I' Tv;o, Actions ; 12 PegqsY i This Yleek -W UL'BWKIPTION RATES: S.S per liter to Dentin and adjoialng Countir; M.IK) aataide this rea In H. C; W-M We M. C. PRICE TEN CENTS LUMEXXV ,'STo. 7 s g. t "5 fct M iVA , 'THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13 1958. ' XV ' , . , -, 3 V J j Briefs Mm 'Lanier llimi -. the most . 'outstanding Lrward In the history of Cainqua- iin?b, stands H H" tali A enldu she has average tetter than 8 points per game, a member of h a Rota club and a bus driver. I"" i . . T Ehe is the daughter of Mrs. vera k Lanier. . ' , 1 ; ' ' : - 1 A hustling Wallace-Rose Hill Guard, Jane has played for four years. She Is five feet six Inches tall andis a senior. Per . parents are Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Beeves, as yet her post graduate plans are indefinite. I I i .- V.t Laurie Mnrrwr '"! Laurie, ' a transplanted guard, played outstanding basketball as a Wallace-Hose ' Hill 1 forward this year, standing five ;f eet eight in ches tall, this Senior scored an av erage of 25 points per game this season. She is thei daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Murray. After gra duation she plans to take a Beuti cian'S 'course.' Patients In Duplta v' Oenersl Hospital. ' The following are patients in Du plin General Hospital; annte Ma 1 Anderson, " Eva Costin, Ann We: 'Houston, "Mary Swlnsbn Outlay, Lucille ; Moore SoUtherland an : Angela Gray StanciL. Warsaw! na f Thomas- Andrews, AHen Ay cock ' and 'Dennis ' Charles' Foun; tain, Chinquapin; 1 Thomas' L Bo niim Goidsboro! Lester S. Brinson LouisB Thelma Hall. William Coloi Lee, James Daniel Matthews, Carl Edward Fate 'and Saran rope Simpson, : Kenansvlltoj. f Georgr Frank Goodman and Elizabeth Ger- Truue' xiogan, 'umsiun iuw jm HiU, Mi. Olive; 1 Albert Hughlej and Robert James Sykes, Ros HiH;-' Carolyn" '' Henderson Jamee Louise Minnt Rdckley and WooJL Roosavelt ShoUr,, Wallace; Katie Elliott Jones, Falson; saran xvonne Merrit', Magnolia; Bloise Whaley Thomas: Beulaville and Samuel E. Williams of Calypso. Births Reeorded Dapttn lfr""LlJ 1111 V.. T V' - , v.. -7rf'. i 'Must.'. a .if- sAKatatabs) Hi -i 1 1 TWO-CAB SMASH KILLS ONK PERSON John Willard Sutton, 47, wiite,1 of, KlnsWn Route 4, driver of the 1951 model car on the right was fatally injured Friday morning about two and one-half miles south of Kinston on the Pink Hill Highway. Driver of the on.i tn'i'tf nan fnrWArdf'With 1111, piuuiil f ImnVi , naetinfi same, has) devetopecr finto a superb player, while scoring Ion an average oi over I u font nine ibcu jjuniOi is a team player au tue wey. i-r ij-J i.n'.vioti h is active in the'-Monogram ami wee i-iub. WWm 'u-- 611U Mr" u T. Braswell. ' .j '''ida Weston da, :; senior and the leading scorep for Beulaville this year with a Tl point average per game. She is a member of the Beta, French an BasketbaU Clubs, on the 'An nual Stiff, n4 Sohool Paper. She is the daughter of V' and Mrs. O. Weston.;- ' ';$. . . i ;:;k : Shelby tesiey ShalbyVlMs been fdr the past four -i -w. h.Mf?iTard la the county ind for WaTlace-RossHin ' Naney Miller'' '" "Dependable" best describes this RMiiaviUe euarcTs playing prow- fljs.,,Ih"her four years as var- stoembwi this live ioot six iubu Senior guara nag earneu wc pect ' of team members and oppo Jewel, one of the most outstand ing guard- to' the eounty, is an all around team player. She is five nents alike. She Is also active in feet seven inches tall and a Junior. . . fha ctBff member of the Monogram Club. of the school paper. Her parents The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ma- i Hursing School wiu iw, ruu"i Z"7 CZ. tion In Shelby's carefe ICWord Johnson. are Mr. and Mrs. John Miller. Col lege will follow graduation in Nancy's