Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Oct. 30, 1958, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
: T11U DU1 LI J-T I MEG . J. v .': ; Published each Thnrsnav In Kenanftvflle.lt. C, County Seat a . E.Uoiial, t owners '- ' i4 pHnHnr plant, KensntvUI. N. C ; OWNER and PUBLISHER ' RUTH P, GRADY, EDITOR Entered Al The Post A - ,... '.4eon4 Tn.PPHOPK C .r!jwjf4r Jf p w fo naplln, lnlr. ' counties; MW r W.atito thte area In , North CaroHnaj JJ rd (A.M. per. rear elsewher , . . " ' K-''i'i A Pap'H riw1 ,J"mM, devot'd in. t' r"cw trlja J. nn"'."J. economic and egricatraraJ development of - DnpUa " Coijws Was Former Salvi ion Arm y Of f icer I ft ' A man who -was a Salvation Army in 18951 Three years. later be Army officer and. soldier for 15 became an offle, f'and jlmmedia-: mortgage loan. , , ' , years before he wrpte one of the tely' '1tegttiv.traveiMisthjlaoM A debtor owlnj two or more de most famous of all hymns "clung to eai&-tM'tiftti, bt to the 8am cre-ltor,, and mak to f-e' Dlo: rugged- cross" ;untU . John 3:18 was the inspiration for :inB a payment, may, at the time, October' 11 'when 'hs "exchaaged the writing" of "The.' Old' Rugg 'rect ts application,, to imv on" it for a crown." 4i g Cross' accorlng 'Bev.- Bennard," the debts. The, right 1 lost if The dlev. George Bennard, who Mwied .the music .'and words' r ''The .OLJ Rugge. Cross." died almost .complef. onscurlty In for in almost .complete obscurity In Reed City, Mich. But the 'hymn he , wrote in 1912, two years after he v gave up, his commission aa an ad- ' Justant in The Salvation Army, will live on fnrev r. He was born4! in Totiigstown,. unto ana later woraea in lowfoi metig ana njouga; .n coal mines as a youngster at 15 to great experiences at those revivals ' neip support ois wiaowex- irwoexBe was awe to conrpteie tne nymp and five brothers and sisters? RcvPafteV rettfining to Michigan, 't 1 . Bennard Joined a The Salvation ' The, doctors lave developed a new medical study, Geriatrics, the cure 'of those in old age. They have, b;en studying the lives of some outstanding o'ld men to find : out ,what are the marks of healthy old Me. One of those they have studied, i Amos Alonzo Stagg, who i at the.ag- of 98 is coaching foot- , ball, s punting jnd kicking coach for Stockton College in Calif orn- id. He served from 1892 to 1933, i for,, forty-one years, as bead coach for University of Chicago, when they, retlr d him at age. 71 years. He.,. went to Stockton College, and in ,1943, when the, coach was 81, his team was so good that , the coach was elected coach of the year and football's man- of the Tear. One of the factors in his long life. Stagg .thinks, is his strict THIS IS THE ? LAV By Robert K. Lee - . "orruweo - ouuer. un tne aate the loan, u to be 'paid, AlUa tenders the $100 with interest to Butler. The money offered and held out to Butler Is refused. Msy Butler two year la- tei recover the money from Allen? Yes. Where the p rformame of a contract consists of the payment of a sum of money, the tender of . the same by the d btor and its re- fusal by the creditor does not am ount to a discharge of the debt. The creditor may sue and re cov r a Judgment for the amount of the debt at any time within the period of the Statute of Limita tions. If the obligation is oral or In writing without a seal, this means that the creditor in North Caro lina can bring his action at any u.lc ui ...ai-.njr ui UW..SOUU... 11 tne oongauon is m wruing wnn a seal or the word "seal" beside the debtor's signature, thev cr.di- tor an wait as long as ten years from the date of maturity to start his legal proceeding for a recov- ery. I Th effect of tender of payment UiKlePefe?rrWtt!in5wi!ch iaJTI DEAR MISTER EDITOR: lhete new 1959 cars they is put ting out remind me of a razor b ' jr. hog in r verse. I've saw inr.ay a razor-back hog that was so from hen vy you htd to tie a r ;-k io his tail to keep him from " ve i-i from. These new c&rs has, got so muca fin-tail on the back that they'll . have U tie c rock to th engine to k:ep it from glttlng airborne. '.i l .ol:, g at 'em at a dis-t-"e, i'.'s rn-J to tell f.'ie :iood , (- om 1 1 trunk. It's like these raw - 4(.frled hair-UiS th wlm- , mn is Sitting. It's hard to tell , v .e.;aer you're walking behind a ':wV... tfjeds a haircut or a womrn teal's Just hsd one. .' One thins.' thougn, : I'-jnotv-. is t.' it U:ey seem to have thicker i- I fjfrpe- the folks that .: ?"". Kned 'em is eKp ctlng a tought r. hunch of-pe'estroins this year. ; i fv-i ; i rj "J er said Sunday ,. that t i"gs.H ? t' ;g be'f sll thetim , snv f;vtr i9 g'.'