NEWS-TIMES OFFICE 504 AraxMl St. Morvhead City Phooe 6-4175 CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES 10 c FULL PAGE COMICS 41st YEAR. NO. 51. TWO SECTIONS TWELVE PAGES MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1952 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS ^Elections Board Official Predicts Light Vote in Saturday Rim -Off Board Deals with Parking at School , Discusses Streets, Accepts Car Bid j Chamber Members Elect Board 1 Of Directors Annual Banquet Will Begin At 6:45 Tonight at Scout Building, Beaufort Eight members of the Beaufort chamber of commerce have been elected to the board of directors fqr the coming year. They are Glenn Adair, Holden Ballou, E. W. Downum, G. W. Duncan, sr., Ger ald Hill, Leslie Moore, Halsqy Paul, uod Dr. W. L. Woodard. Braxton Adair, retiring president, will serve as an ex-officio member of .the board. The annual chamber membership banquet will be held at 6:45 to night at the Scout building. The eight directors will elect officers from among themselves. In addition to those elected, the following were nominated for di rectorships: B. F. Copeland, James Davis, J. E. Dudley, David Jones, Paul Jones, Earl Mason, Odell lferill, Jack Neal, Gene Smith, and Gerald Woolard. Persons who have not made re servations for tonight's banquet , should phone 2-8241 immediately and inform the chamber that they expect to attend. The speaker will be Charles L. IfcCullers of Kinston, and a film on North Carolina, with a major portion devoted to Carteret county, will be shown. This will be the fourth annual chamber of com merce banqiet. Police Investigate Three Accidents j Morhead City police investigated three accidents over the weekend. Victor Homer Wickizer, More bead City, was headed cast on Arendell street Friday at 9:20 a.m. when his car was struck by a truck in front of Scott's garage. The truck had backcd out of the garage and was pulling back onto the street when the Wickizer car pass ed. The truck hit the car on the left front fender and damage to the car was estimated at $100. The truck, driven by Vannic^ Hood Salter of Newport, collided with the car with his right running board. Damage to his truck was $50. Capt. Herbert Griffin and Pa jtrolman Bruce Edwards investi gated. . At 3:15 p.m. Saturday between aSnd and 23rd on Evans sL a car, ahven by Mrs. H. C. Herr of Sa uannah, Ga., was proceeding west. .A jeep was in front of her and the driver, S. A. Horton, gave a left | hand signal and turned right, po lice said. The Herr car struck the rear of the jeep and Mrs. Herr received a cut on the arm. Damage to the two vehicles was not estimated. Captain Griffin was the investigat ing officer. , , Between 7th and 8th streets on? 'Arendell at 3:35 the same day a car driven by Kenneth Canfield and owned by Johnson-Saunders Dry Cleaners was headed east and stopped for a car backing out from the curb. The car behind the Canfield car hit it on the rear left fender. Dam age to the Canfield car was $100. The car behind was owned by Giles S. Hinkle of Cherry Point. He 4it the Johnson-Saunders car with jhis right front fender and damage to his car was estimated at $150. Captain Griffin and Patrolman Ed Wards investigated. Mkm Nab Transporter ' Of Wtiskay Friday Morning County ABC Officer Marshall Ayscue, Deputy Sheriff Bill Dugee ' of Newport, and two Alceholic Tax unit officers of New Bern ap prehended a transporter of non fax-paid whiskey at 3 o'clock Fri day morning on the Nine-Foot road between Newport and highway 24. A resident of Pitt County, the defendant will be tried in federal court at New Bern. V The officers seized 68 gallons of wtyskey and the 1949 Ford conver tible in which the whiskey was Mowed. 'Dairyman Accepted * Battleboro, Vt.? W. J. Blair, Morehead City, has been accepted is a member of the Holstein-Frie tain Association of America by i of the Board of Directors at recent meeting in Roenoke, ? A proposal for solving the lack of parking space at Morehead City school, presented by Street Superintendent J. V. Waters, was approved by the Morehead City town board in session Thursday night at the town hall. Waters stated that angle parking on the east side of 11th street and angle parking on the west side of 12th, with no parking allowed in the crescent* drive in front of the school, would relieve congestion. The Rev. R. T. Willis, jr., a member of the Morehead City school board, appeared before the commissioners on behalf of the principal, G. T. Windell, who heads the Finer Carolina committee for school improvement. Among the projects that commit tee has undertaken was widening of the crescent drive. Estimates Cost The street superintendent told the board that he had surveyed the situation and said that widening the drive 3 or 4 feet would cost close to $1,000 and even then it would be a tight squeeze for two cars. Commissioner