1 Kelly and Ilsrtaci D:nnclf, Jr. I!:n:cd Members Duplin Welfare Board V E. I. KeDy, of KenansviH- tat -. . - . .. V wno reeiaej m Glisson Towttsbip, ,i 1" "been named a member of the , Duplin County Welfare Board as ; : tae appointee of the County Com- tnissioners for a three year term 1 beginning April 1, 1953. The newest ' and most recent appointee by the j County Welfare Board was Mordecai . f Bennett, Jr., of Route 8,'Mt Olive, : N. C, who was appointed to succeed - and complete the term of Johnnie ? ' Albritton of Calypso, who died in V , December. Because of the resigna- tion of a member last -October, a vacancy occured and Mrs. Winnifred Well of Wallace was appointed by '. ; xne etate Board of Public- Welfare t to complete that term. According to f the law there are three Welfare v Board members; one appointed by aV the Board of Commissioners, one ' by the State Department of Public i' - Welfare, and the third by the Wel Jf. fare Board itselt These appoint ments are to be staggered one each year, but it so happens that be- ; cause ox me turn oi events the present ooard is new. Neither of these three has been member of the Welfare Board previously. Mrs. Wells is known for - PI t her activity in the civic enterprises : of Wallace. She is a member of the S board in Wallace that worked for ?' Finer Carolina in the recent cam- . ! paign sponsored by the Carolina (Power and Light Company. She helped lead her town to victory. She is also a memeber of the . Woman's Club. In addition she is a .-lawyer, a wife, and a mother, r : I Mr. Kelly operates the Service '.Motor Company in Kenansville, is : m mukiuiwl- vi uiv jstMtru ui worn ." 5 mlssioners, and also is a member t t tha- Duplin ' County Hospital (Building Committee, and Is civic minded man with many Interests. . Mr. Bennett is a young and pro ; gressive farmer from the northwest , n end of the county, civic mlndedi and active in his community and 1 church. i -' It is expected that under this new '' .'and active leadership the Depart. Mntilv hnn.41nJ ...ill , . . 1 develop in lis. services to Duplin people. : ' Applicants for' public . assistance are considered and approved by the County Welfare Board as ' a basic receiving Aid to the Aged, Aid to Dependent Children, or Aid to the Permanently and Totally. Disabled. The Board, which meets at least monthly, approves an changes or terminations in aid given recipients of public assistance. . - . Members' of the County Welfare Board advise the Superintendent of Puplic Welfare on all aspects of the program. Including the .handling of any serious problem cases. It also acts in an advisory capacity to coun ty : and municipal authorities in developing policies , and plans for dealing with, problems of depend ency, better -social conditions, and cooperations .for the rehabilitation of people in need. The board mem bers, with their -public viewpoint md responsibility, are charged with interpretation of the. welfare acti vities to the county. , The State Board of Public Welfare consults with county .Boards re garding all major policy changes and program developments before they are undertaken. It looks to the County Welfare Ifcards for guidance in preventive and rehabjlitive ser vices to help people help them selves. , v , V 4 The county Welfare Board, made Hp of representative, public spirited. Socially minded citizens, is the legal appointing authority of the county in naming a Superintendent of Pmblic Welfare from names of quaJU lfed persons certified by the Merit System. The board also determines the number and salaries of public welfare employees in joint session with the Board of Commissioners. Annual budgets are made up at ibis Joint session and submitted by the County Welfare Boards to the State Board of Public Welfare In accord ance wi,th statutory requirements. Copies of budgets are also maintain ed by the county auditor. V HONORED -Wake Forest College conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws degree on W. Herbert Weatherspoon of Ra leigh at its recent finals. He is vice-president and general counsel for Carolina Power & Light Co. A Durham native, he once practiced law and helped edit a newspaper at Laurinburg. Gifted orator, civic and church leader, he served 35 years as a Meredith College