THE BEAUFORT NEWS BEAUFORT, N. C. Thursday, June 25, 1942 WilMTT ADDS "OI'l'OKTIJXlTY KNOCKS HERE" FCR SALE ONE OUT-BOARD motor, 2 horse power, Johnson Sea Horse. May be seen at Western Auto Supply, Beaufort. J25J2 OLD MATTRESSES MADE NEW. Inner Springs Mattress Co., cor. New & Burn St., phone 502-J, New Bern, N. C. Jun2o POEM WANTED Some one in Beaufort has a book f poems in which may be fouml a ,oem entitled "Tommie's Prayer" which won for me at one time a ,7ckl medal. Will owner of thi. poom kindly write me at 25 Na tional Ave., New Bern, N. C. Mrs F. Clark Robinson. adv. WANTED ONE UGLY MALE bull dK, puppy preferred. Write to Beaufort News. WANTED: PERSON TO LEARN dark room work not subject to draft. Apply to the Photo Shop, Beaufort, N. C. FOR RENT FRONT BEDROOM, suitable for couple. Available July 1. Mrs. Hubert Fodrie, 122 Craven St., Beaufort. Dial 418-1. WANTED SECOND HAND commode with tank, and bath tub. Must be in good condition and reasonable. Mrs. Carrie Anderson, 403 Turner St., Beaufort. FOR SALE USED SETTEE. Call B-r3-G if interested. EXPERT PIANO TUNING. 16 yrs. with Baldwin Piano Co. Equip ped to render any service to any make of piano. All work guaran teed. Address before July 1. (. has. Goodrich, Beaufort, N. C. 3t Jll FOR SALE OR RENT ROW boats, sail boats and out-board motor-boats. Paul's Marine Ser vice. Graydon Paul, owner, Front Street. Phone B-322-6. FOR SALE TWO-PIECE OVER- stuffed living room suit, in good condition. Mrs. Lillian Hendrix. Phone 385-1. APARTMENTS FOR RENT Woolard Apartment House, Live Oak St., Beaufort. MORE ABOUT RUBBER (Continued From Pag One) MORE ABOUT PROBLEMS (Continued from paga 1) lands from which we got more than 90 percent of our rubber, we must be very careful of the rubber we have. One way of making our stec ; of crude rubber last as long as v ossible is to mix the crude with a percentage of reclaimed rub'ier made from scrap. This pro duc. s rubber up to Army stan dards five old tires or 80 hot water bottles or fourteen 20-foot lengths of garden hose will supply .he amount of reclaimed rubber used in the rubber parts of a 37 VIM gun carriage. And the re laimed rubber used in a flying fortress could be supplied by 20 kires or 320 hot water bottles or .'6 20-foot lengths of hose. Guns nd Mmbers will win the war. .'.$4 hurry them off the produc- yn line by taking your scrap rub r collection to the nearest fill ; g station Now! Rubber There's good rubber in that orn out tire, that split hot water ottle. The U. S. rubber industry r lways has used a certain amount f reclaimed rubber rubber . lade from scrap in its products. Automobile tires contain from : A-enty-five to fifty per cent re v !aiming rubber, depending upon ices, substantial amounts were iixed with new crude rubber to lake your overshoes and shower urtains. Scrap rubber is poten ially as good as new rubber in nany respects. Now it's needed o bridge the rubber shortage created when the Japs overran 'lalaya and The Netherlands' F.ast "ndies. Scour your attic, cellar ; nd garage today, hurry your col ection off to the nearest filling . tation. Rubber Ilo'w much junk rubber is lying iround your house? How many iroken hot water bottles and old ivershoes and worn-out tires? icrap rubber has a wartime job to do. Scrap rubber refined into re 'laimed rubber and mixed with rude rubber from our stockpile vill help keep the wheels rolling oward victory! All the reclaimed ubber needed to manufacture the rubber parts of a pursuit plane i-ould come from three discatded tires or nine 20-foot lengths of garden hose. The reclaimed rub ber parts of a two-ton Army truck could be refined from six tires or 96 hot water bottles or eighteen 20-foot lengths of rubber hose. Vn old pair of four-buckle arctics puld n'ovide enoueh reclaimed rubber for an Army raincoat and an inner tube would yield enough