i WORD TO WISE DON'T SELL Carteret County SHORT For Important News of the Coast Read The Beaufort News Each Week Carteret County's Oldest Newspaper. .Established 1912 VOLUME XXIX; NO. 8. BEAUFORT, N. C, THURSDAY, FEB. 20, 1941. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Bell -Wallace of Morehead City Planning Big Expansion Program -4 ft" KJ $40,000,000 Base For Bank To Observe Holiday Saturday First Citizem Bank and Trut Company here will observe Wash ington's Birthday on Saturday and be closed for the day. All mer chants and patrons of the bank are urged to attend to their banking business on Friday, and to remem ber that thousands of dolalri in Holly Ridge checks will be coming to the coast. Rainy Day Alarm Three blows from the fire alarm sirene at 10 minutes till 12 o'clock an rainy days indicates a "Rainy Day Session" at Beaufort Consoli dated School, it was stated here this week. It means that when the alarm is sounded that all depart ments and grades at the school will be throug with classes at 1:30 P. M. New Traffic Light An approved "Caution Light' has been erected at the intersec tion of Lenoxville Road and U. S. Highway 70 in the vicinity of the Beaufort Consolidated School to remind motorists to drive with care. The School Board put the matter of having a light erected at that point recently to the Town Board of Commissioners which in turn secured the light. Tide Wa ter Power Company has cooperat ed by erecting the light at very small cost. Washington, D. C. ENGLAND'S POSITION IMPROVES Little by little the British position has improved. Gallant Greek vic tories, the triumphant march of British forces across North Africa, the daring of the royal navy in the Mediterranean, all have helped to balance the scales of war. In addition, Admiral Leahy's sea dog diplomacy in Vichy is reported to have had some effect upon Gen eral Weygand, to whom he has promised American gasoline and oil; while the passage of the lease lend bill is found to have tremen dous reverberations throughout all Europe. Furthermore, preliminary reports Indicate that the trip of Wendell Willkie had a stirring effect, not only upon British morale, but upon Germany. The fact that the son of a German sent an anti-Hitler mes sage to the German people is bound to percolate beneath the surface. Germany cannot forget that it was Amend."1 entrance into the World war which finally turned the tide and defeated the kaiser. And that See Merry-Go-Round, Fage2 ALMANAC HISTORICAL EVENTS FEBRUARY 22 Florida ceded to U. S., 1819. 23 Battle Bueno Vista, 1847. 24 Capture of Vincennes, 1779. 25 Shrove Tuesday. 26 Ash Wednesday. 27 15th Con. Amendment posed, 1869. Ind, pro- BIRTHDAY Of Famous People FEBRUARY 21 Cardinal Newman, 1801. 22 Geo. Washington, Pres. 1732. 23 Handel, musician, 1685. 24 Gen. John Burgoyne, .1723. 25 Enrico Caruso, singer, 1873. 26 Buffalo Bill, pioneer, 1846. 27 Henry W. Longfellow, poet, J 1807. MM ; KE A4B P&k&N U. S. To Be Constructed In Eastern North Carolina In Counties Adjoining The Carteret Coast Although Carteret was not mentioned in the announce ment that sites in Onslow and Pamlico Counties had been selected for creating one of the nation s largest U. b. Ma rine bases, it seems only logi cal that the western section of this county will be includ ed eventually in the plans This may result in only a gov ernment built highway and possibly a bridge across the Neuse connecting the land and sea forces which will be stationed in Onslow and the air forces to be stationed at Wilkerson's Point in Pamli co. ! lkl From the piopused camp site hi the New River section of Onslow to Wilkerson's Point is a distance of 82 miles by established high ways. The straight line distance between the two sites is only 40 miles. Should a straight lins highway be constructed from Ons low to Pamlico, the route would traverse Carteret County and al most through the center of Croa tan National Forest which already has its network of CCC-construct-ed dirt roads. Should the short road be constructed between th? land and sea force camp fnd the air base as described, a bridge would more than likely be con structed across the Neuse from a point near the rwith'of Slocum's