.ting more andi" more religl .n ever- dsv. ! and he bj"ed, it on the fapt that then p'n't near as much cussing and pro-, fiimty as they used to be. I ain't no fr l'or to argue with my preach- . ' ,;t he am't even close to the Office! Kenantvine, N. O. -t elass m fitter r v It' 'rvtUMUrflftl k. mm J., uw . Oirlst MA tht M inseDsbl While naylns for directed at the ttm3 of payment, . tn lAbuM tht rW the debtor does not exercise- hi. right,, the creditor may , ,Pw"TVM;'';tlie payment to titter debt; or he Rv B nnard was. holding evanrr gelistlc meeting to1 Michigan whh he started the words to the "01f Rugged Cross", but an inner voice trit him tn 'Wait!" He w."nt to New York and ; conducted a aeries Christian living. When he Was fif teen y ars old, on May 22, 1877, as hp recalls. "I became a Christian. 1 ind that made all the difference o me." He had r ad how Spartan unnths traino,! thir hndiM and . . Mij oiv ,m rnffee sfnn- king, and any use of alcohol. He train d bis body diligently. He rit.?hed his prep school to base ball victory. At Yale he pitched in five championship season. He made Walter Camp's first All erica football squad in 1889. Now at 96 he is till abl to coach. Maybe some of your perple to day could learn something from Amos Alonzo Stagg. "Watch ye, stand fast in the faith quit ye like men, be strong, L t all that ye do be done In love." (1 Corinthians 10.13-14) is that tt 'merely stops the run- ning of Interest and precludes the creditor from.' recovering court sosts In connection with sny sub- more, even TO acnieve iai reauii. tne aeotor must continue, to e re dy and willing to pay the debt at' any time, -or. as u is said, the tender must be kept good. ... Hence, Butler may at a later date recover from Allen at least $100 .plus interest up to the date of tender. Corbin owes to Wllliston money on two separate obligators. One is s cured by a mortgage on Cor- j bin's home, the other is an unse-1 cured obligation. Corbin makes a' payment of $2,000 to Williston, buti doe not at the time of payment specify which of the tw0 obliga- tiona he is making a part payment. ." rwa'rrt He 15 .uny ui ui uc ua. """"j i appil a the as part paymen - of the unsecured loan. May Corbinl require Williston to apply the $2,0- 000 as part payment of his mortg- age loan? No. Corbin should have specl- fled at the time of paym nt that he wanted the $2,000 applied to the, reason we ain't got the expert cus sers w used to have The pas sing of the mule has got folks out of practice in the cussing business. The stubborness and cusse 'ness of a mule would make a feller ip off cuss woids that could be ieard three and four farms down he road. A firmer, mad at the - ntrarlness . of his mule, would :uss until his face got purple an 3 he fell in the hog troug.'i in a fit.' Naturally, his wife and children would hear all this cussing and they would turn out to be pritty good cussers their selves.: But today when a ' farmer gits to Lie pjint of distraction because l, rretor won't run. ii'e just picks up his r-Hone and calls a mechanic, If cussing- was bad fer religion . . eukon the- pore oil mule "will rnv4, to take most of the blame. Mv .rreacher, I'm afeared, ts con fusing the scarcity of mules wiUi inpr--aie in religion.,, ' 1 -I see. by the paper this morning where ode of them junketing Con trrW)n 'skeed a Arab what the chief industry of his eountry was. v'foie.gn aid," replied the native. At least, them Arabs tell