Moose Team is Ready for Action
The Moose entry in the Beaufort Little League is managed by
Henry Hatsell. Team members, front row, left to right, are Mickey
Bertram, Jackie Bridges, James Simpson, Bill Whitehurst, Bob Ham
ilton, David Nance, Leslie Moore and David Wheally. Second row,
Knoto by bod Seymour
left to right, Claud Wheatly, William Harvey, Jimmy Cummings, Mr.
Hatsell, Clem Woodard, Jimmy Hedden, Doug Gilchrist and Logan
Whitehurst.
VFW Wins 11-7 Decision
Over Little Fry Wednesday
j The VFW took an 11-7 decision
over the Little Fry in Beaufort Lit
tle League action Wednesday after
noon. Billy Davis and Fred Davis
gave up seven hits to the Fry as
both pitched for the winners.
The VFW collected the same
number of hits off Larry Teel but
four of the hits were doubles. Fred
Davis and Wayne Merrell hit two
doubles each.
The Fry jumped into a 3-0 lead
in the top of the first inning but
fell behind when the VFW scored
two runs in the bottom of the first
and two more in the bottom of the
second.
The VFW scored four more runs
in the bottom of the third inning,
two in the fourth inning and added
one more in the fifth. The Fry
managed to push across their last
two runs in the top of the sixth in
ning.
Boys who played for the VFW
were Johnny Merrell, Fred Davis,
Wayne Merrell, Peanut House,
Thompson Lewis, Spec Duncan,
Terry Rhue, David McGehee, Billy
Davis and Billy Stanley.
Boys who played for the Fry
were Tommy Piner, Bobby Stev
ens, Leroy Mcintosh, Chris Pake,
Larry Teel, Ronnie Smith, Dickie
Jones, D. V. Mason, Robert Ran
som, David McNeil, Larry Lewis
and Charles Piner.
Tommy Piner and Bobby Stevens
collected two hits each for the Fry.
Officials were Davis, Taylor and
Peterson.
Beaufort Player, Agent
Releases League Slate
The Beaufort Little League re
sumed its schedule Wednesday
after a two-day rest. Since the
season opened with a doubleheader
Saturday the schedule was two
days behind. Player agent Dr.
John Way says the following sche
dule will be in effect for the re
mainder of the season.:
May 26 ? Fry vs. Moose
May 27? Elks vs. VFW
May 28? Elks vs. Fry
May 29? VFW vs. Moose
June 2? Fry vs. VFW
June 3? Moose vs. Elks
June 4 ? Moose vs. Fry
June 5? VFW vs. Elks
June 9? Fry vs. Elks
June 10? Moose vs. VFW
June 11? VFW vs. Fry
June 12? Elks vs. Moose
June 16 ? Fry vs. Moose
June 17? Elks vs. VFW
End First Half Season
June 18? Elks vs. Fry
June 19 ? VFW vs. Moose
June 23? Fry vs. VFW
June 24 ? Moose vs. Elks
June 25? Moose vs. Fry
June 26 ? VFW vs. Elks
June 30? Fry vs. Elks
July 1? Moose vs. VFW
July 2? VFW vs. Fry
July 3? Elks vs. Moose
July 7? Fry vs. Moose
July 8 ? Elks vs. VFW
July 9? Elks vs. Fry
July 10 ? VFW vs. Moose
July 14? Fry vs. VFW
17
July 15? Moose vs. Elks
July 16? Moose vs. Fry
July 17? VFW vs. Elks
Fridays are left open for rained
out games.
Raleigh Swim Team
To Give Exhibition
At Moonlight Bay
The Raleigh YMCA swimming
and diving teams will be at Sound
Beach pool, Atlantic Beach, to
morrow afternoon for a swimming
and diving exhibition. The pro
gram will start at 3 p.m. under
the direction of Coach Ben McCoy.
The team is composed of six
state champions and three national
champs. In recent state competi
tion at High Point the Raleigh
team produced six state champs
in the three age groups represent
ed.
The exhibition can be clearly
seen from any location on the
beach. Coach McCoy will announce
each part of the exhibition and
will comment and explain various
points of interest during the exhi
bition.
We may not be the wealthiest
coanty in the state, but we can be
the cleanest. Don't throw trash out
car windows.
il
Enjoy Your Fishing!
Don't Waste Time Picking
Out Birds Nests . . .
NO-LASH
WILL END YOUR
BACKLASH TROUBLES
Installed At
GUN SHOP
Actom from Morehead City Hospital
Morehead City, N. C.
