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(the (Chronicle .Star THE MOSS POINT ADVERTISER VOL. 103 10c. Copt M.m*« ' PASCAGOULA AND MOSS POINT, MISSISSIPPI, FRIDAY, JANUARY 4. 1952 _ Mrab*r NO. 2 PT National Editorial Aaaodatlaa Tha A.aoclat. g » — TIDE TABLE DAY Today _ Saturday _ Sunday — Monday ... Tuesday ... Wednesday Thursday Friday _ Saturday Sunday —. HIGH —8:14 p.m. .5:35 p.m. ...6:08 p.m. ... 6:48 p.m. ...7:32 p.m. 8:20 p.m. . 9:10 p.m. .. .9:59 p.m. ...10:41 pm. ..11:19 p.m. LOW 7 :27 a.m. 5:27 a m. 5:45 a m. 6:07 a m. 6:58 a.m. 7 :42 a.m. 8:25 a m. 9:05 a.m. 9:39 a.m. 10:07 a.m. * -« MISSISSIPPI'S Largest Weekly ABC Paid Circulation Last Quarter 4390 Read By 23.000 JACKSON COUNTIANS • ---4 These Will Assume 1st Elective Posts GEORGE HAGUE Moss Point Plans, For New Bridge On Rhodes Bayou The mayor and aldermen of Moss Pgint at a meeting Wednes evening voted to widen Main street 10 feet ih front of the John Hill proptiiy adjacent to Rapes Drug store. Widening the street will afford parking space and relieve traffic congestion it is believed. Plans for a new bridge over . Rhodes Bayou on Osntsler street wore presented and the board voted to advertise for creosoted pilings and lumber to begin construction in the near future. Mayor Alton Thomson reported on a recent trip to Washington to seek federal aid for a proposed extension to the sewage system. It was voted U> engage an engi neer to compile the necessary in formation and data to complete the file for federal approval. A. W. Head, local engineer, will compile the information and esti mated cost. Mrs. M. W. Yerger, Club Leader, Dies At JC Hospital Mrs Hyacinth Wood Yerger. 80. died at Jackson County Hospital Saturday after an illness of sev eral weeks. She was a native of Rosedale but had lived in Gulfport before coming to Pascagoula about six years ago to make her home with her daughter, Mrs. Amos A. Tims. She was a member of St. Pet er’a-by-the-Sen Episcopal church of Gulfport; • the Beauvoir chap ter of UDC and Gulfport chapter of DAR. A past state president of the 'American Legion auxiliary she was a member of the Joe Graham post of the Legion aux iliary. Mrs. Yerger had been libra rian in Gulfport end was n member of the Harrison County Library Association. rW... The widow of the late Rucks Vjjt | Yerger she is survived by one daughter, six grandchildren and lb great grandchildren. m Mfci Prayer services were held at i Fails chapel Monday with the Rev. Cyril Vlamynck, rector of t ■ Ft. John’s Episcopal church offi ciating. Interment was at Metairie Cemetery. New Orlean [ . Pall bearers were J. Ouv Krebs and John R Watts, Pascagoula, Chester Lyons. Moss Point. Ro nj land Lovelace, .1 M. Bridges and J. C. Gay, all of Ocean Springs. . ? RESIGNS Mrs. Lois Delmas Neno. g id uate nurse, who recently joined the staff of the countv health ci - t partment resigned this week to move to Georgetown, S. C , where her husband has been transfer red by the International Paper Company, Dr. G. W. Hicks, direc tor, announced today. Steel production in the first four months of 1951 in the United States was 34.5 million tons, a X new' record. OLIN DAVIS DONALD CUMBEST » LEO BYRD ■ County’s Officials Sworn In Monday Carnival Ball To Be Held Latter Part Of February The annual Carnival Ball and the crowning of their Majesties, j ttte'KIn* and Queen of Joy, by the Young Men’s Rusiness club has been set for February 22, Frank G. Spann, Jr., general chairman, announced today. A central theme and motifs for decorations are already being planned the committee for ar rangements said. The traditional ball will be held the Friday evening before Mardi Gras day(in the lllh Street Auditorium. Deadline Is Sei On PMA Program For January 15 The final date for reporting performances under the 1951 Ag ricultural Conservation program is Jan. 15, 1952, W. A. Rogers, chairman of Jackson County Pro duction and Marketing Adminis tration. announced today. Rogers further staled that rec ords of the Jackson County" office show that there are many farm ers who have secured approvals of assistance for carrying out soil conservation practices who have not reported 'performances on these practices. He urges that all