NUMBER 18 TRENTON, N. C., Special Program For Aged Includes Service As Well as Budget Aids Mrs. Zeta Bart, Jones County Director of Public Welfare, stated today that the local county depart Iraent of-public welfare offers many special services to older citizens. The Special Week on Aging, by proclamation of Governor Sanford, is September 15-21, and is being !< sponsored by -the Governor's If Coordinating Committee on Aging. If Under the program of old age assistance, financial help is avail able to needy aged pet-sons who meet eligibility requirements. ""y Mrs. Burt stated that these are ‘5 also many non-financial services for aged persons regardless of their economic situation. These include helping older per sons who have no families to work out a satisfactory way of life. Jones County has no licensed homes for •the aged, but does find placement for aged in other counties and help the older persons and their famil ies in selecting the home best, suit ed to their needs. In many counties homemaker services for the aged makes it pos sible for older persons to remain m their own homes by providing a little help with daily tasks which they cannot manage alone. This is _ a present objective of the Jones County Department. ■‘TThfre has been a great incsefse m the last decade," Mrs. Burt re-» minds. ■ “In North Carolina there are ap proximately 335,000 persons 65 years of age or. older. Many of these people are unable to provide for themselves from an economic point of view. The services in the county departments of public welfare in our State are giving increased em phasis to the needs of the aging.” In Jones County there are ap proximately 3,310 persons 65 years of age or older, she said. Jones County 4-H Council Meets Monday Night; Hears Reports By Annette Lowery The Jones County 4-H County Council held its regular meeting night in the . Ag Building, presided and Joan Stroud devotion. Pledges' were led by Warren Moore and Nancy Flowers. Helen Flowers acted as song leader. Janice Lowery reported on Club week and 4-H Electric - gress. Joan Stroud reported on 4-H. Camp. The president appointed a nomi nating committee to select officers for the coming year: Linda Had dock, chairman, Paula White, Jim my Pollock; Achievement Night planning committee, Janice Lowery, ■airman, Cecil Banks, Linda 'oore, Allen Stroud, Sally Pollock. President Hill made the follow ig announcements: 4-H chicken • r* . . _<M. T?.: September. 21; at Fa i r books record Jones County Arrests During the past week the officii of Jones County Sheriff Borwn Yates reports three arrests: Dehtia Meadows of Maysville and Percy E. Evans of Maysville route were each accused of drunken driving ‘and Esley Koonce of Pollocksville route 1 was charged with public drunkenness. Marine Convicted In Jones County Recorder’s Court last week Cherry Point Marine Larry C. Jenkins was convicted of drunken driving and Judge Nick Noble ordered the, minimum $100 fine and court costs. Jenkins now has to face charges of auto theft in Lenoir County, where he got the car he was driving when arrested in Janes County. IN AIR FORCE Thomas Arthur of the Hopewell Community has been accepted in the Air Force and is receiving bas ic training at Lackland Air Force Base at San Antonio, Texas. Thomas, a graduate of Jones Cen tral High School, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alton Arthur. He has one sister, Mirs, ElSey Jones, also of the Hopewell Comaijtnityv■- N, TUESDAY SUPPER A Dime-AcDip supper is planned far Tuesday, September 24 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Maysville Commu-_ nity building. The event is spon sored by the Methodists WSCS. Lenoir’s 10th Traffic Death of Year Comes In Saturday Crash In a head-on crash at 5:15 Sat urday afternoon at the intersec tion of Rural roads 1130 and 1131 in Trent Township John David Stocks of Pink Hill route 1 was in stantly killed and two more men were injured. This was Lenoir County’s 10th traffic fatality of the year. Stocks was riding in a car driv en by Robert Lee Heath also of Pink Hill route 1. Patrolman V. W. Heath said that Heath’s car made a sweeping turn at the “Y” .type intersection at an apparent high rate of speed and crashed into the car of Carl 'Noble of Deep Run route 1. Noble suffered serious injuries and was transferred to the univer-t sity hospital at Chapel Hill Satur day night after being given emer gency treatment at Lenoir Mem