Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / June 20, 1952, edition 1 / Page 1
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NEWS-TIMES OFFICE S04 AtmmUII St. Morehead City FImnm (-4175 CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES 10c Eifht Paget Color Comic* 41st YEAR, NO. 50. THREE SECTIONS TWENTY-TWO PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1952 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 'Colored Family Loses (Ming, Home in Blaze Mrs. James Rumley, Red Cross Home Service Chair man, Asks for Donations The small home of a colored family at North River was destroy ed by fire Sunday morning and * Mrs. James Rumley, home service chairman * for the Beaufort Red Cross chapter, today issued an ap peal for clothing for the adults and children of the family. ? There are two adults, a grind mother, Mary Davis Smith, who wears a size 38 in a dress; the mother, who wears a size 16, and three children, two girls age 4 and S and a boy age 6. All the furnishings were lost in the fire also. The grandmother told Mrs. Rumley that she had gone to church Sunday morning Ahd when she came home the house A was in ashes. It could not be learned how the fire started. Persons who have clothes or other items for the family may tike them to the home of Mrs. Rumley, 118 Marsh st., or if they ? are brought to THE NEWS-TIMES Office, Arendell St., Morehead City, THE NEWS-TIMES will see that they are delivered to Mrs. k Rumley. Defendant Draws liO-Day Suspended Term Monday * Robert Modlin, charged with public drunkenness and disturbing the peace in a public place, was given a 60-day suspended sentence ill Monday's session of Morehead City recorder's court. Judge George McNeill ordered him to remain on good behavior for a period of six months, pay a $10 fine and costs. Noe Emory was found guilty of public drunkenness, using profane language and resisting arrest'. He was sentenced to 30 days in the ( county jail, suspended on condition he pay costs and remain on good ' behavior for six months. L. A. Williams was fined $100 and costs on the charge of driving under the influence of intoxicants. Trial of the second charge against 61m, no operator's license, was con tinued. Mallie Jack Webster paid $100 and qpsts for driving under the influence of intoxicants. John H. Chamblers, who was charged with careless and reckless ' driving, was fined $25 and costs. Vance Talmadge Robinson and Joseph Barrett paid costs for ex ceeding the load limit on the bridge. Robinson also paid an ad ditional fine of $25. It was his sec Mid offense. Pays Costs ' For speeding, James Kush Chandler, jr.. paid a fine of $10 ' and costs. On the same offense Patrick L. Russell paid costs. Her bert Barker Utley paid costs for running through a stop sign. ?iThe case against Robert C. Por terfield was removed from the qpeket until the warrant could be served. The state dropped the ?se against Donald Wesley Mason. Sudie Fennell Roberts, who was in volved in an accident last week, was found not guilty of careless apd reckless driving. . Ralph Paul Dodd paid half costs for operating a car with no lights, fionel Scott was given a suspend ed sentence of 30 days for having no operator's license. He was also qrdered to pay a fine of $25 and h*lf costs. Joanna Irene Walton paid $25 and half costs for having rio operator's license. Sentence Suspended I John P. Healy paid costs for public drunkenness and was given a suspended sentence of 30 days. ?or permitting an unlicensed per son to drive, Charles Thomas Scott {?id half costs. ' h Cases were continued against L. 8. Watson, Bill Parkins, Jack Allen JUchard, Virgie Lee Bain and Mil ton Robintson, jr. Ynck, Car CeDUe On [nil St., Nonhtad i John William Hollingsworth of Faison. driving a car owned by Ivey V. Haskett of Newport, waa going eaat on Evans at., Morehead City Tueaday morning at 11:10 when he was struck by a panel {truck backing out from a parking llace between 4th and 5th at, police said. i The truck, parked in front of ibe Ocean grill, was driven by 'Clarence Elmon Smith of Apex, -And owned by the Killo Exterminat- I ing company of Raleigh. The truck I f ' kit the car on the right side and did damage estimated at $100. 4 There waa no damage ,to the truck ulrhich hit the car with ita bumper. Herbert Griffin inveati Two Sets of Twin Calves Born*" i MMffigTCTftiifftog i II jj^aliiii I .Itf i ?