V. W. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28,490 VOLUME XV V Nation s Shock on President’s Murder *rcnran arm wm no ottterent than the rest of the nation over this past weekend of shock and tragedy. - |^ Those who knew of the shooting s in the first few minutes hung on their radio sets, hoping for the best,' but fearing that the worst had come. Hope faded when the an nouncer said from Dallas that the President's head was covered with Mood and' he had slumped over on Ms wife. ' ■ .... ■' : And then at 2;36 came that sin gle-line bulletin: The President is . /dead. In some schools the message had been carried to the students as it came off the radio over the Inter communications systems. The stu dents sat in dry-eyed shock, unbe lieving and then when that hoped against but expected word came there were tears in most eyes. For 487hours everyother £iod>of conversation was blotte4 out Tbv ward the end of shock some ehildrwi began to com plain that their TV cartoons were missing. Some older people with the minds of very small children, also complained about the, absence of “their program”. , r But in Trenton, as In the nation as a whole the overwhelming ma jority acted with propriety, numbed and sorrowful. Many Some were angered by the taste lessness of a Sunday night TV in terview with the Dallas policeman’s family. Aside from that the TV coverage was in quite good taste, the majority seemed to feel. A few did say, “It’s being over done”. ( But others said, “This is the death of a President and the least the nation can do is pay its fullest respects”. The cranks in Trenton, as all a cross the nation, began writing an onymous letters, and making an onymous telephone calls. Any who had differed with President Ken nedy politically were the target of such demented .types. oauueneu people picKca up lueir telephones to hear, “You helped kill the President”. “I guess you’re happy now”. “You ought to be next”, and this 'mass cowardice and insanity spread its virulence all across the nation. The more prominent the person who had differed with President Kennedy, the more virulent and more voluminous this kind of crank mail came, and the babbling tele phone calls from assorted idiots. Some attempted to go through jthe motions of “business as usual", but none succeeded. Nothing in the entire nation for that long weekend was “as usual”. But calm returns even after the most sudden and terrible storms and by mid-week Trenton and die nation had gotten back to “busi ness as usual” and Thanksgiving Week took on a more profound meaning for many than it had had in a long, long time. Kinston Mother, Dover Father Charged With Killing Their Sons Important Meeting Mayor Nolan Jones kaa announc •4 that there will bo a busmen meeting In the community building Dec, It at S p. m. Every citisai oad Us payer is being asked to at tend to discuss the water bond is> sue election coming up in January to answer questions and hear an; viewpoints on the issue. Four Jones Arrests During the past week Jones Coun ty Sheriff Brown Yates reports th< atrest^pf four persons: Carl Ed ward Staves of Pollocksville route 1 is charged with drunken driving and Jesse Baines of Trenton, Syl vester Wiley of New Bern route 2 and William B. Miller of Pollocks ville are each accused of publii drunkenness. Hunting Death, Edward Warren Daugbety, 41 year-old resident of the Sand H3 section erf. Lenoir County, disc from a shotgun ’iaM&rf¥&d ft. •ty1 s. death accidental. Daughety wa hunting alone and apparently had been in the act of climbing over ■ fence with his gun loaded and not on safety when the gun went off killing him instantly. He was not found until about 1:30 p. m. but il is believed his death came during the mid morning hours. jvionaay jvirs. c.ena Herring, 71, of 1121 Lincoln Street was charged with murder in the death of her 52 year-old son, Rafael, who died , in Lenoir Memorial Hospital Sun day night from a 12 gauge shotgun wound he suffered Saturday night. Tuesday 50 year-old Ozie Bryant of Dover route 2 was charged with . murder in the death of his 21 year old son, Hosea, who was beaten to death at the Bryant home Tuesday night. In each instance the parent has , told investigating authorities that self defense was the basis of the killing. Mrs. Herring of 1121 Lincoln Street told police that her son was advancing on her With a knife when •she grabbed the shotgun and in flicted the wound that led to his death. Bryant told Craven County au thorities that he and his son had "had words” inside their home and ithat he had left the house to avoid more words. He said hl» son then Shotgun. Bryant sstfd he also had a shotgun. Bryant further claims that he at tempted to get away from his son, but when the younger man kept chasing him he turned and a strug gle took place which resulted in the young man being beaten about the head and face with both the shotgun and rifle butts to that point where he was dead. Kinston Family Income Growth Rate Greater Than National Average io what extent has Kinston s economy moved ahead since the last war? How much better off are local residents than they were IS years ago? The rate at which they have ad vanced, as well as their prospects for the future, are matters of basic importance to the city’s residents. Just as expansion and growth are counted on, year after year, to keep the national economy on an even keel and to provide jobs for the growing labor force, so it is at the local level. And, to each community, what is happening in its own back yard is of much greater concern than what is happening elsewhere in the coun try; . Studies completed by the De partment of Commerce by Sales Management and by other agencies reveal, for each area of the United States, what progress it has made in the last IS years. In Kinston, the figures show, a significant rise in earning capacity lias taken place since 1947. The average income per family at that time, after taxes, amounted to last year, the local avenge , $5,802 per family, •ovement was er, be gone up at the same time. The 1962 dol lar would not buy as much as the 1947 one did. How much of it had to be dis counted ? In terms of buying power, only three-fifths of the increase was real, the Department of Com merce estimates. The average growth rate through out the country during the 15 years, on the basis of family income, was $120 a year, according to the Gov