c. 13, 1-3. V 'WiVga3w- cQiTtWT MIES down, three to ay Guaran teed by Good Houaekcemg, f alam AhunloBm Awnings, '.Car;, ports, pa tie. AJwtuUte storm win-' ds and doors eiao. im(qdI saade v " blinds I;lr"a appreci a iff estim 4wl inform. Uua gladly riven; Call or write W. J. f, 8tysosi rhene w . FOR jfUUf WANOS; Two pianoa in vicinity, -J; goodies- 1 new. May , have by paying unpaid balance due In erested partite write living time of day can be ' contacted Jotmt Piano Shop, Cfcanite Quarry N. C . I ;v - io-c , v Oar entire etere bnUdlng, mer chandise and fbrtnres for ante Extra good looatioo. Beaaon for ailing. Failing health, aad ago. for aalc at onbe, GayV Clothing Store, Me Center Bt, Mi. OUve is t. c AGENT WANTED Want to maka IIS ta S25 in a day? Many are doing it Pleasant work for man orv woman." No ex-1 erJ-Be needed. Sparer or full j time. Will teach and finance yon. Write KeNESS CO, Depk C, Cand ler Bidg- Baltimore , . I j Many so-called economists ex press puzzlement over the fact that despite increasing unem ployment. Jiving costs continue to go up to nw record highs. :-...'. I. ; . A few short months ago, in the drive to atop inflation, the official word Vent out from Washington urging epler-r"!SLri3 to buy leaa.l- 1 Now the tuner 1 j has changed! M' and people arei - v fj mare. I As - This is proo- vy m. Uon but whatl s it inflation , is aL. L MJ erave dancer C.W.Hardw aign.. In fact., on several oeca-J siona, nation's inaepenaen ousi ajoaamon, through National Fed-, oration of Independent Business, have pointed out this danger. 0 0 ' The taatkra then reta down aa to wmvt eoasea inflation Urcoa tinoel a tune af a baYinewi and b e e o ' Basically, a dollar does not have any magic value. In actual ity. It li a measure of productiv ity. When dollars are exchanged for non-productivity, then the value of the dollar gets less; and this results in inflation. a e e Thus, today, government to un doubtedly the greatest inflation ary force fat the country; a far greater force than Mrs. Jones aptarglag at the apparel shop on Main Street, or her husband sign, ing a contract to buy a flashy, expensive new convertible. 0 0 0 There are a few grim facts that cannot be escaped. . . .. ; a) - It has a? the fashion in gov. rrimient aQr.ttrUmto Inflation to people faKVtnjr, too. much money s act ionuawrce aept nargorca .show the. per capita income only Increased from $f,27 per year POTATO sPROUlrsI Grown From High Quality Treated n " Seeds. Come In Now,t WhOe Supply : ' 204 - 210 N. Ileritaje' i j ; I want a farm la this neighbor- Mid. if tM un a iavm rar bub pieaee writ to m at once, giving dl-wcHoo on how tat r I to row turn, and year asking prico. Bo 31 WalUoa, N C. : FOK QUICK 8X1 or LEASE Friendly Cleaaara, rink Hill, H. P. Coed going liuaiium, good lo- reason for' o iling, pall at 4ae4 or call Flak Hill S4U. , LEGAL IIOTICES NOTICE Or RESALE Under and by virtue of an order of resale of Superior Court of Duplin County, made in apecia proceeding entitled, "In the Matter of S. L Fountain, guardian for Lil lian Fountain,1' the undersign d Commiuioner will on Wednesday July 3, 1958 at 1100, noon, at the Courthouse - Door in KenansvIIle N. C, Duplin County, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain land described below being in Cypress Creek Township, Dup lin County. North Carolina, and more particularly described as fallows: B ginning Bid: , 1860.25 Raleigl Fountain Beginning at a stake in the old line, comer of Lot V as indicated in 1952 to fl.942 in 1956. This is all before taxes, of course. o o But from 1947 through 1956 the federal government's civilian payroll expanded from $13 bil lion to $28 billion. In fact, this in crease in bureaucratic payrolls in 