N. C, r:--.3AT, JAKVAS.J If, 1954. LI DUPLIN TIMES u4 each ThsrwUy t MMMwrtlU. HV C Omtr M t DUFLDf COpNTT ' -wfel, Mbea office Ml trtattnir las KMUMftlte, M. C . J. ROBERT fUtADY. KDTTOB OWNKB . . PAUL A. BAR WICK, Aaaistaii Editor ' Entered At The Post Office KeaaaavlUe, N. C. TTXFPHONK Kenansvilla, Day M7-1 Nlffcl tU4 "eriFTION KATESi US Mr iw Is Duplin. Lnaoer. Jjc. Gaslow. PMto luwM, New RmMr a4 Ware WN He. W aertsld thfc ni la Nerth CareHnaj ' v.;' :Aw4bttw ratecfwB!she4 m reeneat. A DapHs Oeeratp ImtmI etovwtesl ts the relWrlnaa, material taMttMuO. NHwmk a acrieartara! develoeaietit M nayftn . Duplin Shows The Way . ' Some of us didn't believe it when we first heard it. It was beyond comprehension. Duplin county school patrons were putting their children above community - pride and insisting on consolidations to guarantee better high schools. .First was the inspiring action of the people of Fai son and Calypso. They asked the Duplin school folks to take their two small high schools and to build one large, well-equipped school half way between the two towns To build a school that would provide the best in " library and laboratory facilities and have a student body large enough to secure specialists as instructors. That school became a reality the past week. Class rooms were occupied. In due time all departments such as the farm shop department will be located at the new plant. Now Duplin has gone a step farther. It has award ed contract for a big school which will consolidate the ' high schools of Wallace and Rose Hill. These towns are among the largest and most energetic in rural Du plin. That they should so understand real values as to appreciate that they serve themselves best for the fu ture by giving their children better school facilities is wonderful. They did not allow any local pride, any Chamber of Commerce attitudes, to deter them from the best The new high school consolidating Wallace and Rose Hill school will be built at Teachey. Put this down for future consideration. The new spirit of enlightenment as evidenced by the school pa trons of Duplin will pay large and lasting dividends in future years. Duplin is on the march. Goldsboro News - Argus tence: A story of vast and in some instances unparali Lleled progress. Here are a lew details. , The year saw the establishment of new high rec oxds in the generation and use of electric power. The indications, are that the industry will henceforth exceed its past record of approximately doubling in size every lu years. ' - v ' '" ' , Our. total 1955 power output was 623,000,000,000 kilowatt-hours more than 40 per cent of all the electri city produced in the world. U, S. generation increased 14b per cent in a 10-year-penod--1944-55. Investor-owned utilities have definite plans for a series of nuclear power plants, to cost over S225.000.000. Last year s construction expenditures by the indus try came to $2,750,000,000, bringing the total investment in plant and property to more than $30,000,000,000. The industry now has about 3,700,000 stockholders and tens of millions have an indirect interest through owner ship of insurance policies and bank accounts and in oth er ways. . -, , .' Customers totaled 52,600,000 when the year ended an increase of 1,400,000 over 1954. More than 98 per cent of all our homes, urban and rural, are now con nected for service. In 1955, the average price per kilo. watt-hour paid by domestic customers was 22.6 per cent less than it was 10 years before. The industry's texes exceeded $1,000,000,000 last year, and were the largest single item of investor-owned electric