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EXTRA, EXTRA!!
SEE
PAGE 3
Weekly
FOR
Brought
FULL
To You
DETAILS
By:
Great Gas Give-Away!
SAMPSON COUNTY’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
The Sampson Weekly
“We will meet or beat any competitors
price!”
FREE
VOLUME 4, ISSUE 16
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
INSIDE
Performance Automotive Project Eagle
To Open Soon
Faith
Page A8
Flight Comes
To Reality
Entertainment
Page A9
Business
Page A19
WEATHER
Fri
Scattered
T-Stroms
Hi: 82 º Lo: 53 º
Sat
Sunny
Hi: 77 º Lo: 50 º
Sun Partly
Cloudy
Hi: 76 º Lo: 56 º
Mon Isolated
T-Stroms
Hi: 78 º Lo: 59 º
Tues Partly
Cloudy
Vince Burgess of Burgess Construction Group updates Terry Lee and Ingrid Burgess on
construction progress at the new Performance Automotive Inc.
Sampson County will soon be home to a new Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram dealership;
Performance Automotive, Inc. The shiny new dealership, owned by Ingrid Burgess and
Terry Lee, will bring new car brands back to Clinton that many locals have driven out of
county seeking for some time now.
The 2 million dollar project is currently under construction by Vince Burgess and the
general contracting company of Burgess Construction Group. Ingrid Burgess stated,
“Construction is coming along well, and we are very pleased. He is doing a great job!”
The project site and future new home for Performance Automotive Inc is just off
Southeast Boulevard at 605 Warsaw Road across from Brooks Brothers. Terry Lee and
Ingrid Burgess expect the new dealership to open in June of this year, and state that
the project, Performance Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, & Ram, will be PERFORMANCE, see P. 3
Team P.R.I.D.E.
5K FUNd Run
Wed Sunny
Hi: 85 º Lo: 61 º
If only for this
life we have
hope in Christ,
we are to be
pitied more
than all men.
1 Corinthians
15:19
On Saturday April 6, 2013 a year long dream and a lot of
hard work came to reality for Boy Scout Jarrett Jackson. A
dedication ceremony for his Eagle Scout project entitled
“Project Eagle Flight” was held at Spivey’s Corner Fire
Department with a large crowd of supporters at Jarrett’s
side to show off the newly completed Helipad. Also an
impressive entrance and demonstration was done by two
Critical Care helicopters, showing exactly the impact the
new helipad will have on this crucial emergency service.
The Project Eagle Flight Dedication Ceremony was called
to order by Richard Stephenson, Eagle Scout Advisor with
invocation being done by L.E. McLamb. Presentation of the
Colors was done by the Sampson County Fire Association
Honor Guard and newly promoted Eagle Scout Jarrett
Jackson led the Pledge of Allegiance. Speakers included
Richard Stephenson, Eagle Scout Advisor who presented
the history of Jarrett’s project and Don Butler, Director
of Government Affairs and Public Relations with Murphy
Brown LLC, presented Murphy Brown’s role in helping to
raise the necessary funds for the Helipad project. Jarrett
Jackson made his Dedication Remarks and showed the
attendees a power point presentation of his “Journey to
an Eagle Scout”.
Jarrett is a sophomore at Midway High School and a
member of Mingo Baptist Church. He joined the scouts as
a Tiger Cub when he was in the first grade, and has been
involved with scouting ever since. Jarrett’s father, Ricky
Jackson, is a cattle farmer and a volunteer firefighter with
the Spivey’s Corner Fire Department. His mother, Denise
Jackson, is a First Grade teacher at Midway Elementary.
Hi: 85 º Lo: 61 º
WEEKLY VERSE
Eagle Scout Jarrett Jackson (right) with
Life Flight helicopter pilot
Roseboro Elementary’s Team P.R.I.D.E. will host their first “Running with P.R.I.D.E. 5K FUNd
Run” on Saturday, May 4th at 9:00 AM in Roseboro, NC. The run, starting in the Town of
Roseboro Community Park, is planning to welcome runners from throughout Sampson
and surrounding counties, including many members from the local community as well as a
plethora of spectators.
Team P.R.I.D.E. organizers, Jessica Eason and Betsy Autry, say that they are, “currently trying
TEAM, see P. 3
to encourage all businesses in Sampson and surrounding
Jarrett also has an older brother and sister. His sister,
Meagan Jackson, is a Pre-K teacher at Midway Elementary
where her mother works. Jarrett’s brother, Noah Jackson,
is married to Jennifer and they have a 3 year old son
named Kash. Noah joined the fire department at age 16,
and Jarrett recently joined the Spivey’s Corner Volunteer
Fire Department as well.
Jarrett has been striving to become an Eagle Scout
since a young boy. He chose an ambitious project
which will not only help him reach his goal of being an
Eagle Scout, but also benefit the
EAGLE , see P. 3
WEEKLY INDEX
Local................................................1-5
Wellness..............................................6
Faith.................................................7-8
Entertainment....................................9
Food..................................................10
Education.....................................11-12
Real Estate........................................13
Health...............................................14
Crime................................................15
Puzzles..............................................16
Obituaries.........................................17
Classifieds.........................................18
Business............................................19
Ford of Clinton.................................20
thesampsonweekly.com
910-590-2102
TRUCKLOADS OF BUYOUTS, OVERSTOCK AND DISCOUNTS FROM CAROLINA’S FURNITURE MARKET
15590 Hwy 701 Newton Grove, NC
I-40 EXIT 343 (910)594-2805
Thur, Fri, Sat and Monday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
A2
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
LOCAL NEWS
From The Desk of
Senator Brent Jackson
Greetings
Raleigh!
from
I hope that everyone
had a wonderful
weekend and was
able to enjoy the
nice weather. It was
another busy week
in the North Carolina
Senate this week with
numerous bills being
read on the floor
and sent to various
committees. I have received a lot of feedback over the past few
weeks about various bills currently in the General Assembly. While
I do try and respond to every email and call, please know that for
the next several weeks I will be focused on the budget. I will still
respond to all emails and calls but it may take slightly longer than
usual. Thank you for your patience and understanding.
NOTABLE LEGISLATION:
*HB 127 - Arts Education as a Graduation Requirement -This bill
is currently in the House Committee on Education. If favorable, it
will move to the House Appropriations Committee.
*SB 201 - Allow Hunting With Silencers - This bill is currently in the
Senate Judiciary I Committee.
*SB 353 - Motorcycle Safety Act - This bill has passed the Senate
and was received by the House April 9, 2013.
RECENTLY FILED LEGISLATION (That I sponsor/co-sponsor)
*SB 648 - NC Commerce Protection Act of 2013. - This bill was
written to increase transparency. -This bill has been referred
to Commerce Committee. If favorable, it will go to Judiciary I
Committee.
*SB 683 - Safe Harbor/Victims of Human Trafficking. - This bill
creates a safe harbor for victims of human trafficking and for
prostituted minors. -This bill has been referred to the Committee
on Judiciary I.
*SB 703 - Limit Local Regulation of Outdoor Smoking. -This bill has
been referred to the Agriculture/Environment/Natural Resources
Committee. If favorable, it will be referred to the State and Local
Government Committee.
NEWS FROM THE DISTRICT:
Ms. Eileen Coite was recently introduced as the new Sampson
County Cooperative Extension Director. She will assume her new
role May 1, 2013. Ms. Coite currently works for North Carolina
Cooperative Extension in Wayne County as an Agricultural
Extension Agent specializing in livestock management and
production, forage crop production, animal waste, management,
and youth development. She has served in her current position for
13 years. She has also worked for Murphy Family Farms of Rose Hill
for seven years. She served as a farm manager and as a production
training team specialist while there. Ms. Coite obtained her
Bachelor of Science and Master’s Degree in Animal Science from
North Carolina State University. I am excited to have someone with
such a strong background serving Sampson County.
REMINDER:
-Duplin Relay for Life is set for May 3. There are currently 17 teams
and 134 participants lined up for the annual event, according to
the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life website. These 17
teams and 134 participants have raised $30, 058.75 thus far. This
event will be held at James Kenan High School at 6 PM. If you
would like to donate or just find more information about Relay for
Life please refer here.
-Liberty Hall is hosting a day camp this summer, June 17-20 from 1
PM to 5 PM, for children. This camp will explore how children lived,
played, and went to school during the 18th and 19th centuries.
While there, participants will learn period games, crafts, gardening,
and experience learning in a one room school. The final day will
have campers participate in presenting a tour of Liberty Hall. The
cost of the camp is $25 per camper. Registration materials can be
picked up at the Liberty Hall Visitor Center in Kenansville.
DISTRICT 10 SPOTLIGHT:
Congratulations to the James Sprunt Community College Phi
Theta Kappa National Honor Society which won seven awards at
a regional conference that was held in Clemmons on March 22
through March 24. Awards included Super Stars, Distinguished
College Project - Honorable Mention, Outstanding Participation in
Carolinas Region Service Program, Horizon Award, Distinguished
Chapter Team - Honorable Mention, Five Star Award, Host
Chapter Award, and Outstanding Participation in the Carolinas
Region Honors in Action Program. The Phi Theta Kappa National
Honor Society is the official honor society of America’s two-year
colleges. To be eligible for entry into this honor society a student
must have a GPA of at least 3.5, established a record of academic
excellence, be of good moral character, and possess qualities of
good citizenship.
This section of our weekly column will feature a standout member
(person, group, business, etc.) of District 10. If you would like to
nominate someone for this, please do so by emailing jacksonbla@
ncleg.net, naming the candidate and briefly describing why they
deserve this honorable mention.
IN CLOSING:
I appreciate you allowing me to serve you in the North Carolina
General Assembly and if I can ever be of service to you, please feel
free to contact me at 919-733-5705 or [email protected].
You can also visit my Facebook page at http://www.facebook.
com/wbrentjackson and follow my Twitter page at https://twitter.
com/SenJackson. I look forward to hearing from you!
Sampson County 4-H
Horse Activities
Megan Merritt, who will teach the equipment section of the workshop.
Sampson County 4-H would like to invite any youth ages 5-18 with a horse interest to “A
Day of Play” workshop on April 20th. This free event will be held at the Sampson County
Livestock Facility from 10:00-2:00pm. Youth may bring their own horse, but horses will
also be available for riding for those who do not own an animal. Learning about feed stuffs,
safety, and anatomy will be taught through hands-on games. Lunch provided. For more
information and registration call the Cooperative Extension Office at 910-592-7161.
Pictured left to right are Jeth Odom of Shealy Electrical, Gary Dean and Paul
Langston of the Eastern Baptist Association.
Shealy Electrical Wholesalers in Clinton donates circuit breaker load center. The Eastern
Baptist Association is helping to rebuild a house belonging to Bob and Tina Blair of Sampson County. The Blair’s house was badly damaged by fire in February.
FFA Chapter Participates
In State Poultry Event
South River EMC Offers A Free
Workshop On Surge Protection
As the storm season approaches, South River EMC is offering a
free workshop open to the public concerning surge protection.
You may not think about it, but even the smallest surge can have an
impact on your electronics. Find out what you can do to keep those
sensitive electronics safe. Join us Tuesday, April 16 at 6 p.m. at the
South River EMC office at 17494 US 421 South in Dunn.
Items discussed will include: a basic electricity review; what a
surge is; why surge protection is important; what causes surges;
what is a surge protector; what is grounding; and application of
surge protection.
Raleigh, NC – The Clinton High School FFA Chapter participated in the North Carolina FFA
Poultry Evaluation Career Development Event on March 15th 2013, at NC State University.
Clinton FFA placed second in their FFA federation. Team members included Landon Pope, Ashley Sinclair, Sydney Simmons, and Austin Wright. Their FFA advisors are Mr. Chris Stroud and
Mr. Ronnie Warren.
This is a great workshop for anyone interested in learning how to
protect those delicate appliances. No question is too big or too smal,
and if you have it, someone else may have it as well. So come and
learn!
During this event students evaluated production, processing, and merchandising phases of poultry industry as well as identifying various industry components. They are also tested on the application of sound management practices. Participants evaluated live birds, present oral reason, and
place a class of ready-to-cook broilers. In the processing and merchandising phase of the event,
students selected and graded ready-to-cook turkeys, and processed products and cartons of eggs.
If you are interested in attending this free workshop, contact Robby
Talton at 910-892-8071x 2152, or by e-mailing [email protected].
Although not required, RSVPs are appreciated.
This event is one of the forty-three different career development events offered to North Carolina
FFA members on a state level. Perdue Farms Inc., with in-kind support from the Department of
Poultry Science at North Carolina State University, sponsors the State Poultry Evaluation Career
Development Event.
South River EMC is a locally-owned and operated electric cooperative, which provides electric service to 42,000 homes, farms and
businesses in parts of Harnett, Cumberland, Sampson, Johnston and
Bladen counties.
The North Carolina FFA Association is a youth organization of 19,301 student members preparing for leadership and careers in the science, business and technology of agriculture with 232
local chapters across the state. FFA makes a difference in the lives of students by developing
their potential for premier leadership, personal growth, and career success through agricultural
education.
Week of April 11-17, 2013
PERFORMANCE, cont. from 1 a full-service dealership, employing up to 30 people with
Sales, Parts, and Service. Lee shared with us their vision for customer interaction, “It’s
about Hard Work. It’s about Dedication. It’s about Integrity. It’s about Performance!”
www.thesampsonweekly.com
LOCAL NEWS
Eagle, cont. from 1
A3
Terry Lee stated, “We want to build a place all of Sampson County can be proud of.
We want a place where the customers not only say WOW when they walk in, but they
also say WOW when they leave by the service they have received. We want to build a
dealership that uses all the modern technology to make the experience of buying or
servicing your car easy.”
“We have always tried to contribute in a positive way to our community,” stated
Ingrid Burgess, “here in Sampson County, so when the opportunity arose to bring
back Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram to the citizens of this county, we were proud
to accept the invitation. Our facility has been designed and is being constructed in
a manner that will allow for a new, superior automobile sales and service experience.
Performance Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram will offer small town service and values
with the amenities, technology and conveniences people would expect to see in larger
metropolitan dealerships.”
TEAM, cont. from 1
counties to come together and support this opportunity to
build future leaders.” The purpose of the FUNd Run is to raise
money for after school programs coordinated by Team P.R.I.D.E., and to assist in enhancing
their playground atmosphere. Any area business or organization that would like to become a
sponsor for Team P.R.I.D.E.’s “Running with P.R.I.D.E. 5K FUNd Run” are encouraged to contact
either Jessica Eason or Betsy Autry at 910-525-4538, or via email at [email protected]
and [email protected].
Team P.R.I.D.E. is an after school program offered to girls in grades 3-5, that focuses on team
building, character building, self-esteem building, and physical fitness. The program affords
opportunities to those students that most likely would not receive these opportunities
otherwise. Organizers stress that those who sponsor the “Running with P.R.I.D.E. 5K FUNd Run”
will be helping to ensure that Team P.R.I.D.E. students will be able to continue participating in
Team P.R.I.D.E. programs without placing financial burdens on their families. They also plan
to make the “Running with P.R.I.D.E. 5K FUNd Run” an annual community project hosted by
Team P.R.I.D.E. Jessica Eason, a Guidance Counselor at Roseboro Elementary and one of the
organizers states, “With the funds raised from the fund run we plan to continue Team PRIDE
and hopefully start a boys after school program as well, which will all be at no cost to the
students. Currently we have 21 girls that are involved in Team P.R.I.D.E. and 5 coaches. We
workout/run once or twice a week depending on the weather, as well as continue character
building exercises. We would love to be able to have more students involved in these programs
in the coming years.”
Ms. Eason goes on to say, “Team P.R.I.D.E. began when Betsy Autry had a goal to begin an after
school program for a group of girls to show them belonging; and allow them to have a vision
of what they can accomplish if they put their hearts into something. It was our goal to provide
these girls with direction before they entered into middle school and the pressures that come
with that. With this in mind I was contacted through email by the YMCA in Wilmington in
regards to Girls on the Run (GOTR). I immediately sent this email to Ms. Autry who brought
it to our principal and that is how this program got started, ‘a vision and a big heart of love
from a beloved teacher by all her students, Ms. Autry.’ Ms. Autry, myself, and Ms. Colwell (our
principal) came up with our plan and we ran from there recruiting a couple more coaches
along the way.”
