Beulavi lie %ociel v
HMrs. Zannie Mae Cottle
I PERSONALS
tag this week in Rich
. Virginia visiting her
rea Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
i. Ruth Harris of Green
visited Mrs. Mina B. Ken
Tuesday night,
and Mrs. Jimmy Wit
and children Hank and
7 of Jacksonville were
(r guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Whaley Monday night.
% atrs. Zannie Mae Cottle and
Mrs. Lewis George Whaley
made a business trip to Kin
ston Tuesday.
Mr Hermon Gore and Mr. H.
J. Brown attended a Civil De
fense Meeting in Wilmington
Wednseday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hay
wood Cottle of Richmond, Vir
ginia spent the weekend vis
iting Mrs. Zannie Mae Cottle
and Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Dunn
of Albertson.
Mr. and Mrs. June Thomas
and sons Jimmy and George
Byron spent last week end in
Norfolk. Virginia visiting Mr.
and Mrs. B. J. Blackburn and
children.
Mrs. Brenda Nelson of More
head City spent a few days
last week with her grandmoth
er Mrs. Mamie K. Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Fussell
and children Wanda and Kent
of Wilmington. Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Cottle and Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Edwards
and children Elaine and Kay
were dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Mercer Sunday.
Friends of Judy Edwards
are glad to know that she has
returned to her home after
having been a patient in Le
noir Memorial Hospital, Kin
ston.
Friends of Mrs. Silas Whaley
are sorry to know that she is
a patient in Lenoir Memorial
Hospital. Kinston.
EAST DUPLIN STUDENTS
ENJOY ICE CAPADES
The Spanish and Algebra
classes of East Duplin High
School attended the Ice Capa
des in Raleigh on Thursday.
The following wot. Dempeey
Alphin. Helen Alphin. Annette
Andrew*. Sherry Albertaon,
Donald Atkinaon. William An
drewa, Joey Brinklay. Gary
Butler, Breoda Blinard, Bach
el Brown, Paye Ball. lCathy
Batta, Phill Brown, Jackie
Brown. JewiU D. Boetic, Mar
garet Brown, Barbara Brown,
Patricia Brown. Iria Brown.
Laurie Brinkley. Donna Calla
han. Regina Chamber*. Earl
Cavenaugh, Gerakhne Duff,
Linda Daughtry. Glenda Dad.
Polly Evan*. Gall Edward*.
Donnie Edward*. Annette
Fountain, Edward Footer.
Sammy Forres. Connie Cam
brel, Richard Gore, Jerry
Grady, Coy Guy, Judy Gore,
Donald Gurganu*, Haywood
Houston, Mary Beth Hunter,
Hilda Houston.
Sherry Hansiey, Emily Her
ring, Shelton Hardy, Elton Hat
cher. Jimmy Herring, Ale*
Houston. Yvonne James, Con
nie J. Jackson, Betty Lou Jen
kins, Betty Lou Jones, Diane
Jackson, Joyce Jenkins, Don
ald Kennedy. Carl Kornegay,
Eugene Kornegay, Andy
Keathley, Lewis Keathley, Ron
nie Kennedy, Sharon Kennedy,
Vicky Kennedy, Donald Ken
nedy, Pat Lanier, Harold La
nier, Craig Lanier, Wanda
Mercer, Harry Miller, Kay Mil
ler, Linda Mobley, Donald
Mercer, Frank Norris, Henry
Noble, Ann Pruit, Wanda Pot
ter, David Quinn, Judy Ray
nor,
Silvia Mercer, Thomoaene
Sanderson, Butch Smith, John
Simmons, Linda Sutton, Don
nelle Stroud, Nora Sumner.
Julia Sutton. Dianne Souther
land, Rod Kennedy, Jerry San
derson, Keith Turner, Tom
Thigpen, Charles Turner, Loo
nie Thigpen. Estalleta Wil
liams. Larry Westbrook, Abel
ton Williams, Glenda Williams.
Jerry Williams, Wilda Worley.
Chape rones for the trip were.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stewart,
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Brown,
Miss Linda Cherry and Mrs.
Anna B. Guy.
PRESBYTERIAN CIRCLES
MET LAST WEEK
The women of the Beulaville
Presbyterian Church Circles
no 1 met with Mrs. Pheobe
Pate. Mrs. Grace Clark had
charge of the Bible study.
After the meeting the hostess
served cookies, ice cream and
Coco Cola to the following:
Mrs. Scott Smith. Mrs. Em
mett Clark. Mrs. Peannie Bli
zzard. Mrs. Toy Jones
Circle No. 2 met with Mrs.
Russell Bostic. Mrs. Pheobe
Pate had charge of the Bible
study. There were 8 members
Mi*. Bottle nnwl refresh
Circle No J met with Mrs.
