Newspapers / Jones County Journal (Trenton, … / Jan. 10, 1957, edition 1 / Page 1
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A Y,JANUARY 10, 1967 VOLUME VIII r" “‘"'I By® / L- j 1 Officials reveal the following facts which touched off their search fhr these three men: ,;V '■ '? Wooten, a disabled veteran, currently out of work, left hte homjv at 9:10 p. m. Saturday with three men, nefther of whom was&omn to Mrs. Wooten, So far as police know the next time Wooten was seen was seconds before be,aria WHed. gg*/ Mns.^lCtoett Ivey of Sevep Springs, driving eaft oh US 70„saw a man that later proved to be IWhotonstaggering along the road with Wood streaming down ids 'jpg. «vgy huftfo around aa toMiy as pomMe'ta return and offer aid to the dbvtously hurt man. This act of JtMnhsr may have contributed to Wooten’s death, of ficers aaree. avis Family erynear fethei _ Sandy Bottom. ■ Wooten’s was the first highway death of 1057 in Jones County. '•» Alta Ana Mallard Makes Highest Honors East Carolina College Thirty-one students at East Carolina College made the envi able record of receiving the high est possible marks in all classes in which they were enrolled dur ing the fall quarter. Among this group was Miss Alta Ann Mallard of Trenton. Her name is included "on the “allf-l’s” classification of honor students, on the Dean’s list of students with very high scholas tic standing, and on the college Anor roll. < Building in Trento* Wednesday nt^t. On ffnirsday, jfo jjyt meeting will be held in Oornfbrt at 7:30 F. M.- in the Mon-. <*8y» Jahiiary 14, fce^f meet with ’the farmers atJP^se FoHc at 7:30 P, M. at EiJjgne pud’s Store; and on TueyMy, January / IS, a meet ingbe held . In the MayWiBe School at 7:30 P. M. , The totooco varieties, disease and insert control, 'will be. fully discussed at these meetings and 1r_ v__..... Parent Education WorkshopWiU fi Held In New Berr Parents are interested in '‘work in® more <flMpIy with their child ren’s teachers”; in "lasting les sons in spiritual values'” and in “adolescent problems.” This was disclosed in answers to a question naire sent to participants in a PTA Parent Educatidh Workshop to be held in New Bern January 14-17 at the Governor Tryon Hotel. “TOts is not just an ordinary training session lor. the cuMivatiott of leadership but an actual _r_v_„__ the.common problems' of our day and with the aid of fine leadership given the opportunity to work out some metipds for parenthood. It is not a series of lectures but rather a succession of discussion groups in which individual problems are high lighted and.worked through.” The workshop program *f based on( needs disclosed . in; the ques tionaires, centered upon the theme, ‘^Developing Better families.” Mrs. John W. Crawford of Ra leigh, state PTA president will act as ‘general consultant and Mrs. Iajla Belle Rich of the State Board of Health, Raleigh, will be as sistant director. Group leaders will be Miss Mary Hayes, Dr. Laura Ross Venning, and Mrs. Fannie B. Masten of Charlotte; Rev. J. Kern Ormond and Miss Madge Blalock of, Ra '-ftp,, and Mr*. Dvrwead Mill*. o# lnk«lilr*«**o*5* bakUy eacaejd serious Inijury at about 8 Friday marring whan thafr car landodl m *ha paaiHan shown - above. The Mills war* driving toward Kinston : :.i»ha^|ai(FjjiiWw ,:|»M|,m:;»* »kfc*: triad* Hiiibway ydicn a school bus ftarted ta puli aide flos toad MM ;'|hrir -F**ii. ■ R*tt»ar :.«*as* ram tha^ The North Carolina Bankers Ab wcttttoh today advised Its mem bership to ‘.'consider' carefully” the implications of the current flue cured tobaqco problem. * •The” Association transmitted to Its. 5®4 member banks in North Carolina a waning town L. T Weeks, general manager pf the Flue, Cured Tobacco Cooperative 'Stabilization Corporation, wbopre dicted that "if production of un desirable or neutral types of to bacco continues, it is going to ser iously impair our .foreign market for fide cured tobacco and mate it, impossible for a pride Support program to operate in the black.” Weeks said that once thfTtpbae co support program goes “into the red,” 'tnbhcco growers will “no longer have the benefits from a 9tf% of parity support -price pro t Weeks pointed out that varieties 139, 140 and 244, irrespective of grade, will Be supported by the federal government in 1957 at one hatf the support rates for com parable grades of other varieties. Also, price supports for individual grades of all flue cured varieties will be adjusted to reflect current patterns. proportion of the crop which has desirable flavor and aroma characteristics.” . The total supply of tobacco cur rently on hand is 3,643 million pounds. That is an all-tijme high, and about 650 million pounds high er than the desirable supply of to bacco. leigh; Mrs. G. G. Atkins of Rocky Mount and Mrs. Harold Qrringer and Mrs. Joe S. Johnson of New ’Bern. This is one of two annual work shops in parent education held by the North Carolina' Congress of Parents and Teachers. The next will be in July at Little Switzer land. Trenton Man