ft 1
m ?'gfTrl- r"il
ftft
I JpSSTtTtbc nuues.
District 27 jf coapucd of
Duplin and Pe#|er Cqunty.
are beginning an old newspaper
drive to help finance the ex
penses U the snouts in the
Beulavllle area.
Newspapers can be bundled ?
and brought to the Scout Hut y
and left in the trailer there.
He?MMhp?
Homecoming at theHaUeali^e
Presbyterian Church will be
held Sunday. October 6th, with
a picnic dinner on ,the church
lairn following the 11 a an. Wor
ship and communion service,
topic of sermon: Do not accept
yourself! Rev. Jack Dal';.
Pastor.
\ ***?*:? ? . \M
M^^SXch will be^obser
ved on Sunday . October 12th.
Revival ervices will begin
that evening, to be held nightly
at 7:30 pjn.
Ml friends of the church are
cordially invited to attend.
?.1
L. P. N't Tt Mtet
The L.P.N.'s of Area 29 will
hold their monthly meeting on
Wednesday night October8th, at
8:00 P.M. In the dining room
at Duplin General Hospital.
The guest speaker for the |
eventag wiU be Dr. C. L. Qulnn
Revival At M
I Oak Wain ft
Revival ?ervlc.es Oak Plain
^jEut minister wOl be Rev.
Jess; M. Parks, minister of
Mount OUv Preabyteria Chu
bftertan Ool ?e in. South ,-ro
Seminary, Rlchmont Vlrj da
Mt. Olive Crilege Fellowship DNpir
hold their Fellowship Dinner
for Mount Olive College on
Saturday, October 4. at 7:30
p.m. in the QtulaviUe Elemen
? tary School Cafeteria In Bbj?
laville. The dinner Is one of
fciteerlea of IT being held throu
ghout North Carolina as a means
* ? - ?
of providing financial support
to the College located In Mounfc
Olive and Sponsored by the
N. C. State Convention of Ori
ginal Free Will Baptists.
A county steering committee
j for the dinner has been appoin
ted. They are Arthur Kennedy
of BeulavlUe, Chairman; Mrs.
Walter Rhodes fcnd the Rev.
i Bruce Dudley of BeulavUle; and
Rhuben Bishop of Mount Olive,
Local church chairmen In
clude kis. Garland Craft of
Richlandp and Mrs. Dwight
Wood of Chinquapin, Bethlehem
Church; Grevoc Hill of Beu
lavllle, Beuiavllle Church;
Mrs, Nathan Hinkle of Pink
Hill. Cabin Church; Mrs. Edaa
Kate Lanier of Chinquapin,
Lanier's Chapel Church.
Also. Mrs. Qrrie J. Scott of
Mount Olive. LcmgRidge Church;
Mrs. Carl W. Powell of Ken
ansville, Pearsall's Chapel
Church; the Rev. Everette Har
per of Deep Run, pastor of
Plney Grove Church; Mrs. Les
lie Bell of Mount Olive, Rooty
Blanch Church.
And, Fitzgerald Bostlc of
Beulavllle; Sandy Plain Church;
A. D. Benson of Kenansville.
Sarecta Church; Rhuben Bis
hop of Mount Olive, Snow Hill
Church; and Mrs. Robert Ben
son of Warsaw, WarsawChurch,
Information regrading Beth
any Church has sat been announ
ced.
Ralford as the Emergency Red Gross Fund drive gets under
way in Duplin County. ~ ' ? 4
The emergency Red Cross
Fund Campaign in Duplin Count)
got under way Wednesday, Octo
rved, ar is to an?
Preston Ralford.
A goal of $5,000. has been
set and of this amount $1,052
has been requested for the Hur
ricane lam ill Disaste
quot in the Campaign,
are
needed In order thai he county
ch?f r of American
Cross can continu to en
fall of each year, therefore the
March drive will no longer be
conducted and the chapter will
attempt to operate on Its bud* |
get from October to Qctober.
Attorney Grady Mercer of
Keftamville and E*ulavlll? is
retiring chairman, having ser
ved as chairman last year. He
own througher: th. county as
he is director of the F i< Arts
Instant wall plaque* and pic
ture frames, decoupage, flocked
fabric designs, hand printed
? wall met*, magnetic car signs,
unpad jewel chests.
