Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / April 29, 1958, edition 1 / Page 3
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
oararaerwves Fof Flowers Independncce, Mo. (AP) ? A neighbor o I former President H?i? ry S. Truman? Hn. W H. Rich* of Independence? knows the pit*, sure of letting her garden linger on. By drying all sorts of plants, shrubs and trees she has colorfut winter table arrangements at l?w cost. On her buffet, for example, art exotic-looking black, shiny leaves arranged around gold candles. These are just plain branches from her pear tree, soa*ed in a gly cerine solution. They remain soft and pHable. Here's Mrs. Riche's formula: Use 2 parts of glycerine? available at any drugstore? to one part wa ter. Cross-split a pear stem up about one inch. Place eneugh gly cerine solution in a jar to cover the cuts. Soak two weeks. Mrs. Riche adds magnolia pods sprayed with glitter or gold to the black leaves. The glycerine tech nique also works on flowering crab, hydrangeas and blue salvia., Mrs. Rlche treats plants another way? with a plastic spray ? then hangs them in a dark place to dry. This is good for peony and poppy pods, chives, jack - in - the - pulpit, green pine cones and lilac pods. A third method is to use one part borax to about 12 parts sand. This powdered mixture is placed in a box about an inch beneath cornflowers, marigolds, zinnias and feverfew and then again on top. Hie flowers dry in 10 days to two weeks. They don't shatter and nearly retain their original color. It's easy to have unique, beauti ful and lasting decorations for the home. Just look around your gar den, says Mrs. Riche. In New Zealand is a valley of pools of boiling mud, hot springs and sulphur fumes known as "The Valley of Tikitere." It has a side name: "The Inferno." THEATRE LATE SHOW TUESDAY NIGHT Box Office Opens 9:0* P.M. *a| &MJT DOUILE HORROR tmW '1 PERSON gs$ ** Show 'VITH THF. "Frankenstein i mm 1 <? > THCFAMMH 1 WBUTWtgB nwrrm uirmnroiutY. IHtTIK TVMMUfll lit AUOKHM < IMMUrilMMItl f MU-UP A 40M0X MiTT. , FIRST TIME" HERB ! AEL 8t Alfc 75c Boosters, Poi*t Woioame Sign 'KTE HIGH SCHOOL k A.A.C.-?? fAuto by Bob beymour Thin alga at the janctlon of Arendeil and Bridges Streets welcomes visitors to Morefaead City. - The Booster Club got the sign from the Centennial Commitee and had it painted. Standing by the sign are Coach Norman Clark, center, and quarterbacks J ickie McQueen and Joha Glaacy. Test Trawls Will Be Made for Shrimp C. G. Holland, state commercial fisheries commissioner, reports that test trawls for shrimp will be made after Thursday, the first of May. The commissioner held out little hope that the shrimping season in inland waters would be opened be fore the middle of May. The cold winter and wet spring has played hob with fishing enter prises of all kinds, the commis sioner remarked. When the shrimp season does open, shrimpers will be permitted by law to work only five days a week, Sunday midnight through Friday night. rmen to Meet At 7:30 P.M. Tomorrow The Fabulous Fishermen will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Morehead City municipal building. This will be the second general membership meeting of the year. Secretary Bob Simpson says sev eral important items are on the agenda and all members should be present to take part in the discus sion of policies for th? year. Thieves Return Torch Stolen for Quick Job Central City, Ky. (AP)? Thieves broke into a garage here and took an acetylene torch which they used to open a safe in an adjoin ing grocery. After taking $364 in cash and checks, they returned the torch to the garage. Beaufort Tuesday - Wednesday FIRST SHOWING IN CARTCKGf COUNT* HED) lAMAKR JANE pflWFIL JAN STERLING GEORGE NADER ? Animal Thursday ~ Friday FRED MacMMRAP JOAN WELDON JOHNWCaW EBXMR w^msga iff n w?np?gw? . -TTTtT^Ffr V?tch for Tktw Attractions ftrwil I* Arm Mi ll the WW Tool Una M?i|iiH te^Bw > | GWi Little Acn TW Pm * BcM Cincinnati Sheriff Holds Records as Player, Official V/iatiiiuau V ni / ? uaii icuau, who is sheriff of Hamilton county, which includes Cincinnati, is a ver satile guy. Not the least of his talents, of course, is his ability, as a Demo crat, to keep being elected sheriff in a county which is so predomi nantly Republican that the elec tion of a Democrat to coanty of fice is an oddity. Dan now is going into his third four-year term. But the big, good-natured sher iff was known as "Dan the Man" even before he started running fq& public office, as a resutt of m? sports activities. Television viewers still Ret glimpses of him on Sundays. Ifc has been an official in the Nation al Football League since 1930. He's the oldest official in the loop In point' of service. He was a baseball umpire for a number of years, working in the Piedmont and Mid-Atlantic leagues and the American Assn. before giving up that work in 1939. But baseball still is one of his great loves. It just seems to work out that each year vacation comes about the time the Cincinnati Redlegs head for Tampa and spring train ing. Dan has been going south with the Reds since IMS, and even be fore that he always was a familiar figure around the Florida train ing camps. Ahd the guy is a bit hard to miss. He stands 6 feet, 3 inches tall and weighs 208. He knows sports personalities from one end of the country to the other. But that's oi4y natural since he played football