11 . . ?. 1 f - i M THE DUPLIN TIMES, JCENANSVHXE, W. C THURSDAY, JANTJASY U. U5C, 7 A U U L 0rc Jy P.T.A. Meets '"A regular meeting of the' S. t. Gradt School P. T. A. Was" held Monday night, January 9. Mrs. Mad- klina Smith' rJtiwnjhin nlui r entet a play, entitled 'Time Stood Still The i award for 1 the room I- iunf In IS Miss i l the. primary grades , wen Bailie Outlaw's first grade. fiftk arado ' taus hi. In ' Mrs. H Ml Wafla wan out in the mm- mar - grades, and . Mrs. Madeline Smith's room won ., In the high . school, 1 ' s ' The president Mr. Willard West s brook wss in chart of the meet- 1 Annou - 3U. and Mrs. Fred Lawton ot Camp ' teune announce: the birth of a ton, at the Naval Hospital there, January J. Mrs. Lawton Is the form l, 'r Miss Dorothy ! Turner ol Knk " Hill. 1 4. ' AH tJt'ys "A&nd"! Smith ; Funeral l In Pink Hill for the funeral of Mr. ' ones Smith on' Tuesday Included 1 " the following from out of town. Mr. !-nd Mrs. D. O.-Sandlln and Mr. and Mrs. Kobett Ai Smith, Mrs. , Bradford Henderson and Mrs. Cecil Henderson. Smithfield; Mr. and Mrs. 1 Hillery Smith. Augusta, Ga.; Mr. M. P. Whaley, Jr., Rockjr Mount; Mr. ' 'Berry Bostlc and Mrs. Quinn Bostic, Greenville; Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Whaley, Sr.; Mrs. Jennie Wesley Batts, Klnston; Mr. and Mrs. J.' D. ; Sandlln, 1 Mr. anil 7,Mra. ; Charlton NEWS OR ; : MOTORS In Pink Hill Phone 2578 Sale A Service Wrecker Service NmI Jones Floyu Whitfield , , '.-;-T-.-. ' -.1. ENVELOPES SSI; . 1. , ( ,: J r ! 1 .- -? 1 ' 1 lp r -cr: Sandlln, Mrs. ..Macon Brown, Mrs. Walter Mercer, Mrs. Norman Sand lln,. Messrs. Bill an X. W. Brown, BeulavUle, Mr. J. A.' McPhauV Wil mington? Mr. and- Mrs. SethTho mas, Leland-and Mr. and Mrs, At ton Whsley of Wallace. ! .,. & Chyrch 7oneh Install Offfceis . ,t i - i Mrs Boy Smith, -was hostess to a recent meeting of Smith's Presby terian Women of the Church, at her home on Pink Hill, Rt 3. Of ficers for the New .Year" were In stalled at this time. They are: Pres ident Mrs. Troy Smith Vice Pres ident Mrs. Jerry O. Smith; Secre tary and Treasurer, Mrs. Ray. Tho- " A good attendance was had and refreshments were served. Mr. Edgaf Wells was lrt Raleigh ilnirsday to attend funeral services for an uncle, Dr. Thomas R, Hart. Dr. Hart was director of Instruction in the School of Textiles at N. C. State College. . Mr. and Mrs. Lehman Williams and sons and Mr. and 'Mrs. Rufus Swain were .at Sneads Ferry, for a sea food dinner on Sunday. . ; Cherle Christine, infant daughter of Mr , and Mrs. Herman Page Is at Dr. Sidbury's baby hospital on Wrightsville Sound for observation and treatment of a stomach disord er. Mrs, Page Is with her there. " For The Deal Of Your Life Time In USED i CARS We 1 i HAND BILLS BOOK WORK STATEMENTS n n ''3f.".M. , T .: fS: -, t S--VV ) -,nr , r V BOYS ' IN SERVICE ' HUBERT D. KORNEOAT' -'.Camp Full, Japan Hubert D. Kornegay, 35, whose wife, Rae, liv es In Magnolia, N. C recently ws prompted to -specialist' third class while a member ot the 8002nd Army Unit at Camp Fuji, Japan. Specialist Kornegay, a military po liceman, entered the Army in April 1954 and arrived overseas the fol lowing $eptemberi He is 1951 graduate of , Kenansville High School. . His mother, Mrs. Alda Brown, liv. es in Magnolia, Am- ' " HUBERT X. DAUV FRANKFURT, GERMANY- Spe cialist Third Class Hubert L. Dail, 20, son of Earl B. Dail, , 204 E. WU liamston St., Mount Olive, recently took' part in a field training exercise held by the 4th Infantry Division in Germany. . v -: Training received by the "Ivy" division, part of the U. S. Seventh Army, Includes intensive maneu vers and realistic field problems. Specialist Dail, a squad leader In Company G of the division's 22d Re giment entered the Army in Sept ember 1954 and, arrived overseas Inst March. He is a 1952 graduate of Mount Olive High