Newspapers / The Beaufort News (Beaufort, … / May 25, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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i The h rr I liJEWS The best ad vet tising medium published in Cartel et Co. ( READING TO THE MIND IS WHAT EXERCISE IS TC i2B0DY I WATCH Your label and pay your aubacripti ion VOLUME XXII M3 8 PAGES THIS WEEK THE BEAUFORT NEWS THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1933 PRICE 5c SINGLE COPY NUMBER 21 s tate Appointments Of Interest To Many Much Speculation As To What Governor Ehring haus Will Do As To Prison-Highway Commis sioner And Other Important Positions; School Commission Appointed By m. r. dunnagan Relief Work Increase T A T FTTI Mm. 00 hn H, I legislative division of the government has completed its labor of 132 days, enacting 1408 bum and b2 resolu Shown In Carteret PLANS PERFECTED FOR BANK MERGER New Bank With Large Capital To Take Over Three Oth ers Now Closed NEWPORT SCHl S3 HAD A GOOD YEAR By M. R. DUNNAGAN Largest Class of Graduates Since School Started; Good Commencement NEWPORT, May 24 With the I literary address, which was deliver- Carteret County Will Send 34 Young Men To Forestry Camps COUNTY FARMERS BUSILY ENGAGED RALEIGH, May 22-Plans as fin- L, b Jud T D. Bryson of Duke Now Shipping Beans, Beets, ally worked ou for ...urger of the University Law School( and the a.i Cabbage and Potatoes to p C,TBa"krand Truust Co., and the wardi f diplomas and certificates! Baltimore and Other on Friday night, May 19, Newport closed one of the most suuecessful years in its history. The largest class Northern Markets Carteret farmers are now the ever to be graduated from Newport most busily engaged people working school finished this year. They were :j in the county. This industry along ' Walter Nicol Allen, Elizabeth Arch with the operation of trucks between abel Bell, Ida Irene Bell, Margaret this vicinity and northern cities fur- Page Trust Co., each with more than a dozen branches in the State, and the Independence Trust Co., Char lotte, with one unit, into a State bank with initial capital and paid- in RALEIGH, May 22 Carteret surplus of $1,500,000, have been ap- tions, a total of 1470 new laws of the county had 1134 families which were1 Proved by Commissioner of Banks 2470 bills introduced, all eyes are given aid through the Governor's of-!Gurney P- Hood, he announced Sat- tiirninEr to the executive department, fice of Relief during April, as com-.urday. "from which all blessings flow." pared with 910 families in March, a wojectionaDie leatures oi original ;er Verna Grace Garner. Lillian Guth'money received from the various ag- Nor has Governor Ehringhaus re- monthly report for the office shows. P'ans nave been eliminated and only rie( Leroy jjill, Lucille Barrington ricultural commodities is finding its lieved that strain, except in a few! A decrease of 16 per cent, or a few objections have been filed, Hughes, Oleta Haskett, Vein Grace way through the various and sundry rare instances,- even of those he will from 164,000 families in March, as j while none of the- various depositor's Lockey, James I. Mizzelle, Jr., Lyn- channels of local trade, judging from finally appoint to the mony posts to compared with 138,000 families in r stockholders' committees have ob- d on parker .Siena Rose Simmons, ithe way trading in Beaufort has be filled. Moreover, the places are April, is shown in the monthly sum- jeeu, commissioner Hood btates. lBelle Taylor, Nina not expected to be filled for two or mary. Improvement in business con-1 AT0. . was glven' commissioner , Curtis Taylor, Rosalie Watson, Ivalseason began. three weeks. Governor Ehringhaus ditions led to the belief that there ooa said, because he feels that the , Lee Wiliis- More than two carloads of beans eoes to his home in Elizabeth City would be less need for relief aid in , uepositois oi tne banks will be great-, r... , B,,miaeinn tn wvhave left Carteret since last Thure Evelyn Bell, Nina Vesta Bell, Madie Elizabeth Garner, Vannie Lee Gam nishes lucrative employment -for hun dreds of working. people. And the earlv in the week for a rest, and April, but oflicials had treatment, and possibly an operation, that it would be as large, before returning to Raleigh, andj Increased needs were shown in 22 that will leave many on the anxious counties, led by Macon, the others seat. being Clay, Burke, Wilkes, Surry, Except for the 11 members of the