:h= CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES 49th YEAR, NO. 60. KIGHT PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROUNA TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1960 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Jets Threaten Private Plane; Earl Taylor to Leave Airport Unless Jet aircraft from Cherry* Point stay above 1,500 feet over the Beaufort-Morehead City airport, local flyers predict another jet civilian crash such as that which took the life of Jesse Taylor, young Beaufort pilot, last August. Yesterday at 12:38 p.m. a Piper PA 12 coming in for a landing at Beaufort-Morehead airport at 500 1 feet was passed at the same alti tude by four jets apparently head- 1 ed out to sea. The pi|ot, who was carrying two . passengers on a charter trip from New Bern to Ocracoke, was thor oughly shaken and as soon as he landed reported the incident to j Cherry Point control tower. The pilot, who asked that his name not be used, said that prior to making the trip he had received clearance from New Bern radio through Cherry Point control tower to fly at 1,000 feet and under. He proceeded from New Bern to Maysville to Bogue and was flying eastward along the beach at 700 'feet. When the weather got bad, he decided to land at Beaufort Morehead airport and was going into the airport at 500 feet when the jets passed him. He was lined up to make his dcsccnt on the run way. Witnesses on the ground also verified the incident. Earl Tay lor, manager of the Airport Serv ice station, says jets are not to fly below 1,500 feet. Present re strictions in this area prohibit ci vilian planes from flying above '1,000. Mr. Taylor said that yesterday's incident is not a rare occurrence. On July 15 at 4:35 p.m. a jet went under a Cessna 195 on its third ap proach from set-down at 800 feet. The jet went under the Cessna from a 45 degree angle from the rear. The civilian pilot who reported j yesterday's incident said the jets that passed him later appeared to be going into a slow climb. "They had no business being at that alti tude, especially when I had clear ance for this area under 1,000 feet," he remarked. In the jet-civilian crash which claimed the life of Jesse Taylor Aug. 24, 1959, it was contended that the jet was approaching Cher ry Point at 1,500 feet. Local pilots claim that it is extremely doubt ful that Taylor's craft was as high as that. The findings, as the result of an investigation of that crash, have not yet been issued. Two Men Jailed Following Fight * George McHone, Asheville, and Robert Alliston, Fayetteville, were in the county jail yesterday, charg ed with fighting in front of Lum mic's Drive-In, west of Morehead City. Deputies George Smith and C. H. Davis were called to the drive-in at noon Saturday. Deputy Smith said McHone hit Alliston on thd head with a pipe. Alliston was con fined to the Morehead City hos pital until yesterday morning. McHone, in addition to being ' charged with fighting, is also charged with using a deadly wea pon, and public drunkenness. Four Injured In Causeway Crash Sunday Four persons were admitted to the Morehead City hospital after a crash at 9:45 p.m. Sunday on the Beaufort-Morehcad City causeway. A car driven by Stell Stephens, Newport Negro, went out of con trol, hit three approaching cars, snapped off a utility pole and crashed into the side of a garage. Injured were Mrs. Patricia T. Polly, 114 Orange St., Beaufort; Stephens, Rose Ann Stephens and Mary Murphy, all of Newport. Patrolman W. J. Smith Jr., who investigated, said Victoria and Clinton Sinclair, who were in the Stephens car, were charged with public drunkenness. According to the patrolman. Stephens was driv ing a 1953 Dodge toward Morehead City. He swerved over to the left side of the highway and hit three cars headed toward Beaufort. Driving one of them, a 1958 Dodge, was Reuben George, Marshallberg. Damage to this car was estimated at $50. Driving the second car hit, a I960 Chevrolet, was Kenneth F. Frady, Spartanburg, S. C. Dam age to that car was estimated at $600. Mrs. Polly was driving the third car, a 1960 Rambler. Dam age to that car was estimated at $800. Charges against Stephens arc pending. Station Entered, Truck Stolen Morehead City police were on the lookout yesterday for a yellow 1959 International pickup truck stolen Saturday night from the Jefferson hotel parking lot. Theft