NEWS-TIMES OFFICE 504 AnmMI St. Monkwd City Phooe #-4178 CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES ?? 43rd YEAR, NO. 77. THREE SECTIONS TWENTY PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1964 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Authorities Juggle Beach Street-Paving Controversy Judge Sends Woman to Prison ? Husband, Ernest Barrett, Bound Over to Higher Court Under $250 Bond Annette Barrett, charged with as sault with an ice pick, was sen tenced to six months in Women's Prison, Raleigh, by Judge Earl Ma son in Ui'J Beaufort Recorder's Court Tuesday afternoon. She was taken to prison Wednesday. Her husband, Ernest Barrett, was charged with assault with a deadly weapon causing bodily injury. In that case. Judge Mason found probable cause and bound the case over to Superior Court. Barrett was put under $250 bond. Richard Barrett, allegedly in volved in a fight between Annette and Ernest, was charged with fight with Annette, but that case was dismissed. The state decided not to prose cute Frank Robinson and James Langdale but left their cases open. Robinson was charged with public drunkenness and Langdale was charged with drunken driving, careless and reckless driving, causing property damage, not hav ing a driver's license and failing to report an accident. Albert Copes, charged with pub lic drunkenness, was not prosecut ed. James O. Harris was taxed costs of court for disturbing the peace and public drunkenness and Rol lin D. Mumford paid costs for cut ting through a service station drive way. Six persons were assessed costs for failing to stop at stop signs. They are Robert Lane Davis, Wil lie Sharpe, Carrie Campbell John son, Reta Joyner Martin, Paul Jones and Rodman B. Taylor. Henderson Davis was taxed costs for having an improper muf fler. The case against Robert M. Harris, who faced the same charge was dismissed after he showed proof of having the muffler re paired. Cases against Lemmon Marion, Marshall J. Hucks and Laurie Guth rie were continued. Marion is charged with public drunkenness while Hucks is charged with drunk en driving and Laurie Guthrie with failing to stop at a stop sign. Norwegian Sailor Recovers Kirl Grytten, Norwegian sailor who was hospitalized Sept. 3 with severe burns he received when a boiler blew up, is reported to be showing marked improvement at the Morehead City Hospital. Mr. Grytten. 26-year-old native of Stavanger, Norway, was the ob ject of a helicopter rescue mission after a boiler blew up aboard the SS Normundo, Norwegian steam er. The boiler blew up Sept. 2 and the steamer, 25 miles off this coast, notified Fort Macon Coast Guard Station. Fort Macon called Eliz abeth City and a helicopter was dis patched to pick up Mr. Grytten. After admitted to Morehead City Hospital, Mr. Grytten was ban daged in gauze from his waist up. He is now up and walking around and will probably be discharged soon. After he is discharged, Mr. Gryt ten will go to New York to report to the company which owns the SS Normundo. Four Fry Drivers Receive Awards Four of the Fry Roofing Co. truck drivers received safety awards at a meeting of transporta tion personnel Sunday. Winners were William E. Jar man, Beaufort, four-year safety pin and *25 in cash; James H. Hibba, liorehead City, two-year safety pin and *15 in cash; Rober aon N. Lamm, Morehead City, and Donald C. Midyette. one-year safe ty pins and *10 in cash each. To receive an award a driver must complete 12 months on the roads without being involved ia an sccident which results in his being charged with violation of traffic laws. Walter Edwards, plant manager, commended the drivers and J. T. Mott. assistant manager, preaeht ed the ?wards. Following a discuasion of safe ty rules ind regulations 16 mem bers of the transportation depart ment of the company were guests of the company at a steak damer at Uw Re* Restaurant. ' The street-paving issue at Atlan-? tic Beach is being juggled around like a hot potato. The town board claims that it used an official map in applying for Powell Bill funds, one approved by the State Highway and Public Works Commission. Residents in an area considered for annexation claim that the streets over which a controversy has risen are not in town but are in pumped-in property owned by May or A. B. Cooper. To get the matter straightened out, the town board asked Satur day that its clerk, H. M. Eure, write James S. Burch, head of sta tistics and planning with the State Highway Department. Mr. Burch said this week in Ra leigh that he couldn't decide which map was the correct one, adding that "a court or some judicial agency" would have to decide. He claimed that the map he made of the town was a "blueprint sketch" drawn to show