Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Oct. 28, 1958, edition 1 / Page 9
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Km Momm ?f WMk . Six Outdoor Living Areas Surround Ranch-Plan Home A broad covered patio provider a welcoming area at Jhe front entrance. The garage and a mans workshop are at Ui? left. The bedroom wing In at the right. Living and dining areas are in between and at the rear. By JOHN 0. B. WALLACE Six outdoor living areas have been deftly linked to form an invit ing fresh air border for this au tumn offering in the House of the Week series. The nine-room ranch plan, desig nated X-25, provides outside activ ity space for every member of the family. The perimeter areas are arranged so that all can be reached directly from interior rooms. The result is a traffic pattern with an efficiency seldom achieved in residential designs. The hub is formed by the living area ? dining, living and recrea tion rooms. Radiating from the hub are traffic routes leading to all parts of the house, both inside and out. The plan is the work of Her man H. York, a New York archi tect. The outdoor border includes (1) a covered rear porch, (3) a rear terrace the full width of the house, (3) a corner dining terrace, (4) a side area for a children's super vised play terrace, (5) a "buffer" breezeway, and (6) a partially cov ered front entrance patio. The "buffer" breeeeway sepa rates the more formal living areas of the house from the garage and its adjoining man's hideaway room. The latter is an 11 by 19 foot (pace providing full privacy for the man of the house in his pursuit of hobbies or crafts. The hideaway room is an important interior de tail. - 1 Complete details of the plan fol low, area by area: This area includes the living room, 15 feet 4 inches by 20 feet 4 inches, and the dining room, 12 by 13 feet 4 inches. Both are at the back overlooking the rear ter race and gardens. A brick wall fireplace, which is an extension of an indoor barbecue unit in the recreation room-kitchen area, separates the living and din ing rooms, assuring privacy and formality to each. In a separate wing at the rigbt For All Horn* Improvement SEARS Catalog Safe* Offfe* fim pa hw tU Araadell St ??rake >4 City BUILDING SUPPLIES For Quality C it m rj a ona savings, Ss? Us First Get the uliirwrMk. . . M Mr* VMtftT fcr In* moaey. Order m lumber Ntd WMk| Material* from as. We have ? eonplete wImIIBb to MM VT tMb. SAFRIT LUMBER CO. KVKKTTHIN* FOB IWMNI, UWMUNO LmukoWIU R?L Phone M MHS ?Mufort, N. C. cfArlnt traffic patten It atom to tfaU OMrHu. At living forai tka hub from whitli traffic routes radiate to all parts of the house, both inside and out. are the sleeping rooms and two baths. There is space for either three or four bedrooms, depending on whether an adult den is wanted. The master bedroom, 12 by 15 feet, has a private bath with stall shower, four sliding door closets, a twin corner-window arrangement and a separate exit to a rear cov ered porch. The twe front bedrooms are cross ventilated and have three and two closets, respectively. There is a central hall leading to all roorai and baths. The fourth bedroom (or den) also has a separata exit to the rear porch. The kitchen, scientifically planned and attractively equipped, overlooks the children's play ana. A cook-top range la set on a tri angular - shaped ialand. Storage cabinets are buUt into the range unit. The laland range, the architect ?ays, "expands the amount of counter top work space and mini mixes the housewife's kitchen rou tine because it separates the areas for preparation, cooking and clean ing." There is a direct exit from the kitchen to the outdoor dining ter race, and an indoor brick wall bar becue separates the kitchen and the adjoining recreation room. The kitchen is entered from the breeieway through a small service hall which contains a lavatory, ? mud cloaet and the basement stair way The laundry room and the heating plant are below in the full baacment. III addition to the outdoor tor races and parches, there la the recreation room, 11 feat 4 inches fey 14 feet 4 Inches. It can he en tered directly from the foyer; It adjoins the kitchen and is only a few steps away from all living and dining areas. In all there are 15 closets plus the garden tools storage closet off the breeze way and the storage cloaet In the man's hideaway room. The 19 by 12 foot garage has stor age space for two cars. The man's hideaway room is sep arated from the main house by the "buffer" breeieway. Generally, a man'a workshop is located in the basement or in a small section of ? garage. Here, the architect decided to giva more importance to the work shop and endow it with a pleasant atmoephere and more privacy. R is fully equipped with work bench, Storage closet and abundant wall space for tools and other util ity