ALL WHO READ READ THE NEWS-TIMES » CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES s 51st YEAR, NO. 72 TWO SECTIONS—SIXTEEN PAGES CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES, MOKEHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT. N. C. PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1962 Fisheries Committee Will Meet Today at Morehead City County to Borrow Money To Build School at Bogue South River Oyster Bed Issue Will be Heard Tar Sprayer Hit; Driver Of Car Injured Ellis B. Salter, route 4 New ., Bern, suffered a serious leg injury, cuts and bruises at 11:40 a.m. Tuesday when the 1956 DeSoto he was driving ran into the side of a tar-spraying machine on highway 101. According to state trooper W. E. Pickard, who investigated, Salter was going toward Beaufort when , the road machine came out of the Laurel road. The entire front of Salter’s car, up to the windshield, went under the machine, between the rear and front wheels. The car was demolished. Salter was taken to Morehcad City hos pital in the Adair ambulance. John ny Rich, Magnolia, who was rid ing the rear of the road machine, got a cut on his eye. The machine was being driven by Dempsey Ains worth, New Bern, and was owned by Nello Teer, contractor. Its dam age was estimated at $250. Trooper Pickard said there are y conflicting reports as to whether a flagman was on highway 101, flagging down traffic. Charges arc pending. Development In Fisheries Proposed Here County commissioners have ap proved Carteret’s participation in federal technical assistance pro ject centering on fisheries. Appro val vyas given on the basis of an explanation of the program, made by state fisheries commissioner 4 C. G. Holland, at the board meeting Tuesday morning. ‘ Commissioner Skinner Chalk cast a dissenting vote. Mr. Holland said that the pro gram is part of the Area Rede volopment administration’s ‘ over all economic development pro gram” to help counties in ‘‘de pressed areas” or where there is chronic unemployment. He added that the county planning commis sion’s cooperation in the program will be requested. The commissioner said that in addition to assistance in develop ment of fisheries products, the program would include work by a fisheries research vessel. He said the cost is estimated at $116,000, with this area putting up 10 per cent as a token of interest in the project. When asked where the local mon ey would come from, Mr. Holland , isaid that the fishing industry it *sclf would probably put up the money. He said several of the Car teret fishing industry leaders are quite interested in the program. G. B. Talbot, director of the com mercial fisheries laboratory, Piv ers Island, said Wednesday that the bureau has been asked to sub mit a plan on how this county .could be benefited by economic development in fisheries. A meeting to discuss the pro gram further has been set for 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 3, in the state commercial fisheries office, Morehcad City. When Mr. Holland was finished with his explanation, Mr. Chalk moved that the proposal be “ac cepted for further study.” Mr. Holland said that he didn’t expect any cooperation from Mr. Chalk. The commissioner remark ed that he couldn’t vote on any plan that he hadn’t seen. Mr. Hol land handed him a mimeographed outline and commented that he didn’t expect him to vote in favor of it even after he’d read it. Mr- Chalk didn’t. < Luther Hamilton Plans To Attend Conference Luther Hamilton, Morehead City, candidate for re-election to the state senate, plans to attend today at Raleigh a Democratic cam paign conference for candidates. The conference will be held in the Hall of the Hduse from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Luncheon will be served at the executive mansion. ” The commercial fisheries committee of the department of conservation and develop ment will meet at Camp Glenn today and tomorrow to consider the private oys ter bed situation in this coun ty and proposed changes in regulations affecting com mercial fishing activities in various waters of the state. The problem facing the commit tee is whether to permit private oyster beds in South river. Tra ditionally, private oyster beds have never been permitted in South river because local interest contend the waters should remain open to any who want to work them. However, law gives the state authority to grant private oyster beds under certain conditions, ac cording to Eric Rodgers, chairman of the fisheries committee. A number of petitions requesting private oyster beds in South ri ver have been received, Mr. Ro Eric Rodgers . . . will preside dgers says, and a number of pro tests have been registered. Both sides will be represented at the opening meeting this morning at 10 o’clock at the commercial fisheries office. Attorneys will pre sent the cases. The hearing will continue until the afternoon and if necessary, members of the committee will go to the South river area for a per sonal inspection, the chairman re ports. The committee will also stu dy a number of changes in regula tions which have been proposed for various commercial fishing wa ters. The meeting will continue through Saturday in order to dis pose of all the proposed regula tions in question, Mr. Rodgers says. The fisheries committee will pre sent a report on its sessions to the C&D board when it meets near Waynesvillc, in Maggie Valley, the latter part of October. The