Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Aug. 19, 1952, edition 1 / Page 9
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1 Nrv? fro* . NEWPORT n Aug. Daryl Clayton and daughter of Williamston came Wednesday to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rhodes. Hffr sis ter. Mrs. Rob Brown, and her son returned home with her on Sunday, to apend a week. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Rogers of Elizabeth City spent the weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Claud Garner. Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Mann of Ral eigh. who have been spending a few days at Atlantic Beach visited his sister, Mrs. D. I. Garner and her family Sunday. Mrs. Maude Harris of New Bern visited her sister *nd her husband, Mr. and Mrs J. I. Mizelle, last week. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pruit and children, Carl and Ann, went to Chinquapin Sunday to spend a few days. Lt. Leon Mann, jr., of Fort Eus tice4 Va., arrived Thursday to spend a week with his parents. Dalton Rhue of Burlington spent the weekend with his parents Mr. and Mrs V. M. Rhue. Mr. and Mrs. Prentiss Garner welcomed a baby daughter, Betty Jane, at the Morehead City hos pital Sunday morning. Zeb Mauney went to Hopewell, Va.. Friday to visit his wife's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. LJpscomb. He returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Garner and daughter Debbie, left Friday for a Make Do - ^ - I Tubular hammock itn<t wnuUmes scratch polished or linoleum covered parch floor*. Piece of cardan hoae, split and slipped over the tufces, provide cushions and protect floors. two weeks' vacation. On their trip to Georgia to visit her parents they went by Nashville, Tenn., to at tend the "Grand Ole Opery." Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Jolliff and children of Raleigh spent the week end with his sister, Mrs A. F. Wetherington and her family. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Parlette and children, Betty, Tommy and Larry, of Norfolk, Va., came Sun day to visit friends and relatives. They left Tuesday to go to Salis bury to visit her sister, Mrs. T. L. Patrick, and her family before re turning to their home in Norfolk. The Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Hen drix of South Carolina visited the Rev. and Mrs. Bill Clarke last week while Mr. Hendrix held revival ser vices at Oak .Grove. Mr. and Mrs. M. C Todd of Wen dell visited in Newport for a short while Friday. The Rev. and Mrs. J M. Jolliff left Wednesday to go to their home in Gatesville, after spending sev eral weeks here with their daugh ter, Mrs. A. F. Wetherington, and her family. Mrs. Ed Carraway left Monday to visit her parents in Kansas. Mrs. Sophie Moore of Trenton visited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heath last Wednesday. Mr. C. S. Long accompanied the FFA boys to White Lake Monday They will return home Saturday. Mrs. Parker Herrington of Rocky Mount has been visiting her sis ter, Mrs. D. N. McCain and Mrs. , Claud Garner. Miss Lydia Willis, Miss Vivian Hill, and Garland Morris all of Cherry Point, were dinner guests of Mrs. S. D. Edwards and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Montague Tuesday even ing. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Lewis and children of Rocky Mount visited Mr. and Mrs. Claud Garner over the week end. The Rev. and Mrs. Bill Clarke left Monday to go to South Caro lina to visit his sister and her fam ily. From there they will go to Asheville, and while visiting rela tives there will attend the drama "Unto These Hills" at Cherokee. Mr. and Mrs. John Slaughter and children returned to their home in Norfolk, Va., Sunday after visit ing Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Millis. Mrs. Clarence Millis and s6ns. Holland and Edward, returned home with them to spend a week. Miss Helen Andrews and Mrs. Grant Dunnagan of Raleigh were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Montague. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Garner were honored by their children at a family dinner at their home on the occasion of their fiftieth wed ding anniversary, Sunday, August third. The dinner was complete with a three tired wedding cake. Miss Melba Garner and Mrs. C. S. Long were special guests last Friday evening when Mrs. Moses Howard entertained her bridge club. Mrs. Parker Guthrie won high score prize, Miss Melba Garner second high, Mrs. R. L. Pruit bingo and Mrs. Eugene Fox and Mrs. Luke Whittiker both won traveling prizes. During progressions the hos tess served cokes and nuts, and at the end of play ginger ale float. The Gertie Howard Circle of the Woman's Society of Christian Ser vice held its regular monthly meet ing Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. P. P. Garner. Ml%. I. N. Howard led the devotional. Mrs. Floyd Garner, chairman presided over the business session. Routine business was transacted after which the hostess served chocolate ice cream and