Rockingham, Guilford, Chatham, Col State School Commission, and two umbus, Nash Halifax, Northampton, temporary places, the appointments Pitt, New Hanover, Carteret, Pamli will wait. Tyre Taylor, whose post of co, Hyde, Tyrrell and Bertie. The Executive Counsel was abolished other 78 counties required less re- with adjournment of the Legislature, lief money. will continue as acting Commission-; The remaining 4,620 er of Paroles, the new post created, the State's 6,500 allotment until the Governor gets ready to estation work will be called in the speak. Edwin Gill, Gardner's secre- next two weeks, to train at Fort tary and Ehringhaus legislative ' Bragg. aide, will handle the workmen's com! Carteret county's allotment of 34 pensation cases growing i& Mil' men will be recruited at New Bern dents to those employed in relief next Saturday, May 27. work under the Governor's Office of Belief. With thousands of relief ' COPELAND-GRAHAM workers, that is important. . tv, Rphnnl Commissioners! The quiet marriage of Benjamin thoucht ' ly benefitted when plans become ef fective. Ihese plans provide for a 100 per cent assessment of stockhold ers; a waiver by the R. F. C. of its rights to share in the first distribu tions to depositor of 20 per cent; distribution of all available cash to depositors sale of selected assets to Uiiixo r, t 4. n. Charles Garner, Gherman McCord !,. . 'pledge or lien ot any kind to the i ,r ,, , workers of 6b , ' Garner, Vernon Mann, Redmon ; for refor- n ban? ' organization, all as- p.. Th Morton Bell. Harry sets of the old bank will be avail able for distribution to creditors and depositors of the old bank. The plan, Mr. Hood points out, does not provide direct or immediate : the new bank and distribution of , Minniel Beets are still selling at a good proceeds to depositors; no assets of ; SSJ J?6 r0 Jone ,fi on the Baltimore market, the old bank are encumbered by ,t6tll mitft' ,sa ... Jn"j!T4nt.v-fftnhiii,rl. of these are quoted at $1.25 now. About four carloads have been shipped by trucks since the last issue of the News. It is said that the farmers have a very good stand of late beets. Cabbage is still being shipped in relief for the present stockholders, j these may go up to the eighth grade jhave ,eft Carteret s!nC6 lgBt Thurs. but there is a fair chance for ulti-, condition were received by Ber- d b rai, flnd b truckg The Bal. mate benefit to them. It provides for " .Lee Williams, Bern.ce Lackey, mark eg h, Pringle, Thomas Morton Bell, Harry l . ' . ! C; TT TT . 1 vuimon oimmons, narry noimes- Mizzelle. Letters of admission to high school, I indicating that those who received' orderly liouidation without the loss Bernice Mann, Neal Chadwick, Wen which accompanies forced liquidation ,e McCabe. Particularly beneficial will be the! -The marshals for the commence. early provision of banking: facilities ment occasion were selected from Thirty-four young men will leave Carteret County early Saturday morning for New Bern, where they will undergo the final examination before they are sent to one of the Federal reforestation camps. Ten other substitutes will accompany them to New Bern, in case one or more of the thirty-four fail to pass the physical examination. These young men are between eighteen and twenty-five years of age. These will assemble at Mrs. Hilda G. Kite's office on Front Street by seven o'clock Saturday morning, where they will be given their quali fication papers. They wil be trans ported to New Bern on a school bus driven by a competent person. Those who fail to pass the physical exami nation and the extra substitutes will be given free transportation back to Wayne Taylor, picked up since the spring shipping Saturdav afternoon or evenine. These young men were selected by the county welfare workers from the many candidates who applied from the various communities over Car teret County. The selection was made wholly on the basis of where the job would do the most good, Mrs. Kite said. The list of young men, as giv en to a New3 reporter by Mrs. Kite, is as follows: Delmas Graham, Jas. Young, Garris Gaskill, Johnnnie Campbell, Ernest Morris, Walter Salter, Ozell Willis, Linster Eubanks, William Merrill, Linwood Russell, Robert H. Willis, James A. Griffin, James Guthrie, George Howland, Mack Edwards, Carlton Pittman, Os wald Elliott, Raleigh Gillikin, James Holland, William Willis, Allen Moore, Johnnie Willis, Delma Willis, John nie Riggan, Virgil