Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 2, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
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Soy Sfi taU?e CaraUaa Pwer * Ughl 0?. E#w ? time dining I tee, he nd , de ., The considered. Bright sunlight in the Moraine helps gffThr household in to e pleasant jjfMgpt mood, but hot afternoon sun pooling into an already warm busy kitchen toward .^Mppertime can bo extremely irri tating. Kitchen size Jp determined not #nly by the amount oI cooking mount of storafi apace needed or desired, and fantft* preferences. ?Tediors trend is tosrarri making the Kitchen larger to accomodate other activities such as laundering, sew ing and family living. J The actual square footage is not the only factor because kitchen ef ficiency and pleasantness are also determined by shape. You should jrowiiitf (he advaotigd gg4 dis* advantages of the possible kitchen pharas jmd which will best meet your needs. There is the one ?M* Mayo which can have the dis advantage of being very wasteful ?f steps. The L-shswe has one dead "earner bat u-aflw jfrdfrerted away pact, efficient il-tint * oven though there ere two dead i 1 wj i%.i ? Summer camp season is approa fng again. If your bog or girl planning on going to camp this year, it's time to start getting reedy. First, of course, select a camp. This depends on several factors, such as how much can you afford, do you want a camp oearty. fir some distance away, do you want a camp for boys or gfato only, or a co-ed camp? Most cities and larger towns aren't far from a Scout er Y camp that charges only nominal dees. Or. there are the private camps in the mountains that cost Make your choice of camp, then fill in the registration forms and get them in the mail promptly. The better camps fill up early. Find out about the camp's health and spfety provision. Will the staff hgva pre-camp health examinations, including kitchen and< maintenance personnel? Is there a doctor or registered nurse on duty at t^l times? Is the food prepared under safe eppditipns? Are menus planned by a trained dietitian? Does the camp have a well equipped infir mary? Are all campers required to have a physical examination and a physician's certificate? Most camps on the approved list of the American Camping Associa tion will meet all of these health 1 corners, for with good planning they can be weH used. The oppo site wall kitchen can be inconven ient because of traffic passing be tween work areas. The new island shape offers great possibilities for improving efficiency. When you analyze your activities you win realize that there are sev eral requirements of an efficient kit chen, for meal getting involves: 1. planning - for which you need a small desk or counter with knee space. Many jobs are done easier when sitting down. g receiving supplies - for which you need counter space particular ly near refrigerator and freezer. If you place refrigerator and freezer near outside eptance you'll ssve countless steps carrying groceries. 3. staring supplies-requires ade quate and suitable storage not only Xor food but lor utensils, gad gets, small appliances and cleaning supplies. Storage shixild be in terms of first use rather than placing like things together. 4. preparing food-which requires gpod lighting to ffluminate work surfaces and eliminate glare. This saves eye strain and fatigue, helps .to spreed your work and prevent accidents. Adequate wiring is es sential to have sufficient electric circuits and convenience outlets to allow using your small appilances in meal preparation. Good ventila tion is desirable for removing steam and cooking odors. 5. serving foog-requires counter snace beside the range and near the dining area. 6. after meal dean-up-made sim plier by easy to clean surfaces for counters, cabinets, walls, and floors The materials for these should be chosen for wear-ability, clean-abili ty and second absorption as well as pi?yyhn^i?iiii to sight and touch. You will find that your activities suggest three major work centers te save miles of useless walking; 1. A mixing center - for food stor age and preparation. It should be adjacent to the refrigerator, in whi ch many of the mix-first supplies are stored. It should include wall requirements' And you certainly have the rigjty to be particular when iZlvS*' **** ** *** * Arrange with your physician for your child's pre camp checkup new. The doctor may find a minor