Negro News
Births at Morehead City Hospital:
To Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt Prit
chard Jr., Havelock, a son, Sun
day, May 18.
To Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Johnson,
Havelock, a daughter, Sunday,
May 18.
Morehead City Hospital
Admitted: Sunday, Miss Mary
Willoughby, Morehead City; Mas
ter James Davis 111, Beaufort;
Mrs. Lottie Marie Pritchard, Mrs
Edith Johnson, Havelock.
Monday, Mr. Macon Ennett,
Beaufort; Tuesday, Mr. Starkey
Mobley, Morehead City.
Discharged: Tuesday, Mrs. Edith;
Johnson, Havelock; Wednesday,
Miss Mary Willoughby, Morehead
City.
St. Mary's Holiness Church will
hold a baptism service at Avery
and N. 11th Streets Sunday at 1
p.m. The quarterly meeting com
munity service will be held there
at 7:30, announces the Rev. S. T.
Killibrew, pastor of the church.
Obituary
MRS. MAMIE HENRY
Mrs. Mamie Henry, 62, of 500
Live Oak St., Beaufort, died Mon
day at Morehead City Hospital
following an illness.
Funeral arrangements were
handled by a New Bern funeral
home and were not known. Survi
vors, besides her husband, Elee
Henry, were not available.
Stacy Boy Scouts Will
See Movies Monday
Members of Boy Scout troop 407,
Stacy, will be shown a movie on
traffic safety at their meeting at
7:30 p.m. Monday at .the Stacy
Free Will Baptist Church.
Scoutmaster James Lewis an
nounces that plans are being made
for Parents Night. At that time
movies on the recent camporee
will be shown.
17=
Port Calendar
Goettingen ? Docked at state
port yesterday to load tobacco
for Antwerp, Rotterdam, Ham
burg and Bremen.
Perseo? Due at state port to
morrow with a cargo of petro
leum products for Standard Oil.
Nicoline Maersk? Due at state
port May 31 to load tobacco for
Manila, Cebu, Bangkok, Saigon,
Hong Kong, Takao and Keelung.
Black lleron? Due at state port
June 10 to load tobacco for Ant
werp, Bremen, Hamburg and
Rotterdam.
Auto Firm Donates Car
For Spraying Down East
Sound Chevrolet Co., Morehead
City, has donated a 1951 Nash to
the Marshallberg Community Club
to be used in mosquito spraying.
The club will work with the Mar
shallberg Fire Department on
equipping it with a spraying rig.
Communities cooperating in the
spraying will be Marshallberg,
Glouecster, Williston, Straits and
Smyrna.
Lonnie C. Hyatt
Respectfully requests your
vote in the May 31 Demo
cratic Primary for More
head City Township Con
stable. Honest, depend
able, impartial.
Where Do You Go From Here . . .
And How Do You Get There?
Graduation Is a time for looking ahead . . . charting your
future step by step . . . deciding where you want to get
In life . . . planning purposefully HOW to get there.
Whether at college or at work, you will find that success
doesn't "Jast happen." It mast be PLANNED by you.
The time to plan U NOW! .
A smart first step in tbe direction of your ultimate ambi
tion Is to open a savings aecoont here . . . then keep
adding to it regularly. The cash reserves yon will accam
ulate can aid in financing your education or speed yoar
progress np tbe ladder nf success to solid achievement*.
Commercial National Bank
MorahMd City ? So. Ur^
_ MEMBER
?i.....nD1ML *esk*ve bysteit
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Arrival of Blues Makes
Inshore Anglers Happy
By BOB SIMPSON
Inshore fishermen are happy
low that the blues have started
batches of 12S blues by Don Press
or and party, Greenville, aboard
Johnny Styron's Sylvia and 109
Dlues by Gene M. Crain and party,
also of Greenville, aboard Theo
iore Lewis's Sylvia, prove they are
tiere.
Both boats brought in several
spanish mackerel. Tommy Lulu,
with John W. McCoy and party.
Roanoke, had 75 hogfish, sea mal
let and trout; Sandy, with W. A.
Patty and party, Burlington, had
140 hogfish and sea mullet. Edna
picked up the season's first span
ish mackerel inshore.
On a combined chartcr aboard
Bunny, Bunny Two, Lois Nancy
and A. M. Willis II the catch was
52 amberjack, 27 albacore, 19
kings, 8 dolphin and 3 bonito, most
)f the major offshore fishes.
Robert L. Morris and party from
Sollinsville, Va., made the catch.
