Newspapers / The Beaufort News (Beaufort, … / May 1, 1941, edition 1 / Page 7
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ThursjUy. May mi- I WaJssdy, I! W Biiii ;;!1:;:v.;: OITOUTUMTY KNOCKS IIE1IE SIX ROOM HOUSE For Rent In Broad Street. Apply to H. r 1 oftin, Loftin Motor Corn Lv, Beaufort. N. C. 4-24 BOGUE BANK fOR RENT 45 Acres, ad- Joining ron """" Jest from Fishing Creek, t.nntm5 on the Morehead 30 A rhannel 2500 ft. Percy Steohenson, Norfolk, Va. 4t MayJ. FRYING CHICKENS FOR Sale. From 2 to 2 1-2 pounds Le or call 367-1 or 367-6. Alex Graham, West Beau for, N. C. Mty 15 i Legal Notices NOTICE OF SALE f iant to judgment Superior I . of Carteret County in mat 1 ''Town of Beaufort et al, vs . L. Abernethy, et al, undersigned 011 .... jVlonday, at 12 M. Oclock May 26, 1941 L courthouse door in Beaufort, N. offer for sale, and sell for cash, r'upon terms bid at sale, all sub ect to Court's confirmation, the following described: J Lot f ifty-three (53), New Town, ftteaufort, N. C, on northeast cor- fiter of intersection of Broad and Pollock streets. This 22nd day of April, l'J U. J. F. DUNCAN, Commissioner. April 24; May 1, 8, 15. NOTICE OF SALE Directed by judgment in matte of "Town of Beaufort et al, vs Jack M. Ellison et al", in Superior "ourt Carteret County, umlersign- I will on londay, at 12 M. Oclock May 26, 1941 at courthouse door in Beaufort, X. ('., offer for sale, and sell to high est bidder for cash, or upon term- bid at sale, all subject to court's confirmation, the following de scribed lands: (1) The west half (Wl-2) of lot 155, old town, Beaufort, N. C; excepting part 33x40 feet in southwest corner thereof (Bell Oiappel's; formerly Daughters of Ruth) ; (2) The north half (Nl-2) of lot 147, old town, Beaufort, N. C; 55x198 feet. This 22nd day of April, 1941. J. F. DUNCAN, Commissioner. April 24; May 1, 8, 15. NOTICE OF SALE Authorized by judgment Supe rior Court of Carteret County in "Town of Beaufort et al, vs H. L. ;J Graves, trustee, etc., undersigsed will, on Monday, at 12 M. Oclock May 26, 1941 at court house door in Beaufort, N. C, offer for sale and sell for cash, or upon terms bid at sale, all subject to court's confirmation, the following described: Part lot 48, New Town, on southeast corner of intersection Pollock and Broad streets. 36 2-3 feet on Pollock street, 100 feet on Broad street. This 22nd dav of April, 1941. "j. F. DUNCAN. Commissioner. April 24; May 1, S, 15. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Eunice C. Bell, de ceased, late of Carteret County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the said estate to present them t.i the undersigned at Newport, N. C. duly verified, on or before the 24th day of April, 1942, or this no tice will be plead in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make prompt payment. This 21st day of April, 1941. S. D. Edwards, Executor, Estate Eunice C. Bell, deceased. Apr. 24; May 1, 8, 15, 22, 29. NOTICE OF LAND SALE Under and by virtue of power of sale contained in that certain mort gage deed executed by Clem Gas kill and wife, Emma Gaskill, Vic tor Gaskill (single). Norwood Gas kill (single). Floyd Gaskill, (sin gle), Flora D. Willis and husband. Tucker Willis to E. W. Hill, dated dune 2nd, 1938. and recorded in the Registry of Carteret County, in Book 90, at page 177, default hav ing been made in the payment of the indebtedness therein secured, , the undersigned will on ins 2 1st ii of May, '941, N. ' ;-!' f ) in i :u am! Wing in Hur. i-r.s Tt)-.vnshi; Cartfivt C C, adjoining the lands H. Stvro:i and others. u::- N. 'iiiiii r.ii- at a stone on the ditch and running thence an Kastwardlr course with the fence 2 yards to the corm-r; thence with the fence X irthward!y course to the marsh; ti.er.ee a WYstwardiy course to the ditch; thence with said diti.h to the lu'iiinniinr. It liein the same land conveyed by John V. Fulchoi and wife to Viohi (Jaskill by deed dated Iiecemljer M, liH)7, recorded in the Ren'i.