Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / March 4, 1958, edition 1 / Page 3
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< All-County Girls Team is Announced Sfrina Davis . . . Smyrna favorite Jrnnay Loa Smith wlik ?' . . EaglrMe forward N'anry Mason . . . Bfuiftrt star -r SiBjr MorriH iye whii Dlt.ir Gllnfr . . . tops on rr bounds Clyde Mm . . . Newport'* choice Four county schools are represented on the All-Coun ty girls basketball team. Morehead City and Beaufort had two players each on the honor team. Smyrna, the county champions, and New port had one player each on the team. Players wrt selected by the coaches, who sent their ballots to THE NEWS-TIMES where they were \iunted. Each member of the first team will recoive a medal and certificate from the paper. Cer tificates will be awarded to second team members and girls getting honorable mention. Forwards for the All-County team are Jenny Lou Smithwick of Morchead City, Serina Davis of Smyrna and Nancy Mison of Beau fort The guards are Clyde Mann of Newport. Sally Morris of More head City and Diane Garner of Beanlert. Second team selections are Anna Faye Willis of Morehead City El borta GHHk in of Smyrna and Rita Giigo of Atlantic at forwards and Erenda Willis of Smyrna, Jessie White of Morehead CHy and Bren da Salter of Atlantic at guards. Girls winning honorable mention are Jean Fuleher and Anita Brown of Atlantic. Laura Lewis of Smyr na. Judie Moore, Sheila Willis, Ann Davis, and Linda Salter of Beau fort, Faye Jones and Frances Gas kins of Morehead City and Peggy Jo Wallace. Margaret Lilly, Becky Garner and Grace Small of New port. Nite Raiders Down Oiler* The Smyrna Nite Raiders rolled to a 62-49 victory over the C? Id well oilers in a New Bern basket ball league game Thursday night. Louis Thomas sparked the Raid er offense with 11 points to cap ture high scoring honors 'for the night. Ronnie Arthur scored 14 points and Wilson Davis hit for 13 points against the Oilers. The other Nite Raider startrrv Nick Stkorski and Everette OoUen. scared seven and one paints re spectfully.. Kenny Pavls scored nine point* M M tot start the game for the Raiders. Ugh scorer for the Oners was fat McCotter with M points Mar Prescott scored U and Gerald An derson and Wes Avery scored It each. The Nite Raiders built up a S l4 lead in the first half and coasted to the victory in the second half of piny. , t Sheriff forbids ifecKitigin Jail Charleston, W. Vt. (AP)-T<*tU seeking on visitors' days at the Kanawha County jail has been for bidden by Sheriff Pat McGovran. A Warm embrace by a couple shocking to observers -L Wd tot sheriff to issue this order la Mi chief jailer: "Yod will immediately instruct all visitors under your supervMta that demonstrations of affection, other than a kiss of greeting aM a kiss goodbye, are out of line hi the lobby. If any prisoner haa vi? itors and they proceed to such deiMiistratiooa of affection (neck ing), the visitor will he imaedUt* ly ordered to leave the lohby and the prisoner wDl be immediately returned to hit cell." Ripped Bog Caatt Man Two Bag* of OrtMriM Suffolk, Va. (AP >? When Wttite White's grocery bag ripped, he] wasn't left holding anything. White told police he left a |r? eery store with tw* ttft of gro ceries when one of. them started to rip. He act the bags down and went back into the store . for t now bag. When he returned the groccrfM wen guui 1ii?tl bag Ini nil. Seadogs Move into Quarter-Finals Of District Basketball Tournament The Beaufort Scadogs moved into the quarter finals of the dis trict basketball tournament with a 55 41 victory over Burgaw Sat urday night at Kenansville. The Seadogl will meet Mt. Olive at ?:S0 p.m. T mrsday. Butch Hassell was the key man in the Seadog victory. The classy Beaufort guard sank 18 points and was credited with aeveral