or ten civilian gasmasks. Get our scrap rubber collection to the nearest filling station now! Rubber Rubber reclaimed from scrap always has been an important cmce of material for the U. S. .lubber Industry. For a long while 'rom a third to a fourth of all the ubber processed each year has been reclaimed rubber. Reclaimed .ubber mixed with new crude rub ber from our stockpile will make good, sturdy rubber articles for military and essential civilian use. Now, with the Japs in control of the sources of more than 90 per cent of our normal crude rubber imports, scrap rubber is more im portant than ever before. We need :very ounce we can scrape up, to make our stockpile of crude rub ber last. Now is the time to get vour collection of scrap rubber lown to the nearest filling station. zone chairmen for Morehead City and Beaufort met at the Civic Cen ter in Morehead City on June 17 and after organizing a planning committee selected the name of "Women's Defense and Health League." Mrs. Eunice N. Tyler, Health Educator of the United Slates Public Health Service, was pres ent to offer suggestions and assist in the planning. Dr. C. P. Stevick, County Health Officer, acted as chairman of the combined meet ing. The following program was outlined : 1. To make Carteret County the healthiest County in North Caro lina by improving and protecting the health of every man, woman and child. 2. To organize the women of the county into neighborhood tudy groups that will be ready for any emergency and that will take an active part in solving defense problems. The following plant of action was decided upon: 1. All chairmen will meet once a month to receive instructions and review materials. Reports of the activities of the neighborhood erouns will be heard. 2. Every woman in the County will be asked to join a neighbor hood study ,?roup. They will meet one hour a month to discuss ,-ieaith and other defense problems, see movinar pictures and receive pamphlets on the topic under discussion. The group decided to carry out an immunization survey during the remainder of this month and to begin the study of nutrition in July. The survey will be carried out by house to house visits of each sector chairman to the fami lies in her neighborhood. The re ports will be analyzed and the statistics presented to the next meeting of the League. A moving picture was shown at the end of Wednesday's meeting in Morehead City. Movies will play an important part in the activities of the League. A movie projector with sound equipment will be a vailable by appointment from the County Health Department for 1 use at the neighborhood roup ' study periods. Films and litera I ture will also be available through l the Health Department. Mrs. Tyler will be present to as sist in leading many of the study groups It is believed that this new or ganization can be made invaluabl to the defense effort. are contacted by private physic ians, by mail or by follow-up work er. Case Holding 1. 1 oports of all cases diagnos ed are reported to Health Depart ment and recorded. Lases are re ported from: (a) Physicians, (b) Selective Service Board, (c) Health Department examinations, (d) Reports from other Health Departments county and state. 2. Reports.of regularity of treat ment of allpatients in county go through health department, (a) Physicians, (b) Health Depart ment Clinics. 3. Delinquents revealed by this record are followed up by mail or follow-up worker. 4. State laws, (a) Marriage law, (b) Food handler and domestic servant law, (c) Examination of suspicious cases, (d) Treatment of infected individuals. Case Treatment 1. Private Physicians. 2. Health Department, (a) White clinic, (b) Colored clinic, (c) Mo bile clinic, (d) New clinic under consideration. 3. Institutions, (a) Samracan, (b) Industrial School in Kinston, (c) State Prisons. 