t THE JONES COUNTY TRENTON, N. €., THURSDAY, AUGUST «, 1970 VOLUME xvra Jones Conation Murdered, Kinstonian Assaulted During Past Weekend One murder and one serious assault came under local invest igation. over the weekend with the finding of a man’s badly de composed body near the Jones Lenoir Comity line in the.Pleas ant mn section and the critical injury of a' Kinston Negro Sat urday night. . The dead man has been iden tified as Frank Brown Murphy about 40, who lived in Tuckahoe Township of Jones County. Le noir County Coroner Raymond Jarman says a single shotgun blast in the stomach ended Mur pity's life. The body was found Friday and estimates of the time of v death are from 4-tod days earl ier. Jones and Lenoir County authorities say the last time Murphy was seen alive was on Saturday when be was helping a crew put in tobacco. Kinston police have next to nothing to go on in the critical injury of Aubrey Lee Williams of 602 Lincoln Street, who was carried to Lenoir Memorial Hos pital at about 11 Saturday night suffering from a compound skujl fracture. Williams is still unconscious at Pitt Memorial Hospital where he was sent to have the services of a neurosurgeon._ Specialist Urges Special Livestock Care Hot Weather by Donald Hawkins Livestock Specialist Livestock producers should take special care to reduce heat stress on their animals during periods of hot, humid weather such as we have been experienc ing recently. These conditions are particularly dangerous to animals in transit and in feed lots. Sows are very susceptible to heat stress in the farrowing house also. There are several steps pro ducers can take to minimize the heat stress problem. Handling of animals should be kept at a minimum with necessary movement being made in early morning or late after noon. Keep animals in areas where there is free circulation of air 2nd provide shade. • Clean drinking water should Jones Pedestrian Killed Ninety Three Year-Old Will Gillette of Pollocksville was in stantly killed at abot?t 9:10 at urday night on Highway U. S. 17 near his home when he was struck by a car driven by Ben jamin Toole of New Bern Route 3. Patrolman C. W. Oakley said Toodle was in the act of pass ing another car as he drove north on 17, and Gillette was walking on the highway when he was struck. This was Jones County's 7th traffic death so far in 1970 and it was classified as unavoidable insofar as Toodle was concerned. Croom Family's 40th Reunion August 16 th The 40th reunion of the San dy Bottom branch of the Croom Family is to be held at 11 Sun dlay, August 16th, in the old Croom meeting house at Sandy Bottom. President John M. Croom urg es that every member of the dan who possibly ban come since a full program is planned and arriving late will mean miissing important parts of the day. The highlight of the gathering is the picnic dinner which is to be served at 12:30. Other offcers of the clan are Vice Presidents Rufus and Bruce Croom, Secretary Mrs. Myrtle Gayne and Treasurer Archie Davis. Tried Any 'Old Hen House' Lately? Around Trenton this week the opening line to many conversa tions has been “Have you tried any “Old Hen House” lately? Basis of tire waggery was the raiding of a good-sized whisky still Thursday night located in one of the hen houses located •back of Hargett’s Red and White grocery store in the western edge of Trenton. Three Trenton area men have been charged' with operating the industry. They are Johnny Hargett, Alford Gooding and El more Robinson, and along with their arrest impoundment was ordered of an automobile be longing to Jimmy Hargett. Thursday afternoon in spite of the heat Deputy Sheriffs Mil ton Arthur, Wesley Mallard and Garfield Haddock, inched their way through the swamp, leav ing their car at the fair grounds in Trenton and reached the still to see the trio busy with the operation. ATU officers from New Bern were called in later in the night and they arrived to destroy the be readily available at all times. If you felt you were getting too hot you would slow down, get out of the sun,' take ad vantage of the breeze, and get a cool drink. Livestock under hot weather stress respond to the same relief. So use common sense and take iL.easy when handling livestock during the coming weeks. still with several charges of dy namite and to place the trio under arrest. The still was constructed of plywood and had a capacity of about 540 gallons. At the time of the raid there were 58 gal lons of freshly run “Old Hen House” still on hand and be tween the time the still was discovered until the ATU of ficers arrived considerable quan tities had been delivered. One Trenton who confessed tasting of “Old Hen House” said with the mixture of the glue flavor from the plywood boxes used in the still and the aroma of Old Hen House it had quite a kick and a most distinctive flavor. Land Transfers The office of Jones County Register of Deeds Bill Parker reports recording the following land transfers in the past week: From G. N. and Jane Noble to Nimrod1 and' Lottie Carroll six lots in Trenton Township. From Don and Ann Brock to W. Bryan Hargett acres and to Ridie Ward Atkins 175 acres in Tuokahoe Township. From David' and Sue Jones Waters, Charlie and Jean Jones to Brook Mill, Inc., all the land about Brock Millpond. From Carey and Louise House to Herbert and Naomi Koonce one lot in Beaver Creek Town ship. Jones Commissioners Ignore Welfare Request for More Medical Aid Monday Suicide Attempt Leaves Jones Youth In Bad Condition, Danny Whaley of the Hargett Crossroad section of Jones Coun ty remains in extremely critical condition at Duke Hospital from a self-inflicted pistol wound. The young man who was work ing at Gurley-Dozier Pontiac Company in Kinston, was thought to be joking when he showed a pistol to a friend Saturday af ternoon and said, “I think I’m going to shoot you!” The friend said, “If you gotta shoot some body why don’t you shoot your self?” Whaley did and the bullet has caused' the loss of one eye and doctors say sight of the oth er eye is also badly damaged and probably will be lost, and they say he also suffered seri ous brain injury from which full recovery of mental faculties is impossible. Hit-and-Run Driver