A BETTER COUNT Y THROUGH IMPROVED FARM PRACTICES American Legion Will Aid In Finding Vets -For Insurance Checks : ' The American Legion will as sist all local veterans in apply ing for their National Service Life Insurance Dividends. This wa? announced this week by H. Bruce Johnson, commander of Clen.Newton Smith Post No. 154 of The American Legion of Trenton. “Our post will have the nec essary applications which vet will have to make to the fit their NSLI dividends,” lifer Johnson said. “Ev •; who held his NSLI 0 days or more will Refund coming to him. :ts to pay out ap nj, $2,800,000,000 in refunds. Payments per i expected to average according to the VA. s should be filed as as possible because it i weeks and months for rati to get his refund Commander John American Le will put on the biggest man in history in trying to lo cate veterans who are eligible for the NSLI refunds. “The VA estimates that some 16,000,000 veterans are entitled NSLI refunds,” Commander scm said. “Actually today the VA has the home address of only six millions of eligible vet erans. The American Legion will help to locate 10,000,006 others.” -<r - it this week on Tuesday, y.Vand Thursday, Dr. B. B. Mixon from the Bureau of Animal Industry of the United (States Department of Agricul ture is making tests on all cattle in Jones County six months old or older for Bang’s disease. This is part of a federal program aim ed at ultimate eradication of this disease. Dairy cattle infected with this disease pass on undulant fever to (hose who drink their milk. „ ' • On .Tuesday of (his week, Dr. . Mixon made tests in the Pol locksville, Maysville, Black Swamp and White Oak commun ities , today' (Wednesday) he 'tnade checks w the Davis Field, ifjihjar’s Crossroad neighborhood •sday he will "be in the field, Green Town, Oxley iads and Trenton section, is no. charge for this ser and all persons owning dai eattle that have not been ; are urged to have them or tied so -that time may saved in taking blood samples the animal” Johnson Dies 5:V James Leslie Johnson, in years of'service the oldest employee of the Kinston Daily Free Press and one of Kinston’s best known citizens, died Tuesday morning at 5 a. ra., at the home of his brother, Ed Johnson, on East Caswell Street. At press time funeral arrangements had not Jjeen completed. ■»— ATTEND KINSTON'S DOLLAR DAYS YOUTH RALLY TO BE HELD SATURDAY IN MAYSVILLE CHURCH By Mazy Belle Stoll On Saturday evening, August 13, at the Maysville Methodist Church, there will be a charge youth rally for all those between the ages of 12 and 23. The eve ning program will include a fel lowship supper, worship, and recreation. Those who attend are asked to bring a picnic sup per to spread together with the others. The evening program will begin at 6:30. Bobby McKenzie, a young min isterial student at High Point1 College, will speak to the group during the worship service and will lead the recreation. Bobby was Chairman of Recreation for the North Carolina Conference Methodist Youth Fellowship in 1947. He worked for three weeks at the Louisburg Assemblies, then he went to the Youth Cen ter at Wrightsville Beach and has been a counselor at the in termediate and youth asemblies there for the remainder of the summer. One week he helped Curt Gatlin with a Youth Activi ties Week in Durham. Loses Heavy Porker The heavy electrical storm of last Thursday, night claimed one large-sized Jones County native TRAINING SCHOOL BUILDING PROGRAM STARTS f In this aerial photograph can be seen the million dollar first half of. the expansion program of the Caswell Training school near Kinston. Upon its completion the present 850 patient capacity of the stale institution for the mentally handicapped will be doubled. In the leff. pi|d right foreground of the picture can be seen tli'e Construction of dor mitories for mdn and wonten employees of the training school. In the right and left center are the foundations of a girls' and a boys' building which will house 160 patients each. Beside the wider tank at rear is the construction of a power plant to make the institution self-sustaining. Oth er parts of the beginning of the program, expected total an expenditure of two and one-half million dollars, include a milk barn and a dairy barn, hidden by the trees at the left rear. (Whitaker Leffew Photo, by courtesy of Carolina Aircraft Corporation) Increased Floor Space, Additional Personnel Point To Biggest Year In The History Of Kinston Market auctioneers . begin Since early in this century Kinston has been one of the foremost tobacco markets of the world. This The fellow pictured above is known by practically everyone in Jones County and he also has a wide* circle