County Board Draws Names Of 40 Jurors The county board of commis sioners, meeting Tuesday at th? courthouse, Beaufort, drew the namei of 40 persons to serve on the jury during the April 2S term at superior court. The names fol low: More held City and Morehead ?FD ? Cleveland Paul Willis. Wal ter F. Patrick, Grover C. Munden. K. S. Swinson, Julius A. Nelson Sr., Pearl Bedsworth, John D. Weeks, L. M. Lewis. Carl M. Ball, J. V. McElroy, William G. Lewis. M. L. Mans field. L. M. Stevens, D. Z. Couch, Alvin G. Davis, E. Stanley Davis, Mrs. Elbert M. Chadwick, C. C. McCuiston, Joseph F. Nicholas, Elmer C. Watson and Mrs. A. H. McDonald. Beaufort and Beaufort RFD ? John J. McKenzie, Lucille Gilli kin, W. H. Willis, Oscar F. Schnei der. Linwood Gillikin, Thomas O'Neal Morton, Foster G. Morris, and Melvin Eubanks. Newport and Newport RFD ? Mrs. Annie Mae Riggs, George Creech, F. L. Lewis, Vernon B. Taylor, Joseph Johnson, Lucy B. Strickland, and Cecil A. Hall. Atlantic ? Thomas C. Morris. Wildwood ? Gerald T. Murdoch. Merrimon ? Oliver A. Carraway. Markers Island? Cranston Rose. Bookmoblie Will Make Two-Day Run Route of the bookmobile Mon day and Tuesday has been an nounced as follows: Monday : Merrimon ? book sta tions in the homes of Mrs. Bessie Carraway and Mrs. Louise Pitt man; South River? book station in the home of Mrs. Vera Cannon; Core Creek? book station in the home of Mrs. Bertice Dickinson; Wire Grass ? book station in the home of Mr?. Dollie Dudley; Rus sells Creek? book station in the borne of Mrs. Lee Garner. Tuesday : Gloucester? book sta tion in J. S. Pigott's store; Straits ? book station in the home of Mrs. Gladys Davis; Markers Island book stations in the homes of Mrs. Ruby Guthrie, Mrs. Reva Nelson, Mrs. Hueston Salter and Mrs. Inez Willis; book station in the home of Mrs. Josephine Lawrence be tween Straits and Otway. Presbyterian Pastor Announces Sermon Topic The Hallowing of Our Wounds will be the topic of the sermon by the Rev. A. G. Harris Jr., pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Morehead City, at 11 a.m. Sunday. The scripture reading will be Galatians 6: 11-18. A snack sup per will be held in the fellowship hall at 6 p.m., followed by study groups at 7. Students Receive Caps Miss Roberta Willis of Sea Level, left arrow, and Miss Janet Willis of Harkcrs Island, right arrow, received their caps in capping exerci&es at Wilson School of Nursing March 28. The exercises wtie held in Asbury Hall Methodist Church, Wilson. Mrs. Corrine Logan and Mrs. Lela Durham presented caps to the students and the class re peated the Nightingale pledge. Miss Patricia Smith of Deep Run, president of the freshman class, spoke on What the Cap Means to the Student Nurse. Following the candle lighting, the school song and presentation of Bibles, a reception was held in honor of the newly-capped stu dents. Russian Students Learn by Mail By THOMAS P. WHITNEY AP Foreign New* Analyst Correspondence courses play an extraordinarily important role in Soviet higher and technological education. The latest figures In Russian statistical handbooks ? for the school year 1956 57? show that 36 per cent of total enrollments in Soviet universities and institutes consists of students taking corres pondence courses. Students in higher education studying by mail numbered 723,000 in the last school year, compared to 1,277,900 actually in classrooms. Enrollment During the present school year, according to figures published in the government newspaper Irves tia, the number of correspondence students in higher education has risen to more than 900, 000. Correspondence courses also have importance in Soviet sec ondary technological education, which turns out trained technicians in a number of fields. In the last school year there were 351,000 correspondence stu dents in secondary technical schools compared to 1,861,000 in full - time physical attendance. , That's about 17 per cent of the total enrollment in this type of study. m Million Here According to Dr. Homer Kernp fer, executive director of the Na tional Home Study Council in Washington, there are from one to l'/i million active pupils of cor respondence courses in the United States. Most, he said, arc study ing courses of college level. Correspondence courses are of particular importance to Soviet men and women who wish to con tinue their education but must also stick with their jobs. Some can attend night schools if there are suitable educational institutions near where they live and work. But others without such facilities nearby can only advance their education through corerspon dence courses. , Recent commentary in Soviet newspapers shows that not every thing is fine and dandy in the field of correspondence education. A group of professors of the All Union Correspondence Poly techni cal Institute recently wrote to a Moscow paper complaining that the students of higher technical schools were provided with only 10 per cent of the necessary text books. Emergency Squad Arrives In Time for Accident Columbus, Ohio (AP)? The emer gency squad arrived before an ac cident happened at South Franklin School here. While squadmen were treating Larry Lybrook, 13, who hurt his ankle on a slide, Paul Fos ter, 15, staggered across the school yard with a dislocated collarbone. He had slipped on the grass and fallen. Both boys were taken to a hos pital. Settlement Knojtville, Tenn. (AP)? The po lice department mail included a $2 check marked "for tags by cops" ? mailed without an envelope with a 3 cent stamp on the check itself. John G. Dawson Formally Bows Out John G. Dawson, Kioston, for mer