School. LEONARD E. ELLIOTT FORT BENNING, GA. Leonard E. Elliott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo nard Q. Elliott, Wallace, recently Miss' Susie Smith, dietitian at Eastern Carolina Sanitorium at Wil son, visited relatives here Sunday enroute from a New Year's visit with relatives in Miami, Fla. Mrs. Willard Whitley 6nd two sons of Goldsboro spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Maxwell. Sgt. Whitley left last week for an army assignment in England. Misses Connie Jo Wells and Bar bara Mitchell of Kenansville, at tended a Presbyterian Youth's Council meeting at Pearsall Mem orial Church in Wilmington last week end. Mrs. C. F. Burroughs of Scotland Neck has been visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Z. M. Williams. Fireman Freddy Small, with the U. S. Navy, stationed in Norfolk, recently visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Small. Mrs. Joyce Flynn has returned to her work at the Production Credit Association office In Kenansville, after having been confined to her home because of illness. Mrs. Gladys Hendren and son, Bobby, Mrs. Thelma Kitchln and Mr. L. W. Sandlin of Burlington, were guests of Mrs. Jones Smith snd Mr. Elbert Smith Sunday. Mr. Sandlin remained tor a weeks vis it -with them.. , 'Mri EagarfflrSttetided funeral services for his 92 year old grand mother in Monroe, recently.. Do All i ZD -r,v;.ii-;; , i What v' . ..V:.' ;:. U ii . UtJiU.jO Ci'vUli'LbJci). was promoted to first lieutenant at Fort Benning, Ga., where he is as signed to the 3d Infantry Division. After three years in the Far East the 3d, nicknamed the "Rock of the Maroe" division, la undergoing in fantry training at the Fort Lieutenant Elliott member of Medical Company In the division's 7th Regiment, entered the Army in June 1954. , , , ' - The 24-year-old sojdler, 1054 graduate of Virginia Polytechnic Institute, was employed at Burling ton Mills, Corporation In AltaVista. Va., In Civilian life. , His wife, Betty Jane,' lives In Co lumbus, Ga. 1 THOMAS C. MARTIN FORT CAMPBELL,-KY. Spec ialist Third Class -Thomas C. Mar tin, 20, whose wife, Alice, lives on Route 4, Mount Olive, is scheduled to leave the U. S, for Germany this" month- as part, of Operation Gyro scope, the Army's unt rotation plan. Martin's unit the 11th Airborne Division, -now stationed at Fort Campbell, Ky., will replace the 5th Infantry Division in Europe. A requisitioning, clerk in the di vision's 408th Airborne 'Quarter master Company, he entered the Army in January ,1954 and complet ed basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. Martin's father, Ira L. Mar tin, lives on Route. 4. LAWRENCE H. CROOM FORT LEONARD WOOD, MO. Army Sergeant First Class Lawrence H. Croom, son of Mrs. E. B. Carr, Wallace, recently helped play host at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., to 52 citizens of the Boys Town of Mis souri, St. James. During the boys' visit to Servant Croom's unit, the 643d Engineer Company, they toured the unit's barracks and weapons room, saw movies on Army7 life and ate a southern fried chicken dinner. Croom, whose wife, Elizabeth, is with him at the Fort, entered the Army in 1942. Deaths Pamela Cheryl Lefler Pamela Cherry Leflert infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. buster Lefler of Wallace, died at Babies Hospital in Wilmington early Tues day morning of last week after a short illness. Funeral services were Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at Potts Memorial Presbyterian Church in Penderlea. The Rev. C. S. McChes ney of Wallace officited. Burial followed in the church cemetery. Surviving in addition to the parents are the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Lefler of Willard and Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Lockerman of Rose Hill. Bell Infant Mary Befti