cookies. Swindling by Smart Hindu Ends Alter 12 Years Calcutta (AP) ? Red-faced Cal cutta school officials have ended the 12-year spree of a swindler who talked his way into $4,200 nobody Missed. At least the pilfered cash went unnoticed for years while the 35 year-old man skipped from job to job in the local educational system. The smart-looking Hindu, who speaks excellent, fluent English, kept a step ahead of suspicion un til May. He didn't even have the high school, college or post graduate de grees he flaunted ? forged before school officials and actually never reached eighth grade. He always showed keen interest m "administrative" work in schools "that kept him near the cash box," one police officer commented. The watermelon is the giant of the cucumber family. 1 SPECIAL 4" ROOFERS - - - $75 per M EXUM WOOD PRODUCTS Highway 70 ? West of Morehead City Phone 6-4912 At Old Morehead Airport AMERICAN STANDARD PLUMBING SUPPLIES ATHEY'S PAINTS -DEMING WATER SYSTEMS - PERMUTIT WATER SOFTENERS Beaufort Hardware Co.f Inc. Phone 2-4686 Merrill Bldg. Bftdufort, N. C. BUCK & DECKER ELECTRO POWER TOOLS CARPENTER TOOLS PAINTERS SUPPLIES MASONS SUPPLIES HARDWARE FOR BP1LDDIS PPRPOSES Hardware & Building Supply Go. Phone 6-3247 727 Arendell St. Morehead City, N. C. MOTHERS! Discover This Secret That Makes MCK-to- SCHOOL CLOWS LOOK UKE-NiW AGAIN! f " ) Our Bitter * Kim/of j Pry Cleaning \ That Gets Oat AIL the Dirt! J Here's your chance to dis cover our amaiingly better dry cleaning that gels clothes cleaner than ever Before! Be cause Sanitone Dry Cleaning reaches deep into fabrics to flush out even ground-ia grit aad grime 1 1 : penerai md colon spring beck to life! Mo dry dtuiaf odor* . . . ma perspiration HKiwd. And it comi jtm no more Am ordinary dry cleaning! Try it today! Laundry | THE SOFT WATER LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING fflBTh WE ARE RELIABLE ^5^ l?12 Bride*. St. ? Dial 4-4440 ? M.r.h..d C%, N. C LUMBER M For Every Building Purpose Everything for Home ' Construction PAHTS Pittsburgh and Marietta ?uruT CO. i 2-4M1 Beaufort, N. C On the House YOU SHOULDN'T BE SHOCKED so oflen, blow a fuse, or pooaibly set your house on fire now that hardware stores are carrying new and virtually fool-proof electric plugs, wire splicers, outlets and other gadgets. These plastic in ventions are so slick you can throw away your screw driver and pliers as far as any household electrical extension is concerned. You merely push the end of an ordinary No. 18 plastic covered parallel electric cord into a slot in these fittings, press a trigger down and the connection is made so se curely you won't pull the cord out. It's no longer necessary to strip insulation from the ends of the wires, struggle with fine strands, try to tic an underwriter's knot and tension accessories were developed by the Monowatt department of the General Electric company at Providence, R. I., and they carry the approval label of the Under writers Laboratories for safety In themselves. The main feature of their handiness lies in getting light where you need it, or a fan where you can enjoy it, rather than stag ing an electrical equipment show in your living room. THE SIMPLICITY of these fit tings makes it very easy to repair or change minor electric conven iences. Suppose a lamp cord is crushed or broken under a furni ture leg ? you merely cut the damaged part away with a pair of scissors, insert each end into a No insulation is stripped from rord with this new plug. Wires are sepnt-ated at end, poked in and clamped tight. tighten terminal screws in such a way that wayward strands don't short the circuit. Insulation is left right on the cord. You poke it into the plug or outlet and when you press the trigger down to clamp it in position, sharp teeth cut through the insulation to make a contact. Of course, you have to use the modern flat style parallel wire cord. The fittings won't work with round or old style twisted cords. But most lamps, fans and other Quirk splicer joins two lengths of extension cord. small accessories nowadays are equipped witli litis type of cord. THE MAIN REASON you can only consider these gadgets "vir tually" foolproof is that they are so handy they could encourage [ somebody to overload a circuit. If j you string an extension from an j outlet in your wall and attach a triple outlet to it and then string other extensions from those three outlets, with triple outlets on each one, you can very quickly draw a power load for which your wiring was not intended. The hazard that arises in such an arrangement is that when a fuse melts and someone foolishly re places it with a heavier fuse the heat in the wires is bound to char the insulation eventually to a dan ger point. But for a few extra lights or small fans it is probably unlikely that an average household circuit would be overloaded. An easy way to notice if any circuit is being overloaded is to watch the lights in another part of the house. If they dim under the strain, or if motors slow down, an overload is