Betsy Autry, a Fourth Grade Teacher at Roseboro Elementary adds, “The GOTR program is
designed for girls in grades 3 through 5. It works on self-esteem, character education, and
physical fitness; also teaching these girls that it is ok to step outside of their box and be a
leader. This program is a 10 week program that we completed with a 5k run in December in
Wilmington, NC. The girls were very interested in staying in the program but in order to do
this cost free to them we decided to start our own team...Team P.R.I.D.E. (Positive, Respectful,
Independent, Determined, Extraordinary) and include a community outreach element to
the program.” A few of the community outreach programs for Team P.R.I.D.E included a visit
to a local nursing home where students in Team P.R.I.D.E delivered Valentines Cards to the
residents, students also participated in collecting trash and cleaning their school grounds.
Ms. Eason concludes by saying, “We are encouraging other schools in Sampson County to
join us in this endeavor. GOTR has been trying to spread into Sampson County schools
(elementary and middle) but they need help spreading the word and willing volunteers to
launch the programs in their own schools. We have had parents come and tell us how much
they feel like this program benefits their daughters and hope that this will continue.”
For more information on Team P.R.I.D.E. please visit their facebook page...Team P.R.I.D.E. at
https://www.facebook.com/runningwithpride where they keep sponsors updated as well
as add any information regarding the race available at the time. See more pictures on The
Sampson Weekly Facebook page.
Friendly customer service,
knowledgeable sales people.
With a complete line of
hardware, lumber, fishing
supplies and ammunition.
ROYAL
®
HARDWARE
Life Flight helicopter landing on new helipad at Spivey’s Corner Fire Department
get to a major trauma center as quickly as possible.” Explaining what led him to choose
Project Eagle Flight, Jarrett continues, “I started scouts as a first grader just because I
thought it would be fun. I soon realized that there was a lot of work involved too. I always
had the goal to become an Eagle Scout, and when I started thinking about a project my
dad told me of a need at the Spivey’s Corner Fire Department that would also benefit the
whole county.”
Jarrett’s Helipad project includes a 1,600 square foot, approved concrete pad. The 40
by 40 foot pad has 8 flush-mount landing lights, a lit windsock, and a helicopter radio
remote control. “This is a standard landing pad for all of the helicopter services that
fly into Sampson County. It will cut down on the number of personnel needed to load
patients and speed up loading time. It should be safer for the flight crew and volunteers
on the ground as well,” Jarrett explains.
According to Jarrett, “Now that the project is finished, I am relieved that the hard work
is over and happy that I could do something to help my community. Now that spring is
here, I will get back to farming. That is what I really enjoy. I will continue to volunteer at
the Spivey’s Corner Fire Department and finish my junior year at Midway High School. I
plan to finish high school and hopefully go to NC State in the Agriculture program.”
Jarrett continued, “The main thing I would like to say to the community is thank you for
your support.”
Jarrett’s parents Ricky and Denise Jackson beamed with pride, “We are very proud of
the work that he has done to complete this project. It took a lot of planning and the
help of community members and businesses to complete the project. It was a very big
undertaking. We are proud of the hard work he has done and the young man that he
has become.”
Jarrett’s Eagle Scout Court of Honor was held Sunday April 7th at Mingo Baptist Church.
Jarrett Jackson is a fine young man and we would like to thank him for his hard work and
dedication to this Helipad Project. It is a project that will save lives and will be having
impact on generations to come.
Thank You, Jarrett!! See more pictures on The Sampson Weekly Facebook page.
The Sampson Weekly
SAMPSON COUNTY’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
The Great
The Sampson Weekly
Gas Give-Away!
SAMPSON COUNTY’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
Brought The
to youGreat
by
Gas Give-Away!
Brought to you by
We will give away $75 in gas each week for 20 weeks
We will
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you could be the winner of $75 in Gas.
you could be the winner of $75
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119 N. Main Street, Salemburg
who picked up her prize at
(910)525-5320
This week's winner of the $75.00 GOGAS
gas card is Clemmie Daughtry from
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complete the entry
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Name:
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Must Be 16 years old to enter. Age ______
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_____________________ Email: _______________________
Rules: Complete entry form and place in drop box at any current sponsor’s location. Winners will be drawn on
Tuesday with the winner’s name and photo published in that week’s edition of The Sampson Weekly. Winners
agree to have their name and picture published, and will be available for picture at the winning location on
Wednesday after the drawing. All who enter agree to allow their information from the entry form be used for
possible advertising purposes. Value not to exceed $75.00. Redeemable for Gas only. Employees of The
Sampson Weekly and their families are not eligible for entry.
Weekly Great Gas Give-Away!
Name:
___________________
Must Be 16 years old to enter. Age ______
Address:____________________
Phone: _______________________
_____________________ Email: _______________________
Rules: Complete entry form and place in drop box at any current sponsor’s location. Winners will be drawn on
Tuesday with the winner’s name and photo published in that week’s edition of The Sampson Weekly. Winners
agree to have their name and picture published, and will be available for picture at the winning location on
Wednesday after the drawing. All who enter agree to allow their information from the entry form be used for
possible advertising purposes. Value not to exceed $75.00. Redeemable for Gas only. Employees of The
Sampson Weekly and their families are not eligible for entry.
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A4
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
LOCAL NEWS
Sampson County May Produce Water as a Commodity
On Monday night, Lee Cannady, Sampson County Public
Works Director, hosted a second planning/discussion meeting
with the County Commissioners, County Manager Ed Causey,
Assistant County Manager Susan Holder and Finance Director
David Clack.
Cannady began the night by very briefly recapping the history
of the county’s water/sewer infrastructure and stated. “Let’s
loosen our collars and set back in an informal atmosphere
much like we would on our front porches. We (the county
Public Works) have been good stewards to our customers and
to the county and continue to be to this day. We do want to
improve our system and be consistent with the desires of this
board. I am impressed with your (county commissioners) interest and enthusiasm in laying the foundation for generations
to come. I appreciate your patience in working with us.”
According to Cannady, Sampson County currently serves
5,100 customers at an average monthly water use of 5,000 gallons per month per family. The County’s $30,000,000 water
infrastructure was put in place using $15,000,000 in grants and
the remaining being financing with 38 and 40 year notes. The
system was designed as a Rural Domestic Water source, not a
fire rated system- however it does serve as a water source for
fire departments in the county.
After bringing the commissioners up to date on the current
system, Cannady explained that with the current cost of paying for the debt service, maintaining current infrastructure
and purchasing water from current municipalities, the county
is barely breaking even. Cannady went on to describe the need
to expand the system into areas not being served, as well as
meeting the needs of potential industrial clients locating to the
I40 exits. Supplying water to these areas would require constructing additional lines. Presently the 403 water lines run
within approximately 1 mile of the Faison-I40exit. Cannady
described a scenario of expanding the current system in order
to serve additional customers within this area. Based on current biding, construction cost -expanding the system one mile
at an average of 15 additional customers per mile would cost the
county nearly $110,000. Financing this expansion for 10 years
at 4.5% would equal an additional yearly expense of $13,965.00.
There are two different scenarios to pay for this expense; 1) Dividing this expense by the additional 15 customers would equate
to a $77.00 per customer per month debt service in additional to
an average $40.00 water bill. 2) Or we divide the cost up among
our entire customer base at an increase of 23 cents per customer.
Cannady stressed at this point- “We need to get as much bang
for the buck as possible because the days of the easy GRANT
money are no more.”
Cannady continued, “If the board wants to expand, we’ve got
to be smarter.” Looking ahead concerning lowering the operating cost, Cannady expressed his satisfaction that once the
new approved wellheads are online, the county could produce
additional water at reduced cost. This could possibly reduce the
county’s operating expenses once the wellheads are fully operational, allowing the county to reduce the need to purchase their
current supply of water from other sources. Cannady stated,
“If we reduced the quantity of water purchased from the City
of Clinton by half, we could save $72,000 per year. Producing
our own water cost us $1.35 per thousand gallons. We buy water
from The City of Clinton for $1.90 per thousand gallons.” Also
Cannady explained to the board the fact that the southern end
of the county has the fewest households but could hold the future in producing additional water for Sampson County. “If the
county expanded in the southern end of the county we could
produce water and push it up to the northern end of the county
where the customers are. Again we will follow the direction of
this Board.”
Lee Cannady explains to county commissioners the
water line routes in Sampson County
Cannady continued to explain another possibility of lowering the operating expenses, and helping to expand the water
producing capabilities, is to outsource surplus water to other
municipalities. Cannady reiterated that a possible new customer has shown interest in partnering with Sampson County
to purchase 1.5 millions of gallons of water per day. In a well
study which was done for the county, Cannady stated, “The
best future source of water and the best quality of water in the
county is in the southern end of the county. We presently have
282 potential customers wanting the county to supply them
water in this area.
“Gentleman,” Cannady stated, “Sampson County is a Regional
Water System. I’m impressed! Our system covers more area
than the state of Rhode Island. Let’s not make quick decisions
but make wise decisions. I serve the Board, I serve the County
and I serve the 5,100 water customers in our County.”
Student Art Show Now on Display at Small House Gallery
The Student Art Show (grades K-11) is now on display in the Small House Gallery through
April 15th. Winners are listed below. Seventeen Sampson County Schools participated
and we had 168 entries. Best in Show winners received a check for $20 and their Art
Teacher received a check for $30 to purchase art supplies for their school.
Student Art Show Winners
Grades 3-5
Best In Show
John Matthews
5th Grader
Union Intermediate School
*Grades K-2: Best in Show – Albany Fusco, 2nd grade Butler Avenue; 1st Place – Lily
Preston, 2nd grade Salemburg Elementary; 2nd Place – Josephine Blackman, 1st grade
Hargrove Elementary; 3rd Place – Pearla Villagran, 2nd grade Butler Avenue; Honorable
Mention - Kailee Parrish, Kindergarten LC Kerr; Honorable Mention - Austin Grice,
Kindergarten LC Kerr
*Grades 3-5: Best in show – John Matthews, 5th grade Union Intermediate; 1st Place –
Carrie Jordan, 3rd grade Butler Avenue; 2nd Place – Zayra Perez, 5th grade Hargrove
Elementary; 3rd Place – Adrian Donatelli, 5th grade Sunset Avenue; Honorable Mention
- Jayna Jones, 4th grade Harrells Christian Academy; Honorable Mention - Zoey Brewer,
3rd grade Butler Avenue
*Grades 6-8: Best in show – Skylar Simmons, 7th grade Sampson Middle; 1st Place –
Shinka Bronson, 8th grade Sampson Middle; 2nd Place – Noah Baker, 8th grade Midway
Middle; 3rd Place – Austin Raynor, 8th grade Midway Middle; Honorable Mention - Kiley Hartman, 6th grade Harrells Christian Academy; Honorable Mention - Lee Faison,
7th grade Homeschool
*Grades 9-11: Best in show – Malika Cromartie, 10th grade Lakewood High; 1st Place –
Stephanie Gore, 11th grade Clinton High; 2nd Place – Amanda King, 11th grade Harrells
Christian Academy; 3rd Place – Madison Hunt, 9th grade Hobbton High; Honorable Mention - Katie Alexander, 11th grade Sampson Early College; Honorable Mention - Erika
Torres, 9th grade Sampson Early College
Grades K-2
Best In Show
Albany Fusco
2nd Grader
Butler Avenue School
Grades 6-8
Best In Show
Skylar Simmons
7th Grader
Sampson Middle School
Grades 9-11
Best In Show
Malika Cromartie
10th Grader
Lakewood High School
GRADUATION Jr. Miss Hobbton Pageant
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The Jr. Miss Hobbton Pageant will be held on Saturday, April 20 at 6pm in the Hobbton
High School auditorium. Contestants (Pictured from left to right) are Lakelyn Bass,
Ivey Brewer, Sarah Daughtry, Camryn Carr and Rachel West. Emily Sutton, seated, is
the reigning 2012 Jr. Miss Hobbton.
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
LOCAL NEWS
A5
We Should Know...
Courtesy Photo
attended high school prior to going to UNC
Chapel Hill where he would study Journalism and
Philosophy. While at UNC, in the mid 1980’s, John
Hood started a student magazine titled Carolina
Critic. That student magazine would eventually
be published on several major college campuses
in NC, with a lean toward conservative and
libertarian writings, and a version of the magazine,
The Carolina Review, is still published at UNC.
Hood credits student journalism for his desire to
pursue journalism as a career.
Hood would also spend time in Washington
DC, both before and after college; and spent a
year working on The New Republic, a political
John Hood with
magazine in Washington. This was during the last
years of the Reagan administration. While there
JW Simmons of We Should Know
Hood had the opportunity to work with two senior
Tuesdays from 2:30 PM until 3:30 PM, J.W. Simmons hosts a editors, Fred Barnes and Morton Kondracke, on production of their
radio show on 1170 AM called “We Should Know”, and The television show, The McLaughlin Group. It was here that John Hood
Sampson Weekly will feature portions of the transcripts in would get his first look at television production and Hood says that
our continuing efforts to bring you more coverage of what is he would later borrow from that experience for the production of
happening in our community. The guest for this week’s show is NC Spin.
John Hood.
While Hood says he remained very interested in national politics, he
John Hood is President and Chairman of the John Locke had decided that he wanted to return to North Carolina to continue
Foundation, a North Carolina think tank that issues policy his career. In 1989 Hood would return to North Carolina, and in
studies, hosts dozens of events and training sessions each year, 1990 opened the John Locke Foundation. “My idea was that North
produces broadcast programs, and publishes Carolina Journal, a Carolina really needed a political magazine, sort of like a National
newspaper, website, and radio program with a monthly audience Review or New Republic type magazine. And I also wanted to write
of nearly 200,000 North Carolinians. Hood helped to found JLF newspaper columns and things of that nature.” Hood says that he
also had a friend, Art Pope, who was interested in forming a think
in 1989.
tank that would focus on public policy research. The idea was to
In addition to his duties at JLF, Hood is a syndicated columnist bring together economist, political scientist, and other professionals,
for the Winston-Salem Journal, High Point Enterprise, Gaston to study education policy, transportation, taxes, and other policy
Gazette, Durham Herald-Sun, and newspapers in 50 other issues; and to issue reports and advise state legislators. Another
North Carolina communities. He also writes a monthly column, friend, Marc Rotterman, who had been involved in politics for some
time, was interested in bringing speakers that would be nationally
“Free & Clear,” for Business North Carolina magazine.
known to North Carolina for different speaking events. “So,” says
Hood is a frequent guest on talk radio and serves as a weekly Hood, “we kind of married all these ideas together to create the John
panelist on “NC Spin,” a political talk show broadcast on 16 Locke Foundation which has a Think Tank arm that issues reports
television stations in Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Greenville, and studies on government issues, has a publication, Carolina
Wilmington, Asheville, and elsewhere. He also created “Carolina Journal, and a series of other radio, television and on-line media
Journal Radio,” a weekly newsmagazine broadcast on 18 radio products, and we do events and outreach programs.”
stations.
Hood states, “Our goal is first, to focus on North Carolina. That’s
JW Simmons begins the show by asking Hood to introduce what we do. We don’t do the national debt or foreign policy… The
other thing we’re focused on is trying to advance the principles upon
himself and the John Locke Foundation.
which we were founded: Individual Liberty, Limited Government,
John Hood grew up in rural Mecklenburg County where he and Free Markets. We believe that’s the path forward for North
Carolina; it’s the way to create progress in our state and make
our economy more competitive, and allow more people
opportunities to get up the rungs of the income ladder.”
Hood goes on to say, “That’s what we are committed
to… North Carolina, and the principles of competition,
innovation, personal freedom, and personal responsibility
that we think should infuse any progressive, 21st century
government.”
Next, JW Simmons asks Hood to discuss his latest book,
“First in Freedom”. Hood says that in 2011, he and his
colleagues at The Locke Foundation, knowing that there
would likely be a change of power in Raleigh, decided that
a series of two books would help set the stage for a reform
agenda for the state. “So,” says Hood, “in 2012 I wrote a book
called, Our Best Foot Forward.” This book, as Hood explains,
was an analysis of our economy, a discussion of what makes
state economies grow, and an investment plan to make North
Carolina more economically competitive. This book was
published in 2012.
Hood says that a natural follow-up to that book was one that
actually got into the nitty-gritty, into the details of how we
could reform the education system, how we could reform the
tax system, the regulatory system, how could we re-organize
North Carolina’s government. And that became the genesis
of the second book, First in Freedom.
Hood states, “North Carolina has a great history of freedom,
but recently we haven’t been living up to it. So we decided to
lay out an agenda for free people to pursue, to create more
freedom and therefore, more prosperity in North Carolina.