companies' expenses. They worked out to 23.6 per cent of all revenues from electric operations. In this connection, it is significant that socialized power sys tems either pay no taxes or comparatively trivial sums in lieu of taxes. All in all, this record of achievement amply war. rants a statement made by Admiral Ben Moreell, Chair man of the Hoover Task Force on Water Resources and Power: "Technically and financially there is no present nor prospective need for federal power activities. There is no lack of ability or. the part of private power to fi nance and install needed generating, transmission and distribution facilities." THE CAPTIVE AUDIENCE . . If a member of a political party, or a civic or fra ternal organisation, doesn't like the policies and pro grams of the organization's leadership he has a simple recourse. He can resign, without penalty, and join an other group or none at all, as he chooses. But suppose a member of a labor union doesn't like the stand on personalities and policies taken by the union-officials. Then the situation becomes utterly dif ferent. As the Wall Street Journal accurately states the matter, "In many cases withdrawal from the union would mean withdrawal from his livelihood. So here he is, not only a captive audience for the union leaders' political propaganda, but also if he happens to disagree with the official union line an unwilling accomplice in the promotion of that line." 1 This, of course, is inevitable uno!er the closed shon and union shop system a system which is based, in effect, on the promise that a man must join a union and pay dues or be refused the right to work and earn a living for his family. That is intolerable in a suppos edly free country. The solution is found in the right-to-work laws, which protect workers from either union or employer coercion, and which have so far been adopted by 17 of the sovereign states. BIG STORY What kind of a stoy did the taxpaying, publiclv regulated, business - managed utility companies write in 1955? The general answer can be given in a sen- TV PROGRAMS W.N.C.T. TV CHANNEL 9 GREENVILLE, N. C. 19 Thursday, January 7:00 Morning Show 7:25 Weather Man 7:30 Morning Show 7:56 Farm News 8:00 Captain Kangaroo 6:00 Romper Room 10:00 Morning Meditations 10:15 Industry on Parade 10:30 Arthur Godfrey Time 10:45 James Mason 11:00 Melodies By Jo 11:15 Arthur Godfrey Time 11)30 Strike It Rich, CBS 12:00 News 12:10 Weather Man 12il5 Love of Life 12:30 Search For Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light 1:00 Jack Parr Show 1:30 Love Story 2:00 Family Fare 2:45 Linkletter's Houseparty 3:00 Big Payoff CBS 3:30 World Geography 4:00 Brighter Day, CBS 4:15 Secret Storm, CBS 4:30 On Your Account, CBS 5:00 Cactus Jim 5:30 Cartoon Carnival 6:80 News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Tar Hsel News 6:20 Safety Tins 6:25 Sports Hilites 6:30 Little Rascals 6:45 This is Your Business 7:00 Greatest Drama 7:15 Doug Edwards, CBS 7:30 Lone Ranger 8:00 The Great Glldersleeve 8:30 Shower of Stars 9:30 Four Star Playhouse, CBS 10:00 I Led Three Lives 10:30 Quiz Kids 11:00 World Tonight 11:05 Sports Nitecap 11:10 Weather Man 11:15 Late Show Friday, January 20 7:00 Morning Show, CBS 7:25 Weather Man 7:30 Morning Show 7:55 Farm News 8:00 Captain Kangaroo O'On Pomn-r ttnm 10:00 Morning, Meditations 10:15 Industry on Parade 11:15 Melod'' Bv Jo 10:30 Gary Moore " ' 10:45 Big Picture 12:00 News 12:10 Weatherman 12:15 Love of Life. CBS 12:30 Search for Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light, CBS H LET US DIG YOUR H IRRIGATION POND GRADING BEFORE SUMMER CLEARING - ROADS