Gardner Edward* Mrs. Ed
ward shad charge of the Bible
study. There were seven mem
bers present. After the meet
ing Mrs. Edwards served re
freshments of pound cake,
nuts, potato chips and coffee.
TO MY MANY FRIENDS
Many thanks to each of you
for the prayers, flowers gifts
and cards sent to me while I
was a patient in Lenoir Me
morial Hospital.
I am home now improving
slowtv. I can walk a few steps
with my brace but without it
I'm helpless. Hope to be much
improved soon. Thanks again
to each of you.
Mrs .Walter Rhodes
Beulavilie, N. ?.
HEALTH CAREER'S
CLUB MEET8
The East Duplin Health
Career's club met at the sch
ool on Wednesday. April I, The
main item of business was the
pre sentation and adoption of
the constitution.
The club with the co-opera
tion of the Home Economics
girls, is getting cobbler aprons
made to be served by the
candy stripers at the Duplin
General Hospital.
The business meeting was
presided over by tre president,
Hilda Mobley.
ATTEND HEALTH PAIR
Several members of the East
Duplin Health Career's Club at
tended the Health Pair in Dur
ham on Thursday, April I,. The
Health Pair, which was the
first to be held in North Caro
lina was at Duke Indoor Stad
ium. While there, the group
toured more than 100 displays
and exhibits which covered all
phases of health, medicine,
and medical research. Each
display and exhibit was man
ned by a professionaly quali
fied person.
The group enjoyed a tour o(
Duke campus before attending
the Health Pair.
Club members attending
were Gloria Albertson, Hida
Mob ley. Betty Rose Rouse.
Marilyn Denny, Bobbye Anne
Miller, and Ricky Brown. Ac
companying the group were
Miss Grace Kennedy. Mary
Prances Harper and Miss
Mary Anna Grady, class spon
sor .
Rebecca Raynor
Reporter
riiere is an old age of the
heart, and a youth that never
grows old.
^ Mary Baker Eddy
fftm'., be thou the sunflower,
not only open to receive God's
blessing, hut constant in look
ing to Him.
Jean Paul Richter
National Geographic Create. Mhaenm Of Sci?ee,
ted Explorer* Hall as
the showcase of the National
Geographic Society's aaw
The museum - a window on
the world and a look ts the
future - spreads over the high
ceOinged first floor of the 10
story. white-marble building
at 17tth and M Street N. W. in
Washington, D. C. It was open
ed to the public on weekdays
January 29, 1964.
Striking new life-size displays
and historic mementoes in
clude a brooding stone head
from a lost American civilisa
tion, a cosmic-ray spark cham
ber, Robert E. Peary's sledge,
and a stratosphere balloon gon
dola.
The hall is designed to take
visitors to the ends of earth,
the edge of space, and the
buried past with National Geo
graphic expeditions. Since its
founding in 1888, the National
Geographic Society has suppor
ted more than 300 explorations
and research projects.
Pel-farming Glebe
The world's largest unmoun
ted globe is the centerpiece of
the Hall. Cradled on eight rub
ber wheels or rotating on a
spindle, the globe spins over a
black-granite reflecting pool.
The sphere weighs about a
thousand pounds; it measures
U feet from Pole to Pole and
34 feet around the Equator.
The globe normally rotates
on a north-to-south pole spin
dle tilted at an angle of 23' 27',
the same as the earth's plane.
For special effects, the spindle
can be lowered by remote con
trol. An operator at the con
sole can then manipulate the
globe in the cradle formed by
the wheels, rotating it is any
direction.
Three maps on 10-toy-15-foot
panels greet visitors. The maps
alternately turn into view as
a recorded narration describes
features. One depicts the wor
ld as shown in 1651, another is
a relief map of the world to
day. and the third is a color
ful world map with blinking
lights locating National Geo
graphic expenditions.
Eighty of National Georgra
phic's famous color photo
graphs are mounted on a slow
ly revolving "kaleidoscope."
The divec juxtaposes striking
contrasts and similarities: a
beehive and an apartment
building, a volcano and an ice
cave, a honey ant and a brew
ery, a galaxy and an atom.
A diorama depicts Dr. Louis
S. B. Leakey, the fairifed an
thropologist. working in Oldu
vai Gorge, Tanganyika, where
he found the skull of Zinjan
thropus, an early form of near
man who lived 1,750,000 years
I
put tecial contours. Soil for
the exhibit came from Oldu
vai.
K1VA DEPICTED
A full-slxed modal of a
smoke-stained klva evokes the
ritual life of the Inidans of
WetheriU Maoa, Colorado. They.
vanished about A. D. 1?0 after
living there some 000 years
The Pueblo Idva was an un
derground ceremonial cham
ber restricted to male tribes
men. One Itfesiae figure in the
display weaves a basket while
a boy watches. Outside the
klva the skeleton of a cliff
dweller lies on a bed of clay.
