Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Sept. 2, 1958, edition 1 / Page 2
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Hau- W? k . ? | Home Plan Features Circular Room for Family Round-Ups By JOHN O. B. WALLACE Nearly half of all homes in the United States lack sufficient space for family activities, a recent na tion-wide survey shows. The defi ciency is corrected dramatically in the "House of the Week" presented j here. A seven room ranch designated X-22, it features a circular family center. 15 feet in diameter, which becomes an axis for the family's entire home life. This ample room is located slightly off center within the pe rimeter of the house, only a step ( or two away from all major areas. , Its curved contours is broken at the ! front by the entrance foyer. And counter clockwise from the foyer, there are openings into the kitchen through folding doors, into a rear children's play terrace through a door edged by a glass wall, and into the center hall of the bedroom wing. Created by Herman H. York, a New York architect who has re ceived many national awards for residential designs plan X-22 has many other features meriting at tention. Full details of the plan, in an easy to-follow area-by-area descrip tion, follow: Living Area This section includes the living room, 19 by 13 feet 4 inches, with a convex-shaped fireplace; an 11 by 13 foot dining room, the circu lar family center and three out door terraces ? a front lounging terrace off the living room, a rear dining terrace off the dining room and kitchen, and a rear children's play terrace off the family center. The living room opens into the front lounging terrace through slid ing glass doors. The dining room has sliding glass doors which open onto the rear dining terrace. There is a door linking the kitchen and the dinjpg terrace. Sleeping Area There are three bedrooms and two baths. The master bedroom is 14 by 17 feet 6 inches and has four separate closets, a private bath, and a built-in vanity adjacent to the bath. The other two bedrooms, 9 by 12 feet and 11 by 12 feet, respectively, have two closets each. A center hall, reached from both the foyer and the family center, links all three bedrooms. The hall bath has a second door opening to the children's play ter race. All bedroom closets have sliding doors. There is a large linen closet in the center hall. Work Area The kitchen is 11 feet 4 inches by 17 feet 8 inches in size with a win dow for direct supervision of the Vertical wood siding U used on all outside walla except for the foyer and living room walls which are | finished in brich veneer. White asphalt shingles are recommended for the roof. The garage is at the right, the bedroom wing at the left. i !>'V? This floor plan shows the efficient room arrangement achieved by the architect in House of the Week design X-22. Inside there ia abundant living space. Outside, there are three terraces. All are easily reached from the inside. children's play terrace. The kitch en has three openings, leading to the dining room, the dining terrace and the family center. The kitchen, of course, has all modern appliances and conven iences. The basement stairs are at one end of the kitchen. The garage, reached directly from the kitchen across the covered portion of the rear dining terrace, has a work bench extending its full length. There are built-in cabinets at each end of the bench. There is a full basement. Laundry and heating facilities are located there. Special Features The family center ceiling is cov ered with translucent glass panels. Indirect lighting bathes the room in a soft, even glow. Floor length picture windows overlook the children's play ter m the patented SUPER FLOOR HEAT PA1ENUD 100% SAFETY! POWIMBMHWMI Til MM than tvtf Mml The revolatieoary mtm Stagier ?ends ft* air ri*bt through ?? heart at tim tn TWICE tojfc* yea ? KiiimM at SUPER near HmM Hwtfi fafM^CBWfart?a^ heat on fee eaHteg ?