DRIVEWAYS PARKING AREAS LARGE and SMALL JOBS FISH PONDS BASEMENTS FARM DRAINAGE CLEARING WE MOVE THE EARTH GRAVEL FOR SEPTIC TANKS TOPSOIL CRUSHED STONE Rome L. Dicker son III I H S3 Day Phone: 2200 lit Olive Highway Sand and Gravel Night Phone 4899 Goldsboro 1 1:00 Jack Paar Show 1:30 Love Story, CBS 2:00 Family Fare 2:49 Man to Man 3:00 Big Payoff, CBS 3:30 World Geography 4:00 Brighter Day, CBS 4:15 Secret Storm 4.30 On Your Account, CBS 5.HX) Cactus Jim Club 5:30 Annie Oakley 6:00 News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Meet The Farmer 6:25 Sports Highlites 6:30 Little Rascals 7:00 Jewel Box Jamboree 7:15 Doug Edwards, CBS 7:30 The Sportsman's Club 7:45 Sports Spotlight 8:00 Mr. District Attorney 8:30 Crossroads, ABC 9:00 The Crusaders,' CBS 0:38 Playhouse of Stars. CBS 10:00 The Line-Up, CBS 10:30 Person to Person, CBS 11:00 World TOnlgbt 11:05 Sports Nitecap 11:10 Weatherman 11:15 Late Show Saturday, January 21 9:20 Salad Mixer' 9:30 Captain Kangaroo 10:30 Winky Dink and You 11:80 Andy's Gang 11:30 Kiddies Korner 12:00 Big Top, CBS 1:00 News 1:10 Weather 1:15 Farming for Tomorrow 1:30 Industry on Parade 1:45 Boy P?ruts 2:00 Roiler Derby 2:30 Rocky Mt. High School 3:00 Iowa vs Michigan 4:45 You Can Do It 5:00 Grand Ole Opry 6:00 Sports Highlites 6:15 Sports Show 6:30 Down Home 7:00 Cisco Kid 7:30 Grand Ole Opry 8:00 Stage Show. CBS 8:30 Jackie Gleason Show 9:00 Two for the Money, CBS 9:30 It's Always Jan 10:00 Gunsmoke, CBS 10:30 Damon Runyan Theatre. CBS 11:00 News, Weather it Sports 11:15 Wrestling 12:15 Salad Mixer Sunday, January 22 12:00 Le''s Take A Trip 12:30 Wild Bill Hicock 1:00 Oral Roberta 1:30 It's G" To College 2:00 World News 2:15 rarolir - Nws of the Week 2:30 Heart Assn. ..JUB! 3:00 face I be nation 3:30 Sunday New 4:00 Front Row Center 5:00 Disneyland, ABC 6:00 Long John Silver 6:30 Corliss Archer 7:00 Lassie. CBS 7:30 private Secretary 8:00 Ed Sullivan Show, CBS 0:00 QK Theatre. CBS 0-M Lite With rather '0:00 Appointment With Adventure, l:S Talent Scouts ii on o,, it.ws Special, CBS 11:15 Late Show Monday, January 23 7:00 M( rning Show, CBS 7:25 Weather Man 7:30 Morning Show 7:55 Farm News 8:00 Captain Kangaroo 0:00 Romper Room W w Mornin Meditation 10:15 Gary Moore 10:30 James Mason 10:45 Arthur Goatrey Time 11:00 Melodies By Jo 11:15 Arthur Godfrey Time, CBS 11:30 Strike It Rich, CBS 12:00 News 12:10. Weatherman 13:19 Love Of Life. CBS 12:30 Search For Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light ' 1:00 Jack Paar Show SKATING Gold Park Lake now has a heated roller skating rink and open night- ,T -n. o 1015. Matinee Saturday and Sunday from a to 5 pjn. Ad n.uS'i-.i xis i'lia $1.00. i w" -"liMps! vr alcoholic drinks id lowed on Lake property at : any tune. GOLD PARK LAKE 5 miles Sou'h of Goldsboro, on Mt Olive H'ghway, The future home of the Largest Clear Water Swim ming Pool in the South and the South' only lot Skating Rink. '. (Advertising) , 10 Lev Story, CBS 1 kW ramily Tare " ft4S Art Lioklettar'g Hauseparty S-M Big Payatf, CB3 v . , 9:30 Science Program - -; .4:00 Brighter Day, CB3' . 4:13 Secret Stem. CBS 1 : ' 4:30 On Your Account CBS . 