Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Aug. 24, 1954, edition 1 / Page 5
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
Beaufort Social News Mn. Uckwood Phillip*. Sockty Editor PkM? ?-M M Mr. and Mrs Bill Hiller of Rocky Mount spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. William H. Willis. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Wolfe and young daughter of North Augusta, S. Cw and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Farlee and young son of Camp Le jeune spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Geddy Bennett. Mrs. Wiley Lewis and son, Wiley Howard, who have been spending the summer at Port Monmouth, N. J., arrived home yesterday. Capt. James W. Davis, USN, and Mrs. Davis and their two daugh ters, Jean and Nina, and Miss Nancy Steele, all of Washington, D. C., are here for a visit with Capt. Davis's mother and sister, Mrs. J. J. Davis and Mrs. Ruby Holland of Smyrna. Mrs. Joe Lewis and daughters have returned home from Pasca ! goula, Miss., where they had been spending the summer. Stewart Hill, stationed at Nor folk with the Navy, will arrive home Sunday on an eight-day leave. Mrs. Earl Willis, Miss Kay Willis Enjoy Golden UERNSEY MILK / ? Pasteurized in the Bottle Homogenized in the Carton ? Produced for Maola by Carteret's Own Open Grounds Farm MAOLA MILK & ICE CREAM COMPANY Phone 6-3434 and Miss Inez Woodard spent last week at Hatteras and attended the Lost Colony at Manteo. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Chappell and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sewell spent the weekend at Wade Shore. They were joined Saturday night by Mr. and Mrs. David Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Eric Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Prentiss of Albany, N. Y., are here for a visit with Mrs. Prentiss' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Powell. Miss Yvonne Arnold left Friday for Alexandria. Va., where she will teach high school English. Mr. and Mrs. Newman Lewis and Mrs. Jack Parkin left Sunday for Penderlea after spending the week end here Mr. and Mrs. Oliver O'Neal, their son, Marlin, and their i daughter, Mrs. Irene Smiley, all of I WUMn, spent Sunday with them. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Murray and daughters of Newport spent the weekend with Mrs. Charles Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Etyerhardt left Wednesday for High Point to make their home there. Mrs. Ever hardt is the former Edith Ann Willis. Mr. Tom Kelly was catted to Statesville recently by the death of his brother. Mr. nad Mrs. Howard Jones and I Mrs. Robe.t Tillett spent the week end at Manteo and attended the Lost Colony. Mr. John Van Deventer left Thursday for his home at Fred ericksburg, Va., after spending ihe summer here. Mrs. Howard Fodrie left Friday for New York on a business trip to study Broadway productions. Mrs. M. Leslie Davis and her son, Dowd, are spending this week at Boone with the Rev. and Mrs. John Davis. M/Sgt. and Mrs. Arthur Baer and son, Arthur Jr., of Fort Camp bell, Ky., arrived yesterday for a two weeks' visit with Mr. Baer's father and sister, Mr. George Baer and Mrs. Levin Bennett. Mrs. Frances Boone left yester day to spend the week at Rich Squaro. Mbfi , Must ha Chadwick Gibbs spefltOJpt' t?Btk at Duke where she Your child is a picture..'. ?hav/e the Portrait made now Growing like a bean stalk? Changing every day? Only a portrait will keep today's ' x memory of your child clear and unfading ? yours to treasure always. This portrait will mean so much to those ? - who love your child? don't let the moment escape? phone for an appointment now. HOURS 12 Noon td 8 P.M. Daily and by Appointment PHONE 6-4730 Clewed Sunday jerky m\mm PluUotyuzfJie/i 411 EVANS ST MOBEHEAP CITY II I If I I'll - Iinr*-"-1"- ? Mrs. Phil Moore Honors Mrs. Mason at Luncheon Mrs Phil Moor*, the farmer Peggy Hamilton ot Beauiort. en tertained at a luncheon at her home in Greenville Friday to honor Mrs. James Wallace Mason, who received her bachelor of sci ence degree from East Carolina College that afternoon. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jordan and young laughter, Mrs. John Jones. Miss Fanny Beat and James Wallace Mason Jr., who had gone to Greenville to attend the graduating exercises. Miss Betsy Jones Honors Miss Davis With Party Miss Betsy Jones entertained at a dessert-card party Friday eve ning to honor Miss Laura Davis who will be married next week to Mr. James Piner. Following a dessert of london fog and cake, three tables of bridge and two tables of canasta were in play. High score prize for bridge was won by Miss Patsy Miller. Mrs. William Oglesby won low score prize. Miss Ann Noe won high score prize for canasta and Mrs. Johnny Willis won low score prize. Miss Jones presented Miss Davis with a chrysanthemum corsage and as special gift, a china plate in her pattern. Two Will Supervise Ice Cream