W. L. Derrickson said that he felt the problem was one for the county board of edu cation. Mayor George Dill asked the town attorney, George McNeill, if there were a question of legality in the town's paying for improve ments on county school property and the attorney replied, "Defi nitely. The town has no regula tory powers or control of school property at all." Waters then suggested that the crescent drive remain as is, be made one-way with no parking, and the angle parking arrangement worked out on 11th and 12th streets. The board felt that the teachers, who usually parked in the crescent drive would have no farther to walk to the east and west entrances of the building than if they parked in the front and used the front entrance. They asked the street superin tendent to work out estimate# on placing curbing along the east side of 11th and the vest side of 12th. JiUlMs also lot'1 the board that work on hard-surfacing those two streets will begin within several days, providing the grade is stabil ized and the maximum amount of settling has taken place since the storm sewers were laid. The commissioners said that Waters was due credit and com mendation for repairing numerous holes on Arendell streets and keeping other thoroughfares in good condition. The mayor remarked that the numerous bumps and holes on Evans street are the result of Caro lina Power and Light opening the streets to get at water lines. Street Commissioner S. C. Holloway said that he conferred with George Stovall, C'P&L manager in this area, and that he had expected Stovall to be at the meeting that night to talk about the problem. The commissioners directed that the town send a letter to Stovall and to the CP&L central office and state that the board realized that much must be done to bring the water system "up to par" but the See BOARD, Page 2 ' Court Approves $15,000 Award v In Civil Action A judgment of $15,000 was awarded the plaintiff, Dallas W. Lawrence, administrator of the estate of Elmo Lawrence, in the case of Lawrence vs. Allen Gilli kin Friday in superior court, Beau fort. Judge W. H. S. Burgwyn stipulated, however, that only $0,500 need be paid if payments are made by June 10, IBM. Elmo Lawrence was killed in an' automobile accident Nov. 11, 1951. In the case of David C. Richard son vs. Nellie Richardson Cooke, the judge ordered that the taxes due on the property on Ann street. Beaufort, he paid from the share of the estate due the plaintiff with Mrs. Cooke not required to pay any taxes on her interest in the estate. The court confirmed the recent sale of the property and directed that the clerk of court pay Mrs. Cooke 4/12 of the amount received from the sale, less 4/12 of the court costs, the residue of the amount of sale to be paid to Mrs. Bertie Caffrey 1/12 and to David C. Richardson 7/12. Mrs. Cooke ap pealed the decision of the judge and her bond was set at $500. In the case of J. Clyde Carr vs. Jesse W. Long, the plaintiff recov ered $511 and the defendant re ceived nothing in a counter claim. Long was ordered .to pay coats. The (MM rated {in the cue of Grace Elizabeth Chadwick vs. Robert J. Chadwick that the de fendant pay the plaintiff $100 on Friday and $100 to the plaintiff's attorney, _ Luther Hamilton, not later than July 1. According to evidence, the cou ple was married July 9, 1950 and have not lived together since Feb. 5, 1952. Because the plaintiff is pregnant, the court ruled that the defendant make arrangements for hospital care and also pay $10 per month thereafter for the use of the plaintiff and expected child, the first payment to be made not later than Sept. 1, 1952. In an out-of-term superior court order signed by Judge J. Paul Frizzelle. a matter of a cut-off in tobacco acreage allotment was re ferred to a review committee, the review committee to meet in the community. Pelletier, in which the petitioner, Robert Rhue, resides. The case is Robert Rhue vs. Whitford Hill, Bert Smith, and Woodrow Taylor who comprise a review committee under the Agri culture Adjuatment administration. Marine Lab Director Releases Schedule o f Summer Lectures Dr. C. G. Bookhout, director of Duke Marine laboratory, today an nounced the lectures for the re mainder of the tummer at Duke Marine laboratory. Participant! in sponsorship of the lectures which are open, without charge, to the public, are the Institute of Fish eries Research of the University of North Carolina, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, and Duke University. The lectures take place each Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the Duke laboritory dining hall, Piver's Island. Tomorrow night's lecture on fish eries research in Maine will be given by Lynn Bond of the Depart ment of Inland Fisheries and Game, state of Maine, and will be supplemented by moving pictures. The schedule for the remainder of the summer