trustee and many years as president of ttw board. Kef's Day , Prccrcsn At Vccdkiid Church A special Father's Day program will be observed Sunday morning at 11:00 a. m. of June 7th. in the Woodland Methodist Church. The pastor, RevD. C. Boone will preach on. the topic: "kther and His Flat J .J; la e-f!lj..,Hosse"i''"-,"-:"3 We wilL have both a Young Peojle's and Adult Choir. The en tire family is invited to sit toget her if possible. The public is cord ially invited to attend. ; . Wheal Allotment For Hew Farms Available In Duplin According to Arnold c armers on . iana on which no wheat was seeded for any of the years 1951, 1952, and 1958 may apply for a 1954 wheat acreage allotment, according to Harvey Arnold, Chair man of the Duplin County Product ion and Marketing Administration Committee. To be considered for an allotment on a farm which had no wheat seeded for anv of those years. the farmer must apply in writing to his county P M A Committee by June 30, 1953. Blank application forms are avail able at the County P M A Office for use in filing requests for allotments. Harvey Arnold H L Owens Of Rocky Mt Replaces Heweft As Scout Executive For Tuscarora Bovnellers Season Extended Shad fishermen have been given 15-day extension for their bow- netting activities, it was announced Monday. The bow-netting season, sceduled to end Monday, has been extended until the 15th. "Seiners were given an extension of 15 days because of high water. Bow-netters have been given the same extension.'' Howell said. ,. - .., - I'ewion Grove Roman Calliolic Church Merges White And Negro Congregations NEWTON GROVE. M. r. nrfk. - ouc officials .expressed confidence , that a new unsegregated church here . will "work'., although angry white' parishioners Virtually boy- sonea me iirsi services. ;.,. ,vr V- - About a score of the white parish- loners forced their way into the rectory of the Church of the Holy weaeemer to protest Sunday after 'Negroes attended masses for the first time in history. - Despite the angry words, shoving and one woman's scream at the , rectory entrance' members of the group became Quite after talks with . Bishop Vincent & Waters of Raleigh. There was no other disorder and nq one was hurt 1 Father George Lynch of Raleish Indicated the incident had not dis- couraged the bishop from consoli v dating the white and Negro parishes of this small North Carolina tobae- co center. S.r-' ' i'.- rWe" think it is going to work uui, ue oaiu. - mviv going TO let the situation take care of itself." . The white and Negro churches : axe only about' 200 yards apart Nearly three dozen of the 80 Negro parishers attended . three Sunday masses at tne bishop's lnvltauon. A group of 40 or 50 whites fathered out omy a handful went inside. ' After the services a group of. white men and women gethered at the rectory and demanded' to see the bishop, who had come here un announced to conduct one of the masses.'. - : "We kind of rushed into the hall way, said Kennon Bowderv one ,of the parishers. The bishop said he would talk to us two at a time. He acted mighty nice." - . V- , Bowden said he and his wife fin. ally were called in to see Waters and .were told the bishop was de termoined to preach to all alike be cause "souls do not have nationality. race or coxor." ., v t xxrwaen saia no one made anv runner protests alter .the talks but ne preaictea that the church "is broken up. . . j n think the whole parish is dls. gusted," he said, "ps finished with Newton Grove." Visitor Pulls In 5l-2Po2dB3ssAt I'cfovan's Pcnd i , Local . anglers were somewhat set-back yesterday afternoon when a visitor from Charleston. W. Vs. showed them how to catch fresh water bss in a nearby fish rL Wolford. wdioaia tdssMdostir. Willis here, pulled in a 5tt pound er, xv incnes long. Air. walford said the fish gave him quite fight. It was the 1st large fish that has been caught in the pond. Ji. short jtime before making this catch Woloford pulled In a small bass, weighting about two pounds. He was fishing from the bank with an old time reed pole. When the report got out local fishermen began swarming to thejjsh pond. Mr, Wolf ord says this is his first visit to Kenansville but - not his last by a long shot He leaves Thursday for 'Charleston, after having spent a week here. 1927 Graduating Class Reunion Here Friday i . i.. , -. i i- We over here have about the swine sort of problems as are else where; some solved, some un-solved. 