- M ami n<ni'--v I mi iiMMM m miMi MM? ? ? - C, J. Hines, Craven county dairv- ? man of the Tuscarora community who started an "A" grade dairy just ten years ago became the proud owner of the two sets of twin calve$ shown above. Their mothers were bred artifi cially. The calves were born on the last day of May and the first day of June of this year. Both sets of twins and their dams were doing nicely at the time the picture was made. The Holstein calves are both fe males, while one of the Jerseys is a male and the other is a female. It is likely that the Jersey fe male will be sterile, commented C. H. Kirkman, Carteret county assistant farm agent. In cases of ?win calves where one is a heifer and the other a bull, the heifer in 95 per cent of the cases is a free martin. # One set of twin calves is about all a dairyman expects in ten years, but two sets in two days are most unusual. Hines reports that the first twin calves ever to be born on his farm occurred several years ago. That was prior to the date on which artifical breeding of dairy cows was available for dairy cow owners in this county. Hines is a firm believer in artificial breed ing. As a result of this program, he now has 12 artificially-bred calvcs, eight of which are heifers. Less than one month after the artificial breeding program was started in - m wm mm .. ' fc I . jyaw? ? Craven county, Hines sold his herd bull, and he has relied on the arti ficial breeding service since that time. This service is available in Carteret county. Of the 45 cows of producing age on the Hines farm, 35 aTe in pro duction at this time. There are 28 calves, both male and female, on the farm at the present time. The owner has providied his herd ample grazing on 50 acres of ladino clover-fescue grass pasture and 25 acres of temporary pasture of small grain and crimson clover also les pedeza. Hines now has on order a con crete stave? silo size 14 by 40 feet, or of a capacity of 150 tons of sil age. Chamber of Commerce Will y Hear Proposals for New Year 125 Register j For Play Program One hundred and twenty-five children have registered so far for the Beaufort summer recreation program which started Monday morning. The program for next week will be swimming in the morning at Pivers Island, and baseball prac tice, kick ball and ping pong in the afternoon at the ball grounds. Activities offered the children are swimming, baseball, soft ball, kick ballr volley ball, badminton, horse shoes, table tennis, croquet, checkers and Game of India. The last two games are table games which Mr. and Mrs. Evans, direc tors of the program, will supervise during the heat of the day, or when the contestants of the active games seek calmer diversion. Rainy day programs will take place in the Scout building, and dancing will be held there two eve nings a week. The dancing dates will be announced next week by Mr. and Mrs. Evans. ? Police Chief j Nabs Motorist Theodore Smith, Beaufort route 1, has been charged with failure to give a hand signal. Chief of Po lice Carlton Garner said Smith was proceeding south on Queen street Tuesday and behind him in the po lice car was the chief. The officer said he expected Smith to continue straight ahead but suddenly he swung left, turn ing into the Chicken Shack. "If I'd been going a little fasier, I'd have hit him square in the side," de clared Chief Garner. The officer told Smith to appear in court at 10 o'clock Tuesday. v Arrested this week on public drunkenness charges were Archie Fulcher, Barkers Island, Thomas Roee, and James Griee. Fulcher posted a $SO bond and the other two $17 bonds each. Tide Table Tides at Baaufart Bar HIGH LOW Friday, June ? 8:38 a.m. 12:58 a.m. 7:03 p.m. 12:40 p.m. Saturday, June 21 7:25 a.m. 1:40 a.m. 7:45 p.B. 1:25 p.m. Sunday, June 22 B:06 a.m. 2:21 a.m. B:24 p.m. 2:08 p.m. Maaday, Juae 23 8:47 a.m. 2:59 a.m. 8:01 p.m. 2:40 p.m. Taesday, Juae 24 8:28 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 8:M P-Jtt. 3:28 pjn. ? The proposed program for the< coming year will be presented to chamber of commerce member! Tuesday night at the chamber of commerce supper meeting at 8:45 at the Scout building. Dan Walker, manager of the chamber of commerce, declared yesterday that spprt* shirts ami other informal attire is in ord? and the building will be cool. Program Set Forth The proposed program as sug gested by the directors, includes more trade promotions* bulkhead ing Front street, additional housing facilities for tourists, benches for the waterfront, municipal dock, continuing service to established firms and industries, obtaining ad ditional businesses and industry, continuation of the highway from Hatteras to Beaufort, more partici pation of citizens in local govern ment. The membership will be given the opportunity to revise the pro gram and suggest additions. "The success of any program," declared Walker yesterday, "de pends not on mere adoption, but an active