And that’s what the book, First in Freedom is about.”
For more information on The John Locke Foundation, please
visit: www.johnlocke.org, and for more information of First
in Freedom, or to purchase a copy of the book, please visit:
www.johnlockestore.com/First-In-Freedom-03.htm
To view the entire broadcast of We Should Know please
visit their YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/user/
WeShouldKnowEDU.
The next “We Should Know” hosted by J.W. Simmons will
air next Tuesday from 2:30 to 3:30 PM on our local radio
station WCLN 1170 AM. If you would like to reach “We
Should Know” you may call them at 910-592-8947 or email
them with show ideas at [email protected] or
you can find them on Facebook.
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Week of April 11-17, 2013
A6 www.thesampsonweekly.com
LOCAL
Spring 2013 Litter Sweep Planned for April
Volunteers are needed to participate in the Governor’s proclaimed LITTER SWEEP to remove litter from North Carolina’s roadways and more specifically Sampson County Highways. Help beautify your community by getting involved
locally. Participants are eligible to receive a certificate of
appreciation and enter the Unusual Litter Contest for cash
prizes.
geted by NCDOT are roads that have been requested or known
high litter areas.”
“The public can contact NCDOT/Sampson County Maintenance at 592-1434 if they are interested in adopting a segment of roadway under the Adopt-A-Highway Program.
They can also call us to report areas that are in desperate
need of litter pickup.”
Litter Sweep is a statewide roadside litter cleanup drive sponsored by the North Carolina Department of Transportation.
The Spring 2013 Litter Sweep is scheduled for April 13-27.
About Litter Sweep:
Litter Sweep is a statewide roadside litter cleanup drive sponsored by the North Carolina Department of Transportation
(NCDOT). It is usually scheduled for the last two weeks of
April and September. The NCDOT Office of Beautification
administers the Spring and Fall Litter Sweeps.
Volunteers can obtain pick up supplies such as orange trash
bags, blue bags (for items to be recycled), orange safety vests
and gloves from their respective local NCDOT county maintenance office in Clinton, NC.
According to Keith Eason, Sampson County DOT, “Litter
Sweep provides a great opportunity for everyone to come together and help beautify their community by getting involved
locally. Everyone’s participation is needed in order to clean
up the increasing amount of roadside litter in Sampson Coun-
Volunteers are desperately needed to help with the clean-up
efforts. Presently the NCDOT, Adopt-A-Highway participants, and other volunteers band together to clean up the
county during Litter Sweep. Volunteers can obtain pick up
supplies such as orange trash bags, orange safety vests and
gloves from the NCDOT/Sampson Maintenance Office located at 220 North Blvd in Clinton.
ty.”
Eason continued, “It is funded with general maintenance
funds. NCDOT will spend approximately $10,000 during Litter Sweep, but cleanup efforts are year round also. In fiscal
year 2012, which if from July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012 approximately $37,000 was spent on litter cleanup in the county.”
When asked how the DOT determines which roads will be
cleaned, Eason stated, “Adopt-A-Highway segments are
signed and are picked up by those participants. Locations tar-
NCDOT maintenance crews devote one week of their time
during Litter Sweep to pick up litter and collect orange bags
from the roadsides once the groups have completed a cleanup.
Everyone’s participation in Litter Sweep is needed in order to
clean up the increasing amount of roadside litter. For future
planning, the 2013 Fall Litter Sweep is scheduled for Sept.
21 to Oct. 5.
For more information on the Litter Sweep and NC Beautification projects visit http://www.ncdot.gov/doh/operations/
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www.thesampsonweekly.com
FAITH
A7
Prodigal Seminar to be Held at CPHC, Clinton’s Community Church
the California State Champion in Informative Speaking; his senior year in college he ranked among the top four speakers in
the U.S.A. in the same event.
pray. He is the author of the best-selling book Prayers for Prodigals, as well as The Lost Art of Praying Together and Praying
the Prayers of the Bible. Franklin Graham wrote about Prayers
for Prodigals, "My mother, Ruth Bell Graham, would have loved
this book . . .
God has uniquely equipped James to encourage others in prayer.
He is available for speaking events, seminars and retreats.
I believe if every parent would peruse these pages they would
find guidance and comfort in trusting in the Lord with their
dearest possessions." A gifted speaker, James communicates
from the heart about his personal experience as the parent of
a prodigal, pointing parents to what God alone can do through
His amazing power to answer prayer. "When our children bring
us to our knees," he writes, "we're in the best position for God
to help us."
Pastor Ken White of CPHC, “Please join us April 12-13, 2013
as we host Dr. James Banks for our first ever Prayers for Prodigals Seminar. Dr. Banks is a gifted speaker, who communicates
from the heart. This seminar is free so please, if you know of
anyone that could benefit from this seminar, please feel free to
invite.”
The event is April 12 @ 7 pm and April 13 @ 9 am in the Family Life Center at CPHC, Clinton’s Community Church located next door to Sampson Community College on Sunset Blvd.
This event is free of charge.
James and his wife Cari have been married for more than 25
years, and have two children in college. They make their home
in Durham, North Carolina where James serves as a pastor and
church-planter.
One of the best known and favorite parables told by Jesus is
the parable of the Prodigal Son. A story of a rebellious son
who demands his inheritance, squanders his father’s assets, and
chooses to live in sin. In the meantime his father remained
hopeful of the return of the wayward son to his father’s house.
This reminds us of the path our prodigal children may choose
outside of our control, leaving us questioning what we as parents can or should do.
Author Dr. James Banks explains, “Other parents may not
understand what you’re up against with your prodigal son or
daughter, but God understands. He knows what it’s like to have
a world full of prodigals, and He waits for you to bring yours to
Him through committed, passionate praying.”
James Banks' books have encouraged thousands of parents to
The Prodigals Seminar:
Learning to Pray for Prodigals
Friday, April 12, 2013
7:00 pm in the Life Center
Session One - Worship, Speaking, Prayer
Saturday, April 13, 2013
8:45-9:00 am in the Life Center foyer
Welcome
9:00-10:15 am in the Life Center
Session Two - Teaching
10:15-10:45 am
Break (refreshments in fellowship hall)
10:45-12:15
Session Three - Teaching, Prayer
James received Jesus as his Lord and Savior when he was a child,
and feels a calling to help believing parents share their faith with
their children. One of James’ greatest joys is to encourage Christians in prayer. James started writing in elementary school when
his 4th grade teacher heard him making up poetry, and assigned
him topics to write about (probably to make him sit still!). Today, in addition to speaking and writing, he enjoys college basketball, beekeeping, tennis, gardening, and spending time under
the hood of his 1964 Plymouth. James also loves church history
and languages, and is fluent in both German and Spanish.
James is a graduate of Westmont College (B.A.), Princeton Theological Seminary (Master of Divinity), and Gordon-Conwell
Theological Seminary (Doctor of Ministry, with an emphasis in
Revival and Reform). He is ordained in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC). His senior year in high school James was
For more information of the Prodigals Seminar go to CPHC.
org and to learn more about the author at jamesbanks.org.
Get Set
(Part 2 of a 4 part Series)
in “anticipation of action” that is about to take place.
The Israelites are set, and they are within a short time
of receiving their signal to move out and to cross the
Jordan River.
By Vanessa W. Polk
Those who know that I love basketball may not know
that I am also a huge fan of track and field; in fact, I’m
a marathoner. There is something extremely beautiful
about the ritual of running. Whether sprint, hurdles, or
long distance each starting line is filled with potential
and possibility. The people who line up behind them
have already done the tough preparation, and are now
to get moving. The adrenaline is high, the runners are
pumped, and the anticipation of reaching the finish line
is great.
In the text the Israelites are setting out from Shittim
to the Jordan, which suggests that they have readied
themselves and are now in position to fix their attention
on crossing the River. Although it does not speak of
Joshua 3:1-3 - Early in the morning Joshua
and all the Israelites set out from Shittim
and went to the Jordan where they camped
before crossing over. After three days the
officers went throughout the camp, giving
orders to the people: When you see the Ark
of the Covenant of the Lord your God, and the
priests who are Levites, carrying it, you are
to move out from your position and follow it.
the journey being a race to a finish line, they are however
physically, psychologically, and spiritually postured for action
–entering and possessing the Promised Land. When a runner gets set in the blocks or corral, their position is not meant
to be held very long. The ‘set’ posture is of limited duration
Life Focus: Once the ‘set’ command is given in a race,
no one is allowed to more –start their forward motionuntil the starter’s gun is fired; a violation will cause a
false start and can result in a disqualification. Obedience to God’s command of ‘get set’ is even more critical for His people. Promises of divine manifestations
are often missed or delayed because of fears and false
starts. For a Christian runner, let’s not become overly
anxious in the faith race. We must settle our spirit and
stay in our set position until we hear a word from the
Lord. Our command to move out and apprehend a
long-awaited promise, hope or dream won’t be long.
Stay in your set posture, it will not be long –a divine
move of God is near!
“The Sufficiency of the Scripture”
Part 6
Rodney Phillips
Carolina College
of Biblical Studies
Fayetteville, NC
Stop. Yield. School zone. Sharp curve ahead.
Slippery surface. Hidden drive. Steep decline.
Road signs protect us from dangers. Likewise, the
Bible protects us in the face of temptation & sin.
By God’s Word, His servants are warned (Psalm
19:11). “Your Word I have treasured in my heart
that I might not sin against You (Psalm 119:11).”
To ignore the Bible’s warning signs is as foolish
as ignoring road signs. The Bible provides the
greatest protection.
The Bible also provides the greatest profit. Psalm
19:11 says, “In keeping them there is great reward.”
When the Bible’s warning signs are honored, it
provides the greatest profit. The true reward is
obedience to Scripture. The Bible is necessary to
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is God’s Word (Psalm 19:12-13), the great purifier.
The Bible is the greatest protection, the greatest
profit and the great purifier. The Bible is that
valuable. This is the sufficiency of Scripture!
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A8
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
FAITH
Have I Got A Story To Share With You!
by Debra Joy Wallace
My niece Hannah Wallace climbing a rock wall.
Earlier this week I watched my young niece Hannah
as she attempted to climb a rock wall. Over and over
again she’d lose her footing and fall to the ground or
else she’d become ‘stuck’ on the wall because she
couldn’t find anything to grab hold of or she couldn’t
reach the next foothold. Thankfully, climbing the
rock wall was simply an impulsive fun thing Hannah
wanted to try that day and therefore she didn’t take it
too seriously.
But what about those days in your life when you feel
like you’ve hit a wall? And you can’t help but take it
seriously because you know that one way or the other
you’ve got to get to the other side. Yet seemingly the
wall is massive and impassable. Ever feel this way? If
so, you’re not alone. All of us at some time or another
come against a wall that threatens to block us from
our ‘hopes’ in God. For some people those ‘hopes’
might be for…healing, deliverance, provision, or to
have a child. For others, their ‘hopes’ might be…
salvation for a wayward family member or completing
an assignment that God has given them.
Whatever your ‘hopes’ in God are…be steadfast in
your faith and don’t be intimidated by walls. The truth
is even Bible ‘heroes’ sometimes felt like they’d hit
an impenetrable wall. Fortunately for us, God made
sure their ‘hit the wall’ struggles were included in His
Word…the Bible. And if we’ll read their stories not
only will we be strengthened and encouraged…we’ll
also discover a powerful truth that the Bible heroes
learned in their trials. And that truth is that God
empowers His sons and daughters to scale walls! I’m
reminded of what David sung when the Lord delivered
him from the hand of all his enemies and from the
hand of Saul. It’s recorded in Psalm 18:20 that David
sang unto the Lord, “With your help I can advance
against a troop; with my God I can scale a wall.”
The LORD longs to be gracious to me; he rises to
show me compassion. For the LORD is a God of
justice. I wait for him and I am blessed!—Isaiah 30:18
From the Bible we read of men who strengthened
themselves in the Lord. The main benefit of one
strengthening himself in the Lord… is that his faith
becomes stronger and he becomes more confident in
God’s ability. In other words…he knows that he knows
that he knows that God can handled the situation…
whatever it might be. You and I can have that same
kind wall scaling confidence in God. So let’s start
building ourselves up in the Lord and one way of
doing this is by declaring ALOUD encouraging bible
declarations. Why aloud? Because the spoken word
of God has creative and wonder-working power that
changes lives and circumstances. Glory!! Here’s a
few Scriptures to start you on your way.
I hope in the Lord, I seek him and he is good to me.—
Lamentations 3:25
This is the day the Lord has made. I will rejoice and be
glad in it.—Psalm 118:24
The Lord is my sun and shield, the Lord bestows favor
and honor. No good thing will he withhold from me as
I walk up rightly.—Psalm 84:11
The Lord blesses me. His favor surrounds me as with
a shield.—Psalm 5:12
The LORD is my refuge in times of trouble.—Psalm
9:9
When my soul is feeling down, I do not rely on my
feelings. I remember my hope is in God, for I will yet
praise Him, my Savior and my God.—Psalm 42: 5-6
I am growing and becoming strong in spirit, filled with
wisdom, and the grace of God is upon me.—Luke
2:40
God has plans for me - to prosper me and not to harm
me, plans to give me hope and a future.—Jeremiah
29:11
I commit my actions to the Lord and my plans will
succeed.—Proverbs 16:3
I love God and I have been called according to his
purpose. God works all things together for my good.—
Romans 8:28
For I am God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus
to do good works, which God prepared in advance for
me to do.—Ephesians 2:10
Not that I have already obtained all this, or have
already been made perfect, but I press on to take
hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me.—
Philippians 3:12
I can do everything through him who gives me
strength.—Philippians 4:13
God is able to do
immeasurably more than
all we can ask or imagine,
according to his power
that is at work within us. To
him be the glory forever.—
Ephesians 3:20-21
Debra Wallace is an
inspirational
columnist
and speaker. She can be
reached online at www.
debrawallace.com or by
calling 252-568-3453.
Debra Wallace
Guest Columnist
It’s Time For The 2013 South River EMC
Annual Meeting of Members
Enjoy the music! North Tower will be performing a variety of music for your enjoyment while you visit over 50
different businesses represented at the bazaar. The Kids’
Korner will feature inflatable games. Your children will
also receive refreshments and a special T-shirt.
The first 1,000 registered members will receive a special gift
bag and a $10 credit on their May electric bill.
Then sit and hear reports of the business of your
cooperative during the business meeting.
Come Join Us:
When: Thursday, April 18, 2013
Registration, Voting and Entertainment
begin at 6 p.m.
The Business Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Where: The Crown Arena & Theatre
South River Electric
Membership Corporation
(910) 892-8071 or (800) 338-5530
www.sremc.com
* Door prize drawings for registered members. The grand prize is a used 2007 GMC pick up!
Members with special needs or who are hearing impaired and plan to attend the meeting are asked to call 800-338-5530.
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
ENTERTAINMENT
What’s
Happening
Where else but SCT
can you see Thomas Jefferson get engaged for the second
time in two hundred
years or see Benjamin Franklin walking around with a
call girl by the name
of “Leggs”? Nowhere
but 115 Fayetteville
Street in downtown
Clinton!!!
Patrons
were treated to lots
of laughs as “LOST
ON THE FORTH OF
JULY” opened last
weekend.
Director
Tom Wilbur has put
a great cast for this
mature comedy that
are “spot on” with
all the timing and
one-liners. This may
not be a well-known
play, but it is one
funny play! I urge
you to some join us
for the laughs!
Auditions will be
held for “THE WIZARD OF OZ” on April
13 at 10:00 am. Director Susan Bristow
will be looking for
actors and actresses
of all ages. You want
at
SCT
to be a part of this big
show? Well, come on
out and show Susan
what you got!
Make sure you visit
our Facebook page at
www.facebook.com/
sampsoncommunitytheatre. We would
love to add you to our
friends list. We will
soon launch our own
website! I will give
you more information
as soon as we “start
up.”
UPCOMING EVENTS
*“LOST ON THE
FOURTH OF JULY”:
Performances
April
12-14. Sponsored by
Clinton Appliance and
Furniture.
*“THE WIZARD OF
OZ”: Auditions April
13 at 10:00am Performances June 20-23
and June 27-30.
*SCT CHILDREN’S
THEATER
WORKSHOP
*“OKLAHOMA”: August 23-25 and August 30-September 1.