17 a try to weigh each situation un 1 1 it balances, right or wrong! 1 r right.' We think seriously i our neighbors sometimes, bet . tor lv t un-said, even tho they are ' a gooa mt, we might keel him over in the ditch smrtetimes, then when we suddenly tad him in troubles and ' destresa, we ' bend ourselves over, banckward, to try help straighten him out once agiin. if posible. wonder wny it's so murh e ter to help one in trouble Usan to help him' when ..'things roxt s othlyT Perhaps as it should be I i - pose. E eve It Or Not V- t y Bible opened to day at Act-;, Ct. yter twenty-five, verse twenfy s' "Whom I have no certsiisi to write unto my Lor A - r. 'ore I have brought 1 " "i, i . ii. i-L-i v.. .. ..... ; -'"d especially before t"e l King A'grlpp'o that after examin ation had, I might have something to write." j We have Instead today, "silent" punishment which is still evil thoughts which may eventually des troy us. uouid we live a better life? Wonder why we magnify bad things in pec ie's lives and seldom see the r'"-i t"- s in others? , On l. r or Eide. . i ". ' The Liive-ln-Theatres may have takn the places of Grandma's '.'"s, Square Dances and ( , and what nots r.t day "Falsies." .i and not the. Old 3 of long ago . . Grand- t 1 five Len made into a 1 yrf Jo. of days gone . v. ' ,a Grndma wore a at the swimming " v ".t F'ie would have i ' -. H t present ; 1 ' nt r - ci 1 - a ii Members of the 1927 graduating class of Kenansville High School will hold their annual- reunion in Kenansville Cafe here Friday nieht June 5th. Members of the class areN Mrs.' Eloise (Kennedy) Ryder, La Grange; : Miss Mary ' Lee Sykes, Kenansville; Mrs. Florence ; (Sum- merlin) Houston, Warsaw: s Mrs. D. F. (AnnaiLee Summerlin) Cham bers. Kenansville; Mrs. Mattie Lou iwestbrook) Kornegay, - Albertson: Miss Viola Westbrook, Potecaisi; Mrs. Lorena , (Brinson) Vestal, Kenansville: Mrs. Annie May (Brin son) Blahfon,- Magnolia; Mrs'; Ruth (Williams) Adam Carolina Beach: Miss Margaret Williams, Kenans ville; ' Paul Ingram, Kenansville; Oliver Stokes, Kenansville: Mrs. Bertha Mae (Schaffer). Blake. Bur- gaw and Mrs. Janie (Sandlln) Bland, TV.k-AH ru..1 '. ' .... ...if .. UVUOUU VUfVBbt ."J !! i.- JI. ... " Leslie L. Turner. 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. S.D. Turner of Albert son, Route 1, is completing his Air Force basic airman' indocrination course at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Lake Tut Reports Water Analysis Good For Drinking The United States Department of Interior, Geological Survey, Water Resources Branch reports that there is no better lake water in North Carolina than at Lake Tut The water was tested in May, 1853 and officially reported on June 2. The source of'-the 'water is a MS -font weep, weft drilled and cased in xne water tested : was col lected at pipe at ' pump. Water level -5 feet above surface. Yield -800 gallons per minute. The parts per million shown in analysis are: Silica (S102) .10:1 Iron s. B): Calcium (Ca) 6;i'slurn ,fM), IK'-Bodlum? (Na) Sirmnfianese (Mn .14; carbonate (OS) none; Bicarbonate (HCOS) 213; Sulfate (S04) .8; Chloride (CI) 3.1; Fluoride (F) ! none; Nitrate (NOS) none; Dissolved solids 203; Total hardness as- (CaCoS) 173; Color 2; P. tt value 7.4; - Specific conductance (micromhos at 25 C) 338. - Mr. Bernard Fussell, ; owner of Lake Tut reports that people are now taking the water away in con tainers by the gallon for drinking T Mill Breik-In .riYeslfcta i Sherrif . Kalnh Millnr anil W deputies are still investigating a break in at C W. Suratt's Mill, near Chinauanin. whirh nmiwi Monday night. The gas tank at the mill was robbed of 75 gallons of gas. At Wis time they have have no clue as to who the robber might be. Suratt's Mill is located on High way u. II v J J.lL.i ... - f 1 a Tiii.. s IS i-villnff s r!p tthoaA of Schedule t3-:s week and 'the shop and Office Will ha 1nw1 all ilu Thursday, FrHy and Saturday. vc ybody wia be back on the Job ss V'inoi find -r. -, . Church Women To Meet Peace College UnJuneStolj Raleigh - More than two hundred women of the Presbyterian Synod of. North Carolina are . scheduled