* o?l fee chto? ttot zsj te itw?' s laves. Boy it on a I MOMY BACK OUARANIII XiaqUfi OIL MM BIATU Cnn k far ? mi ft* AmMW ALLEN & BELL HARDWARE CO. Newport, N. C. race from the family center. The rear gardens are set in an unusual curved wall structure. The brick wall which houses the family cen ter barbecue unit also is curved. Folding doors between the kitch en and the family center can be closed to isolate the family center when it is being used for teen-age gatherings. The lounging terrace at the front is shielded from the street by a wooden fence. The rear dining terrace is roof ed over with horizontal boards in an open rafter effect. Vertical wood siding it Wed on all outside walls except for the foyer and living room walls; these Decrepit, Unsightly Lamp Posts Taken off Bridge If motorists experience a new and delightful view as they cross the Morehead City bridge spanning Newport River, it's because the decrepit lamp posts have been re moved. The posts, many of them broken, and with shattered shades (if any shades were left at all) have stood on the bridge for years in a state of disrepair. They were removed Friday by state highway workmen who are painting and repairing the bridge. School starts today. are finished in brick veneer, j Fluted glass panels flank the main entry door. The chimney is brick White asphalt shingles are specified for the roof because they reflect summer heat away from the house. Vital Statistics Overall dimensions of design X-22 are 40 by 73 feet 6 inches. A 100 by 100 foot lot is recommend ed. The habitable area has 1,608 square feet. The garage has 297 square feet. There are seven rooms ? living, dining, .kitchen, family center and three bedrooms ?plus two baths and three ter races. Duty in Morehead City Means Return 'Home' for Skipper wr u. l. nuti Duty in Morehead City ii a wel come return to North Carolina for Cdr. Claude O. W instead who re cently assumed command a I the Coast Guard Cutter ChUuU Wil mington. N. C., la "homo" to Commander W instead, who haa net had an assignment in the stats since entering the Coast Guard It years ago U was in Wilmington that Com mander Winstead gained his first impressions of the Coast Guard while in high school During the thirties the Modoc, a 230-foot cut ter, tied up at the Coast Guard moorings in Wilmington, her dis tinguishing white hull the thing of which impressions were made. Sailed Many Oceana Since his first look at the Modoc, Cdr. Winstead has saUed the At lantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans, the Gulf of Mexico, the Great Lakes and most of the major in land waterwaya of the United States. He has sailed on and com manded almost all classes of Coast Gusrd cutters from buoy boats on the Mississippi to icebreakers in the Arctic Sea. He has served in billets of junior officers, gone to sea several times as executive nificer, and held com mand duties as early as his promo tion to lieutenant, junior grade. Hia career as s commissioned officer began in 1939, when then Ensign Winstead graduated from the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn. He was temporarily assigned to the 127-foot cutter Campbell, making ocean - station patrols in the North Atlantic. From the Campbell, similar duty followed on the ChampUin, sister ship of the Modoc. One assignment later, Commander Winstead was on the small icebreaker Comanche, operating along the coasts of Greenland setting up Army air bases in conjunction with the Dan ish government. Patrolled Torpedo Junction In Greenland when World War II broke out, Commander Winstead was sent to Savannah, Ga., In Jan uary 1942. There he saw duty on the gunboat Tallapoosa, engaged in anti-submarine patrols in the area off the southern coast known as "torpedo junction". He reported on board as executive officer while still an ensign. With the promotion to lieutenant, junior grade, came command of the 165-foot cutter. Tracking submarines and faced with the first responsibilities of command, Commander Winstead still found time in February 1M3 to take a wife. He was married in Charleston, S. C. With four years of wartime sea Good News About By Barry Venter*, 4-H Advisor fa With school beginning today, I hope that you will have a success ful and enjoyable year at school. Go right to work from opening day and I'm sure you will. I also hope that you are making last minute entries In your 4-H project record books and will have them completed at the first club meeting. Try to do a good job a* Send This Coupon I THE NEWS-TIMES I | liebHllincato. ikMrihi | ? Ik The Boon of tto Week, Dolfi X-22 . NAME ( (PleaM Prist) | IRBI | I err* ?TAT? I Yon can tike tki* atody pt?B to your bank or other mortgage tender and to roar builder and fat roach estimates on the coat of contraction la thil area, as wen at an idea of the relation of the eoat to your