follows: July B ? An Experimental Study of Pigment Cell Pattern in the Black Axolotl. by Dr. H. E. Leh man, zoology department, Univer sity of North Carolina; July 16 ? Habitat and Territory of the Sea Side Sparrow, the most typical bird of the salt marshes, by Dr. Thomas Quay, zoology department. North Carolina State College. July 23? Hydrography of Pam lico Sound, by Dr. Eugene Roelofa, University of North Carolina Insti tute of Fisheries Research; July 90 ?Crayfish of the Ozark Region, Dr. Austin Williams, Univertty of North Carolina Inatitute of FM> eries Research. Aug. t? .Variation of Intensity of Oyster Setting. Dr. A. F. Cheat nut. University of North Carolina I Hugo Blomquist, Botany depart ment, Duke University. Aug. 20? Foods and Feeding of Oysters based on observation of radioactive plankton, Daniel Floyd, Shellfish Laboratory, United States Fish and Wildlife Station, Beau fort; Aug 27? Serological Techni ques as a Tool in the Study of Chemical Embryology, Dr. George Nace, zoology department. Duke university. Clerk of Court v Releases Report Operation of Morehead City re corder's court, on the books, shows a deficit of *137.87 for March. April, and May with disbursments for the quarter totaling $8,214.07 and gross receipts totaling $8,176. 20. However, included in the dis bursements are three payment to taling $2.21.106 to the town of Morehead City. Disbursements, according to a report presented the town board by John Lashley, clerk of court, Thursday night, are as follows: lines collected and paid county $3, 104.66, state I & I tat (retirement fund for court officers) $434, sal aries, court supplies, feeding pri soners $1,973.96. Witness foes, attorney fees, fees for sheriff, subpoenas, etc. $487.40, check to town of Morehead March 4, 1962 $663.96, check to town April 3, 1963 964955, and check Union Sends Food To Strikers; Says j Catches Not Large Spokesman Says Fisher men Have Right lo Or ganize, Bargain C. A. Simmons, representative of the International Fur and Leather Workers union,* announced yester day that shipments of food are be ing sent by the union to fishermen who are on strike in this area and he added that reports of the amount of fish being caught are greatly exaggerated. A full state ment from Simmons appears below. He stated yesterday that local No. 710, International Fur and Leather Workers union, held two meetings Saturday, one at noon and another at night. W. H. Potter, manager of Beau fort Fisheries, whose boats are fishing despite the strike, said that the International Fur and Leather Workers union was listed recently in a national periodical as com munistic. He said the tactics of the union indicates that they have communis tic leanings and are imbued with civil rights propaganda. "Our boys her? are being mil led, " Potter commented. "I think that eventually they'll mend their ways and straighten out. It's un fortunate that they have gotten messed up with this type of union, but 1 think things will work out all right. Above all, I want to keep the good will of the iishermen." Simmons' statement follows: "The first shipment of food for the menhaden fishermen in More head, Beaufort and Southport areas arrived in Southport Friday and Beaufort Saturday with food in the amount of $2,000. This should be an answer to the question of star vation. "Our International union has pledged to support the fishermen i in this struggle to Win their just demands through a uniron of their own choosing. The fishermen are not misled or surprised, at propa ganda about amount of fish being caught because they see daily the fishermen in this area which is proof that they arc united with the fishermen on the Jersey coast and See UNION, Page 3 Couple Throws j Lye at Each Other Lula Mae Oden and William Thomas Oden, colored, have filed counter suits against each other. Man and wife, they have charged each other with assault and throw ing lye. They were arrested by Police Chief Carlton Garner of Beaufort after they were treated at the Morehead City hospital for burns as the result of tlie lye. Oden told the chief that his wife was angry at him and mixed some "Ten-Cent-Pistol" lye and threw it at him while he was taking a bath. According to the chief, Oden then struck his wife, breaking her glass es, giving her a black eye. and took the remainder of the lye and threw it in her face. Each was put in the county jail Saturday afternoon under $100 bond. They are scheduled to be tried in recorder's court Beaufort, today. Two Accidents Occur in Beaufort Beaufort police investigated two accident! Friday on Ann street. At 5 p.m. a 1950 model car driven by Emmett Ray Boone. Havelock, was struck in the rear by a truck driven by David Fresh water. jr. Both were proceeding east on Ann. Boone said he stopped when a car in front of him stopped and he did not have time to signal Fresh water who