following-through by chamber of commerce committees." McCullers to Speak Charles L. McCullers, manager of the Kinston chamber of com merce and president of the North Carolina Chamber Executives as sociation, will be the speaker. A new tourist film on North Carolina, with a major part of it devoted to Beaufort and Carteret county, will be shown. The membership drive for the coming year will begin Wednesday. At a Monday meeting of the mem bership committee, headtd by Ger ald Hill, names of prospective members and firms were divided among the members of the commit tee who will make the membership calls. Hill requests that the business men be prepared to transact their business with the solicitors so that work can be accomplished as soon as potsible. On the membership committee are Earl Mason, E. W. Downum, James H. Davis, Halsey Paul, Dr. W. L. Woodard, Glenn Adair, Gene Smith, Wiley Taylor, jr., Mrs. Bon nie Davant, Paul Jones. G. W. Dun can, sr., and Elbert Dudley. Mrs. Elizabeth Stanford y 1 Accepts Hospital Position Mrs. ElUabeth Stanford, Kin ?tM, M Monday assumed the j position as supervisor of nltf Morehead City hospital. Stanford received her nurses' training in Kinstoa Me morial hospital and has been j employed there for a number o I years. Mtaa Octavia Frailer, far- | mer supervisor of nurses, left the Morehead City hospital in November 1S49 and since that time Miss Lillian Glddens has been acting supervisor. H. L. Green, hospital admin istrator, in announcing the ar rival of Mrs. Stanford as super visor, added that remodeling has taken place in the old wing of the hospital. Plaster has been torn down, replaced with sheet rock, and rooms have been painted. Civil Court v Term Continues ?file civil term of superior court which started Monday was expect ed yesterday to continue through , this morning. Judge W. H. S. Bur- , gwyn is presiding. In the case of Andrew L. Davis I vs. C. F. Pittman and wife, Eudora. regarding a deed of trust on lot i 7, block 69, Morehead City, the 1 judge ordered that the plaintiff was entitled to a certified copy of the deed and that registry be made, also that the plaintiff was entitled to foreclose to recover $320 with interest from Feb. 1, 1MB. The deed of trust, offered as se curity on a $320 note was lost, mis placed, or destroyed by the plain tiff prior to its registry, according to testimony. The defendants were ordered to pay costs of the action. In the case of Norris Candy Com pany corporation vs. Thomas E. Wade trading as the S&W Drug 1 company, wherein the plaintiff was See COURT, Page 3 Chamber President' Lists Committees for 1952-53 Grover Munden, president of the Horebead City chamber of com merce, thia week announced mem bers of the advisory council and chamber committees. They art as fallows: advisory council, L. D. Gore, George R. Wal lace, W. C. Carlton, W. C. Mat thews, Dr. G. C. Cooke, Walter Morris, Mrs. George W. Ball, Mrs. Marion Mills. Committees, membership, J. C. Harvell, chairman. Jimmy Wallace, Jalper Bell, W. B. Chalk, Gedrge Eastman; industrial development, Walter Edwards, chairman, George Ball. John Crump. R. H. Dowdy, W. C. Matthews, H. S. Gibbs, Dr. Ben Royal, I. E. Pittman. L. D. Core, W. C. Carlton, and J. D. , Holt. Transportation and communica tions, Gordon C. Willis, chairman, R. L. Hicks, George Stovall, L. A. Daniels, W L. Derrickson, Asa Cannon, David Freshwater, Frank Exum. Advertising and publicity, Wal ter Freeman, chairman. Alfred Cooper, and Virgil B. .lenkim; tourists and conventions. Dr. Ru* sm chamb&k, ra?> a Miss Aon Mills Will Represent Morehead City Jaycees Select Miss More head City for Pageant . At Winston-Salem Miss Ann Mills, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Mills, has been chosen by Morehead City Jaycees to represent Morehead City in the Miss North Carolina beauty pa geant next month at Winston Salem. Luther Lewis, chairman of the beauty contestant committee, stated Monday night at the Jaycee meeting that Miss Mills was chosen by a committee of Jaycees because there were not enough girls inter- 1 ested in competing to make a con test feasible. Miss Mills was a guest at Mon day night's meeting. She is a grad uate of Morehead City high school, class of 1944, and a graduate of Salem college, Winston-Salem. Fol lowing her four years in college she was employed at Sound Chevro let company and after leaving there, went to New York where she entered the modeling profes sion. She returned from New York several weeks ago to spend the summer with her parents here. The Jaycees set a new meeting time at their session Monday. They will meet from now on at 6:30 p.m. instead of 7. Representing Miss Morehead