assists. Pud lUssell was second high In the scoring column wtth 12 points. The Seadogs were in the driver's seat all the way. They took more shots from the floor and hit for a better percentage than the losers. Beaufort players shot 60 limes from the floor and hit 011 2G shots for 43 per cent accuracy. Burgaw's foul shooting kept that team in the' game. Eleven free throws accounted for more than a fourth of their points. Burgaw players shot 50 times from the floor and hit on 15 for 30 per cent accuracy. Beaufort took a 1411 advantage after the first eight minutes of play. A second-quarter rally by Burgaw cut the Seadog lead to one point. 24 23, at the half. In the third quarter the Seadogs held Burgaw to A points while j scoring 14 to go ahead by nine points and put the game on ice. I The fourth quarter saw the Sea dogs stretch their lead to 14 points as they hit for 17 points and held Btirgaw to 12. Raymond Gillikin. Alex Cope land and Danny Willis scored seven points each tor the Seadogs. Frank Potter added (our points to the total. Allen Autry was the only Seadog player who got into the game and did not break into the scoring column. Beaufort, with Pud Hassell and Copeland under the baskets, con trolled both backboards during the contest. Willis. Butch Hassell and Gillikin picked off most of the re bounds that went beyond the reach of their teammates under the bas kets. Jayvee Tournament to Open Tomorrow ? ' Photo by Bo? trrnmir liufk Gmba, left, aad David Lee Inapect Ike traphiet tkat will be awarded to the dam la Ike Beaafcrt Jaafor varsity toaraameat. TV InpUn art. Ml to right, coiMhki naer#, ctanpUo ahfr. itlilwOil flayer award, n?iUBow wtawr and tkaaiptoMhlp bracket naner-ap. Coatbe* ?*r daaKlManlD charge a< tbr toarwament Six -trams have entered the Beautat invitational Junior vanity tournament, scheduled lor torn or row, Thiiraday and Friday hi?hts Team* which have accepted invita tioii are Havclock, Swanaboro, Newport, Beaufort, Morehead City and Smyrna. The tournament committee drew up the pairings after drawing aamos . and numbers for the schools. A trlplehetder it scheduled for tomorrow night. Havelock and S?an*boro will clash In the open ing contest it 6:30 p.m. Newport and Beaufort will play in tlM aec ODd came with Morebead City and Smyrna playing tn the nightcap. The winners and laaer* of the aeeond and third games temonrow night wtli meet in a doufoieheader Thursday night. The winner in the championship bracket, tlx fame between Ike tw? winneri, wttl meet the winner of the Swantb*o-Havc lock game Friday night for the uurument champioortrtp. > The winner of the coMoUtion game Thursday night will meet the Iteer of the Swansbora-HaVelock (awe os Friday night tor the con aaiatiwi trophy. Iowa Service Station Operator Rises To Defense of Gas Station Attendants Wen, it htt take! a man {ram , Marsh alltown, Iowa, <? ftse to the | defense o f (U station attendant! TIMMeJSf* U? ? NEWS"I _ __ editorially that fit station attendants frequently hinder rather than help a motorist with their alleged windshield clean ing h?l or er- filling of the fat life editorial brought many an "Amen" from sympathetic motor Wa, and only one verbal retort from a local service station op A newspaper, The Gasoline Re tailor, carries a newsstory on the editorial. The clipping from The , Retailer was enclosed with a lat ter (roan "A. Gasoline Service Sia O pari tor", MarshalltoWn, I til* clipping, headed "Editor Rlba cat Station Service," U re prfetod her*, Mtow?d ?y the com tr "A. Gasoline Service Sta tion Operator". flftn ttfenflants claim they give tol are not an actuality at| far at the editor of the Morehead City News-Times is concerted. In a recent issue of the News Timet, aft editorial etitMed "Ser vice With A Smile ia directed to xrvtee tuition attendants, paint ing out a lew of the "services'' far which the editor said motorists art not thankful The ftrst Item an the list was "meaainjt up windshields under the gulc* at 'cleaning the wind shield.' Soma gas station attend aula must Ma awake nights fi*ur lag out how thay ear find a taw way to make windahields opaque ?that means the windshield lets light through, bat that's all " The editorial continued, "A mo tor! irt told tn the other day how he bad -hist scoured and cleaned his hlhgnisli ?tMl tt glistened like s oew-Mawa eryttal,' but be 'made the horrible mistake of Moptttag for gas and before he ccaiM tackle the attendant, the good matt had slapped an old rsg ?o Am windshield so that the mo toric had to go home and dean his windshield of er agate ' want to make things bad, as oily rag i* beat. That'a ? Mai aahotoge job In UN am the gUaa look* fine Bift when it starts to tain, bro ther! The windakiekl wipers work like mad and all they do ia above big oily blobs and toddles of water la frost of tbe driver's face." The editorial had this to say hMut filling toats: Uqueeibig tbe last oobc? af gas la the tank happens whan (be mo toetot, toseing care to (be wind, says fill 'er np .' Tbe pump Starts to How and the tittle mitnbers fly around On tbe pump gauge. By all aoHntl itsMkHb. Uw talk la fi nally full, arcordiag to the motor 1st ? way M thinking "But tbe (as pufto Jockey has tow.7ipiK mora cento worth of gat goes In. ften the computer stops an It*. That will never do. 'Bu hink, rtarg.' The acmpoter runs 2 attendant gives It mother shot 9m compuwlgei up Jo JS^S and Register of Deeds Records 31 Real Estate Transfers (Editor'. Note IB wording real estato transfer*, the Uw doe. not I reauire that the amount paid for ^pertybertatedinthed,^ A token amount, such as *1? Udl may be stipulated. Attached to each deed, however, united State, documen. mentary stamps, the value of the stamps based on the price paid change, hands for less than $101 requires no stamp according to Irvtn W. iJa vis register of deeds. Property which brings I price between $101 and $500 must bear a stamp valued at Mcents. From *0 . U 1*1.000. the .tamps affixed to the deed to tal $1 10. *nd thereafter for each additional $500 paid for the prop^ erty the stamp value goes up 55 "From the value of the .tamps nlaccd on a deed an ertlmatlon of the price paid for the property can be determined. In the trans fers listed below, the teller 1, listed first, the buyer .econd, ?ndfinally, the value of the stamp affixed the deed). Thirty-one real estate transfers were recorded in the register of Ed, officc Feb. 11-24. They fol Morehead City ? A. B. Cooper and wife to Paul V. Vogan and wife. 55 cents; lon. Sm ith.on lou to George *? B?Uou. Ji? stamps, George T. Spc ???? to Frances Wall B Justice, *110. Harrison G. WUli. and wUe to Jesse A Holland and wife, ??, Walter E. Humphrey and wile to Mrs J. M. Tudor Jr., $8 25. Clarence E. Stfron and wife to I Juliua N. Jomei tad wife. $1?, C. Van S. Roosevelt and others to | Grady K. Lov? wlte* r. Roberts to. Louise H. Roberts, no ?Ump? Beulah L. Spsara to Morrla V Apple, )U; A. B. Cooper and vnlt to Dorothy S. Marah.l, Charles W. Marrow and other. to Elizabeth M. Marrow, 55 cent, Harrison C. WUlis and wife to Jeas Brown, $2.20. Wesley D> Lamoureux and ?rfe to Charles L. Milone and wife. 13 gs; W. W. Ballou and wife to Theodore W. Marker and 14.40: F. A. Gore aad wife to EU hue Lewis and wife, ?.?; J- ? A. Gore and wife to Elihue Lewis and wife, $110. Newport - Robert T. Myera aid wUe to Arthur R. Graham and wife 55 centa; The Meadow, Co?* PW to D F WUliara, and wife, W. Ter?U ?nd wjie to Ira Lee Wnght and wife. *>J0. rtd Uort M. Simmon# to Nelson Ball and wife. ?o ?tamp?. _ . BtMfott - yg*jrij* wife to Ethel V. snd MatA Jooe?, qo guwipt; Umit?d *at?a lei to Jamea A. Baktr, no atanpfc, Mary H Davls to Vera. May R*We M - J W. Pear** aid and wlfeU Walter K line M HuWphW. ? shore Park Inc. to Hendrick* Ar ST wd wtfe, *1.10; ?