PAGE SIX THE BEAUFORT NEWS BEAUFORT, N. CI Thursday, August 14, 1941 -:- County News -:- Items for this column should reach The News office each Tuesday. If your community is not represented write up for instructions and supplies. HARKERS ISLAND The Revival of the Methodist church started off with a wonder ful success, with a large attend ance. The service was conducted by Mrs. Barnes. Mr. Sawyer had a very appreciative congregation. His text was on Faith, Hope and Love. The Revival will last for 10 days. Mr. Richard Bledso and General Crowder of Winston-Salem visited Mr. H. B. Hunter over the week end. Dr. Hardy and son spent a day here recently on a fishing trip. Mr. and Mrs. Haskins of Mart insville, Va., and Mr. Haskins of Burlington, N. C, visited Mr. How ard Haskins a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Cherry who had a summer cottage here motored to Manteo to see "The Lost Colony." En route they stop ped to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Toler of Bertha, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Guthrie, Jr., paid a visit to their parent? during the weekend. Mrs. Gordon Willis visited som3 relatives in Beaufort for a fe-.v days. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steedman of Cheriton, Va., spent a day re cently on Harkers Island visiting friends. Mary's College in Raleigh Septem ber 1st. Mr. C. W. Grant of Brooklyn, N. Y., spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lina. Mr. Grant was a teacher in the High school here several years ago. Mrs. Charles Noe of Beaufort spent the week-end with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Alligood. Private Braxton Finer of Fort Bragg Training Corps spent the week-end with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Piner. Braxton is the first young man from our com munity to be inducted in tl e train ing camp. Funeral services were held for Mrs. Kizzie Davis at the Baptist church Friday at 2 p. m. Mrs. Da vis was 81 years of age, and will be greatly missed in our commun ity. Surviving her are two daugh. ters, Mrs. Pauline Willis and Mrs. Polly Piner, and her husband, Mr. William A. Davis, and a host of friends. The beautiful floral tri butes showed the high esteem in which she was held. CORE CREEK Mrs. Eula Dickinson of Lake land, Fla., spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dickinson. Mr. Clyde Foreman cf Sarasota, Fla., is visiting his brother, Mr. A. W. Foreman. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Dickinson and son, Edwin, of Bridgeton, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dickinson. Mrs. J. H. Dickinson has return ed home after spending a week in Clinto.i with her daughter, Mrs. Ennis Bass. Mr. Mid Mrs. Frank Dill and son Frank, Jr., of Great Bridge, Va., are visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Dickinson and children, Margaret and Rose, of Wadesboro, spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dickinson. Mr. and Mrs. Ennis Bass of Clinton spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H Dickinson. Mrs. Effie Williams of More. head City is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ray Dickinson. Mrs. D. W. Sabiston of Great Bridge, Va., is visiting relatives. DAVIS BETTIE THEtPOCKETBOOK of KRJQWJUEDCE n MANY U.S. COMPANIES, IN ANfWERTD "THE NATIOW5 NETP FOR VtflUft EQUIPMENT, KGAN MAKINS NEW Of PRODUCT AiTHOWri -wey vJtzt u$tt omy to peacetime manufacture SM SPSS' !MPAlfyr . Makes parts roa. ' n V etMT " W 0t fl'lwt I nil W JSiw jY PfBP 'BUMPERS' jgy TRAIN COMPANY i SHIPS' COMPASSES Mr. Lionel Murphy of Raleigh 'spent the week-end with his par ents. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Willis and children of Washington, D. C, re turned Monday after being called home to attend the funeral of his grandmother. Miss Catherine Lewis of Har kers Island spent the week-end here visiting her uncle, Mr. Tom Lewis. Rev. L. R. Ennis of Goldsboro filled his regular appointment Sunday and Sunday night at the F. W. B. church. Messrs. Reginsl Styron and Quinton Willis spent the weekend in New Bern visiting Mr. Murry Fulcher. