Newspapers / Carteret County news-times. / Oct. 7, 1958, edition 1 / Page 4
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|Mofh#ad City City Social News her father. Mr. t. B. Rett. Hn J. A. Dakaa ?UM la runs a lav days last weak. MrsAT ?d iwliria; ki ar aMther, Mn. Mrs. Grata Forrwell Dnntr Honors Mr. ond Mr*. J. E. Row# Ml Mrs. Howe Mr. Ant a# the lecal effke lor acre* years. Ha is leaviac la eater Moaat Ottre Callage la aer party. The elfin staff preseat ad Mr. Uae a Bihle. The family Mr. L. C. Forrest of Newport it the sew superintendent. Call PA 6-5088 For Automatic Delivery J. M. DAVIS Distributor Twcoco Products Morelieid Cltj I ItM "cat^HT Ceifege "apeat ' IW i ?!!>?< rn taM with Mr lam Brarifey Melataab Jr.. wfca Is *t? IM wilk lb* A nay at Fart Mjrcn, Va., spent the weekead at Inm Wtth his family. Mr. aad Mr*. M. T. II IBs steal the weekead in Lamberteo wtth their daagkter aad sen-la-law, Dr. aad Mn. Howard Strawcutter, and > family. The Misses Daisy Brack and Barbara Oglesby s 4 Raleigh ware home (or the weekend with their families. Mrs. S. A. Herton visited her slater la Greenville over the week aad. AAUW Gives Coffee Hour For Prospective Members The Beaufort-Morehead branch of American Associatioa of Uni versity Women entertained pros pective members at a coffee hour Friday evening at the civic center. Arrangements of marigolds were ?sad with white candles for dec oration Mrs. Ray Brown poured coffee Petit fears, cookies, nuts aad mints were also served. Mrs. Virginia Bradbury was kas patality chairman aad Mrs. Thom as Scett pinned aame tags on each of Ike fifteen gweets. | Annual PTA Fall Festival Will be Held Friday Night The Parent-Teacher Asosciation of Camp Glenn School will sponsor its annual Fall Festival Friday af ternoon and evening at the school. All proceeds will go toward PTA projects. The festival will begin at 5 p.m. Supper may be bought, so bring the family. There will be a snow ball stand, a cake walk, games of ?kil, a country store and other booths. Mr. L. O. Crime is president of the PTA and Mrs. Lesta Willis is publicity chairman. Mrs. Bernard Laary and Mrs. Skinner Chalk ars c^i- .irmen of grade mothers. Joins Fraternity George Eastman Jr. of Athens, Go., son of Mr. and Mrs. Eastman at this city, has pledged Lamda i Chi Alpha, social fraternity at the IMvorsMy of Georgia, where he is ? student. For Thot "Very Special" I Dinner . . . Bring Them Herejj We come to the aid of erery P*lj with fht load, smooth service, modest prices. stnaphtrs, Blu? Ribbon Restaurant Hlffcway n Wsst ? Ml CMy FAMILY SECURITY THE BUDGET-WISE NATIONWIDE FAMILY INCOME PLAN FOR CROWING FAMILIES. Durtaf th? critical years who children are pouring, this pin fives you the nt p? ataman your ddkn cut buy . . . gives your family up I* J lines mar* protection ...ma low. tow premium. It assures substantial MONTHLY INCOME to your family plus LUMP SUM CASH at begtaalaf and mi of policy benefit period, plus other worthwhile benefits. err ALL THE FACTS ON THIS EXCITING NEW FAMILY INCOME PLAN NOW ??? Proms 1530 Ann St Kxt Tel. rAMM MMtKSKAD CITY I k Merrey Tel. PA (-3081 NEWPORT Mr T. Gum Tel. M-1 Quillen-Oglesby Vows Spoken Mrs. Leonard Nelson Qui lien The marriage, of Miss Cecelia Oglesby of this city and Leonard Nelson Quillen of Frankford, Del., was solemnized Saturday after noon at four o'clock at First Meth odist Church. The bridt is the daughter of Mr. and Mri. Cecil L. Ogelsby and the bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emory P. Quillen of Frank ford, Del. The Rev. J. Furman Herbert, pastor, officiated using the double ring ceremony. Mrs. George Mizes ko provided organ music and Mrs. Austin Williams, soloist, sang O Promise Me and The Lord's Prayer. Baskets and vases of white glad iolas and carnations, fern and palms were used to decorate the church. Six seven-branched can delabra held lighted cathedral taper*. The bride, who was given In marriage by her father, wore a waltz length gown of ehantHty lace and net over white taffeta. The bodice was fashioned with a scalloped neckline and three quarter length sleeves and the full skirt was of alternating bands of lace and net. She wore a shoulder length veil of illusion attached to a velvet and feather haff-hat and carried a white purple-throated orchid on a white satin prayer book. Mrs. Harvey R. Gaskins Jr., stater of the bride, was matron at honor. She wore a street length dress of champagne and gold bro caded satin with beige accessories. She wore a velvet half-hat with brief veil and carried a nosegay of yellow and bronze mums tied with ribbons in autumn colors. Misa Delores Ann Gaskins. niece ?f the bride, was