orial Hospital. Patrolman Heath says Heath will be indicted on charges of reckless driving and manslaughter. Heath is recuperating from painful but not critical injuries in a Kinston hos pital. Both cars were classified as total losses from the impact. slaw and rolls along with a drink. Serving will begin at 5 p. m. and persons may eat either at the fair grounds or take their plates home for supper. Mixed Term o£ Jones Superior Court Set to Begin at 10 Monday Judge |ienry Stevens of Warsaw will convene a one-week mixed term of Jones County Superior Court at 10 Monday with what ap pears to be plenty of work to keep the court busy for-a full week. The civil side of the calendar for the week includes five uncontested divorces, four motions in suits that are not to be tried and one mo tion for contempt against Hen neth Dillahunt, who will have to explain to the court if he has com piled with an earlier order. To be divorced are Sarah Louis Dillahunt from Ellis Dillahunt, Ed ward Jones from Josephine King Jones, Hazel West Marshburn from Walter Page Marshburn, Charles Elbert Thomas from Mary Ruth Sparrow Thomas and Lou Ellen Squires Jones from Earl D. Jones. Two of the motions will be heard in the perpetual litigation being brought by New Bern Attorney Charles Abernathy against Wesley Jones, Raiford Blizzard, Donald Brock and others. This is the fifth time this particular litigation has reached the motion stage, where it has been thrown out on each prev ious appearance. Motions will also be heard in the action brought by Mary Elizabeth Andrews against Norwood Gray Cook and Nannie W. McDaniel and her brothers and sisters against R. L. Fordham, his wife and oth ers. Criminal Cate* Heading the criminal calender are charges of manslaughter and drunken driving against Camp Le jeune Marine Willie Torrence. Godfrey Wilder faces a charge of murder as does George Bruton. Drunken driving charges are set for hearing against Sutton Stroud Mills,, Lewis Hampston White (also hit and run'driving), Johnnie Gray, Lem Kornegay, Frank Bullock, George Lee Pate and Esley Sutton Quinn. Other cases set trial by Solicitor Luther Hamilton Jr. include Willie Lee Taylor, larceny, John Wkyne Heath, speeding, Dalton McDaniel, assault with a deadly weapon, Caloph D. Dove, driving while re voked license* Leo Kinsey, non support, Randy Meadows, assault, Jesse Foy, breaking and entering. Alvis Foy Jr., bastardy, Marvin Hill, reckless driving, Gene Frank lin Jordan, speeding, Dallas M. Foster, driving while License re voked, Allen Whitfield, assault, Zak May, assault, O’Neal Edwards, as sault, Johnny Jones and Latham Jones, larceny, Louis Jones, speed ing and larceny. Edward Thomas Smith, speeding, John Franks, assault, Edward Earl Strayhorn, assault, Milton H. As kew, speeding, Willie Rhodes, driv ing while license revoked, Louis P. Davis, carnal knowledge of a minor child, Archie Hooker, violating liquor laws, Jesse Croom, assault. Land Transfers Jones County Register of Deeds reports recording the following land transfers in his office during the past week: From J. S. Salter to Francis Grif fin 2.17 acres in White Oak Town ship. From Jesse Ray Eubanks to Douglas M. Cumbo one lot in Pol locksville. From Lumas Ward to Flossie Hill four acres in Trenton Town ship. From Julie Hardy Phillips to ■ Shadrach Phillips one lot in Pol locksville. Football Friday The Jones Central Rockets will tangle Friday at 8 on the home ballyard with the Contentnea Wild cats from neighboring Lenoir County. This is expected to be one of the hardest fought games of the year and all Rocket fans are urged to make plans now to be on hand for the tussle. Kinston Changed Much Since 1920-21 Directory By Jack Rider History is the record of things as they were. Nostalgia is the perfumed mem ory of things gone by and that balmy yen to share those scented times,, even when we know well that there is no .turning back of the hands of time. This week, fall house-cleaning •turned up the 1920-21 edition of the city directory of Kinston, and it tickled my memory to that point where I feel impelled to pass it on to those readers whose mempry of Kinston,* like mine, runs back to thfe fringes, or even beyond that in-between-wars time. There were .six ads on the cover of this directory — none of the companies advertised still survives, although one did not give up the ghost until just recently: Hines Brothers Lumber Company. The others