(ifflurclieait ?to Social fobs Miss Norma Gaskill, Society Editor Phone 6-4175 Among those attending the dis trict meeting of Garden clubs in Goldsboro yesterday were Mrs. Caddie Willis. Miss Edith Broad way. Mrs. I). W. Freshwater. Mrs. Phillip Ball and Mrs. W. P. Free man. Miss Luke via Wade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wade, return ed Tuesday to Durham where she is a student ;?t Watts hospital there. Mrs. Leslie Brinson spent Mon day in Kinston. II. P. Scripture is in Sanford where he is manager of the Fair view dairy. Mrs. II. L. Joslyn was admitted to Morehead City hospital Tuesday for an operation. Mr. ami Mrs. J. F. Howard of Ilampstead spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lea. Mrs. Theodore Lewis and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mills spent last week end at Fort Jackson, S C with Re cruit William L. Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Oppen heim of Baltimore. Md.. will be the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Deyo. Mrs Paul King was hostess to her bridge club last evening. Miss Edna Williams returned Saturday from a two weeks' visit in Dallas. Tex., and Mew Mexico. Mr. Joseph Dubois of Washing ton. I). ( arrived yesterday to join his family who are now making their home here. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Chalk, jr.. and Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Collins will attend the Duke Georgia Tech. game 111 Durham 'tomorrow. Mr M. T. Mills and Mr Dick Me Clain returned Wednesday from a short business trip in Charlotte. William L. Lewis. C S Army was transferred Monday from Fort Jackson. S. C. to Camp Pickett. Va. Mr. II. P. Johnston of (irifton and Charlottesville. Va . is tin guest this week of Mrs. Paul Webb. Mr. and Mrs. Koy Murphy and Rhudy Murphy of Galax, Va., and Mr. Herman Murphy of Indianap olis, Ind . have returned to their homes after a visit with their .sis tre, Mrs. Lester A. Tilley. Mrs. E. M Dewey. Mrs. David Murray. Mrs Alan Ferebee. Mrs. Paul Webb, Mrs. C. It. Davant, and Mrs. 1). G. lie 1 1 attended the dis % trict meeting of GJrden clubs in Goldsboro yesterday. The Antonio Aguilar's. who have been living at 16 Evans street for the past year are now making their home at Cherry Point. Mrs. Robert G. Lowe of Ports mouth. Va.. will arrive today to spend the weekend with her son and daughter in law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ci. Lowe, jr. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Tolson of Ocracokc left Wednesday for Kin ston to attend the Methodist con ference after a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. E. Stamey Davis. Ethan Davis. III. is recovering from a recent illness. Mrs. Sawyer, mother of Mrs. Rob ert Wallace, is confined to her home clue to burns received during the first of this week. Rev. J. B. Willis and daughter. Miriam of llamlet, spent last week end with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Adler and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Williams. Miss Ruth Macy of Kinston .spent last weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Macy. Mr. and Mrs Jack Styron and daughter returned Monday to Lake Charles, La., after a visit with Mrs. Sty ion's mother. Mrs. I. E. Pitt man. Mrs. Styron and daughter have spent the past month here. Mr. J. Dewey Willis of Lake Charles, La., was here with his fam ily last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Sanderson re turned last evening from a month's visit in Arizona. Mr. W. C. Aldridge of Oriental .spent Monday with his daughter, Mrs. Alvin Garner. Miss Nancy Derrickson, student .it Woman's college in Greensboro, arrived last evening to spend the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Derrickson. Dr. T). J. Eure attended the Methodist conference in Kinston yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. TiHey left Wednesday for Kinston to attend the Methodist conference. Mrs. John T. Taylor of Raleigh has returned to her home after a visit with > Mrs. George Ross Pou at her summer home on Atlantic Beach. Mrs. Oliver II. Allen is in New ; Bern with her parents, Mr. and , vlrs. Harold Maxwell. , Tide Water to Conduct Cooking School November 8 ; The annual cooking school spon sored by the Home Department of j t lie Morehead City Woman's club ??nd conducted by Tide Water Pow er