streets of the town that are a part of the state highway system. He said the map wasn't intended to show the town limits and was for his own use. Limits Drawn The map showed the town's eastern limit at the Money Island propery line, its western limit at the Ocean Ridge property line, its northern boundary at Bogue Sound, and its southern boundary at the Atlantic Ocean. In applying for the street funds, the town listed streets in an area east of Morehead Avenue and north of Fort Macon Boulevard. On the basis of the town's ap plication, it was to receive $2,561.38 this year. Powell Bill funds are al See STREETS, Page 6 Supreme Court Upholds Lower Court Decision The State Supreme Court on Wednesday refused to reverse a lower court decision which ordered the dog track at Currituck pad- . locked and the equipment sold. An appeal by the Carolina-Vir ginias Racing Association, opera tors of the track at Moyock, was based on the claim that the asso ciation had been deprived of its property without due process of law, in violation of the 14th Amendment to the U. S. Consti tution. When the high court ruled un constitutional the 1949 act permit ting dog racing and pari-mutuel betting in Currituck, the associa tion charged, the constitutionality of the act was not before the court. , The court's ruling was such a de parture from prior decisions as to "constitute denial of due process,'" the racing group said. But the Supreme Court said the argument was without merit. Be cause a state court overrules its previous decision on a question of state law does not constitute a de nial of due process, the court held. Earlier, the association had lost out in appeals to Federal district court and the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. The only recourse now lies in an appeal to the U. S. I Supreme Court. Woodmen Will Dedicate New Lodge Hall Ocl.1 WOW National President, Farrar Newberry, Oma ha, Will be Present The new Woodmen of the World lodge hall, Camp Glenn, will be dedicated next Friday during the fall session of the Bright Belt Log Rolling Association at Morehead City. The dedicatory address will be given by the national association president, Farrar Newberry, of Omaha, Neb. The meeting will open at 2 p.m. with the presentation of a flag and pole to Camp Glenn School. The state manager, Nick T. New berry, will make the presentation. Ted Davis, manager of the More head City Chamber of Commerce, will give the welcome address. The dedication of the new lodge hall is scheduled for 2 30 p.m. Woodmen will conduct their bus iness meeting at 3 at the lodge and their wives will tour Morehead City and Atlantic Beach. Degree work is scheduled for 4:30 with the Erwin degree team performing the initiatory work. At the dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the Camp Glenn School cafeteria, May or George W. Dill will greet guests and the national president. Sover eign Farrar Newberry, will de liver the main address. Clifford Faglie, consul command er of Camp 188, said entertain ment is being planned for the din ner hour. The public is invited to attend and may obtain tickets for the dinner from Woodmen or by calling 6-4372, 6-5234, or by con tacting Willie W. Moore, finan cial secretary, 3105 Arendell St. I Saw a Preview of The Nightmare By ELEANORE DEAR PHILLIPS I was invited to a sneak pre view of the Community Theatre play, "The Nightmare," Wednesday night. In spite of the fact that the usual last-minute hitches had to be ironed out, it has the earmarks of a good play, well-produotd. The story it typical ofl?tnpeiule dramas.. The laying of the base of the plot takes place in a rather lengthy first act. But there the ability of the players is put to the acid test. There, mostly through conversation among the characters, the audience must grasp the import of the diabolical plot that comes to fruition in the more rapidly mov ing second and third acts. The scene is laid in central New York state. In a gloomy old man sion that overhangs a cliff, Perry Wallace waits for the death of his father-in-law. Perry's haughty, bit ter wife, Edith, fights desperately to keep the old man alive. Not be cause she loves him; just because she hopes she can get him to change his will. Perry isn't worried about the will. He knows it leaves everything to the old man's one grandchild, Marilyn Fleming But Perry has plans. He decides to bring Marilyn, who has not been in the house for 20 years, to the side of her dying grandfather. He plans to trick her into sign ing a will that leaves everything to him, then force her to kill herself in the same mysterious way her mother died. So Marilyn comes. She talks with her grandfather and is horrified when he warns her that she isn't safe