Festival Mrs. Hub Whitehurst and Mrs. Charles Noe are chairmen for the Ice Cream Festival which the Wes leyan Service Guild of Ann Street Methodist Church will sponsor I Thursday evening, beginning at 7 o'clock on the lawn of the Lottie Sanders building. Clowns will sell birds on a stick and balloons. There will be a I bake table and a white elephant table, and entertainment will be given at intervals during the even ing. Ice cream, cake and drinks will I be served. Mrs. Rudder Entertains Bridge Club Thursday Mrs. Tom Hood of Fayetteville was invited guest Thursday eve ning wlien Mrs. W. L. Rudder en tertained her bridge club. High score prize, a box of dust ing powder, was won by Mrs. Hood. Mrs. Kudder served peach short cake. \ attended the Methodist Youth Con ference. She spent the weekend in Burlington with the Kev. and Mrs. T. R. Jenkins before returning home Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Glen Adair return ed home yesterday from a week's visit to Asheville. Mr. Frank Pasineau and daugh ter, Loraine, of Oak Park, Mich., spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Taylor. They were accom panied home by Mr. Pasineau's daughter-in-law, Mrs. Lyle B. Pasi neau, and her daughter, Beverly, who will remain with them for an extended visit. Mrs. Pasineau will be joined in Michigan by her hus band, Sgt. Pasineau, USMC, who has been stationed at Willow Grove, Pa. Mrs. Elvin Lewis of Marshallberg left Sunday for Statesville to be with her sister, Mrs. W. R. Moore, and attend the funeral of Mr. Moore. Mrs. Harold Webb and her daughter, Ann Darden Webb, en tertained at a dessert bridge last evening to honor Miss Laura Davis who will be married next week to James Piner. Miss Letitia House left Sunday for Columbus, Ga., and Jackson ville, Fla. Dees Welcome Daughter The Rev. and Mrs. James P. Dees welcomed a daughter, Eugenia Johnston, Saturday, Aug. 21, in Morehead City Hospital. The new comer has a 2 % -year-old sister, Margaret. You can give white sauce good flavor by cooking a little onion in the butter used in making the sauce. This is particularly good with spinach. Recent Bride s ? mmm. mm .w m. m v?an Mrs. William Edward Ward III, who before her wedding on Wed nesday, August 11, was Miss Elizabeth Hendricks House, daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Joseph House of Beaufort. Mr. Ward is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Ward of Salem, Ohio. Obituaries BRADFORD R. HERRINGTON Funeral services for Bradford Roberts Herrington, 38, chief petty officer, USN, who died at his home at Norfolk Wednesday, Aug 18, were held at the Newport Metho dist Church at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon with the Rev. Leon Couch of the First Methodist Church, Morehead City, officiating. Burial with Masonic Rites was in Cedar Grove Cemetery. Mr. Herrington, who was born in Newport, is survived by his wife, the former Frances Stewart of Vanceboro; a son. Bradford Rob erts Jr.; his mother. Mrs. Bessie Roberts Herrington of Norfolk; four sisters. Mrs. Troy S. Brown. Mrs. H. A. Parlette, both of Nor folk; Mrs. John I'. Cassey, New York; Mrs. Thomas L. Patrick, New Orleans, La. WILLIAM R. MOORE William R. Moore, hu&band of the former Flossie Nelson of More head City and Marshallberg, died suddenly Saturday night in a Statesville Hospital after a short illness. Funeral services were held in the First Baptist Church States ville at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon. Surviving Mr. Moore are his wife and daughter, Grace Nelson, and four sons and two daughters by a former marriage. SAM S. KELLY Sam S. Kelly, brother of Thomas E. Kelly of Beaufort, died it his home at Statesville Tuesday, Aug. 10. Funeral services were held at Statesville Friday, Aug. 13. Surviving Mr. Kelly are his wife, a son stationed in Germany with the Army, a daughter of Statesville. a sister and two brothers. Circle Attends Supper Members of the Marie Taylor Cir cle of the First Baptist Church held a covered dish supper at the home of Mrs. B. F. Copeland Fri day evening Husbands and chil dren were guests of the circle members. Always cool a cake on a wire rack. If you use a board or a plate the bottom of the cake will prob ably become soggy. Ii ~ il A Service Vital to Your Good Health We are your doctor's good "right hand" in protecting your health. We fill hi* prescription promptly and accurate ly using only the finest pharmaceuticals obtain able. BELLS DRUG STORE Mmm 2-3291 ? Front St. BMafort. N. C k i Lazy Acres (Continued from Pago 1) and 10 acres devoted to hay produc tion. Mr. Davis pointed out that the < : other land will be cleared when the present land is cultivated to the perfection which he seeks Kvorything on the farm is neat as a pin. All of ??f fr*tl on the farm is close cropped and the houses, barns, sheds, fence posts | and implements carry the lustre of i being freshly painted. Mr. Davis took up cattle raising