City in the Miss North Carolina Beauty pageant last year was Miss Lois Simpson, daughter of Mrs. Mattie Simpson, now of Wilming ton. Chamber Issues , Business List ' Distributed this wedt yas tho Aoft *ead City chamber vl iwi% merce !)u?uiess directory, a 12-page pamphlet the size of the large type j business envelope. The directory carries a classified list of firms which are memben of the chamber, a list of Morehead City churches, plus the names of individuals who are chamber of commerce members. Pictures Published Four pictures appear on the front and last page of the direc tory and the last page also carries facts on population, the weather, and monetary assets. The directories have been mail ed to chamber members, new resi dents from Morehead City to New port, to 200 other chambers of commerce, and tourist information bureaus. Copies are 'available at the chamber of commerce office in the Morehead City recreation cen ter.* The directories will be mailed upon request to those who write the chamber from out of town and to firms who want business and in dustrial information. Revise Schedule J. A. DuBois. chamber of com merce manage:, stated that addi tions and corrections will be made in the 1952-53 issue which will go to press in August. This is the first time a business directory has beeri published in Morehead City for several years. Beaufort Planning Board To Study Parking Tonight Parking in downtown Beaufort will be the target for discussion at a meeting of the Beaufort plan ning board at 7:30 tonight at the town hall. Braxton Adair, chairman of the planning board, expressed the desire yesterday that as many Beaufort businessmen as possible attend the session to help find a solution to the lack of parking space on Front street. The planning board, at the June meeting of the town board, offered its services to the town in regard to the parking situa tion. Child Continues ; To Improve After Train Accident Earl Nicholas Lane, 7-year-old son of Lt. and Mrs. W. M. Lane. 2411 Arendell St., Morehead City, is recovering satisfactorily from injuries received Friday afternoon when he was struck by a train on Arendell st., Morehead City. His mother reported to THE NEWS-TIMES Wednesday that the child did not see the train, that he was looking the other way and there was no warning bell to call his attention to the danger. Mrs. Lane received a wire from Honolulu from her husband Tues day. stating that he was on his way home. He had been stationed with the Marine corps in Korea. The child has a broken collar bone. jaw, shoulder, arm, exten sive head injuries, and his teeth were knocked out. He never lost consciousness but was put under anesthesia for an operation of three hours' duration following ;hc accident. Nicky, as he is called, has two brothers, one 2 years of age and ihe other 3. The accident occurred between 4:30 and 5 o'clock last Friday in front of the child's tome. Marine Receives \ Injuries in Wreck Robert G. Skidmore, USMC, was injured Monday night on Evans st., Morehead City, when the car in which he was riding ran into the back of a parked truck. The acci dent happened at the intersection of 14th and Evans at 9:15 p.m. The truck, parked on the south side of Evans headed east, was owned by Cyrus Hunter. Driver of the car was Paul M. Wise of Penn sylvania and Camp Lejeune. As the car hit the left corner of the truck, a large splinter of wood speared Skidmore's face. It was removed at the scene by Wise. Skidmore also received a broken nose, lacerations on the face and was bleeding profusely. A 12 year-old Boy Scout, Jeff Faucette, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Faucette, was in the crowd of spectators at the accident. When a call went out for someone to stop Skidmore's bleeding, Jeff volunteered, and ably administered first aid to the injured man. Jeff is also a NEWS TIMES carrier boy. Lt. Carl Blomberg investigated. Tlying Sleeve' Hurtles 'J Through Air, Hits Truck Coroner Leslie D. Springle was almost a gone goslin' la'st Thurs day afternoon, June 12. He was driving his pickup truck on high way 101 north of Beaufort toward his farm when something came hurtling toward him out of the air. The thing struck the hood of his pick-up, glanced off and bounced into a ditch at the side of the road. Shocked and a mite scared, the coroner stopped his truck and went searching for the thing that dam aged his truck to the extent of $25. He found it? a piece of solid brass 3 1/4 inches in diameter with a hole through the center about an inch and a quarter wide. The piece of metal weighed 30 pounds and dug two chunks of asphalt as big as a man's fist out of the road af ter it