PAGE SIX E. D. DOYLE RADIO Repair Service Agent Atwater-Kent Radio Duncan BIcg. Beaufort, N. C. Dr. E. F. Menius Eyesight Specialist with Sam K. Eaton Co. t NEW BERN, N. C C. H. BUSHALL Fire. Health, Accident, Automobile Insurance Real Estate Bought Sold Rented Will Write Your Bond RELIABLE COMPANIES, GOOD SERVICE Duncan Bldg. Beaufort, N. C 'Phone 32 I 1 Dr. C. S. Maxwell $ t GENERAL PRACTICE Office Hours 10 to 12 A. M. and by appointment. Dr. J. O. Baxter Specialist THE EYE ONLY NEW BERN, N. C. FOR f AMBULANCE SERVICE I Call Phone No. 3 BELL & JAMES Funeral Director & Em balmers MOREHEAD CITY 4H....1 hH"M"I"M 1 1 11 1 1 U I'i'i I FOB t Ambulance Service I Day or Night 'Phone 216 or 116-W GEO. W. DILL Funeral Director Since 1900 MOREHEAD CIT', N. C. 4HH"HXXX-X-X-X"! R. A. Nunn LAWYER General Practice in all Courts Phone Nos. 64 & 301-W. 50 Craven St NEW BERN, N. C Dr. Geo. A. Wooten DENTIST Second Floor of Duncan Building Over House Drug Store Hour: 91 2 6 Office 115 J Ret. 134 L Dr. F. E. Hyde GENERAL PRACTICE Office over Betti Bakery Office Hours 10 A. M. to 12 M. 3 U 5 P. M. and by Appointment Office Phone 140 Rei. 26-L Dr. W. S. Chadwick Medicine & Surgery Office Hour . 9 to 12M 3 to 5 P. M. and by Appointment Office in Hill Building opposite Post Office Office Phone &3-J Re. 41-L D. W. Morton Notary Public Insurance With M. Leelie Davie BEAUFORT, N. C. Dr. H. M. Hendrix $ DENTIST Office Hoirn S to 12 A. M. 1:30 to S P. M "f Office Potter Euild'og X Over the potofficc 'THE KITCHEN CABINET ua. 1331. Western Ncwsl'a;-ir li.km.l "You have to believe in li:iip:ness H isn t an oiiiwv.rJ iIiIhk. The sprir.K never makes the s-ni't, I guefs, As much as the souk the fiiri:i-j. Aye. m-r.y a heart could find ton tent It it saw the Joy or. the roaa it went, The joy chcad when it had tc grieve. For the joy is there but oU have to believe." CHOCOLATE DAINTIES Chocolate In various forma baa nl way been a most popular confwtioit. dessert, take or caUe filling As nearly everybody likes cbocolnte oi may snttsfy tbe taste of any as r gards the kind of cake. From loaf to drop cakes, simple or rich, they always find a glad wel come. Chocolate Caramels. Put two and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter Into a saucepan, when melted add two cun fuls of molasses, one cupful of brown sugar, and stir until the sugar is dis solved and when the boiling point U i-cfiched r.'ld three squares y choco late f?ated, stirring constantly moil the chocolate is melted. Boil unfit S firm ball is formed when a little is dropped iuto cold water. Add one tea spoonful of vanilla and turn Into a buttered pan to cool. Chocolate Custard Pie. Line a p:e plate with pastry, flute the rim mi.l liil with the following: Kent the yolks of throe efr'S slightly, add one-Miilf cupful of sugar and continue boating, add one tiihlespoonful of soft butter, the snnie of flour, three-fourths of a cupful of milk and two squares of moiled chocolate: flavor with vanilla i and bake. Spread with a me:-ing:;fc made of the egg whites and one half cupful of powdered sugar. Ue turn to the oven and brown. Ciiocohits Cup Cakes. 'lake one half cui.' ful of shortening, add one cupful of siis-'.ir and cream, add one and one-half cupfuU of Hour vv;:h two find one-half toavpootifuls of bak ing powder finely sifted alternately with one-hair cupful of milk, mid lv.