farmers who have carried out an ap proved soil conservation prac tice under the 1951 program report such practice not later than Jan. 15, otherwise the as sistance cannot be granted. A successful conservation pro gram has been functioning in the county. Rogers reported. The fed eial government has helped to pa\ the cost of carrying out soil Icons rving practices on 281 farms J in the county the past year. Farm I ers of the county have received j $19,480 assistance under the 1951 I Agricultural Conservatibn pro gram in rc-ceding pastures, plant ing winter cover crops and ap plying superphosphate, potash, basic slag and liming materials. I Moore Appointed | To City Judge Post For Pascagoula I Joe A Moore, former city nt j tornoy, has been appointed city nidi e by mayor Wilbur Dees at I Pascagoula. I Moore will succeed Donald ! Cumbest, who resigned as of Jan. 1 to assume duties of county pros ecutor, to which position he was elected in August. The number of milk cows on US farms has changed little in the last three years. School Seniors Special Guests New and re-elected county and beat officers will official ly take over their duties for the. next four years at sweajr ing-in ceremonies Monday at the Pascagoula courthouse. Circuit Judgo L. C. Corbnn will administer the oath of office in public ceremonies at 10 am in Ihe courtroom. Senior class members from all county schools have been invited to attend as special guests of the board of supervisors. It will be the firit such cere mony held in the county's new million-dollar courthouse. Leo Byrd, who will succeed J. Guy Krebs as sheriff, said Thurs day that his chief deputy will be E. E. Blakeney, former Pasca goula chief of police who left that post to become a member of the state highway patrol. Two new members of the board of supervisors will be sworn in. along with three members re elected. New members are George Hague, Beat Three, and Olin H. (Buddy) Davis, Beat Five. Members re-elected for four year terms are Roy O. Dumbest. Beat One; E. A Khayat, Beat Two and A. P. Moran, Beat Four. Three Were Unopposed Three officials unopposed in the recent primary who will take oath for another four years are Vert is Ramsay, circuit clerk; N. C Everett, chancery clerk, and Norman T. Lyons, tax assessor. Donald W. Dumbest will take over as county attorney and M M. (Mac) Morgan, who was elect ed to the term made vacant bv the death of A. F. Megehee, will head the superintendent of edu cation’s office. James Ira Grimsley will be sworn in as coroner, and J. Guy Krebs, outgoing sheriff, will be county legislative representative. Hermes Gautier. Pascagoula, will take over as 41st District state senator. Hnd Floyd Foun tain. St. Martin, as floater rep resentative for Jackson and Harrison counties. Justices of the peace and con stables for the county's five boaV will also be sworn in at the cere monies. They are: Beat One: H. P. Parker, JP. M. L. Hamilton, constable: Beat Two: B. B Hobdy. JP. Dari Wilson, constable; Beat Three: Kate Den nv. JP. Dharlie Emanuel, con stable; Beat Four. H P Benuee/ JP, Draymond Rulloek, constable: Reat Five, J M. Alexander, JP Burton E Roberts, constable. EASY THERE. PODNER Vancouver, B. C. (AP) Bruc< Howard was dressed as a cowboy complete with toy guns. for a fancy dress gathering when he spotted two men preparing to drive his car away. When he drew his six-shooters the men fled and Bruce went on to the party. Rotations Earn Cash Reviewing Magazine Articles Lienor looking affidavits mark ed the places of Pascagoula Rn tarians at the club luncheon Wed nesday. The documents stated that the holder could qualify as a $75,000 n year man provided he could speak extemporaneously 50 sec onds about an article appearing in the Rotarian, club magazine. Each Rotarian who qualified received 50 cents and had his af fidavit stamped by H. P. Heidel berg posing as a notary public. Making talks were A. V. Smith, Earl Hammett. Hal Lee. Frank Ellis, Donald Simmons, Dr. Char les McKay, Capt. H. H Colle, Joiner Haltom. Floyd Daniel, Lar ry Lindhart and a visitor, M. W. Levinson, Ciowderspoit, Pa. Last Rites Held For Mrs. Clayton Mrs. Mary I. Clayton, 71, died last Saturday at her residence on Pollack