These are some of the pro
ducts of Heritage Design Ser
vice of Rose Hill. And these are
others. The fascinating story is
now being Jold in print for the
nSSfffgaatu (mi Ontario,
Canada (to say nothing of
Memphis, Mew York aad New
Orleans) is something of an
achievement in itself. Execut
ing them in unique new mater
Udsonty months awsyJron^the
i,,Ihftfirm<hdds patents of its
iwa aad .is licensed to use
0 execute chemical magic aa
t rhnnges liquids into ?"?*? of
u infinite variety of three dl
nansiona] forms. Rigid plastic
Meets instantly pflable
in mq&jncfy built in the
dap) to aasnme another three
lilw ml?it rigid form at toe
utsh sf a button or toe pull of
1 lWlg. , v .
It
^?SJL SSy*toPj^
spvarad with a flne'quality of
plush or velvet, hold premanen
gpggfppoew? T-;
tly in plan with transparent
adhesive sprayed on the aob
iirate, '
To make a uniquely decorate
ed, hand-carved picture frame,
workmen first run conventional
wood molding through an elec
tric roolder It ia then mitcred
and Joined in the usual way.
After that a plastic sheet is
heated and ptdled snugly down
over the frame in a vacuum
forming machine. When the
heat is removed the plastic be
comes rigid again, but as a re
plica of the wooden frame,
even picking up the grain of
the wood.
This plastic form is then tak
en off the wooden Mpne and
Inverted to form a mold into
which plaster of f*ris is cast
and allowed to harden. The
plaster casting is then carved^,
in a special design. When conaT
pleted it is placed in a box and
liquid rubber is poured over
the carved plaster frame, which
in turn becomes solid in a few
hours. This becomes the perm
anent mold into which liquid
polyester is cast becoming a
solid frame in seven Sninutei
Duplicates are made aad con
tinuous production is Urns pos
sible.
then6 ^pata^'and"" ***
the Ann -W?ke of its own silk
s< leased in lull may be used.
II u yeweew ???*/ "rvr Minr*>
Plaques of historical as well
as contemporary subjects are
produced in the same way.
Among these are the seal of the
Lords Proprietors of the Pro
vince of Carolina, IMS, a fifteen
inch disc displaying the coats
of arms of the eight noblemen
to whom King Charles granted
what is now North and South
Carolina and the lands between
them and "the South Seas (Pa
cific)". Another interesting pla
que is a replica of an Egyptian
has relief from the tomb of
Queen Nofretari. c 1250 B. C-,
which blends beautifully into
any modern decor, despite its
ancient origin.
The firm's work with textiles
is done for a New York comp
any which owns mills in Phila
delphia and in two North Caro
lina cities. Designs are lakid
prpited in the silk screen ffo
ceas, in which colored bits and
adhesive are forced through a
stencil adhered to a special
fabric supported in a frame.
While the ink and adhesive are
still wet, rayon flock ( 1/4 mill
meter lengths of rayon yam) ia
deposited over the desijpi elec
trostatically.. When the adho
sive dries the flock is held
firmly in place and the excess
dock , is removed, leaving en
esabroldery-Ube design that wih
resist ^ both washing and dry
iito m^^
other pgts of (SFcouniryrit
also is glad to see its own
home-grown industries develop
new products and new methods
of production.
Developers and owners at
Heritage Design Service are
Dr. Dallas Herring and L. Clay
ton Herring, Rose Hill brothers.
All of their decorative designs
are beautiful and many are or
iginals. They state that the
services of the new firm wfll
soon be avilable to interior de
signers and architects through
out the area. Their dseorathre
products are soon to be retailed
in furniture stores, gifts dtops
and other outlets.
Our sincere good wishes and.
pur congratulations are offer
ed to the enterprising Herring
brothels for their new venture.
Rockfish Fox Clok
The Rockfish Fox Club will
hold its annual meeting on Sat
urday, October 4, 1969, at the
Sampson Memorial Park (South
of Clinton, N. C. near Taylor's
Bridge on Highway #421). The
hupt will leave thk Park at
7.QP A.M.
A barbecue lunch will be
served at the Park about noon.