Creek to Wilkern's Point which on the State Highway maps is indi cated as Minnesott Beach. An associated press story from Washington on Monday relative to tne proposed Marine base leiVoff as follows: "Assurance of speedy congres sional action on the $40,000,000 authorization requested by the U. S. Navy for construction of a ma rine base and air station on the Eastern coast was given r,oday by Chairman Vinson, Democrat Geor gia, of the House Naval Affairs Committee." Legislation carrying the auth orization was expected to be called up on Wednesday or today. As the House prepared to debate the Navy bill, its appropriations com mittee gave consideration to a re quest for an appropriation of $1, 500,000 to acquire land for the two Marine projects. BARDEN REVEALED SITE APPROVAL A comprehensive story, and one of the first to reach the coast rela tive to the Marine base in printed form, appeared in News and Ob server on Sunday under Portei McKeever's by-line. This story follows: Washington, Feb. 15. A 100. 000 acre site in Onslow County has been selected and approved for one of the largest Marine Corps bases in the country, Representa tive Graham A. Barden revealed to day. President Roosevelt and Secre tary of Navy Frank Knok have giv Eee MARINES, Page 8 Roof Collapses At Beaufort Ice Plant A general alarm was sounded by the Fire Department here on Wed nesday when the roof over the cold storage department of the Beaufort Ice Company collapsed. Workmen renovating and install ing new equipment at the plant were heating the storage rooms to dry the moisture from the room? and it was feared that this would cause the structure to catch afire. No one was injured and no esti mate of the damage was given. Ex-Service Men To Register Saturday Saturday, February 22, i gen eral registration day for ex-serv-ice men all over the United Statei for the defense program. In Beaufort Carteret Post 99, has the proper blanks for filling out and all ex-service men are uri?eJ to register. They Will Be Directors Of Seaside Summer Schools Three WCUNC Units Corning To Beaufort In June if In - V "f r ' hpM . fmy I I - 1 1 -AJ L ' r I S I DR. SHAFTESBURY ANNOUNCEMENT WAS made in Greensboro on Saturday by Dr. W. C. Jackson, dean of administration of Womans College, U. N. C., that three summer school units will come to Beaufort in June. Dr. A. D. Shaftesbury, associate professor of zoology, will be in charge of the work atCarolina Marine Laboratory again this year from June 2 to July 12. From June 1 to June 28, Miss Jean Brownlee will direct the Seaside School of Modern Dance in Community Center here. Gregory D. Ivy, head of the Art Department at WCUNC will conduct classes in painting at the Seaside Art Colony from June 2 to June 28. The WCUNC units are in addition to the Duke University Marine Laboratory on Pivers Island under direction of Dr. Pearse which will have two summer sessions and an inc reased enrollment here during the coming summer. CARTERET IS GETTING BIG PAYROLL NOW Camp Davis Project Is Bringing New Money To Town 1,000 MEN FROM COUNTY AT WORK Approximately 1,000 per sons from Carteret Courfty are now employed on the Camp Davis project at Hol ly Ridge and there are still jobs available for those who can qualify for certain spec ialized forms of employment according to W. C. Carleton, manager of the N. C. Em ployment Bureau at New Bern and the branch office at Municipal Building in Morehead City. The branch office will be open daily to register workers. With salaries ranging from $28 per week to upwards of $50 and even $100 to some, the weekly pay roll to Carteret citizens is over $30,000. Merchants in Beaufort and Morehead City are making i preparations to cash all checks of I workers when pay day comes each week-end. James Davis, cashier of First Citizens Bank and Trust Company here has stated tnat if the necessity arose, and if it would be of service to the merchants and workers, that he felt officials of the banking house would consider keeping open during late after noon and early evening hours on the week-end. Until today, however.no definite announcement to this effect had been made. Wise merchants will have plenty of cash on hand th'3 week-end