fcaLth problem that can be corrected be fore .rowing time. An important factor in selecting a camp is to make certain that the age level fits your child. The an nounced age span covers a wide range of years, but in most camps the children are of roughly the same age. Find out whether your child wtU be assigned tova group in bis own age bracket. The swim periods are a highlight of the day it moat camps, and al most of al them have qualified wa ter safety instructors in charge of swimming, with trained Kfeguards as assistants. If your child cannot swim, the daily training at camp will be a good way U> learn, tyt don't take the waterfront arrange ments for granted- Make certain the pool or lake is sanitary and well regulated. If possible, talk with the camp director and one or two of the counselors. Let them tell you about the camp program, and then de cide for yourself whether the camp is right for your child. and base cabinets with a counter at least 36 inches long located next to opening side of refrigerator door. 2. Hie range center - far prepara tion and serving is most desirably located adjacent to the sink senter, near the mixing center and conven ient to the eating area. It should include a heat resistant counter at least on one side of range and both waH and base cabinets for storing seasonings, pots and pans and serv ing dishes. 3. The sink center serves many purposes from food preparation to after mepi cleanup. * is often lo cated between the range and mix ing centers. It should have counters at both sides with a dmjnboard and storage space near IfBjy putting up clean dishes. Tbe cardinal principle of work center arrangement is for efficiency of ncrotiou. Free Publication weeds in corn. Yet. at leapt an equal amount of money is lost to weeds through lower com yields, lower quality and higher harvesting coats. Agronomists at North Carolina State College say controlling weeds chemically "is effective and will save you money." To show farmers the best method of chemical weed control in corn, three of the agronomists have pre pared an easy-to-read folder con taining essential information on the subject. Free copies of the folder are a vdilable from local agricultural ex tension service offices or by writ ing directly to the Department of Agricultural Information, N. C. State College, Raleigh. .r Tbe N. C. Agricultural Extension Service at State College has its 1963 circular on peach spray infor mation ready for peach growers. The circular, which has been pre pared by an entomologist and a plant pathologist, gives control measures for ail types of peach dis eases. Free copies may be obtained from local agricultural extension service offices or by writing direc tly to the Departmen tof Agricultur al Information, N. C. State College, Raleigh. ;**?; - Fed cattle prices in 1963 are ex pected to run slightly above 1962 prices untjl midwinter and then foil below 1962 prices until early sum TACT DUPLIN-TIMES JOO PRIN TING DEPARTMENT. mer. SALARY THIS weeK!* Uncle Pete From Chiftlin Switch SAYS DEAR MISTER EftlTOR: I see by the papers where a fel ler in North Carolina sent the State tax office a check fer $3? said he didn't owe no tax but just "wanted to help out." They had to send the check back on account of they ain't (ot no legal machinery fer the State accepting cash gifts. The Federal Government long ago pulled the stopper out of that jug and ever onct in a while I see wher some feller has left his in surance money to Uncle Sam. Any body that wants to "taty Out" in these matters ought to be encourag ed, and I think ever State should have some sort of Mwoto accommo date such a generou*' soul. Maybe they ought to have two laws, one fer accepting his money and anoth er fer having his head examined. And I see where a perfesHor of chemistry in otwof >them big col leges is claiming that .thai worm fn the apple js a "betted source of vitamins" than the apple Maybe it's the worm a day in' the Jappjte that has been beeping' the doctor away all these years,-I tell you. Mister Editor, life is gitting compli cated. Personal, I may come down to the end of my dayxa little short on vitamins but I aim to keep on than apple suazf-. the worm. e < Well, I note where the post of fices all over tip notion has final had to deirtaroy around 580,000,000 of them old 3-cent post cards. The post office fo|cs knowed a ,? ... ' .t ? year ago the post cards was going up to 4 cent, and the law was pas