career. Kay rope Kv a Junior and one of Kenan's bright stars that will be back next season stands five feet seven in ches tail. She is a member i tne Betaj Glee, and Monogram Clubs. The adughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. P6pe."" - ;; son Brown. Pat Harper TW, 'B. T. Gradv forward has come up. with.30 points per game this season. She is five feet eight nihM .'tail and a member of the Beta. Club. and. Music Club. Pat, is the daughter of: Mr. ana mrs In. D Haner. She plans to attend lErlgnsm Young University. Brenda Johnson Brenda, ; an outstanding-guard on the"Wallace-Rose HiU Lady Bull dogs and a '"Leader in aU phrases of schooi activities.": She Js a mem ber 'of tlie Beta Club and also a cheerleader. VS1 AU-Tour-..... i.ir..u a. sophomore. She is theWXHMr; nd 1 ' Alma "Jo" McOallen Alma, a. Senior at North Duplin t... rrav. twttep than 25 nolnts this season. The Daughter of Mr. and Mrs, w. H MeCulien. sne is a member of the Beta Club ana a bus driver, plans to attend W. C. and study rtyslcal Therapist i . i i a uiman its nriDuir k. uwhhwwi ' Tournament wttl get i ? Monday; night. February startlng'St 7:30 P.JM. a ! Audttorium In Kenansvllle, :' ; 4 . j. hr. the 1 tournament f iiext week w 18 with two games each, night girls i ITS.J; hov. t 9:00. Semi- finalsWednesday; nighf and iinals Friday; unr pncea ' ... t,r. A Kill. A'K i ;ment wui e - " -. .i ' '. hkitib. t James.1 1 Kenan. gir at the . oresent i a .a roeord. Wallace-Rose , Hill are in second pUce with M H f cord. Wallace-Rose HU1 and Chln- nuapin Play, Frids night -in the final regular' season game for. both aubs; and if Chinquapin defeaU Wallace-Rose Hill the Lady Tigers v.... win H thb 'winners, well anyway they are assured at least . tie for firstplace at present In the l. . ltu1.lnn BAUiavuie as i Mnftwiea with a o-i re cord with, Kenan close behind with a 8-3 season record., Now If North Duplin defeats Beulaville Friday iht in the final regular season game Kenan and Beulaville will be tied for first place. Boywnat a race r- rin And BeoUviUe Spilt I. f..a "Long Fellow" Lanier led ( '7'inpln F'rls with. T7 points to a : -g vk-tort .overlEeulavIUt t.";' t i-81. Ma Weston James, Wooten,i. Lanier. v" , AivsnTi ' , GMieail Hospital Mt. and Mrs. Sidney Earl Ball, Willard, a' girl February 8. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Johnson, a boy February 7. ' Mr. and Mrs. William A. Houston, Warsaw, a boy February 8. Mr' and Mrs. Nelson Jones, irai son, a boy February 9. ' Mr. and Mrs. Homer James, Wal lace, a boy February 9. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nathan South- erland, a boy February 10. Mr. and Mrs. James Hill, Mt. Olive, a girl February 11. District Meeting Th'ore will be a district meeting of Number 9 of the Licensed Prac- tocal Nurses in Goldsboro at the 'Nurses home of the Wayne Memo rial Hospital on . February 19 at 7:30 p.m. ' As Duplin County which is on District 8. has not been organized, rh Goldsboro District has issued' n invitation for all those mteres-1 ted in Duplin County to attend this meeting. " Rural Telephone Project Begins Wnrlr ia scheduled to begin this vv on a teleDhone company pro ject which will provide service to thirtv-four rural applicants east of Warsaw along the road to Unity Church and vicinity. This was announced today Mr. W. Y. Vann. manager for Carolina T.lenhone and Telegraph Company. Mr. Vann further stated that the project would Involve an estimated expenditure of iu,s. 'inese ap plicants are expected to receive telephone service around March ' In order to accomplish this pro ject, it w'u Evolve placing some nine miles of wire facilities and constructing eight miles of new pole line. The new facilities will be placed along the aforementioned route with service furnished from the Wsrsaw exchange ent Interest Is High; Duplin Leads SENCIand Area ' 7 '. . m , .... ..I it., I !