Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Oct. 22, 1954, edition 1 / Page 14
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Drought Aid Is Called Life Saver The new agricultural conserva tion practice of vegetative cover may prove a life aaver to drought bit farmers in North Carolina this fall, according to H. D. Godfrey of the State Agricultural Stablization ? and Conservation office. Under this practice recently ap proved for most counties, farmers may apply at their county ASC office for federal cost-sharing in the establishment of a vegetative I cover this fall for winter protection { from erosion and to help meet | emergency needs for grazing, hay, and soil protection created by ex treme drought Originally approved for 91 coun tie* including thoee deaignated aa drought emergency counties in 1093, Mr Godfrey aaya that be cauae of extended dry conditions, the practice ia now approved for almost every county in the state. He says many counties are extend ing their final seeding dates in or der that needed conservation may still be established when rain fin ally comes. Mr. Godfrey reminded Tar Heel farmers that widespread lack of rainfall will make aditional grazing or hay, that might be made avail able under this practice, very valu able as well aa protecting the soil from washing away when rain does come. CARTERET COUNTY Can Best Be Served . . By A Democrat In The Democratic I Legislature ELECT D. G. BELL The Democratic Nominee For the House Of Representatives ggcgg? Oct. 19 ? Mr. and Mrs. Gler Hardesty of Salisbury, spent the weekend with Mr and Mrs Will Hardest y and attended the Hardes ty reunion at Core Creek commun ity building Mrs. Hardesty return ed home with them. Mr. John Ball, of Petersburg Va., visited here during the week end. Mrs. H. D. McLawhorn and sons. Harvey and Claude, of Vanceboro spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs Ashby B. Morton. Mr. and Mis. Joe Small, of Nor folk, visited here during the week end. The Rev. J. H. Waldrop Jr.. Mr W. V. Garner and Mr. M. C. War ren, of Newport, were here Sun day morning for church services. Mr. Warren gave the laymen's mes sage. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Taylor, of Bachelor, passed through Wednes day enroute to Kinston. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ball, Billie Ball and Mrs. Lionel N. Con ncr spent Thursday in Raleigh. They were accompanied by Mrs. Earl Dickinson of Core Creek. Mrs. Cicero W. Taylor attended a stork shower Tuesday evening at Bachelor for Mrs. Harry B. Taylor. Mrs. Carlton J. Taylor and Mrs. Raymond Ball were at Havelock Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Adams, of Beaufort, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond Ball during the week. James L. Smith Jr., of Bachelor, passed through Saturday enroute to New Bern. Ralph G. Temple was in Kinston Friday momihg. Mrs. DeLana Creech, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Creech and daughter, of near Smithfield, have returned home after a visit with Mrs. Earl Creech. Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Emma Oglesby, Mrs. Roy Mason, Mrs. Edith Small, Mrs. Cicero W. Tay lor, Miss Eleanor Taylor and Mrs. W. C. Williams attended the sub district meeting of the* WSCS Thursday at the Williston Metho^ dist Church. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Bowlin Jr., Ray Bowlin, Mrs. W. Kuch Wil liams, Gary Williams, Mrs. Xeno phon Mason. Mrs. Carlton J. Tay lor, Mrs. E. C. McLawhorn. Mr. and Mrs. Edsell Bell and sons, attend ed the PTA meeting Tuesday eve ning at the Beaufort High School. Mrs. Hunter Taylor and daugh ter, Mrs. George E. Carraway, Mrs Elmo Taylor, Mrs. Fred Smith, Miss Bertha Bell and Miss Nellie Smith, of Bachelor, passed through Thursday enroute to Willifton. Billie Ball, who has been visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ball, returned to Charleston, S. C., on Sunday. Mrs. Clyde S. Taylor and Miss CONDENSED STATEMENT first- (itims knk & Trust Co. r Close of Business October 7, 1954. MOREHEAD CITY SMITHF1ELD NEW BERN BURGAW DUNN GRIFTON COATS BEAUFORT RALEIGH Wist Side Branch, Raleigh CLINTON BENSON CLAYTON CAMP LEJEUNE CHERRY POINT ANGIER KINSTON LOUISBURG ROSEBORO FORT BRAGG PINK HILL NEWTON GROVE NEWPORT JACKSONVILLE F A YETTE VILLE FRANKL1NTON SPRING HOPE RICH LANDS GARNER MAYSVILLE RESOURCES Cash in Vaults and Due from Banks % 48,838,225.13 U. S. Government Securities $54,466,129.06 Obligations of Federal Agencies and Other Marketable Securities 30,930,703.07 State Bonds 9,998,481.55 Municipal Bonds 17,429,216,28 