Sponsored by sweetFrog
*“CRIMES OF THE
HEART”:
October
4-6 and October 11-13
*“IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE”: December 6-8 and December
13-15
That is What’s Happening this week at
SCT. Thanks for all
your continued support.
Here are this week’s
Lil Bits of Info:
*The youngest first
lady was Frances
Cleveland at age 21.
*If you refrigerate
rubber bands, they
will last longer.
*According to Pickle
Packers International,
the crunch of a pickle should be audible
from 10 paces.
*In the 1500’s, England’s Queen Elizabeth I outlawed wife
beating after 10pm.
e!
Blessed B
Melvin
G.Wayne
Free Workshop On
Surge Protection!
A9
EAST PARK CINEMA
“Come In And Enjoy A Movie”
122 Southeast Blvd. Hwy 701 Business (910) 592-2800
www.eastparkcinema5.com
We Have The Best Popcorn In Town!!!
Take-out Popcorn Now Available
42
STARTS FRIDAY
Rated: PG-13 for thematic elements including
language
Starring: Chadwick Boseman, Harrison Ford, Jon
Bernthal, Christopher Meloni, Nicole Beharie, Jud Tylor
“42” tells the story of two men—the great Jackie
Robinson and legendary Brooklyn Dodgers GM
Branch Rickey—whose brave stand against prejudice
forever changed the world by changing the game of
baseball.
Mon-Fri 6:30-9:00
Sat and Sun 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00
EVIL DEAD
NOW PLAYING
Rated: R for strong bloody violence and gore,
some sexual content and language
Starring: Jane Levy, Shiloh Fernandez, Jessica Lucas
In this remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five
twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote
cabin . When they discover a Book of the Dead, they
unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in
the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in
succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival.
Mon-Fri 7:00-9:00
Sat and Sun 2:00-4:00-7:00-9:00
GI JOE RETALIATION
NOW PLAYING
Rated: Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of combat
violence and martial arts action throughout, and
for brief sensuality and language
Starring: Bruce Willis, Channing Tatum, Dwayne
Johnson
The G.I. Joes are not only fighting their mortal
enemy Cobra; they are forced to contend with
threats from within the government that jeopardize
their very existence.
Mon-Fri 6:45-9:00
Sat and Sun 1:45-4:00-6:45-9:00
TEMPTATION: CONFESSION OF
A MARRIAGE COUNSELOR
NOW PLAYING
Rated: PG-13 for some violence, sexuality and drug
content
Starring: Jurnee Smollett-Bell, Lance Gross, Kim
Kardashian, Vanessa Williams
Judith is an Ivy League educated relationship expert
who gives marital advice for a living, yet can’t seem
to follow that advice in her own marriage to Bryce
(Gross).
It’s almost storm season, make sure you are
protecting your appliances from surges! Topics
discussed will include:
• a basic electricity review;
• what is a surge;
• why surge protection is important;
• what causes surges;
• what is a surge protector;
• what is grounding; and
• application of surge protection.
South River EMC- 17494 US 421 South, Dunn
Tuesday, April 16 at 6 p.m.
Mon-Fri 6:45-9:00
Sat and Sun 1:45-4:00-6:45-9:00
THE CROODS
NOW PLAYING
Rated: PG for some scary action
Starring: Nicholas Cage, Ryan Reynolds, Emma Stone
Surviving in a volcanic world is tough enough,
but caveman Grug (Nicolas Cage) gets a rude
awakening when an earthquake forces him to leave
behind the only world he knows. With his family in
tow, he ventures out into the volatile world in search
of a new home. The situation becomes even more
complicated when Grug’s family - but in particular
his eldest daughter - become smitten with a nomad
(Ryan Reynolds) they encounter on their dangerous
journey.
Mon-Fri 7:00-9:00 Sat and Sun 2:00-4:00-7:00-9:00
Contact:
[email protected] or
910-892-8071 x 2152
(RSVPs are appreciated but not required.)
Starts Soon
April 19th- Oblivion
A10 www.thesampsonweekly.com
WARSAW
FILL
YOUR
FREEZER
AND SAVE!
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Store Hours:
Sunday - Saturday:
6am until 10pm
STAR
T
WA R S I N
S
April AW
10!
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
A11
S
FAMILY FEATURES
tock up on a superfood that’s a no-brainer: Wild Blueberries have superior antioxidant
capacity compared with other fruits and veggies. Best of all, these little blue powerhouses from Maine and Canada are also incredibly convenient, thanks to their yearround availability in your grocer’s frozen fruit section. They’re just as healthy as fresh
and may retain their nutritional value longer.
Here are two quick tips to help you pack a powerful nutritious punch into your diet:
n
Make sure they say wild — Check the bag to ensure you’re getting authentic, frozenfresh Wild Blueberries. If the word “Wild” isn’t on the front of the package, scan the list
of ingredients on the back.
n
Check the size — Be sure to select the little wild ones. When in doubt, feel the berries in
the bag — if they’re “pea-sized,” you’ve got the wild ones.
With twice the antioxidant capacity of larger, cultivated blueberries, Wild Blueberries freeze
perfectly, retaining their superior quality, color and sweet, tangy flavor.
For more delicious recipes that add a daily dose of blue to your diet, visit www.wildblueberries.com.
Quinoa Salad with Wild Blueberries
Prep time: 30 minutes plus thawing and cooling time
Serves 2
1 1/3 cups fresh or frozen Wild
Mix Wild Blueberries with vinegar and
Blueberries
pink pepper; set mixture aside. Cook
2 tablespoons raspberry vinegar
quinoa as instructed in salt water. Let
(or red wine vinegar)
cool. Wash zucchini, cut in half length1/2 teaspoon coarsely ground pink
wise, and thinly slice into half-moons.
peppercorns
Cut Havarti into cubes; set aside. Mix
1/2 cup quinoa
cooked quinoa with zucchini, Havarti
1/4 teaspoon salt
and cottage cheese. Gently stir in
1 medium zucchini
Wild Blueberries and mint leaves.
3 ounces Havarti cheese
Serve with baguette if desired.
1 cup 2% milk fat cottage cheese
Fresh mint
Did You Know?
Scientists and health researchers
are studying Wild Blueberries to
discover more about their antiaging promise, including their
potential to forestall cognitive
aging, reverse short-term
memory loss, improve motor
skills and protect against cancer,
heart disease and diabetes.
Old-Fashioned
Wild Blueberry Muffins
Wild Blueberry and Elderflower Mint Soda
Prep time: 10 minutes
Serves 4
1 cup frozen Wild Blueberries
2 limes, squeezed
4 ounces Wild Blueberry juice
2 ounces elderflower syrup
2 1/2 cups club soda
Fresh mint
Make a tray of Wild Blueberry Ice Cubes (optional). Place about
1 teaspoon of berries per cube in ice cube tray. Reserve 4 tablespoons of berries for the drink.
Squeeze lime and carefully mix juice with Wild Blueberries,
Wild Blueberry juice and elderflower syrup.
Pour the mixture evenly among four glasses, add club soda, stir
and add washed mint leaves and Wild Blueberry ice cubes.
Spicy Tortilla with Wild Blueberries
Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 12 minutes
Serves 4
1 tablespoon canola oil, divided
4 small flour tortillas
2 apples, cored and thinly sliced
1 small red chili pepper, seeded and chopped
4 teaspoons packed brown sugar
Salt to taste
1 1/4 cups Wild Blueberries
2 ounces goat cheese
Fresh mint
In large nonstick skillet, heat half the oil over medium high heat.
Fry each tortilla on both sides until golden. Set aside.
Return skillet to medium heat and add remaining oil. Cook
apples and pepper for about 4 minutes or until beginning to soften.
Add sugar and salt and stir to combine. Add Wild Blueberries and
stir until cooked through. Divide mixture among tortillas and
sprinkle with goat cheese. Garnish with mint before serving.
Prep time: 15 to 20 minutes
Bake time: 18 minutes
Yield: 36 muffins
4 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 1/4 cups low-fat buttermilk
1 1/2 cups (12 ounces) egg substitute
1/2 cup canola oil
6 cups Wild Blueberries
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
In bowl, combine flour, baking powder and salt;
reserve. In separate bowl, whisk together sugars,
buttermilk, egg substitute and oil. Add to flour
mixture and mix just to blend. Fold in Wild Blueberries. Combine sugar and cinnamon. Scoop 1/4
cup batter into each lined or greased 1/3-cup muffin
tin and sprinkle each muffin with sugar/cinnamon
mixture. Bake in 400°F conventional oven or 375°F
convection oven 18 to 22 minutes or until firm to
the touch. Serve warm.
A12
www.thesampsonweekly.com
EDUCATION
Hobbton High School
Fourth 6 Weeks
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Union Intermediate School
Union Intermediate School held their Spring Intramurals the week before Easter. Union’s PE Teacher, Kevin
Johnson, coordinated a Knock-Out tournament for the
students! In the first round, the girls competed in one division, and the boys in another division. Each homeroom
had a male and a female winner. In the championship
round, the boys and girls competed together and the overall champion was Michaela Easterling from Mr. Allen’s
homeroom!
Superintendent’s List
9th Grade: Taylor Aman
11th Grade: Sarah Best
Principal’s List
9th Grade: Justin Barwick, Lela Best, Alexandra Blackman, Sarah Britt, Allen Collier,
Carly Dunn, Cassie Eldridge, Joanna Hinson, Tyndall Hunter, Victoria Johnson, Brandon
King, Larsheia Simmons, Meredith Sinclair
10th Grade: Michael Bass, Regan Chavez, Keighlah Fields, Rosario Flores, Reese Holland, Ashlyn Johnson, Royce Johnson, MiKayla McLamb, Michaela Oates, Lexus Rogers,
Elvie Sumner, Raul Trejo
11th Grade: Simah Alwahishi, Jacob Blakley, Amie Godwin, Emily Harrison, Caleb Iyoob, Matthew Raynor, Anna Rose, Miranda Rose, Brittany Testerman, Mallory Turner,
Hannah Warren
12th Grade: Sarah Brewer, Noe Cruz, Erika Garcia-Colin, Cameron Medlin, Lorena Otero, Mary Thompson
A Honor Roll
9th Grade: Francisco Alvarez, Alex Askew, Kenya Bristow, Chase Brock, Jaida Davis,
Curtis Gautier, Nathan Gavin, Gregory Herring, Madison Hunt, Briana Knowles, Fredy
Lopez-Hernandez, Stacy Potts, Brandon Rogers, Corrina Rogers, Blas Torres Carcamo,
Sally Whipkey, Caitlyn Williamson
10th Grade: Arlinthon Castillo, Samantha Corbett, Jeffrey Cruz, Drake Davis, Brittany
Escalera, Shadaiyah Franklin, Melissa Gallegos, Jose Gonzales-Vasquez, Isaiah Lamb,
Haley Martinez, Kaylee Matthews, Samantha Monk, Ada Montealvo, Marisol Montes,
Kimberly Munguia, Darius Murry, Tyrencia Parker, Sarah Price, Mikeala Roberson, Kaylan Sinclair, Nicole Spell, Daniel Thornton, Reid Tyler, Salvador Vasquez, Jr.
11th Grade: Oren Aman, Morgan Brewer, Tori Davis, Devin Eldridge, RayAnn Eldridge,
Ananiah Hall, Stephen Holmes, Perla Ibarra, Brandon Jackson, Sarah Jackson, Briana
Jones, Perry King, Charles LaRouche, Brianda Martin, William McCain, Tara McCullen,
Estela Melendez, Pamela Molina, Hernan Montalvo, Alexander Moullet, Cynthia Ortiz,
Alex Parham, Emily Rogers, Carla Sutton
12th Grade: Garrett Aman, Taylor Bowden, Madison Bryant, Erica Cabrera, Clarissa
Davila, Princess Frederick, Christopher Harrell, Selena Ibarra, Lora Joyner, Jason King,
Emma Kornegay, Corey Lee, Sasha Martin, Marcy McLamb, Cynthia Montes, Taylor Olson, Ebony Parker, Christina Peterson, Amber Piotrowski, Courtney Roscoe, Chandler
Smith, Montorom Williams, Jr.
B Honor Roll
9th Grade: Stephanie Alejandro, Abraheem Alwahishi, Emma Arenas, Carlie Bauser,
Shavonia Bell, Isaiah Blue, Christian Bradshaw, Samantha Bradsher, Hunter Britt, Karen
Brown, Nicolas Bryant, Johana Castro, Nikyra Darden, Johnny Deaver, Jr., Hailey Eason,
Hannah Edge, Blanca Espino, Christopher Faison, Jamiroquia Faison, Rosa Flores, Christopher Fussell, Rene Gaona-Talonia, Dany Garcia-Soto, Mario Gil, Kamilah Gonzalez,
Dorona Graham, Tyja Gray, Bradley Gurrola, Cody Hall, James Hall, Tema Hall, Jordan
Hebden, Kira Hernandez, Nettie Herring, Cody Hughes, Zachary Hunter, Diana Jimenez
Mejia, Shelia Johnson, Collin King, Jovanne Lezama, Vicente Lopez-Mata, Cristen Mazano, Austin Marshburn, Cassie McCullen, Jessi McIllwain, Thania Melendez, Andro Molina, Angel Moore, Jenifer Moreta Ramirez, Carrie Oates, Jazmine Oates, Faith Olson,
Erik Osorio, Eric Parker, Kaitlyn Pierpont, Monika Santos, Cynthia Thompson, Austin
Thornton, Efrain Velardo, David Watkins, Joel Whaley, Emily Whitaker, Ayanna Williams,
Brittany Yaw
10th Grade: Ramiro Aguilar, Ciera Bell, Blair Bradshaw, Samson Bradsher, Hannah
Byrd, Dania Cabrera Avila, Bernandino Cabrera, Jr., Andres Cepeda, Ivan Cruz, Quantavious Faison, Justin Farrington Davis, Jackeline Gomez, Maria Granados, Christian Heckler,
Jose Hernandez, Reese Holland, Will Hunter, Jose Ibarra, Nicholas Johnson, Henrianna
Joyner, Zachary King, Milynda Kolakowski, Logan Langston, Lexis Lezama, Jessenia
Lopez, Blanca Martinez, Byron Martinez, Carlos Martinez-Hernandez, Jean McAlister,
Courtney Mehaffey, Miguel Ortega, Roberto Pascual-Velasco, Carina Perez, Javier Perez,
Yesenia Rendon-Morales, April Renfrow, Jose Reyes, Luis Rios, Alicia Robinson, Maricela Roblero, Julissa Rodriguez, Luisa Rodriguez, Alexis Sandoval, Monica Santos, Xavier Serna, Amanda Smith, Marque Surles, Aydan Tart, Joseph Tew, Sierra Torrez, Danika
Treadwell, Haley Westbrook, Sonjerrae Whitted, Frances Zeledon
11th Grade: Maria Aburto Gomez, Daniel Alonzo, Lynsey Barnes, Katie Bass, Shyasia
Bryant, Antonio Caamano, Chantel Davis, Jose Delgado, Madison Denning, Brittany Hamrick, Zachary Hobbs, Nicholas Hunter, Rebecca Hunter, Anna Juanchi, Johnnie Knowles,
Rebecca Kornegay, Aaron Lee, Zachery Lee, Yuriana Lira, Audrey Mercer, Mason Monk,
Rigoberto Mora Jr., Marcos Navarro, Joe Oates, Connor O’Bryan, Mary Odum, John Olson, Andre Parker, Bonnie Parker, Brittany Partin, Nicholas Pate, Kristen Piotrowski, Saul
Ramirez, Anastacio Renteria, Iriani Rincon, Anna Rogers, Kalisha Royal, Edfer Sanchez,
Alexia Santos, Spencer Sinclair, Jessica Summerlin, Brianna Swinson, Bratley Tart, Aaron
Townsend, Caleb Tyndall, Isidro Valle Garcia, Jacob Van Rooyen, Brooklyn Weathersbee,
William Whitted, Yoneisha Williams, Austin Wilson
12th Grade: Justin Armwood, Jarrett Bennett, Taylor Bowden, Codi Brindle, April Chavarria, Charles Chestnutt, Alexis Cook, Haley Evans, Jonathan Faison, Donald Farrior,
Jr., Edwin Funez, Justin Futral, Sebastian Gamez-Parra, Erika Garcia Colin, Dalila Hernandez, Esteban Hernandez, Casey Hobbs, Brittany Hunter, Caitlin Joyner, Tre’ Leach,
Wesley Lewis, Sharon Miller, Marlene Montes, Baileigh Moser, Kyle Newsome, Arell
Owens, Roselia Pascual-Velasco, Courtney Phipps, Ricky Pope, Joanna Rackley, Oscar
Romero Jorge, Tori Rose, Christian Simmons, McKenna Smith, Christina Torres, Lorena
Velasco-Pascual, Hallie White, Michaela Wilson
Read Across America
The Round One Winners for 4th grade were Santos
Gonzales, McKenzie Taylor, Derrick Lockamy, Kendall
Thrift, Marvin Dubon, Nancy Morales, Brian Ocampo,
Jakayla Chestnutt, Antonio Sanches, Karen Carranze, Alfredo Gonzales, Mary Catheryn Batton, Josheim Jones,
Michelle Mota, Jordan Sanchez, and Allison Naylor.