Home From Sea Duty James H- Brown, steward third class, USN, son of Wardell Brown of Trenton, N. C., and husband of Mrs. Rose L. Brown of National City, Calif., returned to Long Beach, Calif., Dec. 16 aboard the ■heavy cruiser USS Los Angeles. Fdr the ipast six months the Los Angeles operated in Far Eastern waters with the Tth Fleet. The ship visited Saigon,' Viet nam;. Hbbg Kong; Manila, Philip-4 pipe Islands; and the Japanese parts of Sasebo, Yokosuka, Kure, Cokohama, Otaru and Kobe. |v-: > • ■ ; v ~ Grassroots Opera to Give Performance |n Kinston Friday Open House Welcomes New Doctor and Family to Trenton Wveckagf Found of Missing Jet Fighter The wreckage of a Jet fighter plane missing since Sunday was found near Cherry Point Tuesday. The body of the dead pilot was found, nearby: The plane was one df six on a training flight from Glenview, Illinois to Jacksonville, Fla, The pilot had radioed Sunday that hit compass was out of or der and that he was low on fuel and would abandon the plane. No thing more was heard. Mrs. Adde Neri, wife of the pi lot, arrived in Kinston, on' Tues day morning with his brother, Roby, and had joined in the search for the missing plane. 75 Members Attend Adqlt Cooking Class The Home Economics Depart ment of Jones Central High School held an adult class Monday night on gas range cooking. Miss Sara Barker, holme economist from Charlotte, gave the demonstration. the 75 members attend ing the class. After the meals had finished cooking, names Were drawn to receive them and other gifts. Horace G. Tyndall won the ham, Miss Tiny Hammond won the Orange Delight cake, Mrs. Ro bert Avery won the broiled stuffed chicken halves, Mrs. Wilma Mai Dr.'and Mrs. Listen F. Bullard, Jr. were welcomed to Trenton Sun-, day afternoon with an open house at the doctor’s new office, from 2:30 until 6:30. Dr. Bullard’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Bullard, were also honored guests. Ttie 450 guests were greeted at the door by Mr. and Mrs. John D. Jenkins and George Noble. Then they, were shown through the con sulting and examining roqms by Mrs. W. S. Hill, Mrs. Ben Hester and Mrs. Rom Mallard. Miss Fay Cox invited the guests to have re freshments. Nuts and cookies were served, and Mrs. George Noble poured punch. Mrs. Austin Koonce assisted throughout the afternoon. The refreshment table was cen tered with a bouquet of red car nations, given by the Jones County Home Demonstration County Coun cil members. Refreshments were provided by the merchants of Trenton, the Branch Bank, and Maola Milk Co. Dr. and Mrs. Bullard moved here from Elizabethtown and he will have morning and night hours at the office. lard won the “Pork ‘N’ Tatoes” gifts that \vere given by the East ern Rulane Gas Co. of Neiw Bern, were an electric alarm clock that went to Mrs. E. M. Philyaw, an aluminum griddle to Mrs. Osborne Mallard and a carving set to Mrs. J. W. Allen. Mrs. Sam Phillips, home ec. teacher, introduced Miss Barker, and thanked everyone for attending. Death Ends Two-Month Coma Of Nathaniel Kennedy; Pushing ’56 Death Toll to 10 in Lenoir Esther Joyner Elected Homecoming Queen At Campbell College Miss Esther Joyner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Joyner of Kinston, will reign at Campbell College as 1956-57 Homecoming Queen. She was elected by vote of over 800 students on the basis of beauty and personality. Last -year, Esther, reigned as home coming queen at Grainger High. Benefit Basketball Game Pedestrian Struck by Chevrolet Pick-Up Wednesday morning William Ar thur Co*,-W year-old negro of SWSoath Tiff any Ave. was knock ed down when he suddenly stepped in front of a Chevrolet pick-up driven by Was Betty Skinner Wir ing of Route 1, Dover. Miss Wfr 4ng South on Queen On Thursday, January 17 at 8 P. M. the Deep Run Rural Volun teer Fire . Department will play Carl Caudill’s^ Team from TV Sta tion WITN. ~There will be a cake auction at half-time and a grand prize of a bedroom suite will be given away. TUe .public is * cordially invited to attend. The death of 32 year-old Na thaniel Kennedy at 7:30 Friday niight pushed the Lenoir County Highway death toll to 10. After nearly two months in a coma from injuries suffered at 3 p. m. November 0th in a wreck at Wooten’s Crossroads in southern Lenoir County Kennedy died with out regaining consciousness. , William Bryant Miller, an Al bertson Route one tenant farmer, will be indicted for manslaughter as the driver of the car which ran a stop sign, ramming the truck Kennedy was driving toward Lid dell. Miller had previously been charged with reckless driving by patrolmen J. A. Crumpler and Uoyd Pate, who investigated the wreck. * Kennedy, g mechanic-salesman for Hill Supply Company, of Pink Hill, was taken from the capsized pickup truck he was driving .in a coma which ended only in death. Friday. in minor
Jones County Journal (Trenton, N.C.)
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Jan. 10, 1957, edition 1
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