A business meeting will beheld
at lidO o'clock P.M. AH of
^etforfu) attend
this meeting.
Marine Killed
Chinquapin
Two Marines were found
dead early Saturday moraine
near Chinquapin after the car
in which they were riding went
out of control and nooe-dfred
into a wim? ana near Nor
theast River. A third Marino
was critically injured.
The bodies of the two men
thrown ftom the car were
identified aa Marine Lance
Corporal John R. Williams, and
Pfc Jack D. Riddick. Both men
wen apparently killed instant
A third Marine identified as
Pfc. Peter J. Durham, thrown
some distance from the car
sustained a possible back and
arms lb juries. He was treated
at Duplin General Hospital
where he was taken by Edger
ton FUneral Home Ambulance.
Durham was later transferred
to the Navel Hospital, Camp
LeJeuno.
Continued. To Page Three
The J. Allen Porter home on Highway*
117 South of Warsaw was extensively damaged
by fire early Friday morning. -Th^Sad'
which appear* to hjy^Jkeen arslSn is under
investigation by:; the Duplin County Sheriff's
.Department, the State Bureau of Investigation,
' and the State Department of Insurance.
Brigadier General William
McG livery Buck was born in
Rowland. N. C., and he present
ly resides wit* bis wife and -
daughter at MS Bast Hill Street
General Buck is a graduate
of Riverside Uttitey Academy
in Georgia, the U. S Army In- ;
fantry Officers Candidate Sch
ool. Advanced Wan try OfO- ill
cers School at Tm Banning,
Georgia, and Command and
General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworth, Kansas
General Buck began his mil
itary career in June IMS when
h. |n the U S Army
Idurtbg World War
i commissioned a
itenant in January '
ie was sent in com
Pacific Theater Fol- ?
ree-yeaMour^the J
??-*??: Dll..
mcuiivery duck gy
ommanding officer of the Ut ?
Jattle Group, 119th Infantry,
ommanding officer of the 3rd
Irigade, 30th Infantry Divi
3; commanding officer of
Probe Of Fire Continues
A pre-dawn fire Friday morn
ing gutted a Warsaw borne do
ing extensive damage.
Sheriff T. Elwood Revelle
said the fire appeared to have
been the work of arsonist and
was set in at least four dif
ferent places in the house.
Kerosene fume* greeted the
Kremen who battled the blase
several hours befor it was
brought under control.
The house located on U. S.
Highway 117 about one mOs
south of Warsaw was the home
F. F. A.
Contest
There will be a F.F.A.Creed
Contest October 8, 1968 at East
Duplin High School at 3??0 PM
in the agriculture shop. he <
contest is open to Freshmen or
Ag. 701 students according to.
the director, C. M. Jenkins.
of Mr. and Mrs. J. Alien Por
ter and tbeir daughter and
family Mr. and Mrs. H. C.
Allen and son David.
Mrs. Porter had accompanied
the Aliens to Florida on Thurs
day to enroll David in a col
lage there
The fire was discovered about
3:90 Friday morning by the
next door neighbor, James Carr
who called the Warsaw Fire
Department 1hey were aaeist
el in bringing the blase under
control by the Fire Depart
ments from KanaasviOe and
Wallace.
The three bedroom houae was
constructed some eight or tan
years ago at a cost of approxi
mately $30,000. in aa exclusive
resldental secttoa.
Assisting the local sherift.
department ht investigating the
fire are Bill Green ot the State
Bureau ot Inveatlgattnn and
Lynn B. Wllliamsoo with the
SUte Department at insurance
working out at Raleigh
Officials Naar EOA Representative
' ?' y t ' V 'i-i* 6* -y-'' ?' 'Sa^SputM
Kenansville's mayor. Earl
Hatcher called a apecial meet
ing of Interested persons on
Thursday September 36 rela
tive to the bond election to
expand water facilities andpro
vlde sewer for the county seat.
Meeting with the local group
Attending the meeting to re
view things to be dooe leading
up to the referenduip in addi
tion to Mayor Hatcher were:
Dixon Hall, president James
Sprunt Institute: W. E. Craft,
KenaivvlUe Attorney; F. W.
McOowan representing Duplin
General Hospital; and J. W.