4. Dispersing drugs by Health Department to private physic;ans. Public Education 1. Talks and Lectures, (a) Mo vies, (b) Schools, etc. 2. Literature distributed, (a) Patients, (b) Meetings. 3. Exhibits, etc. 4. Results of Education, (a) Any program a failure without in tensive education, (b) Directly af fects case finding and case hold ing. Prerention of Venereal Diseases 1. Suppression of prostitution. 2. Prophylactic stations, (a) Army, (b) Of questionable use for civilians. MORE ABOUT DUKE (Continued from nae 1) The tin used in a single automo bile, about 3 1-2 pounds, would make eighty No. 2 food cans, or enough for a whole year's allot ment of tinned food for a U. S. soldier. College of Pennsylvania and did under graduate work at Mt. Hol yoke. Miss Eloise Johnson of Glen Burnie, Maryland an ecological study of marine agar-digestin bacteria. This will be thesis for master's degree. She attends Duke University where she also did un dergraduate work. R. IL Holzworth of Syracuse, N. Y., is studying the respiration of turtles for a master's thesis. He attends Duke University and took undergraduate work at Syracuse University. J. M. Davis of Terre Haute, In diana, is studying the larval stages of marine polychaete worms for a master's thesis. He took under graduate work at Indiana State and at present attends Duke Uni versity. D. P. Gordon of Miami, Fla., is studying the marine plankton. He attended the University of Florida. H. J. Humm, resident investiga tor, is studying the possibilities of producing agar-agar, alginic acid and other products from the sea weeds of the Beaufort region. Prior to the war nearly all our agar was imported from Japan. It is now being made in California. This product is of great import ance to hospitals where it is used to grow and study disease-producing bacteria. Mr. Humm attended the University of Miami for un dergraduate work and later Duke University. Reginald Hawkins and Randolph Johnson, both of Beaufort, are as sisting in research work and doing maintenance work at the station for the summer. Hawkins just fin ished bis first year at Johnson C. Smith University at Charlotte, where he was laboratory assistant in biology. He plans to enter med ical school. Johnson recently re ceived a B. S. degree, major in biology, from Greensboro Agricul biology, from Greensboro Agricul- r.2ilk Peas Flour Colonial Eraporated Early June Green Pender's Best "Enriched" 3 2 12 Tall Cans No. 2 Cans Lb. Bag 25 25 61 tural and Technical College at Greensboro. Three additional research stu dents are expected to arrive at the station within the next week or so: Louise Randall A study of the polyps of the Beaufort region. Master's thesis. Has been teach ing this past year at Limestone College, in South Carolina. Un dergraduate work at Stetson Uni versity, DeLand, Fla. Home town, Datona Beach, Fla. Madeline Hill A study of plant succession on dredge - produced fills in the vicinity of Beaufort. Master's thesis. Home town, Wash ington, D. C. Josephine Bierman Plankton of the marine waters of Beaufort. Master's thesis. Home town, Washington, D. C. Dr. James Beal of the Duke For estry Department, and son Ray mond, visited the station over the weekend. They are on a trip col lecting destructive bark beetles of southern timber trees for future study. Dr. Beal is a forest en tomologist. Dr. Bert Cunningham of the Duke Zoology Department and Dr. Willard Berry of the Geology De partment were at the Fisheries Station over the weekend. Dr. Cunningham is working on the hormones of sea turtles. Dr. A. S. Pearse, director of the Duke Station, will return to Dur ham on Friday. He expects to be back at the station about two weeks later. He will offer a course in animal ecology during the sec ond six weeks. At the same time Dr. H. J. Oosting will teach plant ecology. Last Saturday night the first of the weekly