Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / June 29, 1948, edition 1 / Page 6
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AGE SEC ' CAKTEBET COUNTY- NEWS-TIMES, BEAUFORT. AND MOREHEAD CITY, N. C TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 194$ CLASSIFIED ADS I CENTS A WORD: M CENTS MINIMUM CHABOr DISCOUNT rOE CONSECUTIVELY REPEATED INSERTION CLASSIFIED DISPLA Y M CENTS AN INCH FLA1 CARDS OF THANKS I CENTS A WORD: 75 CENTS MINIMFM CHARGE I to FOR SALE SUNSHINE COURT water view lots with riparian rights. Electri city and water. 1 mile eist of post office Front St. Beaufort Two Riiles from Shackleford Banks, best fishing ground in state. G. M. Paul, P.O. Box 218, Beaufort, N.C. , tf HOUSE and lot at 508 Ann St., Beaufort. T. A. Uzzell, New Bern. T tf CONVERT your old sewing ma Chine into an electric model. Motor and parts $19.95 complete. City Appliance Co., Front St., Beau fort. Tu tf McQUADE QUALITY PAINTS. Ask the man who knows your fainter. At City Appliance Co., Front St., Beaufort. Tu tf feEDROOM SET including double bed, dressing table, chest, chairs and night stand. Phone M 5122 or k 3291, Morehead City TF RECAP YOUR tires for hot weath er safety. Guaranteed satisfaction or money refunded. Tire Service Co., 1300 Arendell St., Morehead City. Jul 16 USED FRUEHAUF seafood van, 26 feet, double rear doors, zinc floor, drain tubes, tire carrier, lights, two-speed landing gear, 4 12 inch insulation, completely overhauled and pointed, available it bargain pric. Tom Bailey Mo tors, Inc., Rocky Mount, N. C. Jull MODERN cottage, four rooms and bath. Located on Radio Island. See A. C. or G. D. Turner. J29p Will Gel You Praclically Any Make or Model New Car Desired In Approximately 4 Days GOOD USED CARS 1948 Oldsmobile Series "98" I 2 Door Sedan 1941 Ford Special Deluxe 4 Door Sedan 1939 Plymouth 4 Door Sedan 1938 Chevrolet 2 Door Sedan Cash or Reasonable Terms DICK PARKER MOTOR COMPANY 1302 Arendell St. Morehead City 16 FT. SPRITSAIL sailboat. Ex cellent condition. Complete with three sails and rigging. T. F. Pak ker, Atlantic Beach. Contact thru News-Times, Morehead City. tf TWO-BEDROOM house with hard Wood floors, good closets, built-in cabinets. Full possession in three days. Contact V. E. Ballou, Fort Macon Hotel. ltp 60FA BED in excellent condition $50; month old man's bicycle $30. Phone M 5372 or see at 304 South 15th St., Morehead City. J2p (TOBACCO trucks and cart wheels. See,, write or phone L, C. Carroll, tNewport. J2 T MISCELLANEOUS WE BUY .:rap iron, steel, tin, au to radiators, bodies, fenders, bat teries. Gei our prices first. Sautt er's Iron & Metal Co., on More head City Highway. Phone New Bern 3910, or write P. O. Box 736, kew Bern. tf ALL APPLIANCES repaired. We pick up your lamp, iron or other Items, repair and then return them. Phone Sound Appliance Co., M pOll. Your Frigidaire products dealer. tf FOR CORRECT TIME: M 8006. For correct Jewelry, satisfactory watch repair, Early Jewelers, 812 Arendell St., Morehead City. tf DUPLICATE keys made to order. We have the blanks arftf the ma chine. Protect yourself by having an extra set of keys, made to put In a safe place. Western Auto As sociate Store,. Beaufort, N.C. tf TYPEWRITERS, adding machines, calculators. Sales and service. Taff Office Equipment Co., 222 Craven St, New Bern. Phone 3135. tf LAWN MOWERS sharpened the factory way $1.50. Pick-up and de livery in Morehead City and Beau fort Dial B 3651, Western Auto Store, Beaufort , , tf FOR better time-keeping let us repair your watch. All work guar anteed. Jarvia Herring, Jeweler, Craven St., Beaufort, N. C. tf ; WANTED TO BUY WILL PAY 8 cents per pound for clean rags. Thornton a Texaco Sta Ann, front and Orange St, Beau iort , , - . , ,tf FOR RENT MAKE OLD FLOORS look like new. Rent our. High Speed Floor Sander and Edger. Low rates. Western Auto Store, Beaufort. Phone 3651. tf HELP WANTED WAITRESS for Best Grill. 