Ocracoke Island Beckons Vacationists And Sport Fishermen Stories and Ads on Pages 2 & 3 SEAFOOD Mrt. 6-30-33 Shriir.p 6c Croaks lc S Crabs 40.60c, Plrs 2ic Flounders 3c 6c Blues 5c S. Trout 6c S. Mackerel 5c ANNUAL BANKER PONY ROUNDUP ON OCRACOKE IS. JULY 4th Carteret County's Oldest NewserEstablished 1912 Volume XXVII 8 Pages This Week The Beaufort News, Thursday, JuiHO, 1938 5c Per Copy Number 27 o o Judge Webb Sends J. Bunyan To Roads "John Bunyan" Goes To Roads For Six Months MRS T1LLEY MISSED CAT AND HUSBAND Judge Paul Webb proved that he was a mighty popu lar man during the recent Primary Election by chalk. .,n an overwhelming vic tory over his two opponents. I Rut since Recorders Court, on Tuesday, the Moreneaa Citv Jurist is even more pop ular, in Beaufort at any rate. In court on Tuesday Judge V ebb after hearing the evidence in the case of State ve. J. Bunyon Con gleton, found the defendant guilty and gave him six months sentence on the roads. A State Prison Camp of ficial came down for John on Wed nesday. He matriculated for his six months course on the roads to day. For several months now, ev er since he served his last prison term many local persons have been hoping that something would happen to get Fublic Nuisance No. 1 out of town again. It happened last week-end, when Congleton, al legedly, in a drunken condition threw an empty beer bottle at Cas tillius Anderson, colored employee of the Beaufort Ice Company. The bottle missed Castillius, and broke on the brick walls of the building. For breaking the bottle, the peace, etcetera, the defendant was ar rested and found guilty in Re corder's Court Tuesday, and Jud;;c "Webb sentenced him tQ.sj months And Beaufort thanks Judge Webb. Viola Tilley who lives in the large stucco filling station out in Morehead Bluffs section proved that she was a poor marksman, re gardless of whether she was shoot ing at her husband or the cat. She missed both. In Court she was charged with shooting or at tempting to shoot her husband. Probable cause was found and she was bound over to the October term of Superior Court under bond of $300. Mrs. Tilley claimed that she was shooting at the cat and not her husband and the thing she was shooting with looked like a museum piece of some sort. It was a double-barrelled pistol. A. D. Jamieson was found guil ty and ordered to pay the costs on a charge of reckless driving. The case against Tom Martin for aid ing and abbetting Jamieson was nol prossed. It was charged that Jamieson struck a CCC truck. Robert Lewis was found guilty of drunken driving but was ordered to pay the costs when convicted of reckless driving. Judgment is pending until next Tuesday in the case of Samuel Williams, charged with non-support. The charges against D. B. Oglesby was nol prossed with leave. He was char ged with theft. M. H. Pratt charged with driv ing drunk failed to appear in (Continued on uage 8) What's the Answer? Br EDWARD FINCH IT IS not really stars we see; It Is a blinding light. And that light Is not really sight but sensation. Any of the five senses when stimu lated artificially will produce the sensation for which that sense is responsible. Thus, when a blow to tht eye injures the nerves of the ye it sends to the brain a mes sage of sight Since there is really nothing there to see, it reacts In a sensation of blinding light hf UViWDO WESEE VI STARS WHEN Coast Guard Stations To Be Improved! The Public Works Admin istration this week allotted $10,000,000 for 178 projects to improve Coast Guard Sta tions throughout the nation. Allocation for North Car arolina coast guard station improvements included: Ocracoke, $142,000; Fort Macon, $33,090; Bogue In let $157,000; Hattcras In let' Station, $113,500; Cape Lookout station, $17,000 and Morehead City C. C. Rifle Range, $1,000. To Be Featured In Beach Cabaret Katharine Meier Attractive and talented Kath arine Meier of Wilmington will return to .Atlantic Beach on Fri day to be the featured attraction in the first Cabaret to be present ed in The Casino on Friday night. Miss Meier studied dancing at the New Wayburn school in New York and during her recent career has filled dancing engagements in manybDmany of the larger hotels, clubs and theatres of the country. Incidentally Miss Meier is the young lady whose pictures you have seen frequently on advertise ments issued by the Department of Conservation's publicity depart merit, telling the world about North Carolina. isyx-" a&$ j f s ' i F j" " f ) I :- - j AT ' I : ' Vkil Chamber Of Commerce Seeking FSC Allotments For Carteret County Red Cross Chapter Meets Tues. July 5 The Beaufort Chapter of the Red Cros3 will meet here next Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the home of Dr. F. E. Hyde on Ann street. Miss Katharine Myer, Red Cross Field Director of Greens boro will be present. During the meeting future plans for the lo cal Chapter will be discussed. All members are urged to be present. BIRTHS Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scy Kill, Tuesday, June 27th, i son, Charles Doy Jr. CHANNEL BASS Island's No. 1 Sport Attracts Anglers From Everywhere Getting a good sliot of sports ft.u'.ixvs s difficult for most people, but