in the house. He tells her to escape, but how can she? When she wakens from a long drugged sleep, her grandfather has died, the funeral is over, and the servants are gone. She's alone with the two who plot her death. The man she loves comes, but in order to save him (Perry toy? with the idea of getting rid of him too) Marilyn quarrels with him so that he leaves in a rage. Her last hope is gone and there's nothing to face but the end. The rising terror of the final minutes of the play have all the qualities of a nightmare. If the characters effectively put across the first act, in which every line is important to the audience's understanding the play, the Com munity Theatre has a hit on its hands. The parts are all definite charac Judge J. W. Parker To Preside at Court Judge Joseph W. Parker. Wind ?or, will preside at the week term of Superior Court beginning In Beaufort Monday, Oct. 18. There ate 100 cases on the crim inal docket, according to A. H. James, clerk of Superior Court, and more than 40 civil cases. The two-week special term of Superior Court, to hear civil caaes held the last week of August and first woek of September, cleared 28 case* off the civil docket. Mr. James said a backlog of criminal caaes Jammed up when J edge Malcolm Paul became ill and couid not bold ctwrt bare in March. Lynn Stoller ... . smile hides evil plans ters. The opinionated, greedy maid is played by Ruth Peeling; the earnest but timid doctor by Sam my Daniels; the lovely, frightened Marilyn by Dorothy Freeman; the haunted, tortured Edith by Pat Webb; the impetuous, hot headed lover by Walt Hamilton, and Per ry, the suave, smiling plotter, by Lynn Stoller. The grandfather, who never ap pears on stage, is played by Horace Loftin. His voice is heard over an intercommunication system the wiley Perry has rigged up between the grandfather's bedroom and the living room. Tressa Vickers is in charge of the stage setting, Joyce Willis is propel tv manager, and member's of the stage crew are Floyd Stewart. James Lucas, Thomas Respess, and See PREVIEW, Page 6 Club Entertains Safety Patrol The Newport Rotary Club had 25 school safety patrol boys as guests at their meeting Monday night. Charles Hill, president of the Newport Businessmen's Associa tion, was the speaker. He spoke to the group on "Citizenship." In the business meeting the Ro tarians decided to invite the fac ulty of the Newport school to their Nov. 23 meeting as their guests. Visitors at the meeting were Les ter M. Garner Jr., John B. Tom linson, both of Newport, and the Rev. Priestley Conyers, Morehead City. Nathan Garner, president, pre sided. 16 Men Drawn For Federal Jury Sixteen Carteret citizens have been summoned for jury duty dur ing the regular fall term of feder al district court at New Bern. The term opens at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 19. Chosen to serve from this county are S. A. Chalk Jr., J. R. Sanders, Gordon D. Canfield, Jim Mussel white, Walter Morris, John E. Lash ley, J. L. Seamon. William White, Bruce Willis, Bill Ballou, Paul Cleland, Robert B. Howard, and E. M. Dewey, all of Morehead City. Also Lockwood Phillips, Henry Williams and George W. Huntley Jr., all of Beaufort. Ports Group Re-Elects J. D. Holt as Director -? Weatherman Says More Heat Due Despite a cool Thursday, Stain ey Davia. weather observer, aaid the county is in (or some more "shirt tail" weather. High lor the week waa 89 on Fri day, Saturday. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Wedneaday the high dropped to 82. Low lor the week waa Wenesday's 67. Sunday waa the only clear day o( the week with the other days be ing partly cloudy and rain waa registered Monday and Tuesday Monday, .51 inches of rain (ell and Tuesday it waa .54 inches. Temperature readings from Fri day through Wednesday follow: Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Max. Ma. 85 88 85 08 B5 85 85 85 85 83 Wadaaaday 75 78 72 87 ' J. D. Holt, manager of the More head City state port, was re-elected a director of the South Atlantic and Caribbean Porta Association Monday afternoon at their meeting at the Ocean King Hotel. Mr Holt aaid members of the as sociation were moat favorably im pressed with Morebead City. Some came Friday and others arrived la ter last weekend. The meeting opened Monday morning. The association includes ports representatives from North Caro lina southward includin" Florida, as well aa porta in the Caribbean. Officers elected for the coming year are the following: J. B Qualey, operations man ager of the South Carolina State Ports Authority, prealdent; Salva dore V. Caro, Puerto Rico Trana portation Authority, first vice president, P. L Sullivan. Wilming ton port manager, second vice president; George M. Antell. traf fic manager, port of Palm Beach, third vice-president; and H. B. He lander. aaalstant to the manager of the Charleston, S. C., port, secre tary . treasurer. Mr Qualey succeeds W. H. Mc Cowan of the Savannah, Qa., port Johnny Ray Waddell Escapes From Hertford Prison Camp Judge Gives Defendant Two-Year Suspended Term Always an Answer! I Mayor Pat Dill of Morchcad Cit.