Kenonsville News Put Matron* and Patron* dub On Monday night, Dec. 3, 16 members with two visitors met at the Rose Hill Restaurant for the Past Matrons and Patrons annual Christ mas party representing Kenansville ^Chapter #215, Order of the Eastern PStar. Dora Evans welcomed those present and called on J.B. Stroud. After the dutch supper, Christmas gifts were exchanged and door prizes drawn. Thelma Murphy was in charge of this part. She had made miniature wreathes for each one present to wear as favors and get in the Holiday mood. Members present were Celia and J.B. Stroud, Pannie and Walter Rhodes, Doris and ^ Robert Chestnutt, Joyce and Kermit Williams, Louise K. Boney, Ruby G. Newton, Thelma B. Murphy, Dora W. Evans, Eunice K. Brock, Mar garet G. Johnson, Edna E. Brinson and Inez B. Chestnutt. The visitors were Amos Brinson and Hazel Holland. Liberty Hall Bridge Club Mrs. W.M. Ingram was hostess for the Liberty Hall Bridge Club a Wednesday night with several addi ? tional guests. Visitors were Mes dames E.S. McGowan, Martha Swann and Martha Sitterson. High scorer for members was Eloise Ryder and Mrs. Swann for the visitors. For refreshments Mrs. Ingram assisted by Mattie Barbee served cocoanut cake, corn chips and coffee. Kontract Klub has Luncheon Mesdames Martha Swann and ? Carolyn Hall were co-hostesses at a luncheon for the Kenansville Kon tract Klub on Thursday, Dec. 6th at noon in the home of Mrs. Hall. The menu consisted of chicken divan, baked onions, tomato aspic, hot buttered rolls and a relish tray with choice of coffee or tea. For dessert the group enjoyed custard pie. All members were present but one and her vacancy was filled by Lorena Vestal. After several progressions of u bridge, Virginia Penney was de * clared high scorer. Mrs. Vestal was *also given a gift. Friends of the Library John Michaud, who has been librarian for the Dorothy Wightman Duplin County Library for the past two years, was given a farewell party last Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 5, in the library. It was co-hosted by the Friends of the Library and the Arts Council. Tom Fife, president of the Friends of the Library, welcomed those present and presented Mr. Michaud with a Paul Revere bowl. He is going to work in the Pitt County Library and will be living in Greenville. Entertainment was by Connie Regan and Barbara Freeman, folk tellers, who were introduced by Merle Creech, executive director of the Arts Council- Punch and pa*;y cake squares were served by Carol Klemm prior to departure. Open House Thelma and H.D. Taylor held open house on Sunday afternoon. The home was cheerfully decorated in the Christmas spirit. After greeting the guests at the front door, they were invited into the dining room where cake squares, salted pecans, mints and cranberry punch were served by their granddaughter, Brenda Carter of Magnolia. Goodbyes were said to Janet Kornegay, a niece of Mount Olive, who. also kept the register where about 40 guests registered. Eldon and Marguarite Brown were host- and hostess-at-large. Personals Miss Jessie Bell Raiford of Golds boro spent a couple of days here last week with Mrs. Nannie Brinson. They went to Teachey on Wednesday to visit Mrs. Louise B. Ward. Clarence Jones of Portsmouth, Va. visited the Roscoe Jones on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Jones shopped in Goldsboro on Monday. Birth Announced Gary A. and Jenelle B. Exelby of Blytheville, Arkansas, are the parents of a son, Joshua Christian, born November 22, 1984, at Blythe ville Air Force Base Hospital. Grandparents are Kenneth Exelby of Seattle, WA and Bob and Phyllis O'Brien of Arlee, MT and Sid and Carol Trager of Kenansville, and Donald Best of Warsaw. 