CARTERET COVNTIY NEWS-TIMES, BEAUFORT 'AND UOSCnSAfi CTtV, S.-C TUESDAY, MAY 25,' 4948 JLC2 roxja. Beaufort, foetal Jfefaa jnroljrn Fsilchar, Society Editor' - Clcnn Adair, of State College, Raleigh, spent the week end at home. " Miss Sue Muray Thomas 'is home for the summer from Con tentia. ' Mrs. J. II. Humphrey spent Sun day in Clark visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pittman. Mr. and Mrs. William Chisholm, of Wilmington, spent Sunday here with her father, Mr. Ed Martin. Miss Geraldine Pearson, of Jack sonville, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Adair this weekend. Mr. and Mrs. .1. W. Harr. ll. of Raleigh, spent the weekend with his sister, Mrs. C. W. Scot!. Miss Joyce Hull, of James Walk er Hospital, Wilmington, is recu perating at her home on Turner Street. Mrs. Lizzie Miller, of Newport, spent the weekend with Mrs. C. W. Scott. Bridge Club Organized On Thursday Afternoon Eight mcmhers of the young married set met with Mrs. Holden Ballou on Thursday afternoon to organize a bridge club. Those present were Mrs. Rusty Dorrler, Mrs. Pearl McQuade, Mrs. Bob Dosson. Mrs. Joe House. Jr., Mrs. Theodore Salter, Mrs. Law rence Rudder, Mrs. Ballon and Mrs. Rjudder won high score for the afternoon and Mrs. Salter, low. Refreshments were delicious London Fog with cookies. Club members plan to meet every other Thursday afternoon. Series of Bridge Parlies Given On Thursday Mrs. Julius Duncan, Mrs. F. E. Hyde and Mrs. James Rumley were johit hostesses to several bridge paMies on Thursday at the home of Mrs. Hyde. n the afternoon three progres sions were played at six tables with Mrs. Jack Windley winning high score prize, a novelty plate and Mrs. Gerald Dickinson, second- high, a lovely vase. Two games of bingo followed wtyh Mrs. Ernest Davis, Mrs. N. T. Erfnett and Mrs. James Biggs win ning measuring cups. During ploy the hostesses served fnyt juices and at the. conclusion otjine party an attractive salad ptfte with coffee was enjoyed by alt Jn the evening Mesdames Dun can, Hyde and Rumley were hos tesses to nine tables of bridge also at! the home of Mrs. Hyde. Miss Lucille Rice was high score winner and second' high was won by! Mrs. Odell Merrill. Bingo' win ners were Miss Ethel Whitehurst and Mrs, Dave Clawson. Similar prizes were given to these winners. Lovely bowls of sweet peas which were used to decorate the rooms for the party were won by Mrs. James Potter and Mrs. Jack Neal. tmUi wim ww jwww'y rWv vvv tfeA- All ovar our state ara baer retailara thousands of thtm faithfully liv fai up to tha latter and spirit of the law. They, in common with the brawini industry at whole, stand , for wholesome condition in their business What of the scattered few who fail ' to "live up"? They are unwelcome ' kadferfon; and when they refute to accept sujjestioai for correction of unwholesome situation, this Divi ' 4uou, in cooperation with law-eo- toreement fenciet, takes action to aaa that they remedy their short. ooeoini or lose their licence. ' ' : ;' This it a program of action within th industry. We eell it "Salf-Regu-. Utioo", You, by yoor sopport, have '' called it program of real benefit to North Corolla. K0TM CAROLINA KYIS'.ON Unite J Statei Breweri ; Foundation ' sam at. kount, mmw its eoe-eOT lawnaMl BMfclts " Balcifh, North. CafoUaa . " Su 3 Phona B-44S-I Harried : v tf Miss A 1 e i s e Killingworth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Killingsworth of Beaufort, was married on January 26 to Mr. Louis A. Menager, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Menager of Tucson, Ariz. Mrs. Menager is a graduate of the Itraufnrt High school, a grad uate of the Grace School of Nursing in Detroit, Mich., and took a post-graduate course in general anascthesia. She is 'a member of the National Asso ciation of Nurse Anaesthists and is associated with br. Palmer in Tucson. Mr. Menager is a graduate of the I'niversity of Arizona and was recently discharged from the United States Navy after seve ral years of service. He is now post commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 549 in Tuc son. Mrs. Menager is the sister of Mrs. Paul Jones of Front street, Beaufort. HARLOWE Mrs. Carlton Taylor spent Thurs day with relatives at Crab Point. Mrs. Ashby B. Morton left Thursday to spend several days in Raleigh with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Green. Mr. and Mrs. William Ingram of Kenansville spent the weekend with Mrs. M. C. Taylor and other relatives. Mrs. Ingram's mother, Mrs. W. C. Check, returned home with them. Mrs. Carl II. Morton spent Fri day in Beaufort with her mother, Mrs. Dallas Sadler, at Mrs. Wil liam Noe's. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Taylor of Wilmington spent the weekend with Mrs. Pearl Olund and family. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Carraway and Miss Hildred Carraway of Beaufort spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Lottie Adams. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Williams and daughter, Alexis, are spending this week with Mrs. W. C. Wil liams. Mri and Mrs. Robert Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lee Taylor, Mrs. J. E. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Waters, Mrs. William Valalcsis, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Pritchett, Mrs. Charlie Taylor, R. A. Nunn, Ben 0. Jones, D. L. Ward, and B. L. Hardison of New Bern were here Sunday to attend the dinner at Taylor Community Hall. Ashby B. Morton motored to Raleigh Sunday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ray Green. Mrs. Morton re tqrficd home with him Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. White, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lanlaster, Mrs. Steve Whitford, Mr. and Mrs. El mo Hill and daughter, Miss Chel sie Whitford, "Pete" and "Punk" White and R. C. Cleve of Vance bdro, Miss June White of Cherry Point, Miss Frances Ferrelice of New Bern, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones and daughter of Kinston visited Mrs. W. C. Willis Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Tallman of near Beaufort were here SunUay for the picnic dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Haywood, Mrs. Nannie Hardison, Mrs. Carrie Shute, Ben Hardison, and Elma Hardisoi of Croatan were here Sunday for the picnic dinner. 1 Mrs. Emma' Oglesby and )tn. Charlie Bell1 were in Beaufort Fri day. sMN Mr. and Mrs. Willie Temple, and Miss Elizabeth Temple of Beau fort were here Sunday for dinner at Taylor's Community Hall. Miss Delia Frances Taylor en tered Morehead City hospital Sun day afternoon and underwent an operation Monday morning. Mrs. Carlyle Taylor spent Monday with her daughter. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Scott, Ken L. Dickinson, Clifton Dickinson and Kenneth Scott of near New Bern were here Sunday . visiting relatives. 4? 1 1 1 mp r-y.-y:..- m . asst... TI hirjk ibnouscenenl IX JAIUS B. BAWES Announces the Removal of His Offices Prom Greenville, N. C. to Washington, N. C. ' BANK OF WASHINGTON BUILDING v. Telephone 1067 Eseasesf f p,Ear, Nose vd Throat- STORK NEWS Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Godwin, of Newport, rt. 2 announce the birth 'of a son, Alfred Paul, in the More head City Hospital on May 20. Mr, ' and Mrs. John Wood a rd Duncan, of Beaufort, announce the birth of a son, John Woodard, Jr., in the Morehead City Hospital on May 22. Mr. and Mrs. Rasper Gurgani ous, )f Morehead City, announce the birth of a daughter, Dollie Eli zabeth, on May 22, In the Morehead City Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. O. II. Gillikin, of Beaufort, Rt. 1, announce the birth of a daughter, Mellie Ann, in the Morehead City Hospital on May 19. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Nelson, of Hurkers Island, announce the birth of a son. Horace Clinton, on May 21, in the Morehead City Hospital. OBITUARIES William Gordon Webb William Gordon Webb, age 45, passed away at 5 p. m. Sunday, of coronary thrombosis. Funeral ser vices will be held Tuesday after noon at 4 p. m. at the First Moth odist church with the Rev. Lester A. Tilley presiding, assisted by Dr. John H. Bunn, pastor of the First Baptist church. The deceased was the son of the lale W. M. Webb and Lillie Bell Webb and is survived by one daughter, Pat Webb, of Beaufort, and a si.ster, Mrs. C. B. Arthur, of Morehead City. Mr. Webb was manager of the Mayport Fisheries with offices in Jacksonville, Fla., where he spent his time during the fishing season and has bed associated with the menhaden industry both in More head City and Florida for a num ber of years. Around six weeks ago he was stricken with an attack and was in the hospital for some time aft er which he seemed to improve and Jor several weeks had been re cuperating at the home of his aunt, Mrs. D. G.JJell. Englehard Rotary Club Supports Proposed Highway MANTEO John D. Gibbs. sec retary of the Englehard Rotary club has advised interested par ties here that his organization has voted unanimously to give full sup port to the highway project pro nosed to connect Virginia Beach, Manteo, Englehard and Washing ton. The new link of the proposed road between Virginia and Nags Head (connecting with U. S. 158) would if built give the east coast its first "real" ocean highway. Gibbs stated that letters had al i so been written Governor Cherry, John Clark, 2nd District highway commissioner and Merle Evans, first district commissioner urging their active support. Receiving the letter in Manteo was Guy Lennon, president