the truth. Yotrr truly, . j '-, Untie Pete ' sen ,zwss'Ai u h NOM.HS fSWT nrnu' a. ruia. . BXCBPT ymrriH- for vei to' wibslt me l ariiL-uiar iuUtiun a nui may apply a part to one debt and the remainder to. another; and he jg not restrtjted as to the-time of pam nt. If, however,-once the .Ait m.Vn ik nnllpatlon he cannot iater change it without the consent of the debtors - If neither the d btor nor the 'creditor makes the application, the law applies it to the unsecured debt. Change In Your Social Security Some important changes have been made in the old-age and survivors insurance program as a result of Uie Social Security I Amendments of 1958 which Pre- sident Eisenhower D1" law on August 28, 1958. All of the changes, directly or indirectly, affect the American public as a while.' Working per- sons employed and sell-empio yed need to know about them; i , their families need to know a-: bout them. X'J In the articles to follow I shad describe the changes singly and in detail; today, I shall restrict myself to a summary of the most important changes design ed to strengthen this .Federal social insurance system which mt losg 0T earned income upon ,the retirement, death, or total , JiMhnHv of ,nrVP Most important because it af- le nd yj, famiUe. jg the to- crease j- benefit amounts Thir appiies to thtfse now getUng ben efit naVments and to those who wm become beneficiaries to the future. People now on the beneficiary rolls do hot have to get in touch with the social security office to obtain ' these . benefit , increases. The larger amounts are effecylte with January and ill show up on benefit checks for that month ; which will go in the mails early, m February. j As vou know benefit amounts , 8re, fiured from a working per-; 8011 9 av,erae earnings. Right $4,800 will be creditable and tax- , W9 for Social gecuritv purpose, mm ouvt SHOE SHOP Expert Repairs o.tMWv Materiala 160 E. Main Mt. Olive Kcasonable Charges - NO WATER vO PAY .' " Not Just A Prori ' 'BUT ' ( OrAPAJfTFICD : 1 1 mm !; v. , NOTICE C?epWc!l Drilling Blowing v mini : . m m " m aawvi M?s Ami; os , Recently I had the opportunity toms In each and to see the dif it traveling to four different ci ties in my worv It was interest- tog to observe the '! different cut- ient larming practices. Now e Just beginning to.set up' a National Extension Program so National- Extension Program so we are studying the situations as it is now. I found that the women who are being hired as home a gents will have to had a lot of training but they all . seem very interested to working. . We have had one training conference with them and are , working now to plan another. Colombians have the custom of the young man seranading h.s girl friend very eany in the morning. He may sing himself or he may hire some professional musicians to sing lorhim and he goes along. Several times re centlv voune eirls on our street have been seranaded. I like to wake up and go to the window to listen and - watch. The songs jjuna very sad to me and not as happy as I think I would like Thei.e are certain wava in. whirh she can respond and show her interest in the vouna man but I do not know all of them. If she is really in love with him, she gets up, her father invites him in and they serve refreshments. mm1: J Money M By The How Is The You Heed Cash, ft' 235 E. Main St. s I, HI 4 ' r r 4 k by D. E. Parkersot" Warsaw We read i great: deal in these times about the 'tensions that exist I a a r vlt ot the busy pace o mo.em life. . Psychologists, Psychi- 4,Uis, anct sumaumea Alinisters ho-employ the art of counseling t u a pari ot weir ministry recom-: iw4.