Kills Woman Near Jones Line Mrs. Doris Kirkman of 1103 Oak Street, Kinston, was killed at about 1:30 Sunday afternoon five miles south of Kinston on Highway US 258 when she was struck by a southbound car. The 53 year-old housewife had just gotten out of the family car to go to Saint James Free Will Baptist Church where fu neral services were to be con ducted' for 73 year-old Miss Wil lie Edmundson of 1307 Caswell Street. Witnesses were understanda bly excited and their versions of exactly what did happen dif fered widely as to description of car and driver. All agreed that the car was southbound, that the driver stopped, got out of the car, looked back and then apparently panic-stricken, jump ed in his car and fled. No one was able to say exact ly what make the car was, its color and naturally none got the license number. Four Jones Arrests During the past week the fol lowing have been booked at the sheriffs office in Trenton: Clyde Kinsey of Pollocksville route 1 was charged with assault on a female, Daniel J. Willis of Tren ton was charged with passing a worthless check, Marshal Ma ready of New Bern was charg ed with drunken driving and Henry Moore of Pollocksville was Charged with public drunkenness. This week tlie Jones County Board of Commissioners ignored a request from State Welfare Superintendent Clifton Craig that they re-open their 1970-71 county budget and amend it by at', least the addition of 12 per cent to the medical aid item in the welfare budget. This in spite of the fact that the money allocated to this med ical aid1 program was exactly what the state and county wel fare boards had asked for. The board included $19,695 in the ’70-71 budget for medical aid to welfare recipients but Craig in his most recent letter says that the estimates of his staff in February will be off by at least 12 per cent. Under the law commission ers have no authority to re-open annual budgets once they have been formally adopted and the tax rate fixed. In other action Monday the board voted to pay $25 rent to Quaker Neck Country Club for a tax supervisor’s meeting; Authorized purchase of a two way radio for the car of Deputy Sheriff Garfield Haddock; And gave Home Agent Mrs. Faytie Gray permission to at tend a special course at State University one day each week for a specified period. One Big, One Small Suit Filed in Jones County's Courts In the past week two civil ac tions have been filed in the of fice of Jones County Court Clerk Rogers Pollock; one very small and one much larger. In the small suit T. P. Ash ford Oil Company of Jackson ville is suing Lawrence H. Small of Maysville for $65.43. In the large suit $50,000 dam ages are being asked from Don ald Wayne Stilley and Dolly Horne Stilley by Otis Adolph Turnage Jr., a minor. This suit alleges that the four year old child suffered serious injuries on January 30, 1970 when he ran into the path of a car driven by Young Stilley and owned by his mother. The contention of the suit is that the road is straight at that point three miles east of Trenton on NC 58 where the child ran into the path of the car and that Stilley should have taken notice of the small child and shoud have been driving more carefully. CARR ON BYRD Navy Seaman Apprentice Da vid C. Carr, of 318-C Richard Green Homes, Kinston, is serv ing aboard the guided missile destroyer US Richard E. Byrd in the Mediterranean. DOPE WAR CONTINUES IN LENOIR; SEVEN MORE INDICTMENTS, TWO CARS IMPOUNDED by Jack Rider The Lenoii County war against dope pushers continued during the past week with seven addi tional indictments being issued and two cars belonging to a lo cal man being impounded for involvement in delivery of nar cotics. These indictments were the result of several months of un dercover work by agents of the State ABC board, working close ly with local ABC Officers Paul Young and Tom Taylor, who al so from time to time called in city and county officers to as* HH ready in custody for previous dope violation' charges. They were James A. Powell, former Kinstonian, now calling Newark, N. J. home, Wanda Fay Collie, calling Brooklyn, N. Y. home, but more lately occupying a one room “dope den” on East Wash ington Street with teenager Lar ry Anderson of 1017 Hicks Av enue. Hicks was named in three of these additional indictments, Miss Collie and Powell'in one each. Two new names were added to the Mst. They were John H; Smith of 400 East Blount Street and Fred Edwards of i205 Sun bath of whom were of Manhattan Cab Company, a pool room, grill and bonding ser vice in South Kinston. Edwards was indicted by his wife last week on a non-support charge and when he was bonded out he skipped town' and the narcotics violation warrant against him has not been serv ed. One taxie and one private car belonging to Mills were' im pounded under $4,000 bond each, which Mills posted Monday, but none of those in custody has yet made bond, despite the fact that superior court judge El bert Peele had reduced the bond of Powell from $50,000 to $5, 000. Smith is under $10,000 bond, Miss Collie is under $15,000, An derson under $30,000 and Pow ell was placed under an addi tional $10,000 bond with this latest arrest, making his total bond $i5,000. ABC Officer Young said in dictments have now been drawn for six of seven people who were under surveillance for dealing in dope in and around Mills’ place on the Southeast Corner of Queen and Shine streets. Young also said the Federal Communications Commission will pe notified of-Mills’ viola tion of his franchise by having a ttoo-way radio on . his private car, as well as those cars be ing used by Smith and Edwards. [in the delivery of narcotics to undercover agents in which de liveries use of the two-way ra dio was a factor. Young further said he intend ed to seek a padlock hearing against Mills for his entire op eration as well as asking the city council to cancel his taxi fran chises. Mills is also supposed to de liver another dope pusher, James A. Kornegay, to local courts by Thursday of this week (August 6th) or pay a $5,000 bond he signed for Kornegay minutes after Kornegay was ar rested when heroin was found hidden in a dresser drawer of his room ait the Kinstonian Mo tel earlier this year.