Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Oct. 2, 1951, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
NEWS-TIMES OFFICE 504 Arandall St Morehead City Phone 6-4175 CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES 2l. 40th YEAR, NO. 79. TWO SECTIONS TEN PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1951 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Morehead Reverberates Under ?Sex Club' Exposure CRDavanl Heads Countywide Civil Defense Program County Board Swamped Yesterday with Tax Mat ters; Road Okayed C. R. Davant, Morehead City, was named county civil defense chairman by the county board yes terday morning at the court house. A request for appointment of a county civil defense chairman was forwarded to the county by E. Z. ? fones, state civil defense chairman As the result of letters sent to delinquent tax payers, the county fcoard was swamped yesterday with citizens saying they had already paid "those taxes" or saying that they didn't owe them, or asking a 75 per cent reduction! Action on purchase of a *3,600 photostat machine for the regis ter of deeds office was deferred until the next meeting but inside 'painting of the first floor of the c lurt house, at a cost of $550, was I iproved. At the request of Mrs. Blanche \ lllis, Beaufort, the county board a reed to reduce taxes on the boat, L adsay C. Warren, owned by her d ceased husband. Since the fed tfal government seized the boat for >s*e, Mrs. Willis said she had re c?ved little, if any income from it During 1950 and the board agreed thfct her taxes should be reduced pijportionately, in relation to the time it was being operated by her huiband. \ Tax Written Off Bite to a mistake in the tax of fice, \ $13.91 tax owed on lot 10, squarrapl, Morehead City, was writ ten ofp subject to approval by J. F Duncan, delinquent tax collec tor, Request for releasing owner of the property, Mrs. Hodge, from ( paying the tax, was made by S. A Chalk, Morehead City realtor The case of L. L. Willis, Bettie, who claimed he owed taxes ftnly from 1932-1933. was referred to Duncan for investigation, and set tlement of $150 in the case of W. J. Merrill, Beaufort route 1, was See DAVANT, Page 6 I Fireworks Cost / I One Boy $45 Fine I Attorney Claud R. Wheatly jr ? told Mayor George Dill in Morc ? head City Municipal court Monday I that Robert F. Hudgins was the I only one of the four Beaufort H youths who fired firecrackers with ? In the town limits two weeks ago. I The charge had been brought ? against all four. I Testimony revealed that the ? lour boys, Virgil L. White, Hubert ? C. Smith, Ralph L. Daniels, and ? Hudgings, had driven to Morehead ? City in a borrowed car. After en ? tering the city limits, Hudgins ad ? mitted throwing several firecrack ? ers from the moving automobile. I Mayor Dill fined Hudgins $45 ? plus costs, for violating a city anti I firecracker ordinance. ? The case againat Miss Mary Gas ? kill, of N. 11 ?t, was dismissed ? for insufficient evidence. Miss ? Gaskill told the court she knew ? nothing about the two pinta of ? bootleg whiskey firemen found in I the wall of her home when it par Ij'al'y burned the evening of Sept. I Aasiatant police chief, Hubert I v- i"' ,estlticd "?at the side I ?9>r<"n8 of the house was in auch I "?repair that the liquor could ? have been placed in the wall from ? the outside I Mrs. Edna Farrior, 2004 Shepard |?t., waa fined $10 plus costs for ? causing the car driven by Mr*. Wil ? ma C. Mathis to collide with-her ?own. Mrs. Farrior was driving ?dowT1 the wrong side of the street ?Sept. 28 when the accident oc curred. police aaid. Tanker, Naval Transports, Arrive ai Morehead City , The Wallace E. Pr?tt, tanker from Baytown. Tex., sailed this morning for its home port. The Pratt arrived in Morehead City yesterday with a cargo of gasoline and fuel oil. The tanker. Kern Hills, from Aruba, NWI, will arrive next Tuesday, Oct. S, with asphalt and fuel oil for the Standard Oil The United States Navy cargo transport, Capricornus, will sail irom Morehead City this morning. The Capricornus, and the Bote ourt, personnel transport, both re urning Marines from the Mediter tnean, arrived at Morehead City iunday. The Botetourt left late iunday. On the Shrimping Front J Price War 9 Night Trawling Protests , Union Activity Arise Along Coast . i i Marine Dies From Snake Bites Cherry Point Undertakes Program to Wipe Out Vi pers, Protect Personnel Cherry Point Pit viper season is in full swing at the Marine Corps Air station here. There have been several recent incidents in volving rattlers, copperheads, and moccassins, including one death due to snake bite. Eighteen-year-old Private First Class Thomas F. Corrigan, USMC, was