bounced off Springle's truck. The coroner called Cherry Point Marine air base and on Friday Marine peraonnel visited Springle and identified the piece of braas as a aleeve for one of the hydraulics on an aircraft landing gear. It was Unir opinion that a plane carrying parts was flying with Its doors open, hit an air pocket, and one of the sleeves being carried inside the plana bounced out, according to the coroner:. It was stated that it could be ascertained what plane the part came from when the parts it carried were checked at its desti nation. Had the piece of brass been about two feet higher? or the county coroner, a farther piece down the road when the metal was at higher altitude, it would have gone through his windshield. Though it might not have made him an object for investigation by a coroner, there may have been a serious accident. Reflecting on the incident, Sprin gle remarked that had he been kill ed no one would have dreamed of( blaming something flying toward him out of the air. Had he been seriously hurt, he may not have been able to remember what hap pened. It took him about five minutes to find the piece of brass after he stopped his truck. It was lying in a ditch 100 yards from where it hit the hood of the pickup. That'i a story for Robert Ripley's Believe It or Not. The coroner is glad he's around to tell about It and thanks his lucky stars the "fly Ing sleeve" didn't fall earthward Friday, June 13. * Alphie P. Wooten, 31, Lennox-< ville, was killed at 2:45 Tues day afternoon when a road ma chine. a roller, ran over him on a side road near Otway. The funeral service will be con ducted at 3 o'clock this afternoon in the Adair Funeral home chapel. Craven st., Beaufort. The Rev. W. E. Anderson, Free Will Baptist minister of Morehead City, will of ficiate. At the graveside there will be military rites in honor of the deceased who is a veteran of world war II. Interment will be in Ocean View cemetery. Wooten. an employee of the State Highway and Public Works commission, was on a roller which was being pushed by a truck. He j fell off the roller, according to Coroner Leslie Springle, and the 1 heavy machine passed over his I body, crushing the right side of i his head. Driver of the truck was Carroll Millis of Newport. The coroner said the truck was going at a rate of about eight miles an hour. Witness es to the accident were Kelly Lewis and Dewey Rouse. There will be no j inquest. Coroner Springle said the death was accidental. Surviving Wooten is his wife. ! Rose Marie: his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Z. Wooten all of Lennox ville; two brothers, Lester ?Leo, ! New Bern; Ray. Beaufort RFD; and ' two sisters, Mrs. Bennie Willis of Beaufort and Mrs. Levi Riggs of ' Newport RFD. Two Countians Attend Course At Greensboro Mrs. Wren Lawrence of Newport and Mrs. Mary Olive Martin Kirk man of Beaufort RFD are attend | ing the Nineteenth Annual Caro lina Institute of International Re lations at Woman's college Greens boro. Mrs. Lawrence is the official , delegate of the County Council of ! Home Demonstration clubs in Cart- 1 eret county and is a member of Merrimon club. Mrs. tKirkman was awarded a special Scholarship to attend the meeting. The therf* of til* week is 'The S igglc for 'he Mil* ta of Men.'' While there, the , delegates will have the opportunity of hearing such distinguished speakers as Dr. Eddy Aslrvalham of Madras, India and Dr. Herbert S. Deighton, dean I of Pembroke college, Oxford Uni- ' versity, England. Themes of some of the addresses are "Awakening Asia and Amer ican Ideal." "Reaction to Western Supremacy in the Midle East," and "Economic Cooperation in the Struggle for Men's Minds." ?The purpose of this institute is to provide an opportunity for the serious and objective study of the pressing problems of world af fairs related to peace, Miss Martha Barnett home agent said. The de velopment of well-informed, spirit ually sensitive leadership for local communities is the primary goal of the institute, added Miss Bar nett. Agent TeUs How To Root Shrubs ? R. M. Williams, {arm agent, to day cave adviee on rooting azaleas, camellias, or boxwood. The farm agent declared: "Home gardeners who like out door life and who would like to start a few plants from cuttings will find late June and July are excellent months for rooting azaleas, camellias and boxwood. In fact, it's a pretty good time for rooting most plants. "Here is how to do the job: (1) Place 6 to 8 inches of clean, coarse sand in 12 to 18 inch deep box, tub, etc., (holes in bottom for drain age). (2) place container in shade or otherwise provide shade. (3) make cuttings in early morning or late afternoon. (4) Take cuttings from new growth. (5) ...ake cuttings 3 to 6 inches long. (8) remove the leaves from bottom two-thirds of the cut ting. (7) keep cutting moist and place in sand as soon as possible. (8) use glass or glass substitute over container if possible, but it is not absolutely 'necessary (cracks will allow enough ventilation). (9) place cuttings 1 to 3 inches apart, pack sand around cuttings and water thoroughly, (10) keep cuttings watered often enough to prevent wilting (perhaps every day ?t first). Labarert Pick Berries Carteret county's colored mi grant laborers are now picking blue-berries. There art approxi mately 100 acres in the county. 