> has done it again. According to the United Press, he was called to the phone the night of Hurricane Carol. Upon hearing how few people had gathered in the municipal building for protection from the hurricane, the reporter asked why more refugees weren't taking ad vantage of the emergency shelter. Mayor Dill replied: "They're all at home watching the hurricane on television." Three Men Seek Supervisor Job Neal Campcn, Beaufort, chair man of the board of supervisors, | Lower Neuse Soil Conservation ?District, this week announced three candidates for the board of super visors. They are Floyd Garner, Y. Z. Simmons, both of Newport, and Sam Garner, Wildwood. | Floyd Garner is on the board at present but is running for re-elec tion. Others interested in running should have a petition signed by 25 qualified voters and submit it to the Soil Conservation office, Ra leigh, no later than Thursday, Nov. 25. j Anyone eligible to vote in a gen eral election is eligible to vote for a soil supervisor, David Jones, county soil conservationist, says. Balloting will take place the week of Dec. 6. j Although voters need not be farmers, only farmers may run for ? . Emeritus Club Honors Eight Men Eight men were elected to hon orary membership for 1954-55 in tiie Emeritus Club Monday night at the Morehead City Recreation Center. They are Mayor George Wi Dill, Morehead City; Mayor Clifford Lewis, Beaufort: J. Warren Beck, president of the Morehead City Chamber of Commerce; Norwood Young, president of the Beaufort Chamber of Commerce. Ted Davis, manager of the More head City Chamber of Commerce; J. A. DuBois, manage)- of the Sea I.evcl Chamber of Commerce; Bill Sharpe, editor of State magazine; and Dr. S. W. Hatcher, Morehead City. T. Bartlett Sage, secretary of the club, read the following letter from Mr. DuBois: "Let me congratulate you and the members of your most energet ic organization upon the realiza tion of success of the club's first real project, the extension of N. C. 12 from Pollocksville to Havelock. "1 have greatly missed being able to attend your interesting meetings but I follow your activi ties with interest in THE NEWS TIMES and my occasional contact with some of you. "Keep up the good work . . Dr. E. P. Spence reported that the field trips proposed for the summer could not be undertaken and was authorized by the club to set a date for a visit to the Du Pont plant at Kinston in October. The club will hold its next meet in? Oct. 18 at the Sea Level Inn. Wives will be entertained and the group will meet that night at the Recreation Center at 5:30. The club members authorized the president, W. S. Kidd, to aend a letter to the Board of Conserva tion and Development^ suggesting improvements that should be made at Fort Macon State Park. Mr. Kidd presided. Tide Table Tldea at the Beaufort Bar HIGH LOW | Friday, Sept 24 6:11 a.m. 12:04 a.m. 8:30 p.m. 12:27 p.m. I Saturday, Sept 28 8:56 a.m. 12:4a a.m. | 7:11 p.m. 1:13 p.m. Sunday, Sept 24 7:30 a m 1:26 a.m. 7:48 p.m. 1:84 p.m. I Maoday, Sept 17 8:17 a.m. 2:0B a m. | 8:25 pjn. 2:33 pjn. Taeaday, Sept It 8:41a.m. 2:38 a .m. I 8 58 p m. 3:00 pM. \ ? Nick Smith, Beaufort RFD, was given a suspended sentence of two years on the roads and was placed on five years good behavior by Judge Lambert Morris after he was found guilty Tuesday of a charge of assault on a female. He was tried in County Court. James Hasting Adams was fined $100 and co6ts after pleading guilty to a charge of drunken driving. Carl Arthur Letsch, charged with not having a driver's license, was given a suspended sentence of 60 days on the roads and fined $50 and costs. John Paul Sc*tt was charged with drunken driving and found guilty of careless and reckless driv ing. He was ordered to pay $25 and court co$ts. Mildred Rose Styron was taxed half costs for not having a driver's license and Gordon Poling was fined $15 and costs on a charge of speeding. Chester Woods was charged with assault on a female but Judge Mor ris ruled malicious prosecution and the prosecuting witness was taxed court costs. Charges Dropped The state did not prosecute Thurman Murray Pittman for not having a driver's license. Kenneth James Hill paid costs on the same charge. The state also did not prosecute , Bill Wiggins, charged with disturb- , ing the pcace, and Leroy Green, | speeding. Ella Harvey was called