was following. There was no damage to the truck but damage to Boone'a car was esti mated at *400. Police Chief Carl ton Gamer investigated. At 3:30 that afternoon a 1950 model aedan driven by Mrs. Marie Davis Staton, scraped the side of one of tlie town traah trucks. Mrs. Staton was headed west in the 500 block of Ann street and both town traah trucks were parked opposite each other on the north and iouth sides of the street, the chief said. Instead of waiting for an oncom ing car to paas. Mrs. Staton con tinued between the trucks. There was no damage to the truck, but the Staton car was damaged to an eatlmated *90. Officer Otis Willis Farmer Survives Air Attack Leslie Springle of Beaufort RFD surveys the 30-pound brass air plane part which flew against his pick up truck recently as he was driving on highway 101 near his home. The cylindrical piece of metal dented the hood of th#? truck, as shown in the picture, then glanced off and rolled in a ditch. It is believed to have fallen from an air plane which was carrying aircraft parts. Mrs. Delia Smith Saves J Two Girls from Drowning Morehead Board . Renews Crusade For Fishing Pier The Morehead City town board took up the crusade again Thurs day niflht for retaining the north end of the present bridge to At lantic Beach as a fishing pier. At the suggestion of I)r. John Morris, commissioner, the board authorized the clerk, John Lash ley, to writ* letters to I>r. Everett Jorfan, head of Uy* State Highway Public Womh coinnwHuioiK George Ross, chairman of the board of conservation and levclop ment; and Thomas Morse, head of the state parks division of the north portion of the bridge be al lowed to stand and operated by the state for sports fishermen. Or, Morris said that the state highway officials and others in volved were in favor of the pro posal when it was suggested a year ago after plans for the new high way bridge at 24th street were ap proved. He added, however, that objections were raised by certain factions who contended that the pier would damage the party boat fishing business. The state then dropped the matter. The commissioners declared that the person who likes to fish from a pier is not the same type of in dividual who wants to go in a party boat and felt that any facility which brings more vacationists to this area is advantageous to all. It was pointed out that the sec tion of the bridge proposed to re main as a nsning pier would not be a hindrance to navigation. On another fishing angle, the commissioners discussed the fact the party boatmen have been ask ed not to dump their excess catches from party boats right off the Jock, allowing big. fish like amberjack to float along the waterfront or slosh along the shore to rot. Commissioner D. G. Bell stated that the party boatmen have agreed to carry the big fish out to sea again but they see no reason why waterfront restaurants should be allowed to dump all their garbage and refuse into the water by their places of business. The board directed that an ar rangement be made to pick up, by truck, all garbage from waterfront restaurants early in the morning, thus making it unnecessary to throw the refuse overboard. Two Arrested William Chadwick and William Blades Parkin have been arreted in Beaufort on charges of public drunkenness. Chadwick was arrest ed at 1:30 Friday afternoon and also charged with resisting arrest. He was put in jail under $100 bond. Parkin was arrested at 1:30 a.m. Sunday and posted $12 bond for his release. Tide Table Tide* it Beaufort Bar HIGH LOW Tuesday, June 24 9:26 a.m. 3:38 p.m. 3:35 a.m. 3:29 p.m. Wednesday, June 25 10:05 a.m. 10:15 p.m. 4 11 am. 4.09 p.m. Thursday, June 26 10:44 a.m. 10:51 p.m. 4:57 a.m. 4:50 p.m. 5:22 Friday, June ? 11:24 a.m. "30 p*. 5.34 pja. Mrs. Delia Smith of 408 N. 10th st., Morchead City, arrived home Thursday afternoon just in time to save two little girls from drown ing. Her home is near Calico creek. As Mrs. Smith walked in her front door, just before 5 o'clock, she said she heard children screaming. She went to her win dow on the north side of the house, which overlooks the water, and saw a crowd of children at the water's edge in front of Luke Dudley's oyster house. Mrs. Smith, who doesn't know how to swim, rushed out of her house and down to the' dock. A child in the group told her that "Marion was drowned." She went I out on the dock and saw little Marion Shepard, 10, floating face upward on the water. She couldn't reach her so she took a stick and pulied her to the dock. Then she reached down and lifted her out of the water. She thought the child was dead j but she and the girl's grand mother, Mrs. Mattie Shepard. work ed on her until she started to cry. Then Mrs. Smith happened to look toward the water again and saw another child, Ernestine Montague, 5, just as she. in deperation, clutched for the dock and grabbed a