JOIN tho March of Dimos CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES 47th YEAR, NO. 9. TWO SECTIONS TWELVE PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1958 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Phone Fight Fund Swelled by $15.65 Mayor John Wilton, Treasurer, Accepts Check for $42.65 Thf phone fight fund has climbed to $15.65 since last Friday when a check for $42.65 was sent to Mayor John D. Wilson, Wilson, treasurer of the East Carolina Phone Fight Committee. Mayor Wilson wrote THE NEWS TIMES a letter acknowledging re ceipt of the money. He said, "Thank you very much for the cheek in the amount of $42 65. This is a great help in the fight against higher telephone rates. The phone committee deeply appreciates your moral and financial support." A letter accompanying the check, from the newspaper office, report ed that the fund came from read ers of THE NEWS-TIMES. The phone fight committee estimates that 20 cents per telephone in the Carolina Telephone and Telegraph area will finance fighting the re quested phone rate raise. Persons who have joined the fight, since the report in Tuesday's paper are the following (some names have been withheld upon request. Morehead City and RED: R. Willan, C. II. Freeman, Mr.i A. Daker Morris, Capt. and Mrs. Bill Styron, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Willis, Mrs. Agnew Guthrie, Mrs. Ervin Lupton. Beaufort and FFD: Mr. and Mrs. j Burl Dennis, Glen Harris, Mrs. i I>ouglas Arthur, Mrs. William War- j ren, and 2-3191. Atlantic: Wesley Goodwin. Newport: Mrs. Madeline Rivers, Mrs. Swindell Garner, Mrs. Ele ner Garner, Mrs. Mary Ann Hibbs. Mar shall berg: T. C. Davis. Davis: Sterling Dixon. Since the hearing before the util ities commission on the rate raise will not take place until April, money to finance the phone fight | w ill be accepted at THE NEWS- j TIMES offiee as long as readers j wish to send it in. March of Dimes Stands at $1,863 Wednesday's total in the county March of Dimes was $1,803.81, ac cording to Mrs. Clem Johnson, campaign treasurer. Recent receipts included $17.75 from Blue Crutch Day in New port, F1IA girls, Mrs. Ruby Sim mons. advisor, carried out the pro ? ject there. Thirty-eight dollars in a single contribution was received from /employees at the Carolina Tele phone and Telegraph office. Thus far, approximately $392 has been received from telethon pledges. The total pledged was about $600. Two hundred dollars is yet to come in. Persons who made pledges through the tv tele thon arc asked to mail their money in without delay. All schools that have not yet turned in their March of Dimes money are requested to close their drive today. If the money is not called for today, it will be picked up next week, unless the princi pals prefer to bring it to the sheriff's office, Beaufort. The room in each school which collects the most money receives a $5 cash prize. The March of Dimes was cli maxed with a Mothers March in Beaufort and Morehead City last night Results of the event will be announced Tuesday. And Now Where To? SHOUP boats Morehead City waterfront soothsayers report that Mel West, who made the famous attempt to reach Bermuda in an outboard motor boat, left Morehead City sometime early Thursday morning in the boat pictured bere. Because it was heavily loaded with gasoline, they believe he is out to make another long cross-ocean trip. Mel West, Morehcad City, who in October tried to reach Bermuda in a 15-foot 3 inch open outboard motorboat, may be on his way again today to try to set an out board motorboat record. Tied up at the dock by Capt. Bill's Waterfront Cafe this week was a 17-foot white boat, broad in the beam, with mahogany deck ing across the bow. It was riding low in the water, indicating it was heavily loaded. A Scott Atwater outboard motor was attached, to the stern. Visible in the stern were several drums, believed to contain gasoline. It was also reported that West had ano ther motor aboard the boat for use in case of emergency. On both sides of it were painted the yellow and red insignia of the Shell Oil Co., which supplied West with the gasoline, and the words Shoup Boats. In contrast to the first craft West took off in last October, this boat, dubbed the Empress of N. C. State (15 N.C. 400), has a canvas sheltered cabin. It also has an antenna that will enable radar screens to spot the craft. The antenna looks like fine wire mesh strung to metal frames. Mr. West, who was finally picked up by the Coast Guard when he ran out of fuel on the Bermuda trip, said several weeks ago that he expected to make another trip. But he declined to say when or give his destination. The daring voyager was in More head City Wednesday night. The pictures of the boat, which accom pany this story, were taken Tues day afternoon. Yesterday the boat was not at captain Bill's. Whether it was merely moved to another dock or whether