9 years of almost $15 billion dollars far exceeds the pay for ail the U. S. armed forces in 1956 of $9 billionj Or to put It another way, the increase in the federal civilian payroll in this period equals the per capita income of 1 million people. If yen add to this the al most $4 billion now being sought in new foreign give away funds, this reaches the per capita in come of almost 16 million people, ooo - 4 dollar paid to factory work er, for example, is a dollar paid for producing something of value which finds its way in the market place, creating commerce. But a dollar paid to a government worker is not money paid for pro ductivity. - :r 1 4 This la an anpaiatanie laci which many la government choose not to recognise, yet haa done more harm to Independent business along the nation's Main Streets than anything else. 0 0 0 As Wendell Barnes, head of the Small Business Administration recently pointed out, over half of the nation's working force is em ployed by small and independent business. ooo Thus, It -logically follows, that no lasting prosperity can be attained in the nation if rond blocks are continually thrown la the path of Independent, free en terprise. The O. 8. nation cannot sannort both free enterprise and Utjarage bureaucracy. l?Tentua'iy, Le, or the other, will go. And if free enterprise becomes the vic tim, it is a certainty that com munism, or socialism, ta some form will follow. , 4 -M'V , ltimton, ni by hand pointing at figure 3, on plat and runs with the old line. South 691 degrees W st, 800 feet o a stake in Raleigh Fountains line, t:-.ence with hU line, South 521, degrees East 643 t et to a stake his corner?- thence with his other line. South 7 ..degrees and SO , minutes East 1353 f e; to a stake his corner, thence with his line South 73H degrees East 87.4 feet to I' stake his corner and also comer of J-ot No. . (2), thenv with the Une of Lo! I, North J8 degrees West 24Q0 feet to the beginning, conummg 35 acres. , ' - Being the sam land described in Book 4 page 364 in the Office of the Clerk of ; Superior Court of Duplin County. -, This 16 day of June WS'S. . . Grady Mercer, Commissioner. 6 28 G. ML. ' Vheat Vote Continued from Front farmers who win nave more than 15 acres of wheat for bar--vest, as grain In ' 19S9; since g-wors with 15 acres of wheat : and those in the feed wheat - program are exempt front marketing . quota proviaiona . ' they are not eligible to oast ballots on 1956 wheat mar keting quotaa ' The vote is on marketing qaotas for the 1956 wheat crop and not acreage allotments. Whether or not quotaa are ap proved, wheat ailotmenta will remain in effect aa a means of determining the individual growers eligibility for price support. It Is Impclrtant that every farmer who has 15 aorea of wheat or more get out and vote in the referendum. The vote will determine to a great de gree the amount of) money in circulation in the County a mong wheat farmers. Duplin Gets Continued from Front pick-up stations as well as at the market in Wallace. Already farmers in Sampson and Pender Counties are mark ting ebbs thro ugh th Wallace Market. The market Is designed to help Duplin farmers in their quest for bigger and better sources of farm income. In order for an, operation lo be successful and pofltable. each farm producing eggs to have an egg cooling system Quality i paramount and during hot weather eggs deteriate 1 rapidly without a cooling system. Sasser said that the eggs will be graded and Inspected by an inspector of the United States De partment of Agriculture and if they do r.ot pass they cannot be sold on the out of state market obtained. This is the reason farm ers with 50 to 100 laying hens can not sell profitably on the new market... . - f . Over the past three years, Dup lin County has become the leading poultry county in Eastern North Carolina. 