In Beaufort Get Your News-Time* At HAH Red A White CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES ■<* 52nd Year — No. 26 Two Section* — Sixteen Page* MOREHEAD CITY and BEAUFORT, N. C. Friday, March 29, 1963 Published Tuesday* and Fridays Newport Voters Okay Sewage, Water Bonds Almost 78 per cent of Newport’s registered voters went' to the polls Tuesday and gave overwhelming approval to the borrowing of $270,000 for installation of a sewage system in the town. Of the 512 voters registered, 399 cast ballots. By a vote of 295 to 99 the voters approved borrowing Full Committee To Get SB70 • Bennett Says He Will Oppose Bill • $800,000 In Bank For School Building The House finance committee will review next week the amended senate bill 70, Thomas Bennett, county legislator, reported yester day. The senate bill was introduc ed several weeks ago by Sen. Lu ther Hamilton and requires the county board of this county to levy a tax sufficient to meet the cost of construction of the West Car teret school. • Stricken from the bill, in a sub committee session Tuesday at Ra leigh, was a proviso that each county commissioner who refused to vote for such a tax would be fined $1,000. Mr. Bennett said he plans to op pose the bill before the full com mittee next week. Mr. Bennett add ed that he fully agrees that the school should go up as soon as possible, but he is not in favor of “outright coercion which this bill advocates.” He said that the manner in which the bill is written could cause fu (See BILL, Pg. 8) Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Mears were two of the voters in the Newport bond elections Tuesday. Seated are the officials in the election, Mrs. Louis Hibbs, Leon O. Garner and Mrs. Walter Roberts. Newport Medical Unit Needs $7,000 to Hit $40,000 FHA Week HI county commissioners. (See page 6 section 2 today’s paper.) Goals of FHA are the following: • r)iscovering^^^^^^^^^ tion of family living • Launching good citizenship through homemaking • Strengthening my education for future roles. Special articles and pictures of FHA leaders will appear next week. FHA chapters number 10,406 in the United States, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Members total more than half a million. Begin Sunday More than 309 Future Homemak er of America members of the county will observe National FHA Week beginning Sunday. The week has been officially proclaimed by Chairman Resign* Charles C. Willis* chairman of the county board of elections, said yesterday that he has resigned. He said terms of elections board mem bers expire Sunday and aa of noon yesterday, no new appointments hid been made. ►■$264,000, half the cost of a sewage system. The borrowing of $6,000, half the cost of a new pumping station for the water system, was approved by a 298 to 97 vote. The other half of the needed funds is to come from the federal government under the accelerated public works program. Newport qualifies for the program because Carteret county has been designa ted as a “depressed area” and the APW program was set up to aid such areas. Newport mayor Leon Mann Jr. said he was very happy with the victory and with the number of voters casting ballots. He said the percentage voting was a b o-u t the same as it was in 1956 when voters approved a water system for the town. Of course this does not mean that Newport will have its sewer system tomorrow, the mayor com mented. We don’t know when the federal government will act—and we have to work with the federal agency. A lot of towns have sub mitted applications under the ac celerated public works program, but we feel confident that within the next few years the town will have its sewage system. C. H. (Dick) Lockey, a member of the town board of commission ers said he was pleased with the re sults. The people’s support of the election gives the mayor and board members confidence that they are doing the right thing, commission er Lockcy commented. Leon Owen Garner was judge of the election. Mrs. Louis Hibbs and Mrs. Walter Daniel Roberts were poll holders. * HnaaBHMmysvMi ► By J. STANCIL BELL Fund-Raising Chairman Our pledges are still coming in slowly and pledge payments are being paid on schedule. We have recently received several rather nice checks as contributions. We still need approximately $5,000 to $7,000 to complete the total goal which we feel will be needed for building and equipping our propos ed modern medical center. A group of the “fellows” from the various committees made a trip to Pamlico county, Sunday, March 16, to observe a completed building constructed from the same plan as the one we are hoping to start in about 60 days. The group examined the center and expressed it as being a “dream.” Much in formation was gained from the Pamlico Medical Center officials. The Sears, Roebuck Foundation has notified us that their engineer will be in Newport to meet with the executive, building and fund raising committee. He will check our progress and discuss the {dans and specifications. No doubt he will advise us on many questions we expect to have for him. All committee members that have been given an assignment are asked to get their reports is now. The engineer will expect facts and figures and will demand ac tion. .