Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / May 2, 1968, edition 1 / Page 4
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
1. To vote for a candidate on the ballot make a cross SI mark in the square at the left of his name. 2. If you tear or deface or wrongly mark this bal lot, return it to the registrar and get another. FOR GOVERNOR (Vote for Om) Q J. MELVILLE BROUGHTON, JR. Q REGINALD A. HAWKINS Q ROBERT W. (BOB) SCOTT FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR (Vote tor Oae) Q MRS. JAMES M. HARPER, JR. Q FRANK M. MATLOCK ? H. PAT TAYLOR, JR. FOR STATE TREASURER (Vote for Oae) ? SNEED HIGH ? EDWIN GILL FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL (Vote for Oae) ? ROBERT MORGAN ? THOMAS WADE BRUTON FOR COMMISSIONER OF LABOR (Vote for Oae) ? JOHN B. WARDELL, JR. ? FRANK CRANE FOR COMMISSIONER OF INSURANCE (Vote for One) Q JOHN B. WHITHY Q EDWIN S. LANIER ? GEORGE A. BELK Q FRED BENTON FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION (Vote for One) ? EVERETTE MILLER ? CRAIG PHILLIPS ? WILLIAM D. HARRILL Q RAYMOND A. STONE ? WENDELL W. SMILEY FOR JUjp?E OF COURT OF APPEALS (Vote for Om) ? KIDD BREWER ? RAYMOND B. MALLARD FOR JUDGE OF COURT OF APPEALS (Vote for One) ? WALTER C. HOLTON ? NAOMI E. MORRIS Primary election May 4, 1068. Chairman State Board of Elections. **?* Saqqara, site of Egypt's first pyramid, attracted tne afflicted from as far away as Greece and Rome. The sick visited a shrine in the ancient city seek ing miraculous cures much as they do today at Lourdes, France, National Geographic says. ???? Deep within the sun 564 million tons of hydrogen are converted to 560 million tons of helium each second. Nation al Geographic says. The re maining four million tons ra diate away as heat and light. Ipt ! * MEMBER OF CONGRESS '"ft; (THIltD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT) ~" INSTRUCTIONS 1. To vote for a candidate on the ballot make a cross E) mark in the square at the left of his name. 2. If you tear or deface or wrongly mark this bal lot, return it to the registrar and get another. FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR (Vote tor Om) ? CHARLES A. PRATT ? FRED ?. BRUMMITT Q SAM J. ERVIN, JR. ? JOHN T. GATHINGS, SR. FOR MEMBER OF CONGRESS Third Congressional District (Vote for Om) Q S. A. CHALK, JR. Q DON HOWELL ? DAVID N. HENDERSON Sample Republican Primary Ballot for STATE OFFICERS AND UNITED STATES SENATOR INSTRUCTIONS 1. To vote for a candidate on the ballot make a cross 0 mark in the square at the left of his name. 2. If you tear or deface or wrongly mark this bal lot, return it to the registrar and get another. FOR GOVERNOR (Vote for One) Q JAMES C. (JIM) GARDNER ? JOHN L. (JACK) STICKLEY FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR <v**e ,or OBe> Q DON H. GARREN ? TROSPER NOLAND COMBS FOR COMMISSIONER OF INSURANCE (Vote for One) ? EVERETT L PETERSON Q CARL W. RICE FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR (Vote for One) ? EDWIN W. (ED) TENNEY, JR. ? J. L. (LARRY) ZIMMERMAN ^ ? ROBERT VANCE SOMERS J . Primary election May 4, 1908. Chairman State Board of Election.. Overweight or obesity is a disease of the American civil ization Just as malaria is a problem in Asia, says the North Carolina Heart Association. 'A B 1 ft W , INSTRUCTIONS 1. To vote for a candidate on the ballot make a crow g| marie In the square at the left of hit name. 2. If you tear or deface or wrongly mark this ballot, return It to the registrar and get another. For North Carolina State Senate 10th Senatorial District Seat No. 1 (Vote for One) ? Stewart B. Warren ? LeRoy G. Simmons For District Court Judges District No. 4 (Vote for Four) ? Carl V. Venters Q Paul M. Crumpler ? Russell J. Lanier ? Harvey Boney ? Walter P. Henderson ? F. Cooper Hamilton ? Robert L. West For Register of Deeds (Vote for One) ? Mrs. Ruth Byrd Wells ? David T. Grigs, Jr. ? Mrs. Christine Whaley Williams Primary Election, May 4,1908. Chairman of Duplin County Board of Elections. ^?r. ????HB ?arl Hatcher was elected Mayor of Kenansvllle. Rufus Freeman was named Cashier of the Southern Bank and Trust Company of Warsaw. Garden Clubs of Warsaw Won the Sears 1500.00 Civic Improvement Award. Steve Cook was badly burn ed when the home of Mrs. A. J. Newkirk sustained heavyflre damage in Warsaw. FIVE YEARS AGO Beverly Grady and Raw Ro