1 Recently, Bill Jasper (has been Recently Bill Jasper has been em ploy d as assistant county agent to work with the poultry farmers in the county on ' educational and production work. UNCLE PETE . oentiane4 on baeW git through T deciding who stole what, with that television station down in Miami. . " V-! I don't know where this thing of wlmmens' clothes is going to end. I tet Where some feller has designed a bathing suit that works like Venetian blinds. If the gal wants a little ' more sun she can yank a st-lng and the flaps come open. And if she don't' want no more sun she yanks, the string the other way and the flaps close. And I see where they is discussing a new evening gown that has a top made out of transparent plastic. In short, the gal has got on clothes but she aint got on any. ' It's a greatly pity. Mister Editor that folks with such brains aint working on somepun useful. Fer instan', if they"d develop' a hog that has got four hams instead of two we'd be gitting some place. ., IS THERE A BIRDTHPT SINGS WnHOUT USING ITS TWROrVT? r Mm MM the voococ ficaiRuvr vrmoux using ns throat By 4 MERELV VIBRFTRMS ITS YMm: FISH SHOOTS ITS VICTIMS j.. , ' 'THEN DDOURsTTHEM .1 : ' (wi -. i .i '.in x-y ,!-f - IffT: " 'irrSpOTES TACULRTCS OF THE FAST INDIES! . CHOcrnNO JETS OF" I Us. d to worry , about su :h , things a heap, but styles change ' even in worrying. When a feller I has got a problem 'now, he just! fakes a pill. I'll knock off naw, Mister ' Sditor . and go take a ; couple. .... i ' Tour, truly I . v , , -jjncle Fete 4-11 Club leontlnbed from front) ' vln:Wlluam.s;.JB:,HllJ,.rrmer.,.The Board' put present use at Cooperative demonstration; Mike an average of M4 million gallons uoooaon. t.Nuve, uvestocK von servation demonstration; Evelyn Wilkins, Rose Hill, Public Speaking James Barwi;k. Mt OUve. Tractor On raton Janice . Maready land Joyce James, Chinquapin, yege- table and. Fruit Marketing: Beth v.mw. t o tx n.. O-rner. Warsaw. Robert and Sus-;;ter g-gaA tbat ground an Clifton. Faison. and Marlnaf J; ,x"5? ,:Ino BUckmora, Warsaw, Talent Louief industrial use" of surface water Jones. Faison, Vegetable and Fruit j averages 378 million gallons a day Demonstrations ; which plao d j compared with 27'mUllon gallons first were Glenn and Melvin Will-1 a. day from ground supplies. Xx lams In Farmer Cooperative. The ( tre'mely heavy use of surface wa tltle of d monsuation was Araer-lter by few industries accounts leg' Free Enterprise System.' v- for the difference - v ; 5 olyn Wilkins, Public Speaking with V ater for agricultural use (for - .. A.f..M irrigation and livestock), averaging - uv.c Rural Uving-; James Barwick voa,""'? '? top honors in -.- Tractor Operation. Joyce James and. Janice Maieady, Vegetable and Fruit Marketing with a demonstration titled 'Pack a Better Crate for a Bet'er Rate." Polly Le James placed in the top Six in th , Dress Revue and will compete in the iState D ess Revu at H Club. Week Nina Garner! and Robert and Susan Cilf on pitted in the blue awrd Talent group.'' 1?::- Duplin County placed the sesond highest , number of winners out of the sevente n ") counties with Sampson County placing the most with nine winners. These ev.'