flower girl. She wore a dress of turquoise faille embroidered in white with a pink iroMbud corsage. She wore a bandeau at white velvet and carried a white basket with pink and green petals. Deonard Paul Quillen, twin bro ther of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Harvey R Gas kins Jr., brother-in-law of the bride, J. L. Peterson Jr. of Vance boro, cousin of the bride, Raymond Lewis of Frankford, Del., brother in-law of the bridegroom, and Wil liam Bruce Purcell, shipmate of the bridegroom. For her daughter's wedding Mrs. Oglesby wore, a dress of american | beauty crepe with black acces i ories and a corsage of white frenched carnations. Mrs. Quillen, mother of the bridegroom, wore a biege crepe dress with brown accessories and a corsage of yellow roses. A reception was held in the ladies' parlor of the church fol lowing the ceremony. Guests were gre(ted by Mr. and Mrs. Linwood E. Wade and introduced to the receiving line, composed of the wedding party and the parents ?f the bridal couple. Mrs. Harry Rivers presided over the guest book. Mrs. Nelson Quillen of Frankford, Del., aunt of the bridegroom, poured punch and Mrs. W. G. Oglesby, aunt of the bride, served cake. Upon their return from a wed ding trip to Washington, D. C. and Delaware, the couple will make their home at 902 Bridges St., Morehead City. The bride graduated from More head City High School and took a one year commercial course at Peace College, Raleigh. She is em ployed at Commercial National Bank. The bridegroom attended Lord Baltimore School, Oceanview, Del., and is now stationed aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Chilula. Out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lewis and son, Donald Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Quillen and family, of Frankford, Del.; Mr. and Mrs. George Quil len and Mrs. Ella Brasure of Bishop, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Blades of West Chester, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Bedford Rhue of Fort Lawn, 6. C.; Mrs. J. L. Pet erson Sr. and grandson. Master Woody Blue, of Vanceboro, N. C. Lions Havo no Program, Play Bingo Thursday Morehead City Lions played bingo at their meeting it the Hotel Tort Macon dining room Thursday night. Winners were C. W. Wil liams, Owens Frederick and Otis Jones. Mr. Williams presided at the meeting in the absence of preatfent Elmer Watson who is on vacation. He reported that the club had re ceived a check (or $23 as payment (or space in last spring's boat aad auto show. The check wa* a dupli cate for one that had been lost Walls Collapse at Stat* Port ???????MIWW IIIIKRVIIII H TVv ?MU wall Hath ia Uw ?ni>iwi arikr taaaliaation al Mat* part wm flattearti daring tankaac Maw. Tie craae la the bacfc|ra? 4 la daaila* away flw rahMa. Beach Crews at Work; Real 'Mullet Blow' Yet to Come By WADE LUCAS The mullet, including the jump ing ones, are beginning to head southward to warmer waters and commercial fishermen in this area are already plotting to stop the fish and put them on tables of peo ple who like this denizon of the deep. September and October are the months in which the mullet begin to leave their breeding places in North Carolina sounds, rivers and 'creeks and head to the open At lantic on their way louthward where the waters are warmer. While some of the mullet are already being caught in Bogue Sound and off Atlantic Beach, there has not yet been any honcst to-goodncss mullet blows" or what commercial fishermen refer to as "nor-easters" that serve to trigger off the schools of mallet and cause them to head southward. Day and night the spotters of crews out to trap the mullet watch for tbe telltale signs that let the i fishermen know the mallet are moving out in force, or better still in the closely packed "schools" in which the fish travel. Once such schools are spotted, the fishing crews go into action. The big nets are carried by power boats tome distance into the water through which the mullet are trav eling. Fishermen in boats then seek to persuade the unsuspecting mullet to head toward the nets and many of them do. Mullet fishing along the Carteret county coast is very much like it was generations ago except that power boats and trucks make the job less back-breaking than it was in the early days when the rail road to Morehead City and Beau fort from Golds boro was generally known ai the "Mullet Line." Capt. Ottis Purifoy, Morehead City, veteran commercial fisher man and fish dealer, thinks mallet are like people with money who head sooth when cold weather be gins to arrive. "The muBet simply cannot stand cold weather or cold water," says Captain