to attend the eighth annual Synodi cal Training School to be held at mice college, Raleigh June 8-13, according to 'announcement from the director, Mrs. W. D. Pearce, of uaieign. Advance registrations now being made with Mrs. C. Reid Ross. Fayetteville, are running ahead of the comparable period of last year, indicating a capacity enrollment for the coming session, i1, -' Initiated in 1946 under the leader ship of Mrs. George U. Baucom, Raleigh, the.'Tralning . School has grown in content and has enjoyed an increasing attendance on the part of leaders of Women of the Presbyterian Church in the state. The program for this year's school will include accredited leadership training : classes, , conferences deal ing with specific activities and pro grams ' and evening . sessions pre senting inspirational addresses. . . Dr. Frank Hall Be Legion Spaker Wilmington Dr. Frank: HatL well known Presbyterian minister. wui be tne guest speaker for the annual Memorial Service during the Department Convention of The American Legion here June 10-13. The Memorial Service, has been scheduled for 7:00 p. m., on Thurs. day, June nth, in Thalian HalL The Grand -Voiture Officers of the Forty & Eight and Department Officers of the Auxiliary will par ticipate in the, services which will have: Legion Department Chaplin Reverend Milton B. Faust in charge. , Special music is planned for this service which memorializes friends and buddies who have passed on. A." T.' Griffin; Jr., President of Tuscarora Council, . announced to day that a replacement has been secured for . the position in Scout ing being vacated by L. W. Hewett, Sr. on June 30. The new Field Scout Executive is H. L. Owens, Jr., who comes to us from Rocky Mt., NJPC Owens is a native of Rocky Mount where he attended the pub-' lie schools. He was a Scout as a boy, attaining the rank of Eagle. In 1943 Owens entered the U. S. Navy and served through the war period, attaining the rank of lieu tenant In 1946 he graduated from the University of North Carolina with an A. B. degree. In 1947 he was accepted for enrollment in the National Training School tor Scout Executives. Upon graduation, he became a Field Scout Executive in East Carolina Council, with head quarters in Wilson, N. C. This posi tion he has held continuously until the present time. Mr. Owens is maried to the for mer Miss Sally Bogart of Washing ton, N. C. They have one daughter, Sally Ann, two years old. According to present plans, Owens will reside in Smithfield and will be primarily responsible for service ing Scouting Units in Johnston and Wayne counties. He will assume his duties in Tuscarora Council on July 1, 1953. It is planned to add a new man to the Tuscarora Council Staff to look after the Scouting interests in Sampson and Duplin Counties. This man will be employed in the very near future. GREATEST NEED People are demanding more and more horse-power when what we need is more will power. It's easy for those outside to crit icize those on the inside. ;': iiv The Dunlin I ers Monday r to b? vc liti t"'- 1 V i Wilmington will be called in to (""'w t.ie r'nns. ' ' " ' Fnard S'-rnrlated i r -i of Contest Be Held Wallace, June 12 by J Simpson, Asst County Agent A tractor driversMeontest will be Hleld in Wallace on June 12, at 10:60 A. M. This wiU be the first contest of this .type ever .held in Duplin County. -n ' The drivers will be members drawn from 4-H Clubs in the county. They will try their driving skill out at the Wallace High School grounds on Friday, June 12, at 10:00 A. M. These boys have been en rolled in the 4-H Club Tractor Maintenance course for the past year. This contest will be a climax to their years work. They will com pete with each other, for some valuable prizes, in Tractor Safety, Tractor Driving, and Belting oper ations. ' This is the first such contest that has ever been put on in the county. Duplin rates at the top in the num ber of tractors on the farm, and is still climbing. The contest is connected with the 4-H Club Main tenance Project and will be a test to see how well our young farmers are learning to care tor and operate their farm tractor. Everyone is in vited to attend. Some of jrou old hands, who are tractor experts, will want to see ust now good our young folks are - maybe they