Page 6-A?THE BRUNSWICK BKACOP Reunio BY SUSAN USHER Clarence Jones figures there aren't too many people his age left to reflect on old times But he T " ' llKes ine iaea 01 a f community reu.' - nion, for he and *wk?^ ?K? '< mcmor*es ani' " bits of wisdom to JONES share. Over the July 4th weekend, the Dark Branch native will be among the speakers at the first reunion held by the Dark Branch, Neck, Marsh Branch and Old Towne communities. "I expect we'll have a lot of folks?maybe a thousand or more," Tools Stole Assorted tools worth $2,090 were stolen from several company trucks ' last week at the Atlantic Telephone * Membership Corporation office near < Shallotte. 1 According to a report on file at the Brunswick County Sheriff's Depart- ? i \ent, the vehicle break-ins happened ' between Friday at 5:30 p.m. and i Saturday at 8 a.m. ' The trucks were parked in a < fenced-in storage area at the offices on N.C. 120 West. Entrv was gained 1 into the vehicles by prying open their 1 doors. 1 In another incident involving a 1 local business. Margaret Christy, < owner of Trawlers Restaurant in < Calabash, told sheriff's deputies that ' her establishment at the corner of N.C. 179 and Ivey High Street was '* broken into Sunday morning. Sunday between 2:35 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., someone pried open a 1 back door to enter the building, then I removed mainly food, wine and change. Theft'loss was estimated at < S502.75. i Also, Phillip Tysinger of I^anvale Nursery on Route 5, Leland, said i goods were stolen from his business i on U.S. 17. The break-in was 1 discovered last Thursday at 11 a.m. i After cutting a fence, the thief 1 broke out the glass in a door to get in aiuc u guia^t:, men iuuk iwo OUIll ' chainsaws, an Echo gas trimmer and a pair of cutters, all worth $765. Other Leland Thefts The sheriff's department on Monday also was investigating other break-ins that were reported in the Leland area. Municipal E Two bills whose adoption would af- < feet two Brunswick County towns and 1 communities adjacent to them mov- ? ed forward in the N.C. General I Assembly this week, according to ( Rep. E. David Redwine. 1 The Senate Local Government j Committee approved a bill that i would allow residents of both ^ Calabash and Carolina Shores to vote i in August 22 referendums on con- i solidation of their communities and a bill that would allow residents of the < i,eianu area 10 voie on incorporaiion. I Both bills must now go to the ] Senate Finance Committee, then to i the full Senate. Any amendments will < then have to be approved by the 1 House. ! So far there is at least one such j amendment. In action initiated by ! Sen. R.C. Soles Jr. of Tabor City, said Redwine, the Senate committee i amended the Leland bill, removing a Autopsy Fai An autopsy performed on a man who was beaten to death near Southport earlier this month did not indicate which of two suspects might have delivered the fatal blow. Brunswick County Coroner Greg White told the Beacon Tuesday that the regional medical examiner's office in Jacksonville was unable to determine whether Earl James Pigg Jr. died of injuries to the front or uacK oi the head?a finding that might have indicated which suspect would remain charged with murder. Ronny Paul Ballard, 31, and Jave Varna mto\A One of Brunswick County's youngest and smallest towns has big plans for its first anniversary. Varnamtown will celebrate Founder's Day on i,abor Day weekend this September. Some of the activities planned by residents of the waterfront village on the I.ockwood Folly River are a parade, pageant, crafts fair, fish fry, s\ Thursday, June 29, 1989 n Will Brine he predicted. In his allotted 20 minutes, Jones, who didn't begin learning the basic skills of reading and writing until he was an adult, wants to impress upon the young peonlo nrpspnt thp imnnrtnnrp of ppftim* an education. Of the four predominantly black communities once scattered along N.C. 133, the "River Road" from Leland to Southport. only Dark Branch and Old Towne remain familiar names. The U.S. Army bought the land that once comprised the Neck and Marsh Branch communities for its Military Ocean Terminal at Sunny Point. Rosa Bell McMillion and her sister, Josev Smith, who work with ?n In Vehicle Frank Ballard of Route 1, Leland, reported last week that someone stole his 1986 Chevrolet four-wheelIrive truck from his residence on Blue Banks Road. The theft occurred between June 20 it 3:30 p.m. and last Wednesday at f :30 a.m. Items in the truck included our Stihl chainsaws and assorted ools. The value of the vehicle and )ther stolen property was not listed. John Stephen Price of Route 4, Leland, told authorities that someone jroke into his home