Newspapers / The Beaufort News (Beaufort, … / Oct. 24, 1935, edition 1 / Page 9
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THE BEAUrORT NEWS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24. 19$S PAGE NINE Beaufort News WANT ADS FOR QUICK RESULTS PHONE Ifi PHONE Police And Sheriffs To Attend District Meet In Greensboro LETTERHEADS Are in reality . . . Ambassadors . . . They should bespeak qual. ity . . . In Our PrinUhop we have ideal paper and type fer printing stationary with char acter, dignity, and distinctive ness. Let us figure with you on that next stationary job. Beaufort News PrinUhop. A NUMBER OF HOUSES AND Lot for Sale in Beaufort, Also several farms for sale. Submit bids to W. A. Allen, Liquidat ing Agent, Beaufort. N. C. TYPEWRITER RIBBONS AND AD ding machine paper at the Beaufort News office. WARRANTY DEEDS. MORTGAGE Deeds, Deeds of Trust, Chattel Mort gage blanks for sale at Beaufort News Office. FOR RENT 50 ACRE FARM more or less cleared land; one six room house and large barn on North River road 2 miles east of Beaufort. See C. II. Bushall, Beaufort, N. C. CORN MEAL AND COTTON BE- ginning Saturday morning, Sept. 24, my Mill House will be opened for grinding corn every Saturday until noon Will pay market price for Cotton. D. F. Merrill, Beaufort, R. F. D. Oc-10 The law enforcing officers of this and neighboring counties will hold a district conference in Greenville, Thursday, November 7th, to discuss mutual problems and lay plans for concerted and continuous effort in crime prevention and highway safety. A total of eight such conferences will be held throughout the State in all. The counties forming this district are Beaufort, Carteret, Craven, Greene, Hyde, Jones, Onslow, Lenoir, Onslow, Pamlico, and Pitt. The series is being arranged thru the Law Enforcing Officers Division of the Institute of Government by the leaders of city, county, state, and federal officers in North Carolina. The district conferences, plans for which were adopted at the state wide School of Law Enforcing Offic ers here last summer, will be follow ed by city and county schools. The Institute of Government, it was announced today, has completed arrangements for the printing of 250,000 copies of its new guidebook on Highway Safety. Those will be distributed to every officer, citizens group, and high school in the State, it was said, forming the basis for safe ty instruction and promotion by all threo groups. In the district conferences the 1 morning sessions will be limited to police, sheriffs, and state patrolmen for the district. The judges and solic itors of the intermediate courts will join in the afternoon meetings. HEADS PROGRAM ! Higgins explained experiments are Carolina." ibeinsr conducted in "bubbling" the I The number of these i water in which starfish live with pois- lonous gasses. Although use of chemicals to fight the enemies of oysters still remains within the experimental stage, Hig gins said other methods were being worked out successfully to free oys ter waters of pests. "Rapid progress has been made in developing methods of control of the ovster drill bv means of traDDine." !he declared. "The efficiency of this imethod has been proved by extensive n v n u " i tvi onto 1 urnlr in Maoeflphnapt.ttt. Rhode Island, Virginia and North I pests has been reduced from 10,000 to 50,000 a week in Delaware, Virginia and North Carolina waters, Higgins said. Experiments also are biing con ducted to determine practical meth ods for eradication of leeches, found primarily in Florida and gulf wat ers, he continued, adding that con siderable progress is being made. The oyster pest extermination campaign is being carried out in a military-like style with Higeins act ing as chief of staff from his Wash ington office. Research work is centered at Bu- Woods Hole, Mass.. Milford, Conn, and Beaufort, N. C, and