George, Sam Brin son, Clayton Garner, Horace Gab riel, Frank Buttry, Lawrence Ward Simpson, David Modlin, Marathon Jones, Reuben Jones, Dolphus Fos key. Substitutes: day, which were shipped on trucks. These have been bringing what is Considered to be a comparatively Certificates of admission to high school were awarded to the following: Doris Ray Mann, Nellie Wilson fonnnn PntVinlpno ftnvnpr. Tnn firflv: tvt av.: d;ii tj; im Efood price. The bushel hampers of maun, njlllic Uliucu Aiijtri, xiavui' - - , Williams, Beulah Marie Small, La beans are now selling for $1.75 m Rue Garner, Theresa Lorine Mann, Baltimore, while the five-peck hamp Fleta Gray Gibble, Lillian Paul Gam- ers are bringing from $2.50 to $3 in table at from seventy-five cents to ninety cents per fifty pound hamper. So far this season about twelve carloads of Irish potatoes have been u nronnvnfinns for handl- F. Copeland and Miss Julia Lane nave r-i --- -- roV,, ,i.i, tnni. niatt jn Now : ' f ""'"""s lanuuci uicm, wvawuu carioaos oi man potatoes nave Deen ing the full eight months school term Graha m, which wok : place in ew for comnmnitie3 now without them. . the . Junior Class, and just those pu-LWpped by truck,, rail and by boat, etarting this fall, hence the reason Bern Saturday . atternoon, JBme." The banks will-continue to receive pils who have made the highest aver- Tha yield is said to be less than ast for early appointment. With the ",C"UV" . Governor as Chairman, and the State section. The marriage was solemmz Supt. A. T. Allen, Lieut. Gov. A. H. ,ed in the office of the Craven County riraViam. nnH Treasurer Uharies m. ucrUa at, w deposits, holding Ihem for immediate j ages thus far in high school could ;year, and the Baltimore market quuot withdrawal, ana will continue under quality tor tnis nonor. Marshals , ed the potatoes at from $2.50 to $3 restrictions until reorganized. De-,were: Claribelle Garner, Chief; Jan-lpg,. barrel. Ball brothers and Gibbs posits will not be subject to action of ice Prescott, Flordia Edwards, Lola , brothers are said to have the best po the liquidating agent, which will be Benton, Louise Quinn, Leroy Hill, tatoes in Carteret. Growers will be- named merely for levying the stock Loyd JNelson Garner. gjn ;n earnest Monday morning in . K-HJn n asm hir I nctulrt fT I 11 Q l Q Johnson, ex-officio members, tne nu- iy ""' cleus was formed. One member from R- H- Kehoe. each of the 11 congressional district Mrs. Copeland is the older daugh completes the commission. These ap- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Graham, of pointees, by district, follow : es i a uiou. one o n.ew board, which will liquidate the ' corsage of white carnations, the class Joseph Conday, ' Elijah Stewart, Clarence Dixon, Cecil Lewis, Larry Hunnings, Thomas Taylor, Robert Smith, A. Harold Russell, James T. Gaskill, Roland otyron. assessment. Depositors will select j The girls in the graduating class ' the harvesting of this important truck tne majority oi tne members oi tne wore white dresses with a shoulder crop. First, Taylor Attmore, ton, reappointed. Second, George J. Green, weiaon, Washinir-' Beaufort High School an i College. Mr. Copeland, who is quite well known throughout Carteret r i.-- s au 1-. f AT- ni1 new, attorney, educator. ' """S r T T V Tw. Third, A. McL. Graham, Clinton, Mrs. Benjamin Copeland of th.s . ' . i community. He successfully con- Cnmiil Rnrkv ducts a seafood shipping rOUllll, A lauiv j!-..., , ...wi-iw Mount, reappointed. ne" in eeaul0"-,?r- an.Q "irs- "J which one of the banks is located, Fifth John H. Folger Mount Airy, 'ana are now mating iu uim -", Mr. Hood states. Ul lUK i Will O tyuwtitO v reappomtea. , 'Cf .. Sixth, Henry R. Dwire, Duke Uni- Street. yersity, Durham, reappointed. Seventh, J. O. Carr, Wilmington, Citizens Mystltied DV Poisoning Many Dogs attorney, new. Eighth, Edwin Pait, Laurinburg, merchant, new. Ninth, Dr. B. B. Daugherty, Boone, ronnnomted. Tenth, W. G. Gaston, Gastonia, man? former school man. 1 lv Eleventh. O. J. Holler, Union Mills tne canine It may be well for the News to old banks, the depositors thus direct- !fl0Wer. The boys wore blue coats and; state for the benefit of its readers ing and controlling the liquidation, white flannels with a carnation bout-1 that when the term "carload" is used with aid and advice from Commis- oniere. Little Marianna Mizzelle, j it means railroad car, and when it is sioner Hood and his