at the corner of Lanvale and Bluff Roads while he ,vas at a ballgaine Friday between 5:15 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. The intruder entered the house by breaking out a rear window. Stolen were two Browning 12-gauge lutomatic shotguns, a Browning IG-gauge automatic shotgun, a Ruger 223-caliber rifle, a Redfield scope, a [9-inch Sanyo color television, a Vlagnavox videocassette recorder, a 15mm AEI camera, several watches and assorted jewelry. The property ,vas worth $4,350. Lizzie Williams of Route 5, Leland, eported that someone pried open a -ear window of her house on Fletcher Drive and stole a public address system worth $1,200 The break-in ,vas discovered Saturday at 8 a.m. Also, Leary Grady of Suinmerville \ME Zion Church on Summerville [>oop Road near Leland told the sheriff's department that someone broke into the church Saturday night. The break-in happened between 6 p.m. Saturday and 8:10 a.m. Sunday. Grady found that a side door to the church had been kicked open. All that Jills Advance ilausc that barred the town of 3elville from taking steps to annex idjoining land in the Leland area )efore residents of that area had the ihance to vote on the issue of incor)oration. Redwine had included the >roviso, he said, so that Leland esidents could vote on the issue vithout using Belville's immediate ntentions as arguments for or igainst incorporation. The Leland Civic Association laun:hed a community-wide incorporaion movement in reaction to Belville's announced intentions ?arlier this year of annexing a chunk jf Iceland's business district and a large residential area. An effort by Redwine to work a compromise such as consolidation of the communities failed, but Belville has since retreated in its position. Mayor Kenneth Messer, who owns some of the property in question said the town in Is To Point C Ronald McCowan, 28, both of Smith Mobile Home Park off N.C. 211 near Southport, were charged with murder in connection with the June 10 beating death. Pigg also was a resident of the mobile home park. According to the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department, the death followed a brawl that began outside Pigg's residence involving the victim and Ballard. Ballard allegedly struck Pigg in the face with a stick and wooden two-by-four during the fight. The struggle ended inside m Making Bi Sunday afternoon gospel and country music songfest, competitive games and a weeklong fishing contest. The parade will be held Saturday, September 2, and both commercial and non-profit entries are now being accepted, said parade chairman Marlene Varnam. Non-profits enter for free; the cost for business entries is $10 each. i 4 I Memories Jones at Orton Plantation, remember what it was like to live in those two communities. But, they pointed out in a recent interview, that's not the case with the young people whose parents and greatgrandparents were born and reared in these communities. They'd like to help change that, this weekend. Aicr we nad to leave on about 1953)," recalled 70-year-old Mrs. McMillion, "people went everywhere, from Baltimore to California." Manv of them haven't seen each other since or met their own kin: the older ones have since "passed on." One of the displanted, Robert Karl Parker, ended up in Virginia, a career educator who will soon retire. Break-Ins was stolen was a telephone from the niislnr'c clnrlv Other Break-Ins Charles Ray Evans of Lumberton told officers that someone broke into the garage at his residence in the Sunset Harbor community. The incident occurred between Friday night and 1 p.m. Saturday. An Evinrude 25-horsepower boat motor and Hummingbird fish finder were stolen from the garage. Theft loss was placed at $3,400. Damage to a door was estimated at $250. Mary B. Bordeaux of Winnabow said her home off N.C. 87 East near U.S. 17 was entered between last Wednesday and Sunday at noon. The intruder entered through a rear sliding glass door. Reported stolen were assorted jewelry, a push lawn mower, a Poulan chainsaw and a tape player. The property was worth $1,987. Judith Slultz Vernon of Axton, Va., told authorities that someone broke into her father's vacation home and a storage building in Ocean Trails II subdivision. The break-in happened between May 19 and 5:30 a.m. Friday. Nothing was taken from the home: assorted tools worth $410 were removed from the storage building. Corey Reaves reported that someone forced open a window and entered the Ruth F. Reaves residence on U.S. 17 near Bolivia between June 11 and Sunday. A microwave oven, console television, videocassette recorder and cordless telephone were stolen. Value of the items was not listed. In Senate April decided to consider