budget. With thia information you win ?t to proceed with by or werkinf btueprtnta direct the architect and Mkinf You can get i study plaa for The Houm of the Week by fill ing la your nam* and address on the coupon on ttaia page and ??"I it with 35 ceota to thia newspaper. Thia atudy plan ahowa each floor of the houae together with each W the four elerattsoa, front, rear and aldea of the houae. It la acaled at Vi-inch per foot. It includes a guide on "How to Get Your Home Built." IU l>l>V MIX ^ DAVi LINDSAY cAKrsnrr C0MCKETCC9 Carteret Concrete a, - your record, which you make your self, determine! what kind of 4 H'er you are. There will be ? apeeial meeting ill More he ad City Wednesday night, of 4-H leaders. These 4-H Club members representing each school in the county, along with several adult 4-H leaders will plan our 4-H program for this year. If there are some suggestions or changes in our county 4-H pro gram that you think will be bene ficial, see one of these 4-H'ers or leaders so they can bring it up at the meeting. The following 4-H'ers have been invited to thia important planning meeting: Anita Brown, Paul Wade, Lenora Lawrenee, Imogene Law rence, George Simpson, Olivia Yeomana, Lana Hancock, Gordon Becton Jr., Kay Temple, Denard Harris, Ann Herbert, Doris Phil lips, Lynn Wallace, Donna Bell, Betty Green, Linda McDonald, Leon Youngblood Jr. and Victor duty behind him, Commander Win stead was advanced to the rank o i lieutenant and reaaaigned aa an instructor in seamanship to the Academy. While attached td the Academy, Commander Win stead served aa skipper of the three masted training schooner, Atlantic. In the six yeara from 1947 to 19*3. Commander W instead trav eled half way 'round tt* world and logged his first 100,(00 miles with the Coast Guard. From New Lon don eame assignment as executive officer on the 3M-foot supply cut ter Kukui, stationed at Honolulu, T. H. In the period from 1947 to 1IM9 the Kukui was instrumental in setting up and supplying this na tion's long range navigation (Lo ran) stations in the Pacific. The Kukui's duties saw Commander Winstead, then lieutenant-comman der, sailing among the Mariannas, the Philippines, the islands of Ja pan and, on occasion, to San Fran ciaco. Leaves Pacific Following duty in the Pacific came a tour as director of the Eighth Coast Guard District Aux iliary in New Orleans. From the auxiliary desk, Commander Win stead took over as director of per sonnel and, in 1951, it was back to aea again. This time, with his present rank. Commander Winstead shipped out of Boston, Mass., on the Coast Guard icebreaker Eastwind. For two years, until 1953, the Eastwind engaged in Arctic opeartions with similar vessels of the US Navy. In 1953 he made his second swap of Arctic duty for the South with a temporary assignment aa acting commanding officer of the cutter Sebago. He took her from the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Md., to her present home in Mo bile, Ala. On the completion of this run, there remained one final tour of duty before return to North Carolina. Five Tears Inland That was in Cleveland, Ohio where for almost five years Com mander Winstead was attached to the office of the Northern Inspec tor. During this time he performed inspecting duties through much of the interior of the United States, visiting Coast Guard units from Vicksburg, Miss., to Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., and from Buffalo, N. Y., to Denver, Colo. During this period Commander Winstead assumed duties as acting northern inspector which duties he held when he received orders to the Chilula. In taking command of the sea going tug. Commander Winstead relieved Cdr. Roy M. Hutchins Jr., who commanded the Chilula during her first 21 months in Morehead City. Since assuming his new com mand, Commander Winstead has been given additional responsibili ties as Senior Officer Present in the Morehead City-Beaufort area. Commander Winstead is entitled to wear the following campaign Maninno. Adult leaden include Mrs. Lenwood Hancock, Mrs W. L. McDonald, and Mrs Dyon Simp son. There aeema to be some misun derstanding about 4-H project rec ord books and when they must be turned in. All record books should be turned in when they are com pleted or at the first club meeting in September with few exceptions. If you have a tobacco or crop rec ord book and that crop will not be harvested