of the truck is believed linked with a robbery at Gant's service station at 4th and Arendell streets. Chief Herbert Griffin said ciga rettes and cigars were taken from the station. Entry was gained by breaking a window in the ladies' rest room. The burglar then attempted to start a car parked next door, own ed by Earl Holt. An attempt was made to turn the switch with a knife. Failing in that, the burglar, or burglars, apparently went to the hotel parking lot nearby and took the pickup. There were no keys in the switch. The chief said the truck was probably started by rig ging the wiring system. The truck was owned by the Cummins Diesel firm whose em ployee, Grady Lowe, is staying at the Jefferson while doing work at Atlantic. He missed the truck Sun day morning. Investigating the thefts are pa trolmen E. D. O'Neal Jr. and J. V. Giaimo. ? Etrl Taylor, manager of the Air port Service center at the Beau fort Morehead City airport, an nounced yesterday that he is going | to give up as of Aug. 1 everything connected with the airport. At present Mr. Taylor is servic ing planes with gas and has an ar rangement with the airport com mission to look after the field. Mr. Taylor said he will continue to op erate the store at the airport if he can't rent or sell it. lie has been advised by his doc tor to give up some of his business i interests. "I've been hanging on, hoping the airport commission i could get someone to handle it," he said yesterday, "but I can't do it any longer." Mr. Taylor has been at the air port since June 26, 1944. Since May ; 1954 when he opened the Airport I Service center, the center has been | open 15 hours a day, seven days a week, even on Christmas. At one time there was a GI school at the airport with six in structors and 22 planes. Mr. Tay lor estimates that 500 persons have ! learned to fly there. "This area needs this airport," I Mr. Taylor said. "It's as important as the waterfront, and I want to see it go, but I just can't do it." lie commented that planes come in and may not spend a cent at the airport, but the people in them j spend money in the county. He I feels that the towns in Carteret and the county itself should hire some 1 one to provide the service at the airport that pilots need. I He added that unless different arrangements are made on the fly ing restrictions now in effect, due to the proximity of Cherry Point, the airport may as well be chopped up and sold off in building lots. He said the restrictions on civil ian planes are not practical and added that military aircraft fre quently are not observing the re strictions placed on them, making cviilian flying in this area extreme ly hazardous. Morehead Youth Wins L Tide Table Tidei it Ike Beaufort Bar 1I1GH LOW | Tuesday, July 26 10:04 a.m. 4:00 a.m. 9:58 p.m. 4:01p.m. I Wednesday, July 27 10:41a.m. 4:29 a.m. I 10:32 p.m. 4:31p.m. | Thursday, July 28 11:19 a.m. 4:57 a.m. 11:13 p.m. 5:04 p.m. | Friday, July 21 11:59 a.m. 5:27 a.m. I 5:46 p.m. I ' Bobby Barts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Barts, Bogue Sound road, Morehcad City, won first place in the state in the junior division of the 1960 Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild contest in car design. Bobby, 14, won $150 in cash, llis model is shown in the lower part of the above picture. The upper part shows the model de signed by William Wisely, Laur inburg, senior winner of the South Carolina-North Carolina Georgia region. In addition to the cash priie, Bobby will receive a trophy which will be placed in hi* school. Camp Glenn. Boys Arrested For Petty Thefts In Beaufort Two boys, one 12 and one 14, have been apprehended by the sheriff's department for breaking into G. T. Spivey's store, Beaufort, Friday night. They have also con fessed to numerous other petty thefts in and around Beaufort dur ing the past three months. The older boy, now living in Beaufort, originally lived in More head City, according to sheriff Hugh Salter, and the other young ster is originally from Ocracoke. The sheriff said that several other boys are being questioned in con nection with the thefts. Taken from the Spivey cash reg ister was $1.50 in pennies. The boys arc the ones who broke into the Museum of the Sea prior to its opening, the sheriff said. Other break-ins to which they con fessed : j Mack's beer place, American Le gion building and the tin building