-t ry of Carteret County in Hook ;, pa ire 341. This 21st day of April, 1.141. E. W. HILL, Mortagee, April 24; May 1, 8, 15. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Cleveland Da vis, late of Carteret County, State of North Carolina, this is to noti fy all persons having claims a gainst said estate, to present them to the undersigned, at Harkers Island, N. C, duly verified, on or before the 10th day of April, 1942, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make prompt payment. This April 7th, 1941. TILTON DAVIS, Admr. estate Cleveland Davis, ieceased. Apr. 10-17-24; May 1-8-15. Orthopedic Clinic Be Held Greenville Friday, May 2nd We wish to remind our readers of the State Orthopedic Clinic to be held next Friday in Greenville, May 2, from 12:30 to 4 P. M. This clinic takes all types of cripples, both white and colored, free of charge who are unable to afford private treatments. It is desired, though not required, that patients be referred by a physician or the Welfare Officer, and that the patient bring such note to the Clinic. This Clinic is set up to serve es pecially the counties of Beauf irt Carteret, Pamlico, Pitt and Tyi rel tnougn patients irom otner coun ties who desire to come may do so The Clinic is conducted by Dr Hugh A. Thompson, orthopedist Raileigh, North Carolina. This Clinic has been running for some thing over three years and is now serving a large number of cripples, adults as well as children, in thi area. The Pitt County Health Depart ment Offices are located at the corner of 3rd and Greene Sreets. Greenville, N. C. State Has Received $8,149,604.76 From Beer Industry Taxes Raleigh, April 28. The Beer in dustry has contributed $8,149, 604.76 in taxes to the state qf North Carolina and its various po litical subdivisions since it was le galized by the 1933 legislature. According to figures compiled by the Brewers and North Caroli na Beer Distributors Committee, the State collected $6,777,854.76; the counties accounted for $993, 750; and the cities and towns $337,500 for the period ended March 31. For the first quarter of 1941, the State collected $306,275.80 in taxes, distributed among these three months as follows: January $75,615.41; February $92,802.70; and March $137,857.69. These totals do not include the taxes paid by the North Carolina legal beer industry to the federal government. Federal taxes amoun ted to $1,657,333.42 for the calen dar year of 1940, and it is prob able the total taxes paid the U. S. government since beer was re-legalized in North Carolina exceeed ed $7,000,000. The tax on beer has become an important source of income for the state. It has risen from $183, 102.37, which was collected in beer taxes by the state for the calendar year of 1933, the first year beer was permitted to be sold under the Franchise act of 1933, to present important economic status. Lard Prices of lard during the com ing year probably will be strength ened by Government purchases un der the recently announced pro gram for support and of hog prices. i Hi 1 1 7n f in n Tar Heel farmers received a cash income of $35,926,000 from cotton and cottonseed in 1940, or 57 per cent more than in 1939, the State Department of Agriculture reports. IS THREATENED Farmers Can Increase Income By Growing Legume Seed A .