1984 YEAR-END TAX PLANNING CONFERENCE SPECIAL RATE - ONLY $50.00 ^ 293-3168 C. JOHNSON SHEFFIELD, CPA JOE ALLEN EDWARDS Most taxpayers can save by planning now for their 1984 returns and preplanning now for the new IRS requirements for farm-truck and auto business-use documentation, effective January 1,1985 ??The conference will be especially beneficial to individuals ?? who prepare their own retui t: Call for an appointment or further information fc SPECIAL TAX PREPARATION RATES IN JANUARY/FEBRUARY V 1984 1040-EZ $15.00 or 1984 1040-A $25.00 SEMINARS ATTENDED IN 1984 INCLUDE: "Are Tax Shelters Right for You?", "Utilizing Tax Laws to Your Clients Advantage for CPAs", "Workshop on the Tax Reform Act of 1984", and "Tax Considerations for Investment Planning". D You'll Find That Special Gift For The Sportsman On Your List At | Goshen Supply Company -71 Hunting Vests, Coats, Pants, Quail Hunter Pants - Adult & Children, Chamois Cloth Shirts, Children's Camp Shirts, Insu lated Coveralls - Adults & Chil dren, Bib Overalls ? Camp & Brown Duck, Adult & Children, Camo Coats - Adult & Children, Gloves ? Many Styles. Goose Down Garments - Servus Chest Waders. Hip Boots - Adult & Children, Knee Boots - Adult & Children, Birdhunter's Rubber Boots, Wheat Lites, Nite Lites, Sunburst Lites, Wheat Head/Nite Lite, Battery Lites, Johnny Stewart Lites, Repair All Lites, All Types of Game Calls, Deer Horn Mounting Plaques, Taxi dermy Kits, Retriever Training Supplies, Quail Release Traps & Cages, Baker Tree Stand, Stain less Steel Bowls & Pails, Happy ^ Jack Products, Vaccines, Belt V Buckles. Breed Caps in Assorted Colors, Lined & Unlined Breed Jackets, Snake-Proof Chaps by Rattlers, Floating Lanterns' Halogen & Krypton. Bulbs, Hanc Tooled Hunter's Vests, Vari Kennel Shipping Crates, Buck-n Doe Lure, Electric Boot Dryer, Cloisone Hat Pins, Carhartt Denim Jeans, Carhartt Denim Pile Lined Jackets, Carhartt Denim Pile Lined Vests, Socks, T-Shirts, Thermal Under ^ garments. Bleed Cuspidors. Compasses, Whistles, Spot Lites, Scopes & Scope Mounts, Gun Slings & Swivels, Handwarmers, Collars - 2.000+ in stock. Leashes, Muzzles, Batteries, Rifle Bullets, Shotgun Shells, Schrade Knives. Wyoming Knives, Tattoo Kits & Letters, Grooming Kits, Camp Stools, Back Packs, Gunning Bags, Coon Bags, Bulbs, Dynalites, Bird C# Cages. Air Pistols. Duck & Quail Straps, Rain Suits, Camoflauge Clothes, Nylon Chaps, Rccharge able O-Volt Hand Lanterns, Hun ti-S-ffoK ter's Mugs, Sportsman's Mud Flaps, Hunter's Horns. Coon Hunter Boots, Coon Hunter Coats, Sportsman's Window Classics. ?SPECIALS? 12 go. Shotgun Sholli, Retail $4.99 Our Price $4.19, Limit S Please All Hl-Power Rifle Ammo $2.00 off per box. limit of 5 please I Exomple: 30-30 $4.95/box 30 06 $9.95/box 22 caliber Rlflo Bullets-long Rifle keg. $2.09/box Our Price $1.19/box. limit of 10 boxes Goot? Down Vest, Parkas and Jackets Closeout Priced 50% off Nylon Stock 22's-Formerly Nylon $4 Reg. $139.00 Our Price-$$9.95 Nylon Top #401 Coonhunter Custom Hip Boot Regular Price: $53.00 Our Speciol Price: $43.00 Many other items specially priced thru Christmas, low Enforcement Person nel All job related equipment ordered for you cost plus 10%. now thru Christmas. I will be running specials from now thru December 24. Read your paper or coll or better still come by. All items are sub|ect to availability and no rain checks will be offered when(supply is exhausted. This is only a partial list of the many items that GOSHEN SUPPLY COMPANY carries. If I don't hove what you need. I will be glod to order it for you. GOSHEN SUPPLY CO. specialises in supplying the hunting needs for the hunter, be it Coon hunter, deerhunter, rabbit hunter, squirrel hunter, fox hunter, bearhunter. quailhunter...Any type of Hunter... Now