Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / July 28, 1960, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 ' "t . i i. ;t, . ''.' htanJ At The Feet : 3i i.oa Jnh'SwIm, FwAkc, gfanww, HJW asavf aaa Ways 4 . . luAm la Harts. CaraUnaj ad fSJ yet yea elsewhere . '":''v" vliwtUM ntM : a iw.h. rsMitvi3Mt3LAeimitotf'to the reOriaDH. . ..... . t vjl n Untie Pele Fronj ' DEAR MINISTER EDITOR: ' 1 The fellers at the country store Saturday night was in mighty fino voice. Ed Doollttle, asusual, led the discussion. He got underway by announcing that he was borrowing a bulldozer so's he could clean out toe junk his old lady has stored In the garage. He allowed as how be ain't been able to git nothing but the front bumper under the roof since last falL There ain't no doubt about it that a garage has got the old fashioned attic beat two to one fer a place to tore Junk. When I see some of the junk folks has got stored in their garage as I drive along the road, I wonder how in t.ta world we got along afore the days of the automo bile. Zeke Grubb was telling the fel lers he saw where a supermarket survey in Chicago showed that the wimmen buy most of the cartons fo beer and tha tthey pick the brand they like best. Zeke said the piece didn't say, but he reckoned the men has took to buying the soap - I mean detergent - fer the kitchen sink that's th eeasiest on their bands. 1 . It was agreed unanimous that a bout the only thing wimmen ain't took over In the country is chewing tobacco and Bug Hookum wasn't SLEEPS SXH.E-.UP' TIKE PUcover Hi Wonderful AcNoa Of This Women mm lomci , . 'Atmsood nights sleep, do yen stuLTfreTtnVed out? Often Ms ran-t feeJUng is due to W ..nn-r vaieeunB 3 1- f P'boiT V'stWRle lroa f 6, r apemla. Thea It's r rarajuBt women to sutler ; fsara awful weanniM. ttVe-lLvdla K. Plokham Tab- f ah,; f nji. Rich in into. ' snalhsm Tablets start to Kit. i xfjtjysvii OP "Hard Road" or. "Back Road," iMTEBNATiOMAb Trucks can take it They're r capeMpM baraporting.big loada at,VAluaWe sayings m any kind of weatherl: " V-8 engines ara standard. Provide'greater power . . with amazing gas mileage, i Medium-duty models have stronger frames and springs for longe Jjiewideits cabs formore comfort. Saa aiabfliri trucki fwt kSQWl " , - '' - ' i ' - - T, . , , -. -"- n K' J- -1 . K. C, Canty Beet Offioa. Imnnftt'Kft.: per year t Paplla, Lstaotr.v aaaisaad. aa hmI.I Ch!;il;n Switch i ATS too shore about that He said he was reading piece not long ago where 81 million pounds of it was sold last year, or about a half pound fer ever man. woman, and child in the coun try. I woundn't put it past a few wimmen to be chewing a little on sly. The statistics, Mister Editor would indicate K. One feller predicted that the price of sugar would go sky high one of these days on account of all the trouble they been having in Cuba. Ed allowed as how high pri ced sugar was okey with him, said he wasn't in favor of putting no cheap sugar in 60-cent-a-pound cof fee. Ed always did like to go fist class. Gem Webster said he saw a piece In the papers where about one out of ever four couples gitting married these days gits a divorce. All the fellers was agreed, natural ly, that it was the wimmen's fault. Clem allowed as how the average woman today gits a husband like buying a old house. Sh edon't see it the way it' is, but the way t'll be when she gits through remodeling, Any woman that marries a man with the idea of remodeling him is going to be as disapponited as a woman that gits married because she's 'tired of working.;- The session ended on a high level, With a discussion on forign, aid. It 1 Blood-Sfrennrhantog strti dav, red strengthen your Wood irtfliM om ( Tnus quwuy neip ouiunaa. bfcod ... to restore stuemrta, ' aad enortr yoa seal fine aeala t MM It yam blood : Is so starved fer Iron that yon Just xf throueb the dfy. aet woaddid "'.slsdta B. Ptnkliani Twists srosa hi tsvsn ttMafttNe ' mm i ii ii p ii urn y v vr i r ik eVuX as - p'f n.m B(,i' -j. WIN 1' ' Warsaw, N.C j ' Fraaohlsa He. MM 7 K wj u,.i "t . a a , l- t INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS gild's HOST COMPLETE LIN.3 Ifa t ' , , T jlllJi- f ' 5r c::c-iot v:.r WHAT'S ' , Eugenia White' Home Service Representative Carolina Power & Light Co. '" Careful strategy is as important in meal planning as in a chesss game. When you plan your 'moves' ahead of time, you are assured of a luncheon or dinner pleasing to the eye and appetite, a meal nutrition ally satisfying. Take Hearty Garden salad for example. It promises a meal fit for a king or queen. Why not plan to prepare this salad right at the table. Wait until just before serv ing - then lightly toss chilled elbow macaroni with the briming bowl of garden - fresh succulent vegetables. The flavor secret lies In chilling and marinating the macaroni in oil and vingar dressing for an hour be fore serving. Then at the table, add the seasonings and herbs of your choice. The result is a crisp combination of leaf lettuce, carrots. radishes and tomatoes with nourish ing macaroni. HEARTY GARDEN SALAD Sliced Ham and Cheese Platter ' Assorted olives and pickles Enriched hard rolls butter or margarins v" Lemon chiffon tarts HEARTY GARDEN SALAD 8 .ounces elbow macaroni Vi cup salad oil cup vinegar 3 tablespoons sugar Yt teaspoon salt Mi pound leaf lettuce 2-3 cup sliced lettuce Yt cup diced green pepper 2-3 cup tiny carrott sticks - v3 small carrots) cs large tomateout in wedges v i bard-cooked -eggs, sliced was agreed that our fsjreiga friends backslide when the money stops, and it's still Uncle Sam versus Eve rybody. It was voted ft's Just as easy to maintain that status with out foreign aid as with it Yours truly, i ; Uncle Pete. o n oM Z3 D - .:"3"nr: ;fj C00IUII6 i teaspoon salt ' 1-4 teaspoon pepper ' Red onion rings - i - Cook macaroni in boiling, salted water until tender ( about 7 minut es). Drain. Combine salad oil, vine gar, sugar and ,fi . teaspoon . salt; pour oil mixture over, macaroni. Cover an dchlU at least one hour Tear lettuce Into bite-size pieces. Toss lettuce with other vegetables, eggs, 1 tap. salt and pepper. Just before serving mix macaroni light ly with vegetables. Add more sea soning if desired. Garnish salad with red onion rings. . Makes 4 to 6 senings... ' CIIAIIGES L'l SOCIAL SECURITY By M. H. Moore Duplin County residents are bus ily satisfying a "hidden hunger" for information on rtuhat social sec urity means to them, according to Mr. M. H. Moore, Field Represen tative of the Social Security Admin istration. In the pasat three 'months, the district office at Wilmintgon, N. C, has received, and honored numerous requests for pamphlets exnlainintr how social security affects individu. als and families in sepcific situa tions employees, the self emnlov. WW OOfl! CROPS TO Vflf? Vhv tiof Take A Trip And P ut Some Of Your Crop Money To Work For You . ..By Depositing It Into Savings Account? Earn. Extra Cash. . Money M By Th e See Us 205 E. (! tm . ( ed, farm workers, tmi farm opera te i, fcouesho.ll t . ,jr and t.xir en loyprs, e iJ o' 's, Mr. V ore s . i il.e car ' si ,t of bow lots av JL,ie com-..i. VI C-'ferent tit les, man yof them geared to the special Information needs of specific groups ,t such as the clergy, farm people, ' the disabled, Mromen,' and state and local government work ers. ' .,.,, . , VA'-'l in the same period,' Mr. Moore reports, the office received and an swered, inquiries telephone, mall and in-person-from . numerous . per sons, K'" ' ', ' . .'".i ' , .. , ' ' , Adding that, social securit? infor mation, printed er oral, is provided without charge, Mr. Moore pointed to the ease with which it may be ob tained. "It's no farther away than the telephone or the nearest mail box,'' she said. Th eWUmlngton, N. C social security office's telephone number is Roger J-262S. ; -u - tVtNKUM BOATINO FOUNDATION By RUDY EVIN3 During'thf put few week I have . had let ten uking me where to catch . the big eiusl Thia of coune is im poeaibto except to Mty that if you really , want big ooei take a trip to the coart : and go aalt water fishing. : . . In the April, 1900, iuue of one of the leading outdoor magaiinee there U a ' lirt of the 1 &30 winners of hut year' ' fishing contest. It showed where the winning fish of the yarioue categoric were caught and in what part of the , United Statei they were takes.1. - A break-down of the categoriee looked fomething like this: Rainbow Trout best at Lake Tend Oreille; Idaho; Muskic, 8t Ifn-nre River, New- York; Northern Pike, Shannon Lake, Quebec; WHllt-ye, Georgian Bay, Ontario: Channel Ua.is, Cape Charles, Virginia) Striped Jtass, Barnegnt Inlet, New Jersey; BoreSsh, Iilanorada, Florida; Blue J Marlin, pan Juan, Puerto Rico: White Marlin, Fort '.auderdale, Florida; Snook, l ake Worth, Florida; Tarpon. Marathon, Florida; Bluefin Tuna, Montauk, New York; Spotted Weakfiah, Cocua, Flor ida. . : . . ' That's the way the contest went and that's where the big ones were caught. The east coast took most of the honors and therefore might be considered THE place to nsh for the big ones. Be that as it may, I still have my favorite fishing area and still think that record breakers ara there for tbe taking. " Happy beating, .".and fishing, toe. , PtllCB .TH. 1 v ' U '-a I N I . i ' ' I ii i 1 UJ . 