at Xavier University, coached there for a time and then turned to officiating. He alao used to do a lot of bas ketball officiating. Of late, too, he has bacome a big game hunter, although his op ffllorehead Now PUjrin* -amaau tmrumsm (luiiciiis suu^ui iu iiiom: cviuitai capital of it in the list election. There have been numerous re ports of a black panther having been seen in the western part of Hamilton county. Dan and his dep uties have become panther hunt ers. His political foe in the last election derided Dan's panther hunts but Tehan was re-elected and he's still hunting the panther. Principal Follows CacMr of Jockey Through Students Twin Hocks, Pa. (AP)? Princi pal Elmer E. Smith of the Black Lick Township High School here saya he has little difficulty follow ing the career of the school's most famous graduate? 25-year-old joc key BUI Hartack. "Students often come up to me and tell me how Billy ia making out," says Professor Smith. "He was a loveable boy in bis four years here. He wanted to play football but was too small to we put him on our sports program. He went all over with the football team and was timekeeper for our basketball team. If we had had a swimming team, Billy would have been the star. He was that good a swimmer." Hartack weighed 102 pounds when he was graduated in 1950. He now weighs 107 pounds. The town o i Black Liek, Pa., is almost 30 mile* from here and Professor Smith saya even though it is in a different county (Indiana County) the town gets credit for Hartack. Hartack actually was born in Colver, Pa., (Cambria County) and went to high school here when he lived in Belsano, Pa., almost four miles from the school. Boy Shoots Indian, Kills Television with BB Gun London, Ky. (AP)? When the In dian threw the heroic cowboy to the ground, 11-year-old Leroy Young reached for his BB sun and fired. lift whole show disappeared from the television set amid a tinkle of broken glass. LAoy got a spanking; his father an unexpected repair Mfl. East Drive-th Th? fcf B? ufort, H. C. hart TtM* To^aht "Th? Big unit recording stabs ft??H WTt? IbeK-W-laO ? Jan, Mac* aad Ballads PLUS CARTOON AND COMEDY KM OF EVE" Oft* CM r.K - SUrtaat Dnk Beach Gets Spring Cleorr-Op Sand thai drifted over the sra wall and on the preparation for Uw summer hbhb. Here H. J. truck thai will haul the sand to a mo** drvirabie boardwalk ia being cleaned' op and hauled away in Bajraden operates a power shovel and tills a dump location. Vacation Driven Publicize tneir Home State Ways Raleigh ? Do your highway ac tions make you a welcome guest in other states? Before you answer that question it would be a good idea to check your usual vacation driving habits pretty carefully. Maj. Charles A. Speed, the State Highway Patrol's director of high way safety, says that drivers are often inclined to sec the mote in the other fellow's driving while ig noring the beam in their own. He says the current vacation driving program which the patrol conducts annually is intended to get drivers to turn a critical eye on their own highway performance and correct any bad habits they find. The vacation driving program is part of the National Safety Coun cil's Back the Attack on Traffic Accidents campaign. The summer time theme is Slow Down and Live, Major Speed said. "Heeding this advice will add to vour popularity wherever you ?urive," he said, "because hjr ing at a sensible pace you show a decent respect for your own life and for the lives and rights of other*." He explained that by "sensible" pace he meant speeds that are safe for the condition of the road, the weather, the traffic, and the condi tion of the driver and his car ? not slow-poke speeds that tie up traffic and invite accidents. Another way to boost your stock, he said, is to obey all the traffic laws, signs, and markings of the areas through which you travel. Major Speed also mentioned a few things that will have the op posite effect. "Driving when you're tired, ill or after you've been drinking will pull the welcome mat right out from under you," he said. "In any one of these conditions you're a menace to yourself and to anyone you meet." Major Speed told Tar Heel mo torists that they woald be just as unwelcome if they drove a mechan ically unsafe vehicle. "Be as considerate when you're a highway guest as when you are a house guest," he said. "You'll be welcome, and you'll have a safe and happy trip." Stores Receive Payment For 'Overdue Accounts' Wildwood Crest, N. J. (AP)? A. twinge of conscience has straight ened accounts for some unknown person at three food markets and a variety store. Owners of the four stores re ceived ? total of $10 in identital envelopes with as unsigned note inside which read: "ThU U for what I took when I was a kid." Gran Fire Morehead City firemen put oat a grass fire at 10th and Fiaber Streets Thursday afternoon. The fire waa out la less than 10 min utes. Revoke* license The state highway safety division has revoked the license of Robert Pfcul Willis, Harkers Island. The action was taken after Willis was canvietad of his second offenas of driving under the infhianae. c H A L K SECURITY U K 4i 1U.J SAVNG3 (. Ui Udl f IM % . C * MURfc H LAD CI 1 r Owners of Farm Ponds Affected by New Rule At a meeting last (all the Wild life Resources Commission made an important change in the regu lations regarding license require ments in private waters. Since this