Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / June 17, 1955, edition 1 / Page 2
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Moose Will Go To Raleigh Sunday A motorcade bearing members of the Loyal Order of Moose who will attend the testimonial claa honoring Gov. Luther H. Hodges will as*enMe at ?:? a.m. Sunday, according to anna? uaent matte by A. Donald AvalloM, governor of the Ida* Mdg>. The motorcade will assemble at the Moose Lodge in Morehead City. It will lerfve there at 7:45 a.m The molorcadd will fee part ol one of five caravans moving into Raleigh on that day. Uoose. num bering 5.000 will b? present for the initiation of a class at new candidates enrolled in honor of Governor Hodges. Biggest CONSOLE VALUE! IK lilt TOPS IN PICTURE! PERFORMANCE! STYLING! Motorola TV Star Line MODEL 21K33E. Extended Area 21" alurrv inixed screen. Smart Ebony finish. Cascode Tuner. 199" Star Lin t MODIl iimi. Engineered for dependability, even in poor reception areas, this new super-powered 4-Star chassis sets a new high standard for TV. Cascods JVnr. Smart Ebony finish. Extended Arm 21' picture. AiHiHi Hcfcr> Cwtil MUn Few Mf U?h TwW ^ ? ? u.k ?Ww?W '169" *W i??M)r an * CAL'S TV & APPLIANCE COMPANY 412 Arftndftll StnMt ? Mor?li??d City Phon* 6-4733 Down East Beauty Pageant Will Begin at 8 Tomorrow , Seventeen conteiUnU wM via for the title of MJm Bdwi East at tkc ?eauty PageaNt twfc)#?Bw night at 8 o'clock at the Sea Level Inn. The contestant] will make two appearances before the judges once in evening ires* arid again in bathing suit*. Master of ceremonics for the event i? Hap Hansen. Beaufort. The girt* repreaeiHing most of the Down East communities are the following: Terry Lynch and Va rena Willi], Smyrna, Edna Chad wick and Mary Ellen Chasten),-* Straits; Myrtle Willis, Stacy; Kran SmttV Bwvi?; SMrWv Plttman. MVr rimon; Sallie Tostu, Sea Level. Eleanor Styron, Cedar Island'; Cartta GothTie, Harkers Island; Gaynelle Spencer, Ocracoke; Peg .Ky Davis and Betty Gillitin. Willis tan, and SaKira Salter. Ajin Pitt man. Mary hetr Mason, and Emma Dora Hill, all of Atlantic. Judges for th? event are L?cl? wood Phillips, and T. T. (Tom) Potter, both of Beaufort; Graver Munden and Mayor George Dill of Morehead City, and Ramie Davis of Wildwood. Spotlight (ContlnvM from Page 1) quatc budget. She got to the of fice early Monday, typed up the four-page budget herself and we*t to the eounty board. She presented the two budgets to the county board, saying one was adequate and one wasn't and it was up to the board to decide which 'they wanted. She and her adequate budget won. After college. Miss Hughes ex pected to be a personnel director in an industrial plant. She went to New York City where for three years she worked in the o/fice of the Cone Mills of Greensboro, N. C. Then she joined the WAVE hos pital corps as a neuro-psychiatric technician. After two years in the Navy, being stationed most of the time at San Diego Naval Hospital, Miss Hughes returned to her home county as a caseworker in the wel fare department there. Started Here in '52 At the end of six months in Pam lico, she spent two and a half years in Pitt County as a case worker and then took graduate work at the University of North Carolina. She returned to Pitt County as a child welfare worker and then came to Carteret as wel fare superintendent in January 1952. Since Miss Hughes has been in charge of welfare work, there has been an expansion in the kinds of services offered by the welfare de partment, including more activity in work with juvenile law-breakers. Miss Hughes, as well as case workers, may be called at all hours of the night, either to take care of some neglected children, talk with a young girl who has gotten Into difficulty with the law of somehow straighten out other types of prob lems that occur within the province ?of the welfare department. Today there are boarding and foster homes in the county. But not enough. Back in 1951 there were none. Glomes are needed where children, too young to be sent to a detention home, can be provided with a pleasant environ ment. 