co., will be held at 2 o'clock j Wednesday afternoon. Nov: 8, in the Morehead City high school au | ditorium. I All members are urged to be I present. | Special Guests Entertained At Tuesday Bridge Club Mrs. Crenshaw Reed and Mrs. ,loe Keller were special guests when Miss Sara Boyd entertained her bridge club Tuesday evening. High score winner was Miss Dor othy llarrell and second high was won by Mrs. Reed. During play the hostess served soft drinks, grapes, candy, salted nuts and spiced cup cakes. Mrs. M. T. Mills Hostess To Alternoon Bridge Club Mrs. M. T. Mills entertained her bridge club Wednesday afternoon and had as special guest Mrs. A. B. Roberts. At the end of play Mrs. Mills was declared winner of high score with Mrs. S. W. Thompson winning second high and Mrs. Robert Tay lor low. The hostess served light refresh ments during progressions. HOSPITAL NOTES John Hose of Sea Level was dis charged Wednesday following treatment. Robert Taylor of Harlowe was discharged Wednesday following a tonsillectomy. Mrs. Calvin Adams of route 1 Newport was discharged Wednes day following an operation. Mrs. Robert Thompson and in fant son of Beaufort were discharg ed Wednesday. Mrs. Taylor Nelson of Morehead City was admitted Wednesday for treatment. Clyde Kd wards of Newport was admitted Tuesday to receive treat ment. Mary Eaton of route 1 Morehead City was admitted Monday for an operation. Mr. Claude Felton of Beaufort was admitted Monday for treat ment. Francis Cray of Havclock was ad mitted Monday for treatment. Mrs. William Jordan of Beaufort was admitted Monday for an oper ation. Mrs. Carlton Smith of Morehead ' City was admitted Monday for an operation. Mrs. Fred Smith of Havclock was admitted Sunday for aft oper ation. Kdmond Willis of Morehead City was admitted Tuesday for an op eration. Mrs. Pauline Hill of Beaufort was ! discharged Tuesday following a ? minor operation. Mrs. Lonnio Lewis of Morehead City was discharged Tuesday, hav ing received treatment. Mrs. Abbic Jones of Morehead Cit: was discharged Tuesday fol lowing an operation. Mrs. Vincent Karl Becton and in fant son of Harlowe were discharg ed Sunday. STORK NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wade of Morehead City announce the birth of a daughter, F.lizabcth Lucy. Sun day, Oct. 2(>, in the Morehead City hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Berlon Pittman of Morehead Cit> announce the birth of a daughter. Rita Mac, Wcdiics ! day, oit. 29, in the Morehead City | hospital. Mr. and 'Mrs. II. C. Hall, jr., of Morehead City announce the birth of a daughter, Bernice Jane, Wed nesday, Oct. 2!). in the Morehead City hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson of Beaufort announce the birth of a son, Robert Derrek, Wednesday. Oct. 29, in the Morehead City hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Mann of Newport KFI) announce the bii^h : of a daughter. Mclba Anita. Tues day, Oct. 31, in the Morehead City hospital. Gbiluary JOHN THOMAS SMALL Funeral services for John Thom as Small, 76, who died at his home at Core Creek Tuesday, Oct. 31, after a short illness were held from his home Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock, with the Rev. Louie Lewis officiating. Burial was in the family cemetery. Surviving Mr. Small arc his wife, Mrs. Mary Small, two daughters. Mrs. Stella Lane of Norfolk and Mrs. George Meades of New Bern, one son, Roland Adair Small of Beaufort RF1). one sister, Mrs. Liz zie Guthrie of Beaufort, 11 grand | children and four great grandchil dren. L N?*w? from Nov. 1--The death angel visited our community Monday evening, Oct. 23, and took from our midst Mrs. Polly Haskett. Aunt Polly, as she was fondly known, was loved by all who knew her. She leaves to mourn her passing many friends fcnd relatives. Hev. W. B. Sprinkle who has been conducting a week's meeting at the Bay View church returned , to his home Monday. [ liev. and Mrs. W. M. VVatkins are | in Chocowinity holding a two weeks' meeting there. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Owen Cot tle of Norfolk spent a while last | week with his parents, Mr. and I Mrs. Owen Cottle. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Haskett of : New Jersey have returned home i after being called home due to the | illness and death of his grand I mother. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Small and Mrs. I A L. Merrill of Norfolk spent a while recently in the community. Mrs. Gurganus of Newport spent a while recently with her daugh ter. Mrs. Ben May. Hev. and Mrs. I. N. Pierce and son of Chocowinity spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Lewis. Hev. Pierce held services at Gra ham's Chapel church in the absence of the pa;, tor, Hev. Watkins. Miss Leila Haskett returned to Camp Lee Sunday after spending a while with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. It Haskett. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Guthrie and Mrs. Ernest Davis of Markers 1 land spent a while Wednesday with Mrs. W. C. Williams. Mrs. Preston Graham and daugh ter. Alinda Sue, returned home Saturday after a trip to Providence, It I , fo visit her brother. We all hope Mr. Lee Brown who is 011 the sick list will soon be bet ter. Mrs. Leo G ask ins and children are spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brown. liev. Kuban ks will hold services at the Bay View Baptist church Sunday. Mrs. Nannie Small is spending a while with Mrs. Charlie Freeman of Bridget'in. Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Lewis and daughter, Darlene, of Morehead ( "it v spent a while Sunday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Small. Mis. Jesse Small and children of i Wilmington spent a while last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Haskett. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Smith of near New Bern spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Gilford Cannon. Mr. Owen Cottle attended union i meeting at Edwards chapel Satur day. Bridge Winners Winners in the Monday night Carteret county bridge league tour nament at the civic center were North-South, first. Bud Dixon and Harvey Hamilton, jr., second. Har ry Saunders and Jack Windley. j East-West; first. Dr. Kugene Roc i lofs and Frank Moran, second, Mrs. James D. Rumlcy and Mrs. C. R. Wheatly. Elk Carved 1 p BAKERSFIELD, Calif. ? (AP) Some 500 needy families bene fitted from a surplus of bull elks at the nearby Tupman Klk Re serve. Butchers from a meat pack ing plant volunteered to slaught er and dress the animals and over a ton of meat, carved into roasts and steaks, was distributed among the poor h/luteX Qamiltf, /Mum . . ? MAYOR GEORGE DILL, JR., AND FAMILY OF MOREHEAD CITY While's Milk takes a prominent place as Mrs. Dill serves a family meal. Ca/deAei County GUiyenl What Do Russia's Masses Know About United Nations? LAKE SUCCESS ? Russia has charged that United Nations' at tempts to halt the North Korean aggression lowered U. N. pres tige in the Soviet Union ? but it is hard to find out just how pop ular the U. N. has been there. U. N. headquarters itself doesn't have a clear idea. It has some re ports from the U. N. information center in Moscow. The reports that a certain amount of U. N. doc uments have been distributed there and that the center has had visit ors 800 last year. But the U. N. doesn't know how the documents got distributed. These fraumentary reports re veal only that the U. N. message has never been carried to Russia's millions on the same large scale as it is done in the United States, by schools, colleges, civic clubs, newspapers, radio, and voluntary organizations that work for sup port of United Nations efforts. A recent U. N. document, en titled 'Teaching about the Unit ed Nations and the Specialized Agencies." carries 75 pages 'of re ports how the U. N. is brought home to the people in western countries. It is a report to the ec onomic and social council meeting in Geneva, signed by Trygve Lie, U. N. secretary - general, and Jaime Torres Bodet, director - general of Unesco. One paragraph says "Information on the publication of materials on the United Nations has been re ceived from White Russia, Czecho slovakia. Poland and the Soviet Union. No details have been given as to the administrative machin ery through which these are being distributed, but it is assumed that responsibility lies with the Minis try of Education in each county." Also the report docs not list any activity during 1949, in any iron curtain country, except Czech oslovokia. There it makes a fleet ing reference to U. N. reports form ing a part of history and civics les sons in the schools. Some up-to-date unofficial fig ures, however, indicate that about 33,000 U.N. booklets and