Michaela Easterling, champion
Boys, Round 1 Winners
The class winners for 5th grade were German Garcia,
Nicole Smith, Victor Almonte, Rachel Nelms, Cameron
Moore, Madison Cannon, Brian Howard, Ester Vasquez,
Esteban Borja, Michaela Easterling, Ashanti Corbett,
Danny Avilla, Priscila Santiago, Yovi Hernandez, Jason
Lopez, and Aidee Jose-Gonzales.
Girls, Round 1 Winners
Midway Elementary
February
Eduardo Gonzalez, Brianna Rojas, Vander Philips, Juliana Faircloth, Yarezta Mondragon, Lovely Roberson, R.J. Jernigan, Lizette Morales, Jase Naylor, Lillie Kate
Parker, Betsy Morales, Jason Torres, Manuel Gomez, Amelia Tart, Aedan Maynard,
Xavier Avina, Moncerraht Arce Sanchez, Justin Edgerton, Madelyn Tew, August
Medlin, Cameron Calcutt, Johana Zalaya Munoz, Brandy Rodriguez, Lamont Moore
March
Michelle Koopman, Chase Byrd, Kelsey Tart, Robert McFall, Rachel Brown, Gage
Smith, Connor Jackson, Alonza Hernandez, Javier Espinoza, Aldo Lazcano-Navarette, Nicholas Stanley, Jaylene Alba, Kendrick Tyndall, Autumn Thompson, jaden
Bradshaw, Chloe Hudson, Brandon jacinto, Sam Tew, Jeremiah Faircloth, Colin
Avery, Darren Miller, Michael Marcel, Austin Hargrove
South River Round-Up Grant
Awarded to Local Teachers
In association with the Read Across America Initiative, Catherine Ruiz from the Sampson-Clinton Association of Educators recognized eight elementary students with Dr. Seuss
books for their improvements in reading. Each student has been selected by his/her school
media specialist for outstanding and noticeable reading achievements.
The Sampson County Board of Education recognized three teachers who received South
River Round-Up Grants for their school. Pictured are: Charlotte Byrd of Midway Elementary for Sampson County Special Olympics and Meagan McKinnon of Midway Elementary
who wrote a grant for their Kindergarten. Not pictured is Melanie Spell of Hobbton Elementary who received a grant for the school media center.
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
A13
REAL ESTATE
Baby Boomers: Bathroom Updates That Increase Livability And Home Value
to come.”
Quinn has helped countless people update their bathrooms
to add modern style and comfort so they can age in their
current home safely. Here are his top recommendations when
upgrading your bathroom while keeping health, comfort and
safety in mind.
Baby boomers are a smart group when it comes to home
updates. While embracing life today, they fully recognize
that in the future, their homes may need upgrades to help
them live well and stay safe. The bathroom naturally gets
the most attention and for good reason - it’s one of the most
frequently used rooms in a home and also one with many
hazards. Baby boomers are turning towards safer bathing
options to support their changing lifestyle including walkin baths, handicap accessible showers, and other supportive
furnishings.
“Baby boomers value being able to live out their golden years
to the fullest, and aging in place is a key component of that,”
says Jim Quinn, installation manager for Premier Care in
Bathing. “They are being proactive about making bathroom
upgrades now so they can enjoy the benefits for many years
1. Safe flooring
Cold, slick bathroom floors can be a major slipping hazard.
When renovating a bathroom space, it’s wise to evaluate the
flooring and, if necessary, replace it with an option that is
both comfortable and safe. Some people choose to carpet
the bathroom because it is warmer and eliminates the slip
hazards of traditional hardwood or ceramic flooring, as
well as the tripping hazards of rugs. Another option is slipresistant, textured vinyl. Keep feet comfortable and add an
upscale element to your bathroom by incorporating radiant
heat underneath.
2. Walk-in bath
Water and heat therapy can be ideal for arthritis and other
aches associated with aging, making a bathtub an asset in
a home. But as people age, it can be physically difficult to
use a traditional bathtub. That’s why a walk-in tub is a wise
investment. Receiving the Ease-Of-Use Commendation from
the Arthritis Foundation, walk-in-tubs from Premier Care in
Bathing provide baby boomers and seniors with an easy-touse alternative. The most popular model - the Sanctuary - fits
in a traditional bathtub space and has a wide, low-level entry,
slip-resistant seat and backrest, temperature-controlled hot
water, and a Hydrovescent therapy option. Other walk-in tub
options may be ideal based on individual needs.
It’s All In The Details - How To
Accessorize Your Home Exterior
3. Replace dated hardware
Bathroom drawer handles and knobs are often small and can
be difficult to grab with limited dexterity. Add modern style
to your bathroom by replacing your existing hardware and
accessories with stylish new options that are also easy to grip.
Explore hardware options that are large and simple to grab.
New hardware is a quick, affordable upgrade that makes a
bathroom easy to use for people of all ages while enhancing
interior design. While you’re upgrading the hardware
elements, consider installing grab bars in key locations in the
room, such as around the toilet or shower.
4. Update lighting
Any interior designer will tell you that lighting is a key
element of a home’s style as well as functionality. In the
bathroom, lighting is particularly important because it also
adds an element of safety. Aging eyes need quality light to
see well - so be sure to incorporate task and ambient lighting
into your bathroom renovations. Baby boomers often add
a dimmer that adjusts bathroom lighting so it can be fully
on when showering or getting ready for the day, and then
dimmed softly for easy access at night or during long soaks
in the walk-in tub.
“These types of updates are wise investments for baby boomers.
They often increase the overall value of a home while also
giving the homeowners the peace of mind that they’ll be able
to enjoy the space well into the future,” concludes Quinn. For
a free brochure including more information about walk-in
bathtubs and other solutions for making living at home more
convenient, visit premiercarebathing.com/saferbathing, or
call 888-378-7953.
Cellular PVC trim and moulding products are easy for your
contractor to install, and are engineered to work with virtually
any siding type, including vinyl siding, stone veneer, brick, fiber
cement and stucco.
“Since trim is incredibly visible, it should be chosen with the
same care as siding,” says Jerry Blais, vice president of marketing
for Ply Gem siding group. “The use of low-maintenance
products like cellular PVC trim and mouldings really give
homeowners a durable and versatile option for making the
home exterior stand out from the crowd. The product can also
be painted to complement other exterior materials such as
windows, vinyl siding, stone veneer, shutters and more to create
a cohesive design.”
To achieve that cohesive exterior home design, Ply Gem and BSB
Design recommend first determining the type of architectural
style you are trying to achieve, traditional or modern. This will
help narrow the options for not only trim style, but also window
grille patterns, color, siding type and accessories like shutters.-
When considering exterior home improvements during spring
and summer, many homeowners go for updates such as the
replacement of siding or windows. These projects can make the
home look great while boosting energy efficiency, but no matter
how much homeowners invest in siding or windows, it will only
look as good as the trim used to complete the job.
Trim products are designed to be used around windows, doors,
eaves and gables, and for application on your home’s corners
and porch columns. Many installers opt for basic corner posts,
J-channels and finishing accessories, which are functional, but
also detract from the home’s overall style. Going beyond the
basics is very affordable and can make a big difference in your
investment.
“One mistake that homeowners and contractors often make
in an exterior remodel is finishing a beautiful window and
siding replacement with basic or inexpensive trimwork,” says
To help provide inspiration, design guides are available for
recommendations on how to make the most of cellular PVC
trim and other exterior products with various architectural
styles. Once you have a style, consider ways to accessorize your
home with trim:
Steve Moore, architect with BSB Design. “Working with your
contractor to accessorize with high-quality, low-maintenance
trim around windows, doors and the roofline helps complete the
look and enhance architectural features. Trim and mouldings
are the glue that ties the look together.”
Whether you prefer a modern, traditional, rustic or Victorian
style, there are many trim options on today’s market to consider,
including products made of wood, aluminum, fiber cement,
engineered wood and vinyl, each with their own unique features.
But if you want the look of real wood without the maintenance
or having to replace in a few years, turn to building products
manufacturers like Ply Gem that now offer cellular PVC trim
with a 30-year warranty. Features of this material typically
include a wood grain or smooth finish option, natural wood
dimensions and resistance to rotting, cracking and splitting.
Due to the superior material, paint will also adhere better and
stay bright longer than painted wood.
CARR
Real Estate Co.
206 Lisbon Street, Clinton, NC • (910) 592-4232
* Accent arched windows on Georgian or French architectural
styles
* Differentiate with decorative gable details for home styles such
as folk, shingle, Victorian or craftsman
* Add wide trim with a keystone to carry out a Tuscan look
when combined with arched windows and stucco siding
* Use cellular PVC sheet in wide areas, such as wainscoting, on
bay windows or under eaves for a gingerbread look
* Detail porch columns with pre-formed post wraps
If you want to see how your home would look with a makeover,
tools like The Designed Exterior Studio on www.plygem.
com allow homeowners to virtually customize exterior home
designs. Tools like this and more can help show the difference
the details make, so if you’re considering an exterior remodel or
new build project, do your research to find the best options and
speak with your contractor to make the most of your investment
- from trim to siding to windows and beyond.
GROUP INC.
REAL ESTATE • APPRAISALS • CONSULTING
WE NEED FARM LISTINGS
$
Reduced
3.54 +-Acres on White Oak Church
4.80 +- Acres on Rackley Road near
Road near Clinton. All Cleared Land. Clinton. 198’ Road frontage. Wooded
Nice Property.
Lot in the Clinton City School District.
$32,000
$27,000
*102 Underwood
Street Clinton, NC.
On the corner of
underwood Street and
Northeast Blvd in
Clinton. Multi-purpose
bldg. with approx. 1,700 +- square feet total. 5 offices,
Two – Half (½ baths). 1,000 Square feet of Shop or bay
area with two 10’ X 10’ roll up doors. 12’ ceiling heights
in bay area. Florescent lighting in bay area. Concrete and
asphalt driveway area. 10 X 17 detached storage building.
0.56 +- acres. Central HVAC. $129,900.
Timberlake "New Construction" Newton Grove - Country Charm
Buy Now & Select Your Colors
4.9 Acs. +/- (3BR-2Baths)
New Price!
* 4.58 +- acres on Hwy 24 Warsaw Road in Clinton, NC .
235’ +- road frontage X 1038’ +- deep zoned light industrial. High traffic area with lots of potential uses. Front
portion cleared, rear portion woods. Water and sewer
available. Great visibility. $229,000
List Your Property with Carr Real Estate Co.
(910) 592-4232 • www.carrrealtors.com • Email [email protected]
2760 N. US 421 Hwy
Ideal for a variety of uses
Sales and Showroom has 15,000 SF
Storage Building has 4,500 SF. Great Location!
Timberlake &
Timberwood Lots
Now Available
(Call 910-592-1298 Today)
“Sampson County’s Leader in Farm Land Sales”
Call McCullen Real Estate (910) 592-3703
A14
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
HEALTH
Suppress The Sneeze: Tips To Help Prep Your Home For Allergy Season
The season of sneezing has made its annual return and that
can only mean one thing for homeowners: preventative cleaning measures. Especially true for allergy and asthma sufferers,
there is no better time to get a head start on prepping your
home against unwanted allergens than the early weeks of
spring.
According to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America
(AAFA), nearly 40 million individuals suffer from tree pollen
allergies in the United States alone, the first phase of which occurs in the month of March. As pollen-potent trees begin their
blossom, it becomes increasingly more challenging for homeowners to maintain a breathe-easy household atmosphere.
But, in fact, it might get easier. According to a recent study
conducted by airmid healthgroup, a professional deep cleaning from Stanley Steemer has been proven to be effective in
removing up to 97 percent of surface allergens.
Helping to eliminate allergen hot spots and triggers is made
easier when following these tips from airmid and the deep
cleaning experts Stanley Steemer:
Ongoing TLC
Dirt and dust can quickly add up if the proper steps aren’t taken. To get the job done, vacuum heavy traffic areas two to three
times a week and all other carpets at least once a week.
Keep the outdoor elements where they belong
Keep windows closed and place your air conditioner on recirculate on high-allergy days or while doing yard work. These activities may churn up dirt, dust and pollen into the air which can,
in turn, end up in the home.
Have a roadmap for cleaning
There is a method to the madness of cleaning. Beware of feather
dusters that simply push dust off surfaces into the air. Instead,
try moist cloths or special dusters made to capture dust. Also,
consider cleaning in this order: begin with air ducts, followed by
upholstery and drapes, and finishing with floors.
Welcome an allergy-free season with a welcome mat
Are You Getting Enough Sleep?
By Dr. Tim Kosterman
of Kosterman Chiropractic Center of Clinton
Some of us feel that sleep
is a luxury. Demanding
jobs mean getting up
early, and for some of us
going to bed early feels
like you’ve lost the day, so we compensate by sleeping
less. But is that good enough? The oft-cited optimal
level of sleep for an adult is the magic eight hours.
However, individuals vary in their sleep needs from as
little as five hours to as much as ten hours per night.
Feeling drowsy during the day might mean you’re not
getting enough winks, so how can you tell if you’re
sleeping too much or too little?
A recent study conducted at the University of Westminster has concluded that there are people who are at
their best and who are ready for action first thing in the
morning, and another group who just cannot do morn-
ings well. This may seem obvious, but why are some
people early birds, and others night owls? The group
who were awake early in the morning was found to have
higher levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, than those
who prefer to sleep in. The results of this study indicate
that there may be a physiological difference between
early risers and late sleepers. The difference in cortisol
levels may also contribute to different temperaments
between the different sleep groups. Those who awaken
early in the morning, tend to be busier and more concentrated, but are also angrier and have less energy
at the end of the day than their late-rising counterparts.
In late-riser group, people are more likely to be relaxed
and less busy. Cortisol is a hormone known to affect
both mood and concentration. While it’s hard to specify
an ideal time to get up in the morning, if you’re feeling
stressed there is an increased chance you’ll feel better
if you add an extra half an hour of sleep to your night.
CLINTON
A doormat at the entrance to a house is a proven way to reduce
the amount of dirt that enters the home. However, the cleaning
can’t stop there. Homeowners should vacuum under indoor
welcome mats and area rugs periodically to help remove any
loose dirt that might be trapped.
Go with a deeper clean for spring
People should maintain their homes, as they maintain their
teeth - brushing every day and visiting the dentist at least twice
a year. The same regular care goes for carpets. However, for
those suffering from asthma and allergies, airmid healthgroup
recommends regular vacuuming along with a professional
Stanley Steemer deep cleaning every three to four months is
important for allergy/asthma-sufferers.
Let’s face it, cleaning is probably the last thing on your mind
when those dreadful allergy symptoms start to creep up. However, prepping your home against allergy season can be as welcome as a breath of fresh air with the help of the pros at Stanley
Steemer. Visit StanleySteemer.com to join in this season’s fight
against allergens.
What about the effects of sleep deprivation? It is well
known that sleep deprivation can be dangerous, especially if you are driving or using heavy machinery. The
effect on driving may be as dangerous as driving under
the influence. Not sleeping enough can also suppress
your immune system and increases your perception of
pain.
Most scientists believe eight hours of sleep is a safe
amount and is enough to function comfortably. If you’re
alert during the day, then chances are you’re sleeping
enough. However if you feel a dip during the day, then
even a 10- or 15-minute nap can make a big difference
in your concentration and performance. If you can’t get
enough sleep on a certain day, you can always make
it up afterwards. Sleep longer by going to bed earlier,
sleep in on the weekend or even take a nap to help to
replenish the sleep debt left. In general, however, try
to have a regular sleep schedule to keep your body as
rested and ready-to-go as possible.
Good health is a combination of many factors including
your nutrition, preventative care, appropriate corrective
care and the small choices you make every day in the
course of living.