4 miles west of Morehead City near Race Track. Apply at Grill after 2 p.m. ltp Legal Notices PRELIMINARY CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION State of North Carolina Department of State To All to Whom These Presents May Come Greeting: WHEREAS, It appears to my satisfaction, by duly authenticated record of the proceedings for the voluntary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, deposited in my of fice, that the Eastman Manufactur ing Company, a corporation of this State, whose principal office is sit uated in the Town of Beaufort,, County of Carteret, State of North Carolina (George A. Eastman be ing the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom process may be served), has complied with the requirements of Chapter 55, Gen eral Statutes, entitled "Corpora tions," preliminary to the issuing of this Certificate of Dissolution: NOW THEREFORE, I, Thad Eurc, Secretary of State of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 27th day of May, 1948, file in my office a duly executed and attested consent in writing to the dissolution of said corporation, executed by all the stockholders thereof, which said consent and the record of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file in my said office as provided by law. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereto set me hand and affix ed my official seal at Raleigh, this 27th day of May, A. D 1948. THAD EURE, Secretary of State 4t J8 13-22 29 Power (Continued From Page One) the driveway. Mr. Stovall said that the repair crews did a good job and everyone concerned coopera ted fully to get power restored as soon as possible. The present overhead wire is temporary and plans are being made to put up another "as soon as a place is found for it." said Mr. Stovall. There are possibilities that another cable will be laid. Results of the survey of busi ness houses yesterday morning were 'as follows: Davis Brothers Fish house, $775 in shrimp, floun der, and mullet, Bell's Drug store, loss of ice cream and business Sat urday night, Guthrie-Jones Drug store, sour milk, ice cream ruined, refrigerated candy melted, estima ted $200 loss. V Joe House drug store. 25 gallons ice cream (in the winter power failure a $125 motor had to be re paired); Beaufort Quick Freeze, $300, Beaufort Ice plant, change over to Diesel engines involving extra labor, Owens Brothers, loss of milk, ice cream, meat, electric motor to be replaced, total loss $200; Beaufort cannery. $800 in tcmatoes which canned on the market would have brought $2,000. Potter's Grocery, meats, produce, ice cream, business, totaling $300, Carolina Grill, $40 in food, $60 in business, A & P, $200 in meats, and Beaufort Florist, $30 in' flow ers. Firemen (CorHned From Pace One) the finish line was reached Adams made the connection to the nozzles which was held by Fred Royal. As the water flowed from the nozzles the stop watches stopped and the record made. The firemen attended the Con vention in Raleigh the following year but did not compete at that time. Winning the first prize at Winston-Salem gave the team $100. Through the liberality of the ex press company a car for horse, equipment and men was furnished tree to attend the conventions of those days. In 1940 Americans spent about four Hilton dollars for medical service. Between 1915 and 1942, the number of U. S. counties with full time local health services increas ed from 14 to 1,828. . Once Again Tfca Lcsl Colony And Old Tom (center) dances merrily through the semes of Paul Green's symphonic drama which relates the tale of the first white colonists to establish English colonics in America. At left above, two of the players mix paint for the scenery which decorates the stage of the outdoor amphitheater (right above) over the waters of Roanoke Sound on Roanoke Isliind, N. C. Virginia Dure, first while child born in the New World is christened by Fathrr Martin (bottom left). At court, Queen IJialielli smokes the new weed brought over from the New World by friendly Indians. Overworked Tobacco Barn Gets Newo J on oi urymg amail By I.nne M. Palmer, Assistant Editor North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station COLLEGE STATION, Raleigh