(4 to 1 iiioe yrbo. are lull ol t Agonal to, get out nea nature au4 fifh or "hunt . and "get'aVay i - f iri iogei it" ' ,r ' I personally doubt that' this .will eui out problems,' except ' maybe . temporally, 'unless we could have uie uciuai oi iioon--ju wawa r : ViA,t: ah -Ainenc-art .tolkiore. is person was hunting and the, tun was one of these mvi- zle lead ra ' the kind you have .i. iwu putvder in tnen your ..... Ji.iv your shot He had plenty of powder,.' but ', oaly had m ti-aa to load one time. He !aWA'jtUSf S limb of a tret neat by. . So be .v.udu :his. gun with 'this last load. tl.eh. he looked back beneath the iuD stood a deer. About this time he heard a rattle beneath hi feet- a rattlesnake. The make was in liont of him and a stream behind him so hi could ndt run. He didn't know what to do but finally decid- ed to fhoot the turkey and take his chances on fcie. ratUesnak u , .r - "1 vou Bein, xuat he diew his gun n.r-. OUgly.. .!' .' ' , . j :., , Being n rvous he "Hot a Uttfe' too low. Part of his load went in io itut turitey, the other part, went into the limb. The limb fell on' tie deer and kill, d him, the ramrod but of the gun and killed the rattlesnake. The giin. kicked him ba kwards. into the stream ani when ha came; up he had his shirt wckeis fua of fish. So he, Ai& th.s jackpot shot . carried .. 'e d;er turkey, and fish. . You will notice that I -did not say that tais story was true. I only said It was recorded In American .tjikior . Anyway I don't think you nor I would be this lucky going hunting, so, get, your iismng poie, come by Warsaw and let's go fish lngl Some of my friends wrote me that a school teacher from Raleigh-would be here during the summer to study Spanish on a Fulbright scholarship.'- I called the United States Embassy to learn when she would come and how I could locate her:' When I called she told me that two men from North: Carolina were' to' the group too. Later I invited the three and two of my Colombian friends to eat chicken to t the basket for lunch. They all seem- Una folks said it was the most AT Coooerative Savings and. Loan Between The 1st. and lOlh. Time To Gel Your Home . Ready See US For. ' ':A LOANS V; Ray Johnson Manager, Dujlln Charge C. - Mr. C. H Pope, of Magnolia North Carolina, is our ' "Meet A Methodist" ., for this week. : Mr. Pope wa born in ftose Hill; N. C and Joined the Providence Method ist Church thirty-five years ago, and , number of years ago he movt ?d his membership to the Magno- , liaf. M thodlsf Church; Mr Pope is a great Christian giving of hU tim,; his talents and bis treasure freely nd unselfishly. Through' his conce-n and efforts the $23,000. .00 building program at the Magv a, u jff thodist Church was cat- through ' to success. . He la, i '.:... u. , j sk .n jnspUation to bis pastor. . ,-. - ! Mr. Pope la" a member vof; the OJctal Board of his Church ser ving in 'the position of Ttustee. !. . t memh r: of the faculty of : James Henan High School where he teaohes lagrtjuiure. He. and Pope have two children. C..H Xt: and Ann.- tike North Carolina? food of any .they had had. They.-were tired of. the Colombian v starchy,, diet. They also had a good chance to practice" their.- Spanish and to learn about the Colombian peap-f le from my,; other fiends.. That night I felt-a littje.hoine sick and- I ure, it waa( from hearing PWIITIIIG TIME. -' -'. '. i'v ; ' i .-1' ' :.; . . .t.i ..- .;,:,''.,;-;,, ' 'Wide Sp"lect?on Of Plant. "It's Not A Home I, Landscape Plann-ng - And Planting Cash And Carry Sales , G0LDSB0R0 NURSERY 1 IU Telephone RE 5-2820 Goldsbore, N. C. 11 Earns Dividends From The G. Nielsens, Pastor, r Hi L C. II. POPE I those southern accents. But it. was fun to have news forni North' Carolina. . , v ' r , The present. University of North Carolina School of Pharmacy was egtsbliahed la 1897.' ' . -, , . . ii Unt'l It's Planted I 3y 31 1L hi il l l m mm. st; For Winter. If r for Wallace, N.C r InwrrwE" L. I Blbla Material! Mark I-.M-W. Dmoiloaal Kcadlafi Luka 4;1-Jl.a 1. 1 in t Umob for November t, , ' JfpHOVSANDS of Americana have, v.. I flatted. Galileo, The very wuw;V. 1 'has a glamorous sound. But at the v -;, -- Ume -tha-evenU. were,:.occurring . which lent the place 1U fame, now.