purposes. Vertical beards are used around the garage-hideaway area and brick veneer is used at the en trance Hand split wood shingles are used elsewhere on outside walls. Asphalt shingles are used for the roof. The shimney Is of brick. The breexeway is covered between the kitchen and the gsrsge-hideaway room. Flagstones or slate set in concrete are specified for the out door terraces. OveraH dimension* are 63 feet 10 inches by 71 feet 10 inches. The habitable area has 2,041 square (set The garage and hideaway room have <90 square feet. A minimum lot, 100 by 128 feet, is recommend Willlamsburg, Vs. (AP>-A te en William and Mary College Stu dents are helping disturbed young sters st Eastern State Hospital with homework, athletics and hob bies. Ptysieiana sey the yeuagstert ire responding well to the youth treatment. War Babies are Expected To Create Building Boom New York (AP) ? Statisticians figure that the crop of war babies of the 1940s will cauie a building boom in the '60s. Statisticians for Allied Chemi cal's Barrett Division say the army of more than 11,700,000 chil dren will reach the home-buying stage between 1965 and 1970. Dur ing that period, builders will be completing more tha> 1V4 million homes a year. Send This Coupon THE NEWS-TIMES 1* 55 Mats, rkut ml n i iw rf I tar Tk* taw W tfc* Weak, Dealfa X-25 (Pleaa* Prlat) CITT STATE.. Yon can take this study plan to row bank ?r other mortgage lander and to your builder and fat rough estimates on the coat at eowtrnetisn In Ms area, at well aa an idea of fee relation ct the coat to your budget. With thia Information you will knew whether you will want to proceed with construction by or dering working blueprints direct froa the architect and asking far Mdi far thai Ton aan got a study plan far The Rouse ct the Week by Ail ing in your name and addroas aa the cavpea as thia page and sending tt with fa cents to this Mwcnawr This study plan shows each fioer at the Mat together with each of th? four elevations, front, rear and aides of the houae. K is atatad at tt-lnoh par foot. It indodaa a guide on "How to Oat Your Home Built." Sea Ua For Mechanical Tools Carpenter Tools WE STUN AUTO STOM BEAUTIFUL WALLS OP CONCRETE MASONRY UBE CONCUR MAMMY FOB 8TtUCTU*AL BKAUTT MOREHSAD BLOCK & TILE CO., INC ?Twm PA 6-3970 mir warn mm* at wdmi cm. n. & Register of Deeds Records 47 Real Estate Transfers (Editor'! Note: In recording real estate transfers, the law does not require that the amount paid (or the property be stated in the deed. A token amount, such as $10 or $100, may be stipulated. Attached to each deed, however, must be United States documen mentary stamps, the value o ( the stamps based on the price paid for the property. Property which chances hands for less than $101 requires no stamp, according to Odell Mer rill, register of deeds. Property which brings a price between $101 and $500 must bear a stamp valued at 55 cents. From $501 to $1,000, the stamps affixed to the deed to tal $1.10, and thereafter for each additional $500 paid for the prop erty the atamp value goes up 55 cents.* From the value of the stamps placed on a deed an estimation of the price paid for the property can be determined. In the trans fers listed below, the seller is listed first, the buyer second, and finally, the value of the stamp affixed to the deed). There were 47 real estate trans fers recorded in the register of deeds office Oct. 7-20. They follow: Morekead Clly ? James S. Salter and wife to Roger W. Jones. $2.20; Wayne I. Kirby and wife to Joseph P. Nolan and wife, no stamps; C. H. Piner and wife to Geneva W. Guthrie, $1.10. Louis H. Russell and wife to Wil liam M. Maull Jr. and wife, $1.10; Francis W. Wade and wife to Mil dred W. Whitehurst, no stamps; Mildred Whitehurst, trustee, to Francis W. Wade, no stamps; Johnnie C. Ward and wife to Myr tle Ward, no stamps. A. B. Cooper and wife to Peggy Ann Hill Rhodes, $2.75; Scddle B. and A. J. Dixon to Robert P. Joyce and wife, 55 cents; Rosabell Lang daie to D. E. Williams, $16.50. Hugh Thomas Garner and wife to Elbert H. Noble and wife, no stamps; A. B. Cooper and wife to Theodore Newman, $10.90. William D. Allen and wife to Wal ter N. Allen and wife, no stamps; S. K. Hedgecock and wife to Carl K Sepmeyer and wife. $12.10; and KHby Guthrie and wife to Rosa Bell Langdale, $2.20. Beaufort ? Ransom Jones and wife to Viola and Charles Debrix, no stamps; Lee Roy Laney and wife to Charlie Styron end wife. $4.86; Lycurgus C. Dickinson Jr. and wife to Milton T. Pratt and wife, $3.30; L. H. Smith and wife to John A. Hunnings, no stamps. O. W. Huntley and wife to Wee too E. Wade and wife, $1.10; 0. G. Holland and wife to Q. H. Ballou and wife, no stamps; Verna D. and Yancey Barbour to Joel O. Can non and wife, no stamps. Newport? James Hagan to Basil L. Flannigan, $2.20; J. W. Pearson