• .. o, fc U A bingo party and bake sale is being planned for this Saturday night in the Newport school cafe teria. We have many good prises to give and I am sure yon win have much FUN and can take Work to Start Soon on New Ship Contract for construction of Duke university’s oceanographic research vessel is expected to be awarded by the end of June, ac cording to the Duke Bureau of Public Information office. Bids will be sought following approval of drawings by the Nat ional Science Foundation, which is financing the million dollar project. The original grant in 1961 of $618,000 has been almost doubled to provide shore facilities to ac commodate the vessel at Pivers Island and to add to equipment aboard the ship. The vessel will be the first ever built in the United States s'pecif ically for marine biological re search. Construction of the craft is expected to start early this summer. James Chadwick Unhurt As Car Goes in Canal James Aubrey Chadwick, Glou cester, escaped from a submerged car without injury at 1:30 Saturday morning. Chadwick’s 1956 Ford convertible left highway 70 between Williston and Davis and went into a canal. Only a small bit of the radio aerial could be seen above the water when C. H. Davis, deputy sheriff, arrived at the scene. It was estimated that water was at least 2 feet in depth above the roof of the car. Chadwick was alone in the car, headed toward Gloucester, when the accident happened. The car is considered a total loss, according to the deputy, who investigated. No charges were filed. mmxmimm mm v M home a good supply of baked goods. Come out and have fun and at the same time, help a good cause. Other plans for raising funds will be reported through this very co operative newspaper from time to time. The public is invited to at tend the bingo party and bake sale. We welcome Morehead, Beaufort and Havelock citizens as well as Newport residents. The would-be stockholders are urged to check on their pledge pay ment date and pay earlier if at all possible. We must have all pay ments in by June 1, 1963. Early payments will mean earlier con struction. Area captains and com mittee members are asked to “beat the bushes” and come up with some more pledges. You have been most cooperative and I wish to thank you for your concern and help. ’ , We are still waiting a reply from some of our good friends from Morehead City and Beaufort that have not contacted us as yet. Have lock is also urged and invited to participate. We need you and you need the service we hope to pro vide. Senator Puts Davis, Bell In Board Jobs • Wesley Willis, Elmo Smith Removed # New Terms Will Begin Monday Removed from the originally proposed county board of education in the state senate this week were Elmo Smith, Bogue, and Wesley Willis, Williston. Replacing them, according to Sen. Luther Hamilton, are Joseph C. Davis Jr., Davis, and John J. Bell, Bogue. Mr, Davis and Mr. Bell will serve two-year terms. Other members of the board, all of whom will take office Monday, are Dr. Herbert F. Webb, Sea Le vel, Dr. A. F. Chestnut, Morehead City, six-year terms; Grayden M. Paul, Beaufort; James F. Hux, Morehead City, and W. B. Allen, Newport, four-year terms. Rep. Thomas Bennett said yes terday that he opposes the appoint ment of Davis and Bell to the board of education. Webb, Chestnut, Hux, Paul, and Allen were among the seven originally proposed by Mr. Bennett in the House of Represen tatives. Smith and Willis, who*the senator had replaced, were also Mr. Bennett’s appointees. Mr. Willis was a Republican and Mr. Smith a Democrat. Hux and Paul are Republicans. Mr. Bennett noted that Carteret is the only county in the state with Republicans on its board of educa tion by appointment through the legislative omnibus bill. He said other of his House Re publican colleagues appointed Re publicans but the Republican no minees were knocked off by the Democrat-dominated House educa tion committee. The bill naming members to 87 boards of education has passed both houses, over Mr. Bennett’s objection. His objection centers on opposition to senator Hamilton’s appointees, Mr. Davis and Mr. Bell. Jit. Davis is employed at Paul motor tfo., Beaufort, as is another board of education member, Mr. Paul. Mr. Bell for the past several years has been a vigorous promo ter of the proposed elementary school at White Oak, which is an extremely controversial matter in that area. It is expected that the bill pro viding for election of county board of education members—instead of appointment—will be introduced next week by senator Hamilton. The bill will provide for seven members of the board. Although there are five now, law permits appointing of as many members as lawmakers wish, through the om nibus bill, Mr. Bennett explains. It has merely been customary, in this county, to have a five-mem ber board. Three proposed for board of edu cation membership