West is in it and on his way somewhere, was not known at press time. Waterfront observers insist, how ever, that West is out again to prove that outboard motors can take a craft across the ocean. Today's the Last Day to List Taxes Today is the last day to list taxes! Persons who have not listed their real and personal property in their respective.townships will be charged a penalty of 10 per cent if they wait until tomorrow ?or any time thereafter?to list. Those who faij to list arc sub ject to a fine of $50 or 30 days in jail. Photo* by Bob Seymour This is the stem ot the 17-foot craft dubbed the Empress of N. C. State. Visible here are three gasoline cans. Three additional 55-gal ion drums are reported stoned away elsewhere in the boat. Unemployment Claims Surpass 1957 Figures Unemployment claims in ine county were up 66.8 per cent this month over January 1957. Mrs. Julia Tenney, manager of the em ployment security office in More head City, says that there was a total of 1.668 claims for unemploy ment insurance during the month ending Jan. 25. During the same period in 1957, there were 1,000 claims presented at the office. Initial claims ac counted for 423 of the total. There were 560 persons filing initial claims this year. Mrs. Ten ney says that many of them are fishermen who are filing claims against other states. A person can file a claim against anomer siaic mrougn me More head City office if he has made more money in that state than he did in North Carolina. Unemploy ment payments arc based on a person's former income. Ambulance Gets Emergency Calls Adair's ambulance made two emergency trips this week. The first was at 5 p.m. Tuesday. Tobc Clawson, Beaufort, had a reaction from a penicillin shot in a doctor's office and had to be rushed to the hospital. At 10:30 a.m. yesterday the am bulance was called to the Fish Meal plant at West Beaufort. It picked up Alvin Day, who had been buried under a pile of fish scrap. Day had been moving the scrap with a bulldozer when it caved in and covered him up. Another bull dozer freed him before he was smothered. He was treated for shock and a cut hand at the More head City Hospital. Draft Office to Close The county draft board office on the second floor of the courthouse annex, Beaufort, will be closed Monday through Saturday next week. The office will reopen at 8:30 a.m. Monday, Feb. 10. Tide Table Tides at the Beaufort Bar HIGH IX)W Friday, Jan. 31 4:30 a.m. 11 26 a m 5:09 p.m. 11:27 p.m Saturday, Feb. 1 5:37 a.m. 12:19 a m 6:05 p.m. Sunday, F'eb. 2 6.28 a.m. 12:19 a m 6:55 p.m. 1:03 p.m Monday, Feb. 3 7:16 a.m. 1:10 a.m 7:42 p.m. 1:50 p.m Tuesday, Feb. 4 1:02 a.m. 2:00 a.m. 8:29 p.m. 2:35 p.m. Health Board Acts in Favor Of Mosquito Control Program The county board of health, meet ing Wednesday afternoon at the health center, Beaufort, recom mended that the county board "take the proper steps to organize this county into a mosquito con trol district." According to law, however, the initial move to organize into a mos quito control district must come from the people. Ten per cent of the voters "within the proposed district" (which in this case would be Carteret County) must present a petition to the county board. Krom that point on, the county board ran act. The law was explained to the health board by Sidney If. Usry, engineer with the State Board of Health, and D. F. Ashton, entomol ogist with the State Board of Health The law provides that a tax up to 35 rents per hundred dollars of valuation can be levied to finance a mosquito control program. Mr. Usry warned that no pro gram can guarantee "no mosqui toes". He added that any control procedure requires continuous work yesr after year. In the future, he predicted that mosquito control districts would receive priority for stale funds. Board members asked the vis itors questions. George W. Dill: How can you control mosquitoes in that marsh between Atlantic and Cedar Is land? Mr. llsry: Only about 5 per cent of that is breeding area. But that section up against Cedar Island is almost all breeding area. Mr. Ashtoo: Places where daily tides ebb and flow arc not breed ing areas. Breeding areas are poekets of brackish water, usually inland, where storm tides or rain water arc held in and can't flow out. Mayor Clifford Lewis: llow about the open grounds? Mr. Usry: That's probably breed ing area in some places. The storms bavc saturated the ground with salt. Then when frosh water hits the ground it makes the low places brackish enough so that the mosquito eggs hatch. Mr. Ashton: By draining, we don't mean making dry land, but connecting pockets of water so that we can get fluctuation of the tides to move the water out. Mayer Lewis: Don't we have other kinds of mosquitoes besides the salt marsh mosquito? Mr; LTsry: Yea, but they don't move a quarter of a mile from where they're hatched. When the wind blows, they stay down. R. M. Williams (county