were The National Bank of Kinston, Lenoir Oil and Ice Com pany, The First National Bank, T. W. Mewbom & Company and At lantic Coast Realty. Company. „ Inside there are more advertis ers, and; more survivors: Mewborn Jewelry Company, L. Harvey and Son Company, B. W. Canady, Oet tinger’s Furniture Store, George L. n, insurance Agent, and W. E. Bailey survive. gone with the toll of time big names in that day Cash Shoe Store, J. Company, Spear Motor Company, Republic Truck Sales, The Caswell Banking & Trust Company, R. L. Blalock, contractor, B. L. Elam, heating contractor, Dudley & Hahn, builders, J. E. Hood & Company, Sutton-Long Electric Company, Farmers Supply Company, Andrew Johnson & Son, D. V. Dixon & Son, Quinn & Miller, S. C. Sitter son, wholesale grocer, McCall’s Ladies Shop, C. A. Dawson’s livery stable, Barrett & Hartsfield, Alli son’s - ready-to-wear, The Dixon Art Studio, photographers, Russell Utter Music Company, E. O. Moore & Company, Korrect Pressing Club, New York Cafe, E. R. Waller Co., roofer, Mehegan Music Schools, Chero-Cola Bottling Company. Kinston had five “hair dressers,” all were colored; 16 barbers, only four of which were white. The town had only one magis trate, Kenneth F. Foscue, who was also collector of internal revenue and a notary public. Three laundries; including one Chinese operated by an unlikely named Chinaman: Jesse Jones. Ten livery stables were in opera tion. The city boasted three nurses: Maggie Weston, Etta Newton and Ada Grainger. * There were 2D doctors minister ing to the ailments of the commu nity, and today three of them still practice medicine: Doctors C F. West, Zeb Moseley and J. P. Har rison. Four railroads brought M pas iger trains per day into the 1 of Lenoir County: A ’ -** Kinston Carolina and Norfolk Southern were the four roads. People apparently did more walking or shoes were of lower quality since that smaller Kinston had 12 shoe repair shops, more than it boasts today. Four tobacco sales warehouses were handling the golden leaf from farms in the area. They were the Atlantic at Heritage and Washing ton, Central at Heritage and North, Eagle at Lenoir and McLewean and Knott at Washington and McLe wean. Woodrow Wilson was in the White House when this directory went to press. T. W. Bickett was governor of the state. O. H. Allen was the resident superior court judge. Joe Dawson was mayor. Kinston had ten aldermen — two from each of its five wards. In 1920 they were Joe May, Charlie Sanders, W. E. Bailey, R. E. Mew born, W. L. Sutton, C. A. Walsh, S. T. Pate, V. A. Abbott, J. C. Kennedy and G. O. Brown. Arden W. Taylor was mayor of the county. R. F. Churchill was chairman of the board of county commissioners and D. W. Wood, A. T. Dawson, Parker Howard and T. G. Sutton were the other members of the board. G. B. Hanrahan was probation officer, G. V. Cowper was county attorney. Jesse Heath was clerk of superior court, Carl Pridgen was register of deeds, D. E. Wood was coroners Felix Loftin was county surveyor, Joseph Kinsey was super '■ intendent of county schools. Kader Curtis was head of city schools. J. G. Sallade was county hog chol era expert. N. J. Rouse was chairman of the county school board and served with P. A. Hodges and John C. Davis. R. A. Whitaker was judge of Re corder’s Court and J. L. Hamie was solicitor. K. F. Foscue was clerk of the court. Alfred Cheney was city engineer, Wright Sanders the health officer, T. V. Moseley was fire chief. C. H. Thompson was chief of the 7 man police force. J. W. Goodson was chairman of the city school board and served with C. F. Harvey, William Hayes, W. M. Tyndall, J. O. Miller, E. G. Barrett and T. W. Mewborn. Ruby Bruton was principal of Lewis School, Scotia Hobgood was principal of the grammar school, F. W. Carroll was principal of the high school and J. H. Sampson was principal of Tower Hill School. Company B of the 2nd regiment of the North Carolina National Guard was Stationed in Kinston with Captain A. L. C. Hill j and Lt. J. H. Taylor, Lt. W. A. Faulkner and First Sergeant Grover Parker in charge. The baseball park was at the southeast corner of Lenoir and East streets, and Parrott’s park was on the west end of Caswell Street. The directory claimed conserva tively that the population of Lenoir County was at least 25,000 and said, “Of these 25,000, Kinston, the county seat harbors more than 12, 3.”

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