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Willis and gon, Douglas, who are spendinsr the summer in Port, Momouth, N. J., were called home to attend the funeral of his grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Murphy spent the week-end at Atlantis with their daughter, Mrs. John W. Smith. Several people from our com munity attended the funeral of Mr. Jack Willis at Williston Sun day afternoon. Messrs. Cecil Ray and Julian Ray Murphy who are taking an electric welding course at the NYA Training Center, Greenville, N. C., spent the week-end with their par ents. Miss Ava Fulcher and Mr. Ever ett Henderson of New Bern spent ast week visiting Miss Doris Davis. Mr. Tom Lewis returned home ast Wednesday from the Marine hospital in Norfolk where he re ceived medical treatment for the past two months. Mrs. E. M. Medlin of Aberdeen has been visiting, for the. past two weeks, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Davis, and her brother, Mr. Avon D. Davis, who has been very ill, and recently returned from St, Lukes hospital. New Bern. Mrs. Medlin's husband, Dr. E. M. Med lin, has just returned from Lin. ville, where he played in the golf tournament there. He joined Mrs. Medlin here yesterday, also their daughter Miss Gloria Gray Medlin who has been on a house party at Wrightsville Beach. They will re turn to their home in a few days, Miss Gloria Gray will enter Saint Rev. F. L. Israel filled his reg ular appointment at the Woodville Baptist church Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Hugh Pake and Mrs. Luth er Salter, Jr., returned home Fri day night after attending the State Home Demonstration Club Short Course at Raleigh. Mrs. Mary Arthur had the mis fortune of falling Saturday morn ing and breaking her hand and arm. While recovering, she is spending the time with her daugh ter, Mrs. Marion Noe at Beaufort. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Keller and daughter, Janice, and Mr. Bron dell Gillikin are spending their va cation in New Jersey with Mr. Keller's brother, Vernon and his father, Mr. Levi Keller. They are also extending their trip through the northern states and Canada. Mrs. F. L. Israel met with the Women's Missionary Society Mon day night and led in the study of the boon, ine Larger &tewaru-Thelma Austi( of Hatteras h ship." Everyone, we hope, will i been visiting her daughter, IV gam vaiuaoie Knuwieuge iniuugn this study. Mrs. Eva Campen and daugh ter, Mary Margaret (Dolly), left Monday afternoon for their home in Austin, Texas. They have been spending their vacation here with Mr. Campen's sister, Mrs. Mattie Poke, and also at Wiregrass with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Campen and Curtis and Tom Campen. Dr. and Mrs. Carl Middlebrook and son of Annapolis, Md., are visiting Mrs. Middlebrook's moth er, Mrs. Florence Salter, and other relatives here. Mrs. D. D. Midgette and chil dren have returned from Buxton and Elizabeth City where they have been spending their vacation with Mr. Midgette who is employ ed at a lighthouse. Mr. Jimmie Simpson returned home Saturday from Princeton where he has been spending a short while with his granddaughter, Faye and Wondah Lamm. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Salter of Norfolk, Va., have been visiting his brothers, Messrs. Charles and Luke Salter and his sister, Mrs. L. L. Willis here. Messrs. Earnest and Stephen Gillikin of Portsmouth, Va., are visiting their relatives here. They are sons of the late Claude Gilli kin. Misses Marie Mason, Daphne and Phyliss Pake have returned from Atlantic where they have been visiting relatives. Mr. Justin Willis of Davis stop ped by to see Billie Pake Monday. Justin will leave for military serv ice at Fort Bragg Thursday the 14th. Rev. and Mrs. F. L. Israel visit ed in the neighborhood Monday morning. There are some cases of mumps in the neighborhood but we are glad to say none of them seem se rious. Rev. Tom Davis and family of Baltimore are spending their va cation at their summer home here. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Bennett and family of Plymouth, Pa., and Mrs. Albert Woffe and family of Wilkes Barre, Pa., returned after visiting Mrs. Bennett's and Mrs. Wolfe's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon B. Lewis. The Epworth League enjoyed an outing to the Cape Saturday night. Paul Lewis of the U. S. Coast Guard, returned to Philadelphia after visiting his family here. Earl Lewis who is pm ployed at Norfolk, Va., visited his mother, Mrs. Robert Betram during the weekend. Mrs. Julian Brown, Jr., and son returned after visiting at Hat teras. Mrs. Charles Ballance and niece, ave Mrs. Roy Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Willis spent the weekend with Mrs. Willis' par ents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Davis. News reached here that Mr. Ray Morris was badlly burned some time now, aboard his boat, by back-firing of the engine. Do not know the particulars at this writ ing. He was rushed at once to the hospital. Miss Juanita Lewis and cousin. Charlotte Guthrie, of Florida, ase visiting Miss Mildred Moore. Miss Reta Moore, of Washing ton, D. C, is spending her vaca. tion with her mother, Mrs. Lena Moore. Bundles For Britain Benefit At Fort Raleigh, Aug. 18th MANTEO, N. C, Aug. 12. The cast and choir of Paul Green's patriotic drama "The Lost Col ony," now in its fifth season at the Waterside Theatre here, will participate in a special program for the benefit of Bundles for Britain at the High School Audi torium here, Monday evening, August 18th, which is the 354th anniversary of the birth of Vir ginia Dare. TRANSFERS of Real Estate NEWPORT TOWNSHIP C. W. Scott et ux to William H. Morgan et ux; consideration $10., 1 tract. C. R. Wheatly, Com., to Mary Estelle Garner; con. 100.00, 2 trBctS' John S. Lockey et ux to D. Ira Garner et ux; con. $10.00, lot 7, Newport. MOREHEAD TOWNSHIP John L. Crump to David Proc tor; con. $10., lots 15, 16, 17, Blk. F. David Troctor et ux to Marshall Y. Cooper; ton. $10., lots 16, 17, Elk. F. Lewis G. Cooper to Marshall Y. Cooper; con. $10., lot 18, Blk. F. M. L. Mansfield to Maude V. Mansfield; con. $10., 18 lots. George E. Gillikin to Alfred Cooper; con. $10., lot 2, Blk. 17. Alfred B. Cooper to Nellie L. Gillikin, con. $10., lot 2, Blk. 17. Home Owners Loan Corp. to W. M. Sanders: con. $6,000., Blk. 47. Town of Morehead City to T. L. Lawrence; con. $720., lot 9, sq. 105. MERRIMON Ernest S. Martin to Mary L. Jones; con. $658., 100 acres. BEAUFORT B. B. Montague et ux to Law rence F. Mclntyre et ux; con. $10., 1 lot East Beaufort. Robert L. Davis et al to F. R. Bell; con. $10., lot No 133 Old Town. C. W. Britton et ux to J. O. Bar bour et ux; con. $10., lot 42 and 43 Britton Sub-division. Masonic Eastern Star Asso., to Dr. C. S. Maxwell; con. $10., part lot 58, Old Town. L. W. Hassell, et ux to Sallie Gertrude Hancock; con. $1.00, 4 acres. Atlantic Life Ins. Co., to Eliza beth G. Temple; con. $135., part lot 153, Old Town. I. E. Ramsey to P. A. Lewis; con $10., part Shelton Tract. J. F. Duncan trustee to G. C. Cutrcll; con. $110., lot 1, blk 8. Progress Representatives ot tne world's greatest wheat-producing nations, Argentina, Australia, Canada, Great Britain and the United States, have recessed their session in Washington until August 18 and report "progress" in the move for an international wheat pool for post-war use. Good Domestic market prospects for most farm commodities continue good, the U. S. Department of Ag riculture reports. Subscribe to The Beaufort News. .Timber A million-pine farm, operated by a Negro near Log Cabin Cen ter, Ga., has more than 1,000,000 pine trees on 866 acres. The Associated Press says Bra zil now is using wood gas and al. cohol as fuel because transporta tion facilities for imports of pe. troleum have been reduced. GUTHRlE-JONtS DRUG STORE