agent): Is there a way to sterilize the mos quito so that it can't reproduce? Mr. Ashton: That is possible on some isolated islands. But mos quito eggs laid in the fall can hatch this spring or next fall. Not all will hatch, but some. The eggs can last indefinitely. Moses Howard (chairman of the health board): Well, figuring a tax of 10 cents per $100 valuation would give us $38,000 a year. That won't start much of a program. Mr. Usry: It's a start ? and you can't do all this at once. You could get equipment and start digging the necessary drainage canals. You'll have to continue with your program to spray the adult mos quito, of course, too. Mr. Howard: What can we ex pect from the state this coming year? Mr. Usry: With matching funds and a new allocation basis, 1 be See HEALTH, Page 2 Coast Guardsman, Charged With Seduction, Goes Berserk Beaufort Chamber Opposes Proposed Telephone Hike The Beaufort Chamber of Com-< merce went on record Tuesday night as opposing the Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Com pany's request for higher rates Directors met at the chamber of fice on Front Street. Director Norwood Young made a motion that the chamber send a letter to the State Utilities Com mission stating the chamber's po sition. David Jones and Vic Bcllamah were appointed to see all the mer I chants and businessmen in town and ask them to write letters to the commission. The chamber also voiced disgust with the Beaufort water supply. An official chamber letter will go to the water company asking for re lief from bad smelling and dis colored water. Chamber president Ronald Earl Mason proposed a boat show, with manufacturers paying for space for exhibits. The public would be invited on a free basis. The boat show was proposed to make up a deficit in the chamber budget. The organization lost $338.02 on its Christmas promotion program. Chairman William Roy Hamilton reported that $533.50 worth of tickets were sold this year compared to $850 last year. Mr. Mason, Dr. David Farrior and Gerald Hill were appointed to collect unpaid pledges. Chamber members owe $866 25 in unpaid dues. Mr. Hill was appointed chair man of the committee. Directors present were David Jones, Mr. Hill, Mr. Young, Hal sey Paul, Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Ma son, Mr. Bcllamah, Dr. Farrior, Jim Wheatley and secretary Mrs. Pat Russell. .Committee Lists Nine Candidates For Club Offices The nominations committee of the Newport Rotary Club disclosed its selections at the Rotary Club meeting Monday night at the PTA Center. The following candidates were nominated: Junius T. Creech for president, Ecigar B. Comer for vice-president, Robert K. Montague for secretary, Nathan H. Garner for treasurer and Walter D. Rob erts for sergcant-at-arms. The following were nominated for the board of directors: Roy T. Garner, club service, John B. Tom linson, vocational service, Moses C. Howard, community service, and Harry B. Lockey, national ser vice. The club will accept nominations from the floor and vote at a later meeting. The new officers will be installed at the first meeting in July. Program chairman Montague had W. W. Thomas, district social security manager, as his guest speaker. Mr. Thomas discussed the benefits of social security. Visitors and guests included W. C. Carlton, Kenneth Wagner, Ger ald Mitchell, H. L. Joslyn, J. David Murray and Dr. Darden Eure, all of Morehead City, student visitor Terry Garner, and Garland Loc key of Jackson, Miss., brother of president C. H. Lockey. Sylvester Bell Fails to Pay Costs, Gets Jail Term : Sylvester Bell got the only jail j sentence handed down in More head City recorder's court Monday. Judge Herbert Phillips gave him ! 30 days for failing to pay costs of ' judgment against him last October. Bernard Cooper Willis was in court on three charges. One case i was dismissed after he show ed I that he had paid all back fines i | and court costs. I He was fined $25 and costs on ; a second charge, driving without a license. A third case involved I support payments. His wife in Lee | County, Ala . had charged that he I was not making payments for their i children. j The matter was heard and Judge ' Phillips ordered Willis to pay $15 a week to the clerk of court for the benefit of the children. Couple in Court Mr. and Mrs. George F. U'wis were in court and both pled guilty to charges of fighting. Lewis was I taxed costs for assaulting his wife. Mrs. Lewis was found not guilty of hitting her husband and dis turbing the peace, j Another family squabble ended ! up in court. Ruth Long had to pay ! court costs after the judge ruled I she was maliciously prosecuting her husband. Harrison Long She I had charged that he attacked her I with a knife. : Charges against Roy David Smith were dismissed. He had been accused of assault. > Fined MO and CosU ^ Klliott Smith was fined $50 and ! costs for careless and reckless 