bert, Jr., were named ?enlor 4-H Health King and Queen. Linda Dianne Smith and Keith Westbrook were named Junior 4-H King and Queen. Duplin County Industrial and Agricultural Council was or ganized. Duplin County Commission ers proclaimed May as Better Health Month in Duplin. Benjamin S. Turner, of Pink Hill, was accepted to an end the College of Veterinary Medicine at Stillwater. Oklahoma. TEH YEARS AGO Mrs. Dorothy Pridgen Re velle died suddenly at her home in Warsaw. The Senior Class of B. F. Grady presented a three act play "Take Your Medicine". County Wide Dress Revue held by the Home Demonstra tion Club Women and 4-H Club girls. TWENTY YEARS AGO *' "The Springtime Revue" was presented by Mrs. Aud rey Alphln Butler's Rhythm class. Sam Kebra Rhodes, age IS, died of a heart attack suddenly at his home near Beulavllle. Rev. J. G. Morrison, L. F. Weeks, M. F. Allen, and George Penney flew to Raleigh to attend a Soil Conservation meeting. I Chittlin Switch | DEAR MISTER EDITOR: Bug Hookum announced at the session at the country (ton Saturday night he had give pow erful thought to tha world money situation and had now come up with the anewer. What we got to do, Bug allow ed, la fergit all this talk about cheap dollars and high price of gold and come up with a new money. He said he had figgered the thing up one aide and down the other and had decided to bacco la what we ought to use Bug waa feeling that people everwhere waa determined to epend their good money fer aomepun to smoke, but they wont be so quick to smoke their good money. They was a heap of side bene fits to this plan, Bug explained. First off, it would help the health case agin smoking. Wouldnt nobody argue with the claim that if a feller smokes his money he cant buy food and if he aint got nothing to eat he's going to git unhealthy fast. Farthermore, said Bug, using tobacco fer money would be a welcome relief fer the Government and the tobacco farmer. The Government tries to work both sides of the road by telling folks smoking is kill ing 'em and by doing research on how the farmer can grow more tobacco to the acre. The way things was now, Bug said, it looks like more people was making money by buying and selling money than by work in* fer wages. What people ta ^nd Urt ,||, A, -..n*. .'"1 uig mem silver certificates tor bl* profit, off the Government Bug was of the opinion we rzz&zzjsjz man DeOall of France, that ain't never paid no (UN dues and sttn owes as 18.8 billion fer World War I loans, $300 million from World War II, not to mention all them American lives we give to save their neck from the Germans In both wars Ed Doolittle was complete agreed with Bog, and it's un usual fer Ed to be fun agreed with anybody but the Lord and Abe Lincoln. Ed said cheap money was a big reason the "Great" is gone out of Great Britain and the reason "Great" Is fast going out of the Great Society. Ed was the opinion our Government was using that old remedy that If a little money medicine was good a whole lot j would be better. We got to stop and flgger, Ed said, that when we water down the medicine to make it go farther we don't do nothing but make it weaker Personal, Mister Editor, I can't git too interested in world money affairs, considering bow little money I was holding. I think the whole thing is up to Congress and I long been con vinced the only answer to Con gress is prayer. Yours truly Uncle Pete the Ministers Desk di: u. t. rariterson; uarr boro, N. C. Several years ago an eld erly man lived In a small town In Arizona who was known as Cactus Pete. He passed his time away by telling his ex periences to tourists. The more he told his stories the less resemblance they bore to the facts. This Is a characteris tic. sometimes, of old age. "Why, last week." he said or one occasion, '*1 was tired, and I went to sleas> under a mes qulte bush. When 1 woke up an hour later I felt a pressure on my chest. When I opened my eyes I discovered the reason for the pressure? arattlesnake >? was sitting there, colled and ready for business. 