Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Feb. 16, 1954, edition 1 / Page 11
Part of Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ECC to Present Scholarships Greenville ? Forty scholarships amounting tu $100 each will suun be awarded by East Carolina Col lege to promising high school seniors who need financial assist ance is order to attend college, Dr. Clinton R. Prewett, chairman >f (he college scholarship committee, has announced. Awards will be made by April 1; and recipients will be notified by April 15. The scholarships will be effective for the 1(?4 1965 term. This acfceol year thirty nine stu dents who received similar scholar ships for the 1953-1954 term are enrolled at East Carolina. "We ire gratified," Dr. Prewett stated this week, "at the excellent scholastic record established by this group of young men and women. We plan to award these scholarships each year." he added, "and we hope that they will prove to be a valuable factor in assisting outstanding stu dents to complete their college work." Basis lor awarding the scholar ships are need of financial aasist ance, total high school record, promise as a college student, and citizenship qualities, according to Dr. Prewett. High school principals through out North Carolina have been in formed about the availability of these scholarships to outstanding seniors in their schools. Already. Dr. Prewett states, a number of ap plications have been received from young men and women who desire to obtain a college education. Any student who wishes to apply for a scholarship, Dr. Prewett has announced, should obtain an appli cation form from him record the proper information, and return it to him as soon as possible. 1 1 -Year-Old Boy Is Latest American Chess Prospect Long Beach, Calif. (AP) ? A lad of 11 has mastered enough chess in 18 months to be rated to day as perhaps the most promising young player in 30 years. Larry Remlinger learned the fundamentals from his uncle, but soon was winning consistently. So he began to frequent the Long Beach Chess club. Now he can hold his own with any of the club's experts. Herman Steiner, chess expert for the Los Angeles Times, says, "Lar ry is as good as Samuel Reshev sky was at the same age." Reshevsky came to the United. States ftora-Poland in JQ21 as a 10. year-old chess wonder and has won the national championships sever al times. Young tarry won't get any chess instructions from his par ents ? neither plays. The sanctuary of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Morehead City, was filled to overflowing Sunday morning for the 11 a.m. dedicatory service The above is an interior view of the church. The Rev. E. Guthrie Brown, rec Insurance Claims Rise in January Raleigh ? January unemploy ment insurance payments amtmnt |ed to $3,159,000 during January, compared to a total of $2,415,000 in December, it is revealed by Col. Henry E. Kendall, Chairman of the Employment Security Commission. The benefits paid in the past live Januarys were as follows: $1, 003,300 in 1950; $980,325 in 1951; $2,316,006 in 1952; $1,876,230 in 1953; and $3,159,000 in 1954. Payments for the 12 months end ing Jan. 31, 1954, amounted to $22,282,600 as compared with $19. 765,850 for the similar period end ing in January 1953. The differ ence in the payments for the two periods is explained by the unem ployment increase that occurred in the November-January period with the payment total this year ex ceeding that for the same three month period last year by more than $3,000,000. North Carolina usually has its highest load of jobless benefit claims in the first three months oi I earti*rtH&nckrr year. Speeding over 75 mph cost the legal driving privileges of l,88f North Carolinians in 1953. tor, greeted the congregation and the sermon was delivered by the Rt. Rev. Thomas Wright, bishop of the East Carolina Diocese. The Rev. D. W. Allen, executive secretary of the East Carolina Dio cese, read the scripture lesson and commended the parishioners of St. Catalog Salutes Forest Products Saluting those who help conserve and rebuild the South's great for ests in a special three-page section including the cover, Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s 1954 spring and summer general catalog is being distributed this week to customers in this ar ea. The section points out that pru I dent use of its woodlands adds 1 more than $5 billion annually to the South's income from the sale of timber products alone, according to Mrs. Linwood Brinson, mana 1 ger of the local mail order office. I Illustrated with color drawings I on the cover and photographs, the section, produced in cooperation , with the U. S. Forestry Service, , shows how the forest resources of the South represent increasing wealth in the form of timber pro ' ducts, soil conservation, water for f power, wildlife and recreation. "Sears pledges its full and whttl** hearted cooperation to those who believes that caring for our woofl-' ' lands will bring greater opportun l ity and bftjer living to the people of our land," Mrs. Brinson said. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS AFTER MARCH 1, 1954 A PENALTY OF I 2 Per Cent WILL BE ADDED TO ALL UNPAID 1953 TAXES E. O. MOORE Carteret County Tax Collector Andrew's for their building of the church. Mr. Allen was priest in charge to the missionary congre gation prior to the coming of Mr. Brown last fall. Holy Communion was observed Sunday morning at 8 a.m. Attending the dedicatory service were Episcopp lians from Beaufort, New Bern and other nearby Epis copal parishes. The church, locat ed at 2007 Arendell St., was built at a cost of $90,000. (Photo by Norwood Young) With the Armed Forc?t Lt. William E. Baugham Aids in Prisoner Release 25th Piv. Korea Army 1st. Lt. William K Baugham, who*e wife, Gloria, lives at 10 Tradd st, Charleston, S. C , assisted in the operation ef releasing inure than 20.000 anti communist Chinese and Korean prisoners when they were returned to UN custody last month. Son ot Mrs. Philip K. Ball. 2003 Shepard street. More head City, Lieutenant Baugham. arrived in Korea laat April. He graduated from The Citadel in 1950 and en tered the Army in October of that year. . Lieutenant Baugham, assistant adjutant in Headquarters Company of the 25th Division s 14th Infan try Regiment, helped to guard the Freedom Road from I'anuiunjom to Inchon to insure the prisoner's safety. Fifth Air Force, Korea ? Gil bert F. Day, Cedar Island, was recently promoted to Airman Sec ond Class while serving with the I Motor Vehicle Squadron of the 8th ! Fighter Bomber Wing in Korea. Airman Day is the son ot Mrs Claude Day, Cedar Island. 2Mh Div., Korea ? Army M/Sgt. | Marshall J. Wise Jr., whose fath i er liven on route 2, Murfreesboro, assisted in tike operation ot re leasing more than 20,000 anti-Cam munist Chinese and Korean pris oners when they were returned to UN custody last month. Wise, whose wife, Gladys, lives j on route 1, Morehead City, arrived overseas in June 1&&2 and has | since been awarded the Combat In fantryman Badge and the Commen \ datum Hibbon. Before entering the Army in 1935 he was a. salesman tor the : American Oil Co., Portsmouth. Va Barber's Point, T. H. At the U. S. Naval Air Station here for duty with Patrol Squadron 22 is "i SHAW'S ESSO SERVICE IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN MOREHEAD Robert Shaw, Manager Phone 6-4403 901 ARENDELL ST. MOREHEAD CITY Washing Greasing Gas Oil Paul D. Jenkins, aviation's male third claaa. USN. son of Mr. ami j Mr*. William J. Jenkins. :<4U Miller Blvd.. Havelock, and husband o| ! the former Miss Geneva M Rhue ol i Newport. He was graduated from Newport High School, before entering the Naval service in June 1951 VP 22 is flying the P2V-5 Nep tune patrol plane on training ex crcises. They also conduct search and rescue missions in the Hawai | ian area. ; Cpl. Bert W. Henry of Beaufort, is a tank gunner on an M 48 medi um Patton tank in the 714th Tank Battalion Motor pool. Fort Bragg. N. C He is a member of Company A. in the 714th, which is one of the 82nd Airborne Division's two tank battalions. The gunner is the son of Mrs. Minnie Henry, 1012 Cedar St. Beaufort . aiul is married to the former Miss Willie Mae Elliott of route 2. Vass, N. C. Although the Egyptians usually are credited with domesticating the cat. modern domestic breeds are supposed to have crossed Egyptian types with the European wildcat. , i. William _ Penn Blended Whiskey a Retail Price ?6 Proof IXI STRAIGHT WMISKIVS IN THIS NOOUCT All 4 TEARS OR MORI OtO ?9? STRAIGHT WHlSKiY, *?% NEUTRAL ST HUTS. CMSTIUCO LOFTIN ESSO SERVICENTER WASHING ? CREASING ? LUBRICATION WE PICK UP AND DELIVER Phone 6-3373 Jib Point Morehead City FDR PASSING' ^ SWITCH TO NSW "TOTAL POWER" ESSO EXTRA Try this great NEW gasoline in your car The best gasoline you can buy! You can have absolute faith in New "Total Power" Esso Extra. It is a new product development of the famous Esso Research Center. It has. peak octane power ... with three great additives that give1 you protec tion against knock, protection against stall ing and protection against valve sticking. Here to a gasoline engineered to meet the total power and anti-knock requirements of even the highest-compression new cars. No other gasoline now available to motorists has a higher octane rating than Total Power" Esso Extra. For millions of older can it means better working horsepower and better total engine performance. If you've tried ft, you know what we're talking about. It to the finest gasoline made by the Esso Standard Oil Company in its many years of leadership . . . it's by far the largest-selling premium gasoline in the area served by Esso Dealers. See your Esso Dealer for a tankful today. LATEST TRIUMPH OF KSSO RESEARCH I TOTAL POWER means: ? PEAK OCTANE POWER to kill off knock s and ping* ? POWER for quick starting in any weather ? POWER for fast warm-up ? POWER to resist cool weather stalling ? POWER to take steep hills in stride ? POWER to pick up swiftly from a standstill ? POWER to get the most possible work ing horsepower from any engine, under today's all-round driving conditions KNOCK AND PING In millions ol can are completely stopped by the peak octane power of this great new gasoline, particularly in the overwhelming majority of new cars and especially those with high-compression engines. BULL PERFORMANCE b made possible for many other new cars whict) now have their sparks deliberately retarded to pre vent knock. COOL WEATHER STALLING and power loss caused by car buretor icing are effectively combated by an anti-stalling ingre dient. Esso Extra was the first fuel to give you this extra value. BETTER MILEAGE and better all-around performanc e can l>e obtained in shoft trip, round-town driving this winter by mfltor ifts who formerly used "regular" gasoline. The Sign of " Happy Motor in f ESSO STANDARD OIL COMPANY ?MK MkMik
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1954, edition 1
11
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75