'driving. Milton D. Brinson was I fined $25 and costs for speeding ! and running a stop sign. Charles Dunn was taxed court 'costs for public drunkenness. Cases | were continued against the follow ing Ira I) Settle, James H. Yan ]cey. Russell E. Willis, Sherry Potts Smith and Donald J. Carson. JC Membership Drive Begins The Morchcad City Jaycccs have gone all out to get new members and get inaetive members baek on the regular rolls. At their meet ing Monday night at the Hotel Fort Macon the Jaycees divided into red and white teams for a contest to sec which could get the most members. I)r. Russell Outlaw, chairman of the DSA committee, reported that he is still looking for a dance hand lo play for their banquet at the Morchcad Biltmore Hotel next Sat urday night. I'resident Dr. It. O. Barnum an nounced the third quarterly board meeting at Kinston which was the next day. Twelve Jaycccs attend ed They were Dr. Barnum, L. G. Dunn. Cecil Adams, Dr. Outlaw, Jerry Willis, Charles Willis, Paul Cordova, Bob McLean, John Davis, P. H. Geer Jr., Luther Lewis and Donald Davis. Farmers Invited to Place Orders for Farm Workers Douglas Amcrson of the farm labor office, Beaufort, reminds farmers that they can place their orders with him for farm labor on the following days: Tuesdays: 10 a.m..to noon at Roy T. (Garner's. Newport; 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the labor office on High way 70 across from Beaufort School. Wednesday: 10 a.m. to noon at the Kmployment Security office. Jacksonville; 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., at Fred Barbec s Smith-Douglas ware house. Riehlands. Mr. Amerson says he has appli cations from several farm workers wanting work on a 50-50 or weekly basis. Farmers who would like to rent to a farm family should con tact Mr. Amerson. Due to extensive rains, many farmers have been late getting soy beans harvested and in getting their cabbage set. But at present, most farmers are getting their cabbage set and plan to get the soybeans later, Mr. Amcrson com mented. lie adds Mat 16 laoorers irom Lumbcrton arc now working in the county; 11 arrived Monday. Twelve to 15 more are ready to come as soon as farmers get their land ready for setting cabbage. Farmers who are setting cab bage now are using both the im ported labor and workers from the North River and Harlowe sections. As for tobacco plant beds, some have been sowed in Onslow, but very few in Carteret, Mr. Amer son concluded. Eleanor Johnson Given Year in Prison Yesterday Klranor Johnson, charged with cutting her alster, Marie Murrell, with a butcher knife, waa given a year in woman's prison In county court yesterday. The Johnson woman has an ex tensive record of law violations and has served time before. The victim and Sheriff Hugh Salter testified for tbc state. John W. Ford, a Coast Guardsman stationed at Ocra coke, will be tried in this county on a charge of seduction after he is released from a hospital where he is receiving treatment for drinking iodine Monday night. Ford was arrested by Sheriff Hugh Salter on a charge of seducing Mrs. Bertha Gaskill, u Morehead City divorcee. The sheriff said that Ford was i jailed and later released on bond. Ford returned to the Ocracoke station and there, according to re ports available at press time yes terday, armed himself Monday night with weapons and ammuni tion stored at the station, cut loose | the Coast Guard craft based there and drank a bottle of iodine. Upon being captured, Ford was flown to the Elizabeth City Coast Guard Station and was reported yesterday to be in a hospital at Portsmouth, Va. John Tilling of the Coast Guard public information office, Norfolk, said yesterday that the Coast Guard is making an investigation. Ford's case was continued in J county court yesterday. Also continued for two weeks was j the case against Tommy llutche- j son, another Coast Guardsman, ! who was charged Jan. 18 with driv- | ing drunk, careless and reckless j driving, and numerous other! counts. Judge Lambert Morris reduced | Ilutcheson's bond to $500. Hutche- I son has been in jail since Jan. 18 under $3,000 bond. The bond was j reduced at request of the Coast Guardsman's attorney, Harvey Hamilton, who also requested that the trial be deferred for two weeks. Hutcbeson, stationed aboard the Chilula. looks like a small-size edi tion of the movie star, Robert Mitchum. Of slight build, with rounded shoulders, he also sports a hair-do that most girls would be pleased to wear. It is resplendent with waves, curving from the front to the back in the style sported by male rock n rollers. Outfit Honors M. C. McKeon Cherry Point (AP)?The court martialed leader of the 1956 Ma rine "death march" at Parris Is land, S. C., has been named Jan uary's "Marine of the Month by the All Weather Fighter Squadron 114 at this Marine air station. The squadron chose Pfc. Mat thew C. McKeon for the honor. He has been a member of the squad ron since last November. McKeon, after his general court martial conviction for negligent homicide in the drowning of six recruits, vowed that he would stay in the Corps and recapture his rec ord as "a good Marine." McKeon, a staff sergeant at the time of the April 8. 