Thursday, March 18, 1937
THE BEAUFORT NEWS BEAUFORT, N. C
PAGE SEVEN
r
Public
Notices
Minimum rales 25 cents
Mutt Be Paid in Advance
Dial4481dial
jtWHH'l' ! i ' ! '! t"
WARRANTY DEEDS. MORTGAGE
Deeds, Deeds of Trust, Chattel Meit
gage blanks for sale at Beaufort
News Office.
PIANO TUNING, REGULATING,
Self-player, adjusting. Tuning price
$ 5.00. Repair work Reasonable. Call
or write A. S. Hamilton, Sea Level,
N. C. Phone No. 511 5tA8
WOOLARD APARTMENT HOUSE
212 Live Oak St. Large or small
Apartments. Special Rates to Win
ter Tourints and Hunting and Fish
ing Partiej.
FOR SALE: TWO ADJOINING
Lots on Broad Street. 62 x 310 and
63 x 310 feet. Harry Parkin, Beau
fort, N. C. 4tM25pd
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS AND AC
aing machine paper at tke Beaaferl
New office.
FOR SALE SEED CORN $2.50
per bushel Blue Ribbon Winner.
Last Carteret County Fair. Earl
Dickinson, Beaufort RFD. M25
S. PAUL'S
PLAY SCHOOL
ENROLL YOUR CHILDREN
At
Supervised Recreation For
Children from 2l8 to 6 years
Rates: $2 per month; 75c per
week or 25c per day
MRS. COPELAND KELL
Director
FREE 1 If excess acid causes you
Stomach Ulcers, Gas Pains, Indiges
tion, Heartburt, Belching, Bloating,
Nausea, get fre sample doctor's
prescription, Udga, at BELL'S DRUG
STORE. 12tJun3
FOR SALE TWO STORY HOUSE,
8 rooms and bath, located at 205
Live Oak Street on lot size 55 x 198
feet Cery attractive terms. Apply
C. H. Bushall, Beaufort, N. C. tf
SPECIALS
1-35 Ford Tudor $350
1-35 Ford Fordor $360
1-36 Ford Tudor $420
1-35 Chev. Tudor $350
1-36 Chev. Fordor $490
EASY TERMS
Lof tin Motor Company
WRECKER SERVICE
BODY WORL .
FENDER REPAIRING
AUTO-PAINTING
GLASS INSTALLED
Lof tin Motor Company
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE
DCA-3969M
Under and by virtuo of the power
of sale contained in that certain
deed of trust executed by Charles A.
Clawson and wife, Janie P. Clawson,
to CAROLINA MORTGAGE COM
PANY, TRUSTEE, dated August
15, 1929, recorded in the Registry of
Carteret Countv. North Carolina, in
Book 63, Page C-lll, the undersign
ed as the duly appointed substituted
trustee (see book 84, page 469, of
said registry), will offer for sale at
public auction at the courthouse door
in said county, in the City, of Beau
fort, N. C. at 12 o'clock M, Thurs,
day, April 8, J937, and will sell to
the highest bidder for cash the prop
erty described in said deed of trust
as follows:
Adjoining the lands of C. E. Case,
formerly E. H. Dill, situated in the
town of Beaufort, and known and
designated in the plan of saiC 'own
of Beaufort as parts lots number
(70), and (80), Old Town, describ
d as follows:
Begining at a point on the north
ide of Ann Street, ninety-nine (99)
feet eastwardly from the northeast
corner of intersection of Ann and
Craven Streets, thence running east
wardly with north line of Ann Street
fifty (50) feet, thence northwardly
parallel with Craven Street two hun
dred and twenty five (225) feet,
thence westwardly parallel with Ann
Street fifty (50) feet, thence south
wardly parallel with Craven Street
two hundred twenty-five (225) feet
to the beginning.
This being same land mentioned
and described ia a deed from E. H.