-.i beaten yolks of eggs, three squares of melted chocolate, ono-half teaspoonful of salt nnd one tenspooaful of vanilla, before the milk and flour Is added. Fold In at the last the well beaten whites of two eggs. Bake In small gem pans. OTHER PROBLEM S , By MRS. DOROTHY COHEN For Peace Sake THE four or five years before Mary and Bobby go to school are filled with moments that are apparently in significant but which have decided bearing on their later years. These years are their start on the coveted run of three score and ten and If any runner were to start a rac with a bruise on the most sensitive part of his foot, we would think his victory a distant, If not Impossible, thing. It Is not Illogical to liken the phrase, "for peace sake" to that bruise on a run ner's foot, for the part that It plays In Mary's and Bobby's race through life Is Just as much of a hindrance all along the course. Do you remember the day we watched Bobby from the window while he laboriously filled his littU red cart with pebbles and carried them load by load to a pile which he had already made by the- kitchen door? We smiled to ourselves at his energy and re joiced to see him so well and strong, but suddenly we glanced at the clock. It was his bedtime. "Come Bobby, time for bed!" we called. "Oh, Mother," came back the plea, which sounded to us like the one he had offered many times before, "I'm making a mountain! Can't I Just fin ish? It's almost done." "No, son," we answered, "that can wait until tomorrow. Mother Ui wait ing now. Come quickly!" So as Bobby had mastered to some slight degree the art of obedience, es pecially near the time for Father's re turn, the mountain was left unfinished and as we look back at It, It seems quite likely thst we weren't even greatly Impressed with the bigness or his scheme. Why, only Bobby and God himself would attempt a thins like that, and Ood would have finished bit mountain while enthusiasm ran high. w Alas -for osl - The Bxt Bme Bobby would probably be content to build only a Mil. He wo14 bave learned that there was not Mate or appreciation for bigger thins. Great engineers, great artists, great tnea and woraea la all walks of life do not btcoina great simply apoa ac quiring a certain maturity of years. They began by building "mountains" at the age of three and four and their greatness began to be a reality with their first completed achievement It Is up to parents to recognise tbat child ish ambitions and occupations are not Insignificant, but are the beginnings of greater ambitions. Letting routine or decisions made Jost "for peace sake" Interfere with a child's efforts often tends to stifle the very elements of fu ture greatness. (& tJ. WMtern Wwppw UaloB.t THE wrAlTPORT NEWS THURSDAY. JUNE 4, 1931 THE VALUE OF PRAISE By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. t a,. Sanders, not long ago, was telling ne ehout his boss. Sanders was a good man, well- trained, efficient, reliable, and quite well up on his par tlculnr line of work. It w o u 1 d have been dillicult to replace him had he pulled out nnd gone with another firm. He had been a nnut r t 1 1 1 A oriniiv organization for .'50 years had grown up with It, In fact, ns It had grown up with him. The prosperity and success of the firm had depended very largely pou bis efforts. He had worked under the same head during nil these years, and yet, he said to me that during 30 years he did not recall that he had ever di rectly received a word of praise from Ids superior ortioer. He knew that if he were ever called to the president's office it would be that he might have pointed 0jj to him something that was mrgT The president never calW anyone to coiamend him. He didu't believe in praise. His theory was that a man should do his best, and, having done that, he had done no more than should rightly be expected of him, and so was entitled to neither praise nor recognition of any sort. If his men did well they were never told so, but they know tuat if they were not working up to the standards which he set, the fact would he called to their attention. It isn't at all strange that there was discontent in his organization, that he was disliked, and that these from whom he should have co-operation