If tobacco barns could keep diaries, here's how such a diary might read: "March 7: I was converted today into a chick brooder house vents closed rnd liphts installed 500 Rhode Island Red chicks due tomorrow. Aoril 21: Chicks moved out to range pens installed to make way for two brood sows. July 15: Getting ready for tobacco sea son flues and stoker cleaned up." "September 28: Tobacco season over new floor installed today for curing sweet potatoes. October 16: First cotton back from the gin seven bales stored inside. Decem ber 1: Field work finished for the year machinery stored under lean-to-shed. February 5: Jersey cow freshens she and her calf brought inside for two days during bad weather. Yes. North Carolina's farmyard standby, the tobacco curing barn, probably holds something of a re cord among farm buildings for be ing versatile. It has been a storage shelter, n processing center and a home for practically every plant and animal grown on Southern farms. And the amazing thing is that new uses are being thought up for the tobacco barn every year. The newest job now lined up for the curing barn is that of a corn and rrrain drying plant. The idea is not merely a brain child vet to bp proven, j. W. Weaver, Jr., S. H. Usry end N. C. Teter, agricul tural engineers at the North Caro lina Apricultural Experiment Sta tion have just completed tests which have shown that curing barns converted into seed dryers are both practical and economical "Up to 800 bushels of hybrid seed corn can. be dried safely in two bins built under a shed along one side of the curing barn," they report. The averaee- sized barn will also dry from 1000 to 1500 bushels of small grain, shelled corn and soybeans, from 10 to 15 thousand ! pounds of peanuts, picked soon af ter digging can be dried in the same manner." The three engineers found that a coal stoker or automatic oil burn er works best for drying corps un der this system. It takes almost constant attention to complete the job with a handfired furnace. Other types of oil-burning tobacco curers have not proved satisfac tory or safe for forced air drying. The steps for converting a tobac co barn into a seed dryer are sur prisingly simple. The ervs to be dried should be loaded into two bins,' each seven feet wide, nine feet long and six feet high. An air pressure chamber, 30 inches wide and six feet high, is built between the bins and the outside wall. A fan is mounted in, the barn wall to draw air from the barn and force it into the pressure chamber. Inside the barn, the farmer should construct a false ceiling of asbestos cement' board or sheet metal and lay it on the bottom tier poles. ' Leave a fourinch opening between the end of the false ceil ing and the barn wall on the side away from the fan. The celling must fit tight up to the wall on the other three sides of the barn The engineers suggest that the celling be made up of sections, four by eight feet, so they can be taken out easily for curing tobaco. To operate such a drier Is easy. The air is sucked down through the four-inch opening, and is heated as it moves across under the ceil ing nnd over the flues to tk-e fan. The flow of heated air into the drying bins is .controlled by open ing or closing sates, hear the floor of the pressure chamber. A slat ted floor supports car corn in the drying bint and gives the space i ' if i fcNs r ' SK, Z I--' -Tr - - a i iiW,Ai ' brains, aoyfteans nocd"d beneath the corn for pond dryinc. This floor mav be covered with wire screen or perforated n'c tal to dry small grain, peanuts or, shelled corn. For simplest operation, the farm er should place ihe temperature control bulb of the stoker near the point where the heated air e'lters the fan. The stoker can then be set to keep the best air tempera ture in the pressure chamber Seed crops are usuallv dried with air at 110 degrees F. or less. Small grains and shelled corn drv well at 130 degrees F. Temperatures should not be above 100 to 105 degrees F. at the start for drying peanuts. It can be increased to 120 degrees F. for the last three