Dill and wife to D. W. Dill, dated
the 24th day of October, 1899, and
recorded in Carteret County, N. C
in Book VV, at page 154, and de
vised by aaid D. W. Dill by will to
Mary L. Dill; and being conveyed to
Charles A. Clawson by deed from
Mary L. Dill, dated March 12th, 1904,
filed for registration March 17th,
1904, duly recorded in the office of
the Register of Deeds for Carteret
County in Book ZZ, page 595.
This sale will be made subject to
all outstanding and unpaid taxes
and other assessments, if any.
This sale is to be made on account
of default in the payment of the in
debtedness secured by the aforesaid
deed of trust, and is made pursuant
to demand made upon the undersign
ed by the holder of said indebtedness.
This, 4th day of March, 1937.
KESWICK, CORPORATION
Substituted Trustee.
4t Aprl
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of
the estate of Laura G. Davis, deceas
ed, late of Carteret County, North
Carolina, this is to notify all persons
having claims against the estate of
the said deceased to present them to
the undersigned at Beaufort, N. C.
on or before the 25th day of Febru
ary 1938, or this notice will be plead
ed in bar of their recovery. All
persons indebted to the said estate,
will please make payment.
This the 23rd day of February
1937.
ELLA D. DAVIS,
Executrix of the estate of Laura
G. Davis, deceased. 6tA6
ENTRY OF LAND NUMBER 2391
North Carolina,
Carteret County.
To Irvin W. Davis, Esq., entry-taker
of Carteret County:
The undersigned claimant, being a
citizen of the State of North Caro
lina, hereby sets forth and shows
that the following tr.icl or parcel of
land, to wit, lying and being in
Morehead Township, Carteret Coun
ty, North Carolina, and more fully
described as follows, viz:
Beginning at the South side of the
Atlantic Beach Bridge, on the east
ern corner thereof and running
thence south approximately 400
(four hundred) yards along the par
allel to the highway to Atlantic
Beach to the first wooden stump on
the old bulkhead there situate, thence
from said first wooden stump in a
northeasterly direction on a direct
line from said stump and the water
tower situated on the property of
the Morehead City Port Commission
to the waters of Bogue Sound, thence
along and with Bogue Sound in a
westerly direction to the beginning
place, containing eight acres, more or
less.
Is vacant and unappropriated land
belonging to the State of North Car
olina and subject to entry and the
undersigned claimant hereby makes
entry of, lays claim to, and pray3
for a grant for, said land.
CHAS. F. CLARK,
Claimant,
This 10th day of March, 1937.
George H. McNeill, Witness.
Irvin W. Davis,,
Register of Deeds.
Filed 11:30 a. m. March 10, 1937.
4t Apr. 1
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by vhtue of the por
of sale contained in a certain deed
of trust executed by Morehead City
Properties, Incorporated, and Branch
Banking and Trust Company, Trus
tee, to James M. Howard, Sr., Trus
tee, dated the 25th day of March,
1936, and duly recorded in the office
of the Register of Deeds of Carteret
County in Book at page 145, default
having been made in the payment of
the note thereby secured and appli
cation having been made to the un
dersigned trustee by the holder of
said note, I will on Saturday, April
15, 1937, at 1 o'clock P. M., sell to
the highest bidder for cash at the
court house door in Carteret County
1 the following described real estate.
namely:
Lots 25, 26, 27 and 23 in Block
"H" of Money Island Beach, accord
ing to plat by George Brooks, Engi
neer, duly recorded in the office of
the Register of Deeds of Carteret
County in Plat Book I at page 96.
This the 15th day of March, 1937.
James M. Howard, Sr.,
4tApr.8 Trustee.
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of the power
of sale contained in a certain Deed
of Trust executed by Morehead City
Properties, Incorporated, a corpora
tion, and Branch Banking and Trust
Company, Trustee, to J. M. Howard,
Sr., Trustee, dated July 26, 1935, and
duly recorded in the office of the Reg
ister of Deeds of Carteret County in
Book 80 at page 402, default having
been made in the payment of the
note thereby secured and application
having been made to the undersigned
trustee by the holder of said note,
the undersigned will on the 17th
day of April, 1937, at 1 o'clock P.