't . " .' tu ,t 1-1 , 1 For A Loan To Build, Remodel Or cjj LjC w3 uD YJ::re JI:::r.ds 'H' .' I '4 i J St. 1 Te I . Protf. i.. v i du-c:er is ti...t pr.i-!ora f vn l ai'y to a i o. ? from the 1 i-r e d .ys. l..e j & .. '1 view t'.e - ' t of ky e r i to v ew it :.uj of U.. iilty to God asa lets revealed Ljiusell in Jesus CxUt. Christians of all denominations accept Jesus Christ as the Word, the revelation of God. Jesus said in the prayer Just before His cruel fixion; 'I have mainfested thy name to the men whom thou gavest me out of the world; thine they were, and thou gavest them to me, and they have kept thy word.? John 17:8) Later in the same prayer he said: "I have given them the words which thou gavest me." ( John 17: S) "I have given them thy word" (John 171:4) -Sanctify them In the truth; thy word Is truth"-1 John 17:J7,MI do not pray for these only. but also for those who are to believe in me through their word, that they may all be one; even as thou, Fat hher, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be in us, so that the flayer's Desk Bj D. B. Farkersoa, Warsaw "The proof , of the pudding is in the eating"; goes an old saying. Just as that is true so also is this statement . 'The proof of Christian ity Is in service rendered." One doesn't possess Christianity because he serves but one serves because he possesses Christlanty. Jesus said that one could recognize any tree by the kind of fruit H bears. And Jesus talked a lot about service -about "being the greatest of all by being the least of all", about "being the masttr of many things by be ing the servant of God and men". A poor widow woman walker five miles in a t errible night to get a doctor. . He hesitated to make the unpleasant, trip for which he would receive no financial remuneration. True to his high 'ideals, however, the physician went,' and tbe life of the little fchild was saved, and there seemed Jto be little hope that he could ever amount to' more than just a poor laborer. Years after, that sam echild became the great Lloyd George of world history, and the doctor said, "I never dreamed that in saving the life of that child on the farm hearth, I. was saving the life.of the national leader." ' The great Albert Einstein ' once said, "It is high time that the ideal of success should be replaced by the ideal of service." Thl3 state ment contains a great truth and a solemn challenge for success mind ed Americans. Put service . above self it you would know life at Its fullest. As Charles Kingsley has said. "Have thy tools ready; God will find thee work." ' , - Earn:; Dividends From The Apnura UUU UUUf 0 w Are -Saving Mi!!::ris ; ; i , ' If. it , ..J i powers of - BTj ELLA V. rrJBGEN ' TIZZ MAN PAUL His birth, of strict Jewish parents In Tarsus, a city of Cilecia-a Roman Province. His education trained in Jerusalem under the great teacher Gamaliel. Trade - weaver of tent cloth, all boys of the Jewish fami lies were' required to learn a trade. As you read St. Paul's missionary Journeys in Book of Acts, he made three missionary journeys' You will understand how he -worked his way . ' w mucn. W maxing. meant to ton. .. St.. Paul bad two names Jewish name, Saul; Roman - name, . Paul He was a Pharisee of the Pharisees, Acts 23:6. His death - beheaded by Nero. H t v -f-y-i-After you read Paul's Conversion on the' road to Damascus, Acts 9:-1-19. You can understand it was not easy for Paul to make concrete in human relations the basic principles of the Christian religion. He did not find It easy to give them expression, Persecution was his lot, but once he was sure of , God's will for him. he never hesitated to follow the diffi cult wad to the end. His whole life was one of learning. Listen, as be says " I am learning bit by nit, (i Cor. 13:12) and'.' I bays learned to count my former gains a loss," ( Phil. 3:8).; He exorted als that others learn and by learning move in the direction of mature Christian Jiving. Never did he take it for granted that the' church people with whom be worked had attained their full stature. . You will learn " that wesus sent Paul as a chosen vessel of his to carry Jesus name before the Gentiles,' and Kings and sons oi IsreaL Paul, the great Apostle, the mighty free In shaping our- Christ ian religion. He tore Christianuy from Palestine to the soil of Europe labor, he transplanted Christianity frm Palestine to the soil .of Eurpe into the culture ' of Greece and Rome. ' u .' . ; ' ; .. St. Paul is the author of nine books in .the new Testament.; The source of -four more. These letters, like al -the new Testament, were written, In Greek Vernacular,; used through out the part of the world. Jesus and his disciples spoke Ara maic. Paul was' following a common practice of the time writing letters to the local church. They were car ried by individuals as they went from city ot city. The .travel was slow and primative, compared with our present ..times. The Ro mans were responsible , for gooo. roads, which was a great help to xt: Repair. ( ?3' A7c!!:ce, !!. C. n " i iii " l , t i: r4MS DmUBMHl iMS 'tl Janmtah U:S-10. Xewoa (or Jury SI, 1SS TpCT mZLB oftea speaks ob A acurely. There is much m lt j which is not clear even to men who-1 have spent a lifetime of study hV 'tt. This la particularly true ot thex Old Testament prophets. They ar reasons.' 