only those businesses or areas where the property owners wish to be annexed. In advancing the amendment, Soles noted that in the past Leland area residents have voted twice against incorporation while Beiville is an incorporated area with plans for orderly growth. Short Reappointed Rosetta Short of Long Beach has been reappointed to the N C CoaRtal Resources Advisory Council for a term of two years. The council serves as a liason between the N.C. Coastal Resources Commission and the general public. Mrs. Short, starting her 15th year as a council member, was first appointed to the board in 1975 to fill the unexpired term of Ocean Isle Beach developer Odell Williamson. )ut Blow That Ballard's mobile home when McCowan allegedly struck Pigg in the back of the head with a two-by-four, authorities said. Pigg was dead on arrival at Dosher Memorial Hospital, Southport. Brunswick County Det. Ray Spencer said both men were charged with murder because investigators could not determine which suspect might have inflicted the fatal injuries. Spencer said Tuesday that the murder charges against both men apparently would stand, since the g Plans For A Spearheading plans for the celebration is the two-month-old Varnamtown Ladies Auxiliary, of which Tonya Robbins is president. She can be contacted for more information on any of the planned events, at 842-91159. She's also the contact person for membership in the auxiliary, which meets next at 4 p.m. Sunday, July 9, in the fellowship hall of Dixon Chapel Of 4 River S "He wanted to get us back together," said Mrs. McMillion, who with her sister and their families are among vuiuiHCCis wumxiig uu iiic ambitious project. "It's important because we want our children to remember where we came from and who we arc," she continued, sharing information about their own parents, James and Amelia Reaves Davis of Marsh Branch. He was a cobbler; she, a seamstress. Josey married Charles Smith, whose sharecropper parents, Junior and Maggie Smith, lived "down in the Neck" and eventually bought their own farm, the "Swain place" on N.C. 211. The three also want those at the reunion to appreciate others who iaa, Four Place Fi Jordan Reeves of Shallotte (second frc bike rodeo held last week at Shallotte 227, as well as taking first place in tli place winners were (from left) Clinton olds; Peter Macon, Seaside, 10-year-i Point Estates, seven-year-olds. County May Hardship Cas BY RAHN ADAMS Assessment payments in Brunswick County's first three special assessment water districts are coming in steadily, but officials involved in the collections say they need additional direction from commissioners on how to handle hardship cases. At Monday's regular county board meeting in Bolivia, the Brunswick County Utility Operations Board is expected to ask commissioners to give Tax Collector Nancy Moore the authority to grant hardship status to deserving property owners, even if they don't meet the current guidelines for installment payments. At present, a property owner who doesn't qualify for hardship status is required to pay his assessment in full within 60 days after the county adopts the final assessment roll in his respective SAD project. Until the assessment is paid, a lien against the individual's properly exists. Earlier this year, commissioners approved an installment payment plan for property owners on limited or fixed incomes, in response to public sentiment that the fiO-day payment period was too short, especially for senior citizens. The installment plan is based solely on the property owner's monthly Killed Man autopsy was inconclusive. He earlier had speculated that the murder charge possibly would be reduced to assault for one suspect or the other, if the autopsy pinpointed the blow that killed Pigg. Probable cause hearings in the case are scheduled for July 11 in Brunswick County District Criminal Court. Ballard was released from the Brunswick County Jail on a $20,000 bond two weeks ago. McCowan was still in custody Tuesday, also under a $20,000 bond. anniversary United Methodist Church. Auxiliaiist Mary Dawson is in charge of the pageant, in which the first Miss Varnamtown will be chosen on August 26, just in time to take a prominent part in the festival itself. Display space at the craft fair is available for $10 per plot, with Ms. Kobbins the contact person. Road Comrr helped mold their communities?the likes of Solomon King, postmaster and church leader in Dark Branch following the Civil War, and Jones' own great-grandfather, Frank Brown Sr., one of the largest landowners of that area, and his grandmother, Fannie Brown, who was a natural doctor and midwife. In Marsh Branch, fishing was a major industry, while in the Neck, farming for families such as the McCrackens was a way of life for many. People such as healer Mary Brown were the stuff of family stories. "One lady whose son had double pneumonia, the doctor let her (Mary Brown) come in and cure him," recalled Mrs. Smith. Another goal of the weekend is to i P ** -*ns /y *,^v*9tem3i{5gs?