W CARTERET COUNTY NEWS-TIMES ??< 43rd YEAR, NO. 19. THRF.R SECTIONS TWENTY-TWO PAGES * MOREHEAD CITY AND BEAUFORT, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY. MARCH 6, 1954 PUBLISHED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS Board of Education Acts On Inter-County School Issue To discuss the matter of Car-' teret children attending Jones and Onslow County schools, the educa tion boards of the three counties met Monday afternoon in the court house annex. As a result of the session the Carteret board passed a resolution approving the Carteret pupils at tending the Jones County schools at Maysville and Jones Central High at Trenton. The State Board of Education has yet to pass on the resolution. If they approve, this means that a bus from Onslow will no longer go into the Stella section in the western part of Carteret to take children to. the White Oak School which is both elementary and high school. H. L. Joslyn, county superin tendent of schools, said that some Stella parents who want their chil dren to continue going to the White Oak School may take them in pri vate cars. While the White Oak School is closer to Stella than the high school at Trenton, the school at Trenton offers a much broader high school curriculum, the county superintendent commented. At present there are about 56 pupils in the Stella community who ro to out-of-county schools. 26 to White Oak and 30 to Maysville and Jones Central in Jones. Carteret students started going to Jones County 20 years ago when the Carteret school system could not accommodate them. About a year ago agitation was started by some parents in' Stella to have their pupils go to the White Oak School. Before long, two busses, one from Onslow and one from Jones were running into Stella to take pupils to the two schools ? the Onslow bus without authoriza tion from the state school board transportation division. The issue was shuttled back and forth between the state and this county and battled out simultane ously among the school boards of Onslow and Jones. Jones County felt that after taking this county's students as long as they had that they should not be asked to give them up because their school ay*, tem has been designed to accom modate them. Tlva atate sajji last year that the two busses ??Hd contWfc' going into Stella but that the problem should be settled before school re convenes next fall. In the hope of getting things ironed out, Mr. Joslyn invited the two boards to meet here. Also present were C. D. Douglass, con troller, State Board of Education, and C. C. Brown, director of the division of transportation. The resolution adopted by the Carteret board expressed apprecia tion to both the Onslow and Jones boards for accommodating Carteret pupils but stipulated that the chil dren should be sent to Jones Coun ty. The resolution also asked that the State Board of Education con cur with the Carteret decision. Police Chief Makes Report The Beiufort Police Department issued 273 parking tickets in Febru ary but collected only $20.73 in parking fines. Chief of Police M. E. Guy explained to the town board Monday night that the "penny" meters were illegal and the over parking fines could be collected only if the violators willingly agreed to pay them. Motor vehicle violations headed the list of arrests with 30. Public drunkenness was next with five and one arrest was made in one assault case. Total number of ar rests was 46. The police department recovered a stolen bicycle and investigated four break-ins. Ten investigations were made for the Federal gov ernment The department also investigat ed 42 complaints and extended It courtesies. The police car travelled 2,388 2 miles during the month. Principal Says Wednesday Career Day Was Success G. T Windell, principal of More head City School, said yesterday that both he and faculty members were well pleased with Wednes day's Career Day at the school. He said the students were pleaaed and seemed to take the vo cational talks more seriously this year than before. In his opinion It was the "best Career Day we have ever had." Several speakers were present ia addition to those originally liated. They were W. C. Carlton and Ray Conner, Morehead City; and Fran cis Neal. East Carolina Collage. Representing the State Highway Patrol waa Patrolman i. W. Sykes. Mr Windell expressed his ap ffoclatioo ta all speakers and to others who participated in taking the event a success. ? From Carteret Waters Green-Gilled Oyster Is Fnirnrp\ Dplinhi About this time of the year, the so-called green gilled or "green oy ster" appears on the North Caro lina market and inquiries start pouring into the Commercial Fish eries Division and the Institute of Fisheries Research asking if the oy sters are "fit to eat," "poisonous," or "harmless." When you eat a green gilled oy ster, you are actually eating a rare delicacy, a real gourment item, says Assistant Fisheries