thru CHRISTMAS our hours will be as follows: Monday I Tuesday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday thru Saturday: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Sundays: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Other hours by appointment only, except Monday night. Goshen Supply Co. is locoted at Goshen Kennels. B miles north of Kenonsvillis off of Highway 11. Owned $ Operated by FRANK NORRIS. Office Phone 294-19B1 Night Phone: 294 1941 or 2914334 Wallace-Hafel ; i Engagement \ ( Mrs. Angela Dail Thigpen of I Chesterfield, Va. and Mr. Karl W. 1 Hafel of Goldsboro would like to ' announce the engagement of their 1 daughter, Bonnie Michele Hafel to < Stephen Dale Wallace, son of Mr. i and Mrs. Thomas L. Wallace Sr. of < Route 1, Albertson. The bride-elect is also the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmore (Bill) Dail. The wedding is planned for December 30th at Snow Hill Free Will Baptist Church at three o'clock in the afternoon. No invitations are being, sent. All friends and relatives are. invited. Marsh-Smith Engagement Mrs. Olive E. Outlaw ot Carolina Beach and Mr. Herbert H. Smith of Magnolia announce the engagement of their daughter, Wanda Sue, to Elias Joseph Marsh 11 of Wil mington. The wedding will be held at 3 p.m. February 9th at Springview Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church in Wilmington. Marsh is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Marsh of Fort Myers, Fla. Warsaw United Methodist Church Christmas Cantata "Ring the Bells!" is a delightfully different Christmas cantata. The Warsaw United Methodist Church choir will present the piece as its Christmas gift to the com munity on Sunday evening, Dec. 16 at 7 p m. in the sanctuary on Plank Street in Warsaw. About 30 members will perform and the accompaniment will be a stereo tape of full orchestration supplied by the sound technician. Danny Jenkins. Taking its theme from the moving gospel song, "Ring the Bells," it develops the story of the first Christmas in a warm and personal way. Musically, this work is easy and varied with brightness and jubila tion. To create maximum communi cation, several refreshingly unusual monologs have been included. Written by Harry Bollback and Don Wyrtzen, "Ring the Bells" will be conducted by Mrs. Carol Moore. Following the concert, refreshments will be served by the Warsaw United Methodist Women. All persons are invited and welcome to the concert. "Ring the Bells" is a Christmas gift for all. Don't miss it. Protect Plants A few precautions taken early in the cold weather period can help homeowners avoid cold damage to certain plants that frequently fall victims to severe cold. North Carolina State University agricultural extension specialists identify some of these cold damage prone plants as rhododendron, box wood and some of the other broadleaf evergreens. The best way to protect them from icy winds and the winter sun is to plant them in protected places to begin with. Plants that are already in the wrong place may be suc cessfully moved, if they are fairly young. Otherwise, some type of screening protection might be provided. For prized plants, you may want to build e scaffold on three sides ? east, south and west - then cover the frame with burlap or some similar material. A Plantation Christmas In Kenansville Decorations are an important part of "A Plantation Christmas" which begins December 23 at Liberty Hall Restoration in Kenansville with open house and continues throughout the holiday season until December 31. Here, in the ancestral home of the Kenan family, tinsel and foil are eschewed, and the emphasis is on those plant materials ? fruits, greens, cones, seed pods and huts that were available