Col. Fred It. Stedman, of High Tcint aid Cciaccks, is usually successful when he b the cameraman. Pictured above ia Capt. Gary Bragg, veteran guide cf Ocracoke caught in action ai In casted out beyond the breakers of the island'3 beach, for channel bass. Surf casting is best at Ocracoke dur ing the Spring and Autumn months." Is the aurrmeriime these copper col ored beauties are usually. taken while -a'r.glers fish from boats in the sloughs and on the shoah of Pamlico Sound. (Photo by Fred Stedman Cut used through Courtesy News and Observer.) National Audubon Society President On Beaufort Visit Dr. Gilbert Pearson, the most outstanding ornithologist living to day is spending a short vacation in Beaufort. He arrived Wednesday afternoon, accompanied by Dr. H. II. Brimley, curator of the State Museum in Raleigh and Mrs. Brimley. While in Beaufort they will visit the Carolina Marine Laboratory where WCUNC students are now studying biology. They will also visit the new Duke Laboratory. They will stop on Fiver's Island at the U. S. Fisheries Laboratory dormitories. Dr. Pearson is president of Nat ional Audubon Society, an organ ization whose members help pro tect birds. In Beaufort Dr. Pear son will probably visit the Lenox ville Heron and Egret rookery, which is under the supervision of Audubon Warden Dave Godwin. Col. Dickinson Here Col. Fairleigh S. Dickinson of Rutherford, N. J. arrived in Beau fort Wednesday to spend a short vacation here. He is a native of Carteret County and makes fre quent visits to the coast. He is stopping at the Inlet Inn. Tenant Farmers May Be Financed By Federal Funds When the announcement was made in the newspapers of the State this week that North Carolina would re ceive an allotment of $1, 318,965 for Farm Security Administration activiti e s during the fiscal year, the Chamber of Commerce im mediately wrote a letter to the State and Regional Di rectors of the FSC in Ral eigh sEekir.s informalix: (Continued on p-ge 8) FISHING IN OCRACOKE SURF .SKSiai- ,s N ODDITIES OF WEEK Four Legged Chick Lost week-end when Mrs. Thomas Parkins Fiymouth Rock hatched out a new fami ly ono of the chickl had four legs. That is Oddity No. 1 of the current week. Tho chick a Plymouth Rock, was brou cht to The Beaufort News office for the editor to see, by Reuben Whitohurst. The chicken is getting along fine and shows no signs of dying. Carrot Quins Mrs. Cillikin of Beaufort RFO brought the Editor one of the most unusual carrots ever grown in this County. Instead of one carrot, it was five, each being perfectly de veloped and looking very gro tesque. The five-in-one car rot was Oddity No. 2. TIDE TABLE Information as to the tide at Beaufort is given in thi3 column. The figures are ap proximately correct and bas ed on tables furnished by the U. S. Geodetic Survey. Some allowances must be made for variations in the wind and also with respect to the locality, that is wheth er near the inlet or at the head of the estuaries. 1 HIGH LOW Friday, July 1 11:01 AM. 4:45 AM. 5:06 PM. Saturday, July 2 11:18 AM. 5:37 AM. 11:55 PM. 6:06 PM. Sunday, July 3 12:11 AM. 6:32 AM. 12:50 PM. 7:10 PM. Monday, July 4 1:03 AM. 7:27 AM. 1:47 PM. 8:14 PM. Tuesday, July 5 1:58 AM. 8:23 AM. 2:47 PM. 9:14 PM. Wednesday, July 6 3:01 AM. - 9:16 AM. 3:47 PM. 10.11 PM. Thursday, July 7 :31 AM. 10:03 AM. 4:14 PM. 11:04 PM. Precinct YD Club Will Meet July 15 Young Democrats of Beaufort I'recinct will meet at Town Hall in Beaufort on Friday nirht July i,", for the purpose of nominating County officers and a precinct chairman for the coming year, it was announced today by P. A. Lewi, Precinct Chairman. All members cf the Precinct Club are ji'S'-'d to be present and the gen-ci-vl public too, may attend if they wi h, It was stated. Professor Quiz Aycock Brown, editor of The Beaufort News will be master of ceremonies in The Casino on At lantic Beach tonight. He will take the role of Professor Quiz and ask questions to teams made up of The Beaufort Chamber of Com merce and The Morehead City Junior Chamber of Commerce. Professor Quiz nights will be pre sented each Thursday. Cash and other prizes will be awarded. Cargo Of Cattle This Week Beach To Present Gala Program Over July 4th Week-End i Special programs for the Fourth of July holiday week-end at At lantic Beach have been annuonced by Manager E. G. Petry, in addi tion to the regular bathing, boat ing, bowling, bingo, fishing, danc ing, card playing and other sum mer attractions at this "Safest Surf along the Coast." Friday will be Cabaret Night, with a floor show, and on the next night there will be a big holiday dance, featuring a famous dance team. Sunday afternoon there is to be the regular daily band con cert from 4 to 5 p. m. on the board walk. For Monday night there will be a big Fourth of July dance, with girls admitted free. Tuesday night there will be the second of the se ries of weekly Girl Break dances, with boys admitted free. Frank La Marr and his New York orchestra v.ill continue fur (Continued on pag- 8) Salaries OfWPA Employees Boosted New Funds For Fisheries Lab On river's Is. The United States Fisher ies Station on Pivers Island will receive $24,800 immedi ately for the