-v v. famous around the world, it had no . . . , glamor at Q. It Is a litUe region g j j v no bigger than a county. At the ? ', time Jesus lived, f . it was a part, a I i ' t i very Insignincant I f corner, of a great empire, governed by a politician named: Herod with the title of "Tatre)rch,M what w' today nlvkt call ...L-uuvtp lr. Foreman - - :: , People took at things diirerenuy i nowadays. If Jesus bad had a ftiK-ft lie-relations man, or someeoay wie , 1 1 . BoUvwood asreat they would certainly have advised a, start somewhere besides CkOflea. "Every body will think you have no back ground" they might have " said; "When people hear you are from Galilee they will just say Oh. If vou have any ambition for a career, Galilee la a pretty poor bottom, rung on the ladder of success,? v ; , CsifflsJai i. ' tie tomnfa''''-'' i) But GalUee was where Jesus was, and that la where he started It did seam absurd. (Not to him. y ot course, but to any worldly-wts observer.) GalUee was not only an -ordinary dusty unglamorous sort : of countryside, dotted with towns and villages; most of which have long been forgotten. Galilee was a f : crossroads, a melting pot. It lay along Important highways. It was " open to immigration, and there had been lots of it There were not . many Galileans who could boast of , ; proud pedigrees to match those of : the aristocrats up in Jerusalem. .. At, nunTi nHfV. all anWi .' IWU, w, iravw, ' '. .... of ideas and idealsaU sort of cus- 'i imu vita ana all anrta oi reninons. I had come and settled In Galilee. ; . There were towns such as Tiberias, ' ' . Herod's littls back-country capital, ; that had been settled by so many , : non-Jews or half-Jews, that Jews "m good and ragtuar standing'' r would not be caught dead in them, and would noteven trade in them. 1 : Again, what en unlikely region j to start a nW religion! Religions ; by the dVisana flouriah4 or, faded aa the ease nught be, tnyGalUae. ; One more raUaioa, ea so what? With an the clamormf voices of I rival faiths, what chance did the I voice of truth have to fin that In- j terfsrenoe? Beatdea, yon would ex-1 pact the founder of a new religion to take hie t oUowers to some re-1 mote shrine, where he and they j could meditate without being dis- ' turbed by newsboys and telephones. Of course Galilee had neither tele-:; phones or newsboys; but it had the equivalents of both. And there is precisely where Jesus started, in all the noise and Jangle, the com- . -petition and confusion. ...,,,...... . . .; J N RtMpn laasjreaii . A . people's minds in Galilee were not on rahgton. There were no great shrines there, no temples like the one to Jerusalem. Priests were few and far between. There was. no great religious tradition. "Sell ing" religion to Galileans was not promising. Granted, the "pious" , people around Jerusalem Included a number of hypocrites. Still, why hot . start to Jerusalem where ' people were already interested, in stead of starting cold, in Galilee? 1 Once when Jesus was teaching, j never mora earnestly or spiritually ; tn his Ufa, one .of these money-.' minded Galileans shouted to him from the crowd: Stake my brother ; divide our inherltanee with met It i la hard to get under the skin and ; next to conscience of people Uke f,, k. .t- .. ..,,-',-.-;..-...,:.'.......:, ..':. 'ilea la nar imi - : . , , v in th. mm jaaiia Mma m ta tha and. Ha act tharebv an ax- - ample to na.. For Galilee Ii our : . -' ' , '; town. We could make a better be- .. -" Sinning HUMWjim wmwi r ,,,imw, i,;,..,,-...: MHITIllHIllHmiMMIIH rim iJ, is where we must begin to be that supports foreign missions with , mwaiiniiii m VMfyvuw pw fi .y. '1 AlilBa mmAmm a ' . ' ' church .that pretends to be Chris- :i';: i ; uaa must ps mtaresteo m peopie;. and if von cannot cat toterstad in ' v the unglamorous Galileans around ' . ' ' fun. jvii wiM w(W mwn ::. eaHwhare. aa M1M aanrfirataA fca tka UMlia ( Vhrbttaa KajmUaa..' Nstlaaal 0aan f tha Olun-hmi mi rhrM la tha . 8. a. Balaaaae kr Oaanaaai raas Santos) , v N,ef CsTore has the American dollar. had such good-byeing power. ':.' !':'j. ?S-'i '' ::::
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1958, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75