however, because there will be thousands of do'.lars in checks to cash, it was indicated. North River Home Demonstration Club The North River Home Demon stration Club held its monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Jessie Wade, Thursday afternoon, Febru ary 13, with twenty members pres ent. The following leaders reported: Mrs. Bessie King, who told us where and how to select baby chicks for 1941; Mrs. Julian Ful cher, food conservation leader, who guided each member in mak ing their family canning budget to be filled this year; Mrs. R. W. Sa frit, Sr., who assisted Mrs. Fulcher in giving a report of Dr. Ernest Branch's lecture on "Health of Our Children" and, too, led a dis cussion of how North River Club might be made stronger. An enun ciation and pronounciation drill was directed. During the business session the club made definite plans to raise money to help construct the Curo Market building. The major lesson demonstration was Bedroom Arrangement and the Home Medicine Cabinet. Edna Beachem led the group in See H. D. CLUB, Page 8 MISS BROWNLEE CHRISTENING The 1 OS-foot menhaden vessel "Dewey" constructed by Bell Wallace Shipyard in Morehead City for W. M. Webb was chisten ed by little 9-year old Patricia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Webb at a colorful launching at 2 oclock this afternoon. The keel for the vessel was laid last Septem ber and the craft, a sea-going beau ty has been named Dewey in hon or of Capt. Julian Dewey Willis who will ba its masteV and who is a veteran employee of Mr. Webb. The Dewey which is expected to be ready for service sometime in April will represent a total invest ment of approximately $55,000 including construction and install ation of motors and equipment. Covering The Waterfront By AYCOCK BROWN IT HAS BEEN estimated con servatively that more than $100, 000,000 is spent annually by the shipping interests of the United States alone because of fouling growth which attaches itself to the bottoms of ships. The money is spent to place the ships in dry docks where the bottoms are scraped and where new paint is applied. In the past the most ef fective paint was of a copper base. THE FOULING OF ship's bot toms is an accumulation of plan', and animal organisms which at tach and grow on both wooden and metal vessels. This accumulation of material consists of many spe cies of animals and plants, which find the bottom of a ship or boat a favorable place to live. Although of many species, the boat owners along the North Carolina coast usually are bothered most by bar nacles. An ordinary inshoiv bar nacle in its live state as the reader has probably seen them on the bot toms of boats or attached to pil ings or rocks are not very pretty. These same barnacles, however, il placed in boiling water change to beautiful colors of various hues. Offshore vessels, such as DiamonJ Lightship, are bothered by another species known as the goose-neck barnacle, a member of the family which is very colorful in its live state, like every form of sea-life which has the Gulf Stream as its habitat. Barnacles are not the only worry ship masters have to contend with in the way of fouling growth. There are boring worms and other parasites which if not bothered would eventually sink i ship or boat. FOR A NUMBER of years in Beaufort at the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Biological Laboratory a series of tests to determine the val ue of different types of paint coatings for steel plate and sheet aluminum used in ship and airplane construction and also wood, have been made. x THE WATERS IN the vicinity of Beaufort are adapted for such tests due to the quantity of marine life existing in the sounds, harbors and nearby ocean. If the proper See WATERFRONT, Page 8 PROFESSOR IVY ENGINEER HAS BEGUN STAKING FOR RE A LINES Home Wiring Loans Available For Members Approved Contractor Must Do The Wiring Actual staking of the dis tribution lines of Carteret Craven Electric Membership Corporation lines was begun by the engineers this week and will proceed steadily in those areas in which all ease ments to place poles on the landing - owner s property have been secured. Construction of the lines will be