Bell, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donnel Bell of the Stanford Community, died at 4:10 p.m. last Monday in Wayne Me morial .Hospital, Goldsboro, eight hours after birth. Surviving are the parents, the Kinds INVITATIONS Ever maternal grandmother, Mrs. Esther Eatmon, of Mt. Olive, Route 2, and pSternal grandparents, Bar. and Mrs.' Willie J. Bell, Mt Olive,' Route 2. Graveside - services were to be held at 3 p.m. today in Brock fam ily cemetery with the Rev. U. A. McManus, pastor of Bear Marsh Baptist Church, officiating. - Mrs. Fred Hill Mrs. Fred Hill, 87, died at her home near Seven Springs Tuesday night at 11 p.m. after a lingering ill ness. Mrs. Hill was the former Clara Ward, daughter of the late James Ward and Malvinia Houston Ward. She la survived by her husband &nd one daughter, Mrs. F. W. Ben ton, and one granddaughter of the home community; five sisters, Mrs. Winnie Thompson,' Mrs. Margaret Fields and Mrs. Mary W. Stroud all of Seven Springs, Mrs. Mattie W. Sadler of Kenansville and Mrs. C. H. Baker of Wilson. s The funeral was held from the home at 3 p.m. last Thursday. Her nephews served as pallbearers. In terment followed in the family cemetery near the home. Mrs. Carrie B. Edwards CLINTON Mrs. Carrie B. Ed wards, 62, died last Monday morning in Sampson County Hospital. Fu neral services were held Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Mt. Gilead church the Rev. Walker B. Healty and the Rev. M. C. McQueen officiating. Burial fol lowed in the church cemetery. She was a native of Sampson County, daughter of the late Obed Newkirk Boney and Emmie Knowles Boney. She was a life long member of Mt. Gilead church. She is survived by her husband, Marion Edwards of the home; one daughter, Mrs. Ethelene Frisbe of Macon. Ga.; three sons, Albert and Edward Bland of Clinton and Tho mas BInd of Aupusta, Ga.: five sisters, Mrs. Obie Milnass and Mrs. Jewel Malpnss of Clinton; Mrs. A. J. Strickland, Mrs. D. L. Matthis, Mrs. J. A. Newkirk of Warsaw; five brothers, J. R. and Chanrev Boney of Warsaw; D. S. Boney of Bennetts ville, S. C; William Bonev of Bal timore, Md., and D. L. Boney of Suffolk, Va. Mrs. Sarah West Mrs. Sarah (Sadie) Southerland West, 82, widow of George H. West, died Friday night at her home near Warsaw after a lingering illness. Funeral services were conducted from the home Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock by the Rev. Lauren Sharpe pastor of the Kenansville Baptist Church. Burial followed in the family cemetery near the home. She is survived by four step-sons, Hen ry M. West of Kenansville, Gordon A. West and J. Ellis West of War saw and J. D. West of the home. Floyd E. Smith Floyd E. Smith, farmer of Alb ertson Township died in Veterans He was son of the late John M. and Agnis Joan Smith of Duplin. Mr. Smith was a Veteran of World War I. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Emma Haskins Smith of the home; one son, F. E. Jr of the home; two Of Job LETTER HEADS LARGE CIRCULARS You .'', j daughters, Mrs Horace E. Nether cutt of Albertson and Mrs; Jimmie Johnson of BeulavUle; two grand children; two brothers, Albert and Lee Smith, both of Albef'tson; and two sisters,. Mrs. John Smith of Pink Hill and Mrs. J. p. Sheppard pf Albertson. Funeral services were held from the Jarman-Howard Fun. oral Home, in Kinston at 2 pjn. Monday by the Rev. N. P. Farrlor, Presbyterian minister of Pink Hill. Burial was in Maxwell Cemetery. Benjamin B. Carr Funeral services for Benjamin Bowden Carr, 77, of Richmond, V.', formerly of the Faison and Calypso communities were held at 9 a.m. last Tuesday in a Richmond funeral home. Graveside services were held tt 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Calypso Cemetery with the Rev. Taylor O. Bird, Presbyterian minister, offic iating. Mr. Carr died in Richmond last Friday night. Jerry