To date the top king catch is
15, by Dolphin III. Harriet L II
came back with 7 kings, 2 amber
jack, 2 albacore; Mattie G, 6
kings, 3 albacore. These were
among the season's first offshore
gamefish catches.
Ten new records, all but one of
ficial: George Berson's 23-pound
red snapper from the Carolina
Queen wasn't weighed in official
ly, but Capt. Frank is confident the
record will be broken many times.
Others were amberjack, 34%
pounds, by Cecil Suck, Ravens
wood, W. Va.; albacore, 9^
pounds, by John Wyatt, also from
Ravenswood; both men were fish
ing from Dolphin II. Two records
at Thompson's Pier: a 1-pound
15-ounce spanish mackerel by
Paul Whitley, Grifton; a 3-pound
pompano by R. E. Massengill,
Clayton.
Two records from Sportsman
Pier: a 2-pound 7-ounce bluefish by
Luther Massengale, Apex; a 2
pound trout by Ruth Soshoky,
Goldsboro. The sea mullet record
is 2 pounds, set by T. C. Ewell,
Portsmouth, Va., fishing from B.
J. White's Camp.
L. E. Batten, Micro, has the
wahoo record, at 47 ** pounds,
from Dolphin; Ben F. Koontz,
Bassett, Va., holds the 15 V4
pound dolphin record from Bun
ny.
Spots are abundant from the
ocean piers, and the same uniden
tified fisherman who's been giving
us reports for three years from the
Triple-Ess is back there again: 64
spots, several sea mullet and
blues; thus man is supposed to be
working, but he always takes time
to fish ; wonder if he's still fool
ing his boss.
Causeway fishermen have had
excellent catches. Bridgeview
Motel guests report good surf
catches; from Rainbow Inn skiff
fishermen have caught plenty of
bottom fish; Buneh's reports up
to 200 hogfish and other bottom
fish from skiffs; one of B. J.
White's parties went home from
a 4-day trip with 6 lard stands
full of sea mullet.
Sound pier fishing continues to
improve. Croakers are excellent
from Mom and Pop's, with some
sea mullet, blues and trout. Ang
lers at Fleming's are getting sea
mullet, spots, croakers, some gray
trout, and picking up blues at
night. At Sonny's Fishing Station
the Harper Brothers of Snow Hill
are still hunting for cobia, but so
far have had to settle for blues.
The headboats have caught
every offshore bottom fish but
grouper, and both the Danco and
the Queen have been getting
some big sharks ? over 200
pounds each ? on light tackle.
Private boats in Pelletier Creek
boat basins, at the yacht basin
and at Kdgewater Marina have
reported fair to good catches of
blues.
UNC Coach Jim Tatum
To Speak Here Tonight
Alumni and friends of the Uni
versity of North Carolina will at
tend a meeting at the Camp Glenn
School auditorium at 8 tonight. Jim
Tatum, head football coach at the
university, and members of his
staff will also attend the meeting.
Coach Tatum will explain the
functions of the educational foun
dation of the university. M. D.
Lasitter, Morehead City, educa
tional foundation director, says the
foundation offers a chance for
qualified students to get financial
aid for going to college.
Norman Clark Hired
Norman Clark, Morehead City
faculty member, has been employ
ed for the summer months to as
sist with the Morehead City recre
ation program. Ralph Wade, for
mer summer recreation employee,
will not be on the staff this sum
mer because he will be attending
school.
Hospital Notes I
More head City HotpiUl <
Admitted: Saturday. Mrs Mary
B. Coulter, Morehead City; Mr. 1
Vencen Locklear, Mrs. Lillian <
Pickett, Beaufort. <
Sunday, Mr. Arthur L. Faulkner, 1
Mr. Herbert R. Hamilton, Master 1
Richard Warren, Beaufort; Mrs. '
Appie Hardy, Merrimon; Master 1
Ernest Clyde Lowe, Mrs. Sally {
Whealton, Morehead City; Miss '
Dorothy Wiley, Camden, Tex.;
Miss Sandra Taylor. Havelock. i
Monday, Miss Laura Daniels,
Newport; Mr. O. J. Morrow, Mrs.
Edith Tippett, Morehead City; !
Mrs. Margaret Rumer, Beaufort;
Mr. Thomas Vinson, Swansboro;
Mrs. Janice Edwards. Merrimon. i
Tuesday, Miss Janet Ross, Mrs.
Helen Stovall, Miss Daphne Styron.
Master Mike Butler, Morehead
City; Mrs. Mildred Dudley, Mrs.