improvement of grounds, breakwaters and the terrapin propagation pens, it was announced in Washing ton this week. The $24,800 will be PWA funds and the actual expenditure of the monies will begin at an early date. Dr. Herbert F. Prytherch, director of the Fisheries Sta tion stated that in addition to the PWA allotment WPA funds would be supplemented to bring the total in Federal funds for improvements to $35,300. Concrete terrapin propagation pens which will also serve as breakwaters for the island will take most of the funds. To Give Lecture At Duke Lab DR. H. L. BLOMQUIST Dr. Hugo Leander Bloinquist, native of Sweden, graduate and post-graduate of the University of Chicago and since 1920 a member of the faculty of Trinity (now Duke University) will deliver a lecture on North Carolina Vegeta tion at the Duke Laboratory on Fiver's Island tonight at 7::30 o'clock. His lecture is one in a series of talks on scientific sub jects being given at the local unit of Duke this summer. Students of the summe,r school biology units in Beaufort and townspeople and tourists here are invited to attend the lecture. ART EXHIBIT The public is invited to view an art exhibit of WCUNC Summer students at House Drug Store. Arrived From Ocracoke Much Livestock Is Being Moved To Mainland The first of two cargoes of cattle and other livestock to be removed from Ocracoke Island to the mainland ar rived in Beaufort on Tuesday aboard a barge owned by Capt. John Beveridge and towed by two of his boats. The shipment of stock, first of its kind to ever be transferred to mainland in such a manner, was under the supervision of David Beverage, George Norcom. and Pete Kowsholtz. In the cargo were 90 adult cattle, 45 calves and 42 sheep. The stock had been purchased at Ocracoke by Mr. Kowsholtz, from Albert Styron. Upon arrival in Beaufort the stock was transferr ed aboard stock trucks and shipped to a farm near Baltimore. At that place the stock will be condi tionad perhaps for butchering. The scow will be towed again (Continued on page 8) r uMM if Unskilled Workers Will Receive $5 Increase Relief workers employed on WPA projects in Carter et County will share in tne $5 monthly increase ordered by Federal Director Harry Hopkins for 13 Southern States this week. While no official notice of the increase has been released to this newspaper, news dispatches from Washington indicated that the pay boost would be inaugurated July 1, to start the fiscal year.. The pay boost will apply to both skilled and unskilled work ers. It has been estimated that the increase in Carteret County will bring the monthly salary to $26. 12 for unskilled labor as compar ed to $21.12 per month as at pres ent. Other counties getting the same boost as Carteret" include Onslow, Jones, Pamlico and Greene. In Craven and Lenoir the salaries will be increased to $29. At present the Lenoir and Craven unskilled WPAmen are receiving $24. The salaries are based on population of various counties. New Furniture Firm Opens For Business New and used quality furniture is being offered by the Eastman Furniture Company which has just opened here in the Ramsey Build ing which was formerly occupied by Willis Hardware Company. George Eastman of Raleigh is ow ner of the new local firm. Until he came to Beaufort to established his furniture business, Mr. Eastman was connected with the Nash-Kelvinator Corporation as traveling representative with headquarters in Raleigh. At the local store Mr. Eastman will be assisted by D. M. Jones who will serve as salesman. In addition to a complete line of furnitue and household equipment, the new firm will feature a cash or credit business. NELSON TO SUPERVISE BATHING AT CITY DOCK Beginning July 1, Nelson T. Lewis of the WPA Recreation pro ject will be assigned to the Inlet Inn pier to supervise the water sports for two to three hours daily except Saturday and Sunday dur ing high tides, and when the wea ther is favorable. Mr. Lewis will assist with swim ming, diving and other general supervision of Beaufort's "sea shore playground." He will see that no rough play goes on, aad will endeavor to make the bathing beach a place of fun for every body. Mr. Lewis has the support of the Mayor, Chief of Police, P. T. A. other organizations and offi cials in this phase of Beaufort's summer recreation. Fishing And All Outdoors By AYCOCK BROWN MY FRIEND Bill Sharpe of the Department of Conservation' news bureau sends out sonv splendid stories but I think he should have re-written the last paragraph of a vacation story re leased from Raleigh this week. The paragraph had to do with Gulf Stream fishing, and so that you readers of this column who know something about our blue water angling may get the significance of what I am trying to explain I reprint the paragraph under dis cussion. It follows. "FISHING IN the Gulf Stream off the coast from Southport, Fort Fisher, Wilmington, Morehead City and Beaufort, is growing steadily more popular with those who appreciate the thrill of land ing a struggling barricuda, tarpon, sailfish, or others of the many varieties of deep sea fish swept up from, warm tropical waters to within easy distance of the North (Continued from pajc 1) , i