.nts are one of the high lights of the 4 H Club Program and Duplin County Club members are to be ' congratulated on the large participation as well as the fine showing. Mrs Lois Britt, assistant home agent, and Ed Simpson, assistant home agent, are 4 H advisers in Duplin County. June Or July Continued from Front . which is normally used for liming does not react immediately upon addition to the soil; Soil acids must act to disolve the lime during n utilization, which is a gradual process, especially it the sou u strongly acid.. Where lime is need OUTDOOR TIPS FRtTfiit FRUIT MAKC tVONOeBFOt fICtwIC CAN IRLW tMnafcKTWtlB IW aaif "' - S5 --'FUlOA - aP" " TUaal - .ATI tviTH - lv . ; ;'''''''-' , -s FOR A ZCSTV-FRTsH "HEBOSAMSmCH, t AOP COlf CLAW AMO FRSSH TOMATO fillet TO COLP MEAT f. TELLER CT CJOSTTHE EACKC2S OF COLUMBUS FErVTMEgS l' VAlHCeS DID UfRCST imy - . vi... rv' 3 t . lmm- j'Xj:;3'" Ceil ';'E:or, ..ore- I7at0?: L::::::!r A statewide survey of water use! in North -Carolina poin s, up a need for more extensive research' lo ' assure adequate supplies fort 'he future, th ; State ; Board of, Wat - PnmmlGclAndra rortArtarl fn I j. s-.,.' .; vvvi.-- B day and istimated that by 1975 the demand will be twice as great The figures come fron information which is being ga.bered as a ba- li ;for legislaUva recommenda- ti0B. . . ' ! ' . me most' worth varoiuuans depena on , .... JM for , the most part from surface sources, al'hough a definite break down ?ould not be determined. Only for domestic purposes ' (in cluding both urban and rural ho mes) does ground wat r use exce ed that of surface water. Of1 the average 252 million , gallons used daily, ,133 million gallons comes f rom underground and 120 million gallons from th? surface. The ex planation is simple. The dispersed rural i population j "- . about two thirds of the state' people . : Muddy Creek , (continued from front) a responsibility as well as the Soil Conservation Service and Fe deral . Government. Farmers have to conduct a, soil and water con servation plan which will assure a minimum amount jof erosion and a maximum of soil and water conservation on -V the ' individual farm; ,;.'. v ed it should ba aplled and mlved into the soil from two to four mon ths prior to seeding ''According to Reynolds, a prompt reply can be expected from the Soil Testing Labors ory Dvirink June and July. ' There ' is much gain by early sampling,' and Rey nolds encourages c farm rs to stop by his office and. obtain suppules and instruction for collecting sar-f plea. Do it today, v It A aeRE4HIN BCACH-MltTY W!MK, LAR6C mitMMEIMI AH w A I UiT- FkCSH lemon and ORANOE -, LIQUID IS CWUNK BY ' ' STKAWS MtTO TH RIM H0U . PSFI UMMUI( BEUMUH AMD BUTTER CACll CARafNEH- 1 tfu pea ear), salt and kpkk,' k I FOLD HUSKS AROUNO CORN FAsF V T r cnmiO with irimT.GUL Huwca - .1 7 - Boast uhth. tenocr(2o nxf t, Jmvm i TVMf StyERAl TIMES 'f: e A j V HOW MUCH 010 THE EXPEDITION OF COLUMBUS TO AMERICA COST ? ONUV 3 2115" POS THE DISCOrfERy OF AMERICA IN2WJ ,r THE WORLD'S MfllLSrONSS FRLL? ' &6 fs i Mr . j ..J rely on individual w. lis, and the) residents of 175 of the state's 835 municipalities having public water Supplies use ground waler because it is mors economical than using! surface : : water, u which :; requires costly treatment. -:' .:: '. Population growth," Industrial expansion "and ever increasing di versity in the use of water are expected by 1957 to push toe daily requirements to MS million gallons for homes. 602 million gallons for industry, and at least 000 million gallons for agriculture. .. "These requirements will call for greatly increased development of our water resources, both un derground and surface, if suppll s are to be sufficient in future years,'' commented General J. R. Townsend of Oeensbdno. oPard chairman." "And proper - develop ment and. wise use will have to be based on sound and ' reliable information, which takes time to develop. ' - A great deal of basic data are available, through cooperative ef forts of the State Department of Conservation and Development and the U. S. Geological Survey, but more extensive work must be