June Snooks, Mrs. Eva. Simmons,
Newport; Mr. Edward F. Gillikin,
Beaufort; Mrs. Irene Garner,
Havelock.
Discharged: Sunday, Mrs. Foye
Clark and son. Miss Joyce Willis,
Mrs. Bonnie Willis and daughter,
Morehead City; Mrs. Maude Lewis
and daughter, Newport; Mrs. Ma
rie Norris and daughter, Mrs. Lil
lian Pickett, Mr. Julian Hamilton,
Beaufort; Mrs. Geraldine Taylor,
Sea Level.
Monday, Mr. Vencen Locklear,
Beaufort.
Tuesday, Mrs. Mary B. Coulter
and daughter, Mrs." Birdie Lewis,
Miss Daphne Styron, Master Mike
Butler, Morehead City; Mrs. Jan
ice Edwards, Merrimon; Mrs.
Louise Guthrie and daughter, Har
kers Island; Mrs. Audrey Hoffman
and son, Mrs. Alberta Dickinson,
Beaufort; Miss Sandra Taylor,
Havelock.
Wednesday, Mrs. Patricia Ar
thur and daughter, Beaufort; Mr.
Earl Davis, Marshallberg; Miss
Janet Ross, Mr. Richard M. Mc
Cain Sr., Morehead City; Mrs.
Thelma Thomas, Atlantic Beach.
Sea Level Hospital
Admitted: Monday, Master Da
vid Hampton, Morehead City; Mas
ter Richard Willis, Miss Lynn Mc
Kee, Beaufort; Mrs. Bessie Willis,
Atlantic; Mr. Clem Freeman,
Maysville; Mr. J. B. McKinney,
Havelock.
Tuesday, Mrs. Ora Ball, Mrs.
Cavell Brinson, Morehead City;
Mrs. Lela Thomas, Williston.
Wednesday, Mrs. Mamie Wade,
Smyrna; Mr. Harry Simmons,
Windsor; Mr. Weldon Fulcher,
Morehead City.
Thursday, Mr. Charles Pigott,
Gloucester.
Discharged: Monday, Master
Mark Gaskill, Sea Level.
Tuesday, Mr. Ralph Pittman,
Stacy; Mrs. Willie Johnson, More
head City; Master Richard Willis,
Newport Club to Sponsor
Sirl for Dairy Pi-incou
The Newport Rotary Club voted
Monday night to sponsor a candi
late in the county dairy princess
:ontest The club met at the school
unchroom. President C. H. Lockey
named Moses Howard, Bob Mon
:aguc, Roy T. Garner, Nathan
Sarncr, Harry Lockey and Junius
Creech to a committee to make
plans (or selecting a girl.
Seven visitors attended the meet
ing. They were I. E. Pittman,
Beaufort; Master David Hansen,
Straits; Mr. Leon Quinn, Newport.
Wednesday, Mrs. Olive Murphy,
Davis; Mr. Lester Harbaugh, New
port; Mrs. Bessie Willis, Atlantic;
Miss Lynn McKce, Beaufort.
Thursday, Mrs. Hazel Sparks
and son. Smyrna; Mr. J. B. Mc
Kinncy, Havelock.
T. D. Lewis
Machine Shop
Dealers for
* Evinrude Motor*
* Barbour Boat*
* Scott-Craft Boat*
* Lewi* Boat Trailer*
* Fishing Tackle
* Marine Hardware
* Boat Supplie*
Also a limited few of flr*t
class used Motor*
DRAWINGS EACH MONTH
NOW THROUGH SEPTEMBER
Lucky ticket* given with each
purchase (or valuable prise*.
SHOP WITH US AND SAVE
T.D.LEWIS
MACHINE SHOP
Gibb St Morehead City
ll
Sound Beach Pool
ATLANTIC BEACH CAUSEWAY
Professional
Swimming and Diving Exhibition
Saturday, May 24
Starting at 3 p.m.
Don't Miss This
Big Water Show!
MAKE SWIMMING A
FAMILY AFFAIR
SOUND BEACH POOL is a dream come true for
parents and their children, where they can swim, dive
and enjoy all the facilities of a swimming pool and
still he out under the sun; where children can swim
and parents can be satisfied about their safety . . .
because they are being watched every minute.
?
PLENTY OF FREE \
PARKING SPACE i \4
HOT AND COLD SHOWER BATHS
DRESSING ROOMS FOR BOTH MEN AND WOMEN
REFRESHMENT STAND PICNICKING
NO BEER IS SOLD
?
FREE STORAGE
CDArC