Road after a lengthy ill ness. She was a native and lifelong resident of Pascagoula. Funeral services were held Sunday at Fairview Baptist church with the Rev. J. S. Jen kins officiating assisted by the Rev. C. S, Simmons. Interment was in Machpelah cemetery. Pall bearers were Freddie O'Brien, Andrew Moates, E. Goodman, R. M. Whitfield, Earl Cunningham and J. Snyder. Survivors are her husband. Charles Clayton; a daughter. Mi's. £ H. Spicer; a son, Richard Clay ton: two brothers, Emp. Pasca goula and Dallas Trehern. Irving ton. Ala.; 16 grandchildren and four great grandchildren. lames M. Colmer To Practice Law In Pascagoula James M. Colmer will open law offices in Pascagoula, he said to day. Colmer is a graduate of the University of Mississippi law school and saw active service as a lieutenant in the Navy in both the Atlantic and Pacific during World War II. He is son of Mr. ,.nd Mrs. W M. Colmer. His offices will be located in the Palace Pharmacy building. Mt. Dora, Fla., is one of the most recent communities to install electric garbage disposers on a town-wide scale. Ninety per cent of the houses are connected to septic tanks and the new dispos ers grind waste into small par ticles for quick assimilation in | the tanks. J. I. GRIMSLEY i Joint Rites Will Mark Installing Of Masonic Heads There will be a joint Installa tion of officers of Pascagoula chapter No. 151, Order of Eastern Star and Pascagoula Lodge No j 419, F&AM Monday at 7 p. m. at the Recreation Center, C. D. El lerman, retiring worshipful mas ter. announced today. W. E. Litton, Gulfport, district deputy grand lecturer, will be the installing officer. Outer visiting dijjna'.arjus will hi Lawrence Corbin, Gulfport, junior grand warden, and Joe Lee Smith, For est, grand master of the state of Mississippi. Incoming officers are Miss Ellen Daggett, worthy matron and C. E. Trest, worthy patron of the East ern Star, and G. E. Cowart, wor shipful master of the Masons. Wise Undergoes Serious Operation D. C. Wise, employe of the Pas cagoula sanitation department, underwent an operation to cor rect a ruptured disc in his back in Mobile Friday. Wise was injured when he slip ped while at work. The city will pay the medical expenses. Evans Byrd First Victim New Year's Fontainebleau Man Is First To Succumb On County Highways Evans Byrd, 28, was killed and his brother, Mantell, 30, was hospitalized when a half ton pick-up truck in which they were riding overturned on the Pointe Aux Chenes road south of Highway 90 near Gautier about 4 a. m. New Years. They both resided in Fontainebleau. County Highway Patrolman C. A. Davis, investigating the accident, was unable to deter mine at the time who was driving the truck, but it is re ported to have left the highway on a curve, ripped down a bannister and overturned. Evans Byrd was thrown out of a door as the truck overturned and crushed him. He died in stantly. Mantell Byrd was taken to Jackson County Hospital where he was treated for lacerations and was discharged Wednesday. Service Station Operator Byrd, son of the late Ernest E. Byrd and Mrs. Emily A. Parker Byrd, was a lifelong resident of Jackson County. He was a mem ber of the Bellefontainc church. Until three weeks ago he had been operating a service station at Fontainebleau. He is survived by his mother; four brothers, Woodrow, Wiggins, Mantell and Lavelle, Fontaine bleau and Lynn, New Orleans; four sisters, Mrs. John Bond, Wiggins, Mrs. Ulysses Seymour, Ocean Springs, Mrs. W. C. Var nado, Bogalusa, and Miss Olgie Byrd, Fontainebleau; 22 nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held Wednesday from the residence in Fontainebleau and from the Daisy Vestry church with the Rev. R. L. Vaughan officiating. The Tasmanian tiger, actually a marsupial wolf, is one of the rarest of living animals. MISS MISSISSIPPI — JESSIE Wynn Morgan of Newton — a Miss Ameiica contestant in the annual Atlantic City Pageant, makes one of the first contribu tions to the 1952 March of Dimes. The March of Dimes period has been doubled to in clude all January because of the record polio toll of the last four years. March Of Dimes Local Quota Set As Drive Opens For the first time Jackson coun ty has been asked