and sold "by the first club meeting, then complete the book as soon as possible. If, on the other hand, you have a poultry project and your pullets are not yet laying age, then bring your record book up to date, turn in your record book, and continue this same project next year, begin ning where you left off. If you have any questions concerning your record book, drop me a card and I will be glad to help you with your problem. C. G. Whmtead . . . command* Chilula decorations : American Area cam paign medal: European - Africa Middle East Area campaign me dal; China Service medal; Ameri can Defenae Service medal; World War II Victory medal; United Na tion! Service medal; Korean Ser vice Medal; Coast Guard Expert Rifleman and Pistol Shot medals. Mrs. Winstead it the former Martha S. Durden of Bailey, Ga. She and Commander Winstead live at 2107 Shepard St., Morehead City, with their four chidlren. Having finally returned to North Carolina after 19 years and sev eral hundred thousand miles, Com mander Winstead states that he has no definite retirement plans after his Coast Guard lervice. "For now," he says, "I'm going to make it a career". David Modlin, Beaufort, Files Suit for $200,000 David W. Modlin, Beaufort, has filed a suit asking damages of $200,000 to compensate for perma nent injuries suffered Aug. 23. 1956 in a bus accident on the New Jer sey turnpike. The suit was filed last week in superior court, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Defendants, listed as owners of the bus on which Modlin was riding, are Safeways Trails Inc., a Maryland corporation, and Virginia Stage Lines Inc., a Vir ginia firm. John Fulmer, bus driver, is also a defendant. Mpdlii) y?s hospitalized many months after the '.accident , both in New Jersey arfd'lii WOreMad City. ?' ? i.i.i . Obituary THOMAS F. NOE The Hev. Thomas P. Noe, * director of the Episcopal Orphai age in York, S. C , from 1017 unt hit retirement in 1M1, died in Wi) mington Wedneaday after t ion, illness. A graduate of the University o the South, Sewaaee, Tenn., he too), his first pastorate at St. Paul1,' Episcopal Church, Beaufort, th> town in which he was born. Mr. Noe moved to Wilmingtoi in 1907 to become sector of thi Church of the Good Shcpard an< remained there until 1917, whei he went to South Carolina. Funeral services will be held a St. James Episcopal Church, Wil mington, at 11 o'clock this morn ing. 1 Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Su san Price Noe of Wilmington; twe! sons, Thomas P. Noe Jr. of Greens boro and Julian M. Noe of Spar tanburg, S. C.; two brothers, the Rev. Israel Noe of Memphis, Tenn. and the Rev. A. C. D. Noe of Bath; four grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Speaks to Club Dr. W. L. Woodard, who w4s| program chairman for the Beau ' fort Rotary Club last Tuesday night, discussed the All-Seashore Highway and Ocracoke to Cedar! Island ferry. The club met at the| Scout building. Nearly 84 per cent of Utah's ; school teachers have at least one university degree, reports the Na-j tional Education Association. TRY For All * ? Home Improvement Needs SEARS Catalog Sale* Office Phone PA 6-5181 ?IS Arendell St. Morebead City 24x38 $2.38 28x38 $2.49 32x38 $2.75 36x38 $3.02 28x44 $2.75 32x46 $2.95 20x50 $2.63 I 24x54 $2.78 I 28x54 $2.95 I 32x54 $3.15 I 36x54 $3.49 I 40x54 $3.79 I I ALUMINUM ? screen wire I By Th* Roll, P?r Ft. ll .^WHOLESALE Bl'llDING " SUPPLY CO. ?? Y Carolina's largest and mostcomplete BUILDING SUPPLY HOUSE * HIGHWAY 70 1 ? MJLES FROMNEW BERN C'TY Liwr1 ^?WHOLESALE PRICE! PAY YOURSELF FIRST WITH . . I AcW - Qcu/lwgA AUTOMATIC SAVINGS PLAN IT'S SIMflE TO STAKT! Secure an "Add-omotk Savingj" outhoriialion form Irani your neareit Firtt-Citiieni office. Fill in the amount you wish tromferred from your checking account to your uvingi account each month . . . and the dot* you with *H? tramfer to be made each month. Sign your name . . . and your "Add omatic Saying?" it underway! 3% GUARANTIED INTEREST ON SAVINGS Savinfs received by September ( etrm laterest from September I Conveniently Located in Morehead City Beaufort Newport Swanaboro Cherry Point Havtloek and In other Am n. C. coramunitiea We never forfet to /Zm/
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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Sept. 2, 1958, edition 1
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