are better than you. and maybe not but I know yorewill want to find out so come to the contest and see for yourself. . . Mr. N. L. Vann, of Wallace Motor and Implement Company, who Is sponsoring the- contest, has put up some very , nice,- prizes that will really make the contestants try their very best , to win. The top prize is a free to Raleigh, plus a $30.00 set of tractor - tools. This should make any young man really try his best to win. The dads will all be there rooting for their favor ite driver, and maybe eying the very nice tool sets that their young sters can bring home. , . Brio Mrs. Craven, T. B. Worker, Requests Salary Reduction The executive committee of the Duplin County T. B. Association held its annual meeting in -the local Health Department offices last Thursday night President Dr. Colwell of Wallace presided. Miss Lillian Wilson, field worker for the state T. B. Association attended. Dr. Powers, local Health Officer, suggested that money be appropri ated to buy certain type of medi cine needed for cases that cannot be admitted to state sanatoriums. It was approved to provide the Health Department with $300 for this purpose. Mrs. Carolyn Craven of Warsaw executive secretary gave her annual report and the treasurer's report, in his absence,' who Is Garland P. King. It showed a cash balance on hand now of $1007.41. Mrs. Ruby Kornegay, recording, secretary re ported on communicable diseases in the county last year as follows: T. B. 17 cases reported and 6 deaths; measles, 16 cases reported; diptheria seven cases reported. Members Of the board include Mrs. Kornegay, Mrs. Addis Cates of Faison; Mrs. Q. J. Sutton and Dr. Matthews, Warsaw; Gilbert Alphin, Summerlin' and J. R. Grady, Kenansville. Alphin and Grady are new members. Lewis Outlaw, chairman of the seal sale was re appointed to that position. New officers named were; Dr. Colwell, reelected president; Mrs. A. P. Cates, vice president; Mrs. Ruby Kornegay, recording secretary; Gar land P. King, treasurer and Mrs. Carolyn Craven, executive . secre tary. Mrs. Craven requested that her salary be reduced from $65 per month to $50 per month for this year. Dr. Ruff in Is In New York Attending A.M. A. Meeting Dr. and Mrs. Winston Ruffin of Pink Hill are in New York city where Dr. Ruffin is one of more than 16,000 doctors from all parts of the United States attending the annual meeting of the American Medical Association this week. NEW YORK, The convention, the 102d in the A. M. A.'s annuals, was expected to be the largest gat hering in the history of the medical profession. Scientfic meetings were held in seven hotels and in Town Hall. Four floors of Grand Central Palace are being used for scientific exhibits and a technical exposition.' Approx imately 260 exhibits prepared by doctors for the special benefit of the family physician are presented on the fourth floor of the Palace. The exhibits show some of the dramatic developments in medicine, especially in heart surgery, but con siderable emphasis will be placed on the prevention of child accidents, which accounts for the deaths, after infancy, of more children than any one disease. More than 375 manufacturers of drugs ana medical equipment food processors, medical "book publishers and other commercial organizations are participating in the technical exposition that occupy the three lower floors of the Palace. About 400 papers, covering every phase of medical research and therapy, are being given in a scien tific program are presented in gen eral sessions and twenty-one sect ional group meetings. The gather ings are field at the Commodore, New Yorker, Waldorf-Astoria, Bel mont Plaza, Astor and Roosevelt Hotels and in the Town Hall. Em phasis is being placed on the dis eases that today7 take the heavlert: death tolls such as heart and blood vessel diseases and cancer. , The scientific phase includes also a medical motion picture program, with about twenty-five films de picting the latest techniques in the treatment of many diseases, in cluding cancer and tuberculosis. Color television originates from the operating rooms and clinics of the New York Hospital and is being viewed for the first time on large screens. Two five-by-six-foot screens are located at the Roosevelt Hotel Officers Capture Still and