nearby (took keys out of cars in the tin building and later returned them), Carl Gaskill warehouses, drinks from Dora Dinette, candy and peanuts from Guthrie-Jones, cakes from fishing boats. i Sling shots from the dime store, drinks from the Inlet Inn, Carteret Quick Freeze, Shell station, Math Owens, Toot 'n Tell It (entered twice), $2.85 from Lewis Motors, money out of Beaufort's dime me ters. Stapler from Bell's drug store, and money from the whale pot in front of Museum of the Sea. The boys also entered Russell Man son's store and The Spot. The sheriff said arrest of the older boy came as the result of I playing hunch. When confronted | with evidence that he had entered i Spivey's, he readily listed the oth I er break-ins. The Jcppesen Maersk, Danish vessel, will arrive at Morehead Friday. After loading tobacco, she will leave for the Far East. County Ranks 53 rd in Per Capita Personal Income j Carteret county ranks 53rd"< among North Carolina's 100 coun ties in per capita personal income, according to figures released this month by the Department of Tax i Research, Raleigh. Per capita income in Carteret is $1,106. This is based on 1958 fig ures and an estimated population in that year of 26,547. H. C. Stans bury. director of the tax research department, said 1958 is the latest year for which sufficient data was available to reach valid conclu sions. Total personal income for the county is $29,359,000 annually. The ten top counties of the state, in per capita income, are the follow ing (in order): Mecklenburg, For syth, Guilford, New Hanover, Dur ham, Wake, Onslow, Cumberland, Alamance and Catawba. Of neighboring counties. Craven ranks 19th, Jones 74th, and Pam lico 94th. The five counties lowest in per capita income arc Brunswick, Tyr rell, Clay, Hyde and Avery. Clay and Avery are in the extreme western part of the state and the other three in eastern Carolina. Two Cars Collide Friday At Beaufort Intersection A Ford driven by William C. Spruill, route 1 New Bern, ran into the rear of a Renault driven by Donnie Dudley, Beaufort, at 12:15 p.m. Friday. The accident hap pened at Cedar and Live Oak streets, Beaufort. Patrolman Otis Willis investigat ed. He said that Dudley had stop ped at the stop sign on Cedar street. Damage to the Renault. was estimated at $35. There was no damage to the Ford. Spruill was charged with follow ing too close, causing an accident. Beach Firemen Get Three Calls Atlantic Beach fire department answered three calls in less than 10 hours Monday. At 12:30 a.m. the firemen put out a brush fire between Club Colony and the Dunes club. The fire is believed to have started from a cigarette tossed from a car. At 3 a.m. Monday, Atlantic Beach and Morchcad City firemen answered a call to the Emerald Isle motel where a bed had caught afire. The room where the fire occurred was badly damaged. Beach fire chief William Barts said the blaze probably started as the result of someone smoking in bed. Damage was estimated at a thousand dollars. Morehcad firemen also assisted beach firemen at 8 o'clock yester day morning at Money Island where the cottage of Fitzgerald Wallace, Kinston, caught fire. The occupant had left the house about 35 minutes before the fire broke out, bound for Kinston. Fire men said the oven had been left on. The kitchen was termed a total loss and the rest of the cot tage was damaged by smoke. Driver Dies Virgil L. Bailey, USCG, Jackson ville, Fla., who was seriously in jured last Tuesday morning when his convertible turned over on high way 24, died seven hours later in the hospital at Camp Lejcune. Pa trolman J. W. Sykes. who investi gated the accident, said he verified late Thursday afternoon rumors to the effect that Bailey's injuries were fatal. Eric Rodgers Succeeds D. G. Bell As Fisheries Committee Chairman D. G. Bell, Morehead City, who has been succeeded by Eric Rodg ers, Scotland Neck, as chairman of the state commercial fisheries committee, terms Mr. Rodgcrs "the best qualified man in the state for the job." Mr. Bell, who asked Governor Hodges to name his successor as soon as possible after the May 28 primary. ? a i d Mr. Rogers is familiar with fishing prob lems the entire length of the North Carolina coast. Mr. Rodgers, publisher of the Eric Rodger* i Scotland Neck Commonwealth, Ju? served six and a naif years on tnr' Board of Conservation and De velopment, was one