obvious. Use nothing heavier than 15-watt fuses on ordinary house hold lighting circuits and you have a common safeguard. However, these new plastic ex small plastic block called a splicer, clamp the triggers down with your thumb and everything works again. Chemical engineers and electri cal engineers have teamed up to produce these various devices. Their shells are made of plaskon urea, durable enough for average abuse. You can get complete wiring as semblies for table lamps, with I ? _* Automatic closet light ? Door closes on the button. socket for three-way light and frame to hold a lamp shade. You make the lamp yourself out of an old bottle, jug or homemade wood en stand. A pin-up night light has a small seven-watt bulb in a translucent ivory colored shade and can be hooked on a nail o? screw at any place. An automatic closet light, which goes on only when the door is opened, can be quickly screwed to a door jamb and its cord plugged into an outlet. Most of these lighting setups sell for around a dollar at hardware stores ? cords and fittings for much less. Giraffes, natives of Africa, may grow as tall as 19 feet. / 1 11 HEATER SALE NT MOW SAVK ?"'Sp ^Aiajic CA*f HATSELL'S ELECTUC CO. Wiring, Fixtures, Appllanm Dmjr 14*47 Night Park, Bcaafort Graas Provide Winter Grazing Small grains seeded now will provide fall and winter grazing [or animals, Dr. G. K. Middleton. small grain breeder for the N. C. Agri cultural Experiment station, tells feed -short Tar Heel livestock farmers. One of the best of the small grain crops is rye. which will give 1 more pasturage than any other i small grain, particularly an sandy soil# Middleton advises immedi ate seeding of Abruzzi or Balbo ryes in order to obtain maximum grazing. Rye can be seeded alone it ?he rate of six pecks per acre, or in combination with 15 pounds of crimson clover. If the cattleman desires to add 15 pounds of rye grass, the amount of rye should be reduced to four pecks. Ryegrass provides a good turf, but it becomes a pest when seeded on land in which small grain occurs regularly in the rotation. Barley i? another small grain that dairymen in the Piedmont and mountains may prefer to seed. Two and one-half to three bushels, with or without crimson clover, is rec , ommended. The addition of rye grass should reduce the amount of barley to two bushels. Oats produce less grazing in the fall and winter than does rye or barley and are susceptible to blight disease. Early seeding of wheat is not advised because of a serious influx of Hessian fly. Some 400 to 500 pounds of an 8-8-8 fer tilizer should be drilled in with any of the grains seeded. Elm Ffcrm Ollie, a Guernsey, was the first cow flown in an airplane, j The. flight was made in 1930. and Ollie was milked during the flight and sealed paper containers of the milk were parachuted over St. Louis, Mo. INSTALL A GOULD Water System For Every Farm And Home Need GOULD PUMPS - For Deep ft Shallow Wells CAHTEBET PLUMBING AND REFRIGERATION CO. Phone 6-3479 6-4275 105 N. 14th Morvhead City IS THIS YOUR DBEAM HOUSE? Ol/>?n0'lii i i v F I g | t < f i O O ? ? k ? " 'j THE BUNA is a story and a half colonial with three roomi on the , first floor, two bedrooms and a bath on the seeond, an attached garage and a porch. As shown, the dining room and living room are joined by a cased opening, but the partition can be left out to form an L-shaped com bination living-dining room. Cabinets are placed on two walls to permit space for kitchen din ing. The double compartment sink is under the rear windows, the refrigerator to th?? right and the range in the counter to the left. The living room has light from three sides ,an open stairway, fire place and a coat cloaet, linen cabinet and walk-In closets in the bed rooms. Exterior finish includes brick facing on the lower front wall, with siding and asphalt shingle*. Dimensions are 28 feet by 22, excluding porch and garage. Area is 618, cubage 15,400. We have the Mat complete eelectlea of flaw far Meal small karfs la (Ml area, ftaa the materials u make them ta jtm specMeattaaa. We ale* are ready la half yea ?lisralsi aad ThUNTLEY'S BEAUFOKT H. C. C. W. STYROH & SON PLUMBING CONTRACTORS COMPLETE PLUMBING IN YOUR HOME FOR A FEW CENTS A DAY WE FINANCE PLUMBING AND HEATING NO MORTGAGE REQUIRED NO DOWN PAYMENT " PHONES 6-4223 and 6-3184 MOREHEAD CITY, N. C. BLANCHARD'S ELECTRIC SERVICE CONTBACTING MS BEPJUMMG Hotpoint ft Deepfreeze Appliances Phone 6-3230 Slate License 8 914 Arendell St. Morehead City, N. C. pi ? m m FOR ALL PUKPOSLS uLAjj for All Purposes Windows ? Doors ? Pictures Commercial Store Windows Table Tops ? Mirrors ? Auto'Saiety Glass Cut and Fitted WE'LL DO THE JOB ? JI'ST CALL RUSSELL'S GLASS SHOP PHONE 61744 Owned and Operated by Tommy Russell 905 Shepard St. Morehead City, N. C. STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY I RATIONAL DISTIltllS riOtldS COIfOIATION, N. Y. ? It MOOf A
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 19, 1952, edition 1
9
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