-eed shortage is immi nent in the United States and A. 1). Stuart, seed specialist of N. C. State College, says an opportunity is ottered alert farmers of North Caro lina to supplement their in come by saving grass and le- guma seed. oe koonce of Jones County, a senior m agricultural education and editor of the "Agriculturist" magazine at State College, inter viewed Stuart on the subject. The seed specialist said that seed sup plies of several grasses and le gumes can be produced economi cally in North Carolina. "With increased emphasis on pastures and soil-conserving crops" the student was told, "North Car olina farmers will need more grass mil legume seed to meet their soil- building requirements under the Agricultural Conservation Pro gram. "Importation difficulties caused by the European War have reduced the supply of many of the seed which originally were shipped into this country in large amounts from Continental Europe," Stuart con tinued. "Taking these two facts into consideration, there will prob ably be a shortage of many of the grass and legume seed. This will result in higher seed prices unless suitable sources of these seed are developed at home." The State College specialist recommended that rye grass, or chard grass, Kentucky bluegrass, white clover, red clover, alsike clover, crimson clover, low hop clover and hairy vetch seed be saved by North Carolina farmers. Dallis grass is another important pasture crop in the State, but lo cally-grown seed have a low germ ination due to disease. Conse quently, the saving of Dallis grass seed is not recommended in North Carolina. 13 Per Cent Of Southern Timber Is Destroyed Destructive mortality accounts for 13 per cent of the drain on living timber in the South, says R. W. Graeber. Extension forester of N. C. State College. The destruc tive forces are chiefly fire, insects, disease and wind. "Timber farming is a real in dustry in the Southern states," Graeber said, "but it can be a greater and higher income-producing industry if care is taken to control destructive forces. Recent data compiled bythe U. S. Forest Service and other agen cies shows that 40 per cent of the timber used in the South is made into lumber. Another 29 per cent goes for fuel wood, 4 per cent for hewed cross ties, 4 per cent for pulpwood, 3 per cent for fence posts, and 7 per cent for other uses by man. North Carolina, a typical South ern state, has more than 10 million acres of farm woodland, or more than 50 per cent of the total farm acreage. Another million and a quarter acres of idle land can and should be returned to forests through planting, the Extension specialist stated. "We in North Carolina can use our woodland more advantageous- THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE ! WZ W B$. inpustries ; j TV I APE PWPUCIMS ' ( r j I I FDR THE ' stfrfU I7MIUIOH Iv r4x. c,'f WRITING OFF mU PA"TS- . TL H with pee? IS y 37 MILLION tf-S'JVd "l J il pwesoF "V rT mivtw?e ; SOWS. f&cP I J SSllTMS -ftey "ia7 MP I 10 s1 lX l COCLP ABSORB 8 MIlllON fy P " '1h WWWtFWE Jl PAIRS OF V CWM'NeiJIN yif rmM com tap mp irf COMPOUNDS, INPLftR.'U ?EZFKi1 has Pf&cvcEP fiMLitJE pyea. explosives, ppfss, Fsprnneps, PlASfCS FlWOfilM SdSSZMCFS. mo BFHZFHe THE BEAUFORT NEWS BEAUFORT, !y by cutting c orwervative'.;. ventiny fiivs, an i srovir.-x pre- ." Gi can aebv! 1 1 T. .i timbe t mt' ici't-s ouch." uh.-r poi:;N in ': ber !';u ming are ii-te ester ;n the form i ( 1 ) Have you made stop fires from read from adjoining pi ! by th. f l.UCS an fff' in you operty? f.r- :inns: rt t'1 land (2) Do you cooperate with your neisjl' rh- burs and the County Fire Wardens in preventing and controlling fires? Have you had your land posted against hunting, fish ing and camping without permis sion? (4) Do you inspect your woods for "lightning strikes" af ter each storm to remove damaged trees and thereby prevent insect outbreak? j t. .v. ANSWERS To Timely Farm Questions QUESTION: What is the ob ject of the national campaign to produce more eggs? ANWSER: The call which Sec retary of Agriculture Wickard has made for increased egg production is a part of the United States de termination to assure ample food supplies for this country, Great Britain, and other nations resist? ing aggression. The campaign aims for an increase of six per cent in the next 15 months, or about 