department. Due!tj,e ciags mascot, was very dainty in 'said that so many carloads have been notice will be given to depositors, 'a jong; pieated organdie dress and shipped by trucks it means that the prAfiifnra. stnrkhnlrlora and nfVioa - j, a; ri - ; j . innnH.. nlnv.n,l Vnilno4 ?o business . corsage oi carnations, one recneu a 4ua"n miivcu j" a lamuau i o 1 .interested in each community " .standard and that this amount is di- Supt. J. G. Allen, County Super- vided into truck shipment, ihe truck intendent of Schools, awarded the bodies vary somewhat in size. high school diplomas. Miss Gertrude1 ; Styron, teacher of seventh grade a- Local Coast Gliardmen warded the certificates and letters of . and Vir- nimioainn to ar.v.noi Mr Feel Economv Measure Powell, principal of the school, madej a few remarks to the members of I a. a rPait ftf .Vie. recent nation- Seventy-five Fishermen Leave for Jersey Today MARRIAGE LICENSES Jeff Sabiston, Beaufort ginia Fulcher, Williston. James G. Whitehurst, and Mildred V. iSabiston, Beaufort. Moody C. Lewis, Salter Path and Judging by the number of dogs that mysteriously died here Thurs- ia. day and Friday, some one had evident M Lewig' Uy become tired of the members oi ; AnHrcw w Davis. Marshallberg, and Annie L. Hunneycutt, Smyyrna. family wandering the Rutherford county, new streets of Beaut ort. aome nueea Question! Being Asked 'dogS died suddenly and without Everyone is asking, and no one is warning, while others became desper answering, questions as to who will ateiy in, as a result of what many be chairman of the Highway and think was some deadly poison. don-. .ftmmiasinn. commissioner of, These does were not all confined to revenue, commissioner of paroles, as- one area in the community, but the . excellent eistent director of the Budget, to casualties were rather widely -distrib- Crteret C1 succeed Henry Burke, who has an- uted around the town. Chief TM?hm-f nonnced that he is leaving soon; lice w. R. Longest stated to a News .in tije matter of v iU .st.cs. Ac Three of five members of the Board reporter that it had not been definite corduig : to the iJ8t;; of Agriculutre, half thed irectors of , determined how the poison was SU to iB.ISS and boards of about 21 of the State s thrown out, and whether meat was tha mon JJJJ f A ., c nariLa uic. cui i cnuntti uscu - - the senior class. He also presented ai economy bill, two of the four sev medal to Madie Garner for being the enty-five-f oot rum chasers stationed best all round student in the senior jin Carteret County waters will be put class and a prize to Rosalie Watson out of commission, along with all for having the highest average in'three of the nicket boats located at science. This last mentioned prize jFort Macon, Core Banks and Ocra- with marked anticipation that they About seventy-five white and col ored men left here about ten o'clock this morning on three menhaden fish ing boats for Sandy Hook, N. J. where they will participate in the summer fishing industry in that vic inity. Approximately fifty-five of these men will fish on the three boats, while about twenty will work at the factory. These boats were: "Doswell S. Edwards," 'C. P. Dey," and the "Lancaster." Scores of friends and relatives of the departing fishermen crowded the Standard Oil and Gulf docks to give their farewells and good wishes for a prosperous sum mer's fishing. In previous seasons is, the Sandy Hook section these fisher men have made what is termed a "good summer's work," and it was (Continued on page hve) CARTERET COUNTY VITAL STATISTICS SHOW AN INCREASE IN POPULATION tional institutions. But Governor Eh- coax the dogs to consume the pois tringhaus is keeping his own counsel. cn The Commissioner of Banks post; a large number of local people is a four-year job and Gurney P. including those whose dogs were a Hood was named two years ago, so mong the victims re very indignant that is not open. But delegations over the poisoning. Beloved pet dogs have visited the Governor on the post were isted among the casualties a f director of the Department of long with the "street" dogs. Efforts .. . u.n Viold . - i nAn frt determine who Q1S Conservation ana uewwyw' nave Deen inau - ----- ( by J W. Harrelson. Gen. j. van tributed tne poison bu Metts has not been informed as to umber of dogs in various sections .v.v.