40 on the Theodore Budd farms, Len noxvilie, and 50 to 80 on the Jason Morris and Jim Young farms, Stella. County Suffers , Under Fust Heat Wave of Summer Cooling Southern Winds From Waler Offer Only Respite from Heal Suffering under the first con tinuous heat wave of the summer, Carteret countians began yesterday to anxiously scan the sky for rain bearing clouds. No rain has fallen in the county for two weeks. According to Stamey Davis, of ficial weather observer, the last heavy rainfall was .87 inches the night of June 5. Several drops of rain fell in the Morehead City area Wednesday afternoon but the sun didn't even disappear. R. M. Williams, farm agent, stated that "the situation could get serious" if rain doesn't come soon. In the growing ptoeess now are corn, tomatoes, peanuts, soybeans, cotton, watermelons, and of course, pasture lands. Back yard gardens have been re tarded by the dryness, but the farm agent said farmers down east don't suffer as quickly from dryness as do upstate farmers because of the high water table in the eastern sec tion of the county. The highest temperature thus far this summer was 93 degrees on Sunday, June 8. Wednesday's tem perature of 90 was next highest. Southerly breezes have been blow ing almost continuously but the trick is to be able to recline in their path with a glass of lemonade. Temperatures since last Friday follow : Max. Min. Friday, June 13 88 65 Saturday, June 14 88 66 Sunday, June 15 85 76 Monday. June 16 87 76 Tuesday, June 17 87 77 Wednesday, June 18 90 77 Officers Arrest Primrose Mason Primrose Mason of Beaufort was arrested soon after 6 o'clock Tues day night on a charge of going through three stop signs and speed ing 70 miles an hour in a 55-mile an hour zone. Chief of Police Carlton Garner and Officer Max well Wade made the arrest after chasing Mason in his car through Beaufort and out highway 70 about four miles. Mason has been ordered to ap pear in court at 10 o'clock Tues day morning in Beaufort. According to Chief Gamer, he and Officer Wade were parked in the colored section of Beaufort at about 6 o'Mock Tuesday when a car came by, and Chief Garner said as soon as the driver saw the police car he speeded up. The officers decided to follow the car, neither of them recogniz ing the driver because of his dark glasses, the chief said, and the chase started. The driver, who was later identi fied as Mason, went through color ed town, back toward the center of town, then out Turner street to the west Beaufort road, east on that road to highway 101, south on 70 and then through Huntley's and out highway 70. Chief Garner said Mason soon turned off into a dirt road and then left that road and ran into the woods. The officers followed as f far as they could, then jumped out of the car. At about the same time Mason stopped, the Chief said and ran from his car. When Mason jumped out, Chief Garner recognized him and the of ficers decided to drive the aban doned car back to town. Just as Officer Wade was about to turn it around, Mason came out of the woods. The officers questioned him, and fie told them that he was just playing a game. Chiefr Garner replied, "Well, we don't play games like that," and told him to be in court Tuesday morning. Chief Garner also serves as a deputy sheriff. According to records in the clerk of court's office. Mason is now un der a six-month suspended sentence as the result of a trespassing con viction. Attend Convention Julian Fulcher. J. R. Herring, both of Morehead City, and Earl Mason. Beaufort, are attending the Durham Life Insurance company convention at Raleigh. Their wives accompanied them. Police Find Boat Parte Morehead City police have found an outboard motor, two oart and an oil can. These things may b* claimed at the police station after being properly identified.
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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June 20, 1952, edition 1
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