'And boarding homes are needed so that elderly people can be cared for. Aid? AA's Just recently the welfare depart ment has been working with Alco holics Anonymous. Films are be ing provided and with the beip of Miss Hughes, members of AA are receiving instruction in the whys and wherefores of alcoholism. There are still many, many prob lems to be ironed out. Right now the welfare department needs case workers badly, dne worker has left to accept a position at Dur ham. another is going to Richmond July 1. a third recently left be cause she's expecting an addition to the family and a fourth has re signed. Now thi? sudden departure is not because Miss Hughes is an ogre. Miss Hughes is the first to sympathize with caseworkers who are checking on >s many as 215 cases when the average case load per worker should be about 128. Larger metropolitan welfare de partments attract qualified case workers because the departments are better equipped, the amount of work assigned each employee Is comiderably less and the pay Is more. Miss Hughes recognises that the county Is providing as much money as absolutely possible for welfare work and It's a caae of making what's available from the county, state and federal governments go as far aa possible and yet get done the mountainous amount of welfare work that there is to do in Carteret. If anyone thinks he's got prob lems, he should talk to Miss Hughes a few moments and he'd begin to think his problems were nothing. With it all, the welfare superin tendent la not one to complain. She has nothing but praite for the county officials who cooperate with her department and ahe'tl do any thing within the realm o( possibil ity to lend a helping hand ? ex cept have her picture taken. That's why there's no photo with this spotlight itary. You'll have to take It from me ? she's a moat attractive woman, personality plut and intelligent too. gpeetway Opens Sunday Promoters Of the auto race tfack I en Country Clrt Road near More id City have scheduled Its i for Sunday. No i who will racq tor $1000 In ? Judge Hears Driving Cases Jaws Wilty Kester was fined $25 and costs by Judge Herbert O. Phillips in Morehead City Re corder's Court Monday morning when he pleaded guilty to careless and reckless driving and improper passing. Edward Earl Forrest was fined $16 and costs for speeding 60 miles per hour in a 33. miles per hour zone. George Rouse was fined $2S and costs for having no operator's li cense, with the full fine to be re mitted, since he had obtained a valid license. Costs were assessed against Rich ard Faust, speeding, and Maynard Fair .Meekins, failing to stop at ? stop sign. The case against Sylves ter Bell, charged with failing to comply with a court order, was dis missed. Cases against Arthur McCarter and George Dudley Sr. were con tinued. Railroads (Continued from Page 1) ing specialist; Dewey C. Wayne, transportation marketing special ist with the N. C. Department of Agriculture; R. P. Helms, Cargill, Inc., and officers from Camp Le jeune and Cherry Point. Beverly I. Lake, assistant attor ney general for the state, said the state desires Southern's acquisition of the A&EC "to the extent that this can be had withoot closing routes and gateways." The Norfolk Southern and Atlan tic Coast Line are objecting on the basis that routes and gateways to competitive lines, (NS and ACL) would be closed. The public should have advan tage of competitive routes, Mr. Lake said. He remarked, "We want this ap plication approved and we want no conditions attached to the approval which will prevent the actual op eration by the Southern Railway of a single trunk line from More head City to the west through New Bern, Goldsboro, Raleigh, Greens boro and Asheville. For the pre sent proceedings, only, we leave it to the several railroads here in volved to establish and to the com mission to find, what conditions should and can be imposed with out the loss of our main purpose of such east- west service." George F. Potter, Atlantic Coast Line vice-president in charge of traffic, said that if Southern op erates the Camp Lejeune Railroad, | which it is also seeking to do, ACL j would lose a large amount of bus iness. In rebuttal. Col. J. M. Davis, Ma rine Corps logistics officer, said thdt the present rail lines serving Cherry Point and I^ejeune were unsatisfactory and "extremely lim ited." Witnesses who have agreed to testify in behalf of Southern in clude Leo H. Harvey, Kinston; Raymond Bryan, Goldsboro; and Harold M. A. Cowell, Jacksonville. Also offering testimony are of ficials of Southern Railway. Grand Jury Completes Work by 10:45 Tuesday The grand jury this week wound up Its work by 10:43 a.m. Tuesday. In its report, the jury said it acted on cases presented to it, in spected the jail and thanked all court officials (or their assistance. Foreman of the grand jury was Bruce L. Goodvfln, More head City. Guard of the grand jury was Capt. Charlie Thomas, Beaufort. Commissioner