- , nnntinue as adju-' fVB community became victims; IVIlCUiCl C w ... w- - Newport 1 0 Portsmouth 0 0 Smyrna 0 0 Straits 1 3 I j 15 51 coke Inlet. These boats will be car- yie nurL"ern ried to the Coast Guard depot at ! territory this forenoon. Custis Bayy, Ma'ryland, where they will be decommissioned. The rum chasers have been operating from Advance Base A, located at More heai City. Some fifteen hundred men n the Coast Guard Service throughout the United States are scheduled to lose their jobs within a short while, and many others are being reduced in fishing W'hite Oak combined with Morehead ranks and likewise in pay. Lieutenant Township. did not do so well. There were 20 births in that month and 12 deaths. These figures indicate a gain in the county's population for the two months referred to of 44 brand new l Town human beings. The figures for .he lBeaufort various towns ana townsmps uie en below: MARCH APRIL Deaths 3 2 0 Birthi 2 Stillbirths tant general. No one seems to know whether h. B. Jeffresa will be re-named for the larger Prison-Highway post, or wheth er it will go t3 George Ross Pou. A guess is that Jeffress will head the department and Pou the Prison divis- ion m it. V ou migm, geu - ---- al nrison iob in Atlanta, but so far the person or persons re sponsible for this wholesale siaugn ter of the dogs has not been discov ered. TONSIL CLINIC CONTINUES The News is informed that the frep tonsil clinic for children in Car- 1...4. taito-of .nuntv will continue for some ' .. x I j.... Tha nnerations Will be eeems inclined to , Q e in the hospitals in Beau- and, rumor says, hopes to succeed peo Mroupfld Citv. Parents who f St ac S".to ak. the arrangements for jested to see ivirs. r.t t 4.i, TVio sprnnd nlace des: yl uepuwiiwi, ... oorvif.p are requfi 5!" to - m G. Kite as soon as possible. Town Death Beaufort 2 M. City 4 Newport 0 Town hi p (Beaufort Cedar Is. Harkers Is. Harlowe Hunting Quarter Davis 0 Hunting Quarter Stacey 0 Hunting Quarter Sea Level 0 Hunting Quarter- Births 8 18 0 2 2 4 2 Boint Jeffress: other say he can't af ford not to. Now it seems to lead to just that. (Continued on page eight) Eastern Carolina tobacco growers 1-ave finished setting their crop one k earlier than usual this yea.. M. City Newport Still- Townships births Beaufort 0 3 Cedar Is. 0 0 Harkers Is. 0 1 Harlowe no report Hunting Quarter Davis 0 1 Hunting Quartei? Stacy 1 Hunting Quarter Sea Level 0 1 Hunting Quarter- jD. F. DeOotte, commanding officer of the Pamlico, stated in a conversa Ition with a News reporter this week !that it is understood that the fifteen hundred men who will lose their jobs' are those whose records are none too , good, while those who have good rec- ( ords should have no fear at tne present time concerning the perman ency of their wors. Boastwain L. Christensen, who has been in charge of Advance Base A in Morehead City, has been trans ferred to the Coast Guard Patrol Boat "Yeaton," which is stationed at Pascaqula, Mississippi. TIDE TABLE Information aw to the tiaes at Beaufort is given in this col umn. The figures are approx imately correct and based on table's furnished by the U. S. Geodetic Survey. Some allow ances must be made for varia tions in the wind and also with respect to the locality, that is whether near the inlet or at the heads of the estuaries. POLICE COURT ITEMS weet Atlantic Marshallberg Msrrimon IJerrimon Morehead 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 10 Atlantic Marshallberg Merrimon Morehead Newport Portsmouth Smyrna Straits 2 0 0 2 1 0 1 12 1 1 0 3 1 0 1 20 9:23 9:34 10:00 10:13 10:19 10:52 a. m. p. m. m. m. m. m. m. m. Only two cases were tried in Police Court Monday evening by Mayor . i Bayard layior. inese were s Al lows : J George Johnson, colored, disorder-, 11 :3 4 a. m. lv conduct. $2.50 or five days with; 12:06 p. m the street cleaners. Clyde Edwards, soliciting alms, judgment suspended. The folowing casese were contin ued: Mary Conyers, George Johnson and Walter Williams. High Tido Low TWa Frtfty, May 26 3:31 3:22 Saturday, May 27 a m. 4:09 a. p. m. 4:59 p. Sunday, May 28 a. m. 4:48 a. p. m. 4:36 p. Monday, May 29 11:01 a. m. 5:29 a. m. 11:21 p. m. 5:22 p. m. Tuesday, May 30 6:13 a. m. 6:17 p. m. Wednesday, May 31 12:17 a. m. 7:00 a. m. 12:54 p. m. 7:19: p. m. Thursday, June 1 1:05 a. m. ?:48 a- m- 1:48 p. m. 8:23 p. m.
The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.)
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May 25, 1933, edition 1
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