in the fall of 1952. lie has a herd of 17 cattle now and plans to have a carrying capacity of 65 in five years. He points with pride to the first bull calf which was born on the larm. The bull. LA Beau Mixer 1, is now 13 months old. The ini tials before the name of the bull stand for Lazy Acres. Mr. Davis also dispells the old adage about infuriating a bull by waving a red flag in front of it. He said, "Red in front of a bull has no effect whatever on the bull. A bull is color-blind It's the move ment that excites him." Mr Davis said. ' The cattle-rais- i ing business is a slow process. It . takes patience and time. For in^| stance, say you have a cow bred. You wait nine months until the calf is bom. Then you have to wait another year before the calf is big enough to sell or two years until it is a full grown cow. It's not easy work. I don't know why I named this place Laxy Acres because a person who raises cattle can't be laxy. There's too much I to be done." he declared. But every day's work is bringing him closer to his dream and goal. The goal? "I'd like to see all the cattle in this area improved. This is ideal country for cattle. There is good pasture, water and warm winters, j If the cattle owners would have the patience and foresight to see that it would be better to improve their stock now and wait for it to j pay off bigger dividends later, then we could have better stolk. It's a 1 lot better to get 22 or 24 Mnti ;i pound later than get 14 cents a ikitnnd nnus " h? nvnltinnr! Mr. Davis recently took a step toward improving Carteret's cattle when he sold LA Mischief Domino to 4-H'er Cecil Gillikin, Smyrna. | This gives Cecil an excellent start ; toward producing a better stock The Lazy Acres owner points 1 out. however, that lie isn't raising j his cows for sale right now. First i he wants to build up his herd. His cattle are registered with the American Hereford Association, meaning that they are purebred Ilerefords, and also with the Amer ican Polled Hereford Association, meaning that they are hornless Ilerefords. All 17 of Mr. Davis's cattle have this double-standard rating. lie paid $800 to $900 for each animal when he started the cattle business. He remarked, "Our progress is made by going forward a step at a time. In our planned program of I herd and breed improvement, we 1 take every step forward on a con structive basis Realizing that con structive breeding can only be ac complished when outstanding sires are mated with top-producing fe males, we are building a herd of carefully-selected brood cows that E. W. Downum Co. pound now," he explained. Helps 4 H er DEPARTMENT STORE John Stevens Heads Elementary School John Stevens, son of Charles W. Stevens, Beaufort, has been re named principal of the elementary school at Drivers, Va Mr. Stevens graduated from Morchead City High School in 191*4 and attended I^es McRae Junior. College for two yeprs before en listing in the Air Force After four years in the Air Force, he attend ed the University of Virginia and received his BS in education there in 1962. lie received his master's decree in education at the Univer sity of Virginia this year. Mr. Stevens started teaching and coaching at Chuckatuck High School in Virginia in 1952. He was first named principal of the ele mentary school at Drivers in 1953. are proven producers of quality calves." As advice to anyone wishing to go into the cattle raising business he says, "I?earn to raise good Cat tle, and I mean good, without too many of the fancy fittings Es tablish your business on a "rock" good pastures and not cm the sand of expensive ideas, and you wiH have, with llerefords, a busi ness that will be both profitable, and pleasurable and a refuge in the time of adversity." i, ' == Meet A Man with <Secu/Uly R. J. Schwark Our Christmas Sale Ends Saturday . . . Reductions 20% to 50% dee gee's ?words simply can't describe Hi Chance* are, you'll be at a Iom for word*, too . . . after just a few minutes with a "Rocket" Oldsmohile. ThehV ?o much that** great . . . even "Ter-r-r-ific" fall* abort! For example, original color styling ? already honored by a host of imitation*! Interiors a atep beyond your dreamt*! New* widest -ever v in ion with ( )ldsmobile's panoramic windshield! And in aetion, the 185-hp. "Rocket" Engine speaks for itself. To all this, add Safety Power Steering*, Power Brakes* M. ia fact, every power feature in the book ... for wonderful, workiena driving no matter what lies ahead. Result: the greatest popularity and highest snlrs in Old* history ! Isn't that your cue to visit our showroom . . . take the wheel ; ? . and let a "Rocket** Engine Oldsmobile do the "talking!** ?OpffMM / ml ?trm cW. ???????pi mari ii"? jnni OLDSMOBI LE SOUND CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC. 1308 ARENDELL ST. PHONE 6-4071 MOREHEAD CITY, N. C.
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 24, 1954, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75