Are you
UNINSURED or UNDERINSURED?
FAMILY DENTISTRY
If so, The Sampson County Health Department may be
able to help and is offering the following services:
Dr. Clark & Associates
Prescription Assistance Program &
Diabetes Self-Management Program
HABLA ESPANOL • MEDICAID • HEALTH CHOICE
910-596-0606
Your Family
Dentist in Clinton.
Our Goal is to keep
you smiling!
Walk-In &
Emergency
Appointments
Available.
Monday - Thursday 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM & Friday 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM
All Phases of General and Cosmetic Dentistry
Offered: Implants, Crowns, Oral Surgery,
Dentures, and Whitening Available.
320 NE Boulevard • Clinton, NC 28328 • 910-596-0606
If you are a Diabetic or need assistance
with your medications, call Robyn Avery at
910-592-1131, ext. 4960 for more information.
Sampson County Health Department
360 County Complex Road, Suite 200
Clinton, NC 28328 • 910-592-1131
You can call Eastpointe's Access to Care 24/7/365
For a FREE Initial Clinical Screening call
1-800-913-6109
Help Is Only A Phone Call Away
Serving: Bladen, Columbus, Duplin, Edgecombe, Green, Lenior, Nash,
Robeson, Sampson, Scotland, Wayne & Wilson Counties.
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Arrest Report
04-02 Jamie Ray Byrd, 20; 2760
Hobbton Hwy, Clinton; Failure to Appear:
Child Support Court; Cash Purge $2,000;
Court 04-09
04-02 Danilla Latory Davis, 28; 410
Calvin St, Roseboro; Simple Possession of
Marijuana; Citation Issued and Released;
Court 05-22
04-02 Elizabeth Anne Finnicum, 30;
230 Westbrook Rd, Clinton; Possession
and Distribution of Methamphetamine
Precursor, Possession with Intent to Manufacture, Sell and Distribute Schedule II
Controlled Substance, Possession of Drug
Paraphernalia; Secure Bond $25,000;
Court 04-12
04-02 Jimmy Clifton Sanders, 39; 205
Bob Ln, Clinton; Manufacture of Methamphetamine, Maintaining a Vehicle/Dwelling for Controlled Substance, Possession
with Intent to Manufacture, Sell and Distribute Methamphetamine, Possession of
Drug Paraphernalia; Secure Bond $50,000;
Court 04-12
04-02 Samuel Earl Powell, 20; 154
Emerly Ln, Clinton; Possession of Schedule II Controlled Substance, Possession of
Drug Paraphernalia; Citation Issued and
Released; Court 05-29
04-04 William Harrell Hinson, 36; 1905
Indian Town Rd, Clinton; Failure to Appear:
Child Support Court; Cash Purge $1,232;
Court 04-09
04-05 Charsena Lynette Baldwin, 36; 1210
Hwy, 117 Faison, NC; Identity Theft; Unsecure Bond $10,000; Court 04-12
04-05 Mario Hernandez Medina, 23; 1435
NC Hwy 45 S. Cofield NC; Failure to Appear:
NOL, DWI; Secure Bond $1,500; Court 05-16
04-05 Juan Antonio Velez, Jr., 44; 1901
North Salemburg Hwy, Salemburg; Failure to
Appear: Felonious Restraint, Burning Personal Property, Injury to Personal Property; Secure Bond $51,000; Court 05-01
04-05 Jerry Venegas Palacios, 19; 5889
Cornwallis Rd, Turkey; Simple Possession of
Schedule VI Controlled Substance, Possession
of Drug Paraphernalia; Citation Issued and
Released; Court 05-22
04-05 Javier Medrano, 23; 102 Judith Dr,
Magnolia; Failure to Appear: Possession of
a Schedule VI Controlled Substance; Secure
Bond $500; Court 04-30
04-05 Issac Lee Herring, 29; 50 Bill Ln,
Harrells; Resisting a Public Officer; Secure
Bond $2,500; Court 04-15
04-02 Matthew Douglas Nugget, 22; 46
Mandolin Ln, Roseboro; Possession of Cocaine; Unsecure Bond $7,500; Court 04-12
04-05 Atiya Shim, 24; 61 Hobbs View Ln,
Clinton; Simple Assault, Injury to Personal
Property; Bond $1,500; Court 05-06
04-03 Mykeshia Antionette Garner, 28;
3325 Arrowhead Rd, Spring Lake, NC; 2
Counts of Failure to Appear: Failure to
Comply with a Court Order; Secure Cash
Bond $589; Court 04-12
04-05 Victor Espejo, 35; 4870 William R.
King Rd, Newton Grove; Failure to Appear:
NOL, DWLR, No Insurance; Secure Bond
$1,000; Court 04-23
04-03 Michael A. Rich, 40; 228 Hook
Kane, Clinton; Carrying a Concealed
Weapon, Possession of a Firearm by a Felon; Secure Bond $50,000; Court 04-26
04-04 Justin Nobles, 22; 311 Madeline
Ln, Autryville; Unauthorized Use of a Motor Vehicle; Secure Bond $1,000; Court
04-29
04-04 Jeffery Allen Jones, 40; 87 Old
Drag Strip Rd, Clinton; Child Support
Court; Cash Bond $1,500; Court N/A
04-06 Braddock Bernard Gross, 21; 1218
Franklin Street, Goldsboro; Assault with a
Deadly Weapon with Intent to Kill or Seriously Injure, Felony Conspiracy, Assault with
a Deadly Weapon With Intent to Kill; Secure
Bond $100,000; Court 06-25
www.thesampsonweekly.com
Order; Secure Bond $1,000; Court 05-23
04-08 William Joseph Usher, 50; 3800
Cabin Museum Rd, Turkey; Failure to
Comply with Court Order: Child Support;
Cash Purge $1,500; Court 04-09
04-08 Jerry Thurman Vinson II, 34;
705 E. Pinewood St, Roseboro; Failure to
Appear: Child Support Court; Cash Purge
$900; Court 04-09; Also Served: Assault on
a Female; (No Bond) Court 04-30 -NOL,
No Registration Secure Bond $1,000;
Court 05-01
04-08 Kevin Lee Register, 47; 1200
Needmore Rd, Turkey; Possession of
Methamphetamine, Possession of Drug
Paraphernalia; Secure Bond $7,000; Court
04-12
04-09 Issac Franklin Feltwell, 53; 334
Hayes Locklear Rd, Pembroke; Failure to
Appear: Probation Violation, Conspiracy
to Sell and Deliver Schedule II Controlled
Substance; Secure Bond $40,000; Court
05-07
04-09 Edith Garcia Romero Blanca, 23;
169 Preston Ln, Newton Grove; Failure to
Appear: NOL, Exceeding a Safe Speed; Unsecure Bond $500; Court 05-15
Incident / Investigation Report
04-03Shelley McCullen reported a
Breaking & Entering and Larceny at her
residence located at 570 Hollerin Rd,
Dunn. Entry was made into the home by
kicking open a door. Items reported missing included a wooden jewelry box, an assortment of jewelry and a Pulsar watch.
04-03 Emily McKenzie reported a Breaking and Entering at her home located at
240 Happy Tr, Newton Grove. Entry to the
home was gained by prying open the front
door. A black RCA TV was reported missing.
04-07 Michael Maldonado, 35; 828 Sampson Acers Dr, Clinton; Fraud Disposal of
Mortgage Property; Unsecure Bond $500;
Court 04-23
04-04 Gloria Quick reported a Breaking
& Entering at her home located at 46 Colt
Ln, Dunn. Entry to the home was gained
by prying open the rear entry door. There
were no items reported missing during the
incident.
04-08 Brent Edward Smith, 33; 558 N. Ingold Ave, Garland; Failure to Appear; Release
04-04 Cynthia Bache reported being the
victim of Credit Card Fraud. According
Births
-Layla Jade Otero born on March 22, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Jesus OteroJorge and Rocio Romero Otero
-Luis Adrian Fernandez Hernandez born on March 24, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center
to Luis Javier Fernandez Fernandez and Maria Elena Hernandez Dilone
-Jacob Bryan Bass born on March 27, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Tony Lynn Bass
and Tiffany Marie Tyndall
-Anzlee Ruby Newman born on Mar h 27, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Albrey
Cornelius Newman Jr and Amanda Blair Honeycutt
-Juan Carlos Arteaga Jr born on March 28, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Juan
Carlos Arteaga and Meydy Yasmin Zuniga Arteaga
-Jeremy Elias Barrera born on March 28, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to
Melquisedec Barrera and Mireya Aburto Barrera
-Annabella Helene Carnley born on March 28, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to
Walter Brandon Carnley and Ashlee Angelina Gutierrez
-Emiliano Aguilar Gonzalez born on March 29, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Jose
Luis Aguilar and Minerva Gonzalez Rivera
-Francisco Trinidad Marcos born on March 29, 2013 at Sampson Regional Medical Center to Maria
Nelly Marcos Alvarez
Marriage Certificates
-Arthur Lee Coston III to Ruby Shanta Blue
-Jovan Julian Sanchez to Maria Cristina Aguirre-Giron
-Jonathan Kent Hall to Megan Nicole Culbreth
-Michael Ray Gautier to Arlene Gay Bass
-William Henry Peterson to Wendy Simmons Lucero
-Vander Buen Smith to Deborah Dianne Kimbrough
-Wiljean Tondo Jean to Melanie Nicole Duncan
Deaths
-Louise Boykin
-Samuel David Gannon Jr
-Rose Lamb
-Presley Franklin Mahoney Sr
-William Dennis Packer
-Allen Eugene Raynor
-Hazel Herring
-Hazel Herring Sutton
-Kathryn Virginia
-Sherrill Evans Thornton
-Pearl Elizabeth Thompson
-Joe Peace Woodlief Jr
-Bertha Whitfield
-Ernie James Williams Jr
Land Transfers
-Kelly B Grantham, William S Grantham to DOT- 0.897 Acres Belvoir
-Donald Keith Dawson, Donald Keith Dawson/EXR, Linda Sue Dawson, Lizzie W Dawson Estate to
John W Kachel and Patricia D Kachel- 4 Tracts w/exceptions Mingo
-Joan Blossom Carr to Joan Blossom Carr/TR and Joan Blossom Carr Revocable Trust- Lot 7
Section VI Boykin Lakes Sub
A15
to the filed report, someone used her credit
card to make purchases without her authorization. It was also noted in the incident report that the credit card was removed from
her purse.
04-04 Sebastian Bereza reported a Breaking and Entering and Larceny at a Murphy-Brown farm located at 2558 Southern
Pines Ln, Garland. Items reported missing
included a 25 gallon tank with electric pump
and 3 gallons of gasoline.
04-05 Brenda Sloan reported a Breaking
& Entering at a residence located at 741 Curtis Ivey Rd, Turkey. Cooper wiring in the
home was removed damaging the sheetrock
walls in the process.
04-05 Jeanette Johnson reported a Breaking & Entering and Larceny at her home located at 10863 Harnett Dunn Hwy, Dunn.
Items reported missing included a Samsung
42” TV, an assortment of jewelry, medication and US Currency.
04-05 Tramaine Smith reported the theft
of a .38 caliber HI Point hand gun from his
residence located at 1970 Alderman Mill Rd,
Dunn.
04-07 Maria Whitehead reported the
theft of a garden tiller from her residence located at 8640 N. US 421 Hwy, Clinton. The
tiller is valued at $400.00.
04-07 Henry Moore reported the theft
of a battery charger and sandblaster from
a storage building located at 164 Sampson
Airport, Clinton. Total estimated value of
the stolen property was $1,550.00.
04-07 Jimmy Burch reported the theft of
a white,2 Ton International truck from his
farm located at 685 Burch Rd, Faison.
04-08 Shelia Smith reported a Breaking
& Entering at a residence located at 1000 N.
Main Street, Salemburg. Entry was made by
forcing open a door at the home. There were
no items listed as missing in the incident.
04-08 Sabrina Pridgen reported the theft
of her 2005 Pontiac Grand-Am from her
residence located at 58 Carter St, Garland.
The burgundy 4 door Pontiac was removed
from Ms. Pridgen’s property without her
permission.
-Deutsche Bank National Trust Compan/As Trustee By AIF, Home Equity Loan Asset-Backed
Certificates, Series 1998-4/By AIF, OCWEN Loan Servicing/AIF to Oscar Williams- Lot 50 Pine
Lakes Estates Section IV
-Thomas A Williams to Dennis Autry Williams, Larry Thomas Williams, Thomas A Williams- 96
Acres Mingo
-George Melvin, Universal Holiness Church to Anna Melvin and George Melvin- 0.32 Acres Little
Coharie
-Melissa D Thompson/FKA, Melissa D Wilson to Crystal Raynor and Delric Raynor- Lot 10 Section
1 Serenity Lake Subdivision Belvoir
-Renita Sasser to Beverly Baker- Lot 1 Turkey
-James Randall Peterson, James Randall Peterson/MGR, Terry Keith Peterson, Terry Keith
Peterson/MGR, Peterson Investments LLC to Rowan Baptist Church Inc- 36 Acres Lot 5 William
Peterson Division North Clinton
-Linda Gail Bass, Steven J Bass to Johnson Deleon Bass and William Edwin Bass- Lot 2 45.49
Acres North Clinton
-Timothy Sean Smith to Eloise P Warren- 15.2 Acres w/exceptions Westbrook
-Jose Luis Amaya to Felix Otoniel Zavala Gonzalez- Lot 14 Marvin Smith Subdivision
-Joyce S Faircloth, Weldon Wright Faircloth to Debra Bower and Gregory A Bower Sr- 14 Acres
Sampson
-Wyonita Jean Adams to Wyonita Jean Adams Revocable Trust- 2 Tracts w/exceptions Lisbon
-Degarrett Spearman to Carolyn McPhail Robinson and Charlie Junior Robinson- 0.57 Acres
Lisbon
-Nancy Joy Bartlett/FKA, Leonardo G Parra, Nancy Joy Parra to Alonza Maynor- 0.50 Acres
Franklin
-Audrey Gail Rackley Baldwin to Pelmon Jart Hudson Jr- 2 Tracts w/exceptions North Clinton
-Denise Langston to Sallie Doris Cottle- 2.03 Acres Tract 2 Turkey
-Freedom Constructors Inc of Dunn, Larry Wade to Jesus Ricardo Centeno Bustillo and Beronica
Centeno- Lot 13, 0.46 Acres Cedar Lakes Subdivision North Clinton
-Percy Lenon Owens to Restelle Smith Owens- 4 Tracts Little Coharie
-Lila S West to Gladys Baltazar and Jose Blanco- Lot Taylors Bridge
-Judith Belvin, Larry E Belvin to Cape Fear Will Baptist Church- 0.48 Acres Dismal
-Donald Ray Gainey/AIF, Thelma E Gainey/BY AIF to Cynthis Falatovich and Marshall G
Falatovich- Lot 2 North Clinton
-Pelmon Jart Hudson Jr to Audrey Gail Rackley Baldwin- 1.82 Acres North Clinton
-Mazie Eloise Springs to Lalister Faircloth and Wanda Faircloth- 1.0 Acres McDaniels
-Dewey Sanford Williams to Dewey Basil Williams- Lot 7 2.20 Acres Minnie Mae Williams
Division Little Coharie
-Dewey Sanford Williams to Dewey Sanford Williams and Jennifer R Williams- 2 Lots Little
Coharie
-Diana Roldon Gore to Michael Pinckney Gore Jr- 33.29 Acres Lot 1 w/exceptions North Clinton
-Donald O Spangler to MTJ Inc- Duplin, Sampson, Wayne Counties
-Hylton Lawrence, Phyllis Warren Lawrence, Lynda Warren Naylor to Raymond Elvin Love- 4.03
Acres Lot 1 Mingo
-Johnny W Chestnutt, Chestnutt Ventures Inc to Joel Alejandro Diaz Mejia and Edilma Perez
Ramirez- 0.69 Acres Lot 1 Halls
-Joann Collins, Lea Faircloth to Thornton Homes Co- Lot South River
-Betty Irene Taylor to Kenneth Jason Noles- 2 Tracts Westbrooks
-Paula C Roy/FKA, Glenn Smith/AKA, Paula C Smith, Sidney Glenn Smith to Paula C Smith and
Sidney Glenn Smith- Lot 35 Warwick Plantation Section One Little Coharie
-Lottie N Sessoms to Brandy F Sessoms and Johnny L Sessoms- 52.2 Acres Little Coharie
-Joan P Bacon, William M Bacon III to Sweet-Silva Investments LLC- Tract D Elizabet S Dubose
Property South Clinton
A16
www.thesampsonweekly.com
PUZZLES & GAMES
Crossword
Puzzle
CLUES ACROSS
1. Selects
5. A cutting remark
9. Teaspoonful (abbr.)
12. Having two units or parts
13. Quality perceptible to the sense of
taste
14. Expression of surprise
15. Italian Island
16. A coarse cloth with a bright print
17. Propose a price
18. Sedimentary material
19. Tree toad genus
20. Passed time agreeably
22. Custodians
24. 3rd largest city in Zambia
25. 18th Hebrew letter (var.)
