The Duplin Times Progress Sentinel. May 6. 1982 Page 11
The Pink Hill Review
"Serving Pink Hill, Deep Run, Albertson, Beulaville, And llieir Surrounding Areas" ?
VOL. 4 NO 18 * KENANSVILLE, NC 28349 UAV B 1982
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RESCUEMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD
kuther Ledford, pictured, far right, pre
sented, left to right, Ernest Bvrd Jr, Rescue
captain, with the Rescueman of the Year
Award, Preston Bryant, first It. with Pink
Hill Fire Department, and Ronnie Heath,
assistant chief with the Fire Department,
Co-Fireman of the Year Awards at the
Appreciation Supper last Tuesday night. The
event is sponsored annually by the Pink Hill
Business and Professional Club and at
tended by many local citizens.
* Registration In Pink Hill
A staff member of the
Board of Elections and elec
tion officials will be at the
Town Hall in Pink Hill to
register voters and to make
address, name and party
changes. Anyone who is
registering to >te for the I
Tirct time in Lenoir County ?
4?hould bring prot of birth
such as a driver's license,
birth certificate, etc. Seven
teen-year-olds who will be 18
on or before November 2,
1982, can register to vote.
Dates and hours to be at
Town Hall: Saturday, May 8 -
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Monday,
May 10 - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
Saturday, May 15 -10 a.m. to
2 p.m.; and on Monday, May
17-9a.m. to5p.m.
VtcDaniel Announces
Candidacy
? .. ? . . Hp inHiratpH that
Concessions
Any church or civic group
desiring to rent a space to
sell concessions or food at
the upcoming Liberty Festi
val, should contact W.A.
Avery before June 1 to.
reserve a space.
? 1 ? "? H
fcugene Ked McUantel.
former Navv-Marine Corps
Liasion, Aircraft carrier cap
tain and Vietnam POW, for
mally announced his candi
dacy for the U.S. House ol
Representatives seat from
the N.C. Third District at
ceremonies held in his
hometown of Buies Creek.
McDaniel, 50. a Republi
can, said that he is commit
ted "to the goals of a bettet
North Carolina and United
r ? ' ?
his campaign will emphasize
conservative economics, the
need for a strong national
defense and continued
. support for agircultural pro
grams. "We owe a great
debt to our farmers and must
work to keep their business
' profitable," he said.
Sharing the speaker's
platform with McDaniel was
former Governor James
Holshouser, who also
attended a pre-announce
ment prayer breakfast held
at Campbell University.
McDaniel. a native of
Lenoir County, attended
Campbell University before
his military career. He ex
pressed his affection for the
Campbell community and for
the Third District. One of the
Vietnam war's most deco
rated veterans, McDaniel
said that he is concerned
about the nation's military
readiness. "The price of
freedom is vigilance," he
said. "We must continue to
strengthen our national de
fense. Having known the
horrors of war. 1 pray every
day for peace."
McDaniel. who com
manded the aircraft carrier
USS Lexington after a six-,
year ordeal in a Communist
prison, said he offers "dem
onstrated leadership," and
pledged to place national
good before political party.
BIG WHEEL CONTEST
A Big Wheel contest is
planned for the Liberty
Festival this Julv 3rd. There ,
will be two age groups, ages i
4 and 5. and ages 6 and 7.
For more information, call >
Carol Sykes at 568-3181 or ,
568-3445. ? I
Liberty Festival
New Feature
The 1982 Liberty Festival
will present a new feature
this year. Instead of a
parade, there will be a series
of outdoor historical tableaus
that depict the lives and
times of 1932. These will be
non-ntobile while the spec
tators go by and view them.
A cash award will be given to
the scene that is most like
real life in the depression
era.
The following are sugges
tions for scenes that would
be appropriate: a farm family
at home, a country store,
washday, soap-making,
shooting marbles. Older citi
zens in the community will
be wonderful resource
people for ideas to display.
Groups or individuals who
wish to enter a tableau or
want more information
should call Catherine Shep
pard at 568-3251 or Wilbur
Tyndall at 568-3101.
