Jaycee Week Proclaimed In Kenansville Kenansville Mayor Don Suttles signed a proclamation designating January 13-20 as Jaycee Week. The organization will be holding several programs in recognition of Jaycee Week, according to Kenansville Jaycee president Dennis Kirby. A Prayer Breakfast will begin the week and the Distinguished Service Awards banquet concludes Jaycee Week. The DSA banquet is scheduled for January 19 at 7 p.m. at the Country Squire. Pictured above is Kenansville Jaycee president Dennis Kirby, Kenansville Mayor Don Suttles, and Jaycee Week chairman Carey Wrenn. * Engagement Announced Mrs. Jean C. Weber of Covington, Lousiana, and Thomas W. Bailey of New Orleans, Louisiana, announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia Anne Bailey, to Walter Richard Powers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Richard Powers of Beulaville. The wedding will take place May 25 in New Orleans. Duplin Revaluation Hits Allotments The tobacco program's trauma affects other realms, including the revaluation of real property in tobacco-producing counties. Duplin County is now in the midst of revaluation, a process state law requires every eight years. The new assessments will go into effect Jan. 1. 1986. For manv vears appraisers could depend on the tobacco support price level to determine how much value a tobacco allotment added to a farm. "We are not taxing the tobacco allotments," said Tax Supervisor Frank Moore. "The allotments are used as a factor influencing the value of the property, just like location by a good highway affects the value." A tobacco allotment now adds SI per pound of production quota allotted to the appraised value of a farm in Duplin County. The sale price of farms throughout eastern North Carolina is determined to a great extent by the amount of ? ma ? ? _ tobacco poundage quotas and acreage allotments assigned to them. For tax purposes, appraisers are supposed to determine the value of the real property, and sale prices of similar land provide one of the major valuation inputs. The tobacco support price may be lowered by Congress from the' present $1,699 per pound to as low as $1.35 to make U.S. tobacco more c mpetitive with foreign leaf. Other congressional or administrative ac tions may be taken in the next few months in an attempt to bail out the financially 'ailing tobacco price support and production control pro gram. "We will continue to place some value on tobacco allotments, but as of right now we don't know what it will be," Moore said. "As long as the tobacco program exists it lends some added value to a farm, even though the value may be small." "Farmers are caught in a bind on lie tobacco situation now. They don't know what they can pay for tobacco and banks don't know what they can lend," Moore said. For many years, farmers have been able to lease tobacco produc tion poundage quotas and acreage allotments from owners who don t want to grow the tobacco them I 1 selves. Since 1*>82, il?ey have been able i" buy quotas and allotments. Moore said d liar values must be assigned to property before Sep tember so Mhe county can send owners a written notice uld house basketball and racquet ball courts, storage space and bleachers to seat 400-600 people. Commissioner Arnold Duncan said. "It bothers me to commit us four years down the road." Duncan pointed out that Gov. Jim Martin "is talking about dropping this inventory tax and that will cost us over $12,000 a ye.u." Blanchard said the board could take $25,000 from its $30,000 contin gency fund for this year's payment. "It's not been too many years ago that the town couldn't pay its bills," Commissioner N. H. Carter said. "There's a Committee of 100 started and the town hasn't contributed anything. There's a rescue quad building right beside us here that cost $90,000 and the town didn't con tribute toil. "1 i.,ink we got this thing back wards. You should go out and raise the money and then come back and tell us what you have," Carter said. Rivenbark replied, "In my busi ness. if 1 were' to say 1 was going to be out of business in four years, 1 doubt if I'd last two years. You can't sit back and say things are going to be bad and prosper. This gym will bring people into town. Everytime anything happens in this town here's a certain few that have to contribute." fKPPGKLL S CARPUS^ year ? Direct from the ( Mill Prices ? We Carry Our Own Accounts ? No Waiting ? ? Over 300 Rolls of Vinyl St Carpet in Stock ? Our Own 1 Professional Installation ? Lowest Prices We're Bigger Than We Look, 1 Displaying 28,000 Sq. Ft. of Furniture & Carpet in a 14,000 Sq. Ft. Store 'One of the best things we have is our prices' -ErEDERICK JhuRNlTURE WW Company ttnt a/ Ik* k*M i*mt> n* k*<* it M>' f*H? 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