piling. Ernestine was full of water and foaming at the mouth. Mrs. Smith, who had only been told about the one child and didn't know the Montague youngster was in the water, reached down ind got her. She was taken to the hos pital by Alonzo Jones and her mother, Mrs. Nellie Montague. Both children fully recovered and Ernestine was taken home from the hospital Friday afternoon. It is believed that while playing the youngsters, who couldn't swim, got in water over their heads, and in panic, almost drowned. ' Carteret countians and their fellow North Carolinians will go to the polls again Saturday to cast votes in the run off primary between William H. Bohbitt of Mecklenburg county and R. Hunt Parker of Halifax who are seeking election as associate justice of the supreme court. Both are running for the short and long terms. The associate justice ballot will be the' only one presented Carteret voters, although in some North Carolina districts there will be voting for congressmen. F. R. Seeley, chairman of the county board of elections, predicts that the vote will be very light, probably 1,200 and not more than 1,500 as compared with a vote of 4,400 in the recent May '11 primary when William B. I 'instead defeat ed Hubert E. Olive for the gubcrna torial nomination. The second primary Saturday in Carteret will cost the county at least $1,700, ventured Seeley. Cost to the county of the May 31 pri mary was between $3,500 and $3. 700. He estimated that the total cost to the state for the run-off Saturday will be close to $250,000. Cost of distributing ballots alone to all the counties will run about $75,000, remarked the county elec tions board chairman. The contest, incidentally, is over a $12,000 a year job. Because this is a race between two Democrats, there will be no Republican poll holders on duty Saturday. The polls will open at 6:30 a.m. and close at 6:30 p.m. Morehead Lioos Install Officers For Coming Year Fred G. Lewis was installed as president of the Morehead City Lions club Thursday night. Other officers installed were Frederick [ Hardy, first vice-president; Alvah ; North Willis, second vice-presi dent; John T. Willis, third vice president; John D. Willis, sccre tary. Dave Battle Webb, treasurer: Victor Wickizer, tail twister: Charles Bell, Upn tamer; CUucncc Bell and Lewis HHisen, direct*!*. Past officers are Oscar Alfred, president; E. L. Faucette, secre tary; James Bell, recording seere tary; Fred G. Lewis, treasurer. Jesse Jones. Lion from Kinston. was in charge of the installation and gave a brief talk. Jones con ducted the installation when the club wa* reactivated in 1945. Forty were present for the pro gram which was also ladies' niyht Eleven of the members were given perfect attendance buttons for the past year. They were O. N. Allrcd. J. G. Bennett, Frank Moran. Fred G. Lewis, Harry Van Horn. John D. Willis. John T Willis. Clarence Bell. Dave B. Webb, Victor Wick izer and James Bell. After the installation ceremony. Zcno Spence, jr., of Goldshoro, guest of Frank Moran, gave a demonstration on Fast Painting of Ocean Scenes. He painted one in eight minutes and three in less than a half hour. The club pre See LIONS, Page 2 Morehead Board Tentatively Approves $187,065 Budget iworcncaci i.ity s tola] estimated budget for 1952-53 is $187,065. The budget was tentatively approved at the meeting of the town board Thursday night over the protest of one of the commissioners, W. L. Derrickson. Because the budget was not final ly adopted, there will have to be another meeting this month to take final action, the mayor. George W. Dill, jr., said. Absent Thursday night was Commissioner M. T. Mills. The mayor commented Thursday night. "This is the largest budget we have ever had. It is large be cause our anticipated revenues are expected to be larger. Further more, we have acted on the premise that the taxpayer does not benefit until the town spends the tax in come on behalf of the taxpayer." I.ast year's budget was estimated at $172,000. Receipts for 1951-52 were $183,258.06. The break-down by departments follows: adminis trative expenses $27,558. police de partment $29,060; fire department $18,101; streets and sewers $5,360; sanitation $13,530. Cemetery $8,175, building inspec tor. Carolina Power and Light, debt service, recreation, and hospital $60,833. street department (Powell bill) $24,446. Under the new budget, the mayor's salary, and expenses inci dental to operation of his office are set at $2,600: commissioners will be paid both for attending regular and special meetings (heretofore they were paid $5 only for each regular meeting) and that expense has been budgeted at $600. The janitor's salary haa been raised from 11,719 annually to $1, 876 annually and police salaries as well as tire department engineer salaries have been upped. The mayor said that no uniform ed man winking for the