Resigns J. P. Harris, Beaufort fire com missioner, this week presented his resignation to Mayor C. T. Lewis. Due to his regular employment, Mr. Harris said he could ndt con tinue to serve as fire commissioner. mneram rarm Laborers Draw Road Sentences WUIi.m tM Walking and Wil liam T. Kinchen, itinerant farm laborers, were found guilty of aa sault en a female Hi Superior Court and sentenced to It moath* on the roads by Judge Walter J. Bane yesterday morning. The two men were ckarflrd wkh assault on Mrs. Viola Holloway with intent to commit raf*. Shi also said they threw her husband out of the house. Viola told the court that the was in bed when the two defend ants forced their way into the house, chased her husband from the house, and then forced her to submit to them. She told the court that they pull ed her clothes from her, struck her and hurt her. She and her husband are also farm laborer* at the K. W. Wright camp for migratory produce work ers at North River. Mr. Wright told the court that Viola's husband had come running to him after being thrown oat of his house and told him that his wife was being attacked. The defendants denied the alle gation of forcing their way into the house and committing the as sault on Mrs. Holloway James Heel was also sentenced yesterday to 12 months on the roads for breaking, entering and larecny and his accomplice, Jane Carol Fair, was given a six months' suspended sentence in Women's Prison on the provision that she not associate with James Reel un less she shall be lawfully married to him, and must be on good be havior for two years and not vio late any laws. Reel pleaded guilty to burglariz ing a store at Merrimon and the loot was found in his home. Mia* Fair was his accomplice in that she went into the store with him. Members of the jury which found Watkins and Kinchen guilty of as sault on a female were James H. Long, Arendell Golden. Harry G. Willis, Charlie Mason, Thomas Respass, William H. Godwin, Charles Thomas, Marion T. Mills. Guy Carraway. Tull E. Williams, Johnnie T. Midgett Jr. and William H. Godwin. Rotarians See Movie on O&R Col. George Doyle, assistant ov erhaul and repair officer at Cherry Poiht, and Capt. Bob O'Neal, cost control and review officer of the same department, showed the film. Success Story, at the meeting of the Newport Rotary Club Monday night at the community building. The officers were introduced by the program chairman, Derryl Gar ner. The film dealt with the work done at the Alameda, California Naval Air Base in the O and R department The officers explained that the same work was done at Cherry Point. The film depicted the job that O and R does from the time the plane lands and the disassembling job Is started. The entire airplane is taken com pletely apart and then with the ad dition of new parts, is reassembled and repainted. Both officers said that the cost of the work was about 10 per cent of the initial cost of the aircraft, which meant that it was much cheaper to overhaul and repair the planes than to junk them. Both Colonel Doyle and Captain O'Neal said that they wanted to thank the people of this area who have made the O and R department at Cherry Point the best of ita kind in the east. Sgt C. L. Teague, state high way patrolman and a New Bern Rotariaa spoke to the group about the Slow Down and Live program. The members were la favor of obtaining Slow Down and Live stickers that are being sold and Roy T. Garner was asked to obtain them for the club. 0 Walter Edwards, Morehead City Rotarian, was a visitor. Lejeune Marine Band Plays at Milk Festival The Camp Lejeune Marine Band will furniab the musical entertain ment at the Carteret County Milk Festival to b? held Wednesday, June 22, starting at 3 o'clock at the Recreation Building in More head City, under the sponsorship of the Beaufort and More head Jayeeea. Confirmation on the band's com ing was received by the festival chairman. Dr. Silas Thome, from Maj. Gen E. W Snedeker, USMC, Camp Lejeune commander. The main speaker for the gala day will be R. R Rich, Dairy Ex tension Department, State College, who will tell the audience of the importance of milk and dairy pro ducts (o the life of our nation. Free dairy products will be trtnded oat to all who attend tile festival, with ice cream and the Ul* being ftattNhMt by Km White fc* Cream end r*trr CotmMtty Of Wilmington and the Maoia Dairy company of New Bern. Show stalls for the dairy cattle are being erected preeently on the western boundary of the Recrea tion