hours. The engineers found it best to load the drying bins six feet deep wjth ear corn, four feet deep with small grains, shelled corn -m'l soy beans, and ebout three feet deep with peanuts. It takes from four to six days to dry hybrid ear corn seed harvested early to combat in sect damage. From 24 to 72 nours may be needed to dry other crops. One drying bin is unloaded r.nd loaded again while the other bin is drying. The fan is the heart of this dry ing method. The Experiment Sta tion workers say that it must be chosen carefully. A thrce-fourihs to one-and-a-half horsepower tao tor will usually do the job. For further details, see your county agent or write to the Agr.'cul'ur.'l Engineering Department. North Carolina State Collepe, Raleigh. Aphids 'Continued From Pnee Dne used immediately after mixing as it looses its effectiveness in ap proximately 30 minutes after mix ing. The material is toxic to al! ani mal life. If any of this material comes in contact with the operator or work animals, it should be wash ed off immediately. A respirator should be used to avoid inhaling the material. Do not wear cloth ing wet with spray. It has been suggested that the body be pro tected by using a rubber rain coat and boots. The juices drawn from the to bacco plant together with the honey dew that is excreted by the aphis, is attacked later by a black mold which does considerable da mage to the quality of tobacco. - Russian Scientists Study Turkmenia Desert Region MOSCOW - (AP) Turkmenia the southernmost Soviet repub lic which borders on Iran and Arghanistan will be the scene this season of numerous scientific expeditions, Scientists will study the natural wealth, flora and fauna as .well as the past of this Central Asian republic. Turkmenia occu pies a vast area of 485,000 square kilometers, more than double that of Italy. Most of its area, however, is covered by the Kara-Kum desert. Plans for expansion of the out put 'of local raw materials lends importance to minerals hunters. Earthquake districts wil be visited by other scientists. The greatest amount of field work is to be dons by the Institute of Botany and Plant cultivation which is sending 53 expeditions to the repuplic. The number of Americans per dentist in the United States de clined from 2,560 in 1900 to 1,723 in 1930, but incre:scdto 1,865 in In 1940. All of the belongings of Harry Hester and John Whiton, valued at approximately $;t00 were lost in a fire at a home owned by Doris Davis al 1 o'clock Sunday morning in Morehead City. The house was a one-story build-' ing in the alley at the rear of the Negro Masonic temple. Two alarms wore sent in and alter the lirenicn returned, another alarm was sounded hecMii.se it seemed as though flames would break out again, it was reported. The house is a total loss. LOO IT IS ALL YOURS TRY AT A GREAT SAVING IF YOU-- iJ Transportation Is The Problem . . . Call Your Oil Dealer Today . . . 'Secure a Large Storage Tank. Buy Oil In Summer Slay Warm In, Winter. Act Today - This Amazing COLEIIAII Offer Good Only Till Jnly 31 Clyde Jones Gas & Appliance; Company 28lh & Arendell Sis. Ilorchccd CiJy Phone II 582-7 I Farmer' Gets Big Check From Baker 4J.94J.000 43U3&000 " ..ep a4- p I54.M7.0OO 55.6I6.0QO fi7.796.000 II7.898.300 The nation's dally bread and pies, cakes, doughnuts and sweet rolls require so much farm pro duce that the bakers of America are very near the top of the farm er's list of "best customers." This close economic relationship of baking and agriculture is illus trated above by the check for $870,000,000 which the bakers apend annually for farm produce. The baking industry has equal stature by other measurements. According to the American Bakers Association, baking ranks first in the food, manufacturing industry in number oi employees, motor ve hicles, plants, volume of sales, and size of payroll; and second in value of products. The industry is now nearing the three-billion-dollar total for annual business. Recent studies show that while less than 60 years ago about 95 per cent of all bread was baked at home, 90 per cent or more today is baked in the nation's 80,000 ""keries. r Robert Lowe, Secretary, Returns from Chapel Hill Robert Lowe, secretary of the Morehead City Chamber of Com merce, has returned from a week long meeting of the Southeastern Institute of commercial organiza tion executives at Chapel Hill. Mr. Lowe said the meetings were "worthwhile and interesting" and showed how to fit the chamber of commerce into the needs of the city. He said that the meetings furnished plenty of "food for thought, especially in regard to re sort facilities." v - "Tr 0 The Wonder . ii Oil Heater 00 01? 