of the Dare County Chamber of Commerce. A group of Virginia and North Carolina representatives meeting in The Carolinian Hotel on Nnjjf Head recently wholeheartedly ap prove construction of the propos ed "real" ocean highway.' It would give America's east coast one of its most unusual and scenic ocean side drives through the historic dune-lands of North Carolina's up per Outer Banks, and thence via Nags Head, Manteo, Manns Har bor, Stumpy Point, Englehard and Belhaven to connect with U. S. 17 at Washington. The ecean floor accumulates only about a foot of residue every 50,000 years except on portions near land areas where the accu mulation usually is more rapid. Vole For CHARLES II. JOHIISOII For GOVERNOR 'The most important activity of the Stale: Government is the School System' Charles M. Johnson Camera rv m$kWz'i& By Irving Desfor AP Newsfeutures Photo Art Editor The sermon this week is on Ne gatives Their Value, Care and Preservation. I hasten to tackle this topic because I've been amaz ed to discover how few amateur photographers realize that their negatives ai'c actually more valu able than their prints and should lie preserved carelully. It is a lesson well earned, however, in professional, commercial and news paper photography. II all boils down to the fact that at any time ou can make any number of good prints' from your original negatives at a min imum cost. If a negative is lost or manhandled, duplicate prints can be made only by a more ex pensive process ol copying an original photo, and the finished print somehow never manages to have the "qualify" or sparkle the picture started with. Learn to Judge Neg Fundamentally, you should be gin judging your picture-snap ping results only merely by the photo prints, but by the negatives as well To many amateurs noth ing looks so hopeless and mean ingless as glancing at negatives, but I assure you that in a short time they begin to make sense. And m iiiy tiipes they can prove that some of your "bad pictures" were only "bad prints" turned oul by careless photo finishers in a rush. Doing your own developing i a good shortcut in learning how to judge negatives. For now, however, we'll just assume that your negatives are being pro essed properly - fixed, whshed and free from dirt and scratches. Now what? ' How to File Them They should be filed in some sort of uniform envelope system, dated and identified on the out side and kept in a file box-a sturdy cardboard one will do for a start. The exposure data might be added on the envelope if you intend to profit by your mistakes and successes. If you can't obtain regular negative envelopes, you can maKe your own wiui orui nary stationer's envelopes. Seal them, then cut them in half and you'll have two containers open at one end. Your filing system should be Oodles and Oodles . Sk 'I Yes, we've got oodles and oodles of these wonderful half slips ... In white and black' . . . scalloped bottoms ... the slips to keep you cool! V $4.88 to $7.98 WE APPRECIATE ; YOUR PATRONAGE The DRESS SHOP Arendell St . M 4531 Jtv MnRRHEin rifv . IIcvs -y simple and should answer an ever-ready question about each picture: "If I wer? to want Ibis again, where would I look for it?" Simple personality 'pictures are easy the person's name leads off on the upper left of the envelope, then the date, and any other in formation that will identify that particular negative. Thus no time is lost in dragging it out of its envelope to see if it's the partic ular one you want. Naturally all pictures of one subject taken at the same time should be kept in one envelope. This saves enve lopes and writing. Son.e people like to keep their files in chronological order. I'm af;in' it. I've found that anything more than a few months back lades into a mental fog. I file in alphabetical order, and if I want Susan's baby picture of 5 years ago I need only thumb through to the "S's" where I find a pack of envelopes all marked "Susan," and pass them by till I find one dated "1943, Spring-Fishing." Some 'general subjects (like "Vacation 1948 . . . Auto Trip") can be' put together in a group, and given an over-all gummed la bel title. Separate subdivisions can then be made like "Scenery," "Activities," etc. In the final analysis each person has individ ual problems and ideas about fil ing, but the important thing is get started ... at once. Preserving your negatives in some .sort Of sensible system will preserve your enjoyment for the future. PAUL .obby BEAUFORT Cabinets Made To Order Sign Painting BROAD ST. 4. OX 6 613 LOWE BROTHERS PAINTS & VARNISHES. (Quality Unsurpassed Since 1870) FREE Color Manuels pre pared by the experts. Over 100 answers to Painting Problems. Color schemes for every room plus time-saving hints for the busy housewife. Get Your Copies Today If you have a special deco rating problem (inside or out side) Lowe Bros, will give you L personal advice. Come la and find out how you may obtain this personalized service FREE. i i i jj.''rAV, '7aasajBjBBjBjaajBjBBBBa American Favorite Safety Fan " See. i It Today! 