1 knew If I moved even one muscle I was a goner as sure as shoot ing." "What did you do then?" a tourist chlmea In, obviously excited by the story. "Well, seeing as how there was noth ing I could do. I closed my eyes and Vent back to sleep." old Pete answered. Now, you know, and I know i that the old man had really told a big one this time. He had outdone himself. We know that literally no one could go back to sleep In the face of such dan ger. No one, but no one. could be that tranquil (or stupid) In the face of danger. Or could they? Isn't that exactly what often happens in our lives? And Isn't that what has happened to an appreciable degree In our chur ches' Dr. Dordthee Soelle, a theologian, said of the church | In a speech given in 1965: ' The I church no longer asks if a per I son is a Christian, but If he I Is churchy. It offers a kind I of fellowship that no longer ln I terests most people. It looks with suspicion at the world. It Is introverted, washing its own car every Sunday morning." If Dr. Soelle Is right, and I think he is, this is a serious In dictment of the church. Could I the story of Cactus Pete be true? Has the church gone to sleep In the face of danger? Does it wash only its own car? I read recently the story of a blind man, aided by his seeing eye dog, who went Into a large bank to apply for a | loan. The loan officer got the necessary information, and, af ter some deliberation, Informed I the blind man that the loan could I not be made. The blind man's I dog, angered at this rebuff of I his master, proceeded to bite I the loan officer. He then cor I nered one of the bank's cus tomers standing nearby and bit I him. The, loan officer, ob I vlously shaken by the whole I affair, said, "I can understand I why your dog bit me, for I re I fused to make you the loan. I But why did he bite a cus I tomer?" Whereupon, the blind I man said, "Oh. he Just bit the I customer to get the bad taste I out of his mouth after Mtlng I you." Every true believer in God I Is, in s very real sense, a loan I officer on the bank of^Iyavenu I ihirtf In those assets per ncujjiui, aa 11 is ui mi con stituted and presented, leaves a bad taste in the mouths of others. No wonder the world is in the mood to bite .back. Like Cactus Pete we face the world full of danger. But where there is danger there is also opportunity. We can ill afford to go back to sleep. All men of strong faith and good will must do more than salute God with our hands--we must salute Him also with our hearts and minds, and also with our eVeryday actions. If you are not currently involved In this kind of effort apply at the church of your choice. No spiritualized versions of Rip , Van Winkle needed. We have jd enough In stock already! With Our Boys DAVID MANLEY CAMP LEJEUNE - March 28 I - Marine Privace David Manley, son of Mrs. George H. Lee of Route 1, Magnolia, completed two weeks of training under si- I mul ated combat conditions in the fundamentals of day aid J night paroling, employment of infantry weapons, survival me thods and assault tactics a this I Marine Corps base. This individual comba train ing is given every Marine after his graduation from recruit I training. Taught by comba ex perienced non-commissioned officers of the infantry train ing regiment here, it prepares the young Leatherneck to I become part of the Maine air ground comba team. While in the field he was I taught how to use hand gre- I nades, a compass and the pin clples of map reading and land navigaion. He learned how to detect and disarm mines and / booby traps and, while being ex posed to live machine gun fire, he learned to advance safely from one point to another. From this course, he is sche duled to go on to more advanced training Wore being assigned to his permanent unit. Duplin Times Progress s Sentinel PnMlaheS Weakly hp Progrm Sentinel, Inc. Kenansvllle, N. C. 28849 Second Poetefe h Pefh see All I In (led* N, Co Sake Tu) | Oihtn Nertt Cass?a* ANNOUNCEMENT I FARMERS HARDWARE i MERCHANDISE CO.I to HIVED its complete operation I to its Cotton Street location ooat tor to I Wp " ? ? i Western Auto 1 r I B ^ ^ ' T& .'t*11 - '? -V ! >'? ' 5? Y ''?* J" ">?;-V'k ""9 k 4^11r 'mm I NEW MODERN STORE fl ?| / * ' ?,MV'-^1 I for bargains an Hardware I I - Appliances and Air Caatitianers I I (0O Inc show her how much you care on M031EIS W with a remembrance of flowers or plants Remember her on her "?pedal" day with a ?pedal floral gift?beautiful cut flowers, long-lasting blooming plants or a lovely _ I " Orter Early " m *>#W? Da, Ibm, U J *"<* plants anywhara 3-?* _av ^3~46&S
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1968, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75