M., sell to the highest bidder for
cash at the courthouse door of Car-
teret County the following described
property, namely:
LoU 5, 6, 7, and 8 in Block "O";
Lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 11 and
12 in "T" of Money Island Beach,
according to plot by George Brooks,
Engineer, duly recorded in the office
Beaufort
School News
GRADE 1-1
By Mistake
A. B. Morton's name was omitted
from the honor roll for the fifth
month of school.
GRADE 1-1
Sunday was Bryan Loftin's birth
day. Monday afternoon his mother
came to school and gave him a sur
prise birthday party. The class sang
a happy birthday song to Bryan. Af.
ter the song Bryan gave an Eastei
basket filled with candy eggs to each
child. All of us had n good time.
GRADE 3-2
Suthey Rhue, Frank Morning, and
Roscoe Conway got us some minnows
from the ditch. J. T. Hardesty
brought some snails which he found.
We put them all in a bowl and some
of the boys put in borne marbles.
Edna and Hilda Glover brought some
food for the fish.
We planted some btns in a flower
pot so we could watch them grow.
GRADE 5-1
Last week our grade made some
things of clay. Gordon Bell Davis
made a stage coach which was very
good. Hendricks, Philip and Edwin
made some airplanes which were also
especially good.
Dot, Mattie, Lucy Belle, and Cath
erine have made a portfolio to keep
our pictures in. It is very pretty.
Our class won the dollar for hav
ing the most parents present at the
P. T. A. in February. We are going
to buy a book with it.
We ares tudying about birds. We
have already found many bird pic
tures. Reported by Ricard Smith and
Floyd Springle. .
GRADE 5-2
Helen Dixon and Garland Dudley,
who have been absent for several
days because of sickness, have return
ed to school.
Bobbie Safrit and Blythe Noe, Jr.,
whom our class is sponsoring in the
baby contest visited cur rooms last
Friday. We are pleased to find that
both babies Bobbie and Blythe, are
ahead in the contest.
Since we have a picture show in
our room, we have decided to have
a show each Friday afternoon at
2:30 o'clock.
We are proud that we have two
members in the school band Carl
Edwards, Jr., and Robert Willis. The
band is giving a concert Sunday af
ternoon. Lorine Austin, '
Class reporter.
6-1 CHOOL NEWS
We have been busy for two weeks
practicing on a St. Patrick's Day
program. All our class has a part in
the exercise and we are anxious for
all our parents and friends to see
the program.
We regret thata number of our
class mates are sick. Some of them
have flu and some chicken pox.
Jane Ramsey,
Pansy Mason.
GRADE 6-2
Mrs. C. R. Wheatly gave our class
a set of encyclopedias. We are enjoy
ing them very much. Some of the
boys in our class are interested in
making bird boxes for the bird box
contest. Our class is getting ready
to organze a baseball team. We hope
to have the champion team.
Lina Bell, Frances Langdale,
Reporters.
GRADE 7-2
Our room has an attendance rec
ord of 98 per cent for the first five
months. We have finished our physical-political
maps of Australia and
have them on display in the class
room. Some of our boys are busy
building bird boxes to enter the
county contest.
Delcha Willis.
Will Explain Modern
Fertilizing Methods
RALEIGH, Mar. 17 Recent stud
ies in the mechanical application of
fertilizers for cotton will furnish the
subject for a radio talk on the Caro
lina Farm Features program Satur
day, March 20.
Dr. Emerson R. Collins, agronomist
at the North Carolina Experiment
Station, will explain in the broadcast
the progress which has been made a
long this line.
The experiments in fertilizer
placement around cotton were start
ed in 1931 and practically the same
placements were used in 1932 and
1933. The outline of the experi
ment station was revised in 1934 to
take advantage of the information
obtained in the previous years.