bitten three times by a poison ous snake or snakes, at about 10 a. m. Saturday, Sept. 22, while helping clear ground for a runway extension. Corrigan was given first aid and taken to the station dis pensary, where he died at 2 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 23. Captain Paul Vaughan, (MC) USN, Senior Medical Officer at the dispensary, expressed the belief that Pfc. Corrigan was bitten by two or more snakes, simultaneous ly, or in rafcid succession. The biggest kill of the season, a 6 foot 4 inch rattler, was made by Edward Cotton on his farm near Bogue sound. Cotton was accom panied by three of Cherry Point's skeet team, Captain John M. Olon, Major O. H. Ramlo, and Master Sergeant C. R. Wingard. The party was dove hunting when the big snake was discovered. Staff Sergeant Charles B. Bowl ing and his wife, just after enter ing the main gate of the air station last week, were greeted by a moc cassin. The Bowlings did an about face, returned to the gate and sum moned a taxi. Then tftwe wns Mwr-snake that came to breakfast with Corporal Robert Waddle, his wife and baby at their former home at Minne sott Beach. The viper in this case was a four foot copperhead that insisted on sharing the corporal's kitchen. Waddle attacked with a fishing rod and effected the rep tile's speedy demise. As a result of the current in creased snake activity, a station memorandum, issued by Major General Vernon E. Megee, Com manding Officer of Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, has made provision for working parties to wear knee-length boots. The station medical officer has issued full instructions for emergency treatment of snake bite, and the Forestry department is engaged in clearing grassy areas near station housing facilities. Gerk Probates, J Files Three Wills Three wills, those of Thomas Duffy Wade, Harold Knudsen, and Robert Tillett were filed recently in the clerk of court's office, Beau fort. Wade's will, drawn Aug. 27, 1951, was probated and filed Sept. 8. 1951, and was witnessed by Lillion F. Giddens, Lottis P. Oglesby. and Lettie J. Sanders. Named as ex ecutors of the estate and trustees, were Gerald Wade and Reba Wade Roberts. Wade, a resident of Morehead City, died Sepl 5, 1951. His will directs that the executors pay his funeral expenses, estate and in heritance taxes. To his wife, Lucy K. Wade, he gave the home at 512 Bridges St., Morehead City, or a choice of one of the other homes in the estate. Should her choice be the latter, he directed that the home at 512 Bridges st. be sold and the funds divided equally among his four children. Thomas E? Reba Roberts, Margaret Wade Willis, aivd Gerald Wade, with one equal share for his grandson, Benjamin Frederick Wade. Also to his wife was willed the property known as the 'Wade build ing." 712 Arendell St.. Morehead City, also the properties. 509. 511, S13 Arendell. garage, lot. and fill ing station. The deceased request ed that his wife "provide reason ably" for the care of their grand son, Benjamin Wade, and further directed that upon the death of his wife the executors sell all the property bequeathed to her and the proceeds be divided among the lour children and grandson. The executors of the estate were authorized to pay mortgages (from life insurance proceeds, govern See WILLS, Flic ( As a result of a 10-day investi-' Kation of alleged "price-fixing" of payments to shrimpers in Pam lico county, preliminary findings by the FBI and SBI have been for warded to headquarters of the two agencies at Raleigh and Washing ton, D. C. According to reports, Robert Mi notti, an independent shrimp deal er, upped the payments of shrimp per pound, in some cases as high as 33 cents, incurring the animosity of other dealers. Minotti has stated that he was the first to contact the SBI and FBI because he had been denied use of common carrier trucking facilities he had formerly used. He claims the trucking firm informed him it could no longer transport his shrimp inasmuch as it had been told by the other firms if it did, the others would boycoit the truck er. The independent dealer claimed such action constituted restraint of trade provisions of the Sherman anti-trust law and he informed authorities of the situation on that basis and not just price-fixing. Pamlico A double-barrelled blast was leveled today at night shrimping by two brothers closely associated with the shrimping in dustry who say they are speaking for the mass of shrimpers in this area. The two brothers are Clifford Gregory, owner of the Gregory Seafood company, wholesale shrimp firm located here, and Ralph Greg ory, local merchant and himself a "little shrimper." August Good Month Following a very good