gin within ten days after the con tract has been signed by the REA Administrator. The contract is to be let to the low bidder after a public letting, which will be an nounced in a tew days. J he en gineer reports that with favorable weather conditions all lines and houses that are wired shouid be lit up by early summer. G. W. Huntley, president of the Cooperative has received word from Washington that $5000 ad ditional has been allotted to this project and will be available to members for loans with which to finance the wiring of t' ir houses. Any signed member may borrow 80 per cent of the amount neces sary for his wiring at 6 per cent interest over a period of five years, with semi-annual payments. The Cooperative, however, in sists on having only a wiring con tractor approved by them doing this type of work. Money is avail able from this fund with which to make plumbing installations . . . . Miss Esther Dickinson of Core Creek has been employed as office clei k and stenographer for the Co operative. Library Debt Fund Increases Slowly During Past Week Contributions to the debt-liqui-!tertained dating fund being raised by the ! Woman's Club in behalf of the Car-1 teret County Library, increase'! 1 its regular meeting. The meeting slightly during the past week. It 1 was held at the studios of Roy Eu was erroneously reported iast week , banks, the Rotarians being enter that Beaufort Hardware Compan contributed only $5. The amount should have fceon $10 which this firm donated. Omitted from the list of contributors last week, also was the name of Huntley's. George W. Huntley of this firm was oj.e of the first to made a donation and his donation was $10. The goal for $200 which was needed to liquiilLe the debt in curred for materials purchased by the Woman's Club to be used in renovating the library is still not realized. This does not speak well for the interest the citizens who should hrve contributed freely and wiped out the debt within an hour or two after the canvas for funds began. Those making contributions See LIBRARY FUND Page 8 Bidding For Construction Of Two U. S- Mine Sweepers Employment Would Be Given Many Carpenters VESSELS WOULD BE 136 FEET IN LENGTH Bell-Wallace Shipyard in Morehead City has submit ted bids for the construction of two U. S. Navy mine sweepers and if the contract is awarded this plant, one of the most important marine railways and boat building firms in North Carolina al ready, will begin a gigantic expension program immedi ately, it was learned author atively by The Beaufort News this week. Already the bids have been submitted and February 26 or immedi ately thereafter it will be known definitely whether the contracts have been let to the Carteret firm. . Bids for s-iall boat construction in the government's fleet expan sion program have also gone in from Barbour and Meadows of New Bern and the Elizabeth City Iron Works, another marine con struction firm on the Pasquotank River. The mine sweepers which the Morehead City firm would build would be 13G feet in length, or 31 feet longer than the beautiful new menhaden vessel now under con struction at Bell-Wallace Shipyards for W. M. Webb. The 105-foot vessel under construction for Mr. Webb is sceduled to be launched within the next few days. It will be named the "Dewey" in honor of its future ekipper. - Should the contract be awarded Bell-Wallace for the construction of the mine sweepers or mine lay ers the present facilities will be in creased by the construction of ad aitionai anu larger railways, new sheds and the installation of new equipment. At present 32 persons are employed at the shipyards. The new contracts would mean em ployment for a total of 250 to 300 skilled and semi-skilled shipwrights ship carpenters, painters, machin ists and laborers. The present wage-scale would be increased to the government wage scale which for carpenters would be about $1 per hour. The present scale for carpenters is 60 cents per hour. The mine-sweepers would be of wood construction. This means thrnght here in Carteret county ana n nearby counties skilled boat builders would be given an oppor tunity to work. The time limit for construction of this type vessel See Mine