sed back in September, 4 months afore it went into effect in January. But they still had hundreds of mil lions of them 3-centers on hand. I reckon this is what you would call our usual careful Guverament plan ning. I brung this item up at the coun try store Saturday night and Zeke Grubb said fer me not to git alar med over the matter, that this was due to our standard stockpiling per cedure. Zeke allowed as how the Social Security folks, fer instant, has probable got enough printed cards already in storage to take care of our population till 10 year beyond eternity. He figgers if they would change the form real sudden, it would take 16 battleships from now till next January hauling 'em out to sea and dumping 'em Ed Doolitle took aides with Zeke, claimed we couldn't git no place without food, standard stockpiling percedures. Farthermope, Ed point ed out, big firms like General Mo tors is careless that way, don't stockpile except fer the next year, but our Guvernment stockpiles fare the next generation. On account of the next generation is going to have to pay the bill, Ed, claims the Guv erament is following a sound {fis cal policy in these matters. Yours truly. Uncle Pete School And Your Child By Win Corey Education Department ' ? HpyalarlilMi State Teachers College Let's Enforce sr Abolish Schssl No-Smoking Lows It's a wonder our young people take grown-up* as seriously as they do. Adult society is monumentally two-faced. We say one thing and do another. Take smoking, for in stance. Most state laws clearly prohibit smoking by students and teachers on school grounds, n Sale of tobacco to youngsters un der IS is unlawful in most places. Coaches usually outlaw 'the weed' fpr their athletes. Health teachers teQ pupils year after year that heavy smoking may cause cancer, that tobacco contains nicotine ( a drug highly poisonous in its pure state), that inhaling de posits a tarry substance in lung tis sues, that excessive tobacco use slows appetite and digestion, that nicotine causes a temporary "lift" to the nerves which helps make tobacco habit-forming. Thus smoking has many draw backs. Yet members pf every seg ment of society smoke. Mothers and fathers puff in the home. Their kid dies even light up for them. Ash trays are standard equipment everywhere. Medical doctor* enjoy tobacco. &l do hifl-t'me athletes-at least they endorse their favorite brands for money. Even teachers, from first grade up, fog school lounges V?tb tobacco fumes'. 1 , The aroqcl seryices permit the giving of cigarettes to young GIs Colleges "often allow dJs*ibuUon of ... .. . >v5 par A W "?NTt A LOW_ DUPLIN-TIMES WANT ADS. aSS *171. tobacco samples to co-eds on cam pus. A growing number of parents per mit their high school-age youngsters to smoke at home. "I don't want him smoking behind my back, so I let him smoke in front of me," was the weak-kneed approach of one parent. Teenagers encounter little trouble in buying tobacco. If the law were enforced, said one principal, "we would either have truck-loads of cigarettes, or three-fourths of our students would be on suspension.' No wonder some educators are ready to toss in the towel. Why sh ould high school principals break their backs enforcing no-smoking laws when society itself mocks them? Right or wrong, some school offi cials have established, in defiance of their state statutes, escape hat ches for high-schoolers who have just got to have their "drangs'. An Alameda, Calif., vice prin cipal, Louis Grant Brandes, samp led 110 large high schools in Cali fornia and learned that 10 provide smoking areas where students can puff during noon hour as well as before and after school. The practice is probably much more common than this sampling indicates. The officials justified the smok ing areas by saying that California statues are unrealistic. "Students will smoke," most of the principals said, "denying the privilege will only lead to deceit and evasion. Some well controlled system is needed, one that will not gloriffy the smoker in the eyes of the non-smoker." Another permissive principal said that without designated smoking areas for both boys and girls hp would spend much of his time polic ing lavatories, boiler rooms, and other such places. Most principals responded to the Alameda survey by saying. "It js poor educational pipcedure to pro vide a smoking area on or near school grounds when this would be breaking the few. As k?g as fee law is on the beaks. I am going to do everything in ray power to w* port the law!" There's no question that this lat frornj.be rest of sOCiety.