of friends in every part of North Carolina. Although he wasn't born in Jones Coun ty. he is the son of a Jones Counlian, has lived in Pollocksville since he was one and a half years old. His full name is' George Rufus Hughes. At present he is County Attorney, a job he has held for the past two terms. Prior to that time he was Superior Court Clerk for 13 years, having been appointed to that post by J««ta» Paul Frizzelle of Snow HU1, succeeding A. E. Hammond. Hlfehes was the son of Dr. George R. and Annie Whiiford Hughes and he was born in Greensboro, where his father was practicing medicine. A year-and a half after this addition to the Hughes family they moved back to Pollocksville where the present County Attorney finished high school and went on to higher study at the University of North Carolina. When, he first hung hi* shmgle out he had offices in Maysville and Pollocksville and during this period he served a two-year term on the County Board of Education. He married Mrs. Eunice Honrine and in addition to three stepdaughters. Ifixs. H. C. Bell, Mrs. John Ben ^ Mrs. Donald Hudson, all of Pollocksville he has three children, Anne Carol, 12, George Rufus. Jr., 10. and John Rod ney, 4. Hughes u one of the county's busiest men as well as being .one of its best known. One of the biggest job* he has ac complishment since becoming county attorney was the establish' m<mt of a County Health Department, working in conjunction wUh Lenoir County officials. (Whilaker-Leffew Photograph) their chant August 18th in Kins ton there will be 14 warehouses with a total of more than one and a half million square feet of sales space; there will be addi tions expert personnel in these houses and there ^ .a better than, so . s of bit, -- long been denied. Two new warehouses, the Kinston Cooperative Warehouse, Incorporated and Sheppard’s No. 2, plus additional floor space in two pf the older houses, Planter’s and The Star, will give more than 50 per cent additional sel ling space. With five sets of buyers. the early market blocks that have caused millions of pounds of tobacco to pass through Kinston in the past should and most probably will be ended. The entry of Greene County’s Percy Holding to the Kinston marketing area is expected to bring a considerable toloc of Greene and Pitt County tobacco to Kinston that in the past has always followed Holding to Wil son, where he has been an im portant tobacco figure for nearly a score of years. Holding will manage the Eagle and Carolina warehouses. Purchase of a considerable I share of the ownership of Plant er’s Warehouse by Ivan Bissette, Grifton business man and farm er, is expected to cut another slice off the huge tobacco melon that Greenville has always en joyed from upper Lenoir and lower Pitt counties. Both Bissett and Holding are tobacco growers of considerable size and their wide business ac quaintance in their communities quite reasonably are expected to bring tobacco to Kinston from areas that have always been co sidered Wilson and Greenville territory. To insure an even firmer grip on the great tobacco growing areas to the south of Kinston in Jones, Duplin, Onslow, Craven, Pender, Carteret and Wayne counties all the additional floor space added to the Kinston mar ket has come in the area * just south of the city through which the great majority of this acre age passes and Lenoir counties and a scat tering few in the other areas from which the Kinston market nor mally draws the golden weed. The promotional abilities and the Duplin nativity of The Star Owner Charlie Herring is again this year expected to increase the Duplin-Wayne percentage of tobacco on Kinston floors. Added to these obvious assets of the market are key staff men in several of the warehouses from the outlying tobacco tobac co producing areas. Plans are afoot to increase the percentage of Moseley-Hall-In stitute tobacco on the Kinston floors and Warehouseman Em mett Jones, who hails from La Grange, is expected to have a lot of help in persuading the weed producers in that part of Lenoir County to forego then habits of selling in Wilson and give the home town a try. Everything points to the most successful selling season that Kinston and its patrons have ev er enjoyed. No Encores, Please It happened Sunday in a Kins- ' ton Sunday School. The teacher was smothered with yells from the students when she started to lead them in a song. The song, began, “Now I lay me down to sleep ...” The pupils were of ages one to three years in the beginners department. They thought teacher was going to put them to bed in the middle of the morning. ATTEND KINSTON'S DOLLAR DAYS Days

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