Arrest To Move Info , ' The Weather The temperature has been fine on our dispositions for the past two or three nights when the thermo meter dropped' -down, around, tne fifties but the dry weather is be ginning to show in the faces of our farmers. . Crops , are beginning to suffer, .not just in Duplin but it is reported state-wiae. xne weather man said Tuesday night that fair and continued ieooi through Wed nesday and Thursday. r Halt And Wind , " Hail and "heavy winds were re ported in the Beulavllle and' Cedar Fork sections Monday. Soma crop damage was reported. r i, k Mr. Beaaley tn Hospital - Mr. L. ' A. Beasley, prominent Kenansville attorney, underwent serious operation' in the Clinton hospital last week. Reports from the family Tuesday-said the had the crises an was getting along as tine as could .fit! expected. : to Gavin's Office - Mrs. Preston Sheppard of Glisson Township, formerly in the Register of 'Deeds office here has accepted position in the office of Vance B. Gavin, local attorney. Moves Into flew Home ' Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Littleton moved into their new home on Rutledge treet here Ve"iFs.i v. They have l iiiit afar I ilow type Duplin County librarian Miss Dorothy Wightman is perking up around here these days as she pre pares to move into the new library building shortly. The building is not new but will be new to the library. This week the county had tne old li. o. Williams office build ing moved onto the lot besides the Welfare building. It was given to the county by Mr. Williams to be used as a library bunding. It is much larger and in better shape than the old building. . Oullcok Good . .. '. .. . .V,..,. For Weed Crop Raleigh L. T. Weeks, general mana ger of the Flue - -Cured Tobacco Stabilization Corp-said Monday the outlook is generally good for tne 4S08 crop in both Quality and price. ,,.v;,,:;t.,-v..; - tvw ;' Weeks said prices are expected to equal the average paid for the 1952 crop. The latest support price averages as of March was $47.90. MeawhUe Lacy F. Weeks of Raleigh, field service director for Tobacco Associates, IncL, urged leaf growers to stress quality product ion Vas never before." , "Our leadership In the world! market depends on oualltv.' he said. "The overall demand is good but we 'rm; t -develop, recinrocal ... . - i Saturday morning, Sherrif Ralph Miner and Deputies, Houston. Boone, Revelle and McKay cap tured a submarine type still, capa city of 100 gallons with a double condenser and twj sets of oil burn ers. Along with tne stiL. 2 ,-.ire;l of beer and 100 gallons cf mash was confisti-atet'. The still w;,' located :n Gliiiu trwrisxt- abou. 1-4 mile from tie Alum Springs Church. No lirroits we made. Sunday afternoon, Duputies Boone. Revelle and Houston arrested Julius Herring for possession of five Vi gallon jars of non-tax-paid whiskey in his possession. Upon the search the officers found the whiskey in a hog pen a short distance from Herrings house. Herring was tried in Justice of Peace Court and Disced under '$200 bond. Waived hearing to County Court (Editor's Note: Blue Cross is coming to Duplin County, June 1st. The Duplin General Hospital will cooperate with The Hospital Care Association of Durham in the in tensive county-wide enrollment campaign. If there is anything you don't understand about Blue Cross anything you would like to know about it, send in your questions to the Public Relations Department Hospital Care Association, Durham. N. C. ) QUESTION: What is the purpose of Blue Cross? ANSWER: To protect you and your family against the shock of unexpected hospital and surgeons' bills. By providing an inexpensive prepayment plan for these costs. Blue Cross assures you of health protection, without the accompany ing big hospital bills that can mean personal bankruptcy. With The Hos pital Care Association's Compre hensive and Standard Certificates, North Carolinians can have a max imum Blue Cross protection at a minimum cost. QUESTION: What does a Blue Cross member have to do to get his bills paid? ANSWER: A Hospital Care Asso ciation member has only to present his Blue Cross identification card when he is admitted to a Member Hospital. This is all he has to do. The hospital notifies the Associ ation, and we handle all details and