1:00 Cactus Jim Ctu i 5:30 Big Picture :Q0 Newa .:.; te'V4 ' :10 "Weather Man " 9:15 Meet The Farmer 1:25 Sports Highlites 6:80 Little Rascals - - 7:00 Town tt Country '" 7:15 Doug Edwards, CBS 7.30 Robin Hood. CBS 0:00 Burns and Allen, CBS -8:30 Bob CumoUngt Show, CBS 0:00 I Love Lucy, CBS 9:SO December Bride, CBS 10:00 Studio One 11:00 World Tonight 11:05 Sport Nite Cap 1140 Weather Man 11:15 Late Show Tuesday, January 24 v 7:60 Morning Show, CBS 7:25 Weather Man 1 7:80 Morning Show 7:55 Farm New ' S;00 Captain Kangaroo 0:00 Romper Room 10:00 Morning Meditation 10:15 Coffee Cup Theatre 11:19 Arthur Godfrey Time, CBS 11:80 Strike It Rich, CBS 13:00 News 12:10 Weatherman 12:15 Love of Lite 12:30 Search For Tomorrow, CBS 12:43 Gviding Light, CBS 1:00 Jack Paar Show 1:30 Love Story, CBS 2:00 Family Fare 2:45 Art Linkletters Houseparty 3:00 Big Payoff, CBS 3:30 Science Program 4:00 Brighter Day, CBS 4:15 Secret Storm, GBS 4:30 On Your Account, CBS 5:00 Cactus Jim Club 5:30 Cartoon Carnival 8:00 News 6:10 Weatherman 6:13 Tar Heel News & Safety Tips 6:25 Sports 6:30 Eddy Arnold Show 7:00 Jewel Box Jamboree 7:15 Doug Edwards, CBS 7:30 Name That Tune, CBS 8:00 Phil Silvers Show 8:30 Eddie Canter Show 9:00 Make Room For Daddy, ABC 8:30 Cavalcade Theatre. ABC 10-nn 4 0f Ou'-'ion. CBS 10:30 Motorama Show 11:00 World Tonight 11:05 Sparta Nitecap 11:10 Weather Man 11:15 Late Show Wednesday, January 25 7:00 Morning Show, CBS 7:25 Weather Man 7:30 Morning Show 7:55 Farm News 8:00 Captain Kangaroo 9:00 Romper Room 10:00 Morning Meditations 10:15 Garry Mnore Show 10:30 Find A Hobby 10:45 Ar'hur Godfrey Time 11:00 Melodies By Jo 11:15 Arthur Godfrey Time, CBS 11:30 Strike It Rich, CBS 12:00 News 12:10 Weatherman 12:15 Love of Life, CBS 12:30 Search For Tomorrow, CBS 17:45 Guiding Light, CBS 1:00 Jack Paar Show 1:80 Love Story, CBS 2:00 Family Fare 2:45 Art Linkletter's Houseparty 3:00 Rig Playnrf. CBS 3:30 Science Program 4:00 Brighter Day, CBS As t t'o.'-'i.K i -J 4'-: G Us Surely town a well, as people would like to have that gift to see ourselves as other e us. What is in any town or village that cre ate an impression, upon a .caauaf passerby? What make one piece as sume a personality so marked that, we never forget It, and another fade away? ;-,-rj'-:-W"''Ku-- Of course. If we stay long enough to meet the people, then we remem ber that place by It inhabitants. It's a friendly town to us or an un pleasant place we wont seek again. Many of us a adult become o fixed in our habits and attitudes that we are not .susceptible to the ntniosphere of a place. That is our loss, too. Children are more im pressionable and often see more clearly.. When we were : very young at least once during each lovely, lazy summer, we made a magic Journey. It was an event planned from one year to the next looked forward to as eagerly es Christmas. AU oi us at our summer place on the lake, and there were a lot of us growing up together then, went, each year, to Wilton to get our wonderful elk skin moccassins. Some of us left a pattern of our feet, and had a pair sent to us in the winter when we were exiled from Paradise back in school in the South. ' ,' Those were magic shoes, it seem ed to us. We walked miles and miles in them and never got tired. We climbed mountains, scrambled over rocks, hiked over rough trails. Our feet had wings to match our spirits. And we were convinced that all the fun we had in our Maine summer was in some mystical way connected with those perfect fitting shoes we got each year in Wilton. My father who was Welsh but cer tainly part Irish was a renowned story-teller. If he told a newcomer to camp that a loon's wild cry was that of a banshee, then the tender foot would shiver with the terror that is .still part delight He told us many times of a fierce Indian that lived near Wilton a Paul Bun yan kind of Indian, a veritable su perman at whose name the white settler would tremble and even flee. Those of us who heard his stories day after day, year after year, nev er believed them entirely but we were glad to pass a certain spot near Bean's Corner where on given nights in summer, Harry's ghost could be seen. So vividly did he de scribe this wild brave that we often -r OR THE GIIOST OF BEAN'S CORNER U V ; . ' did see him striding across the hills. I will hear the over, Chesterville Ridge, in seven league boot which we were sure were made for4nm by those marve, leu shoemakers in Wilton. - ; ' Even now a I drive by that place, I feel aompelling urge to look over my shoulder to see Jf that Indian I, wa-sure was a mere figment of my father' imagination is standing there, v ).