M. Cottle Jerrv Miah Cnttle. RO riioH FriHav noon at his home in Rose Hill. He was a son of the late James David and Rachel Teachey Cottle. He was a lifelong resident of Duplin County and at the time of his death was a retired farmer. He was a member of the Rose Hill Free Will Baptist Church from which funeral services vere conducted at 3 p.m. Sunday by the Rev. Aubrey Carter, assisted Dy tne ev. Vance Hich and the Rev. Julien Motley. Burial was in Rose Hill Cemeterv. He is survival hv hi. wife, the former Nellie Jane Han chey; four daughters, Mrs. George Carr and Mrs. J. B. Penny, Rose Hill, Mrs. Grover Booker, Rocky Mount and Mrs. Sam Pnne Jr Portsmouth, Va.; six sons. Howard' Herbert, Albert, Jerry Henry, Dan iel and Charles Cottle, all of Rose Hill; two sisters, Mrs. JoeL Jones Willard and Mrs. Robert Vernon, Portsmouth: one brother Genrire Cottle, Washington, N. C; 18 grand children and two great gran'd child- Save 20 Per Cent On Feed By Own Grain In Winter Twenty per cent or more can be saved by making dairy feed with own grain this winter. Many dairymen in Wayne County are mixing their own feed or are using their grain to have the feed mixed. By using market prices of grain in figuring the cost of the feed, it shows another way to help beat the price-cost squeeze. A good grain ration can be mix ed right on the farm that will do the job of producing milk well. At other times it may not be as profi table to go to the extra trouble to mix feed on the farm. For every man who lives to be 85, there are seven women but by that time it s too late! Need Printing LZ1 f - - . i .: .' v. . The U. S.1 Deparlmenj Of Cccrce Gives Report On Retail Sales In ; Duplin; 1955 Totaled Over $20 Millicn State North Carolina, County of Duplin. , Retail sales In 1954 of 352 stores In Duplin County totaled $20,396,000, according to preliminary 1954 Cen sus of Business figures announced by the Bureau of the Census,. De partment of Commerce. This was an Increase of 58.8 per cent over ss. in 1948 by 456 stores of $12,888,000. Stores with payroll in 1954 number, ed 168, had 722 paid employees in November 1954, repotted payroll of $1,467,000, and accounted for sales ot $17,402,000. Proprietors of unincor porated businesses numbered 370. The number of stores and their 1954 sales, grouped by major kinds of business, were: Food stores - 95 $4,407,000 Eating, drinking places 18 261,000 General merchandise group 44 2,373,000 Apparel, accessories stores 12 1,279,000 Furniture, home furnishings, appliances 17 788,000 Automotive group 22 3,711,000 Gasoline service stations 54 2,085,000 Lumber, bldg. matls.-, hdw. farm equip. 19 Drug stores, proprietary 2,835,000 stores ii doi.uuu . Other retail stores 51 1,809,000 and h.sdseh.s, duo to colds.. y IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO stores 11 lines, BANK OF "Make Our Bank Your Bank" . il MT. OLIVE oooooeeoopooooooooooooooi IV Hi Nonstore retailers . 9 261,000 For 10c a report for the State' counties and placet ot 2,500 or more population is available from the Bureau of the Census, , Washington 25, D. C. or. from Department ot -Commerce field offices in most large cities. . . - 1948 totals above Include data for a few types of establishment not in scope In the 1954 Census. Thl Is significant only to the extent that milk dealers (dairies) and store with annual sales between $500-$2, 500 ere important in the county. ' (Slow Down & live) (Practice It) COLD SUFFERERS COLO discomforts yiold eulekly STANBACK'S proscription toimuw, STANBACK tablets or powdort work fast to bring comforting roliof from tirtd, tors, aching musclos, neuralgia .IL i time Id spend in countless the worry of sending cash through the mails . . . . so knany reasons. Investigate for yourself the many advantages of having a checking account at MT. OLIVE CALYPSO . l 4 il I, !' (i i; r il 7"r