< pearaon and wtfe to l??i Cunning h,Hark^Iriaod-Ch?rle,r Nel| wn and wtfe to Robert L. Clay ??d wife $2.75. Atlantic ? B. B. Bau "u. .S t^hwa to 8. A. FretweU. and wife to Wilbur B. m*r ??? and wife. ?* the back fender and the lt?Ooo driveway." Marahalltown, U. Feb. 17. rati Dear Mr: You eooM lean many thing! U you to? cod youraaU by worklag In a giaoline aervtce atatlon a (aw daya. T atkMwMgc that there are aoiM very poor (U pump Joefceye but there We alee a greet many goon rtprrnori wim foo<i en* plojtea and I ventore te eay that then my ha a few faulty netn paper editor*. Yoorg truly, K. GaaoUne Service Station Operator ?.i'. a . . D. L. Williams Now Cleared For Ports Job D. Loon Williams, Savannah, Ga., will be the next executive di rector of the state ports. He will step Into his new position March 15 ami will attend a meeting of the State Ports Authority Monday, March 17, at Morehead City. -Mr. Williams Is the third man to hold the directorship since the state took over operation of Wil mington and Morehead City ports. The first was Col. 0. W. Gillette, followed by Col. Richard S. Man Mr. Williams breaks what ap peared to be the beginning of a I train of retired Army colonels In the ports director Job. The full State Ports Authority approved Mr. Williams' hiring Fri day. When his appointment was first announced, a Raleigh news paper revealed that Georgia ports, under Mr. Williams' supervision, I were being investigated by a Geor I gia Senate committee. This made the North Carolina SPA withhold "final approval" of : tti* :new appointee until a forttrer {check wai made. I The Georgia committee has since issued a report which states that Williams "executed his duties In an efficient and Intelligent man ner". North Carolina will pay the new porta director $18,000 a year. Chamber Office is Lively Place Miami, Fla. (AP)? Bothered by Monday blues? You ought to work for Verne Barnea, secretary-manager of the Hialeah-Miami Springs Chamber of Commerce. He saya he hatea to fo to work ?n Mondays himself ao he trie* "to take the curse off for the people who work with me." For two years now he'a been giving his employes what be calla the "Monday eur prise" ? a little gift for each work er. Sometimes the preaents are out right fooUahneaa? like used win dow shades, frayed rope and ao on. At other timet, they consist of home-made fudge, passes to va rioua attractions or invitation* to dinaer. "We never knew what's coming DMt," say Ma employees. i Bond Raises Money By Selling Peanuts BeUefonte, Pa. <AP)? Most of the moaey for the support g < the BeUe fonte High School band comet from peanuts. Each fall, members of the band canvass the school district selling peanut*. The proceeda go toward general band expenses Band di rector Bruce I. Garner says it t* practically the only means the band has for raising money. Cherry Pointers Fight Major Blaze Near Base By S/8GT. A. W. STEELE Cherry Point?' The first major forest (ire of the year in this area wat squelched recently when the bate crath crew, military police detachment and heavy equipment opcratora were pressed into ser vice by Cherry Point Fire Chief Mike Jowdy to atiiat the U. S Forestry Service in combating an uncontrolled blaze Ave miles south east of the tlr nation TV flrr, thought ?o be under control until about Boon Tuesday. Felt. 1*. eroaard a creek between Camp Bryan pr?r*-*i> . where it had beer m4 I* . n olf grassland and Uw -?? >eaa land, a pri vate gams _ -teal area The roaauM>*? flames burned across nearly four thousand acres of land betwK o Long l.ake and Uttle Las* before It waa brought under control. The fire burned almost to the doorstpps of the Camp Itrinson area before bark fires could be set and