and did ( not appear and forfeited a bond. ( She was charged with cohabiting. L. J. Hair, charged with issuing a bad check, was taxed court costs and the amount of the check. Julius Davis Small Jr. forfeited bond. He was charged with speed ing. 1 Billy Powell, a resident from up state, charged with breaking, en tering and larceny, was not prose cuted, S. L. Johnson was taxed court costs and amount of the chcck after he was found guilty on a charge of issuing a bad check. Elizabeth A. Bonavita was not prosecuted She had been charged with not having a driver's license. Pay Costs John William Frivance and Fi delius William Baker were taxed costs of court on charges of speed ing. Charlie Pake was ordered to pay costs for allowing a mnior to op erate a motor vehicle and William Stanley Lockhart paid costs for failing to stop at a stop sign. The case against Reva Hagan for assault on a female was dismissed. Cases Continued Thirty-eight cases were eontin tinued: Herbert Jones, speed- : ing; Ted Day, bad check; Jack R. 1 BelU no operator's license; Mat thew Abraham Marshall, driving drunk; Jack Harlem Harmon, pass ing at an intersection; Alonza Thomas Redd Jr., driving drunk, ' no driver's license; Francis ' Strouse, assault; James Branton, 1 bad check. Theodore Johnson, bad check; 1 Isaac Blango, following too close See COURT, Page C Johnny Ray Waddell, Newport, who told Sheriff Hugh Salter in a letter written Tuesday that he had decided to go straight, made a break from a Hertford County Prison gang yesterday morning at 9:15. Waddell took off with Phil Leroy Twiddy as the two were with a crew cutting bushes at Merry Hill near Ahos kie Twiddy was caught by a guard before he could get to the woods but Waddell got away. Waddell waa sentenced to two years in prison in June on charges of assault on Deputy Sheriff M. M. Ayscue, assault on a female, fail ing to pay court coats and resisting arrest. He was sentenced to the two years one week after his 21st birth day. After he first arrived at Hert ford County Prison Waddell made a break, in July, but was caught the same day in Roxboro. Assistant Superintendent at the prison, R. R. Williford, said that, other than the first break, Wad dell's attitude had been "pretty good." He said there had been no recent actions on the part of Wad dell which would indicate that he was planning the break. In his letter to Sheriff Salter, Waddell asked that his prison sen* tence be cut. He said, "I realize you have given me a break before but I didn't use it. I promise this time to go straight and I will because 1 have never before made a promise. "I have made up my mind to go straight and live a clean, decent life from here on out," he wrote. At the end of the letter he said that he realized how it is to be with his family and others and to behave himself. The letter was written and mail ed Tuesday and Sheriff Salter re ceived it Wednesday. Directors Get Budget Report A total of ft, 540 has been col lected by the Sea Level Commun ity Chamber of Commerce, it was reported at a recent meeting of the board of directors. Many pledges are yet to be paid. Expenditures to date have amounted to $1,912.58. DDT coat ing $565.96, advertising $483.27, >nd airplane (to spread DDT) cost ing $480 were the major items on the budget. There is a balance on hand of $627.42. At the meeting the board authoi ized Joe Dubois, manager, to purchase an additional 100 gallons Df DDT from the state for use in the neighborhood fog trucks. The need for added fire protec tion for the communities east of Beaufort was discussed A com mittee was appointed by T. C. Smith, president, to get facts and figures on fire protection. Recent fires down east have pointed up the need for a fire-fight ing program. Members of the committee are 1. P. Harris, Beaufort, chairman; Beaufort Fire Chief Charles Haa sell; Leslie Springle. Beaufort RFD ind John Styron, Stacy. Other members are to be appointed later. The next meeting of the board will be at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct 2, at the Sea Level Inn. + Sailor Remains In County Jail No One Posts $5,000 Bond Set by Judge Mc Neill in Court Monday Ronald St. Cyr, 19-year-old sailor charged with attempted rape and breaking and entering, remained in the county jail at Beaufort yester day. No one has posted $5,000 bond for his release. ? Judge George McNeill found probable cause in Morehcad City Recorder's Court Monday afternoon after hearing evidence to the ef fect that St. Cyr had entered the Charles T. Broadhurst home, 1706 Eavns St., Morehead City, and at tempted to rape Mrs. Broadhurst. According to testimony, Mrs. Broadhurst was unable tq sleep. Her husband and son had retired and she got up, in her night