BAILEY EUGLE, BAILEY, NORTH CAROLII\[A, I^ERUAP.Y, 1957 FACE 7 FUTURE FATHER'-SON BANQUET March 6 Team Wins Fourth Place InContGst Freshmen, Jerry Bissette, Charles Eatmon, Don Eng lish, and Donald Bass re presented Bailey in the Nash.Edgecombe Federation Tool Judging Contest last week at Dillion Supply Co. in Rocky Mount. The boys competing with eleven teams came in fourth place behind first place West Edgecombe. Coopers and Benvenue placad secoid and third. HIGH SCGRilRS Out of a possible hundred points Jerry Bissette was high for Bailey with 95 pointsj Don English, sec ond with 9h points; Charles Eatmon, third with 8? points; and Donald Bass had 86. The three high scores counted thus giv ing Bailey a total of 276 points. There was a total of one hundred tools, materials, and equipment used in tiie contest. STUDENTS OBSERVE NATIONAL FFA WEEK Future Farmers of America througho.ut the nation are scheduling special activ ities to focus public at tention on the work of their organization during National FFA Week, Febru- arey 16-23 Locally, members of the Bailey FFA Chapter are put ting up posters in obser vance of this week through out the community. Several boys from the ninth grade have participated in the Federation Tool Judging Contest this week. Membership in the FFA is made up of farm boys who are students of vocational agriculture in high school The organization's activ ities are designed prima rily to help develop rural leaders and good citizen ship, to stimulate the boys toward better achieve ment in their study, and to work toward successfull farming. Bailey's FFA Chapter has 61 members. Officers are President, JAMES WELLS; Vice President, CHARLES WTT,T,TA.vr.q - Records Attest Fact s Summarization of last year's records shows that Bailey FFA students receiv ed a gross income of -‘Ill4,58l.87 for their farm projects. Among the enrollment of 61 members, ii8 boys had corn for their special pro jects; 23 tobacco; and’i, cotton. Tobacco projects of the boys average tlOhO per acre. Members having corn produced a yield of 78 bushels per acre. Four boys with cotton projects produced one and a third bales per acre. WELLS; Treasurer, JEFF DK'^TON; Reporter, CARROL BOTTOMS; and Sentinel, LEWIS WLLIAI'4S. John H, Wells, vocational agriculture instructor, serves as advisor of the chapter. 2o5-l £gj;Lc.stary \N ..'.j Lu m be r a hd ® Bu i Iding Materials BAILEY, NORTH nARnT.T^tTd