112,824,529.96 Accrued Interest 626,073.56 Loans and Discounts 69,885,356.71 Banking Houses, Furniture, Equipment and Real Estate 1,652,186.75 (233,825,372.11 LIABILITIES Capital Stock - I 1,260,000.00 Surplus _ 8,500,000.00 Undivided Profit* 706,162.13 Reserve A/C ? Accrued and Unearned Interest, Insurance, Taxes and Other Reserves 8,736,813.46 Inter-Branch Clearings 3,473,199.77 DEPOSITS: 211,169,206.76 9233,826,372.11 EVERY COURTESY, ATTENTION AND SERVICE CONSISTENT WITH GOOD BANKING ARE THE FACILITIES OFFERED BY THIS INSTITUTION MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Germ ccU 4 Judge*' bench 8 Quarrel 12 Extinct bird 13 Parto t the eye 14. Edible rootstock 15. Concern 17 Butter substitute 18 Youth period IB. Play care lessly 21. Jackdaw 23 Most recent 26. Endures 30. Beverage 31 Eager 32. Head covering 33. Heavenly body 34 Seine 35 At no future time 37. One who shoots from ambusb 39 Born 40 Fisherman's accessories 42. Legally sound 46. Arch 48. Earlier 50. Detest 51. Sly look 52. Armpit 53. Organs of sight 54. Period at fasting 55. Beam ?OM liif.Uillt-J ;imii mm* ' "II * affiK ?tf.i ?* jj A iiw WiilliJ WLViil nunuw loawiu'ioiu BW MBIiUli il llilW KKId ElUflHl Mil Id ami'Jii wSwi'bi mi nniaiiiiifiiil iduiidiiid jiir ii aiiian HMMIdll MOld 1-J11M r.'U'.H lilMlfiilll I'JQO I scsii iiiitMHH MMti Solution to TucwUy's Pnnle uunw 1. Give out 2. Departed 3. Movable barrier 4. Treasurer 5. Salutation 6. Headland 7. Cattle raisers B. strong 9. Fan palm 10. Exist 11. Also 16. Finished 20. Abyssinian governor 22. Cataract 24. Cauterize 25. Weed 26. Convert* to leather 27. Baking chamber 28. Go to law 29. Hebrew letter 33. Daub 35. Clock In the shape of fc ship 36. Return 38. Sheets at glass 41. Large knife. 43. Teller ot untruths 44. Citjrln 46. Heavy wagon 46. Personal pronoun 47. RemunarM 49. Decade Eleanor Taylor were at Havelock Monday morning. Mrs. Emma Oglesby visited Mr. and Mrs. Primrose Gooding during the weekend and attended Home coming Day at the North River Methodist Church. I A. T. Jackson, county agent of Craven County, was in the com munity Thursday morning. Mrs. Ivey Taylor and Mrs. A. G. Taylor, who have been visiting in California, returned home Thurs day. C. H. Smith. J. L. Smith Jr., Mr. , and Mrs. Claude Taylor and daugh ters, Claudia and Susan, of Bache lor, were here Friday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Kuch Williams and children, Gary and Judy Kay, were at Beaufort Saturday morn ing. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Davis. Mrs. Harry Davis and their guest, Mrs. J. J. Davis, of Smyrna, were in Beaufort Friday afternoon. Marvin Edwards, of Newport, spent Sunday with Ray Bowlin. , | Mr. and Mrs. John Reynolds and daughter,. Dianne, of Newport, were here Sunday afternoon to see Mr. and Mrs. W. Kuch Williams. Mrs. A. N. Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Jurney Conner, Mrs. E. R. Bowlin i Jr., Ray Bowlin and Roger Ball were in Beaufort Saturday, i The Woman's Society of Chris tian Service met Sunday evening, Oct. 17, at the church. The presi dent. Mrs. Edith Small, presided over the meeting. Homburg Hat Comes From German Town . Bad Hamburg, Germany (AP) ? One of the world's most universal hats is becoming more and more popular, but few people connect the Homburg hat with Germany's Bad Homburg. Bad Homburg? translated liter ally ? means "Bath' Homburg." For many years it was the world's most fashionable spa. Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II and Russia's Czar Nicholas II would meet here before the turn of the century and swap royal gossip. A third member of the royal group, England's Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, would sometimes get bored with palace talk and wander around town. One day he noticed a hat shop. Fasci nated by the intricate and unusual process by which hats were made he stepped in. While in the shop, he outlined an idea for a new type hat. It was to have a brim that curled all the way around and a distinctive crown. The owner of the hat shop, Jo hannes P. Moeckel, agreed to try it. Thus the Homburg hat was born. Since Edward was something of a fashion plate, the style spread rapidly. Dr. Paul Wuttke, executive di rector of West Germany's Wool and Hair Hat Industry Assn., says his research indicate* the hat be came popular throughout the west ern world five or tea years later. The hat is still worn by the world's well-dreaied men, partic ularly diplomats such as Anthony Eden, John Foster Dulles and Kon rad Adenauer and most recently President Eisenhower. Thomas Beard, a