0D (life (f fell, A.' W(t di ' 1 w 1 1, ' Blilfiii; mlKmmmm'x Get rid off chilly, old-type heaters . A small payment puts this onozing Automatic Furnace in your home: Our summer sate saves you real money! Replace your old-type home heater with this amazing automatic furnace. No expensive ducts. No dirt. No ashes. Perfect system for all sizes of 1-story homes. Easy terms. Practical Norses Begin Service in VA Hospitals Practical nurses 'are now being employed for the first time in Veterans Administration hospitals in Norh Carolina to relieve an acute shortage of registered pro fessional nurses, the VA announ ced today. The starting salary for VA prac tical nurses is approximately $40 a week. Practical nurses who are interested in these positions should contact the Chief of the Nursing Service at the VA hospital nearest their home, it was stated. Appli cants must be graduates of schools approved by State Boards of Nurse Examiners for training of licensed practical nurses. Practical nurses will assist registered professional nurse. H. C. Jones Repairs Building on Craven St. Extensive repairs on the build ing Situated on Craven street near the corner of Front street, former ly occupied by Ben's Bicycle shop, have been under way for the past two weeks and are expected to be completed within another week, H. C. Jones, owner of the property has reported. The repairs are being made on the ground floor of the building. A cement floor has already been laid, and the store front will be furnished with plate glass win dows. Mr. Jones ventured no estimate on repair costs. The work is under the direction of O. C. Lawrence. Mr. Jones, when the repairs are completed, plans to rent the build ing. Alamance Farmers Plant New Type Pasture Grass COLLEGE STATION, Raleigh Tall fescue, new permanent pas ture grass which shows promise of becoming important in North Carolina, is creating considerable interest among Alamance county farmers, reports S. H. Dobson, ex tension agronomy specialist at State college. Several farmers have seeded a small acreage of fescue on J trial basis, Mr. Dobson said. Some used the alta variety but most pre ferred the Kentucky 31 strain. Fits under floor out of sight . . . No basement needed I Circulates heat in entire house ... gives you WARM FLOORS My mill M Melhodisl Church Plans Youlh Week Observance Plans are being made Jiow foi the observance of Youtn Weel at Ann Street Methodist church Beaufort, through the week of Jujl 4-9, beginning at 7:15 each evening; Rev. T.' R. Jenkins, pastor, an tiounced today. The program of study, worship and recreation will be under thf direction of Thomas M. Hornet of the Duke Divinity school, Mn thodist assistant in Beaufort ani Morehead City for the summed Joyce Johnson and Neva Boll wi j be in charge of the music for thl week. 0. H. JOHNSON, M. D. F,YE, EAR. NOSE & THROAT! SPECIALIST GLASSES FITTED Office Honrs: Morehead City 9 AM to S PRl Including Sundays DR. E. F. MENIUS OPTOMETRIST 3rd Floor Elks Temple Rooms 307-8 9 & 10 NEW BERN, N. C. mMmmemmmmmm I Dr. J.O. Baxter Jr. I THE EYE f ONLY ! t Front St. BEAUFORT N. C. 4.4. ..;...;..;..;..;..;..;..t..;;. PHONE N 5827 For Our Representative To Visit Your Home. He Can Survey Your Heating Needs And Explain All Details. Ml I 4 I BIGGS SHOE SHOP Beauiorl
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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June 29, 1948, edition 1
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