Purifoy, "and they go south lust like ao many northerners who cannot take all that cold weather they have." While many mullet are corned and salted and sold throughout the year, the big need is for more storage space and processing plants, veteran fishermen contend. The salt mnBet industry is a rather siiaMe one in the areas along the sections of the North Carolina const that this species of fish an fcnsnd. TTiere has been , ff , -* A ? - L - * SOmc CI1UI l tO SmoKe muilCI ami other fish and Captain Purifcy, who is backing a smoked fish ex periment here, thinks there wouM be a ready market for the smok?d varieties, especially for partiM and in taverns. The annual catch of mullet la no wise approaches the catch 50 to 100 years ago, but it is stlQ a sizable figure in the economy of the commercial fishermen who depend upon commercial fishing for their livelihoods. In the period from July 1, 1954, to June 30, 1956, almost seven mil lion pounds of mullet were caught by North Carolina commercial fishermen, according to C. Gehr man Holland, state fisheries com missioner. The mullet had a value of $594, 137 to the fishermen who caught them, Mr. Holland said. Too many of the fish, however, have to be sold on daily fresh mar kets, fishermen contend, and con sequently huge catches of mullet tend to drive prices down consid erably. Hence the need and, ac cording to many fishermen, the necessity for more processing plants and storage houses if the commercial fishing industry is to become a more prosperous one. Her Potatoes Held 'Nuts' Qumcy, Mass. (AP)? Dig those nutty spodsl Inside ever; potato in a five pound bag she purchased, Mrs. Gustave A. Oster III found a nut like object which tasted vaguely like a walnut or a waterchestnut. An agricultural expert theorized the potatoes were grown in either Virginia or North Carolina. In these states, he noted, there is a growth called "nut grass." He suggested that the grass had been so thick in the potato fields as to penetrate the potatoes, gromr , ing their nuts inside. But the effi cial, a potato expert for some 40 years, said he had never heard of a whole field of potatoes being so affected. Bits Car : Nathaniel Nash, Cherry Point, pulled out from a gas pump at Dudley's 14th Street, Morehead I City, and hit a parked car left by Thomas A. Teel of Havelock. There was no damage to Nash's ear and 1 13# to the other vehicle. Patrol man J. C. Steele investigated the accident at 1:45 a.m. Saturday. Port Calendar ?rnteW CKy Mat* M Kethedyfc? Docked Ma; and sailed yesterday wtU a cargo of I sheers. lumber and grapefruit. ?arise Daw-Che* ? tatcd yesterday ? nalag. leaded glycol far the Dots Cfceariral Co yfant at flii|at. Tn, aad sailed yes terday afternoon Neli Darted yesterday af toraooa *U a cargo of asphalt far Trumbull's. Lira Maaish Dae next Tups day lor tobacco far the Par East. Morehead Band Needs Five Cars to Go to Game The Morehead City school band win play at the Duke-Baylor game at Durham Saturday. The band association will furnish one bus, but five more cars are needed to take the remaining members of the band. Persons wko wiH take their cars and take band members are asked to phone Jim Bob Sanders at the First-Citizens Bank, 6-4151. Bar Keeper Lists His Troubles Boston (AP>? Thi? sign behind the bar of a local tavern saves the mixologists a lot of headaches: "You Think You've Got Troubles?" So far, today, we've had 20 re quests for one on the house; eight requests to step outside; seven complaints that the beer is all foam; four complaints about no foam; five hints that *e water the liquor; nine spilled drinks; two fires in the kitchen ; 200 glasses to wash, five times each; three angry wives looking for their husbands; 17 marriages to patch up; 10 oifers of advice on our night life, and three requests for same; 100 chances to laugh, all at the same joke; 18 salesmen to discourage and a couple of saleswomen and 18 phone calls for Henry. Call Me and SAVE! jamef Steed I FREE ESTIMATES AND INFORMATION ON: * APPLIANCES * PLUMBING. HEATING * IRRIGATION * FLOORCOVERING * TELEVISION * FARM EQUIPMENT Call PA (-S1U Night PA 1-4478 SEARS 115 Arendell H. Morehead City 1959 MODELS ARE COMING OUT NOW! J For 5% rw mm Knm MY MtowaiMwMi BANK AUTO LOAM Ym cm rkooae IMa the whole fl*M a< *i moM can to fat Ike keil taaattla tar, Ml fiance your paufcaai at Km loweot rmriilr co?t . . . with a Commercial Na IM talk Mi Imb. Thia la Ike oao aare way to get tko moat far yaw noaey. Cue la aod get tha facta aa4 tlnraa! Commercial National Bank MmfculCHi ? S?M ckqual uom amxx i roiUL Dinar msuuncs goipomtdn
Oct. 7, 1958, edition 1
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