August month in catching shrimp and the best month of the season so far, the entire shrimping industry here is threatened with complete col lapse as it enters the second week of virtually no catches at all. The cause of it all. the Gregory brothers say, Is the night shrimp ing being allowed by the state. The two Gregorys claim the shrimp which were here in such abundance during August has now departed by way of the inlets to the ocean, a direct result of the night shrimping. They point out that both the large trawlers and the smaller boats are guilty of shrimping at night. It has been reported that Pam lico shrimpers this season have netted well over 1,500,000 pounds of shrimp. Norfolk, Va. (AP)? A Norfolk maritime union, only nine months See SHRIMP, Page 6 40 Episcopalians Sign Petition Forty Morehead City Episcopal ians have signed a petition re questing establishment of an Epis copal church in Morehead City and this petition will be forwarded to Bishop Thomas Wright of the East Carolina diocese. At a meeting Friday noon at the Jefferson restaurant J. R. Morrill was named permanent chairman of the committee to establish the church and H Earle Moblcy was appointed assistant chairman. The name ot the new church will be St. AndrewY Preparations for building a sanc tuary between 20th and ?lst street on Arendell are being made. Di mensions of the property are 150 by 120 feet. Members of the bishop's commit tee, appointed Wednesday night at a meeting at the Morehead City Municipal building, are Morrill, Mobley, Dr. O. H. Johnson, Paul Branch, Mrs. Ethel Morrill, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ball, Rudolph Dowdy, John Crump, David Mur ray, George Stovall, and J. N. Bridgeman. Morrill stated that the number of signers required on a petition requesting establishment of a new church is 30 and that he felt con fident Morehead City's petition, with 40 signers, would be accepted. Tide Table Tide? at Beaufort Bar HIGH LOW TUESDAY, OCT. 2 8:43 a.m. 2 ;25 a.m. j 9:01 p.m. 3:04 p.m. | WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3 9:25 a.m. 3:03 a.m. I 9:41 p.m. 3:47 p.m. THURSDAY, OCT. 4 10:10 a.m. 3:42 a.m. 10:25 p.m. 4:35 p.m. I FRIDAY, OCT. $ 10:59 a.m. ' 4:2? a.m. I (11:16 p.m. 5:28 p.m^J / Me Don Gilliam Acls on OPS Cases Bax,ler\ Havelock, Allow- 1 ed io Reopen; Defendants Pay Courl Cosls J iunZ* a"S?d threo mandatory in junctions to be issn#>H an/i tinuatinn ?? i. and on<? <on Don f n r bc gran,fd by Judge 1 last week8 Uw/^8100"1 wteK, it was announced hv pn ! '-cement Director and?,8.8' Neiman- "alfich jeweler psaasSftf: sent judgments. con" Grocery company of route 3 Lj,Ue The OPS T,lTd Unt" ^ 8 quired by Ceiling Price Regulation ; Admitting failure to file a nri?. char, and to kecp J^Pnee ales slips required by CPR 7 ' wh!ch"orred 3 TSOm I ancc with CPr"? d!?'c compl|-| the National Defen? Tr^Tct^n j it be" avelock st?re orders that covered by CPR Tunf Commod'l>' any sales or offers of sales Unf g^Slj F&J?3&2 jamin Baxter of New Bern. we^ortrr pay'Vun" c",7 Injunctions served nn ? u .. /? I be Permanemly res ?a?ne550' "0t I joined from furt?/ s^f ?d?Cn' of sales until opc _ offers | (had been me, r??"ren,ents Concert Offices j To Open Today Community Concerts member ship salesmen this morning took up their posts at Community Con certs headquarters in Beaufort and Morehead City and will remain there daily throughout the week, during the Community Concerts membership campaign. The office in Beaufort is located on Front street at Eastern Rulanc and in Morehead City in the cham member of commerce office, muni cipal building. Workers, who were briefed last night at a dinner in the First Bap tist church Sunday school rooms. Morehead City, will contact last year's members and request them to renew their membership this year. The number of memberships will determine the type of con certs to be planned. The Community Concert* execu tive board has already requested as the feature concert the Apollo Boys choir. ? A Community Concerts film will be shown this week throughout the county to civic groups and in schools. Student memberships to Community Concerts are available. After the campaign clones, no membership ticket? may be bought and no tickets are sold at the door for individual concerts. Two con certs will be presented in More head City and one in Beaufort. In charge of the campaign in the Havelock-Cberry Point area is Mrs. J. K. Butler, Havtlock. Principal Promises 'Drastic Steps' II Incident Recurs V A few days ago it came to my attention that efforts were being made to organize a club among the girls of the high school and upper grammar grades. Immediate action was taken to determine the nature of the