in the Demo cratic primary were not named in the bill. They were Charles Har ris, Marshallberg, Charles Davis, Beaufort, and Wayne Parker, At lantic. Bus, Car Bump On Highway 70 An automobile and school bus collided at 3:45 p.m. Monday three miles west of Morehead City on highway 70. John Robert Stocks, Morehead City, driver of the school bus, was charged with failing to see if a move could be made in safety and with not wearing glasses as re quired. According to state trooper J. W. Sykes, who investigated, the acci dent happened in front of Bryan’s grocery. The bus was headed west as was Mrs. Pauline C, Beachem, Newport, in a 1958 Plymouth sta tion wagon. The bus turned to the left and sideswiped the car as the car was almost, abreast of it in the dual lane highway. Damage to the station wagon was estimated at $50 and to the bus $10. Tide Table Tides at Beaufort Bar HIGH LOW Friday, March 29 11:37 a.m. 5:20 a.m. 11:59 p.m. 5:34 p.m. Saturday, March 39 12:38 a.m. 6:19 a.m. 6:34 p.m. 12:59 a.m. 7:29 a.m. 1:35 p.m. 7:49 p.m. Monday, April 1 1:58 a.m. ». 8:40 *.m. 2:38 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 2 3:01 a.m. 9:43 a.m. Truck-trailer, Car Crash; Xhrt Men Seriously Hurt In the foreground is the roof of an automobile that ran under a tractor-trailer Monday night at Morehcad City. The other part of the car is in the background. Three Navy men from Cherry Point . were injured, one critically. Clinton Will be Site of Hearing On Port-Longshoremen Dispute Abortion Case Scheduled To Go Before Qrand Jury Two Cherry Point hospital corps men, Raymond Kenneth Wilshere and John Edward Henderson, will go before the grand jury on abor tion ^charges in the criminal term of 4&perior court, which opens in Beaufort Monday. The two men were bound over to the high court after a hearing i^county recorder’s court in Aug ust 1962. In. the hearing Mrs. Mary Lou Salmons, who was then residing in Salvors Work On Potomac The Vindof Co., Chicago, is work ing now on the remains of the*Po tomac in Morehead City harbor. The Vindof Co. was awarded the contract to remove the bow of the Potomac. The job was given to the Chicago firm by the Navy Bureau of Ships after the third request for bids. Salvors are pumping water out of the wreck, patching the hull and plan to move it to a northern port. The stern of the Potomac was cut off and moved to Norfolk last fall by Merritt Chapman and Scott, a salvage firm. The Potomac was severely dam aged by explosions and fire at Aviation Fuel Terminals dock, Ra dio Island, Sept. 20. 1061. The blackened ship remuned at ap proximately the same location for a year before effort were made to get her out. The entire ship was finally moved to an island several hun dred yards away. As she rested there one night, the big hulk crack ed open amidships. The few men aboard as a watch crew got a thorough scare. They didn’t know what the loud crack and rush of water meant. This accident caused a change in plans. The stern, still containing valuable equipment, was then se parated from the bow. The bow has remained at the same spot, but la expected to be moved in several days. Pedestrian Struck By tltfiess on Highway John Taylor, Otway, was dis charged from Morehead City hos pital Wednesday after suffering an attack Hear Mansfield superette west of Morehead Qity Tuesday night. Taylor had started across highway *70 when he became ill and fCD in the eastbound traffic Two Marines, driving by at the same time, first thought their car had struck Taylor, but it was found that be had not beep.hit. He was incident accunred | Newport, testified that the two men attempted to induce an abor tion for her at her home near Har lowe in April of 1962. She said her husband had been overseas since September 1961 and that she was living with another man at the time of the attempt. Mrs. Salmons said she had a suc cessful abortion in Vanceboro when she went to a “Mrs. Burroughs.” She said she gave “Mrs. Bur roughs” $10 and two bottles of paregoric. Henderson told state bureau of investigation agent William S. Hunt Jr. that he had agreed to the abortion to get another corpsman, Fred Bivins, “off his back.” He said he "faked” the attempt. Others cases to go before the grand jury are Richard Powers, Martin Vernon Chavis, George W. Godley Jr., Albert K. Gilmour, as sault; L. G. Norris, cruelty to ani mals; James Calvin Jones, petty larceny. Willie Moore Harkley, possession of non tax-paid whiskey; Georgie M. Wyatt, Albert K. Gilmour, Wil liam L. Steele, Emerald A. Bur kett, breaking and entering and larceny; Nelson Lewis, public drunkenness. Donald Clayton Edwards Jr., lar ceny; Robert Roy Morton, drunk driving; William L. Steele, petty larceny; Mary Gage, Mrs. Janet Steele, aiding and abetting break ing and entering and larceny; W. C. Pugh, embezzlement; Andrew Guthrie, forgery. Sixty-three cases are scheduled to be tried during the one-week term. A one-week civil term will begin April 8. ■ Federal judge Algernon Butler will decide Monday afternoon at his hometown of Clinton whether a court order, keeping