'v; NEW ' Opposite Easter C o n p 1 e t e II o It's Time To Try Meat and lemons figure im portantly In today's recipes tested in the kitchen of the Nation Live Stock and Meat board,1 Chicago. Any one of the meat dishes below could be topped aff with luscious llemon pie crowned" with creamy meringue, why ot try it? PORCUPINE? 1 pound ground beef 12 cup bread crumbs 14 cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper. 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon paprika 12 cup uncooked rice 1 10-ounce .can' tomato soup 2 cups boiling water. Combine meat,- crumbs, onion, green pepper, salt and paprika. Mix well. Shape into 6 balls. Roll each ball in rice and press the rice into meat so that as it cooks.it will cling to the mtfat. Place meat balls in pan; cover with tomato soup and boiling water, Cover and simmer about 45 minutes. 4 to 6 servings. SAUSAGE AND VEGETABLE CASSEROLE 1 12 pounds pork sausage 2 cups cooked or canned lima beans 12 cup chopped celery 2 cups canned corn 1 cup vegetable liquid 2 tablespoons flour I teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper Shape the sausage into patties. Brown patties slowly in frying pan. Combine all remaining in gredients, and pour into greased casserole. Place browned sausage patties on top of vegetables, and bake in modern oven (350 degs. F.) for 45 minutes. 6 servings. FRANKFURTER SALAD BOWL 4 frankfurters, cut In 12 inch slices 1 No. 2 can kidney beans 34 cup sliced dill pickles 34 cup French dressing 1 head lettuce, coarsely chopped 12 large onion, thinly sliced Drain kidney beans. Combine meat, beans, pickles and 12 cup French dressing. Chill thorough ly. Combine lettuce and onion. Place alternate layers of the frankfurter-kidney .bean mixture and the lettuce-onion mixture ip a shallow salad bowl. Pour the re-1 maining French dressing over the salad. Serve immediately. 8 serv ings. CREAMY HASH 2 cups cubed, left-over meat 2 cups diced cooked potatoes 2 cups brown gravy 14 cup grated onion - crafl Now Is The Season Tot TAILOR-MADE iLAWN FURNITURE Flower Trellises - Boxes Borderline Fence Pickets Wooden Awnings . Window Screens We make these and similar items either from our own de sign or y out's. Theatre Seats and Projection Equipment for Sale. The seats are Ideal for offices and waiting rooms. iflJGS BERN, N:'G,!;:v: Rulane Sales Corporation n t i i 1 1 k f Seme l!ew Recipes Combine all ingredients and mix well.- Cook slowly until thorough ly heated.- 6 to 8 servings. LEMON PIE FILLING 6 tablespoons cornstarch 1 18 cups sugar. 1 12 Cups boiling water 3 egg yolks, well beaten - 1 12 tablespoons butter or . margarine Grated rin dof 1 lemon 6 tablespoons lemon juice 1.. teaspoon salt Combine ' cornstarch and sugar,. Add water and bring to a boil, stir ring constantly. This mixture should boil in order to thoroughly cook the starch. Remove from heat, cool slightly. Add beaten egg yolks slowly to cornstarch mixture. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly, about 5 min utes or until eggs are cooked. Add butter or margarine, lemon rind, juice and salt. Cool thorou Jghly For A Limited Time Only! Toar Choice of $25.00 Worth of Records With Any Admiral or Farnswortli Console Radio-Phonograph VARIOUS MODELS AVAILABLE ON EASY TERMS AT CITY APPLIANCE COMPANY Roy Hamilton FRONT ST. B The Gilt Every Graduate Wants . . . Gold wrist wide bracelet. watch In $24.75 np i Sheaf fer Pen and Pencil Sets for ladies and gents. $1175 i j$m3 17 EL DON'S ' sTHTELECS, EX ' AUTHORIZED "KEEPSAKE" DEALER GUARANTEED WATCH REPAIRS - Next to City, Tbeatrt ARENDELL ' ST. , MOREHEAD and bear before placing in baked 8-inch pastry shell. 'Cover with meringue. MI&INGUE j .;; 3 egg whites 14 teaspeen salt 14 teaspoon lemon juice 12 teaspoon vanilla 6 tablespoons sugar Beat egg whites until hubbly, add salt and flavoring. Continue beating until egg whites form a thick foam. Add sugar, a table spoon at a time, beating after each addition. After' last addition of sugar, beat until mixture stands in peaks and sugar is dissolved. Spread a small amount of merin gue around edge of a pie shell, al lowing no space between edge of meringue and - pastry. Pile re mainder on center of filling and spread to meet meringue at edge. Bake in moderate over (350 degs. F.) about 12 minutes. C. Z. Chappell 3251 BEAUFORT 14K gold Elgin wrist watch set with two dia monds. $71.50 Sterling silver buckle and tie clasp. $1100 ' CITY BBSS f . .1.11 i. T I

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