club, and to identify the leaders. The leader readily confessed but claimed that she did not know the connotation of the word used as a name for the club, and that she had no intention to imply or organize a club such as the general public interprets it. 1 have in my possession the purported original statement drawn up by the high school girl who was the originator. That is all the written facts that 1 have been able to locate from any one. The matter has been thoroughly investigated and the faculty alerted. Should any further activities be detected, drastic steps will be taken. G. T. W1NDELL, Principal. September 29, 1951. Stanley Woodland Will Run For District Governor, Rotary I lie ltotarians of Morehead City ? will sponsor Stanley Woodland, 1701 Shack leford avc.. for district governor in the forthcoming 279th district election. Woodland, a past president of the Morehead City Rotary club, has been extremely active in Rotary work for many years. He is head of the Carteret District Boy Scout council, lay reader in St. Paul's Episcopal church, Beaufort, and has been outstanding in numerous civic activities. Woodland accepted the nomina tion at the Rotary meeting Thurs day night in the Sunday school rooms of the First Baptist church The present head of the 279th district is David Britt who address ed the local club two weeks ago. PTA Plans Novel Events for Friday Rides in a jeep, on a saddle horse, and in a horse drawn cart, and a live goose wheh anyone with a .Ittfe eye afd quick hand .pan nog. will be anong th* featured attractions Friday afternoon when tUe Beaufort PTA holds its carni val at the ball park. There will also be a football kicking contest, fortune telling, bingo, and games of skill to be tried during the afternoon. Candied apples, soft drinks and ' frankfurters will be sold during the afternoon. From 6 to 8 that evening, a bar becue supper will be served in the school cafeteria for $1. Tickets may be bought in advance or at I the cafeteria door that evening. I Movie cartoons will be shown in the gym during the supper hour, and at 8 o'clock the parents will i present a revue in the school audi torium. , 4-H Boys Win $36 ! At Calf Show ?/ ; Carteret county 4-H club boys J brought home $3? in cash prizes from the Wilmington Junior Dairy ' Calf show which took place Thurs- ' day and Friday at Wilmington. Cecil Gillikin of Bettie and Billy J Simmons of Newport, each of whom entered a grade Jersey calf, ' took second place and won $9 each ' Mark Eubanks' calf, shown by Henry Eubank?, Beaufort, got a | second place premium. #10. and ? Leo Watson, Stella, won a third place premium, $8. Eubanks and Watson's calves were purebred Guernseys. A fifth calf, owned by Henry Eu banks, was scheduled for entry but was not taken to Wilmington be cause it became sick. Mark Eu banks could not be present at the | show because he is in the armed t forces. One hundred forty calves from 1 eastern North Carolina were enter- t cd this year as compared with 82 i last year and judges stated that the i quality of animal shown had im- I proved considerably. The show is 1 sponsored annually by the Wil- | mington chamber of commerce. i L. R. HarrUl, state +H club ad- j viser. spoke at the Thursday night banquet where 4-H boys, girls, i their parents, and guests, totaling i 300, dined. t Accompanying Carteret boys to i Wilmington were the county farm f agents. R. M. Williams and James i Allgood. and several parents I Cannery Transaction Carroll Crockett, manager of canning enterprises in Beaufort, has purchased canning equipment o f Beaufort cannery and negotia ting art under way now lor the purchase of the building by a~local business firm. L Newport Resilient Comments on Ca$e Of Stolen Lead Vernon Mann, Newport, who is involved in the recent disposal of 1,500 pounds of lead stolen from Cherry Point Marine air base, in formed THE NEWS-TIMES Sat urday that he handled only eight bars of the stolen metal and had nothing to do with removing the lead from the base. He further stated that the lead was not owned by the government but by the Sanford Construction co., of Sanford, N. C., which is en gaged in a construction project at Cherry Point. Marines Named Mann added that the- "lead was taken from the base by two Ma rines, Sgt. Daniel Jelenik and Pvt. Claude R. Morey in a government vehicle and transported to this county and dumped." As stated by George Canady of the State Bureau of Investigation, in recorders' court last week, the lead was brought to this county where Marines, who executed the theft, recruited aid of Carteret residents in selling or getting rid of the metal. No Warrant as Yet Canady furthbr stated that Mann would be tried ip federal