Center field, and the displays will feature dairy cattle of 4-H club memben as well as other pro ducers in the county. The festival, pan of the Jaycee Jane Dairy Month Obaenranee, will also hate a repeating of the sMvar dollar give-away of last year. Jayceea will give a silver dollar thia month to every waitress who happens to ask a Jayeee if fert like milk or some other dai tf pro duct with his ntal. Certain Jaycees have hem given the dollars. When they diipoae a t theirs, another gioup of Jayeces will be given silver dollars to (tve a?sy. Names of aH waitresses who earn tbair dollars b# MMttuBending dairy products, wiU M pdMhMn in THE NEWS TIMES, according to Or. Thorns. Youth (CoittiHM* from Page H A resident of the section (aid that the car hid been there (or several Ws. A GoMaboro friend reported age ing Jerry seeking to thumb a rtfc wear Morafcmd City Saturday night His ear was faafctf," he said, and he could not give him a lift. The report said that later thla friend ran into Jerry at a Morehead City Cafe and talked wtth htm. Registers Here A Mojehi'ad City hotel operator said that a youth who gave hfs ad dress as PayettevUle registered for a double room Saturday night, say ing that hie "buddy** weuld be in presently. The hotel man said he saw the "buddy" when he came in and went up the stairs. He gave a des cription which fitted that of Jerry but no further trace could be found. Check in Fayetteville disclosed ne such street address there as the one given on the Morehead City hotel register. The calendar of the case: June 2. Jerry leaves for Seott Field driv ing his car. Sunday, June 5, A collect call comes, answered by a younger brother who said the operator ask ed if call from point in Illinois Confiscated Moonshine Makes Good Cleaner Miami, Fla. (AP) ? Federal agents haye discovered a use for a five-gallon jug of "real moon shine whisky strong enough to blow your head off" that was con fiscated long ago in some forgot ten raid. Deputy Marshal Guy Hixon said his office uses it for cleaning the fingerprint board. "You ought to see how it eats that old ink off. Best cleaning fluid we ever had around this office." would be acceded Parents talk with Jeny. He rays everything is OK. Wednesday, June S. A letter pet merited in Lambert on the dsy previously and dated the Satirday previously, arrives in Mdsboto. It says hejhas decided not to (o back to Miliary service. Anyea* with say knowledge of the youth wil asked to contact the chief of police in Goldsboro. This morning the search shifted its center to Wilmington area beaches A Goldsboro yooth en route to Carolina Beach yesterday said he saw Jerry in Warta* and he apparently was headed for the beach. He might be at Carolina or Myrtle," it was said. Th? ntw, tikaliit, klnwlMr Zenith "ROYAL-M" Hearing Aid As powerful as tome hearing aid* it taut twite iu size... smaller than many selling for twice its price! Zenith's latest and greatest engineering triumph? the tiny hut mighty "Royal-M"? weighs about the same as ? pocket lighter and is hardly larger. Instantly adjustable fingertip tone and volume controls. And just imagine? it operates for lOf a week on one tiny battery! Come in and sec the "Royal-NT*.. .wear and compare, on Zenith's 10-day money-back Guarantee. Try it at home, at work, anywhere. Discover for yourself iu wonderful clarity... convenience. So comfortable you scarcely know you're wearing it! kASY TIMI-f AYMKNT PI AN 10-DAY MONVY-IACX OUAtAHTW If, in yoor opinion, any hearing aid out-performs a Zenith in any way, simply return the Zenith within 10 days and your money wilJ be refunded promptly. '"TeHSO ?Kit HIARING AIDS ly i? Mokor? of WorM-Pwow ZmMi TV and Radio Sots MOREHEAD CITY DRUG CO. A GOOD DRUG STORE NO ARTIFICIAL FLAVORS* in _^ea?feo?L. t???? Mil f ICE CREAM ,ij Taste . . .pause . . . smack your lips over the lkesh<fniit goodness of Se attest ice cream and sherbet. Naturally food ? because Ho Artificial Flavors are used in any While's Sealtest ice cream! Vanilla, chocolate, strawberry ice creams . . .'orange, lime, pineapple ihettott ? Mid other mouth-*ateri?j flavor*. lo^ijf-Mw at off Whltf'i to trtmm d?kr'* inert art No Artificial Flavors la My WMte'i ScahM crcim Sm BIG TOP oa WHCT-TV, CIuimI 9, IliOO A.M. Saturday! WMFD-TV, Channel ?, 8-?ui i?y? 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Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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June 17, 1955, edition 1
2
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