Some of the placements which had
proved but of little value were drop
ped and other placements that offei
ed promise were added. The sec
ond outline was carried out in 1934
and 1935, and revised for the 1936
season. ')'
The experimental plats are locat
ed at the Upper Coastal Plain Ex
periment Station near Rocky Mount
on a Norfolk sandy loam soil.
The Carolina Farm Features sched
of the Register of Deeds of Carteret
County in Plat Book 1 at page 96.
This the 15th day of March, 1937.
James M. Howard, Sr.,
4tApr8 Trustee.
ule in full for the week of March 15
20 follows: Monday, Dr. J. O. Hal
verson, "Spoiled Feed and Loss of
Livestock;" Tuesday, Dr. I. V. Shunk
"Plants That Give Light;" Wednes
day, Boone Trail School Program;
Thursday, Wake County Home Dem
onstration Day; Friday, N. M. Wil
liams, Caring for Baby Chicks;
and Saturday, Dr. E. R. Collins, "Im
proved Methods for Fertlizer Place
ment on Cotton."
Top-Dressing Is A
Tonic For Pasture
RALEIGH, Mar. 17 Top-dressing
makes a god spring tonic for old
pactures, says John A. Arey, exten
sion dairy specialist at State College.
Give the old grass a dose of "plant
food" and it will soon be growing
thickly enough to supply good graz
ing while new pastures ares till too
young and tender, he pointed out.
For Sandy soil, Arey said 300
pounds of 4-8-4 fertlizer may be ap
plied to the acre; slay soils should
receive the same amount of a 4-12-4
mixture.
But a Spring tonic by itself may
not be enough to reclaim the sod in 1
time if the grass has got too thin,
Arey added, and in this event the
thin spots should be recessed when
the fertilizer is applied.
If the soil is reasonably loose, the
seed and fertlizer may be drilled in
satisfactorily with a disk drill, he
continued.
Soil that has become hard packed
should be sacrificed first with a disk
harrow, and then the seed and ferti
lizer can be drilled in without dif
ficulty. After pointing out that pasturage
is the best and cheapest feed that
can be supplied cattle and workstock
Arey stated that the animals, espec
ially young cattle, should be inspect
ed for lice.
A calf heavily infested with lice
cannot make a good growth, even
when plenty of rich, succulent pas
turage is available, he pointed out.
In cold weather, infested animals
may be dusted with a mixture ot
equal parts of Flowers of sulphur
and ground sabadilla seed or sodium
fluoride. On warm days they may be
sprayed or sponged with lime-sulphur
cold tar, or nicotine dips.
Williams Gives Tips
On Crop Fertilizers
RALEIGH, Mar. 17 North Caro
lina farmers spend 20 to 30 million
dollars every year for fertilizer.
Yet many of them do not get full
value for the money they spend be
cause they do not apply the right
mixture to their crop3, said C. B,
Williams, head of the State College
agronomy department.
The kind of fertlizer to apply de
pends upon the crops grown and the
type of the soil.
The amount of grower will find
profitable to use depends to some ex
tent upon thep rice he can expect to
get for his crops, Williams added.
When prices are up, the grower
can afford to apply more fertilizer
to get the highest y;eld consistent
with good farming piactices, he con
tinued. For the major crops grown in the
State on average soils, and with a
prospect of avorage prices, Williams
recommends the following fertilizer
applications:
In coastal plain: Tobacco, 800 to
1,000 pounds of 3-8-6 to the acre,
the fertilizer mixed according to rec
ommendations of the tobacco commit
tee. Cotton, 450 to 500 pounds of
Dr. H. M. Hendrix
DENTIST
Office Houri:
9 to 12 A. M. -1:30 to S P. M.