a tempor ary laboratory at Apalochicola, Fla. i Dr. W. S. Chadwick Medicine & Surgery Office Hours 9 to 1211 8 to 5 P. M. and by Appointment Office in Potter Building oppodtw Post Office Office Phone 75 Res. Phone 1 Dr. H. F. Prytherch Dr. Prytherch, director of the Bu reau of Fisheries on Piver's Island will also head an Oyster Pest Control program in southeastern states. This program is of vital importance to the oyster industry. A complete story of what will be done in the various states was released from Washington this week. It is reprinted below. OYSTER ENEMIES WILL BE ROUTED Each district conference will cul minate with a buffet supper at which . 1 1 i j s mayors, members oi me Dar, anu I members of the public affairs commit tees ot tne various citizens i-uups will meet with the officials in the in terests of co-ordinating the efforts of all groups in a state-wide program ; of law enforcement. I WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 Enemies of the defenseless oyster are being met this fall by an aggressive cam paign of the Bureau of Fisheries. RUBBER STAMPS AND SEALS made daily. "Send for Our Prices To day." ROBERTSON STAMP WRKS. 22 1-2 W. Hargett St., Raleigh, N. C. t NOW IS THE TIME Windshield And Door Glasses Re paired While You Wait LOFTIN MOTOR COMPANY Beaufort, N. C. FOR SALE One'Storr bouse with six 18 acres more or less, 12 clear ed more or less. stocc house. 2 1-2 miles from Beaut ort on North River Road. Want $3500.00 APPLY TO C. H. BUSHALL Beaufort, N. C. 4t Nov. 7 Geo. J. Brooks ENGINEER and LAND SURVEYOR Box 477 BEAUFORT, N. C. lMeee' Dr. H. M. Hendrix DENTIST Office Hours: t 9 to 12 A. M. 1:30 to S P. M Office Potter B-ilding i ; B. A; BELL Your Jeweler for 25 Years Repair work efficiently and Promptly Done NEXT DOOR POSTOFHCE Support The Chamber of Commerce Expernments in control of the star fish, drill and leach, authorized by spjeial act of Congress, were said by Elmer Higgins, head of experiments at the bureau, to have evolved new and novel methods of destruction un dei' water. Poisonous gasses, not unlike those used to kill armies in the World Among the topics for instruction ' War, are being tested to see if they and discussion at the conference for , will destroy the starfish without harm this district are rules of evidence, ar-. ing other marine life. rests, searches and seizures, investiga-: "Experiments are at present under- tions, preparation of cases for trial, ! way to determine the efficacy of var- . 'i : i p irtnq phpTnipnla in lcillincr.. starfish" Civil service, puuucs in law ciuuitc- ( e. , ment, and uniform laws and uniform . niggms saia. enforcement of the laws. "But to avoid possible damage to l other marine life, including food Along with those will be featured , fisn, further experimentation is nec- the co-ordination of all groups of law jessary before practical methods can enforcing officers in the enforcement , be recommended to the oyster indus of the motor vehicle laws which is ; try." one phase of the larger problem ot crime prevention and criminal law en forcement. 'DIRT IS NOT CHEAP" WHEN EROSION STARTS O IB HI EBB B B B B fl w Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 16 The old expression, "dirt cheap, Deiongs to a past era, according to James M. Gray, Regional Director of Land Utilization for the Resettlement Administration. "Dirt is not always cheap,' Mr. Gray said. "When erosion robs a man of his topsoil and leaves him with a non-productive gully-cut farm,- he realizes that his dirt was worth more than gold itself. Dirt, in the sense of productive soil, is the most valuable of all the nation's resources." Mr. Gray is directing a program designed to return selected areas of ! X eroded lands in North Carolina, Ten nessee, Kentucky, Virginia and West : Virginia to profitable use, these pro jects being integrated with the broad