Home - Garden
To produce disease- and
insect-free fruit of good
quality, you should follow a
regular preventative spray
program. Repeated
applications of some all
purpose spray mixtures will
give satisfactory control of
most diseases and insects.
However, good coverage of
of all parts of the plant is
essential.
One all-purpose mixture
that can be purchased or
prepared is as follows: cap
tan in a 50% wettable pow
der at 2 tbsps. per gallon of
water, plus methoxychlor or
sevin 50% wettable power at
2 tbsps. per gallon of water,
plus malathion 25% wettable
power at 4 tbsps. per gallon
of water. Commercial
mixtures are available under
such names as "Home Or
chard Spray" antt "Fruit
Tree Spray."
Apple - Apply first spray
using the combination spray
as buds open and repeat at
20-day intervals until
blossoms start to open.
When the flower petals are
off. make another application
and continue at 14-day in
tervals until one month
before harvest. If cedar
agple rust is a problem.
Include ferbam, 76% wet
table powder at 2 tbsps. per
gallon in sprays before and
just after bloom. Do not
spray while the trees arc in
bloom, except with strepto
mycin. Sprays with strepto
mycin at 100 parts per mil
lion (I tsp. per gallon) at
5-day intervals during bloom
will aid in the control of fire
blight.
Peach and Plum - Apply
one early dormant spray of
ferbam 76% wettable pow
der at 2 tbsps. per gallon or 4
ounces per 10 gallons for
control of leaf curl disease.
From the end of bloom until
three weeks of peach or one
week of plum harvest, spray
at two-week intervals or each
time apples are .to be
sprayed. Continue with
captan 50% wettable powder
at 4 ounces per 10 gallons
one week before harvest and
during harvest it necessary
for rot control. To control
peach tree borers, spray tree
trunks and main branches
with endosulfan (thiodan)
50% wettable powder using
2 '/i tbsps. per gallon of w ater
ar 5 ounces per 10 gallons, in
the first w eek of September.
Strawberry Spray at two
week intervals from when
icw growth has started until
jerries start to form. Con
tinue with captan alone at
three tbsps. per gallon at
two-week intervals until har
vest is underway. After har
vest, continue to spray
strawberries when apples or
peaches are sprayed. Do not
use methoxychlor or mala
thion within three days of
harvest.
Bagworms ? which are
caterpillars that carry their
baglike homes around with
them, have recently begun to
feed on conifers and oc
casionally maples and pines
in the area. Bagworms can
be easily identified by their
spindle-shaped bag. one or
two inches long, of unbe
lievably tough silk, which is
covered with bits of leaves
and twigs. Eggs overwinter
in these bags and hatch in
spring, at which time the
larvae begin to feed, making
new bags as thev do so
late summer, the adult moths
appear and mate, with the
female laying 500 to 1,000
eggs inside the bags.
Control is best achieved
when there is a light in
festation by picking the bags
off in either the winter or
spring and destroying them.
In. more severe infestations,
spray in spring with Bacillus
Thuringiensis, a natural oo
curing parasite of the bag
worm. sold under the names
of dipel. thuricide or by
spraying with either sevin.
diazinon or orthene.
Wedding
Invitation
Cheryl Lynn Smith
and
John Alexander Rouse
together with their parents
Mrs. Earl Haywood Smith
and
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Rouse
invite you to join in their joy
when they exchange
marriage vows
on Saturday,
the fifteenth of May
nineteen hundred and
eighty-two
at two-thirty o'clock in the
afternoon
Pink Hill Presbyterian
Church
Pink Hill. North Carolina
Reception following
CONTESTANTS SELECTED - The Miss
Liberty contestants have been selected.
Violet Stroud and Yvonne Deatherage
hosted a get-acquaintcd party for the girls to
socialize and meet each other recently. Also
present was the 1981 Miss Liberty, Christine
Howard and Little Miss Liberty. Mary Beth
Watson, and Little Master Liberty. David
Grady. Pictured above, front row. left to
right. Keiva Sumner. Tammy Brown. Denise
Moultrie and Tiffany Thomas. Back row.
Deborah Whaley. Beth Kennedy and Brid
gett Miller. Not pictured were Ellen Sandlin
and Michelle Hfives.