-irc- tn inprpaQA farm income Community Development is ex panding in Duplin County wilh in terest being the highest It has been since the first club was organized in 1957. A coal of 20 Community Develop ment Clubs has been set for 1958, according to Vernon H. Reynolds, County Farm Agent. In DuDlin. as in other counties and area where the prog.-am has been successful, all agriculture agencies and organizations are working together to make the over all program mean something to every family, community and Co unty benefit. Community Development had its origin in the Mountains of North Carolina. Since 1950, several areas have bean organized, composed of several counties, with two objec- Annual ReDOrt Of Dunlin ASC Is i . Given; Pertinent Information Given Several Important him Meetings Are Scheduled f or Du0 &mj fmM second car was named as Donald Erwin Murphy, 24, white, of Kenansville. A passenger in Murphy's car .Lester Brinson, 87, ef , Magnolia, suffered a broken leg. (Photo by George Denmark, Jr., staff photographer, by courtesy of Kinston Free Press.) Courtesy of Kinston Free Press Motorist Dies In Collision Near Kinston Friday Lenior County's second traffic fatality of the year occurred at about 8:45 a. m. Friday when John Willard (Popeye) Sutton, 47 of Kin ston Route 4 was killed in a two-car head on collision about two and one-hajf miles south of Kinston on the Pink Hill Highway. The victim, alone in his car, was pinned beneath the vehicle when it rolled over on its left side, witnes ses said. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Parrott Memorial Hospital and the body was taken to the Jarman Funeral Home. The second driver was identified as Donald E r w l n iviurpny, m white, a volunteer fireman of Ken ansville. He suffered minor chest injuries caused when he was slam med against his steering wheel. A Dasseiu:cr in Murphy's 1956 auto- l mobile suffered a broken right leg tives: (1) to increase farm income and (2) and to convert this in creased farm nicome into better living. SENCIand.. comnosed of seven Southeastern North Carolina coun ties, is the first such area orgnai 7od in Eastern North Carolina. During the first year of copeti- tion to ietermine the County Com Continued On Back Several important farm meetings have been scheduled in Duplin County next week. Vernon H. Reynolds said that on Wednesday, Feb. 19, a Sweet Potato meeting will be held at 7:30 p. m. at Aldine Whitfield's Potato House, in the Rones Chapel section, to dis cuss various phases of sweet potato priduction. Reynolds said he will discuss production, seed selection, fertili zing, bedding, planting, cultivation and harvesting. On Thursday, Feb. 20, at 7:30 p. Continued On Back On a harvested acreage of 18- 8)1.35 acres, a total of 32,637,953 pounds were marketed. This gave tie county an average yield of fifty farms with an allotment i.t no was numeu as jjcici 10.73 acres did not plant any to- .57. white of Kenansville and was bacco aken to Duplin Memorial Hospltm Twenty-nine farms remained at Kenansville for treatment. Stale Income Tax Facts The 1957 General Assembly made Federal provisions covering income a number of changes in the North-., from purchased annuities and re Carolina individual Income tax law. tirement plans. All receipts are with most of the changes bringing taxable where the taxpayer had no State law Into line with Federal investment in the annuity or retire i. Iment plan and an exclusion of the The major changes affecting the taxpayer's investment is allowed reporting of income by North CarO- over a period of years if he con Una