'One is the trmailatloiv perhaps. But F 1 vm im original Is Hffioult. part ly because many names of places sad persons are used, and events are' referred to, which are now unknown to us. Then the marnK i . ... scripts rere notf Dr. Foreman always fcept carefully (of coursa the original -copies nave been lost 'long since) nor copied accurately ; And sometimes, on top of all that, ' the writer puts his thoughts In a. ' very jerky, back-and-forth faahion.' t That is what we nave in the props acy of Hoses. In fact, moat experts believe that fn da, not have con tinuous straight-sway writing in. s ., this "book," but only what we to day would can sermon notes In-... stead of written -out sermons. ; Tkti Now ' 1 ' . Frankly,' there would "be Uttlo .. use in struggling to find out what:,' Hose U driving at, If he hsa nothing to say to our day and time. The book would be interesting as 'lustory, It would give us an Insight Into far-off times. But it would not speak directly to us. The reason. ' why the church cherishes Hose, and the other prophethv books of: the Old Testament, Is that we be- lieve God still speaks through these , words to us. Wherever we find a. o parallel case, wherever we find eon- dltions today much like conditions In- ancient. Israel, whenever we find ' , a prophet revealing the will of God. regarding . conditions which, have-' -parallels in modern times, there we hear the authentic voice of proph--ecy across the yesrs. One way in which Hosea's tima and ours parallel, Is that his na tion of Israel was undergoing a period they would have said en- , joying a period of prosperity such as had never been known before. Our level of living rises snA rises ' In America, It may be true that, , our poor people, possess certain ; luxuries unknown even to the rich and great. in ancient Israel. But i tuxury is a comparative thlng.Tha . point Is, aa compared with a can- - ' tury ago tbe U.S.A. Is a land, of ' ' tremendous comfort, and luxury, th most lavishly luxurious country . ts the world. So, ss compared with'' a century before Hoaea, bia nation ( was far "fatter" as he would put It' ; Unrjr ' , lAxucy is something esrly, everybody wants. But a flame lss anvsWrfg every moth wants. And.' , one is about Ss djpjigerous aa th, other; There are fnylslbto dangem; , in the luxurious life. One Is that. It makes cowards out of peopled An Indian poet put Us finger on. if. When a maa Uanks ef comfort first, hs said, he has given up his freedom. He becomes such a slave ) to his comforts that be will, not fight to preserve'them. Kefonly so,' but nansry .eats Into a man's moral strength. We have, seen h onr tlme how'snen an Wemen chested on tae TV outs programs! They knew they were sot honest but they eseuatd themselves by the fact that they Were naklnar their lives cpasfSrtable on a scale their school-teacher salary or, whatever It was could never reach. . . , . Dtstruettoa I (, Whenever a ' great nation has coUapsed, the anal catastrophe h4sv ummllr keen preceded by a period of Immense wealth and luxury. It has been trjue of ancient elynasOeS hi China. It was true of Hosea Israel It was true: of Greece asd Home, of Carthage and' Bpaia. It can be true of -ourselves. The na tion that 5 runs, to luxury has tlie means to preserve Hself, but It has . lost the wUL Besides, a nation that clings to luxmrv is faffing into Idol atry. Tot. an tdol la, essential, somethiag for the sake of which, you will sacrifice everything else. In times gone by Idols, were madA of wood and stone; now they are made of chrome and porcelain and Steel and aluminum. God has with drawn his protecting hand, befor now, from idolatrous nations. Will hs males us an exception? ' - (Baaa4 a eafllaM arrt1iae4 Vr ,the lTlaUm at Cartoiiaa Hdacatlaa. MatUaal OaauaeO ol tlta CainM at Carta la taw V. S. A. B.alaaaad hs . , Casaasasttf Yiesa Sarrlaa , Paul and the disciples to carry the missionary message, . - - The writing of the wttors we know Paul wrote, began about the year aO B. C: during hris stcond MissiOB sry Journey. Scholars disagree a to whether 1 ThessalonkM .or Gala tions is earlier. " - ivHiuoueu iwu wees. i , -. L
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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July 28, 1960, edition 1
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