National Hospital Week
Presents Hospitals As Friends
Duplin General Hospital
joins with hospitals all across
the country in celebrating
National Hospital Week May
9-15. This special observance
is built around the theme
"You've Got a Friend in the
Hospital."
Costume
Contest
Get out those old family
photo albums and see what
people were wearing in the
early '30s! Those styles will
be the order of the day on
July 3. 1982. at the Liberty
Festival. A costume contest
will be held to determine
whose costume is most ac
curate to the styles of 1932.
Special Class
Rudene Kennedy will be
teaching a class on "Spiritual
Gifts" on May 6th beginning
at 8 p.m. at Sandy Plain Free
Will Baptist Church. Every
one is invited to come.
Lenoir
County
Menus
The menus for the re
mainder of the school year
will not be published. Each
school will make menus for
their respective cafeteria.
This is done in order to
utilize their inventories.
Each student will be served a
nutritional Choice Type A
lunch. All lunches are served
w ith a choice of one-half pint
whole, sweet acidophilus or
low-fat flavored milk, accor
ding to Ruth R. Sugg, di
rector of the school food
services.
"We think the 1982 Na
tional Hospital Week theme
reflects the role of our hos
pital and its staff as friends
in helping community resi
dents stay healthy." said
Richard Harrell. hospital ad
ministrator. "We are work
ing to reduce the need for
hospitalization through our
progress in both prevention
and cure of illness and
injury." During the week the
hospital also is reminding
people to be their own best
friend by taking care of their
health and by learning how
to use the hospital wisely to
be well.
"Our employees are ex
pressing a special form of
friendship to our patients by
keeping abreast of progress
in the delivery of hospital
care," Harrel! said. "As
techniques and medical and
health science improve and
technology changes, our staff
seeks job-related education
and training that then is
translated into top-level job
performance."
National Hospital Week is
sponsored each year by the
American Hospital
Association and its 6,000
member hospitals to foster
better communication and
understanding between hos
pitals and their patients,
employees, and the com
munities they serve.
I Emogene's
I Beauty Shop
Rt. 1, Deep Run
Tel. 566-4443
Spec ial^^^^^^?
In Ladies & |
Mens Haircuts
*1
Open Wednesday
thru Saturday Now iV
On Tuesday & \
Thursday Nights, Too
We Were closer! nerinriirallu
, ?wvviiiij uuc iu
sickness and are now open fulltime for business.
H Thanks for your cooperation. I
Hill's Radio & T.V.
114 E. Broadway St. Pink Hill 568-3238
Authorized Dealer
?
owned ana operated by Donnle & Tlha Hill
dome by ft Register for a FREE AC/DC Portable TV Drawing May 24
'We Service All Brails Of TVs, Radios ft Stereos'
i ?
fifeSJDcu?
Corsages <'"???. & shio *3.50
m Roses Carnations ( Red,White,Pink) Giamias Orchids ||
Iji Pot Plants Hanging Baskets ||
I Rose Bushes Caladiums
Geraniums Hydrangeas
Crysanthemums Daisies
(WhiteJLavender.Yellow)
Impatients Boston Fern |
Airplane Plant Fish Scale
Purple Heart Swedish Ivy
European Gardens Begonias
Silk Arrangements $7.50uP
CERAMIC PLANTERS, GIFTS. WOOD ITEMS
Place Orders Earlyl
Wire Service Available Minimum *12.50 ^
i The Colony House I
56*4159 Florist
ARTHRITIS
* PAIN RELIEF?
Mrs C P of Woonsocket h.l. said. My left foot was so
swollen from arthritis that the doctor was going to operate
on a burr that formed; now the swelling is gone and I feel
great. I also used to take a package of Alka Seltzer a week.
Now I take none. The Aloe helps me inside as well as outside."
Why Are People Drinking
? ^'0'^ and
Getting Unbelievable
Results
Ask Your Pharmacist
01 How You Can Make Aloe Juice Or Aloe Drink
For Only $1.90 a Quart
R.L. Hood Pharmacy
110 E. Broadway Pink Hil
Brewer Drug Co.
106 W. Broadway Pink Hill