—r rmmm BY JACK RIDER Recently It seems that Kinston and Le noir County have had much more than ■ their fair/share of trouble with Marines. People are beginning to grumble on street comers, police are concerned and to a de gree. I am toe. But Just as iq most other situations there is two side'to this one. There1 ^ ho point in recounJingeVen a partial list of the recent serious crimes Committed, or allegedly committed in this area by Marines.'If one keeps up-with local aeWs he is already' aware of this part of the picture. Marine authorities with whom I have talked are just as unhappy, if not more so about this situation than local officiate. They point to their part of the problem and insist that it is not all their fadlt, and here is at least onfe side of their argument. ‘Jhe uncertain draft board status of teen agers forces a great many bpys in tlfese troublesome' years to get into mischief. They find it difficult to get a jobwitb em ployers remembering that said teenager may be tapped on the shoulder any day by the draft board. They develop a don’t give-a-damn attitude, which often finds them in trouble with the law. Here is where the Marine "Corps and ether branches of the armed forces enter an objection. They say that these teenagers who get into trouble are all too frequently permitted to “join,up” and clear them selves of the minor trouble they are in with the old home town police. In many metropolitan areas this prac tice is the rSlb if the teenager can meet the physical requirements for service duty. These boys are already a disciplinary prob lem, the Marine officials point out. They comfe 4Ro the aimed forces with a chip on their shoulder. Of eourse,- disciplining them bJItf th^y^Se* hri the military reservation is a problem, but it is a minor problem to curbing their rebellious attitude when they are off the base. The strict imposition of military authority upon a youth who has never known* any kind of discipline before is in itself a severe test to any young man’s character, even if his pre-sendee record is as white as the driven snow. Marine official? poir.; to the obviousness cf the fact that they cannot restrict the en tire Corps for the wrongs of a tiny frac tion of their number. To do this would ere:i‘e a general Rebellion,, and to restrict juri'; those boys who might be expected to cause trouble outside would be compound ing the social fracture which has already made these bpys potential law breakers. As an ex-service plan who understands something of the pressures and lack of pressures which generate a large part of civilian troubles with the men in service, I tender one or two respectful suggestions: _-2__ #V No.' 1, Overnight passes ought to auto matically carry a curfew of say midnight, permitting military police and civilian police to revoke the pass of any violators. No. 2, Passes of short duration to any town except the home town of the indi vidual ought to include as one requisite the wearing of the full uniform. This has many points to recommend it: \ Permitting easier identification, creating pride of the uniform and the service and not the least it would lessen the risk that civilians might be inclined to take. jf people works more S^er in sloppy dress ce than upon the neat, on pspe 5 'O' •" • v This would b'e a protection for the ser vice man equal to the protection it would givft civilians. Around the perimeter of every military - reservation there is always a rabble of prostitutes, gamblers, bootleggers, narcotic runners and every day grafters who make a shady and sometimes fat pro 'Stick Around... We May, Keed.Ypu Yeti ' EXPLODES fmprnm STAND*..* tui Distributed by King Features Syndicate ‘ ^ 1 ‘ .- - And He May Be Wrong, " jp ■ " n - 1 farm Program Changes During the holiday peri, ad when farming operations in most Eastern Carolina areas are at a standstill serious study should be made by each farmer of the changes now made in the federal fanm program. Of particular interest to the small farmer is the fact that there is no limit on the amount of acres he can put in the soil bank of any of the allotted crops. There is a maximum, however, that any one farm can receive. That is $3,000. If a farmer has, for example, eight acres of tobacco, five acres of cotton and 20 acres of corn allotted to his farm and his soil bank payment rates were about the average for Jones County his soil bank check would be approximately $2,978 if he were to put the whole shooting match in the soil bank. This will be a mighty attractive proposi tion to many small farmers, in spite of the fact that outside employment is scarce and the present chances of off-the-farm .em ployment are the worst in 20 years. The obvious intent of this program is to take entire farms out of production of these supported crops which are in surplus sup ply at present. There are many other aspects of this changed program which the individual farm-' er ought to apply to his own situation in telligently so that he may make the best possible decision for his own best interest. Those better class,small farms, of which Jones County has a large and growing number have a number of opportunities presented with this “total soil bank idea”. Putting all of these allotted crap acres in the soil bank, and retiring them from any kind of commercial production will gen erally leave considerable additional acreage that can still be used comanerciaBy but not, of course, in the specified crops. The fanm with an established pasture program may accelerate its meat or milk production. The farm without the pasture program may turn to a combination of small grain and poultry production, re membering, we trust to put the grain be fore the poultry. Going into any phase of meat production—beef, pork or pdullry— is foolish to a bankrupting degree if one enters it with any notion of making money with boughten feed. The biggest single advantage that this changed program affords the small fanner is that it is an opportunity to experiment without jeopardizing completely the cash income of the farm. ' These are just a few thoughts from a desk farmer on the kind of thinking that farmers—small farmers in particular, of the ]pnd Jones County has a large percentage, ought to foe doing in this lull before the farming season goes into high gear. Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin Some more religious than us may feel it a trifle wrong to use.Biblical quotations in connection with such wordly things, as the current farming cmtlook for Eastern Caro lina. Let us hasten to explain that our use of the handwriting , on the wall, is more to catch the reader’s eye than from any real or imagined connection between the King dom of Belshazzar and tobacco. However, Ion those who can read and in terpret the handwriting is surely on the wall insofar as tobacco is concerned, and although we do not suggest for one min ute that our interpretation is the correct one, we do feel 3 to be based in some logic. Using Lenoir County as an example, ab sorb the following hard facts: In 1851 tobacco income hit the all-time high for Lenoir County farmers 'with $17,904,040 income frion that source. Last year the figure sagged with a great drop ip price to $17,568,947, in spite of a big in crease in pounds sold. This year the drop ia more, pronounced in spite of an increase to prtec. Both poundB and dollars dropped and dofflar-wise die final picture is $13,338,286.52, tfeil over a four-million dollar drop in the tobacco in Ike's Second Invasion President Bisenhotarer’s second invasion cf Europe is far different from that ot June 6, 1M1 when l» *M Gee«»l Eisenhower. Then the situation was military, today it is political and although we hope him the very best ftricthere cannot be denied the' vast gulf between what is practical and possible In one situation as compared with the other. As General Eisenhower, Ike was Supreme Allied Commander. His wish coafld not be contradicted 'by anyone of the millions of men of leaser rank beneath him. As President Eisenhower, Ike is stilt su preme commander in one military sense, but today military forces are an implied rather than an actual ingredient in. con siderations of policy. ’ , In 1944 Europe was prostrate from five years of the most terrible war so fa* re corded. The tramp of German boots had been heard from the gates of Moscow to the chalk cliffs of Dover. European politkans knew only one word: Help! Today some of those same helpless Euro pean politicans are aking much more than “HMp”.-They still want help, but on their terms. Backed by recent Soviet scientific successes and their natural wily disposi tion these Western European politicans are seeking, and succeeding in pls|ying the naivety of the United States against the blindness of Russian plans. We bet “Ike” would like tW be back in uniform and giving orders again. The Babcock Plan The current effort to take the highways; of North Carolina out of “politics” has suc ceeded in one sense, in that it has taken the highway building program out of Eastern North Carolina. Present plans call for the state spending practically all of its highway funds to match federal funds for these huge, ex pensive military roadls that are eating up land, money and patience with alarming, rapidity. Highway Boss Bill Babcock; recently told a Charlotte gathering that the commission was “broke” and would have no money for secondard road work, Snd toddy any road not on this monstrous super-highway pro- - gram' is a secondary road. These highways in addition to being un imaginably expensive to build may very well cost the state millions of dollars of business each year from now on. A narrow state such as North Carolina, across which millions of tourists travel every year will inevitably lose money when these limited access monsters permit tourists to dash suddenly across the state. Tourist accomodations are one of North Carolina’s biggest businesses, and they will, and already have lost millions of dolr lars of revenue because of this mania that has bankrupted the highway commission and thrown our overall state highway net work in the ash can. People had better become alarmed and insist on putting some politics back in the highway commission. Fire is an extraordinary hazard in the Christmas Season. Make sure that your Christpias is not ruined or your life de troyed from carelessness with fire. - Over the holiday season, and at every other time of the year please apply one logic to driving: If you must drink, don’t drive; and you must drive don’t drink! come of the farmers of Lenoir County alone. This same story is true all over Tobacco land, U. S. A. This drop in the face of in creased tobacco consumption cannot mean anything good for the -tobacco farmer. Plans had, better be made ,by the tobacco farmer if he wishes to remain a farmer. JONES JOURNAL .Every Thursday by The Lew Company, Inc., 403 W< Ave., Kinston, N. C., Phone 54] ?d'as Second Class Matter May 5, at .the Post Office at Trenton. Carolina, under the Act of March 9. all in First Zone—$3.00 Per Sear, rtptton Rates, Payable In Advance