A cast of a giant stone head
from Mexico's ancient Olmec
culture peers from a Jungle
setting in a corner of Explor
ers Hall. The original carving
was uncovered in Tabasco.
Mexico, by a National Geogra
phic Society-Smithsonian Insti
tution expedition in 1930.
The Olmec head can easily
be seen through large windows
from the promenade outside
the new National Geographic
building. Several other exhibits
are designed and lighted for
viewing from the outside when
the museum is closed.
In the polar section of the
hall is a sun compass invent
ed for Richard E. Byrd by
Albert Bumstead, the late
Chief Cartographer of the Na
tional Geographic Society.
Byrd said he could never have
made man's first flight over
the South Pole without the J
compass.
A model of Captain Jacques
Yves Cousteau's ingenious
Diving Saucer highlights
an exhibit describing the work
of the undersea pioneer. IBs
explorations have been suppor
ted by the Society for more
than a decade.
A series of huge illuminated
panels shows to great advant
age many of the striking photo
graphs that have appeared in
National Geographic over the
past 75 years.
Two fine antique globes,
made in 1831 by America's
first globe maker, James Wil
son, mark the entrance to a
display on map making in the
south part of the hall.
Great Geographic Adventures
In the south section also are
mementoes of two of the Na
tional Geographies greatest
adventures; the successful 19
<3 assault on Mount Everest
and the record-breaking 1935
stratospher flight.
The Everest exhibit includes
clothing and tents of the clim
bers, spectacular summit seen
gg BT IDS
? a ^ ?iA|n*? n.. . M
SS^-STS'L^rz
At root is ? corner of the
hall is the balloon gondola that
carried Army Air Corpo Cai>
taino A. W. Steven* and O. A.
Tndoraon ton, Sto feet on
Novanfcer 11, ins - a record
tor manned flight that atood
tor SI year*.
A section on space explora
tion shows, among other exhi
bits, an orrery, or working
nwiij of the solar system.
Visitors depart from Explor
ers Hall beneath giant color
translucencies of galaxiee and
nebulae that give them an il
lusion of being in space
FRIENDSHIP
Mews
PERSONALS
Mrs Prank Langston and
Mrs. Bill Grady and children
visited Mrs. Pete Henderson
and Mrs. Ida Wagstaff at Wal
lace on Thursday.
Mrs. Annie Brock of War
saw and Miss Jeanette Brock
of Greenville. N. C. visited,
Mr. and Mrs. Odeil Brock and
children on Saturday night.
Visting on Sunday were Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Wallace, Angela
and Danny of Albertson.
Friends of Mrs. Emma Pot
ter are sorry she is still a pat
ient in Duke hospital in Dur
ham.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Whaley
and children of Kenansville
visited Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Whaley on Sunday.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Geor
ge Pridgen and Mack on Sun
day were Mr. and Mrs. John
Royal, Carson and Kathy and
Mrs. Gray Ezzell and 4 chil
dren of Clinton. Shirly and
Larry Matthews of Turkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McNeU of
Faison and Barbara McNeil of
Warsaw.
Mrs. Ben Swinson is staying
in Durham with Miss Margaret
Swinson to be near her mother
Mrs. Emma Potter who is a
patient in Duke hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenwood San
derson visited A-C and Mrs.
Sam Kornegay and boys of
Washington, D. C. over the
weekend. While in Washington
they saw the cherry trees in
bloom. White House, the Capi
tol, Lincoln Memorial, Mu
seum of Arts and the Space
Caspule in which John Glenn
was in. Mr. and Mrs. Sander
?1
had to have.
Mrs Bill Grady was in Kin
stoo on Saturday night.
Mrs Nellie Pridgen visited
John Cam Pridgen in Duke
Hospital in Durham Thursday,
and spent Sunday in Calypso
with relatives.
Miss Dianna Outlaw spent
Friday and Saturday in Ral
eigh with the Beta Club.
A1C and Mrs. Louie Jones,
Beti) and Timothy of Goldsboro
spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Jones and boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Cart Ginn spent
Sunday at Topsail.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Veach,
W xii Md M
more attended church at Gos
ban church on Sunday night.
???? ii i7
ATTENTION
Com tractors and Bum
We Are Specialist la
Electric Heat Insula*
tion Direct From Fac
tory To You
CaO For
Free Estimate
Ingram Brat.
Oleander Ave.
Wilmington, N. C.
I
TOBACCO GROWERS;
D-D* Soil Fumigant has boosted
yields for 15 profitable years
?and it's still the No. 1 fumigant in 1964!
Com* in or call
r - N
Daly-Herring Co.
^ Kinston, N. C. s
Phone 527-0195
Ahoskie, N C. 1,1 Non, S. C.