committee will devote a por tion of this afternoon to a session with MIC Stale Highway Patrol, which has asked for permanent use of a portion of the commercial fisheries property at Morehead City. The patrol wants to build a per manent district office and is ask ing for a strip of land about 200 feet in width, extending from high way 70 to Boguc sound, a distance of about 250 yards. Fisheries committee members who will be present arc Dr. John Dees, Burgaw; Luther W. Gurkin, Jr., Plymouth; Lorimer Midgett, Elizabeth City, and Ernest E. Par ker Jr., Southport. The commer cial fisheries advisory board has been requested to be present also. It is composed of the following: A. W. Daniels, Cedar Island; Ralph Meckins, Wanchese; Percy Grant, Holly Ridge; Garland Fulcher, Oriental; Clyde Potter, Bclhaven; Lewis Hardee, Southport; and Mon roe Gaskill, Cedar Island. Also present will be Robert L. Stallings Jr., New Bern, new di rector of the Department of Con servation and Development; Har grove Bowles Jr., chairman of the C&D Board; Roy Wilder Jr., as sistant director; Johp Allen Jr., assistant to the director; C. Gehr mann Holland, fisheries commis sioner, apd Dr. A. F. Chestnut, director Of the Institute of Fish eries Research. License Suspended The license of a Newport resi dent, William Dent Oxley Jr., has been suspended for 30 days, ac cording to the North Carolina De partment of Motor Vehicles. Ox ley, according to the department, was convicted for speeding. Board Hears Two Requests • Resolution Seeks Better Ferry Service • Outer Banks, School Policy Discussed Two citizens appeared before the county board of commissioners Tuesday morning. Leslie Moore, Cape Lookout, asked the eounty to take interest in preserving the outer banks, and Wayne West, Newport, asked that the eounty commissioners exercise greater control Over money appropriated to the county board of education. Mr. Moore, who operates a mar ina at the cape, said that the eoun ty has done nothing to preserve the outer banks. He asked that the County apply for federal funds.. Upon the advice of Moses Howard, chairman of the board, the board deferred action pending a con ference with Col. Harry Brown, head of the state water resources commission. In reply lo the charge that the county has done nothing to pre serve the banks, commissioner Skinner Chalk said that the state has assumed responsibility and has acquired much of the outer banks for the purpose of prevent ing erosion. Mr. Moore estimates that the state now owns 70 per cent of outer banks property in Carteret. He add ed that construction of a large dune is proposed, with the state purchasing a dredge to pump up the dune. He said that this dredging, on the sound side, would also provide *‘an alternate inland waterway” along the outer banks. Commissioner Gaston Smith said it would do no good to build up a dune without stablizing Drum in let. Mr. Moore praised the federal park service, stating that it has done “a wonderful job” in pre serving the banks in the seashore park area. Mr. Moore also commented on the inadequacy of the ferry ser vice between Atlantic and Ocra coke. He said the number of cars left at Atlantic is nothing compar ed to the number at Ocracoke who See BOARD Page 8 -* Model of Baby Pigmy Sperm Whale Put on Display at Hampton Museum News-Timos Photo by Tom Sloan David Murrill holds a life-size model of the baby pigmy sperm whale that he and two others found at Atlantic Beach in September 1960 after a storm. Mrs. Doris Bell, Morehead City, is at right. The model is on dispfay at the Hampton Marine museum. History repeating itself is noth ing new, but an unusual chain of coincidence surrounds the Hamp ton Marine museum’s latest addi tion to its exhibits. The new exhibit, a model of a rare pigmy sperm whale, is un usual in the fact that its three find ers are ail the descendants of for mec whaling crew members in the county, and all three of the men are grandsons of whalers who sup plied the whale for another of the exhibits in the Museum of Natural History in Raleigh. The model in the Hampton Ma rine museum at Camp Glenn is of one of the two pigmy sperm whales washed up at Atlantic Beach Sept. 20, 1960. Two whales were ground ed, a mother and her newborn calf. The Hampton museum model is of the infant. Models of both whales are on exhibit in Raleigh, as is the “May flower” whale skeleton, which was Higher Than the Moon Photo by Reginald Lewis The new micro-wave tower erected by Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co., Morehead City, appears to be higher than the moon in this photo taken in the morning as the August , moon was setting in the west. Even one of the painters sways on his scaffold “above the moon.” e caught by the grandfathers of the | three men who found the two whales in 1960, Jimmy Howland, David Murrill and Carl Mack Ed wards, All three of the men wete work ing on a house in the Ocean Ridge section of Atlantic Beach when the pigmy whales were spotted by David Murrill, who was working on the roof of the cottage at the time. Murrill said he thought the little whale was a porpoise caught in the surf, and called the others. After capturing the baby whale, it was taken to the Sea life exhibit on the Atlantic Beach causeway and placed in the tide pool. The UNC Institute of Fisheries Re search identified the whale as a pigmy sperm whale. The mother of the baby whale was found dead, washed up further cast