time assistant director of the C&D department and has served as chairman of the commercial fisheries a d v i ? o r y board. He was instrumental in com pletely recodifying the commercial fisheries regulations several years ago. While chairman of the commer cial fisheries commiUcc, Mr. Bell effected a compromise in a rock and herring controversy in the Chowan river. Prior to accepting the chairmanship of the commit tee, he served three terms aa Car teret's representative in the legis lature. Mr. Radgera' tern of office will expire ia IMS. Chamber of Commerce News Letter Goes Out Received this week by Morchcad City chambcr of commcrcc mem bers was the July new? letter. The news letter congratulated Beaufort on its 251st anniversary celebration and covered develop ment reports on chambcr projects: tourists and conventions, indus trial development, All-Seashore highway, improved waterways and the question of location of the new Morchcad City bridge. Schools in Carteret county will open. Tuesday, Aug. 30. Onflow Mbool* art U> open earlier. 1 State Fisheries Museum Will Reopen at 10 Today NeWi-TImn Photo* by McComb Harry T. Davis, curator of the state museum, Raleigh, arranges models on the wall. Ernest Barrett, Beaufort, To Serve 90 Days in Jail Crazy Cat W. J. Mishael, Beaufort, owns this cabbit, a cross between a cat and rabbit. Note its hind leg ? formed exactly like a rabbit's. Merchants Plan Clearance Sale Retail merchants of Beaufort and Morehead City agreed Friday night on plans for a Twin City Summer Clearance sale. Mem bers of the Beaufort Merchants as sociation and the Morehead City chamber of commerce arc eligible to participate. Attending the meeting were Os car Allred, Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis Herring, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Willis, Gilbert Potter, E. W. Downum. James Potter, Garland Scruggs, Grayden Paul, Earl Lewis, L. E. Lewis, Jim Whcatley, Clarcncc Stamper. John Steed, V. D. Bcasley, Roy Thompson, Leslie Moore, Mrs. Glen Harris. Mrs. Ben Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Bill McDonald and J. A. DuBois. The group met at Captain Bill's restaurant, Morehead City. * Ernest Barrett, Beaufort, has1 been sent to prison for 90 days for failure to comply with a court or der. Two defendants, Shelton Rogers and Jessie Hughes, each were sen- j tenecd to six months in jail in | county court last week for failure to comply with former court or ders. Judge Lambert Morris sus pended the jail term for each on payment of all fines and costs Bill Hart, charged with aiding and abetting in an affray was also sentenced to six months in jail and roadwork. His sentence was suspended on payment of $25 and court costs. i Other defendants, their charges and the findings of the court: Wade Golden? Possession of non , taxpaid whiskey, 60 days in jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs. Annette and Ernest Barrett Possession of non taxpaid whiskey. The state did not prosecute Annette and for Ernest, judgment was sus- j See COURT. Page 2 3i=v jmtii In the rrptiles exhibit is this life - like eastern diamond ? back rattler which at one time lived in the vicinity of llavelock. Ilitrh lliker Identified The hitch hiker who was struck by a hit-and-run car July 16, in front of El's Drive-In, Morehead City, was identified yesterday as Edgar Lee Stanfield. Cherry Point. Deputy George Smith, who investi gated, said Stanfield was confined to the hospital for a day with a back injury. Officers are still look ing for the car, a red and white Chevrolet, about a 1955 model. Opening today at 10 a.m. is the Hampton fisheries museum. More head City. Located in the com mercial fisheries building at Camp Glenn, the museum displays mod els of marine animals, amphibians, reptiles, birds, collections of sea shells and other exhibits having to do with marine life. Although the museum was dedi cated and opened July 15, 1951, il closed after about a year due to lack of funds to maintain it and to pay someone to keep it open. Through efforts of the Morehead City chamber of commerce and general assemblyman D. G. Bell, the legislature of 1959 appropriat ed funds to reopen it and keep a curator at the museum on a part time basis. Harry T. Davis, curator of the state museum, Raleigh, says pres ent plans call for keeping the mu seum open from March 1 through October