“A BETTER COUNTY THROUGH IMPROVED FARM PRACTICES TOgtfloW, N. C., Thursday, September 20, 1991 V NUMBER 19 J*to Trenton baiter first took Hr® tools of h58,000; $500,000 income shrinks byabout $420,000 in taxes and if you were able to earn $1,000,000 you’ll have to pay at least $868, 667 in federal income taxes and possibly as much as $900,000. Real Estate Boom Boosts City Ditch Price Considerably Back on November 20, 1939, when the board of aldermen of the City of Kinston paid Ely. J. Perry and Marvin Rochelle $2,750 for two strips of ditch in what was then known as Grain ger Heights considerable adverse criticism was heard on the sub ject but now the shoe is on a. different foot and that board of 1939 is due a pat on the back for its “farsightedness.” The two strips were a 20 foot wide strip from the center line of the drainage ditch that runs between Howard Street and Queens Roads and the other is a 30 foot-wide strip measured from the center line of the same ditch between Queen Street and Queens Road. It is this latter piece that is now the cause for belated congratulations to the city fathers of 12 years ago. H. B. Meisleman, operator of the new Park Theater, has made a tentative offer of $5,000 to the city for this latter stretch which measures approximately 30x210 feet. Meisleman wants to make a parking area and street thru there and a sidewalk so pat rons of his new theater can come m from Queens Road without having to walk all the way around the block of build ings now nearing completion there by the Stadiem Estate. It will, of course, be necessary to advertise the area and have it sold at public auction but it is unlikely that anyone will be ready to overbid Meisleman for this strip of ditchbank that once caused five aldermen to get- a lot of ribbing. Those al dermen now have the last laugh. They were: Ike Jenkins, Bill Stanley, Johnnie Sams, L. L. Mallard and the late W. T. Pais ley and the mayor was Jack Skinner. J *