26. Coasted on ice
27. Libyan dinar
28. Displayed exaggerated emotion
31. Andalusian Gypsy dances
33. Material
34. Article
35. Ballplayer Ruth
36. 5th largest Greek island
39. Hand drum of No. India
40. A style of preparing food
42. Former ruler of Afghanistan
43. AKA Cologne
44. Not generally occurring
46. Auto
47. Print errors
49. Interspersed among
50. Electrocardiogram
51. Churns
52. Ice hockey feint
53. Drive obliquely, as of a nail
54. Dried leaves of the hemp plant
55. Ardour
CLUES DOWN
1. Lyric poems
2. Hungarian sheep dog (var. sp.)
3. A pad of writing paper
4. Lists of candidates
5. Base, basket and foot
6. Samoan capital
7. Mythological bird
8. Urban row houses
9. Sensationalist journalism
10. Carried on the arm to intercept
blows
11. Estrildid finch genus
13. PA 18840
16. S.W. English town & cheese
21. Runs disconnected
23. Mourners
28. Old world, new
29. Atomic #25
30. Sweet potato wind instrument
31. Legend
32. 3rd tone of the scale
33. Russian jeweler Peter Carl
35. Capital of Mali
36. Extremist sects
37. Violent denunciation
38. Tooth covering
39. Music term for silence
40. Smoldering embers
41. Writer Jong
43. Actor Kristofferson
45. Adam and Eve’s 1st home
48. Fish eggs
SUDOKU
Fun By The Numbers
Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This
mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the
moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and
put your sudoku savvy to the test
Here’s How It Works:
Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken
down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the
numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and
box. Each number can appear only once in each
row, column and
box. You can figure out the order
in which the numbers will appear
by using the
numeric clues
already provided
in the boxes. The
more numbers
you name, the
easier it gets to
solve the puzzle!
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Clinton
Linda Carol Sinclair
Saunders,
70,
of
724 Bucktown Road,
Clinton died Tuesday,
April 9, 2013 at Kitty
Askins in Goldsboro. A
memorial service will
be held Saturday, April
13 at 3:00 pm at Carr
Memorial
Christian
Church, Clinton with
Dr.
Penny
Ziemer
officiating. Inurnment
will be at Grandview Memorial Park. Family will
receive friends 1 hour prior to service at the church.
Born in 1943 Carol was the daughter of the late Paul
H. and Rossie Bass Sinclair. She was preceded in
death by brothers: Norwood F. Sinclair and James
“Pig” Sinclair. Carol was a member of Carr Memorial
Christian Church. She retired from Belk as office
manager with 32 years of service. She was the widow of
Jack Saunders. She is survived by a brother, Durwood
H. Sinclair and wife Dixie, sisters-in-law: Grace C.
Sinclair and Kay S. Basinger. Cherished nieces and
nephews that she called her own: Dewain Sinclair
wife Karen, Joan S. Lee husband Charles, Durwood
Sinclair, Jr., Jerry Sinclair, Linda S. Wooten husband
Clark, Jason Sinclair, Beth Sinclair and Scott Sinclair
wife Sharon; 12 great nieces and nephews and 1 greatgreat nephew. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be
made to Carr Memorial Christian Church, c/o Jane
Brewer, 1801 Panhandle Road, Faison, NC 28341.
Special thanks to the wonderful caregivers, family
and friends who have supported and taken special
care of Carol during her sickness. “I have fought the
good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the
Faith.” 2Timothy 4:7. Condolences may be sent by
visiting wwwroyalhallfuneralhome.com
Autryville
Brenda Autry Zinser, 54, of Las Vegas, passed
away April 2, 2013. She was born Oct. 1, 1958, in
Abilene, Texas, and was an eight-year resident of
Nevada. Brenda lived most of her life in Autryville,
N.C. and worked 17 years for Kelly Springfield Tire
Co., in Fayetteville, N.C. She moved to Las Vegas in
2005. She worked as a part-time tax preparer for
Liberty Tax and was a full-time homemaker. She was
an active member of the Crossing Church Community.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Carmen
and Alex Autry. She is survived by her husband, Jim;
sister, Betty (Larry) Rogers; brother, Alex (Carol);
sons, Michael (Fatima) Scaggs, Charles “Chuck”
(Tiffany) Briza, Joshua (Summer) Zinser, Jeremy
(Moriah) Zinser, Matthew Zinser and Morgan Zinser;
and grandchildren, Sunnie and Alex Briza, Alexander
and Julian Scaggs, Dillion, Hayden and Delilah
Zinser. Viewing will be 9-10:30 a.m. Saturday, April
13, with services following at 10:45 a.m, both at the
Manna Church, 5117 Cliffdale Rd., Fayetteville, NC
28314. Burial will follow at Wiley Autry Cemetery in
Autryville, NC. In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made to the Manna Church.
CLINTON
Mr. Ronnie Lee Bullard, 57, of 391 Quail Run
Lane, died Monday, April 8, 2013, at Sampson
Regional Medical Center. A funeral service was
held at 2 P.M., Wednesday, April 10, at Coharie
United Methodist Church in Clinton with Pastor Roy
Hilburn officiating. Interment followed in the church
cemetery. Mr. Bullard, born in Sampson County,
was the son of Marvin Bullard and the late Tessie
Brewington Bullard. He was a former welder and was
a member of Coharie United Methodist Church. He
was predeceased by his mother, Tessie Lee Bullard,
and three sisters, Jeanette B. Lewis, Jeanelle B.
Thompson, and Sandra B. West. He is survived by his
father, Marvin Bullard; a sister, Debbie B. Holland;
two nephews, Chris West and Bradley Holland; four
nieces, Heather Williams Chavis, Kimberly Lewis
Landrau, Charlie Samatha Lewis, Amber Holland;
great-nieces and great-nephews, Jasmine West,
Hailey, Trinity, and Jaden Landrau, and Noah Lewis.
The family received friends 1-2 P.M., the hour prior
to the service, on Wednesday afternoon at Coharie
United Methodist Church and other times at the
home.In lieu of flowers, contributions in memory of
Ronnie can be made to Coharie United Methodist
Church Youth Fund, c/o Mrs. Peggy Ammons,
Treasurer, 303 Willow Road, Clinton, NC 28328.
Condolences may be emailed to the family at www.
crumpler-honeycutt.com.
Arrangements are by
Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral Home, 118 Fayetteville
Street, Clinton, NC 28328.
Faison
Mr. Raymond Frederick, 67, of 120 Eldon
Thornton Road, died Wednesday at his home. The
funeral service was held at 1pm, Saturday, April
www.thesampsonweekly.com
6, 2013 at Prayer of Faith Evangelistic Church,
Warsaw, NC. Pastor Luedell Washington officiating.
Entombment at Devotional Gardens, Warsaw, NC.
The visitation was held Friday, April 5, 2013 from 1pm
- 7pm at Brock Memorial & Worley Funeral Home,
Clinton. Online condolences may be sent to www.
brockmemorialandworley.com. Services entrusted to
Brock Memorial & Worley Funeral Home in Clinton.
CLINTON
Mrs. Betty Louise Jackson, 67, of 371 Bill Jordan
Lane, died Tuesday, April 9, 2013, at the home of her
daughter in Autryville, NC. The funeral service will
be 2:00 PM, Friday, April 12, at Crumpler-Honeycutt
Funeral Home Chapel in Clinton with Pastor Glenn
Morgan and Evangelist Steve Long officiating.
Interment will follow in the Tyndall-Spell Cemetery.
Mrs. Jackson, born in Sampson County, was the
daughter of the late Willie Edge and Semci Edge. She
was a homemaker and a member of Galilee Holiness
Church. She is survived by her husband, Billy Ray
Jackson; her children, David Maness of Autryville,
Betty Sue Fisher of Autryville, William Marvin Maness
of Roseboro, Mitchell Ray Maness of Newton Grove
and Richard Lee Maness of Roseboro; three brothers,
M.L. Edge of Cedar Creek, Kenneth Edge of Vander,
Franklin Edge of Bethany; six grandchildren; two
step-grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren, and
three step-great-grandchildren. The family will receive
friends from 6–8 P.M., Thursday, April 11, at CrumplerHoneycutt Funeral Home in Clinton and other times
at the home of her daughter, 1187 South River Road,
Autryville. Condolences may be sent to the family at
www.crumpler-honeycutt.com. Arrangements are by
Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral Home, 118 Fayetteville
St., Clinton, NC 28328
Clinton
Mrs. Janie Tew Medlin, 96, of 180 Southwood
Drive, passed away Monday, April 8, 2013, at
Southwood Nursing and Retirement Center. A funeral
service was held at 11 A.M., Wednesday, April 10, at
Harnett Primitive Baptist Church in Roseboro with
the Reverend Randy Barker and the Reverend W. H.
Calcutt officiating. Interment followed in the church
cemetery. Mrs. Medlin, born in Sampson County,
was the daughter of the late Preston Tew and Carrie
Sinclair Tew, and was the widow of Ralph Medlin,
Jr. She was a homemaker and a member of Harnett
Primitive Baptist Church. She was predeceased by
a brother, Oscar Tew of Roseboro, and three sisters,
Othal Simpson of Clinton, Ilee Stovall and Ruby
Herring, both of Benson. She is survived by three
sons, Ralph Ronald Medlin and wife Ruby of Clinton,
Mike Preston Medlin and wife Pat of Roseboro, and
William Lynn Medlin and wife Debbie of Clinton; five
grandchildren, Jeff Medlin, Brian Medlin, Rhonda
Medlin, Chris Medlin, and Renee Woods; eight greatgrandchildren. The family received friends 10-11 A.M.,
the hour prior to the service, on Wednesday, April 10,
at Harnett Primitive Baptist Church in Roseboro and
other times at the home of Debbie and Lynn Medlin,
3178 Bud Johnson Road, Clinton, NC. Condolences
may be emailed to the family at www.crumplerhoneycutt.com.
Arrangements are by CrumplerHoneycutt Funeral Home, 118 Fayetteville Street,
Clinton, NC 28328.
Louisburg
Mrs. Cheryl Ann Miller, 56, of 25 Birdie Lane, died
Sunday, April 7, 2013 at Wake Medical Center, Raleigh,
NC. The funeral will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, April
13 at St. Stephen United Holy Church, Turkey, NC with
Rev. Willie Bryant officiating. Burial will follow in
Roseboro Cemetery, Roseboro, NC. Public visitation
will be held Saturday, April 13, one hour prior to the
service at St. Stephen United Holy Church, Turkey, NC.
Mrs. Miller is survived by her husband, Willie H. Miller
of the home; father, George Lewis of Capitol Heights,
MD; daughter, Angeline M. Thomas of Waldorf, MD;
3 grandchildren. Online condolences may be sent
to
www.brockmemorialandworley.com.
Services
entrusted to Brock Memorial & Worley Funeral Home
in Clinton.
Clinton
Mrs. Helen Price, 88, of 507 Blaney Street, died
Friday, April 05, 2013 at Southwood Nursing Center in
Clinton. The funeral was held 11:00 AM, Monday, April
8, at Clinton Pentecostal Holiness Church, with Rev.
Dwight Dunning and Rev. Roland Harrell officiating.
Burial followed in the Clinton Cemetery. Mrs. Price,
born in Sampson County, was the daughter of the late
Madison Lane and Ethel McLamb Lane and was the
widow of Charles Wendell Price. She was a homemaker,
a member of Clinton Pentecostal Holiness Church and
the women’s auxiliary. Mrs. Price was predeceased by
sisters; Pauline Boykin, Louise Millan, Gladys King,
Hortense Barfield, Hilda Hicks Lottie Herring and a
brother M.W Lane, Jr. Mrs. Price is survived by her
sons: Charles Anthony Price and wife Mary, of Clinton,
A17
OBITUARIES
Marshall Keith Price and wife Cindy, of Burlington:
three grandchildren: Caroline, Jenna, and Matthew
Price. The family received friends from 10:00 –
11:00 AM Monday, one hour prior to the service in
the Clinton Pentecostal Holiness Church Fellowship
Hall. Flowers are welcome or donations may be
made to a charity of your choice. Condolence may
be made to the family at www.crumpler-honeycutt.
com Arrangements by Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral
Home, 118 Fayetteville St., Clinton, NC 28328
Clinton
Mrs. Evelyn Rich Leach Robinson, 82, of
426 McKoy Street died Tuesday, April 2, 2013 at
Sampson Regional Medical Center. The funeral
will be held 3 p.m. on Sunday April 7 at Olivet
Institutional Baptist Church with Rev. Willie Bowden
officiating. Burial will follow in Sandhill Cemetery.
The public visitation will be held Saturday April 6,
from 2-6 p.m. at Brock Memorial & Worley Funeral
Home in Clinton. Mrs. Robinson is survived by
her daughters, Barbara Faison of Clinton, NC and
Evelyn Bowden of Turkey, NC; sons, Carnell Leach
of Clinton, NC and John Leach of Chesapeake, VA;
12 grandchildren, 19 great grandchildren, 2 greatgreat grandchildren. Online condolences may be sent
to www.brockmemorialandworley.com.
Services
entrusted to Brock Memorial & Worley Funeral
Home in Clinton.
CLINTON
Mrs. Lula Rebecca Royal, lovingly known as
Coot, 81, of 1090 Odom Road, passed away Monday,
April 8, 2013, at Rex Hospital in Raleigh, NC. with her
children at her side. A funeral service will be held 2:00
P.M., Friday, April 12, at Sharon Pentecostal Holiness
Church in Clinton with the Reverend Michael Oliver
and the Reverend George Terry officiating. Interment
will follow in Royal Cemetery, Odom Road, Clinton,
NC. Mrs. Royal, born in Sampson County, was the
daughter of the late Elliot Lee Vann and Mattie
Vastie Waters Vann and was the widow of William
Ollen Royal. She was a homemaker and a member of
Sharon Pentecostal Holiness Church. A son Duane
Ollen Royal, brother, Herbert Vann, and a sister,
Marie Vann Edwards, preceded her in death. She is
survived by her children, William Rodney Royal and
wife Annah Kay of Hampstead, Howard Lee Royal
of Clinton, and Rebecca Ann Royal of Wilmington;
seven grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; six
brothers, Sam Vann and wife Linda, Frank Vann
and wife Cherry, Freddie Vann and wife Hattie Jane,
Johnny Vann and wife Rose, Paul Vann and wife
Diana and Ralph Vann and wife Jean, all of Clinton;
brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, Lou Alice Fann of
Clinton, Darwin and Jackie Hairr of Fayetteville, and
James and Sharon Royal of Clinton. The family will
receive friends 7:30 – 9:30 P.M. Thursday, April 11, at
Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral Home and other times
at the home. Flowers are welcome or memorials may
be made to Sharon Penetecostal Holiness Church, c/o
Mr. R. F. Fann, 1593 High House Rd., Clinton, NC,
28328. Condolences may be emailed to the family at
www.crumpler-honeycutt.com. Arrangements are by
Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral Home, 118 Fayetteville
Street, Clinton, NC 28328.
CLINTON
Miss Cynthia Ann Wallace, 72, passed away
Sunday, April 07, 2013. A funeral service was held
2:00 PM, Wednesday, April 10, at Graves Memorial
Presbyterian Church with the Reverend Dr. Richard
McDuffie officiating. Interment followed in Clinton
Cemetery. Miss Wallace, a native of Sampson County,
was the daughter of the late Granville Lee Wallace
and Mary Lou Peterson Wallace. She was a retired
school teacher, a member of Delta Kappa Gamma,
the Clinton Garden Club, the Clinton Women’s Club,
the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and the
Daughters of the American Revolution. She was a
member of Graves Memorial Presbyterian Church
and served as a church elder, a member of the choir,
and was an honorary life member of Presbyterian
Women. She is survived by two sisters, Mary W.