^ HHV PHOTO CONTRIBUIFO irst In Rodeo im left) emerged overall winner in the Middle School by Cub Scout Pack No. ic eight-year-old division. Other firstRountree of Holden Beach, ninc-yearnldc* otirl Ckimbti pn?knbniu ir:il~?~ M..U xyuvnj ? U1.III iwiu, Tillage Permit More >es In SADs household income and the number of individuals in that household, with the allowable number of monthly payments ranging from four to 20 based on those two factors. However, Ms. Moore, whose department handles SAD collections, told utility officials last week that at least 15 property owners who don't meet the present eligibility requirements have asked to participate in the installment payment plan. There are 10 to 15 standard hardship cases in each of the three districts, she added. If given authority to do so, Ms. Moore would review the requests individually and take factors other than just household income into account, as to whether or not the assessment would cause a suhstan tial economic hardship on the property owner. She said the requests should be filed in writing. According to Ms. Moore's figures as of June 16, some $140,134.93 or 65.1 percent of the $215,262.70 levy in SAD 2 had been paid. The past due date was May 3. Delinquent property owners were notified of that fact earlier this month. In SAD 1, some $68,384.17 or 23.3 percent of the $293,004.14 levy had been paid. The past due date in SAD 1 is July 11. Also, $18,579.23 or 13.3 percent of the $140,135.83 levy in SAD 3 had been paid. The past due date in SAD 3 is July 25. You don't Y an Ami to die of a h / / BUi *41 You also don't ha consume excess cholesterol. Or ig pressure. Or smoke large segment o population does. An the United States incidence of heart att the American Heart trying to help Americ ^ they live., f||) American He WE'RE FIGHTING 1 lunities MSI honor some of the families in the area who contributed to life in those communities, such as the late Dan Harrelson Sr., whose former store near the entrance to Orton Plantation was well-frequented by members of the community. "He was good to us. They're gone, but their children are here and we want to honor them," said Mrs. Smith. Events over the June 29-July 2 weekend include church services and on Saturday, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., a community picnic at Town Creek Township Park, which will be followed that night by a banquet at the 11,A Hall in Wilmington. More information is available from Clayton Vaught, 371-3227, in Winnabow. July Show To Help Kids At Christmas It may be hot outside, but one local group is thinking Christmas?in July. The Brunswick County Volunteer and Information Center will sponsor a benefit country and gospel show on Saturday, July 8, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. at Shallotte Middle School. Featured will be local artists and groups such as Gene Simmons and the Cedar Grove Gospel Choir. Proceeds will be used to help needy children in the county during the Christmas season. Offices To Close Independence Day Post offices, financial institutions and the Brunswick County Government Center will all be closed on Tuesday, July 4, in observance of Independence Day. Also, town halls at Shallotte, Calabash, Holden Beach and Sunset Beach will also be closed Tuesday. Ocean Isle Beach Town Hall will be open normal hours, 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., and will also be open all day Saturday. Twins To Appear On TV Talk Show Sabrina and Serena Varnam, the twin daughters of Ronald and Jencie Varnam of Varnamtown who are pursuing modeling careers in New York City, will appear on local television next week. The twins will be guests on the Jim Burns Show next Tuesday and Wednesday, July 4 and 5, televised on WJKA-TV 26 at 10 a.m., said Mrs. Varnam. AT HOLDEN BEACH BRIfiG HOME THE & BEACON On Sale At HiHn nuiutn KtflLl 1 BARN RESTAURANT BEACH MART CAISON'S SUPERETTE CAROLINA SEASIDE RETREAT CITGO STATION FARRELL'SFOOD MART GENERAL STORE GINNV'S CHICKEN HOUSE JEFF'S GROCERY HOLDEN BEACH PIER HOLDEN BEACH SEAFOOD JANE'S RESTAURANT ROBINSON'S VARIETY SPAN MART SKY MART EXXON L. BOOKWORM CAPT. PETE'S iave to be erican eart attack. _ y II LP5 I I ve to overeat. Or ive amounts of nore high blood i. But that's what a f this country's d that's one reason has the highest ack in the world. At Association, we're ans change the way A.nd die. iart Association FOR YOUR LIFE I