^emtfort portal JJefrrs Mrs. Lockwood Phillips, Society Editor Phone B-44S1 George Eastman i+turned Sun day from an extended buying trip which took him to all the prin-. cipal furniture centers in thfc east. Mr. and Mrs. Wyon Lewis. Mrs. L. G. Davis and Mrs. Prudie Wil lis afternoon and after the preaants i wene opened by the guest of hon- , or, refreshments of cake and Ice I cream were served. The guests received favors of party hats and baskets with Valentine candies. Out-of-town guests attending the party were Phyllis Smith, Tana i Lee Smith, llary Virginia Smith, Gerry Willis. Victor Wickixer, Jr., J Stevie Wickiier, Guerney Miaell and Worth Mizell, all of Morehead City and Stevie Austin of Nor- I folk, Va. Mrs. J. D. Rumley Reviews 'Woman Who Rang Bell' The Woman Who Rang The Bell, by Phillips Russell was re viewed by Mrs. James D. Rumley Thursday evening at the Beaufort Book club. The book, which won the May flower cup thia year, tells of the life of Cornelia Phillips Spencer ' who worked during the Civil War and in the years afterwards, to keep Chapel Hill a university. During the program Miss Lena Duncan read selections from the book. Mrs. W. L. House left Saturday for Chapel Hill where she will vis- , it Mr. and Mrs. Pelham Jones, and to Franklin county where she will visit her son, Douglas. Glenn Willis, Jr., a student at ! Wake Forest spent the .weekend j at home. Mrs. Calvin Jones was called to Raeford Friday because of a death ' in her family. Mr. Jones and the two boys, Calvin, Jr., and Dave ; Ward, drove up Sunday to get her and bring her home. Miss Lena Duncan and Miss Gladys Chadwick spent Saturday in Greenville. Mrs. Clarence Guthrie took her daughter, Suzanne, to Dr. Sidbur y's hospital in Wilmington Satur day. Mr. and Mrs. Van Austin of Nor- 1 folk, Va., spent the weekend with Mrs. Curtis Brinson and joined their son, Stevie, who has been visiting her. Thomas J. Adams has returned home after being stationed in San Francisco. Mrs. C. R. Wheatly left yester day for Charlotte to stay with her grandchildren while Mr and Mrs. Ed Davidson who are being trans ferred to Rutherford, N. J., go there and look for a house. Dr. H. F. Prytherch will be the speaker of the evening at- the Rotary club in Edenton Thursday evening. Members of the First Baptist church entertained at a reception at the home of Mrs. C. L. Beam last evening to honor Roba Lee King who has been superintendent of the Sunday school. Miss Virginia Stanton will re turn to Beaufort Wednxday from Rocky Mount where she has been visiting her sister and brother-in -law. Mrs. Teel Riven bark of Watha arrived Sunday to be with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Safrit. Clara Sa frit returned home with her grandmother after a visit in Wa tha. JANUARY CLEARANCE CONTINUES * 1950's Biggest and Best Furniture & Appluace Sale City Appliance & Furniture Go. FKONTST. ? KAUTOCr, N. c. Yof Child Today Th$ Problem of Jealousy I n inn v * v? n? a ?ffr don'1 DO ? hot ! UNfAIR TO SITTERS. . . . That's w hat you'll be tailed If you leave the dinner dithet for your " baby-titter to wash? ' and . the en' I . (Oris again. Young People's Group To Meet at 7:30 Tonight The Young Mensand Young Wo men's club of Carteret county will meet at 7:30 this evening in the home agent's office, court house annex. Topic for discussion will be "Are You Marriageable?'' Mrs. Carrie Gillikin. home dem onstration agent, announced the following home demonstration club meetings for this week: Crab Point 2:30 Thursday afternoon with Mrs. J. L. Seamon; Cedar Island, 1 o' clock Monday afternoon with Mrs. Dora Day: and Atlantic. 3 o'clock Monday afternoon with Mrs. Dee Mason. Mrs. Rusty Dorrler Entertains Bridge Club Mrs. Rusty Dorrler was hostess Thursday afternoon when she en tertained her bridge club. Mrs. Glenn Adair received a pair of vases as winner of high score prize. During play Mrs. Dorrler served cokes and nuts and at the end of the afternoon apple pie a la mode and coffee. i r Three Special Guests Attend Bridge Club Party Miss Lena Duncan, Mrs. W. L. Woodard and Mrs. L. W. Moore were special guests Friday eve ning when Mrs. Hilton Hill enter tained her bridge club. Mrs. R. M. Williams, winner of i high score, received a box of note i paper as the prize. Mrs Hill served lemon pie and coffee at the end of the evening | School Lunches Menus for lunches at Beaufort school, today through Friday ap pear below: Taday ? Vegetable soup, two kinds of sandwiches, crackers, ice cream and milk. Tomorrow ? Chicken salad, sliced cheese, crackers, green lima beans, rice custard, milk, and bread. Thursday ? Canned beef hash, pineapple salad, green field peas, devil's food cake, milk, andHbread. Friday ? Pork chops, candied sweet potatoes, coiUrds, sliced peaches, milk, and bread. Approximately 5,000 trolley cars (till operate in more tahn a score of American cities. ?>J w??ll> IHIMHI HUM Af Education Writer Parents are becoming more and | more aware that jealousy in chil dren is often a very real problem. And not knowing what to 0o about it, many parents are worntd. Per haps they have one baby and are thinking of having another, or they have two children and may have noticed signs of jealousy in one or the other. "You WILL run into jealousy," says Dr. Edmund Ziman, former psychiatrist at St. Elizabeths hos pital. Washington, D. C., lecturer at the medical schools of George Washington University and Mary land University and presently as sociated with the William Alanson White Psychiatric Institute and the Washington - Baltimore Psychoan alytic Institute. "Whether you have two children or ton children, there will still be jealousy; and if you have only one child, you will still run into jealousy." Dr. Ziman has just written a book, "Jealousy in Children: A Guide For Parents," (A. A. Wyn, New York). He says: "There will be jealousy, but the depth of jeal ous feeling will vary with each child. It will depend on his rela tionship to his parents, his prepa ration for the coming of a new baby, and his parents' attitudes, toward him in general: whether they enjoy him and love him. or whether their affection depends on his good behavior. It will de pend, too, on whether both par ents understand the child's upsets and whether both agree on the ap proach to his problems. But while jealousy in children is almost com- 1 ( pletely unavoidable, it need not be- j come a problem." On th#> nthor hntid if ipnlmiftv is permitted to exist without being recognised, it can be very serious, he says. Educators, psychologists, psychoanalysis, and pediatricians now agree that where emotional problems are recognized early enough, and something is done a bout them, there will be fewer emotional difficulties later in life. Jealousy which bothers adults is not quite the same as a child's jealousy, he says. In a child it is a perfectly normal reaction; usual ly it is an unconscious attitude or feeling which bothers him and makes him as uncomfortable as it does his parents. It is the poor handling, the mismanagement, of jealousy which causes trouble, not the feeling itself; it is the failure of the parents to recognize the ex istence of jealousy, or their down right suppression of it, that pro duces such unhappy results. We can say that a child is j?4r ous when he want's something someone else has. The child who is troubled has to find some way of showing it. A two-year-old, for example, may revert to his infan tile habits of no toilet training. Or, he may strike his infant sister or pull her out of her crib, or worse. But Dr. Ziman says he shouldn't be regarded with horror, as if his parents have suddenly discovered they were harboHng a monster. They cannot get very far by pun ishing him because they have not reassured him that he has not lost their love. In fact punishment it such times will only help convince him that he has lost their love. A little child needs to feel loved and nJfeds to have this love demon strated even more when there is a new baby. The reassurance that he belongs, that he is still very muoh loved, that he was and is a nice child, needs repetition over and over in both words and acts. Thomas's Welcome Son Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thomas of j Tillsonburg, Ontario, welcomed a t lb. 14 (B. son Friday, Jan. 13, in the Tillsonburg hospital. The newcomer has a two year eld sister, Judith Louise. Mrs. Thomas j is the former Louise Gutbrie of I Beaufort. Home Hints By Rath Cimit State Horn* Demonstration Agent The location o t the outlet where the electric iron card plugs in may teem an unimportant detail to the man wtio wires the houee But te the woman who does the ircming. a convenient location for this par ticular outlet saves time aad ef fort and makes for a better iron ing job. say the home management specialists. For efficient work the cord should not drag or catch on tht board, hamper the movements of the worker or pull across and thus wrinkle clothes being Ironed. The best place for the outlet is above and to the front of the board, the teats of hand ironing shewed. The best height is 36 in. or more above the board. The most convenient position is on a wall faced by the worker; next best, on a wall to the aide (right side for right-handed workers); least convenient, on the wall in back. An overhead outlet also makes for convenient ironing if it is within easy reach. But the specialists caution against using an ordinary light fixture on a drop cerd for an iron, this does not give proper heat and is likely to cause overheating of the wire. The length of the cord also needs consideration when the out let is placed above the board. Too long a cord will wrinkle garments CpL W. F. Willis Sarves Wilh JUi Fore* in Orirat A new arrival in the Orient to serve with the Far East Air Forces is Cpl. WiHimt F. Willif. ion of b*in< ironed; too short a cord will pull and hinder the ironing job. Studies showed that a cord 5 1-2 feet long is needed when the out let is on the wall laced by the worker ami 36 inches above the board, but that a 8-foot cord is needed for an outlet on a side wall. This applies to a standard size board which measures 54 by 14 inches. Mr and Mr?. George V. Willis of SOI Fnher St., Morehead City. Corporal Willis has been assigned to Far East Air Material command maintenance and supply depot (or installation of the Air Force throughout the Far East, and larg est base of its type west of Sacra mento, Calif. Corporal Willis had his first taste of military life with the U. S. Marines, having served with that branch of service from 1945 to 1948. While with that service, he was attached to the 22nd Marines. Sixth Marine Division, stationed at Tsingtao. China. He transferred to the Air Force in May of 1948. INVITATION TO BEAUTY DESIGNED for you alone . . . A hair-do that effortlessly changes from A.M. to P.M., with a flick of a brush. Sim ple, yet not severe. IN THE NEW MERRILL PROFESSIONAL BUILDING A COMPLETE NEW SHOP IN A NEW LOCATION DUCHESS BEAUTY SHOP Front St. Phone B-511-6 Beaufort &SALE& EXTRAORDINARY NOT JUST OH SOME FEW THINGS BUT OH EVER YTHING IH THE STORE ONE-HALF OFF OH THOSE FAMOUS JAUNTY JUNIOR SUITS The VOGUE FRONT STREET BEAUFORT, N. C. New Shipment JUST AUITED AT EASTMAN'S ANNEX LDMXTILLE MAS NEW AND USED FURNITURE M Im* lutes 044 Ms CImsI Drawers Diaiag Inr SmUm Hhui Oaks of aU Kinds Office Desks Office Chain Pianos NhU* Tap Wash Stands Chairs - Mas Aali?i?s In? SeM Walnal (JtJ la hi Cherry HUBIItW OF ITEM YOO HATE BEEN LOOKING FOR AT BARGAIN PUCES . EASTMAN FURNITURE ANNEX USMSRUJC MAD BEAUT1BT