Phone 332-3241 Pli one 774-7331
IS Sail K PV ivi
jgOrimilil
te^lLuM
Sfeg. SIDING and
Contompora
CHAIN UNK FH>jg |
W ilmin ffton
MR. FARMER... *r
MANY OUTSTANDING TOBACCO GROWERS SAY LIQUA
VITA (10-20-10) IS "THEIR PREFERENCE BECAUSE IT PRO
DUCES FINER QUALITY AND MUCH HIGHER THAN AVER
AGE YIELDS!"
With vegetable and tobacco growers, a quicker start and earlier maturity is the key to
a profitable crop. For all users of Liquid Fertilizer and Starter Solution, LIQUA-VITA
(10-20-10 > is specifically designed and created to give your crops the quickest start pos
sible and offers the very best in liquid feeding. Every possible advantage in scientific
blending, coupled with quality materials and trace elements, goes into every gallon of
UQUA-VITA.
Experienced tobacco growers who use the latest in modern farming techniques are the
ones who are proclaiming LIQUA-VITA the Starter Plant Food of "Their Preference Be
cause It Out-performs All Others!"
Many leading tobacco growers have used UQUA-VITA consistently for 10 years or more
because they are quality minded and know that they obtain much higher than average
yields by using it. "Top Quality" goes hand-in-hand with extra and impressive yields per
acre. If you have not used LIQUA-VITA, now is the time to give it a trial. Use it in your
transplanter for higher yields and finer quality tobacco. It has been tried, tested and
proven the leading Liquid Fertilizer on the market today.
UQUA-VITA Is Widely Imitated, But Thus Far It Has Not Been Duplicated! Do Not Be
Misled With Cheap Substitutes! Insist On the Product Bearing The Genuine "LIQUA
VITA" Label.
LIQUA-VITA Is A Product of The American Liquid Fertilizer Company, Marietta, Ohio,
and the result of more than a quarter century of research and testing in the liquid fer
tilizer field.
FOR A SUPPLY OF "LIQUA-VITA," AND OTHER INFORMA
TION, CONTACT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING DEALERS:
WALLACE, N. C.
Potter Oil Company
WARSAW, N. C.
Farmers Hardware A
Mdse. Co.
DupHn Trading Company
MOUNT OLIVE, N. C.
C. Ed Herring Supply
Andrew* A Knowles
Produce Co
SEVEN SPRINGS. N. C.
D. M. Price
LaGRANGE, N C .
Caah Supply Stare
CHINQUAPIN. N. C.
M. L. Later A Saw Store
TURKEY. N. C.
Tom Hudson Store
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
H Weil A Brothers
Seegars Hdwe A Supply Co.
KENANSVILLE. N. C.
C. E. Quinn Company
PAISON, N. C.
A. D. Clifton
SMITHFIEU), N. C.
Jack's Farm Supply
Joe Padgett's Seed Store
Roberto A Wellons
ROSEBQRO, N. C.
Howard ft Herring
CLINTON, N. C.
Farmer* Seed k
Fertiliser Co.
McLean Supply Company
John T. Best Gen. Merchandise
L. F. Thornton
NEWTON GROVE, N. C.
D. P. Herring ft Sons
SALEMBURG, N. C.
Royal ft Warren Hardware
H. Brewer Honeycutt
FOUR OAKS. N C.
J. E. Creech
Mr. Farmer... For Your
Tobacco TRANSPLANTER
*
ma *4a
........
.. ?.' ??. .. ,
_ v. '.- - .,,,. . .
WITH FERTILIZER EQUIPMENT
Eliminate fertilizer injury with the
popular Powell "42" fertiliser-trans*
planting equipment. Precision-spaced
plants are secured with uniform water
output,. PLUS accurate fertiliser
placement This will assure a faster
start for plants, uniform growth, and
higher yields.
Here's how it works: Fertilizer bands are placed 4" each side of the row of plants and 2" to 5" in depth.
The fertilizer is covered with 2 covering blades or disks and the position of the bands is not disturbed.
Plants cannot be placed in the fertilizer. The fertilizer hopper mounts directly on the transplanter.
Useable on flat or previously bedded land.
"42" AF
One row, lift type, for 3 point hitch tractors.
Barrel mounted on tractor. Ideal for lighter
weight tractors.
"42" BF
One row lift type for 3 point hitch tract
with barrel mounted on transplanter. ]
larger tractors only.
"42" CF V
For use with all tractors. One row pull type
with hand lilt.
NEEDS SEE THE...
"42" era
Two-row, pull type. For row widths from
36" to 60". Equipped with hand lift. For
any two row tractor.
T. A. Turner & Co, Inc.
"Headquarters For Farm 80001168"
Pink Hill, N. C.