shoemaker, came to America on the second voyage of the Mayflower. UMm* ? f Cff/666 Massachusetts grows 60 per cent of the U. S. cranberry crop. Tibet has 400,000 or more priests in a population of four million. Sears Features South's Products Made in North Carolina merchan dise is featured prominently this week at the Sears, Roebuck and Co. order office, Morehead City, as the company stages its fifth annual Dixie Progress Celebration, accord ing to Mrs. Gretchen Brinson, Morehead City Sears manager. Purpose of the event, which is being held simultaneously in 250 Sears souther^ retail stores and order offices, Mrs. Brinson said, is to pay tribute to the South'* rapid ly expanding importance as the manufacturer of the products ihe whole world uses, and to highlight the degree Sears depends on Dixie made goods to stock its stores. No scction of North Carolina was left out of these sales to Sears. Over 167 different firms in 80 sep arate towns and cities shared those millions of dollars. Nearly every kind of consumer goods were in cluded in the list of products bought from Tar Heel manufac turers, Mrs. Brinson said. For the third consecutive year, Mrs. Brinson said, Sears bought far more than it sold in most southern states. Pedals the Mail Larkspur, Calif. (AP) ? Post man Roy Hannick, 25, makes his 7 mile route on a gearshift bicycle he equipped with a sidecar. Post master Manly Bystrom says the sidecar saves time by carrying as much mail as three postmen could deliver on foot. There are about 400,000 divorces in the United States every year. Adding a room? Building closet* or shelve*? Ju*t name the job . . . we've got the right ma terial* at real *aving* to you! See u* NOW I Safrit Lumber Co. LENNOXVILLE ROAD ? BEAUFORT ? PHONE 2-4581 CA Tw^ltw mM. Tw? w*d l*v?l-D?ptfc CuHUo ??n or# alto ??ail ?bl* f?r.th? WO Tr*ct?r. All in?d?U Kav? hydraulic cwi ?r?l with 4?lay*4 lift ?f rear bar. There's a real difference with Allis Chalmers Level-Depth Cultivators. You can sense it from the tractor's seat . . . the level running, even in rough ground ? the freedom from vibration. You can see the difference, too ... in the even flow of soil . . . the control you have in placing it around plants. Parallel linkage is the key to this new cultivating ac tion. It provides natural penetration without forcing. And get-ready time is reduced to minutes. Swing the front gangs open like a gate and drive your WD or CA Tractor in. There is a difference in cultivating with Allis-Chalmers Cultivators. Let us prove it ... in your own field. NEWPORT Tractor & Equipment Co. C. T. CANNON, OWNER SALES - SERVICE Willys Cars ? Trucks ? Jeeps Alli^-Chalmers Tractors Fertilizers, Smith-Douglas-V-C Tobacco Curers, Any Make Tune in the National Farm and Home Hour ? Every Saturday ? NBC NEWPORT, N. C. GOOD USED CARS Phone 237-7 HORSES AND MULES p r' ' y A* E 0 * 1 * f v C</LJ>.-t o In the same way that STERLING on silver signifies a standard of known value, so is this A.B.C. emblem a symbol of FACTS about the circulations of newspapers and periodicals. It is the emblem of membership in the Audit Bureau of Circulations* and is assurance to advertisers that the circulations of member publications are measured, audited and reported in accordance with the rigid standards that have been mutu ally approved and adopted by idvertisers and publishers. . \ Here's why our membership ?mt. R-r.L' '"AO, in the A.B.C. is important to our advertisers and ourselves: At regular intervals one of the Bureau's large staff of experienced circula tion auditors makes a thorough inspection and audit of our circulation records. The results of this exacting audit show: how much circulation we have; where it goes; how it was obtained; and many other FACTS that advertisers need as a sound basis for their advertising investments. This audited information is published by the Bureau in eaiy-to-read A.B.C. reports which are avail able to our advertisers on request. The Audit Bureo< of Circw* -lotions, of which ?hi? newspoper It ? ?*mb?r, it o cooperotiee, nonprofit association of 3,575 advertisers, odvirtiiint ogenciti ond publishers. Or ganized In 1914, A.B.C. brought order owl of advertising choot by establishing: A do Anition for paid circulation; rules ond stand or ds for auditing ond reporting the circulation? of newtpa^efs ond porlodicob CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES REPORTS ? '10 YEARS OF FACT FINDING AND FACT-REPORTING .v ''":t * '
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 22, 1954, edition 1
14
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