to 19th Century North Carolinians. Decorations feature imaginative trrangements of such traditional or sxotic fruits as apples, lemons, times, pineapples, pears and pome granates. Natural materials like the dried pods of okra, magnolia, dried peppers, sweet gum balls, nuts, cotton bolls, mistletoe and various pine cones are used extensively. Holly, nandina, pyracantha berries ?dd a touch of red. Greens ? cedars, pine, boxwood, yew and hemlock are combined with the leaves of mag nolia or holly to create pleasing effects. Decorations range from elabo rately created nosegays for the Christmas tree in the Ladies' With drawing Room, to a simple spray of pine and holly on a windowsill. Elaborate or simple, plain or tancty, each decoration at Liberty Hall expresses the spirit of Christmas the Kenan family enjoyed each year and one that guests can enjoy today. The total effect is one of elegant sim plicity inestimable charm and an atmosphere of love and caring at a special time of year. The Liberty Hall Restoration Commission stages the annual open house as part of the Twelve Days of Christmas in Historic Kenansville which is sponsored by the JCenans ville Area Chamber of Commerce. There is no admission to Liberty Hall Restoration on December 23. i Jackie Taylor Norris First Citizens Names Norris Assistant Cashier Jackie Taylor Norris has been named an assistant cashier for First Citizens Bank in Kinston. She is manager of the Highway 258 North branch. The Pink Hill native has been with First Citizens since 1974 and has experience in installment lending and commercial lending. Norris is attending Lenoir Com munity College. She is a member of Credit Women International and the Lenoir County board of directors of the American Institute of Banking. She is also active in the Lenoir County United Way. Jackie and her husband, Jackie Ray Norris, have two children and live in Pink Hill. BAKED APPLE DELUXE 1 can (8-1/4 oz.) Dole Crushed Pineapple in Syrup 6 large baking apples 1/4 cup chopped nuts 1/2 cup dark brown sugar, packed 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon Drain pineapple, reserving all syrup. Core apples. Com bine pineapple and nuts; spoon into center of apples. Add enough hot water to reserved syrup to make 1/2 cup liquid. Stir in brown sugar and cinna mon until sugar dissolves. Pour over apples in baking dish. Bake in 350 F oven 50 to 60 minutes. Spoon sauce over ap ples once while baking. Serve with cream, if desired. Makes 6 servings. Announcing The Incorporation Of Carlton, Lee & Co. Providing Full Service Financial Planning & Securities 105 North Pine Street Warsaw, North Carolina ' Registered Representatives CAR DELL & ASSOCIATES, INC. MEMBER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS, INC. FROM OUR IA Z BOY SHOWROOM A FANTASTIC CAttQAO SAU OF U I-MT RfCUNAROCUR CHAIRS AND MCUNA-WAY' ) WAU KCUMRS CHRISTMAS LA-Z-BOY" RECLINER SALE s360 LA-Z-BOY? $OOI>00 ReclinaRocker" Chair [ s380 LA-Z-BOY? $0^750 I Reclina Rocker Chair ?m^ i s432 LA-Z-BOY? SOTfJ00 Reclina-Way Wall Recliner ? ? " s492 LA-Z-BOY? $Qn750 Reclina Rocker' Chair V\J f Is456 LA-Z-BOY? SOftROO ' Reclina-WAy Wall Recliner fcOw s576 LA-Z-BOY? S^fifl00 ReclinaRocker' Chair w WW )s565 LA-Z-BOY? $ O C O 5 0 ReclinaRocker" Chair s600 LA-Z-BOY? $071100 Reclina Rocker- Chair O f w OVER 150 CHAIRS IN STOCK Several Tell City m / #%???? SOLIC HARD-ROCK I/a if EE MAPLE ROCKERS / A. wi I Stockings Full of Free Gifts For All Kids 10 & Under REGISTER FOR FREE LA-Z-BOY? TO BE GIVEN AWAY CHRISTMAS EVE. Frederick I wy. 117-Rose Hill I - i ^ Phone: 289-3448 Furniture flHHff r>/w r?/ the hr\t things *f hu\ r is nur nrict Company Microwave Ovens On Sale I Call Me? 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