and sympathy and love even gave him none of these things. It was the king in one of Milne's poems, a man of simple tastes he claimed, who asked for nothing spe cial excepting that he liked a little i butter with his bread. He wasn't sat isfied with being merely fed. lie could easily li.iiu boon properly nourished with the bread that was furnished him, but he wanted something that gave zest and taste to his eating. The most of us feel the same way about work. It is praise well spread on which furnishes the butter to the com mon bread of toil with which our days are filled. Without it we work with less enthusiasm, we grow discon tented and restless. I know another man quite unlike Sanders' boss, and very much more successiul. When one of his men does a good piece of work he tells him so. More than that, he generally writes him a note so that his words of com mendation may he reread and re-enjoyed and then taken home lo the family that they, too. may get pleas ure from the complimentary words He thanks men when they do him a service; he recognizes efficiency nnd loyalty nnd effective service, nnd he does so freely nnd ungrudgingly, lie never takes credit to himself for what others have done. His men adore him and would work their fingers to thf bone. If need be. to win bis praise. (EV 1'.'31. Westorn Newspaper Union. I Read The Want Ads NOTICE OF LAND SALE By virtue of authority contained in that mortgage deed executed by E. B. Whitehurst and Ruth L. White hurst the 5th day of January, 1926, recorded in the office of the Register of Deed? of Carteret County in Book 46 at page 257, default having been made in a note, secured by the said morttraee deed, the undersigned mort feiree will, on th fith dnv of .Inlv at 0 , "v.. J J - N E Cotton and Linen Nets, Twine and Fitting for ' mil the FUheriea. T GOLD MEDAL COTTON NETTING A. N. & T. COY LINEN GILL NETTING BURNHAM'S COD LINES Purse Seines, Traps and all oth er Appliances fitted Complete. 1 o'clock M at the courthota door 'the office of th KcgisW of Dd. titS.'c.-r- Jr-W ..detect C..y .. M 32 .. will sell to the hiehest bidder for 266. win sen, 10 wic u'xiif-i - . cash, the following described proper ty, to-wit: ! FIRST TRACT: In Eeaufort TJT uship, beginning1 at an iron stake at the southeast coiner of the County !Home land, and on the west side of the New Bern Road, running north, CO 1-2 dt-prees we-t with the County :Home line 420 feet to an iron stake. the southwest corner of the County !n h.ml- thonce north. 18 degrees west, with the County Home line; thiiae with the Laura G. Davis line .,.,,.!. c.ii I." ,l.irrnM u-pst 9-!0 feet to an Iron stake; thence with Sam i Morgan s line 18 degr ine 18 degrees west 1050 j feet to an iron stake; thence south, '60 1-2 dtcrees eaet 136i feet to an !;,...,. ctl.-o. thanrn couth fi) llel!ToeS east 595 feet to an iron stake in John l.askill s line leet Horn i. t. I Avery's northwest corner; thence ' north, 17 1-2 degrees west 595 feet i to John Gaskill's northwest corner; jthence north 67 1-2 degrees eat 210 feet to an iron stake at the west edge of the New Bern Road; thence with said road north 17 1-2 degrees west to the beginning, containing thirty-five and one-half acres, more or less. It being the same land con veyed by J. L. Stanton and wife to E. B. Whitehurst by deed dated Sep tember 22, 1925, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Car teret County in Book 61 at page 45. SECONR TRACT: Adjoining- the lands of Clyde GilliWn beginning at .Clyde Gillikin's northeast corner and running thence north 18 degrees west twenty poles; thence south, 76 de 'grees west, 4 poles; thence south 6 degrees east 20 poles and 8 links to Clyde Gillikin's line; thence north 73 degrees east seven poles and 11 links to th? beginning, containing 3-4 of an