longshoremen on the job, should be continued. The hearing has been called for 2.30 p.m. in the courthouse at Clin ton in Sampson county. The judge signed a restraining order Friday night which sent long shoremen at Morehead City and Wilmington ports back to work Sat urday. The strike was called when longshoremen at Morehead City became miffed because the State Ports Authority decided not to let them handle ship lines after regu lar working hours. The restraining order was ob tained by the Wilmington Shipping Co. and Heide and Co., stevedoring firms. Wilmington Shipping company's firm in Morehead City is Morehead City Shipping Co. Heide & Co. also has an office in Morehead City. Defendants in the action are ILA local No. 1807, the Clerks and Checkers local No. 1776, both of Morehead City, and local No. 1426, Wilmington. The checkers’ union is a unit of the Morehead City long shoremen’s union, according to lo cal ports officials. They’re involved in the dispute because the state ports authority (SPA) has decided that union la bor will no longer be used at More head City to check cargo passing through transit sheds and ware houses. (The men were not employ ed as union members, but simply because they were available, ac cording to Walter Frederichs, port operations manager. They got the same rate of pay as state port employees.) The locals are required to show cause Monday afternoon why the restraining order, which sent them back to work Saturday, should not be made permanent. Wilmington struck in sympathy (See HEARING Pg. 3) Nobody Home m: Three Navy men were se riously injured in a tractor trailer and auto crash at 10:20 p.m. Monday at the western edge of Morehead City. Douglas Fullen, Cherry Point, was in critical condition yesterday at Camp Lejeune Naval hospital, according to state trooper J. W. Sykes, who investigated the crash. Others iajared were Cyrus A. French III and Alfred S. Meeks, both of Cherry Point. They, too, are in the hospital at Lejeune. French has a compound fracture of an arm and Meeks a back in jury. All throe were thrown out of the car when it plowed under the rear end of a Thurston Motor Lines 1960 CMC tractor trailer driven by Glenn B. Wallace. Wilson. The accident happened in front of the Pepsi Cola warehouse as the truck slowed to turn into the scales just west of the warehouse, the officer said. Both vehicles were headed west. The three men were in a 1955 Ford. The car skidded 150 feet before it hit the truck. The lower part of the truck peeled off the roof of the car, then the car spun out and went 30 feet more. The injured were taken to More head City hospital in a Dill am bulance. They were then transfer red to Lejeune. Legislator Revises Bills On Fishing Carteret representative Thomas S. Bennett introduced in the House yesterday a bill which would put Carteret in with New Hanover, Pender and Brunswick counties which now allow people US take seafood on certain days for their own consumption. The law allows people in those counties to take oysters during the closed season, in open waters of the state, on Tuesdays and Fridays for their own family. He had for merly proposed a statewide bill of a similar nature. The amount permitted to be taken is only one bushel per person in the boat, Mr. Bennett explained, and no boat is permitted to have more than five bushels a day. The bill permits shrimp, fish and clams to be taken any time except from polluted waters. The law per taining to New Hanover, Pender and Brunswick was passed in the 1959 legislature, over the objection of state commercial fisheries per sonnel. Expected out of committee yes terday was a substitute bill on li censing family fishermen, which will restrict the bill’s provisions to Carteret county, the legislator add ed. Mr. Bennett said that Sen. Lu ther Hamilton of this county has endorsed both bills. At the request of the town of Newport, the legislator introduced this week a bill that will extend the authority of Newport police of ficers to an area within two miles of the corporate limits. This bill has been reported on favorably by the House Judiciary 11 committee, is expected to be on the calendar of the House today and probably win be approved by the senate early next week, Mr. Bennett reported. They were considered fcp the fisheries committee yesterday. ; Repairs Under Way at Hospital Itfdn are Mac made to tlm Morebead City hospital to assure its continued licensing by the state Medical Care Commission. Davkl Willis, hospital adminis trator, said that supports are be ing placed under the sinking floors, linen chutes have been dosed, and fir* doors to go between the old and new sect ions are expected to . be delivered at any moment. The now doors are of the ham link typo that will automatic ally seal if the temperature reaches a certain point. Mr. WiU» said. Asked if the hospital is contem plating major renovation. Mr. Wil lis said the hospital board doesn't fed as though it caa malm a de cision there until the county makes a firm commitment aa to what II intends to do about a county hao