Front St. Beaufort, N. C. m Foz House Wiring See J. R. Williams FOR INFORMATION CALL B-448-1 Beaufort - - N. C. fen m - President Louis Manoz Marin of the Puerto ican Senate is push ing for the adoption hv western nations of a Western Hemisphere tlag to be flown with national flags of North and South America. Since no performance of "The Lost Colony" will be given on this night, playing as it does nightly ex cept Mondays and Tuesdays, the directors made arrangements with D. Bradford Fearing, president of the Roanoke Island Historical As sociation, to prepare a special program of song, skits, and dances. It promises to be one of the most unusual events in this section. A special program by the Lost Colony Choir, under the direction of Theos Cronk, musical director of the drama, is being prepared from the repertoire which the cel ebrated group is now rehearsing for its 1941-1942 transcontinental tour as the Westminster Choir. Noted soloists of the group will sing a group of favorites along with spirituals and classics. The program will also include specialty acts by Donald Somers, most popular of all Old Toms, who will introduce his marionette cre ation Elmer Puddle to the aud ience. Proceeds will be turned over to Bundles for Britain as the contribution of "The Lost Colony" to the valiant struggle being wag ed today for democratic civiliza tion, according to President Fearing. Schools La Prensa, Argentina newspa per, says 270 clandestine schools are being operated in the Argen tine by the Germans as one of the principal means of carrying out infiltration into that country. SUBSCRIBE TO FORT NEWS. THE PEAU- CARVING CHARACTER WITH THE SURGEON'S KNIFE Discussing how tee troublesome consciences and worries which cause insanity are disposed of by chiseling through the "nerve wires" in the front of our brains. Don't miss this unusually interest ing article in the August 24th is sue of The American Weekly The Big Magazine Distributed with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN On Sale At All Newsstands 3 Town Of Beaufort i.i & sUk u tUb M0TICE MARSHALLBERG Norwood Lewis of New York has been visiting relatives at this place, and has returned to Norfolk to be with his father, Capt. Elijah Lewis who is a patient in Marine hospital. Mr. and Mrs. John Willis are visiting Mrs. Willis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herring at Beaufort. Pellam Hancock and friend from Florida are spending some time nere with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Becton and little daughter, Lois, spent Sunday with Mrs. Becton's mother, Mrs. Viola Murphy. Dr. Reeves and wife, and his mother from Henderson, N. C, have been visiting Mrs. Reeves' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Taylor Willis. Mr. Ira Lewis returned to New York after spending several days with his family. ALL PERSONS OWING TAXES TO THE TOWN OF BEAUFORT ARE URGED TO PAY SAME AT ONCE Unpaid Municipal Taxes Will Be Advertised On September 1, 1941 PAY YOUR PAST DUE TAXES NOW AND SAVE ADDITIONAL COSTS T. Murray Thomas CITY TAX COLLECTOR $14.95 Delivers McuUi BH7-41 (lUiuMtd) SAVE FOOD AND MONEY TOO WITH THIS NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC "BIO 7" Every pound of food you save Is direct contribution to national defense and help to your personal budget This new G-E "Big T with In Selective Storage Zones protects that wealth of health in your food for days, and uses 90 lets current than the best refrigerators of just few yean ago, Get your G-E now at today's low price, GENERAL Q ELECTRIC Topi In PrcfVrtnct . . . Tops In Ptrformtnc Miller Furniture Co. BEAUFORT, N. C. Big Week-End DANCE Atlantic Beach Casino Saturday Night, Aug. 16 Featuring CHAN CHANDLER And His Orchestra ADMISSION $1.10 LADIES FREE Service Men In Uniforms Admitted For One-Half Price Coming - FIGHTS - doming IN CASINO ARENA Friday Night, August 22 SMOKEY DODD vs. RIP DOWDY MAIN BOUT Good Preliminaries Promoted By Frank Alston ' Sunday Free Boardwalk Concert