clothes, listened to the radio a while and then decided to lie on the couch and read a book. Had UwOTd Windows She testified that she had lower ed the windows because the wind was blowing hard and that both screen doors were hooked. While she was reading she said she sud denly smellcd a terribly strong odor of something like hair tonic and thought for a moment that a bottle had tipped over somewhere in the house. Then she sensed that someone was in the room and believed at first it was her husband. About that moment the person lunged at her. grabbed her and she screamed, rousing her husband and son. Runs from House The man in the room ran from the house and Morehead City po lice were notified. St. Cyr was pick ed up a short time later on Aren dell Street near the downtown sec tion and booked on the4 breaking and entering and rape attempt charges. Time of the incident in the Broadhurst house was placed at about midnight. St. Cyr's wallet and identifica tion cards were later found in an other section of town, in a cross alley between 4th and 5th Streets. St. Cyr made no comment dur ing the hearing other than to reply "No sir," to the judge when he was asked if any member of his family could post $5,000 bond. Appearing in court on behalf of St. Cyr was an officer of the ship, USS Navarro, on which the boy was serving. The ship stayed in port until 3 p.n^. awaiting the out come of the hearing, although it had been scheduled to sail in the morning. St. Cyr was taken from the Morehead City jail to the county jail Monday afternoon after court. His case is scheduled to come be fore the grand jury in October. Girls, Charged with Running Bawdy House, Given Suspended Sentence Ocracoke PTA Meets Monday Ocracoke PTA held Iti tint meet ing of school year Monday night. Harvey Wahab, prealdent, presid ed over the business session. Mrs. Thurman Styron, retiring treasurer, gave a summary of sum mer receipts and expenditure!, showing a balance on hand of ap proximately $140. Treasurer for 1954-55 is Klisha Esham; secretary is Mrs. Edna S. O'Neal. Theodore Rondthaler, principal, called attention of those present to various improvements and repair* .made to the school building and to new equipment. The organiution voted to purchase a number of small items needed tor the school, including bulbs for the movie pro jector, waste baskets, and song books. It voted to finance the building of shelves in the 7th and 8th grade claasroom and to spon sor the annual carnival in October. H osteoses were Miss Kathleen Bragg, Mas. Doris Balance, Miss Nora Edmoadeon, Mrs. Marion Aus tin. Mrs. Lillian Fulcbwr, and Mrs Virginia Ma? Two barefoot girls, clad in slacks* ?nd shirts, heard Judge Lambert Morris give them a one-year ?us pended sentence and place them on good behavior for three year* fol lowing a bearing In County Re corder's Court Tuesday. They had been charged with running a house of ill repute. One of the girls, Mrs. David R. Kelly, Galax. Va., 18-year-old wife of a Cherry Point Marine, burst in to tear* while on the stand and told the judge that she was preg nant. She claimed that her hus band was the father of the child. The state produced 12 witnesses, five bf whom testified. All five testified that Marines streamed in to the girls' house off the Mill Creek Road at all times of the day and night and sounds of fight ing, aa well as loud, vulgar lan guage were often heard coming from Inside and around the house. ' One of the witnesses. Miss Mary Cottle, said the Marines came to the house on foot, hitch-hiking, In ?utomobiles, on motor cycle*, and motor scooters Harvey Hamilton Jr., Morehead City attorney who was assisting solicitor Wiley Taylor in the pro iccution, began referring to the ar rival of the Marines a* the "Ma rine landing." Mrs. KaUy and 19-yMr-old Peggy ?m fiBU. Tim i Farm Planners Tour Carteret Farm planners of the Lower Cape Fear Soil Conservation Dis trict are gueati of farm planners. Lower Neuae Soil Conservation Dis trict, on a tour through the coun ty yesterday and today. The tour began at Richlands yes terday morning st 9:30 snd con tinued to Carteret yesterday after noon. The men will leave here to day to continue their trip into Pam lico County. Yesterday afternoon they ob served windbreaks at Swansboro, bahia rfrsss and scricea lespedeza on the Koonce farm, crotoiaria on the Elmo Smith farm and coastal Bermuda grass on the Alton Bland farm. All the farms are located along Bogue Sound Today they will visit Hugh Swann and Roy Keller's farms as well as the Open Grounds farm. C. C. Abernathy, management agronomist for this area, is in charge of the tour. Asaisting Mr. Abernathy in this county la David Jones, soil conservationist. Fourteen men art making the trip?