-.;' - ..,.-- V': You may imagine my complete amazement thi Very week when reading some early history of south ern' Franklin County to find that there was an Indian, and a fierce one at that and hi name was Har ry. He was so famous, or infamous that Solomon Adams who explored the township in 1785 called it Harry town. . But Captain Tyng and hi company, from Concord in an ex cursion against the Indians, killed the . "dangerous savage", end the first settlers changed the name to Tyngtown in honor of the gran- Come summer again when my very young grandchildren go with me to get their magic , mocassins from Wilton, you can be sure they will hear the tale of Harry, the. giant Indian and hi fabulous boot. ' made in Wilton, of course. Only in deference to modern child psycholo ' gists, he will become a friendly In- ' dian, a patron of all those who love Maine and the Maine woods, whose , spirit guards the geological won- , dcrs of Chesterville Ridge, and who ' often can be seen on' a warm July iwlilffht. near that olacs he lovr 'i . best-Bean's Corner. , - 1 . . U.Un n1Hu,Al1 rHiflllmflM 4:15 Secret Storm, CBS 4:80 On Your Account, CBS 5:00 Cactus Jim Club 5:30 Sky King 6:00 News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Tar Heel News & Safety Tips 6:25 Sports Highlites 6:30 Superman 7:00 Cameo Concert 7:15 Doug Edwards, CBS 7:30 Mayor of the Town 3:00 Godfrey and Friends, CBS 8:30 The Man Behind The Badge 9:00 The Millionaire, CBS 9:30 I've Got a Secret, CBS 10:00 Wednesday Nite Fights ABC 10:45 Cage Time 11:00 World Tonight 11:05 Sports Niteeap 11:10 Weatherman 11:15 Late Show Ccn'tGctQIJ pf .Your CcWf Thea try OSS, the wldeetivity aateV icina, for gnatt effectiveaera & againat all sytfiptoaae of mtt kind of , colds. 660 on nihil 4 potent, widely pnaoribed dross and gives positive ; dramatis neulU in a Butter at hours. Its combined thmpy Co van thai' ; nmpln nag of all cold symptom. , No o&tr cold lYFMofy con moon ooo uoiue r 66a- Cold TmbitU. 6GG i INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS FARMALL TRACTORS ..... ...... ;. FARM IMPLEMENTS f ! if' 1 I ' "SSI ' f s REFRIGERATION -PARTS -SERVICE t i! AC H I NER YC OS: PAN t, 1 N C kinston,northcarolina-phone4178 , , SEARCH YOUR ATTIC, BARN OR GARAGE For. Old Scrap Metals WE ARE PAYING HIGHEST PRICES DELIVER TO OUR PLANT WAYNE AGRICULTURAL WORKS South John St. Goldsboro, N. C. In the low-price Jield rw n n u i n n i - Ford's Thunderbird V-8 engine, the standard "8" in Fairlanes and Station Wagons, is the most powerful "8" in its field at no extra cost. Ford has built more V-8's than all other makers combined ! Loft! uLftQS U O In virtually every model, a Ford ;; equipped the way more and more people want it . . . costs less than any other full-sized car in America! Gome in and . Test Drive the Ford in your future! ) 'Bated on a compariton of mggatad litt prief. l".'"f. .' It I 3 - - - ,; , . . . - YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER , GREAT TV. FORD THEATRE, WNCT, CHANNEL 9, SATURDAY, 8:00 PJtf.

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