Newspapers / Jones County Journal (Trenton, … / Jan. 26, 1956, edition 1 / Page 5
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lift tBPIKMBHW nv JttA. USTlCwaXH Vw ,.;':nu- of •. •■, > • HON. A. WILLIS MWOCISm Of Virginte.' la The Senate of The United Time was whan; liberalism meant freedom from excessive government — freedom from en croachment upon the rights of the people. . > :'■ dietary has the right to de twmlnft who shall or shall not attend public schools. This dis regards the wishes of the States as expressed la their laws and receptive consUtutlonfi. It is a short' step now to the selection of teachers and to the designa tion of a curricuttum by Federal aathnetty. V Today’s liberal acquiesces in this usurpation of federal power. Control of employment has hitherto been a right reserved to the people — the right of the individual to work or to refrain from working, and the right of the employer to hire or to re-. fsan from hiring. Nedfcuer the Statesnor the Federal aovern mahit were ever given the right to interfere with the freedom of tadfcrtduBfe to oaotraot for goods oreervto. taxes paid: last year the tax Jtet tor Kinston was $34,518416 which was Just over 4S per cent of the total ■valuation for the county-of $76,088,788. Until last year when a sudden jump in the rural listing came with a ten mutton dollar addi tion made by the Du Pont plant the city had been paying well over half of the taxes for the entire county. And now with the extension of the city Omits to inchude atmost 1,000 more homes it is likely that Kinston will again be paying more than half the total county taxes. But this is not to spilt the rural,, and the urban peoples of Lenoir County for we’re all in this boat together. It merely Is to repeat something we have said on this page over and over again, to wit: lit Is fcomonal, illegal and against ail common sense for the people of Kinston to be cMx. bed. twfice tor count? nroleots department, the Recorder’s Court, the National Guard, Civil Defense, Fat Stock: Show ap propriations. These are projects in which people from the entire county share. They should be paid for on a county-wide basis. 'When a SO-SO appropriation Is made by Kinston and county of. fkdails the people in Kinston wind up paying aU of the city’s half and 45 per cent of the county’s I Distinctive Styling ) Correct Colors ► National Brands >Perfe9t Fitting ) Courteous Service Th e se Are A few Of The MOM IP Till*? . Xf yon can correctly ldentif) title MYSTERY FARM yon may win a flee subscription to flic Journal. The first fire persons to do ao will be the winners. This is a Jones county farm, took at It closely and see if yon ean be one of the five winners. The owner of the turn pictured lure onr get a Ire# beautifully framed print ef this picture b$ railing at the NEWS office. hall, which gives them a total share of just under 75 per cent in the project. Carr ought to study a little more closely the fiscal affairs of the entire county, rather than losing hte head and going off into the wild blue yonder as he reportedly did in his speech to the Harvey School PTA. : JACK RIDER Every Week Day At 8 A. M. and 12:20 P. M. Over Statical WELS 1010 on Your Dud \) PARROTT SAYS! Our First Baby Chicks From Browns Hatchery Monday Jan. 30. Be-Assured of The Bight Starts With Browns Chicks And Red Rose Feeds March of Dimes To Aid Thousands TOM* treated for a yeah at the STRICKEN IM JULY, MUCH, RESPIRATOR CENTER AT HOUSTON, ~ RETURNED NO fvj m HOME ID HIS WIPE TWO CHILDREN. J1S* Tommy Woodward, s, THE 1956 MARCH of DIMES POSTER BOV WAS STRICKEN at 14 months— oust as HE WAS LEARNING TO WALK. HE'LL NEED CARE FOR YEARS' Id . * 6)7jSS ANf Of UU*UL& I HELP IS CONTINUING TODAY. I fTHBKBHAS BUN MOKE POLIO IN LAST & YEARS NINTHS SO Aas eefont. POLIO VICTIMS WERE ADULTS. , now rre25%! AL A Porins THE 1955 POLIO EPIDEMIC PUUO ISNT LICKED o POLIO VICTIMS NEEDING MARCH of DIMES HELP AS 1956 BEGINS: 68,000/ IN MASSAfcHUSfcTTS, /HflKCH Of DIMES RUSHED IN 204 IRON LUNOS FROM it all parts of the country. - Mn the MARCH OF DIMES JuuuuufSS Polio isn’t licked yet. This is a fact that is being brought to public attention in this county and throughout the coun try this week as volunteer workers opened the 1956 March of Dimes. The drive for funds to carry on the polio fight will continue here throughout the month. mousanas oi pono pauenis still need aid, according to the National Foundation far Infan tile Paralysis. And many of these depend on iron lungs and other mechanical devices for the very breath of life. "To stop aid now,” a state ment from March of Dimes headquarters said, "would be like pulling the electric plug -from ah iron lung.” The treatment of a single polio patient often costs thou sands of dollars and extends over many' years. "It is not enough to save a life,” a March specialists study methods of re storing the ability to breathe, and demonstrate new techniques so that this knowledge eaa bo applied inhoepitalsaU over the Mantiy. v More than 56 per cent of this year’s March of Dinies need is for patient aid. March of Dimes funds will be spent also in re search programs which may save future generations from the
Jones County Journal (Trenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 26, 1956, edition 1
5
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