lown will receive less than $50 a week. Police patrolmen lave been raised from $45 to $50 a week, lieu tenants from $50 to $55, captains from $55 to $60, and the chief to | $65. Commissioner Derrickson object ed to certain salary increases, and said he was voting against the ten tative budget because he did not approve of them. in the tentative budget no pro vision has been made for the pro posed county-wide radio setup which the county. Beaufort, *\nd Morehead City have been discuss ing for the past several weeks. For debt service $43,600 has been earmarked. $5,450 to the recrea tion commission. $2,725 to the hos pital. and $9,000 to Carolina Power and Light for street lighting, power, and water. Anticipated receipts are as fol lows: taxes $109,000. poll tax $765. delinquent tax $5,000, franchise tax $2,500. penalties and costs $700. intangible tax $2,700, busi ness licenses $6,000, cemetery rev enue $800. dog licenses $100. Rent $600, beer and wine tax $4,000, parking meters $7,000, city tags, maps $800. building permits $250. sewer tap fees $250, street assessments $300, racing commis sion $23,000, recorder's court $5, 000, Powell street aid bill $16,500. Child Hurt John Kelly, new barber at the Sanitary Barber shop in Morehead City, was called to his home near Charlotte Saturday because his son waa seriously injured in an automobile accident. Commission Seeks Funds for National <> Seashore Park Group Meets Saturday Af ternoon at Atlantic Beach Hotel; Avon Man Protests With approval of the council of state, expected to be given at Ral eigh yesterday morning, the Cape llatteras National Seashore park comes closer to reality. At a meeting at the Atlantic Beach hotel Saturday afternoon members of the North Carolina Cape llatteras Seashore commis sion approved a resolution asking that $200,000 be turned over to jthe federal government by July 1 j and another $300,000 prior to Aug. V This $500,000 plus $118,000 of I state funds already earmarked for the Cape llatteras park will match ! $018,000 the federal government ; says it has available. | The $018,000 is coming from an unknown benefactor. A. C. Strat um of the National Park service's I regional office, Richmond, told the commission Saturday* that he him self did not know who the bene factor is and if he did, he would not be at liberty to disclose "his or their identity." The total $1,236,000 would be used to acquire the land for the national seashore park. The fed eral government hopes to take in the southern tip of Bodie island, south through llatteras and Ocra cokc. Stratton told the commis sion that the federal government cannot appropriate money for ac quisition of land. The land has to be donated or' financed through other sources. The federal gov | urnment does, however, appropriate I ate funds for develop*** nt of iDt * See HATTKRAS, Pago 2 Polio Strikes j Pelletier Child The first case of infantile paraly sis this year has occurred in the county, Dr. N. T. Ennctt, health officer, reported yesterday. Melba Alice Lee. 9-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alton Lee, of Pel letier, was stricken last Tuesday and removed yesterday from Jack sonville to the Greensboro Conva lescent hospital. The health office has placed a quarantine on the Lee family, which includes besides the parents, "six or seven children," according to Dr. Ennett. The physician attending ihe .LilJ I\- I II ?( mini was ui. o . r. v,uiuun ui Swansboro. The Carteret county health department was notified of the case through the health repay ment at Jacksonville in Onslow. county. This is the first case in Carteret county since September 1951. Cases in the county during the past six years are as follows: 1946, six; 1947, one; 1948, twelve; 1949 two; 1950, one; 1951, two and this year to date, the Lee child. In the years when there were 6 and 12 cases, the health oficer said that first reports of the illness came in July and he said that judg ing from the statistics, it may be that more cases than in 1949, 1950, and 1951 can be expected this year. Saturday Night Party Changed Because of the difficulty in ob taining chaperones at the Saturday night teen-age parties at the More head City recreation center, the Saturday party has been switched to Wednesday night, Fred Lewis, recreation director, announced yes terday. Beginning tomorrow night, the recreation center will be open for the youngsters rather than Satur- . day as in the past. The Friday night party will continue as usual. In charge of this Friday's enter tainment will be the Morehead'City Rotary club. The Rotarians also sponsored last week's Friday party. I Lewis announced that the new tennis poles and nets are up and were used for the first time Sun day. The Morehead City high school band, under the direction of Ralph Wade, will give an outdoor concert at the recreation center at 7 p.m. tomorrow.