send payments directly to the hospital and - or physician for their services. After the subscriber leaves the hospital, he receives a voucher showing the benefits paid by the Association. QUESTION: Is Blue Cross expen sive? ANSWER: No, because The Hos pital Care Association is a non profit organization, there are no stockholders. Thus, complete hos pital, surgical and maternity care cost only a few cents a day for the whole family. In the last year more than 98 of the income re ceived was returned to subscribers in the form of hospital claims paid and necessary adWnistrivx penses. The remaining 2 went into a reserve fund to meet possible future contingencies, as required by the N. C Insurance Commission, l Any divisible surplus that is ac crued by the Association is return ed to the certificate holders in the form of lower dues or increased benefits. Editorial Kev. Tom Ed. Bizzell of Pine Level, N. C. and Rev. J. M. Bizzell jr. oi Micro, N. c will begin a revival meeting at Deavers Chanel Church on Monday night June 8. Services each evening at 8:00. Reg ular church services each 1st Sun day morning at 11:00 and Sunday night. Everyone is invited to attend these services. i THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER By JOHN H. CASEY IN THE NORTH CAROLINA PRESS Without its newspapers the small town American community would be like a school without a teacher a church without a pastor. In the aggregate, the country news paper determines the outcome of more elections, exerts a greater in fluence for constructive community progress, is read longer by more members of the family and con stitutes, with its millions of circu lation and quadrupled millions of readers, a better advertising med ium than any other group of news papers or periodical publications. When properly conducted, it cul tivates so intensively its home news field that city dailies, farm journals and general magazines circulating in the same territory becomes only secondary influences. Through service to its community, the country newspaper will not merely survive; it will continue to flourish as the most representative, most distinctive, most wholesome type of journalism America has produced. Dry Weather Hurts Calypso Crops .'J CALYPSO, June 1 Dry wea ther is affecting the late bean crops and as a result the movement of this crop will some be over, it is the opinion of S. L. Warren produce man. An abundance of beans have been moving to the Mt Olive mar- ket from this area. These have brought from $2.74 to $4.75, per hamper, depending on quality. The potato crop locally has also been hurt by the continued dry weather, Warren said. Less Pclhtion Is Resorted In llerth last River feor 7.If.r0fiVe A sanitation, expert reported last week that pollution in .the North east Cape Fear River below Mount Olive has been vastly reduced since last August Dr. Nelson Nemerow. nrofessor ox sanitary engineering at State. reported that he found no signs of waste rrom tne Mount Olive Pickle Company's plant in the river dur ing a 15-mile check Thursday mor ning. The company . had - invited Doctor Nemerow to make the check as a follow-up to -one -conducted last AUgUSt -t-:v,-,-'-;jii-;i,-i.1;-,.. v At all points cheeked by the ex pert-there was sufficient oxygen available in the water to support fish life. In addition, there were no solids from the pickle plant in the waters so far as Dr. . Nemerow could determine. J "'-.,- ? The lnitiral survey of the river. Olive citizens had complained to then-Governor Kerr Scott about the large number of fish that were be ing found dead in the river. Gov ernor Scott sent a state sanitation ' department official to the site to conduct an investigation and the -pickle company invited Dr. Nem erow in to make a parallel exam ination. - ;;.,..,.-. v..,. The first survey showed thai 80 per cent of the pollution existing ' in the stream was attributable to -pickle plant wastes with the re mainder coming from the town. Since that time, screens have been placed over the company's disposal outlets! and company employees were asked, to cooperate In a cut- down of waste materials. No future survey has been plan- - ned by either the state or the Pick le company unless a need for one traoe f "- .). was made last f .;i i -f J'w-t Is f awn. -.