10,000,000 cases of 30 dozen eggs each. Program QUESTION: When should colts be weaned? ANSWER: Fred M. Haig, pro fessor of animal husbandry at State College, says colts should be taken away from the mare when four to six months old. When three or four weeks old, colts will nibble at grain and hay in the mare's feed box. As the animal grows older, he will eat more and more grain and hay. In this way the weaning is a grdual process and the final separation from the mother will not cause a set-back in the colt's growth. After this th voiino- animal should be kept on pastuie as much as possible. QUESTION: Will deduction be made in AAA payments it su nernhosnhate is not applied ac cording to recommendations? AXSWER: E. Y. Floyd, AAA executive officer, says a farmer will not receive soil-building cred it and the cost of the phosphate will be deducted from any AAA payments coming to him if the farmer does not apply this AAA material in a prescribed manner. Application at any time during the program year to a depleting crop with which no eligible grass or le gume is seeded or growing will cause a double deduction. Cattle Dewey Wallin of Marshall, Rt. 3, believes more clear profit can be received from beef cattle by rais ing and fattening steers at home, reports P. R. Elam, farm ugent of Madison County. Electricity The construction of new power lines will provide electricity in six new communities of Cherokee County, reports A. Q. Ketner, farm agent of the N. C. State College Extension Service. FREDERICK THE GREAT, Of PRUWm, JUST FOR IIM FARMERS TRADED A OF CORN FOR A POUND OF NAltS PUE 10 fMPROVEP STFFL PKOraCTION METHODS, THE PRICE OF A BUSHEL OF CORN WILL NOW &UV 10 POOHDS Of fJMS N. C. OP AND SPEED ARE GRIM REAPERS Death, Suffering And Sorrow Are The Price Paid March Fatalities Are 81 Per Cent Over March, '40 North Carolina streets and highways ran red with the blood of traffic accident vic tims last month, as the death toll showed an 81 per cent increase over that of last .March, the Highway Safety Division reported this week. Records of the division list ') traffic deaths last month, against 3 for march, 1940. This is the greatest increase on record in this state. The traffic toll for the irst three months of this year was i persons killed, against 188 killed in the same period last year, an increase of 4l per cent. Fifty of the 100 counties, show ed increases over the first quarter of last year. Twenty-three coun ties, were not charged with a traf fic death during the entire three months period. Carteret had 2 fatal accidents the first quarter 1940 and 2, 1st quarter 1941. The worst counties included Co lumbus, which had 11 traffic deaths the first quarter of this vear. against none for the same period last year; Wake County, with a death toll of 18 this year, against three last year; Pender with six this year against none the first quarter of last year; Rocking ham, with six this year against one last year, and Mecklenburg, with 15 this year, against 12 last year. "These shocking figures chal lenge every citizen of our state and every agency having anything to do with accident prevention to de- vce more time, more thought and more hard work to ,the accident problem than ever before," de clared Ronald Hocutt, director of the Highway Safety Division. Traffic deaths in the 20-24 age group showed an even 100 per F. R. SEELEY RESIDENTIAL CONTRACTOR BEAUFORT, N. C. , iwii--0 ceil Even if you're young you look old if your hair is old , . if it's dull, faded, streaked or graying. Whatever your actual age, you'll look more youthful . . even feel more youthful with Clairol-treated hair. Insist on the modern Clairol process at your hairdressers'. It corrects those defects in one 3-in-l treatment, sham pooing as it reconditions as it tints your hair to "closeup" loveliness. Write now lot free booket and (ree advice on your hair problem fo loan Claii. Pieaideal. CJairoi. Inc. 1 32 W 46th St , New York. N V Carteret County's GREATEST USED CAE SALE i NOW IN PROGRESS SAVINGS FROM 25 to 50 "We Guarantee To LOFTIN MOTOR CO. SALES BEAUFORT, N.C. C-T.t lr q'ijirte i'j.r t ? among cent, t Yea! . 