^Tto-sniOk H CIS W Changes li Y< nr OF INTEREST Social Security wpat TwvFSSk Sn from the Father" In the course of her yery search ing comment ahe said, "Everyone of us is aome 'word* made flesh. There is a single word by which each of us might be known. It may ku niiriltr Knn/ur or )t)p$pea&, but whatever it may be, we are it's incarnation- "The W.ord wade flab" Names were extremely important n.? n?ax,, Biwtiania om<4 ?hruil nl ha among mc anciem? ana snouta Dr among us. But therp is a sense in whfcfc wob of ns cbooges big ffifafrllSK for any of us, there&re, if we were to take a little time to search our own aoulb honestly and relentless ly to decide what name w? have in carnated. If all our character with it's vir tues and it's faults were to be sum med up in one word, aqd that word was given to us as a name, by what name would we actually be known? This Is The Law Pr Robert E. Lee (Far the N. C. Bar Association) LAND TRANSFERS Johf Jones agrees in writing on April 1, I960, to sell to Ben Brown the property on which his home is - located tor $15,000. Brows is to pay for the property on June 1, and Jones is to deliver to him on tins date possession and the deed to the property. Does Jones have the legal right to remove some of the rose bushes, shrubs, and flower bulbs prior to June 1? No. Rose bushes, shrubs, flower bulbs, trees, vines, and other pere nnnial plants pass with the title to the land. The law considers the land and all perennials attached to it as united. Is an oral agreement giving to Jones the right to remove rose bu shes, shrubs and flower bulbs vaj id? No. There cannot be an oral a greement to except from the provis ions of a deed perennials that are a part of the land to which they are attached. Contracts relating (o them must be in writing. There may, however, be an oral contract to except from the provi sions of a deed annual crops that are growling on, the land. AIUj ough a deed passes the ownership of annual crops attached to thp land, along wjth the title of the land, to the grantee in the absence of a reservation, an oral reserva tion of annual crops to the seller is valid. Let us suppose that Jones sells and conveys his farm to 'Brown, but at the time of the sale there is an oral agreement to the effect thft Jones may return in the fall to bar vest Ids cotton and some apples from certain designated trees. The oral agreement is valid and enfor ceable in reference to the cotton but not the apples. Cotton is a pro duct of an annual plant, whereas npples are the product of a peren nial. Allen conveys his farm by deed to Butler. The deed is properly reg istered in the courthouse. At the time of the conveyance Collins is in possession of the farm by virtue of an oral lease that he had made with Allen for a period of three years. The oral lease has two more years io run. May Butler require Collins to vote the premises? No. The tenant has merely acqu ired a new landlord. The lease is not terminated and the tenant is not deprived of any of his rights under the oral lease. Lea ses for not more than three years from the making thereof are valid though oral. Actual possession by the tenant is treated as the equivalent of notice to the purchaser and as a substitute for registration where the lease is for not more than three years. ?- 'j e Fon THE FINEST IN JO* PHIN TINO CONTACT THE DUPLIN - TIMRS. ak*w*=s? CTS Jour & aro protw^ a?tot \m?i b*0"* ?" rE^5^y' ?** fcfSftSU^-i-4^ MranTh^ rights y?i a? have certain obligatione under the Social Security Act as an e ployer. The most impdrtanUif the" obligatiors is to *8?rt ft* fW* ?StfB3B5V 4^9?GS?S tfiuaggg be reported. You should file these rL rU with the Internal Reoeuue SS? at the end of an employer there are lour things -?ri" C*lll Keep en *ecurateh T^toyee the amount you pay ^ during the year and the number o days he works for you. Be sure^ Include only the cash wages you pay-not wages m kind, sucn so. get an ??|%W[I tggjSSS number from your Office by filH* ?J^^OfT ab\e at any Internal Revenue wi Report oncp a y??r ft t?I^y ?al Revenue the wages paid tea Sw&iSKW* SSSBgSt and send it with your report to in 'X 5r5^?n *?? cStact your*Social SecurHy PJ^t Office at 311 East Walnut Street in ?)?e. m to 8:00 p. m.. and the teiepm? SLTSiShx-. Dm?! o< fice was opened lh January l?^ *64? 