fire breaks cut to turn the blaze. Twenty sis members of the MP detachment manned water and tank-trucks and fire e* tinguishers around the camp to hold back the blaze until the for estry service could bring into play its caterpillar plows to rut breaks around the camp. Members of the Camp Rrinson hunting club arrived on the scene to help in the fight. One member pointed out a hidden cache of dynamite th"t had to be unearthed before dioecious flames reached the area. TMs task was under taken by S/Sgt. T. R. Waiting, NCO in charge of the firefighting detail. The dynamite had been buried underground a few yards away from the cabins and sheds. The fire was brought under con trol about 5 p.m. in the vicinity of the camp and all personnel were accounted for during a mus ter before leaving the charred and burnt area. The only casualty suffered dur ing the afternoon firefight was a punctured radiator of a pick-up truck. The quick thinking of Cpl. B. R. Trantham of the MP de tachment soon had. the vehicle in operating condition. A piece of soap found near the cabins? was Women Judges Are Popular Oklahoma City', (APf-Going an the thr -<ry that the fair sex might also be the fairest when it cornea to the law, Oklahoma voteri in the past eleven years have elected seven women to be county Judges in a stale with 77 counties. First to crack the barrier was Judge Marie Dunn of Tishomingo. A lifetime of experience as a legal secretary enabled her to past the state bar exar.nations alter her husband'! death in 1946. She was appointed to fill her husband's post at county Judge of Murray County and has won every elcc tion aincc then. None Of the JurltU believe there's anything exceptional about being a county Judge and a woman. The moat recently elected, Car ter County Judge Chrittine Legate, said, "When 1 ran for office tome men tald they would never vote for a woman. However, alnce elec tion I've received the finett co operation from the public." An Ardmore citixen aaid Jadge Legate hat "more prestige than any public official here." The women manage to mix home and civic lives with their profes aiont. All carry a full load of civic duties and are interested In poli tic*? -Democratic for five of them and Republican for two. Six of the seven have been mar ried and two have grown children while a third la the mother of a 13-month-old boy. I.. ' I. ? >!., i. . ?. i SECURITY SERVICE SAVINGS rVy1 i /Insurance lllUtlLG I A r,FNry ..II. 4> r. ? . MOREHEAD CITY lllorehead Office "TRULY CARTERET'S FINEST THEATRE" Daily at 12:30 P.M. Now PUfk| MJUUOX BRJOTOO and an exqvjistte new JAPANESE STfcRlK ??SJim ?tt s^jumssma <? nam UTIICII lltll ? Ul M?M Mimil Mtll ? JUKI lOfft ?ia?? ?onu??i ? *umu icon ? 1 .J"'?T.TO7.1 vmm -wutuw wm ? iii nsed a make-shift radiator plug and rendered the truck usuable. Chief Jowdy praised the work of (he vplunteer firefighters, many of which were in the off duty MP section and had begun to check out on liberty in civvies; but In record time they were changed into their dungarees and ready as firefighters. ? Chief Jowdy warned that with the coming spring winds, grkss burning gets increasingly danger ous He also cautioned that local laws forbid open fires and burn ing off of property without first obtaining a permit. The only ex i ception to this rule is burning be | twees the hours of midnight and four o'clock in the morning. Last Time* Today Wednesday ? Thursday Big Doubl* Feature jGtufc / /n / ? Plus ? MOTORCYCLE ' GANGr^^ Beaufort Tuwdijr - Wednesday FIRST SHOWING IN CARTERET! Tknndtjr - Friday ? TIM ft THE FACE OF WAR YOVVE NEVER SEENKFOK! mm IHUHn WW? P " WDGOQ COMING March 13th and 14th
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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March 4, 1958, edition 1
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