court but Mann said Saturday that he had not been summoned to answer Lo charges in federal court. "May be I will, but I haven't been yet," he remarked. Deputy Sheriff Marshall Ayscue stated Saturday that persons in volved in the matter would be tried, some in federal court and some in Craven county court. As for warrants going out under the federal authorities, Deputy Sheriff \yscue commented that "it takes juite a while sometihes" for the jovernment to make all the moves necessary. He added that even though the government did not own the lead, he fact that it was carried away [rAn property owned by the fed ?ral government makes the theft i federal offense. THE NEWS-TIMES regrets that ts report of Friday stated that Vlann was involved deeper jn the situation than actually was the :ase. Students Reveal Organization Attempts ; Dope Rumored A club, patterned after big city marijuana-smoking, sex orgy teen-age organizations, discovered last week at More head City school was believed today to have been stamped out by frenzied parents and school officials. Federal narcotics agents, however, were continuing their untiring search for reefer pushers in the Cherry Point Marine base area. While no defnite tie-up has been estab lished between the Morehead City episode and marijuana smoking, youth sex groups and dope are, universally, com panions in evil. Revelations in the Morehead Gity case were developed Dy inc. irom inter views with students and mothers. All names have been withheld by THE NEWS TIMES to protect stu dents innocently involved. The club was believed to be only in cmbryonic stage when girls who had been asked to join told their parents of the loathesome require ments of the organization. One of the girls asked to join the club, in an interview with a NEWS TIMES reporter, said that it was to be called (paradoxically) "The Queer Club." It had all the ear marks of a secret organization signs and passwords. "Sets of rules for the club were typewritten on sheets of paper," she revealed, "and these sheets were being pass ed around. The girls were asked to sign them if they wanted to be come members. "The girl in back of mo handed me the rules and I read about three or four of them, but they were so awful, I threw them right back at her," the girl related. As in other clubs of this nature which have been discovered recent ly among teen-agers throughout the nation, the girls were required to have intimate relations with men, in this case. Marines. "I actually believe the girls didn't know what it was all about," declared the mother of one of the girls asked to become a member, "or they wouldn't have talked about it so openly." The reporter asked the girl who refused to finish reading the club rules if Marines were mentioned in any of the rules. "At the ?Qe ?f the ru.'es. I saw the worJ Marine* hut tot&tTt remember what the rule said/ Stie continued, "There were aetually only three or four girls who put their name down to join it." How Did It Start? The reporter next asked her how the idea of such an organization got started. "Well," she declared, "this girl, ? , (she mentioned the girl's name) who started all this, had an older girl visiting her from a large city up north this summer ? you know, that's where all this sort of thing has been go ing on ? and after she left, (she mentioned the girl's name again) started becoming more vul gar and everything and I think that's how it all started. " "Have you actually seen any of the 'doped cigarettes' that have been reported to be out at school? Or do you know anyone who is using them?" the reported con tinued. "I didn't know anything about those until Mother spoke about it and then I remembered one day 1 went into the rest room where the girls go to smoke. I don't go in there often because I don't like to, but on this day another girl had fallen and hurt herself, she was bjpeding and we went in there and I saw one of those things, it looked like a hand-rolled cigarette (she See SEX CLUB, Page 6 ?Ji-Ho, Come to the Fairl State Fair at Raleigh Will Wear 'New Look ' A "new look" will greet the more .ban a quarter-of-a-million visitors o the 19S1 North Carolina State rair to be held in Raleigh Oct. 18 !0, according to Dr. J. S. Dorton, he fair manager. This includes instruction on the mammoth live itock judging arena and exhibition lall which it the center of the (2,000,000 expansion program at he fairgrounds, plus many new irogram features planned for this rear's fair. The "Fair of Tomorrow" expan >ion program will not be complete mtil 1852, but one unit ? i youth renter to house rural boys and [iris who show, judge and exhibit arm animals and other products it the fairgrounds ? will be ready