866 per month, or t7,768^t pe yen to social security ?g?? S^VlxS fesj&SMW ?^s?iS!5?>?-wjs sHwSrSK UP. PP4 ^ ttw tocpl THE WAYSIDE PULPIT sv-* ? D. E. Earnhardt The fig tree and the vine yield their strength. Joel 2:22 Snakes swallow little bunnies hawks catch sparrows, cats eat mockingbirds and preachers eat lit tle chicken. I determined to get out of this bad company and eat only vegetables, but 1 learned that every vegetable leaf is loaded with unseen microbes and every glass of water is teeming with Ufe. So I saw the mineral kingdom yielding its life up to the vegetable kingdom and the vegetable yield ing up to the animal, with no apple tree keeping back a single apple for itself. The caterpillar yields its life to become a butterfly. It la only the unregenerate man who breaks the divine order and lives for himself. This is the crime of the ages and the disgrace of tne human family. Crime graves come from this gang and, basically, the only cure is re generation .".J.1 ? 1 . ? . -rr ^ISity^or^peiIJTjSLJy*! <' 1962 In temporary quarter*. Arte A 1962, the office moved to penfian.:. ent quarter? at Jit Kaet Walnut Street, Goldsboro, North CaroHj*. This office aervea Wayne, Lenoir Duplin, and Greene countiea. ^5*435^^^ I TiBa Forgiven uimitrnr s, no 1 ?l Htf ? ? " bum. ff ?**<*> Featae ?i H, MM. t<n?wi ?w4li|i P??lm 1ft. ! WHY Is It that when ? sermon or i Sundiy ichool Icuan ii to b? op ihfjytw *3fHv* oess. or cowmN With it. the Bibl^ passage selected is nearly altvwrf town the fMtwMa w?tt and opt Mm New? T* ? Pialms, has the moving account of God'?forg|v?oa??. ?xpert^fatifba ing fofcW that Dr. Feremaa S 1 donthe?re#iKlu*r(^^^^^ - t , i l J . Mi ? ? HB ^ ti*u I misunderstood in many maya. l>t ? us glance Si fwo ol ttem.^k m * Srthii?<W(Srii'bV purt'SdSw. Whenthe el?t?lc power gwSffi, ? hands will put your hd& onjM- I I slid* down, th.j' allugidve* -flUst S^ie^ppk IkJtS forgiveness is s sort of reWSfwli * I I rargs srssg I I til P**?y food man?atovfSfl ? average, in fact. Such fooflW ? ? deserves some recognition. ,%T I SiS'SKfTOlBt I To be forgiven is a gift of God. ? "I flladhlfi" I ? Th* poet who wet* Psalm hi ? I to himself that he ha'd not tinned ? at all,could be port# ? I rwHtetSw I ? God. Nothing can be mone iatpMl I ? aible than to pretend it nevtrhah- i I pened, Nobody can go off and stmt ? a dooe behind blm and fapct S3 | ? ? God will get no nearer thSn (US ? wtth t^inSrt^udiBlst that to- ? tuafly a serious menace taheaftfe. I Psalm 32:3 and 4 describe a MM ? I 55: I ^Mto^the cia^ and^this po*t I Tbt truth ig, God doff ttifith <*w y *.jig'jyj fJftte oil bosh ^jBBMMp^HikyH u, ^^Tfufjlv u^.- a* nkT2?^' ? ^jli rt ?T ? (Batui #l ??tlfa?# ??yrHtlwi W I I SillilS Mvldtt S X#"cbfUS #'* . ? pillar Co. 293 - 7166 j m Warsaw. N. C. One Mile Ptm CrsimnaJi WU| Do Complete Job Fhrtvrca And Labor Or Just Labor, i STATE LICENSED CONTEACrOA I II . ,<? ? Ebuy save iJL OAS STATION LO?p*D NKXt TO DCTLOl KOIOU * f| WUSAW, R. C. nlar?27c Per Gallon Hi-Test?30c M l/IS Octane in Octane la Gaa Am Kemacne ? "Never Giver Oaf AH Branch Of Oil ?. MINSREW ? OWNERS ? MATT IE MINSHEW : !?I?:?I I THE DUPLIN TIMES Published each C? c?W?4j S??t of Editorial, business office mi yrMif fkat, KenanjrvUle, N. C. RUTH P. GRADY OWNER and PUBLISHER Bp ROTH ?. GEARY, EDITOR Entered At The Foot Office, Keoansville, N. C. : < Eg* as second class matter K TELEPHONE?^nansyjlle, Dty ?9 *2171-1^ & J*14* SUBSCRIPTIONRA^fS;,^# per yepj pigs l|f N. (C. Safe* TW p> DlipMn S Lenoir, Jones, Onslow, Pender, Sampson, New Hanover and Wayne coun I ties; $4.5# per year pins 14c N. C. Sales Tax outside this area in North Caro I Una and $5.5# pnr^r plus 17c N. C. Sales Tax elsewhare. I -f, - ' - *\ i mliniili 5nnnKS itemorrnoios Without Surgery KtlAfl Dlltt vlip RIB RCRCVcS ralll For tfco int thM sciairta has found ? new healing substance withrtha as Sxe^a JJ!* tlon (shrinkage) took pUeo. Moot amasing ofHtll - results woro so thor ough At sufferers mada aatuhleblng ?ta toman to lika "Piles hare cJasOdto be a problem!" Tha secret is a now ijgfog substance (Bio Dyn.?)-dis- I eoTary of a woHd-famous rOOsarch fnstitute. This substanca is aev arah abla l? S?frpoaitory or osatmeat f*m callod Preparation H*. At all drug . iJi? ' ? \ I Electric Bottling Co; I Ln Wilmington, fif C. 1 'ii -.".i ? Triii r V ji n ,.ii b in mil
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1963, edition 1
8
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