i individual taxpayers are dis- tributed to the annuity or plan. If cussed In this article. Future art-1 the total cost will be recovered icles will discuss deductions.per- within three years after the start- aonal exemption Slid tax credits All of the changes discussed are effective for the calendar year 1957. U) annuity and Retirements In come. Th old " rule" has been re placed by provisions similar to the inff date the amounts received are excludable until the Investment Is recovered, otherwise the excludable amount will be determined by use of life expectancy tables and the annuity starting date or January 1, 1957, whichever date is later. Continued On Back over-planted for a total excess acreaee of 27.26 acres. Twenty-nine farms planted 7.45 acres without an allotment. Cotton The cotton allotment for Duplin County in 1956 was 4,198 acres. This allotment was divided among the 1.174 cotton farms, of which thirty five were new farms with an allot ment of 29.5 acres. Corn The corn allotment for Duplin County in 1956 was 78,225 acres. This was allotted to 5,161 farms. Marketing quotas were not in ef fect on corn and about 58 percent of the farms stayed within their allotments or soil bank bases. There were 73,294 acres of corn planted in Duplin County in 1956. 2,261 acres of this was planted on arms that did not stay within their allotments or soil bank bases. 41, 33 acres of this was planted on arms that ad stay within their allotments or soil banks bases, (continued from front) - . tv 4 imm-mmmtMmw 1 ton 44, Grady 32, N.' Miller, Ken- n Miller Aibertson. ' ;i In the boya ameBuddyj Mercer! -.ut. ' of nnjfitn led Beulaville to 8 sounding Victory pver .Cninquapln 75-53..' f .,-Si"f1 mas. l. Mercer 21, Bratchep 16, J.' Thomas watnews wwiw, ier L Brown .; 1ir;;"".':'!-..,j ' ' Chinquapin . K j Humer o,.v Maready -; 18, Sloan, Bowen is, p. Raynor 4, Evans 5, 5, W, Ma ready 1, w tiaynor , uwsn 4r f mw- v.... Ulan "Hirer's lied bv . iua - Howard Usher stop Br. uraay in the final home game of theseason x-tt TiiMUlav nishl . ' J- M) Uiher 10. ciau. Price 7, Bishop 12, Powell. L, Ctferry, Matthias 2, Hule 1,'Stanley.i ? Sv B. Tf, Grtdy (39) Harper a, n. t' sk MwaWiiiv ha rpentlV- 1X1 a.4.."iHB Tji Laity ! Gefiuchi, 8 yeas oJ4 gub $cbut was awarded . .aHfn of 'merit from: the Nattohal Court of Honor for savin 'the life of a playmate. 2 ... y. r. i a in inn- rnk SMit Larrv Genuchi nine years of age, was walking .through his yard witn a neignoor a1". xwina.. 'jxuiuu . " - year old brother. J. W. "Bo.Klng i Jt. . - Bo" , trippta; na ibm .s ti.a.ma ntfltiffiea wim dangling live, wire. Heraing the boy tif rememoerinx u" tloni he had received , in hte dem. T .Ml tiailiaiA tl U1B DDj BUVft " uir v I 4 wbu, - him sharplyV knocking Wm tree of th.' live wire.",!'- r:- y. ( Larry is the son of tha iormet Kathleen Wlggs of, Warsaw and the The History Of Lanefield School 1 Smith- 8, Goodson 7,, Southerland , Stroud, HiU 7f Strafford In the girls game, Joyce Brsi wen led the Lady Tigers -with 35 points to victory to assure them of at least a tie for first place.' Kenan (84) . Pope M, Standi, Boona 8, Braswell 5, Pope, Brown, Adjrvs . .... . B.' T. Grady (47), Howard 17, Ws ters 8, Harper SI, StiIOi P. &r( Kathleen " " " , grandsonot Mr, H. .Wiggs of WatBw-;rByi;W.:v . MiHtih in korei were the first to airlift a company, then battalions of essualtl troops by neucoptea. n Kb. 11 1899. the battleship USS Maine was sunk by an under- .watnr rr-' -n at Tavana, Cuba. Of tUe tii ici,: 5 wc ttt uuieueut benool : Nearlraixty years in this com munity, a little group of men who were interested in educating tneir children began to discuss ways ana means for starting a school. Those were not days' tt much money, for the