ernment findings. Since the $120 represents cash in come only, farm families did not show to as good advantage as did urban families because some of their return was in the form of rent-free housing and in goods pro duced and consumed on the farm. Principal Indicted Jones County High School Prin cipal Christopher Columbus Franks was arrested Tuesday By United State* Marshal Hugh Salter on a warrant accusing the negro educa tor of filing a fraudulent federal in come tax return for 1M1. Franks, principal of Jones County’s largest school, and a native of the county, was released under $1,060 bond after being given a preliminary hearing Tuesday and trial is srikeduled for die next term of federal dis trict court in New Been. ' 5 Jury Frees One, Judge Another in Homicides Sheriff Yates to Direct Jones March Of Dimes 9th Thne Sheriff Brown Yates will serve as Director of the Jones County 1964 March of Dimes, Attorney George Hughes, Chairman of the Jones County Chapter of The National Foundation, announced this week. Sheriff Yates will direct volun teers during the January 2-31 an nual March of Dimes campaign in this county to raise funds fbr medi cal care of those afflicted with birth defects or with arthritis, and to support research into the cause and cure of these crippling condi tions. In announcing the appointment Hughes said, “I know very well that under the leadership of Sheriff Yates, the people of Jones County will give generously again to sup port the March of Dimes scientific assault on these cripplers. In de ciding the amount to give, all of us must also be mindful of the con tinuing needs of thousands striken in other year* by paralytic polio.” Sheriff Yates has directed the Jones County March of Dimes for the past eight years. HUSBAND IN ALABAMA Capt. Elbert C. Nye, whose wife, Lois, lives in Pollocksville, com pleted a four-week polit transition course in The Aviation Center at Fort Ruckner, Ala., Oct. 23. In this week’s' session of Jones County Superior Court presided over by Judge Howard Hubbard of Clinton two charges of murder have been cleared. A jury after brief deliberaiton found George Bruton not guilty of a second degree murder charge in the June 30th pistol slaying of Wes ley May. Both were involved in a fracas in the Caswell section. Bruton asserted that he was act ing an self defense and witnesses supported his claim in the view of the jury. Alex Koonce was charged with the! shotgun slaying of his wife Jean Murphy Koonce at their home in the Shady Grove section. He also claimed that he was trying to dis arm his wife when a shotgun ac cidentally went off, killing her in stantly. In the Koonce case Judge Hub bard issued a directed verdict of not guilty at the conclusion of the state’s presentation of evidence. Judge Hubbard gave Camp Le jeune Marine William Torrence a 2-to-6 year prison term for man slaughter in the March 24, 1963 death of John Tolbert III, who was •killed in a crash near Dover on US 70, when the Marine’s car crossed into the wrong lane while he was driving in a drunken condition. Torrence had his prison term suspended on condition he remain on probation for 5 years and pay $50 per month, each month during that time for the use and benefit of the parents of the infant child. Tobacco School if- — Jones County Farmers during the next 2 months will have an oppor tunity to substantially increase their knowledge of tobacco begin ning Monday night, December 2. Monday night’s session which will ibe the first in a series of five will feature discussions on the tobacco situation and outlook, also a dis cussion by a tobacco industry repre sentative on the lively subject “To bacco Quality and the tobacco pro gram as the tobacco industry sees it”. This series of schools offers far mers a rare opportunity to learn more about their business from some of the best authorities available any where. Listed below is a complete sche dule of the schools. December 2 — “TOBACCO SIT UATION — Supply, demand, use, production (domestic, world) Eval uation of tobacco programs and al ternate programs — Dr. E. W. Jones, Agricultural Economist. “TO BACCO QUALITY AND THE TO BACCO PROGRAM AS INDUS TRY SEES IT — Louis Dibrell, Vice-President, Dibrell Brothers, Danville, Va. December 9 — “GRADE STAND ARDS, NEW GRADES AND GRADE CHARACTERISTICS” — Jimmie Cash, U.S.D.A. Tobacco Grading Service. December 19 — “VARIETY AND PLANT PRODUCTION AND PLANT QUALITY” — S. N. Hawks Jr. Extension Tobacco Spe cialist. “DISEASES” — F. A. Todd, Tobacco Disease Specialist,' N. C. State. January 20 — “HEAT, AIR MOVEMENT AND CURING PRINCIPLES” — Dr. W. H. John son, Agricultural Engineer. “HAR VESTING AND CURING PRO CEDURE” — R. R. Bennett, Ex tension Tobacco Specialist. February 3 — “FERTILIZATION AND WEED CONTROL” — S. N. Hawks Jr. “SUCKER CONTROL AND SPACING AND HEIGHT OF TOPPING” - Henry Marshall said W. G. WoUz, Research. Glenda Collins Named Reporter for Eastern School Library Group At the annual meeting of the Eastern District of the North Caro Jina High School Library Associa tion held last week at Wallace-Rose Hill Glenda Collins of Jones Cen tral High School was named re porter for the coming year. The district includes schools in Greene, Wayne, Onslow, Jones, Le noir, Craven and Carteret counties. Other officers named were Presi dent Linda Shepard of East Duplin, Vice President Henry Clay Nobles of East Duplin and Secretary Elea nor Eakes of Greene Central. College Night Tuesday For Jones Central Hi College night will be held at Jones Central High School Tuesday, December 3, from 7 until 9 under the supervision of the Guidance De partment of the school. The program is open to all high school juniors and seniors and their parents. Freshmen and sophomores interested in attending college may participate in the program. The purpose of the event is to enable students and parents to be come acquainted with the colleges throughout the state. A wide range of colleges, includ ing industrial, techncial liberal arts, nursing, and business schools will be represented. New Maysville Service "'i.'.'y Beginning Wednesday Dee. 4. through a contract with the town board of Maysville, Wilford Phil yaw will be picking up trash every Wednesday. All garbage cans musk be placed on side' of the street in Front of the homes. There will be U> pickup ups from the back of the bom as. Citizens are asked to have cans ready far jfak np.