to accept a quota in the March of Dimes campaign, R. H. Burney, county chairman, said today. The state suffered the worst epidemic of polio it ha3 fiad last year. Burney said, with 751 cases in Mississippi alone. This was more than the total number of cases in the preceeding two years tficials said. There were four cases in Jackson county and about JO in Harrison. Jackson County has bean ask ed to accept a $10,000 quota. Mr. Burney said, with the fund j raising campaign set for Jan uary 2 through the 31st. The county headquarters has mailed out 6100 March of Dimes folders and a generous response is hoped for the chairman said. Success of the campaign is con tingent upon the cards being mail ed back with an enclosure. About 600 iron lung banks will be distributed throughout the (Continued on page 5) January Thru June In Jackson County: Highlights Of First Six Months Of 1951 As the year 1951 fades into the pages of history Jai kson county prepares to post to those pages its accomplishment', its trials and tribulations, its jo\ and sorrows. I Following is a chronological re ! view of these happenings and events of general interest to countians. January Alton Thomson w sworn in as Moss Point s new mayor, suc ceeding Bob Cirlot Sworn in as aldermen were S. A Mclnnis, C. B. Wilkerson. John A. Cirlot, E. Gregory Wood n l Frank G. Spann. Four am i desperados, two of them women, were cap tured in Moss Point and Pasca goula after bi -puntuated chases. Pascagoulans m • ;,ting with Reynolds Metals c >n locating an aluminum plan in the area were told it would p: viably go to Texas because of r- - favorable gas rates. Richard Spi iger Smith. 59. native and In' g resident of Escatawpa, d d at Veterans Hospital at Biloxi. A record 63 count vs left for pre-induction ph' d exams. Sidione Eugene K b 72. life long resident of Pa s igoula and member of one of t • ■. county’s oldest families, di* d at the coun ty hospital. Ben Scholtes wa mod pres ident of the chambrr of com merce. *The Missi-s ppj Coast Council, meeting at Gulf Hills, adopted a resolution asking a state investigation >.f industrial gas rates. Funeral services were held for Paul Turner Vaughan, 67, superintendent of the L&N creosote works at Gautier. The home of Mr. and Mrs. John Watts. Beach blvd , was damaged an es timated $20,000 in an eatly morn ing fire. The SS Schuvler Otis Bland was launched at Ingalls, first ma jor launching in 18 months. Hen ry “Cap'’ Fletcher, 82, native and life-long county resident, died at Biloxi Hospital. Cpl. Alfred E. Duvernay. 21, Ocean Springs, was reported killed in action in Korea. Figures were released showing more than a half-million pine seedlings were planted in the county during 19S0. Bernard Van Court was elected president of Ocean Springs school board. Death claimed Mrs. Isa bel Mclnnis, 70. former Moss Point resident, and Mrs. Cora Ed wina Moody, 64. Moss Point. Two persons were injured and two cars wrecked in reported ac cidents on Highway 90 during the month. February Charles E. Morie, 15, Kreole, was chosen "Tops in Our Town” in a Chronicle-Advertiser spon sored contest and won a free trip to New York where he appeared on a national radio hookup. Fu neral services were conducted for Rudolph Hans, longe-time Pasca goula resident. Jackson county experienced its coldest weather in many years when 12-degree freeze hit crops and water pipes. Ingalls was awarded a $40-million contract by the US Maritime board for con struction of five high speed cargo vessels. The seafood commission signed a contract for dredging reef shell, and adopted an order authorizing reciprocal fishing agreements with other Gulf States. Work was started on the new state 4H camp at Magnolia i Park. W. H. Nelson, Jr., was re appointed to the MP school board and R. J. Van Horn, Vancleave. was named to the hospital board. Kllie Edward Smith, 60, died at Moss Point. The 4th annual Golden Gloves was completed with entries from four states and the Chronicle Advertiser sponsored team head ed for the Southern regionals at Nashville. Open house was held on the Gulf Star, newly completed tuna clipper, which was scheduled to operate out of here following com pletion of the tuna cannery at MP. John