Office Potter Building
Over the postoffice
Dr. E. F. Menius
OPTOMETRIST
Now located ir New Offices
-irr. . f
McLellan Building '
I hone 620 New Bern
-5-....;;..;.;..;..;..;...;..;-;..X"!";
Don't Let Others Fool
You
Come and See for Yourself
We Give the Best Money
Can Buy
BEAUFORT
SHOE SHOP
Next to Post Office
d C. H. BUSHALL
Fire, Health, Accident,
Automobile Insurance
Real Estate Bought
Sold Rented
Will Write Your Bond
RELIABLE COMPANIES,
GOOD SERVICE
Hill Bldf. Beaufort, N. C
Dial 415-1
4-8-4. Corn and small grains, 250 to
300 pounds of 4-8-4. Legumes, 200
to 300 pounds of 2-8-4. Late sweet
potatoes, 600 to 800 pounds of
3-8-8.
Where soils have been built up
with legumes, Williams added, the
amount of nitrogen in the fertilizer
can be reduced slightly.
Good Seed Necessary
For Profitable Crop
RALEIGH, Mar. 17 "Bed the
best sweet potato seed you can get
now and next fall and winter you will
get better prices for your crop.
'Good seed not only produces
greater yields per acre, it also helps
produce good quality potatoes that
command top prices," said L. P.
Watson, extension horticulturist at
State College.
This year growers should give more
attention to quality than to quanti
ty, he added, as a big crop is in pros
pect and only the best potatoes will
bring good prices.
A buyer recently told Watson he
paid 25 cents more a basket for good
grade potatoes than for the run-out,
low quality potatoes most f aimers
were offering him from the 1936
crop.
The average yield per acre last
year was 90 bushels.
BABY CHICKS
FOR SALE
Rhode Island Reds
Finest Strain
$10 Per Hundred
200 Now Ready for Delivery
RAYMOND DICKINSON
at James Rumley Feed Store
Front Street Beaufort
Thought
By showing thought and a
truly sympathetic atti
tude, our service always
wins appreciation of fam
ily and friends.
The perfect precision and
the quiet smoothness of
ceremonies conducted Iby
us, prove we have a thoro
training and understand
ing of our professional
duties.
Phone:
Night 37S-6 Day 37S-1
Adair & Rice
BEAUFORT, N. C
HaveMoney
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At 25 cents more on the basket,
good grade potatoes would bring
$22.50 more per acre, Watson point
ed out.
But this is not all, he continued.
Good seed would produce a greater
yield and the grower would get much
more than $22.50 per acre over the
returns for inferior potatoes.
A Chowan County grower who
planted the No. 1 strain of Porto
Ricos last year got 248.9 bushels of
No. 1 grade potatoes from each acre,
Watson pointed out.
A Pamlico farmer planted Porto
Rico strain No. 1 and got 375 bush
els to the acre ; a New Hanover grow
er harvested 437 bushels from an
acre.
No. 1 potatoes are now worth $1.
a bushel, Watson added. "You can
figure for yourself whether it paid
them to plant good seed."
F. P. Markham of Pasquotank
county planted six acres of new per
manent pasture last week.
Does Bladder Irritation
Get You Up?
Results guaranteed, 25c. If not
pleased, in four days go back and get
your 25c Flush the bladder as you
would the bowels. Help nature elimi
nate impurities and excess acids
which can cause irritation that re
sults in getting up nights, scanty
flow, frequent desire, burning, back
ache, or leg pains. Get buchu leaves,
juniper oil, etc., made into little
green tablets. Just say Bukents to
any druggist. F. R. BELL, Drug
gist. 4tM25
Dr. F. E. Hyde
GENERAL PRACTICE
Office at Residence, Ann Street
Office Honrs:
10 A. H. to 12 M. 3 to 5 P. M.
and by Appointment
Phone 338-1
MH"M"M"M'W'W"tlW"l t'H1
DR. J. O. BAXTER
NEW BERN, Nf C
Practice Limited to tke
Eye Only
Dr. L. W. Moore I
GENERAL PRACTICE
Office Potler' Emergency
Hospital
OFFICE HOURS:
9-12 a. m. 2 to 4 p. m.
and by appointment X
Phones T
Office 443-1 Rei.370-1
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BOXES FOR RENT