and wife to Roger W. Jones and wife, $3.30; Wilbur V. Gamer, trus tee, to John T. Lilly and wife, 55 cents. Ervie Gray and others to Erma G. Stanaland, no stamps; Ralph Leonard Laros and wife to Claude T. Foy and wife, no stamps; and Cherry Point Veterans Mutual Housing Association to Roy L. Her man and wife, $1.10. MarehaHberg ? Elijah A. Piner and Witt to Ivey Q. Pintr and wife. DO stamps; Elijah A. Plner and wile to Oscar Street and wife, S5 cents; aod Jones Brothers Real ty Co. to Jamal Neal Etheridge and wit e, no stamps. ?aitars Ialaad - Louise Gaskili to Clem C. Gaskili and wife, no stamps; and Earl C. D:"is and wife to Wesley Lewis and wife, no stamps. Atlantic Beach? Wachovia Bank and Trust Co., trustees, to George C. Thomasson and wife, no stamps; Mack G. Smith to Sarah L. Smith, $110; W. Olin Reed and wife and Thomas B. Griffin and wife to T. W. Heath Jr., $2.20; and Atlantic Beach Inc. to A. F. Flem ing Sr., $8.30. Hariowe? Charles B. Davenport Sr. and wife to Druscilla Daven port, no stamps; and C. B. Daven port Jr. and others to Charles B. Davenport Sr., no stamps. White Oak ? W. K. Glover to Glula Phillips Glover, no stamps; and John S. Jones and wife to Kvarett H. Cannon, no stamps. PortsaMath ? Phillip K. Ball and wife to Soger Jones, $2.20. Straits? Robert L. Chadwick to James J. Barnes and wife, SS cants; and Robert L. Chadwick to H. L. Chapin and wife SS cents. WUUston? Pauline Wade and others to Elmer D. Willis, no stamps. Lions Schedule Ladies Night The Morehead City Lions will have ladies night at their regular meeting Thursday at the Hotel Fort Macou dining room. 0. N. Allred, chairman of the program, says that he has an interesting program lined up for the guests. Cliff Edwards, chairman of the white cane drive, reported Thurs day night that the final reports had been made on the drive and the memberships sold in the NC Asso ciation for the Blind. The associa tion got $486.98 and the local club kept $82.98 for work In the county. The three top Lions in the cam paign were Mr. Edwards, who sold 140 memberships at $1 each, James E. Crowe, who sold 46, and A. N. Willis, who sold 20. Three new members were ad mitted to the club. They were L. J. Hill, Beaufort, and Tom Hewitt and George Lore, Morehead City. Members of the Morehead City Lions will meet with the Down East club at the recreation building in Atlantic tonight. Last night they met in Beaufort to see how much interest there ii In forming a club there. Mr. Allred, 0. J. Morrow and Mr. Willis were appointed to look for a new meeting place. Cologne, the Cathedral City on Germany's Rhine, was founded 2,000 years ago by the Romas ar mies of Caesar. It* first name was "Colonia." Stag* Production Nets Oho Potior for Fund Vucmb, Aril. (AP)? Three Tu? son sixth-graders wanted to do nate something to the Tucson Daily Star Sportsmen Fund? used to send kids to summer caaps. The 12-year-olds put on ? show with Billy Bloom tap dancing, Marilyn Peterson singing and Har riet Bloom joining them in a one act play. The show drew IS spectators at 10 cents a head, and the net profit of $1 was sent to the fund. No Argument Sterling, Colo. (AP) ? Robert Roberts won't be criticizing his wife's driving in the future. Mrs. Roberts, driving the family car, collided with another car in the al ley near the Roberts home. Roberts was miffed about it all until he, too, collided with a car at exactly the same spot two days later. Caff PA 6-50M Automatic J. M. DAVIS Texaco Monhcmi CMr REUOY MIX *, DAVL LINDSAY Carteret concrete raa I /?* *i>y mixh < r, yi , ,F , i/v4fc<5^j HI WAY 7c>*v ??? Ito&'uUttui > % PAINT IT EASY! . . . with the first trouble-free, one-coat vinyl plastic Color* Unlimited "j Tailored to T aste INTERIOR FLAT ? Flattest finish trtrt ? A Obi yea mi mtl ? 1-ml Mdtof pomrt ? Supiriar prfcnwmt > ? Cottt MS tD B?1 ? OM?ilM|t|l wMtmrnniin Now in juu uieem colors unlimited RUPERT E WILMS HARDWARE 912 Arendell St. Phone PA 6-401 1 Morehead City Worried about roof 'blttf of... 1 r Come in and ue the now - ^ ^ Seal-O-Matlc ShligtM MiM'S THI SCCMT TW m'l heal Mob *? tab* eefeemfcely bMM of Ihta ipcdd faourr oppH?d unrfmM* ?< Mth iMngl* These new Johas-MoBviKe Shiagles btM tight in Ugh winds btcivM fay art self tealhkil Hhi || At most important contribution to rat lor hamaa and farm tuildinga in tha laat M DM . . . * rod at tra?Maaal toiatfa da ?i?n that II ?K Malln?. Tha ant haat com thaaa amatol ahioclaa to Ml Ifcinitvn 4an at Ox Ml adga and grip to* ahtoflaa ? imit with bulldog Imadlj . . . tttff defy ma high ?M| to pry ?Ma> tot ??al ?M?to shtatfai an i Hilli to ?? popular Thick Butt Myta la Many eoton aad to you. Ajk (or a fraa Mtotk HIGHEST QUALITY ? LOWEST PRICES HUNTLEY'S
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1958, edition 1
9
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