state senator, has officially announced that he will not seek re-election. His statement follows: "I greatly appreciate the honor the seventh district has accorded mc by permitting me to serve in the senate, and I have desired to be a member of the 1959 session in the hope that I might be useful to the state. "However, since before Christ mas I have had the subject under almost constant consideration in an effort to find it feasible to do so, which now seems next to im possible. "My professional engagements and other compelling business rea sons practically forbid my serving in the General Assembly next year, which I much regret. Therefore, I shall not be a candidate." County Tax Collector Reports March Receipts Taxes collected in March 1958 amounted to $33,744.14, E. O. Moore, county tax collector told the county board Tuesday morn ing at the courthouse. Collected on the 1957 levy was $31,132.15 and on 1956 and prior levies $2,611.99. Percentage of the 1957 levy collected to date, Mr. Moore reported, is 84.80. E. L. Brinson, deputy collector of delinquent personal property taxes, collected $48.46 last month. 3 Ml reason why you won't want to miss . . . CHEWS APRIL SALES SPECTACULAR I 1 SPECTACULAR STYLE ? Pnmd by Uodaig fatkwn detignertl The smartest look on the road I That's Chevrolet in all 17 glamorous models. And proved, too. For Chevrolet'! sculptured elegance and gracefully ?weeping linei captured the imagination of world-famous designers, inspiring a fabulous r?Hrction of women's fashions. 2 SPECTACULAR PERFORMANCE ?Protod on a round-trip run over Ik* Andttl from coast to coast across South America, up over the Aades from Buenos Aires to Valparaiso, and hack again in just 41 hours and 14 minutes ! Chevy went all the way with the hood sealed shut, without a drop of water or oil added ? experiencing every extreme driving situation you can think of far 1,900 straight miles. Chev rolet proved la sure-footed readability and boundless V8 energy, with the Automobile Club of Argentina certifying the results. ?3 SPECTACULAR \ALVE?Y Sound Chevrolet Company, Inc. 190S ARENDELL STREET ' MOREHEAD CITY, N. C. PL If*. II Railroad Men Use Original Hand Signals Norfolk. Va. (AP) ? Railroads have modernited their lignala and communications systems with some pretty fancy electronic gad gets. But railroad men still hang on to the old hand aignal? for per sonal conversation aa well at mov ing a train. The Seaboard Air Line Railroad good naturedly discloses that it has discovered a large family of "home-made" hand signals in use along with those in the line's offi cial list. Like the bottle of catsup in the dining car galley window? the tra ditional warning that a company bigwig ia aboard ? many are de signed to tip off a colleague to look sharp. Here are some of thtm? all tip offs on the approach of a superin tendent: Brushing hair back? bald head ed superintendent around. Raising arm high, palm down? tall superintendent. Sawing off arm with hand? short superintendent. Doing hand in yak-yak motion ?inquisitive superintendent. The railroaders depart from the Boy Decides His Star Matches His Zipper Little Rock, Ark (AP)? A kin dergarten teacher at Anthony School was placing stars on good work papers. She put a blue star on one little girl's paper and a red star on another girl's paper, saying: "These will match your dresses." Five-year-old Mike Criteson, who had received a silver star, com mented philosophically: "Well, mine matches my zipper." Baptism of Fire Wood River, 111. (AP) ? This pity's new refuse truck was literal ly christened "under fire." The fire department accompanied it to the dump after a fire broke out in a load of trash. City Manager A. Kraft said the only damage to the unit was a scorched top. "FIGHT CANCER WITH A CHECKUP AND A CHECK" I AMERICAN CANCER iOCHTY I 225.000 book, too, to improvise time-saving signals for purely business pur poses on local freights. The Sea board listed these: Tap the back of one hand with the other ? engineer back up. Tap it and make a roof with hands ? back up on company load ing siding. Tap it, make a roof, cut throat with hand, hold up fist four times ?back up in the house track, cut off four cars. Hold nose with one hand, tap head with other? hot box on the head end; touch waist? it's in the middle; touch back? it's on the tail end. One superintendent reported that he was on the scene but failed to see what must have been one of the most expressive signal com munications in the Seaboard's his tory. He became aware of it when an engineer, slightly ruffled, swung down from the cab and headed back for the caboosc. "Where you going?" asked the superintendent. "Back to the caboose for a min ute," the engineer replied. "That brakcman ain't going to get away with what he just called me with that lantern." The Mayflower had 101 passen gers and 48 crewmen when it left England in 1620. Board Acts on Road Maintananc* Raquost The county board o i commission 's have approved a request that i road running between Lennox fille Road and E. Front Street Seaufort, be maintained by the state. The board stipulated at tta meeting Tuesday that the approval a subject to the highway depart nent's decision on it. The request was placed before he board by George Huntley. Mr. iuntley said the road ia 670 feet ong and <0 feet wide. He said bat he has been maintaining the oad, but it is used by the public, rbe road goes by the Ivey Maaon 'esidence. A request a couple years ago hat the road be taken over by he Mate, was approved by the 'ounty but rejected by the highway ?ommission. cormron - mi *?? ???" W r? i