acre, more or le?s, being the same land conveyed by Wilkie Piner and wife to E. B. Whitehurst by deed dat ed August fi, 1920 and recorded in I "EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER" Most Complete assortment in Eastern Carolina. Brick, Lime, Cement. Plaster, Wallboard, Sheetrock. Heart Sills, Dressed and Rough Joist, Studding, Rafters. Flooring, Ceilings, Finish Mouldings. Weatherboard, Beveled Siding, Roofers. Juniper and Asphalt Shingles Ridge Rolls, Spouting. Window and Door Frame Material or made up Frames. Paints, Oils, Varnishes. Windows, Doors, Locks, Hinges, Nails. TERMS CASH. On Jan. 1st we announced reductions in price .and Cash Terms. It caught on big with the buyers and sales are increasing every month. PAY CASH AND SAVE MONEY Beaufort Lumber and Manufacturing Co. "Everything For the Builder" QUALITY PLUS SERVICE Phone 66 Mi 'wM'H"H"54x Go wherever you will, where fish nets are used, you will find GOLD MEDAL COTTON NETTING and A. N & T. COY LINEN NETTING the CHOICE of SUCCESSFUL FISHER. MEN. SAMPLES and prices mailed on request. THE Distributors NEW YORK, N. Y. 200 Hudson St. BOSTON 575 Atlantic Ave. THIRD TRACT: In Marshalbers ,and 6 1-2 links; thence noith, 72 de Township, ndjoining the land of P-lF,ees east 34 poles and 14 links to D. Murphy. Beginning at a stake on jthe beginning, containing G acres, the west side or the roaa oppusu C. II. B. Davis bridge, thence run ning 68 1-2 degrees west 8 poles t the Davis line; thence south 21 de gree? east 29 poles, to P. D. Mur nhv's line: thence east 2 poles and 13 links to said road; thence with the road north, b degrees west. 28 poles and five links to the beginning, con taining one acre, more or less. Be ing the same tract of land conveyed ; by James W. Harris to E. B. White- hurst by deed dated January it, 1920 and recorded in the oince oi me Register of Deed of Carteret Coun ty in Book 32 at page 2C2. FOURTH TRACT: In Marshallberg Township, adjoining the lands of F. P. Lewis and containing two tracts. ..... , it. FIRST TRACT: beginning at a stake on the shore on the south side of and near the mouth of a small gut and running thence with the shore south, 13 degrees east, 21 poles and 18 links thence south, 70 degrees west, 17 poles and 14 links; thence north 26 degrees west, 16 poles and 22 links; THROW IT AWAY ? No! Take it to Barbour Bros., Machine Shop and have it welded the acetylene way. No matter what it is, they can fix it. Or if any kind of machinery gets out of fix, they can put in running order in just a short while. TRY THEM J BARBOUR BROS. MACHINE SHOP FRONT ST BEAUFORT, N. C. Jissortment! LINEN THREAD CO. of American Net & Twine Co's Products Lombard and Colvert Streets BALTIMORE, Md. i BRANCHES- GLOUCESTER 105 Maplewood Ave. CHICAGO 154 West Austin Ave. "BUY THE BEST ot ;thcnc south 32 detnei wcrt. 6c, .gJi-JJ f, , fc j , ithence 4a 1-2 degrees west 13 poles more or less. qcw.nij TKACT: Beginning at the center of a ditch at the end of an old ditch bank in the old homestead field of Franklin P Lewis, thence running south, 25 1-2 degrees east, 93 yards; thence south, 55 degrees west, fifty-six yards ar.d one post; thence north 46 degrees west, 49 yards; thence north, 23 de grees east, 60 1-2 yards ; thence north 32 1-2 degrees east, 2 1-2 yards to the beginning, containing one-half acre, more or less. These two tracts of land being the same conveyed by Stephen F. Harris and wife to E. B. Whitehurst by deed dated June 12, 1920 and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Carteret Coun ty in Book 32 at page 264. This June 3, 1931. THE BANK OF BEAUFORT, Mortgagee. Date of Sale: July 6, 1931, 12 o'clock Noon. Place of Sale: The Courthouse Door. June 25. JACKSONVILLE 24 East Bay St SAN FRANCISCO 443 Mission St IT PAYS" 1 f: i i iimi mm i jT