Henry Durden, long time Pascagoula resident, died at 93 leaving 106 direct descendants. Frank E. McDonald was named to head the annual Red Cross drive. County PMA allotments were doubled for 1951. Funeral serv ices were held for Mrs. Ada Ursa line Clark, who had lived in Pas cagoula for 72 of her 79 years. Ranee Calhoun Faegard, 70. life long county resident, died at Wade. The US Army Engineer boat yard at Pascagoula was offered for sale by the federal general services administration. H. J. Winkelseth was named head of (Continued on page 5) To Refute Charge Says Chief Jones At Hearing Today Charges accusing police chief R. E. Jones of irregular ities in the performance of his duties were entered on the minutes of the city of Pasca goula Thursday. The charges were made by Virgil Cuevas, assistant chief, who was fired as of Jan. 1. A hearing and investigation of the Cuevas accusations will be gin at 9 a. m. today in city court. Presiding will be H. C. Ezell, works commissioner. Jones was quoted as saying the Cuevas charges could be refuted. Cuevas’ statement, dated Dec. 31, was addressed to the board of mayor and councilmen. The com plete text follows: “I have served as a police offi cer and assistant Chief of Police of the Pascagoula Police Force, having served as a police officer for some 22 months. Recently the Chief of Police, Jones requested my resignation, which 1 declined to give. I was then notified by Chief Jones on this date, that I was discharged. “I believe that the Board and the public are entitled to know something about the operation of the Pascagoula Police Depart ment under Chief Jones. The in cident that led up to my dis charge arose when I asked to get off on December 17th and Chief Jones agreed and stated that he womM work in my place. “The Sunday before I was sop posed to have the day off, Chief Jones asked me if I had got any one to work in my place, and de nied ever having agreed to work in my place. "He advised me at that time that Mr. Ezell and DeJean would not hire anyone to work in my place. I pointed out to Chief Jones that Chief Jones and Mayor Dees had taken Po liceman Stewart off a day to go bird hunting with them re cently, and that they had hired D. Y. Smith to take his place. “Chief Jones actually had turn ed in D. Y. Smith’s time for the City to pay him, but when he found out that I was checking on it, he withdrew D. Y.’s Pay state ment from the City Office. “In other words, I am being dis charged because I protested on not being allowed a day off, which had been promised to me by Chief Jones, when Chief Jones would allow a policeman a day Off to go bird hunting with him and the Mayor. “As Assistant Chief of Police I have had opportunity to observe the manner in which the Pasca goula Police Department has been operating, and there are certain grave irregularities that ought to be called to the attention of the Board and of the public. “(1) There is no record being kept in the City Hall of guns tak en from offenders, which guns are confiscated and not returned to the original owners. These guns are being disposed of by the Chief of Police in such manner as he sees fit, and it is my understand ing that these guns are not being destroyed, but are being given to favored persons. “(2) There is no accurate record kept of the long distance tele phone money that is turned in at the police headquarters by per sons calling long distance from the police station. Although the City pays the entire bill I have reason to believe that there is no verification made as to what long distance calls are made by pri vate citizens and paid for, and that for several months that this money has not been turned in to the City Treasury. "(3) I have been advised that there is a special Police "Kitty." in which funds are deposited for the benefit of the Police De partment, but there is no record kept to show where the money comes from, how it is disbursed, or for what purposes it is dis bursed. this being a matter controlled entirely by the Chief of Police. “I do know that recently be fore the parking meters were placed officially in operation that the day before the meters offi cially started that Calvin Bolding (Continued on page 5)