Goodwin of Clinton and Granvillene W. Carter of
Cary; a nephew, Hunter Goodwin and wife Lynne of
Belmont, NC and children, Ethan and Grace; a niece,
Loretta Walker and husband Alfred of Richmond,
VA and children, Christopher and Nicholas; an aunt,
Ruby W. Parker of Tarboro, and several cousins. The
family received friends 6-8 PM, Tuesday, April 9, at
Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral Home in Clinton and
other times at the home of her sister, Mary Goodwin,
702 Sunset Ave., Clinton, N.C. Memorials can be
made in the memory of Cynthia Ann Wallace to Graves
Memorial Presbyterian Church, 201 Fayetteville St.
Clinton, NC 28328. Condolences may be sent to
the family online at www.crumpler-honeycutt.com.
Arrangements are by Crumpler-Honeycutt Funeral
Home, 118 Fayetteville Street, Clinton, NC 28328.
Serving the local community since 1926
401 West Roseboro Street
Roseboro • 910-525-5138
Andy
Wood
Traditional Service - Visitation is held one evening at the funeral home. The funeral service is held the
following day at either the church or the funeral home. Burial immediately follows the service.
Traditional Service With Combined Visitation - Funeral service is held at the funeral home or church.
Visitation immediately precedes the service at the service location.
Traditional Evening Service - Service is held at the funeral home. Visitation immediately follows the service
at the funeral home. Burial service follows the next day at the gravesite and may be private or public.
Memorial Service - Usually held when the family selects cremation. It can be held at the funeral home or
church with or without the cremains present.
Graveside Service - Funeral service is held at the gravesite and combines the funeral and burial ceremonies.
May or may not include visitation the evening before.
6535 Clinton Road
Stedman • 910-223-7400
Robie
Butler
A18
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
The Sampson Weekly (910) 590-2102
300-YARD SALE
Yard Sale at 514
Pineview Road, Clinton
(Belfield Neighborhood). Saturday,
April 13th 7am – 12n.
Kitchen items, home
décor, bedding, picture
frames, lamps, light
fixtures, framed art,
sectional sofa, kitchen
table and chairs.
NOT your average thrift store!
10% OFF
with this coupon!
319 E. Broad Street
Dunn, NC
910-230-0499
Check Us Out On Facebook!
M. J. Cleaning Services
800-FOR SALE
Riding Lawnmower
For Sale
Craftsmen 42”
in good shape
Needs new battery
$250.00
Call 910-592-3031
An inside yard sale will be held in the fellowship
hall of Graves Memorial Presbyterian Church
(201 Fayetteville Street in Clinton) on Saturday morning, April 20, 2013 from 7:00-12:00 noon.
Items include children's clothes, books, holiday
decorations, household items, furniture, dishes,
pictures, and decorative items.
Furniture, Home Decor, Antiques, Collectibles,
Glassware, Clothing, etc...
700-SERVICES
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YARD SALE
Wall to Wall Consignment Shop
Specializing in Mobile Home Centers
House and Office Cleaning
Carpet Shampooing
Reasonable Rates * Work Guaranteed
Day or Evening Services
Weekly * Bi-Weekly * Monthly
Melinda Jones
910-590-4954
HELP WANTED
Clinton-Sampson Chamber of Commerce is
seeking a part-time Administrative Assistant.
Applicant must demonstrate high communication and people skills, proficiency with
computers, ability to work independently and
with others, and encompass some clerical or
secretarial experience. Applicant must have a
High School Diploma. Please submit your resume to Janna Bass at the Clinton-Sampson
Chamber of Commerce, PO Box 467, Clinton
NC 28329 by Friday, April 12th.
SAMPSON COUNTY SCHOOLS
2013 KINDERGARTEN CLINICS
Please contact the school in your district for more information and directions.
Plain View Elementary, April 12, 2013
Salemburg Elementary, April 15, 2013
Clement Elementary, April 19, 2013
Electrolux
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SALES & SERVICE
Lowest Prices on Belts,
Bags and Service $24.95
Panasonic •
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Personal & Professional Accounting
Let me solve your tax mysteries...
Complete Tax Service
Bookkeeping, Payroll & Taxes
204 Lisbon Street - Clinton, NC • (910) 596-0964
Oil Change
$
1995
Includes 5 Quarts of Motorcraft Oil, Motorcraft Oil Filter & 27 Point Inspection.
(Plus Tax & Disposal Fee - Excludes Diesels)
Copies of the child’s birth certificate and immunization record are required for the clinic.
213 Southeast Blvd.,Clinton, NC
If your child has not had their Kindergarten Health Assessment done prior to the clinic
date, please schedule an appointment with your child’s physician or your local Health
Department as soon as possible. These physicals are required by State Law to be
completed within 30 days of the beginning of school and no earlier than one year prior
to school enrollment.
910-592-6056
www.fordofclinton.net
At the present time, North Carolina State Law requires a Comprehensive Vision Screening by a health care provider prior to beginning Kindergarten. If your child fails the vision
screening the health care provider will refer your child to an ophthalmologist or optometrist for a complete vision exam.
New & Used Tires
General Mechanic Work
Computer Diagnostics • Alignments • Brakes
• Ball Joints • CV Axles • Tie Rods • A/C Repair • Etc
**All children who reach age five on or before August 31 are eligible for entry into Kindergarten.
Se
Habla
Español!
We Pick Up Vehicles!
1003 Beamon St.
Clinton, NC
910-592-4884
LIMITED TIME ONLY
New Tire Sale!All Brands!
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(Offer requires 24-month Agreement and AutoPay with Paperless Billing)
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HDÊAccessÊFee:
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$
440/yr over
JEAN TART, 3542 REEDY PRONG
CHURCH RD., DUNN, NC 28334,
EXECUTRIX
3542 Reedy Prong Church Rd., Dunn, NC 28334
directions: From I-95, Exit 79 go to Hwy. 50, turn south and go 8.5 miles to Reedy Prong
Church Rd. Turn right and go 6 miles to sale. FROM DUNN: Take Hwy. 55 East 11.5 miles to
Reedy Prong Church Rd. Turn left and go 1/2 mile to sale. WATcH FOR AUcTION SIGN
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400/yr over
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Check our website for pictures at: www.mouthsofthesouth.com
Terms of Sale: Cash, Money Order or approved check. To pay by check, persons not known by the auction co. must provide an
original bank letter of guarantee on the bank’s letterhead and signed by a bank official. All items are Sold “As is—Where Is.”
Not responsible for theft or accidents. Announcements made day of sale takes precedence over any printed or internet advertisement.
($6/mo DVR service fee applies)
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SAPÊ=ÊFreeÊSpanishÊaudioÊfeed.Ê1=ÊRequiresÊpurchaseÊofÊadditionalÊdishÊantenna.ÊÊ2Ê=Ê
AvailableÊatÊnoÊadditionalÊcostÊtoÊDISHÊNetworkÊcustomersÊwithÊsubscriptionÊtoÊqualifyingÊ
programming.ÊÊrequiresÊpurchaseÊofÊadditionalÊdishÊantenna.ÊÊ3Ê=ÊavailableÊinÊ:ÊOhio,Ê
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NCAF 8796
2324 Hobson Road, Dunn, NC
919-894-3664 • 910-385-8871
DANFORD MCLAMB, NCAL 787
JEFF BYRD, NCAL 2531, NCRBL 215405
Week of April 11-17, 2013
Chamber Chat
With Janna Bass
The Clinton-Sampson Chamber of Commerce
strives to serve all businesses within each municipality
throughout Sampson County as best as possible. With
Sampson County being the 2nd largest county in the
state in land mass, sometimes our demographic
composition can be an asset while other times, remains a challenge for economic development.
Although each week I travel throughout the county, so often my schedule is preplanned with a specific reason and tasks to accomplish in each municipality, I
don’t have the opportunity to spend the entire day visiting members and learning
how we can better assist each community. Therefore, at least once a year we
have Chamber Days, a specific day reserved for each individual, business or
organization within each municipality. One reason I truly enjoy Chamber Days
is to have the opportunity to speak with each individual on a personal basis. To
discuss the opportunities the Chamber provides, the needs of the business/organization, the needs of the municipality, how the Chamber can better serve that
community, and much more.
This past week we have finalized the 2013 Chamber Days and I encourage you
to take advantage of this opportunity. Save the date for your specific Chamber
Day: May 16: Salemburg, June 5: Autryville, July 11: Clinton, August 22: Turkey,
September 26: Harrells, October 24: Roseboro, November 7: Newton Grove and
December 12: Garland
With nearly 400 members, the Chamber works hard to promote commerce and
a strong quality of life; however we need to hear from you. We need to learn
more about your current needs and I promise that if we are able, we will do our
best to assist. Those within the Chamber have a passion for Sampson County
and their community. Where the chamber is uniting those that realize we can
accomplish more together than individually. Use the Chamber as a resource
and for assistance; let the chamber work for you.
For more information about Chamber Days provided through the Clinton-Sampson Chamber of Commerce, give us a call at (910) 592-6177. We look forward
to working with each of you to ensure Sampson County continues in economic
growth and a strong quality of life.
www.thesampsonweekly.com
BUSINESS
Congratulations
Chamber Member of the Week
Congratulations to the Chamber Member of the Week, “Town of Autryville”. As
a small town in Western Sampson County, folks in Autryville enjoy the simple
life. The Town of Autryville residents enjoy the park and walking trails around
the town hall as well as the citizens are enriched by services in their two local
churches. In Autryville, each resident and the town as a whole strives for a better
tomorrow. Pictured above with the Chamber Ambassadors starting third from
the left is Patricia Williams, Mayor of Autryville, Christina Johnson, Autryville
Commissioner, Plato Faircloth, Town Maintenance, and Diane Autry, Town
Clerk. For more information about the Town of Autryville, contact Diane Autry
at (910) 525-4567. For more information about the Clinton-Sampson Chamber
of Commerce, visit www.clintonsampsonchamber.org or call (910) 592-6177.
monitorin
g starting
BEST WAYS TO DO BUSINESS
WITH SOCIAL SECURITY
By Brenda Brown
Social Security Public Affairs Specialist
in Fayetteville, NC
Many people save time by going online to take care
of everyday tasks. For example, they shop online to
avoid going to crowded malls or stores. They pay
bills and check their account balances online to save
a trip to the bank.
It’s true of Social Security business, too. You can save
a lot of time by visiting www.socialsecurity.gov.
Here, you can handle much of your Social Security
business quickly and securely from your home or office computer. At the
Social Security website you can —
•
create a my Social Security account for quick access to your
information;
•
get an instant, personalized estimate of your future Social Security
benefits;
•
apply for retirement, disability, spouse’s, and Medicare benefits;
•
check the status of your benefit application;
•
change your address and phone number, if you receive monthly Social
Security benefits;
•
sign-up for direct deposit of Social Security benefits;
•
use our benefit planners to help you better understand your Social
Security options as you plan for your financial future;
•
request a replacement Medicare card; and
•
apply for Extra Help with your Medicare prescription drug costs.
A19
around
per week
*with $99 customer
tallation e and
purchase of alarm ins
monitoring chserarg
vices.
• A home without a security system is
• A burglary occurs every 14.6 seconds.
3 times more likely to be burglarized.
• 1 out of every 5 homes will experience • 85% of Police Officials surveyed believe
1
a break-in or home invasion.2
3
home alarms deter burglary attempts. 4
1. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2008 National Crime Report http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2009/june/ucr_stats060109 2. http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/contentpub/press/vdhbpr.cfm
3. FBI, 2008 National Crime Report http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2009/june/ucr_stats060109 4. http://www.beyondidentitytheft.com/home-security-statistics.html
Call Today, Protect Tomorrow!
1-888-654-0376
Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST
$99.00 Customer Installation Charge. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $36.99 per month ($1,331.64). Form of payment must be by credit card or electronic
charge to your checking or savings account. Offer applies to homeowners only. Local permit fees may be required. Satisfactory credit history required. Certain
restrictions may apply. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Dealer customers only and not on purchases from ADT LLC. Other rate plans available. Cannot be combined
with any other offer. Licenses: AL-12-1104, AK-35221, AR-E08-014, AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401,
GA-LVA205395, HI-CT30946, IA-AC-0036, ID-39131, IL-127.001042, IN-City of Indianapolis: 80988, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1082, MA-1355C, MD-107-1626,
ME-LM50017382, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC354, St. Louis County: 53328, MS-15007958, MT-247, NC-25310-SP-FA/LV, NC-1622-CSA,
NE-14451, NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-68518, City of Las Vegas: B14-00075-6-121756, C11-11262-L-121756, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State
UID#12000286451, OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA22999, RI-3582,
SC-BAC5630, TN-C1520, TX-B13734, ACR-3492, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382, WA-602588694/PROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: 0001697,
WV-042433, WY-LV-G-21499. 3750 Priority Way South Dr. Suite 200 Indianapolis, IN 46240 For full list of licenses visit our website www.protectyourhome.com. Protect
Your Home – 3750 Priority Way South Dr., Ste 200, Indianapolis, IN 46240.
Your Desktop
Post Office
™
Click
Print
Postage
Print official U.S. postage right from your PC and printer.
Looking for more Social Security information? Go online to find out almost
anything you need to know about the Social Security program. Information is
available on subjects ranging from how to get a Social Security number for a
newborn to returning to work while receiving disability benefits.
And since April 22 is Earth Day, here’s another tip: going online is good for the
planet. It saves more than just your time — it also saves paper, emissions, and
energy.
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Print exact postage and address in one step.
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Save up to 80% compared to a postage meter.
4-week trial plus
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To get the offer, you MUST enter
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Offer www.stamps.com/1000
If you need to reach us by phone, you can call us toll-free at 1-800-772-1213. We
treat all calls confidentially. We can answer specific questions from 7 a.m. to 7
p.m., Monday through Friday. Generally, you’ll have a shorter wait time if you
call during the week after Tuesday. We can provide information by automated
phone service 24 hours a day. (You can use our automated response system to
tell us a new address or request a replacement Medicare card.) If you are deaf
or hard of hearing, you may call our TTY number, 1-800-325-0778.
No matter how you choose to contact us, Social Security is here to assist you.
We encourage you to give our website a try. You’ll get fast, convenient service
by going to www.socialsecurity.gov.
In this moment . . .
It doesn’t matter if you saved money in 15 minutes.
It doesn’t matter if your neighbor has the same insurance you do.
What matters right now is that you get to enjoy this moment feeling completely at ease - because your independent insurance
agent and the company that stands behind them have you covered.
Claim Denied?
Call H. W. “Sandy” Sanderson, Jr.
Call us today to learn more about the many different Life Insurance
options offered by Auto- Owners Insurance.
Lockamy/Tek
AGENCY
NAME
Insurance
Agency
Inc
Town Name • 555-555-5555
Call or visit us:
Attorney
910.592.5751
1940
NC
1940Hobbton
HobbtonHwy.
Hwy.Clinton,
Clinton,
NC28328
28328(910)592-4700
(910)592-4700
website
212 West Main Street * Clinton, NC
12783 (7-12)
A20
Week of April 11-17, 2013
www.thesampsonweekly.com
SPRING
Pre-Owned
Inventory Blow-Out
Sales Event!
$
10,981.00
2009
Mitsubishi Lancer
DT2543A
$
21,842.00
2012
Mustang Premium
FP-3602
$
$
13,947.00
2011
Chevy Impala LT
FP-3527
$
22,987.00
2012
Ford Taurus SEL
FP-3531
$
14,961.00
2012
Ford Focus SE
24,953.00
$
2009
Lincoln MKS
2012
Ford Edge LTD
FP-3613
$
FP-3572A
28,947.00
2010
Ford Ranger Sport
FP-3560
$
FP-3508
27,985.00
FP-3567
$
32,965.00
2013
Ford Explorer LTD
FP-3552
18,922.00
15,987.00
2011
Ford Fiesta SE
2013
Ford Flex LTD
$
$
FP-3569
$
27,961.00
2011
Ram 1500
2267C
$
32,977.00
2010
Ford F-150 Lariat
P2456A1
$
33,946.00
2011
Ford F-250 XLT
2504A
42,977.00
36,954.00
$
2012
F-150 Lariat
2012
F-150 Platinum
DT-2549A
213 Southeast Blvd.,Clinton, NC
910-592-6056
FP-3540
*Plus Tax, Tag &
$399 Dealer Doc Fee.