211 we i-i, frr.n t'.i- fY 4 4 -r te iV.a.es. ir.ere;.es :er h(-v i-i persi.ns eroding crass pedestrian r.r.ted killed S Lie: aceide Hi cle lanroa accidei and in cars that struck fixed ob jects or ran off the roadway. Tha first-quarter toil wis as follows: Pedestrians, 81 this year, 54 last year; railroad train, 21 this year, 15 last year; bicycle, 11 this year, 4 last eai ; fixed objects, 22 this year, 6 last year; overturned in roadway, 16 this year, 17 last yea.', other non-collision accidents, 7 thi yoar, 5 la-t year. Only 11 of the .March fatalities occurred in cities of over 10,000 population. For the first quarter, only 36 person were killed in the 28 cities, agains' 37 for the first quarter of 1940. Up The cost of living for wage earners in the United States made its fourth successive monthly ad vance in March, according to the National Industrial Conference Board. "Immature pasturage grown on a fertile soil is not only the be.-.t single feed for dairy cows, but the vitamin A content of the product is superior to that produced by any other feed.' Farmers' Bulletin 1G26. TROUBLES OF A GLAMOUR GIRL HEAD ED FOR THE MOVIES Adela Rogers St. Johnt, noted Hollywood commentator, explains difficulties of introducing socialite refinement in the morief. One of many feature in the May 11th is sue of The Merican Weekly the big magazine distributer with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN On sale at All Newsstands TfST? Save You Money" SERVICE PAGE SEVEW Paper :.- ii ji:.t of I iw-ojul l: a U ! a Ct'J ! o'-tcotir-raw ot of high- the ir. itir.g paper has been, ail- jUocei! by tr.e Mirni-js .Market- AdminUtratio-. Subscribe to The Beaufort News. MEET "JUST KIDS" NEW COMIC BOOK FEATURE You'll get a thrill from the mis chievous doings of the youngsters "Just Kids", one of the many enjoyable features in the COMICBOOK new 8-page supplement every week with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN On sale at All Newsstands Professional CARDS Dr. J. O. Baxter, Jr. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted FRONT ST. BEAUFORTi JAMES DAVIS NOTARY PUBLIC First Citizens Bank Beaufort N. C DR. E. F. MENIUS OPTOMETRIST Room 206-207-207-A McLellan Bldg. NEW BERN, N. C. DR. LUTHER FULCHER Medicine & Surgery Office Hours: 9 to 12 M. 2 to 5 P. M. And By Appointment RAMSEY BUILDING Office Phons 424-1 Res. 485-1 DR. W. S. CHADWICK. MEDICINE & SURGERY Office Hour: 9 to 12 M 3 to 5 P. H and by Appointment RAMSEY BUILDING Office Phone 424-1 Res. 372-1 O. H. JOHNSON, M. D. Eye, Ear Nose & Throat SPECIALIST GLASSES FITTED Office Hours: Morehead City 9 A. M. to 2 P. M Including Sunday Beaufort 2 to 4 P. M. Week days enly DR. J. O. BAXTER THE EYE ONLY Eye Examined Glrsses Fitted NEW BERN, N. C. EARL MASON JUSTICE OF PEACE NOTARY PUBLIC Eudy Barber Shop Beaufort, N. C. C. H. BUSHALL Fire, Health, Accident, Automobile Insurance Real Estate Bought Sold Rented Will Write Your Bond RELIABLE COMPANIES GOOD SERVICE 108 Turner Street DIAL 415-1 beauf ort, Dr. JOSEPH A. SYLVESTER Physician ar.d Sv-rgson Office Hours S-ll 12-2 6-9 405 Cedar Street BEAUFORT, N. C Marine and Automotive Equipment. Electric and Acetylene Welding. Cylinder Heads & Engine B'ocks Welded. Delco Engine Repair Parts of AH Kinds. Generators, Starters, Car buretors. American Hammered Pis ton Rings Valspar and Kirby's Paints and Enamels. BARBOUR'S MACHINE SHOP Beaufort N. C.
The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.)
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May 1, 1941, edition 1
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