Sweepers, Page 8 Adjt- Sadye Brewer And Her Band Here Today and Tonight Adjutant Sadye Brewer of the Greenville, N. C, Corps with hec band, will be visitors in Beaufort this afternoon and have charge ot the Services at the Hall (American Legion Hut) tonight at 7:30 o'clock. Adjutant Brewer has a very good band and is alsj a very able speaker. She will visit Mar kers Island with Captain and Mi. Farmer during the afternoon. Rotary Entertains Dr Ralph MacDonald The Beaufort Rotary Club en- Dr. Ralph MacDonald former candidate for governor of North Carolina. Tuesdav nieht at tained by Mr. Eubanks, Aycock Brown, Jake Miller, anil Dr. J. O. Baxter, Jr., at an oyster roast. The club reported on hundred per cent attendance, and all members were well pleased with the roast as a variation over the regular din ner. Last week at the meeting of the club, the members were enter tained with very interesting talki on Lincoln by Harry Paul and Miss Mary Johnson, students of Beau fort School. Mr. Paul emphasized the life and times of Lincoln, while Miss Johnson referred in particu lar to the personality and charac teristics of the great humanitarian. Both talks wer well planned and presented, and indicated consider able research on the part of the speakers. Pilot Saves Self And Champagne As His Plane Crashes Although his Fairchild moao coupe seaplane was almost demol ished, Pilot Robert Love, of Bos ton, Mass., escaped without a scratch in a crash on the water front at the foot of Marsh Street last Friday afternoon. Love wk had flown the plane from Savan nah on Friday, heading north from an air cruise in Florida, and tV West Indies, had circled the har bor and was banking to come do wo on the water at the CAA-approred seaplane landing float when the motor died out and the plane turned topsy-turvy on the beack. . A pick-up truck from Inter Gty Air Service of Boston came down on Monday to carry the midialwul plane back to Boston. Mr. and Mr. A. Bemis of Bos ton, traveling companions of Love were in a similar seaplane, bt they landed safely. It was stated that damage occurred only to the plane, and not only did the pilot escape without a scratch, but that also four bottles of champagne aboard were unbroken. At the beginning of 1941, there were two bale3 of cottoi in th world for every bale likely to be used during the year, estimates the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Man About Town! Acm) Yorkers Are Talking About: The hush-hush divorce of Seth Parker (Phil Lord) and his current blaze. Bonnie Doone, former "Hon eychile" on the Bob Hope stanzas . . . The $1,000 bracelet Chaplin gave a Powers model named Jean, . . . The witness in the Hauptmannj case who brought "new evidence"! on the Lindbergh snatch to Dewey's; office . . . President Wilson'r daughter, once active in N. Y. lit- erary circles, who has joined a Brahman nunnery in Pondicherry, Indo-China . . . Quentin Reynolds" standing order of posies to Betsy Cushing Roosevelt every day. Ha: calls her "the ideal woman." The $40,000 a month it costs to' keep the Normandie and its crewr docked in NY. The coin comes from ' the frozen French funds here . . . Capt. Patterson's plan to erect the biggest independent radio station; within six months . . . The soon due consummation of the merger of two newspapers (B'klyn and Man hattan) now that they've applied to the RFC for a $2,000,000 touch. Erskine Gwynnrls czrZ2.-?ZZZ A' See VVinchell hage TIDE TABLE V Information as to the tide at Beaufort is given in this L-olumn. The figures are ap proximately collect and are bas d on tables furnished by the U. S. Geodetic Survey. .So meallowances must be made for variations in the wind and also with respect to the locality, that is wheth er near the inlet or at head of the estuaries. the X Friday, Feb. 21 4:28 A. M. 10:49 A. M. 4:47 P. M. 10:59 P. M. Saturday, Feb. 22 5:29 A. M. 5:45 P. M. 11:48 P. M. Sunday, Feb. 23 6:23 A.M. 11:58 A.M. 6:35 P. M. 12:40 P. M. Monday, Feb. 24 7:07 A. M. 12:37 A. M. 7:20 P.M. 1:25 P.M. Tuesday, Feb. 25 7:50 A.M. 1:37 A.M. 8:02 P. M. 2:05 P. M. Wednesday, Feb. 26 8:29 AM. 2:18 A.M. 8:41 P. M. 2:41 P. M. Thursday, Feb. 27 9:06 A. M. 2:57 A. M. 9:21P.M. 3:16 P.M. u 1 mmLfkML