along the beach. The baby whale died sometime during the following night, when ebbing tides left it stranded. Murrill stated that he was told by fishery experts that the baby could have been kept alive and fed by bottle if it had survived the first night, provided it could have been placed in a suitable tank or marine "zoo.” Only two other pigmy sperm whales have been found in the state. The new models are the first to he placed in the museums in Raleigh and at Camp Glenn. The pigmy sperm whale is a rare edition in miniature of its larger relative, the sperm whale. The sperm whale was once the object of the extensive whaling expedi tions of the past century, including the North Carolina whaling in dustry at Shackleford Banks in years past. The pigmy sperm whale reaches a maximum length of 13 feet, and is never seen on the high seas. The cast made from the actual baby whale is on display at the Hampton Marine museum. The model of the mother whale on dis play, along with another model of the baby whale in Raleigh, was made from both casts and measure ments of the whales. Third Tax Installment Due Monday, Sept. 17 Taxpayers paying estimated in come tax are, according to J. E. Wall of the internal revenue office in Greensboro, required to pay their third installment of tax due on 1962 estimated income by Mon day., Sept. 17, 1962. If the income expected to be earned during 1962 has changed, taxpayers should file an amended declaration of estimated tax. A blank form for use as an amended return is printed on the back of the bill which taxpayers receive for an installment of estimated tax, Mr. Wall pointed out. If you have any questions on estimated tax, contact the internal revenue office at the New Bern posloffice', phone MElrosc 7-5361. Republicans tip Meet The county Republican club will meet at 8 p.m. Saturday at Repub lican headquarters on Front street, Beaufort. Candidates will be pre seht and plans for the coming two months will be made. School Groups Study Thomas Site School committees ami princi pals of Beaufort, Smyrna and Atlantic met at Smyrna Tuesday night and decided to present the “Thomas corner" property at the junctioh of the Merrimon road and highway 70 to their respec tive school patrons as the pro posed new high school site. Reaction of the respective PTA groups, interested organizations and others-will be reported at another meeting of the same group Wednesday night at Smyrna school. At this week’s meeting, wives of the Smyrna school committee members served refreshments. L. McComb Jailed On Check Counts Jailed under $500 bond Sunday night was Larry E. McComb, Beau fort, on charges of passing three worthless checks totaling $133.40. The warrant for McComb was sworn out Friday, by Leonard Gaskins, King Wholesale Co., New Bern. Gaskins alleges that he re ceived from McComb three checks, Aug. 16, 17 and 20, 1962, in the amounts of $41.15, $23.25 and $46.50, all of which w'ere worthless. The case has been set for county recorder s court Tuesday. McComb was manager of Larry’s Playboy Patio, Atlantic Beach. lie was tak en into custody at the beach Sun day night by deputy sheriff Billy Smith. The patio has been closed since Sunday. Served on McComb Tursday in jail was a warrant sworn out by H. W. Dickson, agent of the State Department of Revenue, charging that checks received from McComb last month, totaling $221.49 were worthless. Vacancy on Newport Town Board Filled by Tom Temple Tom Temple, who Lives in the area annexed by Newport Jan. 1, was named to the board of town commissioners Tuesday night when the board met at the new town hall. Mr. Temple will fill the un expired term of Steve Smith, who died in July. Appearing before the board for the third time was Virgil Kincaid, a resident of West Newport who is seeking the town’s help in digging a ditch tt> drain his property and the street. Commissioner Dick Lockey ex plained to the board the findings of an engineer who surveyed the area. Mr. Lockey told the board that there were two ways the ditch could go and gave the recommen dations of the engineer. Mr. Kincaid, who has offered to bear the expense of .’digging the ditch in order to get his property drained, told the commissioners that if the engineer’s recommenda School to Open fbr Grades 1-8 in Fall of 1963 County commissioners asked Tuesday that the county attorney and the auditor proceed with steps to borrow $160,000 for construction of a school in White Oak town-hip The school would be located at Bogue on the same site as the school which burned in 1048 and would accommodate cildhrcn in grades 1 through 8. It is estimat ed that 230 to 250 children will at tend. The youngsters arc now go ing to school in Onslow county. Motion to borrow money for the school was made by commissioner Gaston Smith and seconded by Tommie Lewis. Commissioner Skinner Chalk voted against the proposal, stating that the item was not budgeted and that the board was not proceeding properly. The action was taken after pre sentation to tile board of a letter from the county board of education, asking for $160,000 and stating that the school was scheduled for open ing ill the fall of 1963. Mr. Potter said that two-thirds of the county debt retired last year could be borrowed. The board of education in recent months has received petitions both for and against construction of a school. Long-time residents of the area want the school. Sonic of the newcomers to the area are satis