national land adjustment program of ttie Resettlement Administration. O. H. Johnson. M. D. SPECIAUST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat CLAMES FITTED Office Mroaead City Beaufort Hoarsi 9 to 12 A. 2 to S P. ta BBs1 I HIS I 1 B B b h n b a CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many friends for the sympathy and kindnesses shown the illness and death of our beloved Esther J. Garner. We wish specially to thank those who show ed their sympathy by sending floral designs. C. H. Garner and family. C. P. Pringle and family. Person County farmers paraded their pure bred cattle , through the main street of Roxboro recently and held a speaking program following ex hibition of the cattle. There are 600 acres of the Crotal arie legume growing on the sandy soils of Richmond County at present. In 1932, there were only two acres in the eounty. 1 H t W"ft l"H'H"H'H .jut, ,;,,' Dr. F. E. Hyde GENERAL PRACTICE Office at Residence, Ana Street Office Hears: 10 A. M. to 13 M. 3 to E P. M. I and by Appointment Phone No. 140-L Dr. Clifford W. Lewis Office Tel. 46, Res. Tel. S9 J Office Hours: 9 a. m to 12 M. & 2 to i p. m. NIGHT BY APPOINTMMENT BEAUFORT, N. C. C. H. BUSHALL Fire. Health, Accident, Automobile Insurance Real Estate Bought Sold Rented Will Write Your Bond RELIABLE COMPANIES, GOOD SERVICE Hill Bldg. Beaufort, N. Phone 32 Dr. C. S. Maxwell J GENERAL PRACTICE Office Hours: 10 A! M. to 12 M and by Appointment. 4 Dr. E. F. Menius OPTOMETRIST NEW BERN, N. C. 95 Middle St. BvcooDerative action, ten Clay county farmers filled their ten silos at a cost of $8 each by buying a sil age cutter for $60 and an automobile engine for $10. The men said it was the cheapest feed they had ever stor W i 1 . 1 ', 1 4 1 :- i ' s I . !a.v V i mimmm I CAN SMOKE ALL I WANT BECAUSE I SMOKE CAMELS. THEY OONt UPSET MY "-, j, I SMOKE A GREAT DEAL TOO. I PREFER CAMELS BECAUSE THEY DON'T MAKE MY NERVES JUMPY, AND I LIKE THEIR FLAVOR BETTER ..'.i-isfeS If FRANK SUCK Wild Animal Collector SECRFIAtY Elizabeth Harben 4 F At last ... A "drinkable" whiskey at a "cents-ible" price . . . Old Drum, the Super Blend . . . Distilled from same premium grain used for costliest whis key . . . Smell the difference . . . Taste the difference . . . Pocket the difference . . . Compare Old Drum with any "straight" or "blended" whiskey in its price class . . . You can't beat it! HIS GUESS IS $1.50 A PT. Asked to estimate the price of Old Drum, Jack Leslie, of New York City, declared, "I'd pay a (1.50 a pint for it. Old Drum is one of the few whiskies I've ever enjoyed straight P' IN $2.25 PT. CUSS "Can serve it with out embarrass ment." N. J. Ander son, Gary, Indiana, SAID SI. 45 A PT. Old Drum's quality astonishes Benji min Rosenthal of New York City, WELL WORTH $1.75 "Very smooth when taken straight," says Don O'Reilly, Minneapolis, Minn, A $1.50 PT. VALUE "The best blended whiskey I ever tost' ed," says C. V. Rich ard, New Orleans, La, r Air ii hi SAYS IT'S WORTH $1.50 PT. Hundreds have guessed that Old Drum costs from 25c to a $1.00 a pint more than it actually does. John W. Scott, of Denver, Colo rado, says, "Old Drum is the best blend I ever tasted worth at least $1.50 a pint.'! I : QJJ mmimmmtmmifmmvi A PINT JJ 1 iM?snr- -A-si jHarptanb Crab "It should be the re sponsibility of every legitimate distiller to produce whiskies so perfect, at a price so low, that the public can have no reason for patronizing illegal dis tillers who defraud our National, State and Local Governments of their just revenues.'' II II ' LiilitiUlyyi BRAAfn- BRAND SUPER WHISKEY if 1.. (M , ..... ' 3h. S O laM, MarrUuxl DtotlOflry, lUUr. Md. OM Praia BwmM Blytrted WyMy
The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.)
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Oct. 24, 1935, edition 1
9
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