other literature and several do/en doc umentary films were given some distribution in Russia through the U. N. information center in Mos cow. i There are 16 such U. N. informa- ' tion centers in the world. Most of these centers not all ? are not nationals of the country where they are stationed. The head of the Moscow U. N. information center is a Russion, Michael S. Vavilov, who used to be head of the Russian Embassy in formation section in Washington, lie was sent to Moscow au acting director when the center opened. One former Moscow correspon dent (Joseph Newman, of the New York Herald Tribune) now stat ioned in Berlin reported last June that few Russians know the office , exists. Lie denied that after he came back from Moscow on his save-the-U. N. tour of Europe. He Mansfield Park Housing Project Grows Rapidly Sixteen houses under construc tion in Mansfield Park, located west of Morehead City adjacent to the Bogue Sound club, are two thirds complete and plans are un derway to start on 15 more, L. H. Vickers ot the Carteret Realty company announced yesterday. Of the 15 to he constructed, 10 will he available to the public. Vickers said. The other five and the It) under construction now have already been sold. Newport Seniors Begin Rehearsal On Annual Play The senior class of Newport high school has begun rehearsal on its annual play, "Brides to Burp." ?Vrs. Emma W. Wade, class adviser, is directing the production. The three-act farce was written by Jay Tobias. It will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 17, in the school audi torium. The cast is as follows: Miss Le titia Gundy, Louise Jones; Gilroy Garfield Gundy, Francis Mason; Clarice Borland, Ann Henderson; Gertrude Borland, Christobel Can non; Harold Hazard, Ernest Gar ner; Frank Fulton, Paul Jenkins. Sue Prentis, Nancy Hyder; Hotchkiss, Clifton Piner; Sapolia Pipp. Ann Dudley; Madame Gas j parilla, Pearl Fodric; Dr. Jonesby, I Burton Lockey. Paul Jenkins and Geneva Rhue, seniors, were crowned king and queen of the high school and Jos eph Mann and Eula Warren, third graders, were crowned prince and princess of the elementary school at the Hallowe'en carnival Friday night. The carnival was sponsored by ihe Newport PTPL Construction began in early Scp pacc .since then. Workmen with Batton and Pickler, Edenton con tractors, who are doing the build ing, have worked from dawn to dusk each day. The public has reacted most fa vorably to the development of Mansfield Park, Vickers stated. He said favorable comment has been received from the general public and. most surprising ol all, from the workmen themselves. '"We had some skilled workmen come here from other FIIA pro jects that have been completed," Vickers explained. "All of them re marked on the superior grade of construction and said it was at least 40 per cent better than on other FHA projects they had | seen." When completed the develop ment will have paved streets, a fresh water lake, two parks, a swim ming pool, a municipal dock, a shopping center and many other advantages. There are 87 lots laid out. Plans for later development call for at least 250 more to be surveyed and laid out if public demand is great enough, Vickers stated. 86.4T PROOF 'LAIRD & C0.. Scobeyville, N.i. tember and has moved at a rapid LAIRD'S APPLE BRANDY % Quart nual half-price sale ! -*? ? < Hllrki/nA weather lotion BtGUlAHY SJOO limited Hm? only For "soft-touch" hands, thrilling to behold, use famous Dorothy Perkins Weather Lotion. This extra-rich skin lotion soothes . . . smooths . . protects! Soaks in quickly; never sticky or greasy; delicately acented. Buy it now? save half! GUTHRIE-JONES DRUG CO. Phone 2-4981 FRONT ST. BEAUFORT said Muscovites saw the blue and white U. N. flag flying over the center at 15 Hohlovski Pereulok, Moscow, and that U. N. officials used the offices on their visits. Lie did not say then, however, how much the Russian people themselves used the center. New information from Moscow asserts that ?ordinary citizens were among the 800 visitors to the center dur ing 1949 and said that they saw U. N. material there without any prior censorship. The 800 visitors in Moscow com ?pari' with 1,400 reported during 1949 at the center in Prague, anoth er iron curtain area; and with 1,700 at the Hans center and 1.000 at the Copenhagen center. 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