or use this year. "Sidewalk supcr ntendents" will find construction >n the ultra-modern, 9,500-seat irena an attraction. Official? to Compete New program features at the 1091 fair include: A cow-milking contest between Governor W. Kerr Scott and Commissioner of Agri nil ture L. Y. Ballentine on Thurs lay afternoon. Both are prominent dairymen and they have challenged one another to a milking contest. An accuracy bait-casting contest on Wednesday morning, and an ex hibit of home-made artificial lures, will be new attractions designed to appeal to the multitude of fish' ermen in the state. Entries in these contests should be mailed or delivered in time to reach the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission. P. 0. Box 2919, Raleigh, on or before Oct. 12. Guests Invited Special guests at the 1951 fair will include "Rural Newcomers to North Carolina," and veterans of the Korean war. The United Na tion veterans need only to present discharge or furlough papers to gain admission at the gate and re ceive free tours of the grandstand and midway attractions. The "Rural Newcomers" ? farm families who have moved to North Carolina from another state or foreign country within the past 12 months ? should write Dr. J. S. Dprton, State Fair, P. O. Box 1388, Raleigh, tor their tickets. Steel Delays Bridge; Port Work Proceeds A workshop is being constructed and clay hauled in on property just beyond the western limits of Morchead City on highway 70 where piling will be poured for the new bridge across Boguc sound to Atlantic Beach. State Highway Engineer W. H. Rogers, jr., said that work on the bridge has been held up by slow deliveries of steel. The bridge ap proach in Morchead City will be at the southern end of 24th street. Several major highway projects have been delayed by slow deliv eries from steel suppliers and there are reports that some projects will be held up indefinitely. The same trouble is being experi enced by the State Ports authority in obtaining steel for its project at Wilmington Col. George Gil lette, executive director of the State I'orts authority, is having so much trouble locating steel for transit sheds and a warehouse there that the port will have to op erate for a time on an "open stor age" basis. This means that, until the sheds and warehouse ?re ready, only goods which can be kept out in tho -5?. unit'?! It h?n>; xl ihti.fcfch d* i port. Colonel Gillette says the SPA has the priorities and his been promised the steel before the end of the year. The port itself if sup posed to be in operation early next year, but It will take several months to get the sheds and ware house built after the steel is de livered. The steel shortage hasn't slowed up things at Morehead City port. The steel, fortunately, was on hand here and a shed and warehouses I now are under construction. Sanitation Work v Proceeds at Bogue I In conjunction with the rural sanitation program. A. D. Fulford, county sanitarian, at present is in specting the Bogue community on highway 24 five miles east of Swansboro. The rural sanitation program has been in process for more than a year, the sanitarian selecting cer tain areas in different parts of the county to be investigated. He points out that the most important factors in rural sanitation are proper sewage disposal and safe water. The law requires that every resi dence. irrespective of its distance from any other residence, have at least a sanitary privy for sewage disposal, this privy to meet the ap proval of the sanitary inspector. Fulford will inspect premises as to safe water and proper sewage disposal, and advise the landlord as to what is needed; giving him a reasonable length of time in which to comply with the law. This sani tation program is not only in the interest of the health of the public, but even more in the interest of the health of the individual family. Privies may be repaired or con structed by the individual. Fulford giving free supervision, or privies may be obtained from Gatlen Ar thur of Bogue. Dr. N. T Ennett. health officer, expressed the hope and the belief that the citizens of the Bogue com munity will give full co-operation to the sanitation program. Morehead City JaycMS Will Collect Scrap Infey The monthly acrap paper drive will be conducted by Morehead City Jaycecs Sunday, Oct. 7, Charles Willis, chairman of the scrap paper committee, announced yesterday. Resident? should place their scrap paper in front of their home* not later than 2 p.m., Sunday. A number of Morehead butineta con cerns, he added, are donating trucks for collecting the paper.
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 2, 1951, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75