effects of the Civil War were still very evfcdenC Ifor were there taxeLio fee spent for' such things. Tfte truth is the Uxes of those days atmiM nnt have cone far toward providing either building or tea chers even; haa they oeen avau .Ki.Wnr.fnf this mav be readily seen by examining an ld tax re ceipt founa recenuy id ihvi it h om thai one ox una group of men who founded Lane . . . . J k. m. rieia was ciprotu w yj " nifirient mm at 1.87 on rm ox nariV a hundred acreg. Birt it tnoey was tSheap "so were teadhera-v and lumuer, ana inese r pa were U " 1 . roeat abet L Top row left to right' William ;3:; Boyette, Oswald Perrell, Eliott Chestnutt, Randall Jones. : .. ' ' i 7 M Second rowt Leon Boyette, Rena Boyette, John. Wright Boyette, Herbert Smfth.'-vf .- !r' . V ' . ," " Third row: Bruce Torrans, Ralph Moore, Esther Moore, Hanna i i ; Fourth row! Bph Jones,-Vtoia Moore, Alice Tucker, AdeUe K.iiigwttiv'rv'AnB3sae Smta., on wH .Miat juTM-ifjShme;. Fifth' rows Herbert a Middleton, JR andW';,::? Sixth row; . Henry Middletott and James Bovey Boyette : : Bottom front: L and SUls West a cchool If we W heard r' Mr H. B Bowden, Br. 3. U Car' X. A, , W. Carlton, Mr. V. the teadera anvtunC than were Winders, Mr Ankrum Boyette, Mr., tsaiom rhllUps. ur. ueorge sia i Mrs. Minnie. Middleton Hussey, tho mithnr of the Article was former tescher of the Laneneio Srhnnl She is now a resident of Greensboro and was librarian at Womans College until her retire ment this fall. dleton, Mr. TO. J. Middleton and Rev. W. M. Kennedy and Mr. Clem Rlllesnie. A small Dlot of land, part of the present site, was given by Mr. Winders and the name ox io .whonl ealled Lanefleld. for the " F" ' very Simple reason that a a iine once had a house ana aeias vara oy k..;iin in which wa meet to- kUS MM..M1II, - - day. As we cleaned the newgrounds this spring It Pe mieresuns to find traces o old corn row that evidently belonged once w wese same field. - 1 . 1 1 Then a house wa atanea. almple enough affair to be sure lv.. hi,. .t hnlMlnrf nf that day t uv - Continued On Back New Community Development Clubs Being Organized Four new Community Develop ment Clubs are being organized in Duplin County. The new clubs will bring the to tal of such organizations in the County to nine. Temporary officers and plans have been completed at Oak Ridge. East Magnol and Beautancus with another one beingplannedatFotters HiH. J. A. Glazener, Extension Pro gram Planning Specialist, said today that the goal in Duplin County fc to have at least 20 Community De velopments Clubs organised by tne end of 1958. "These Clubs mean a great deal to this County, "Vernon H. Rey nolds, County Farm Agent said, "and we are doing everything in our power to help those people and communities organize whicn want to be a part of the overall County program." The other live commuum ganized and functioning are: pleas ant Grove, Cedar Fork, Fountam Lyman. Sarecta and Bowden. Leroy Simmions Elected Head 01 Farm Bureau Leroy Simmons, of Aibertson, has been re-elected president of the Duplin County Farm Bureau. Mrs. David Williams, of Rose IHU. has been elected vice-president Alonza C. Edwards, execu secretary of the North Carolina u p,rn was euest speaker at the annual meeting held in Kensns- ville. , H D Club Meeting i Schedule Give , For Feb. 17 Week The schedule for County Hem , ;, Demonstration Club .meetings .for-' the week beginning .V; announced today by County, Horn - . ; ;; Agent Mrs. A1U Kornegay.v ,;A!1 i. meetings begin at 8:98 t tn i In the meetings which w m V. attended by Mrs. Kornegay, Jcljfc ; and Jams wUl be the demonrtrat. : , (oenttad tre-V frwit) ; v !; 1 t f. ' ;fs far rulav'". j r ':;:r. D) "nD"n fvr

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