action affects hundreds of farm pond owners and thousands of anglers, the commission believes that the change should be clearly explained, and the reasons lor the change described. In past years owners of private waters and their invited guests have been excepted from fishing li cense requirements. The commis sion simply changed the phrase "invited guests" to "house guests." The simplicity of the change is per haps the reason that it had gone unnoticed by the press until re cently. The original wording of the regu lation was set forth a number of years ago when farm ponds were few and far between, and farm ponds were an insignificant part of the commission's wildlife conser vation program. Since that time farm ponds, many of them coming under the jsflption of '^private waters," have tfceif constructed by the thousands. At the present time the manage ment and protection of these ponds is a major function of the fish management program. At the same time the demaad for fkrm pond management ser vices and protection grew, the peo ple who stood most to benefit by these services were for the most part exempted from supporting the Iirogram through license fees. In the past the phrase "invited guest" has been almost impossible to define, but was tacitly construed to mean anyone fishing in a private pond without at least the d]M# proval of the owner. A "bouse" guest, as defined by the commission, is one wbo is ? < visitor in the owner's house as hU i invited guest at the time of the I fishing trip involved. I The regulation regarding licenses | in private waters now reads: "Li censes in Private Waters: The owners of private waters falling within the definition given in See tion b. (1) of this regulation, or their house guests, may take fish therefrom in any manner, without regard to season, size, creel limits, or license requirements: provided that no game fish shall be sold, except for propagation purposes as provided by Article 23 of Chapter IIS of the General Statutes of North Carolina." Further explanation of the effects of this change in the regulation should be made. The only persons affected would be those who were not house guests of the owner of the particular private water con cerned, but who would otherwise be required to have a license; i.e., residents of a county other than the Dne in which the private waters are located, or persons using artificial lures. The owner himself would not need a license, his house guest would not. and persons resident of the county involved, using natural bait, would Bet, The owner would ?till Fiave the right to cha?%c a fee for fishing privileges. There have been, and still are, questions regarding the definition of private water. North Carolina law gives this clear definition: "Private Ponds: Bodies of water ?rising within or lying wholly upen the lands of a single owner or a single group of joint owners or ten ants in common and from which Fish cannot escape and into which of legal site cannot enter from pub lic waters at any time." For purposes of further clarifica tion, the commission uses this defi nition: "Private Waters: Bodies of water arising within and lying wholly upot. the lands oi a single ramer or a single group of joint iwners or tenants in common and from which fish cannot escape and iato which fish caanot enter from public waters at any time." Picture Makes ki~- 'k.jLujLS null AUIilvInf Enid. OkU. (APMMfW Cor mliua, Eaid ambulance driven is flabbergasted by all the telephone call* from mothers, seeking hit advice. The mother* have called to auk him about everything from formula mixture* to medical problems con cerning their children. The rash of telephone call* was started by a picture appearing in the local newspaper, showing Cor nelius comforting a 3-year-old girl who received minor in juries when she was struck by a car. Cor nelius "paced the floor" in the hospital while awaiting a physi cian, and the child went to sleep on his shoulder. But he hasn't been able to offer much comfort to the mother*: "I'm a bachelor," he explains. "And what I know about babies you could put in & thimble." Similarities in Nam* Cause Problems for Men Atlantic City, N. J. (AP)? Lou Kohn of nearby Ventnor and Lou Kohen of Atlantic City have much more in common than pronouncia tion of their names. Both are insurance men, both have wives named Ida, sisters named Rose and brothers-in-law named Paul. Both had accounts in the same bank until Kohn changed his. Too many inixups, they agreed, even among friends. in T. D. Lewis Machine Shop Dealer* for ? Evinrude Motors ? Barbour Boats ? Scott-Craft Boats ? Lewis Boat Trailers ? Fishing Tackle ? Marine Hardware ? Boat Supplies Also a limited taw at first class used Motors DRAWINGS BACH MONTH NOW THROUGH SEPTEMBER l ucky tickets gives with each purchase far vslnsMr prises. SHOP WITH 118 AND SAVE T.D.LEWIS MACHINE- SHOP1 Oftfc &- MortMrsd CUjr i in : iin til r ? NOW! JOIN THE SWIN6 TO EDSEL . SET OUR SWING THKKK!/ .J k Distinctive jetl-arfllt styling that stands oat Mas tbs look-alihrcrewd: Exclusive Teletouch Drive ttte shift but ton* right on the ih n in| wind hull Big -car room and roadaMHtp- Basel's smootfr hapdltng mellows the miW 1 22I!L5iL ?> iwt LiFcTIIVi anrntai HUtMCffY MOTORS 130J tnrfl S. ftom, UOH KaWOf ;
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 29, 1958, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75