social gathernigs of the Duke colony was held in the mess hall. Following card games, prizes were awarded and each person did a stunt. Dr. Pearse sang two hu morous solos. The following is the seminar program for the first six weeks. Dr. Pearse inaugurated the series last Wednesday with a description of his travels and work in Nigeria on the Yellow Fever Commission. His lecture was illustrated with over 100 slides. June 17 The work of the Beau fort Biological Station of the Unit ed States Fish and Wildlife Serv ice H. F. Prytherch. June 24 Work at the Beaufort Marine Laboratory of Duke Uni versity C. G. Bookout. July 1. Observation on Beau fort Polycheates Martha Clark. Observations on Beaufort Mol luscs Hulda Magalhaes. SJuly 8 Plankton at Miami Beach, Fla. Donald Gordon. Polycheate Larvae J. M. Davis. July 15 To be announced. Anyone interested is invited to attend. Not everybody with a dollar p to spare can ahoot a run straight bat everybody can shoot straight to the bank and buy War Bonds. Buy your 10 every pay day. Are you entitled to wear a "target" lapel buttonT You re U you are investing at v -j- t- - - vui iii come In War Bonds every pay day. It's your badge of patriotism. BUY U. S. DEFENSE BONDS AND STAMPS MORE ABOUT STEVICK ((Continued From Page One) Lost and found columns of Tokio newspapers are crowd ed these days. Every time an American bays a War Bond, the Japs lose face. Buy your 10ft every pay day. records on 300 cases that are treat ed outside the county or by private physicians. Before showing the Rotarians a film "Know For Sure," an educa tional sound-movie prepared by the United States Public Health Service, Dr. Stevick outlined the Carteret County Health Depart ment's extended program for ve nereal disease control. The pro- gram includes the following points: Case Finding 1. Food handler examinations. 2. Pre-natal examinations. 3. Marriage examinations. 4. Draft examinations. 5. Contact examinations. 6. Health Department examina tions of prostitutes, prisoners, etc. 7. Suspected cases. Health De partment: School children with eye symptoms, mental defectives, etc. Physicians: Rashes, primary les sons, etc. 8. New cases are diagnosed by combined physical and laboratory examinations: Wasserman tests and microscope. All positive cases DROMEDARY GINGER BREAD MIX, pkj 21c CALIFORNIA APRICOTS, No. 2 1-2 can 19c BLENDED FRUIT JUICE, 2 6-oz. cans ... 9c TENDER SKINLESS FRANKS, lb 27c Zion Fresh Fruit FIG BARS 2 lbs. 27c Sugar Ripe PRUNES 2-lb. pkg. 21c Jello Freezing Mix For Ice Cream 2 17 Northern- 3R 17 Scott's 1 Duke's PAPER TOWELS MAYONNAISE Home-Made 16-Or. Jar Roll 10 29 r U V V C 17 MILK FED It FRYERS . lB- LB. V I FRESH Watermelons PEACHES 6y y irrfttTTtrcn BEAUFORT THEATRE Dial B-483-1 COMFORTABLE COOL AT ALL TIMES Today and Friday "PARIS CALLING" with RANDOLPH SCOTT - ELIZABETH BERGNER Plus News and Specialty. Saturday Double Feature "THAT NIGHT IN RIO" with ALICE FA YE - DON AMECHE "TONTO BASIN OUTLAWS" with RANGE BUSTERS Plus Chapter of RIDERS OF DEATH VALLEY. Sunday - Monday - Tuesday "BALL OF FIRE" with BARBARA STANWYCK - GARY COOPER Gehe Krupa and Orchestra Plus News. Jack Pot $150 Wednesday "IT HAPPENED IN FLATBUSH" (Story of Brooklyn Dodgers Ball Club) with LOYD NOLAN - CAROL LANDIS WATCH FOR "Ten Gentlemen From West Point" lt(mttttttltttMtMMt.tltt!!tillll!tI!t18liHHimtHlLa - " ""I IT Qb M Qb (BIMdD ATT IT WILL BE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE TO SELL YOUR TOMATOES THROUGH THE AUCTION MARKET t GUEST PRICE MID AT IMEET 4 SALES DAILY AT 10 A.M. 11:30 A.M. 1:30 P.M. 3 P.M. to 7 P.M. i Wednesday, June 24 $1.95 Per Bu. THIS WEEK GET MORE MONEY FOR YOUR TOMATOES BY SELLING AT AUCTION Auction Market Located At LENOXVILLE ROAD & ATLANTIC HIGHWAY Beaufort North Carolina 3S IttM 1 - I f t

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