done in a large part of the state," he continued. v r il you oftt n . , fhe exira V C.V performanbe: 'I features too -A s 'Vs.i",,'-",, , i j lean; Clean aiid j il 'lilirror-Sharp TV! I ..i. t , i , , s. '. ' j ' ITS A NEW KIND OF TV Z t 'V , i Tla WaWla Doano. Portablo ; - TV Dakmai 108 iq. .viewable' aroa. Shainlng taporod dostgo ki V " 2 toM and 2 two-tarn WnUM. ;,4T!56w,r;$2.5ow NBY SPACE-SAVING CONSOLES save k Ji :. The Uneaorl. Maaa'aamo ooa- " wi it, o m. m. Tivwaoia arsa. ' I MahogMygrahd,wakwtsralnd -, DnhrMXi Hned oak gralnod or ' birth gralmd fbiiihos, ; ., if .. astro. 21T842 Sartss. ', x V ; $4.C0 wk. Increasing needs for water ac centuate the Importance of small streams as a source of. supply, uata on characteristics of many smaller from ahonM be obtained, in ad dition to the information already being gathered, on tne larger streams : and principal tributaries, to' show the -possibilities of stor age of water during high flows for release during dry p rlods. i ."Ground water holds tremendous potentialities for development, but wa do not know enough detail of its occurrence. A vast quantity of additional data must be coll c ted and analvred to provide a' firm basis for making better use of this r' soiree. There ase excellent pos sibilities for serving more indus tlal users With round water, and la also has promise of furnishing dependable supplies of Irrigation wate" to many -more of our far mer" V t' " ' ' MM. DOUJOE K MOUOt . Mrs. , Dollie 1 M. Miller 'wife of Norward MiUer died at her home S OSi aa ask r-p 1 1 . 'sMUOa-tHABr' v.i aaMNmBaaiAMcan ma noniaa MMUTVSMSOUNO MaW 4ttplll Mbaf- AaMMlMl bTMI RMl ffMssssfMat aaaBak-M New Flight-Line" Space-Savina Tin'.' i ' r "-' ' ' Ifc'-PiKv Tha fa dais Daftmo. fbrloble TV Palaao Wflh tnmt) a"ta aaaoa. ISeiq.lkviowablooraa.Taporod-' iyOag k) 4 solid and 2 two-tons ,livew ra L i Si ' ,v ' t ! , Tha Lookarood Dokna. "Tovch ' Turn" swivel TV. Big 262 so. In." 4 ; vtawable arsa. Mahogany, walmtt wi blond tropical hardwood ' trha, or birch fkibhaa. .2.0.60 8 WQ "The Farmers Friend" Warsaw, N. C" ,wW;ii I near Beulaville early Sundav Mnn, ing. She was the former Dollle Mercer and had resided in th Beulaville community" all of her life. She was a member of the Hall villa Presbyt.iiian Church and the Beulaville Chap'.er No. 237 o the Bast rn Star and Feat Worthy Mat ron- , ' ' . '.' ' Funeral services were held from ' the Hallsvllle Presbyterian Church i Monday at 4:30 p.m. Church servt-1 cos were "ondiicted by the Rev. S. T. Snively faator, assisted by Rev, R. C Clont of Davidson. Inter-: nwnt was in the Church Cemetery Th body was carried to tha chu rch one hour before the funeral. She is survived by her husband of the home. Two Daught rs, Mrs. ' Burch Murphy of Norfolk and Mary Lee of the ' home One son, i liorward of the home. Three slstirs , Mrs. Rashie Kennedy of Green villa : Mrs. Fran Rhodes and Mrs. Ottia Millir of Beulaville, Three Broth-; en J. R. Mercer,- Willie Mercer and Woodrow' Mercer all of Beu lavllle and two gandchlldrcn ' J " ' jmunt t fc. mis, 3A1 ' .'' rasa, , . ar aara to. Ia uliaiali arsa. Portables , , Table Models " Haa Oaften, sodgoi-erfcad table -1 if & TV. 262 sq. K vlowablO aroa. " 4 "Oao-Taadi"oaoff controL&oayi r asonooaay gralasd ar aawd oak . .Owlnad Ojnanas. oxtfO. a 21,1820 Swiss. . 3.C3 wk up to 36 floor space : I 1 The Nonn.. Dakna. Spaea- , avhig "Ontom-Comar" TV. 262 t sq. In, viewable oresu - Provincial . styling la gonvsio tawny birch ,. vanssrt and odds, a. . ' J 21D862 Sarios, . ?LC3 WK. -O 'V;:! .'0' S - f AT SCINGPATW.IUDIFI! T, I v. :; ,A somst.m iuttytute rrTrr;: v. .to. "--,- czzc: ? J. F. (Jimmy) fetricUand. 1 VTER CULLET3, IT f77'"3 t'CiLL Mrs. F, J. Strickland ( i