fied to have their children continue going to Onslow. Feeling has run high frequently over the Carteret children going to school in Onslow. Last year, Onslow school authorities demand ed that Carteret pay Onslow for schooling Carteret children. This demand eventually dissolved, but this year, for the first time, Ons low wanted an agreement, which it signed. The state school planning divi Sion has advised that a sc/lopl be built at Bogue when people there requested it. John Bell and Mrs. Essie Smith, Bogue, have been in strumental in putting the recent request for the school before the county commissioners. In addition to the petitions for and against, E. C. Jcrnigan, super visor with the Carteret school sys tem. made a survey in the area. On the basis of the survey, which in cluded a count of the number of children eligible to attend the pro posed school, the county board of education decided in July that the school should be built. Mr. Bell told county commission ers Monday that unless the school was started now, “any kind of building” might be thrown up next summer, just so it could be opened by the fall. When Mr. Chalk voiced iisapproval of voting money for Lhc school, Mr. Bell said it would be nice if the folks in that area were made to feel once more that ihey’rc a part of Carteret county. Pastor Joins Rotary Club Tuesday Night Beaufort Rotary club welcomed Ihe Rev. Dwight Fouts, pastor of Ihe Ann Street Methodist church, as a new member Tuesday night. Speaker was. the Rev. Billy Mob Icy, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Beaufort, who gave a brief religious talk. Guests at the meeting were visit ng Rotarians Fred Lewis and Jack Roberts, Morehead City. The club net at the Surfsidc restaurant. tion was followed he didn’t see how he would benefit, therefore he would not pay for putting the ditch in. Roy Dennis, forester, informed the board that if they followed the Tides at the Beaufort Bar Tide Table HIGH LOW Friday, Sept. 7 12:55 a.m. 1:33 p.m. 6:37 a.m. 8:46 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 1:5(4 a m. 2:35 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9 3:08 a.m. 3:47 p.m. 9:49 a.m. 10:48 p.m. Monday, Sept. 10 4:27 a.m. 4:56 p.m. 10:50 a.m. 11:39 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. II 5:31 U.m. 5:55 p.m. 11:46 a.m. Committee Asks For New School • Industrial Education Center Sought • Overall, Simultaneous Financing Requested The Beaufort citizens’ committee for Better Schools presented a res olution to the county board of ed ucation Tuesday requesting that • a new school be built on'high way 70 between Beaufort and the highway's junction with the Mcr rimon road • a county industrial education center be built in the exact geo graphical center of the county for use of all citizens. • that action be taken to pro vide funds for these proposals The committee also recommend ed that “the total building program for the county be instituted simul taneously and under one coordinat ed plan for financing.” The hoard of education interpret ed the latter to mean that a bond issue for schools should be floated. Presenting the resolution w'erc Clifford Tilghman, chairman of the citizens’ committee; Gilbert* Pot ter, 'Mrs. C. R. Whcatly Jr., and Mrs. Charles Hassell. The general location sugge-ted for the school seems to meet, at present, with approval Beaufort and Smyrna school district offi cials. The resolution further asks that the school site consist of fifty acres and provide facilities for at least a thousand pupils. Relative to the simultaneous and “one coordinated plan for financ ing,” the resolution says, “This suggestion is made with the reali zation of extreme need in all areas of the county school system and with the sincere desire that all children in the county may have equal and uniform educational op portunities at the earliest possible time.” H. L. Joslyn, county superinten dent of schools, said that the state will not approve, at present, an education center in this county. Such a center is located in Lenoir county and a new building for the school there is under construction now. R. W. Safrit, chairman of the hoard, read a letter from W. H. Potter, Beaufort, suggesting a site on highway 70 for a new high school. A committee was appointed for the adult farmer education pro gram at Newport school. Members arc Harry Lockcy, Y. Z. Simmons, Ernest Quinn, Sam Garner, Nathan Garner and Pernel Hardesty. A mobile classroom was ordered for Beaufort school. One is already there. There arc also two at At lantic. Board members present were l). Mason, Atlantic; Theodore Smith, Davis; W. B. Allen, Newport, and Dr. A. F. Chestnut, Morchcad City. engineer’s alternate plan they would have to get written permis sion from the forestry service for an casement across forestry land. He explained the conditions upon which such permission would be granted. A motion to write the forestry service for the easement and to proceed with the alternate plan was carried, with commissioner Lockcy casting a negative vote. The board passed a motion that i letter be written to Dewey Phipps isking him to move his fence off i five-foot easement at the back of lis lot. The fence is in the path if the ditch. The board approved the cleaning >ut of another ditch in West New port. Several other West Newport resi ients were present to ask the ward what it intends to do about weeds and debris on. lots owned See TOWN BOARD Page 8 , l