1956. "death march," testified in his celebrated court martial that he marched Re cruit Platoon 71 into a tidal stream "to teach them discipline." The skylarking platoon panicked and six drowned. The incident caused a sweeping reorganisation of Marine recruit training methods. Shriners Plan Benefit Dance The county Shriners will spon sor a valentine dance at the More head Bilt more Hotel Thursday night, Feb. 13. Buddy Bair and his orchestra will play dance music from 8 to midnight. Donations of $5 per couple will be accepted for the crippled chil dren's hospital sponsored by the Shrine Club. Advance tickets can be bought from Theodore Phillips. Marshall Ayscue, Capt. Bill Ballou, Capt. Ottis Purifoy, Tommy Russell, Cicero Hardison, Gerald Mitchell, Hugh Salter, Robert Safrit and Dan Sadler. Riggs Case Slated For Trial Yesterday Docketed for trial in county court yesterday were Oliver J. Riggs and Cleveland W. Riggs. The two were charged with steal ing tractor rollers, a section of a harrow and other machinery from the real estate section being de veloped by William Mcl-can just cast of Swansboro on Highway 24. The Riggs were picked up Friday night. Jan. 17, on Highway 24 by Sheriff Hugh Salter and Constable Ralph Paul. They were driving a truck loaded with junk. The truck had no tag. Value of the McLean property was estimated at (200- The Riggs stole the machinery for rc-sale to a junk dealer, the sheriff said. Chamber Officer Pledges Help On Fall Cruise J. A. DuBois, manager of the Morehead City chamber of com merce, reported yesterday that he has written W. J. Smith, Chapel Hill, who is making plans for a passenger cruise from Morehead City. The chamber manager assured Mr. Smith that hotels, motels and restaurants in the Morehead City area will be ready to serve all persons coming to Morehead City next fall to go on the Caribbean cruise aboard the Arosa Sky. Mr. Smith is affiliated with the North Carolina Pharmaceutical As sociation, which is booking its membership for the cruise. Mr. DuBois also offered the chamber's help in contacting the association's members and inform ing them of the accommodations here and the improved facilities for taking care of cruise members. The Arosa Sky is sailing this fall from Wilmington. It is a Swiss owned and operated luxury liner. The capacity is a thousand pas sengers, but the passengers for the cruise from Morehead City will be limited to 500. The cruise will last 11 days. The Arosa Sky will stop at several ports in the Caribbean. At present, Mr. Smith says 112 have indicated interest in making the trip. Firemen Make $44.50 on Pies The Marshallberg Fire Depart ment made $44.50 on its recent pic sale at the community building. The pies were baked and donated by women of the Marshallberg area. They sold for a dollar each or by the slice. Barber shop songs were sung by Walker George, tenor; Ralph Ncal, second tenor; Norwood Lew is, baritone; Willard Piner, second bass, and Odcl Guthrie, low bass. Roy Willis played the baritone ukelele. The party was climaxed at 9 o'clock with a few clog and tap dances. The final dance was done Dn "all four" when Odcl Guthrie lid the rabbit dance. Ikic Guthrie and Kay Willis, chairman of the fire department finance committee, express their appreciation to all who donated pies, bought pies, ate pies, and to the women who supervised the party and did the serving. At the Friday night meeting of the fire department, Lester Mur phy, assistant chief, presided in the absence of Chief Ikie Guthrie. Capt. Cicero (Wurnp) Lewis and Lt. Fernie Willis reported the fire truck and equipment in good shape. Dbtaining new equipment for the department was discussed. 40 Bus Drivers Attend Luncheon Forty school bus drivers were the guests of the County Board of Education at a barbecue lunch at noon Wednesday at the Morehead City Recreation building. Following lunch, talks were made by Carl II. Walker and George Maddrcy, both of Raleigh. Mr. Walker accountant with the De partment of Public Instruction, Rave facts and figures on school bus operation. Mr. Maddrcy, safety specialist with the State Board of Education, spoke on safe driving factors. He commented that statistics show teen age drivers have better driv ing records than adults. Moses Howard, chairman of the county board of commissioners, and Robert Safrit, chairman of the county board of education, ex pressed their appreciation to the bus drivers for the fine work they are doing In addition to the drivers, 18 guests were present. Route Number < Have lock route 6, which covers the Bachelor and Harlowe areas, has been changed to Havclock route 1.