Hours are 10 to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays. The museum will be closed Monday. Mr. Davis has been working on plans for reopening the museum since last July. Rest rooms are being installed and even though the museum will not be complete by today, it's going to open, Mr. Davis says. He remarked that any museum that is complete is dead, inferring that a useful museum is one that is constantly being improved and added to. William Palmer, affiliated with the state museum at Raleigh, will act as curator. Designing exhibits is Jay Johnson, who is with the state museum, as well as Roger Rageot, exhibits designer with the i Norfolk museum, who is helping out here while on vacation. The museum is located on the first floor of the commercial fish eries building and is entered from the main west entrance. After entering, the visitor turns to the left where lettering introduces him to "The Sea Around Us ? Cradle of Life." A chart shows how life has evolv ed from the sea. Fish models arc mounted on the walls or suspended from the ceiling. Most have been given to North Carolina by the federal government. They were made on Fivers Island during the 1930's under a Works Progress Ad ministration program. The project was fostered by Dr. H. F. Prytherch and the models were on display there for many years. When the Fish and Wildlife peo ple needed exhibit space for offices and other research work, the fish models were put away and later turned over to the state of North Carolina, with the proviso that the state display them properly and take care of them. When the Hampton museum didn't work out as hoped, the fed See MUSEUM, Page 2 County Awaits Information on Pupils Who Will Leave Schools in Onslow H. L. Joslyn. county superin tendent of schools, said yesterday that Swansboro school principal, Paul Tyndall, estimated it would take about a week to compile for Carteret information on what chil dren from Carteret are attending Onslow schools and what grades they will be in when school opens in about a month. Carteret school officials have agreed to school Carteret children t now attending Onslow schools. The | decision followed protests from | Onslow officials who said that they wanted to be paid for educating the children. A total of 325 children who live in the western part of Carteret now attend Onslow schools, 19 go to White Oak school and 307 to Swans boro school. Citizens in the western part of the county have organized a com mittee to handle their problem. Head of the committee is Ben M. Licko. Committee members are Woodrow Bright, the Rev. D. E. Hill, Leland Crumplcr and J. O. Weeks. Tale of Woe Photo by Reginald LewU "Wkat da they take me for, a ichnook? That *aa no catnip lea la THAT bottle!" The committee has announced plans to retain Jesse Jones, Kin ston attorney to represent them. A meeting was scheduled for Friday at Swansboro school. The commit tee asked Carteret school officials to attend, but none was present. Mr. Joslyn said the Licko com mittee also conferred with him Wednesday. He added that there was no information Carteret offi cials could have given at a Fri day meeting. The schooling of children from one county in schools across the county line is not unusual. Car teret accommodates in its school system approximately 250 children from Craven and Jones county. By the same token that Onslow is ask ing remuneration from Carteret, Carteret could demand that Craven and Jones counties pay for chil dren in Carteret. Such a practice would lead to many complications throughout the state. Mr. Joslyn said that par ents who want their children to attend school in a district other than their home district assume the financial burden themselves by paying tuition. The situation with the Onslow folks stacks up like this: 1. Onslow wants Carteret coun ty to pay for Carteret children at tending school there. 2. Carteret cannot afford to pay the amount requested, so it has agreed to accommodate the chil dren in Carteret schools. 3. Folks in west Carteret whose children attend Onslow schools don't want to send their children to Carteret schools, but neither, apparently, do they want to pay tuition for sending them to Onslow schools. Mr. Joslyn lays that Onslow county has benefited from Car teret's pupils attending school there, since federal payments for those children have gone to On slow, sot CarUrat.