Commis sioner Gehrmann Holland. These oysters come from a section of this county and appear green gilled only at certain times of the year. They are identical in color with the famed huitres des Marennes so highly prized in France. In Europe, these oysters are eagerly sought to please the palate of the epicure. According to Dr. William Fahy of the shellfish division of the Institute of Fisheries Research, the green color in the oyster results from a microscopic organism which the oyster eats. It is a tiny plant which makes a seasonal appearance and comes into full bloom in late winter and early spring. During the time when the oysters are feeding on this plant, they turn green because of a pigment which is found in the plant. In the Chesapeake Bay area, Dr. Fahy points out, this organism has been proven identical with the or ganism which gives the famous French oysters its green color. While he has made no investiga tion in the North Carolina area, Dr. Fahy is convinced that the same organism appears in the wa ters of Carteret County and im parts to the local oyster its green color. For generations, Carteret Coun tians and eastern Carolinians have been eating the green gilled oy ster; and while they did not realize that if they had eaten the same oysters in France they would have paid 10 times as much for it, they do know that it has a rare flavor and is harmless. Morehead City Drug Will Open Store Tomorrow State College To Oiler Courses AtMoreheadCity Kalcigh, N. C. - The North stwsss riSJ head City this summer. In announcing the new series of courses today, Eugene Starnes, as sistant director of the college s . tension Division, said that eacn course will run for two weeks and that the five courses will be taught during the periods J"1* 5 16' i hi v 19-30. and Aug. ir is. The courses to be offered are ?Martne Life in Coastal Waters^ of the Coastal Plain, and Plant land Animal Life in Coastal North rciimis Will be held at the More head Cily Technical lnstitut? Latoratory and field tnps will be I made to various communities in | the Morehead City area. . Mr. Starnes said that teachcr may earn credit toward the re newal of their certificates by tak ing the courses. Total costforeach of the two-week courses, including room, meals, and tuit.on, wUl be approximately $55. H. D. Lockey j Joins Rotary JSi K" farmer, as a new member at a^neeting Monday in the Newport ^'l^keyw'a. presented* .the rnv Wallace, program chairman. Gates Matthew., .eld representative of the State Hig Lav Patrol Safety Division. Mr. I Matthews talked ' e ? h training program offered by mg hS'oWective o' lhe er?grV".^ tn teach teen-agers how to drive. Mr Matthews said He e?P1?ln?*1 that lessons in driving .nd hand^ ling a car were given by a faculty "Thfcar. a dual-control type. i? supplied by an automobile manu facturer and insured by the ?choof a npw car is supplied each y?a' bythe manufacturer, concluded "a 'fTli^'dealing with the teen age driving problem, was shown by Mr Matthews at the conclusion of hlatalk Mr. WaU.ce informed Mr Matthews, after the Prog?"}' ?t" B Comer. Newport prinej pal. was in favor of ? driv?r> tr^ ing program in the Newport ? n | pwis and Visitors were T. v. Lewis |oon ? I WOmtoJtoo. . ' Morchcad City Drug Co. will open its doors tomorrow morning in its new Arendell street location in the old Rose Store, Leary build ing, Morehead City. More than double the size of its old store, which will close its doors for the last time tonight, it is described by store equipment en gineers as the finest drug estab lishment in eastern North Carolina. A formal, grand opening will be held in tbe new store in the near future, i W. CjM*nhe* - ov.ner and man ager. opc". d his first store in Morehead City Feb 23, 1029, more than 25 years ago. Almost his first welcome into the business venture was the stock market crash of July 1929. In March 1939, 15 years ago, he moved into the location he vacates tonight. There he has built one of the county's largest businesses and, in the process, a general meeting place for people. None of the friendly things that have helped build Morehead City Drug Co. into a home-like estab lishment are missing in the new store. The new store is everything that is new plus everything that is old and familiar, Mr. Matthews says. Commercial National Bank, a newcomer to Carteret County will occupy the old Morehead City Drug Co. quarters in the near future. Pink Hill Hunter Forfeits $5 Bond Harvey Turner, Pink Hill, charged by l.eroy Mcintosh, game protector, with hunting doves with an unplugged automatic shotgun, did not appear Monday before Earl Mason. Beaufort justice of the peace, and forfeited his $5 bond. Other violations reported by Mr. Mcintosh during February were Harold Nelson, hunting robins with an unplugged automatic shotgun, $15 and costs; Foster Nelson, hunt ing robins, (10 and costs; Donylee Willis, hunting robins, (25 and costs; and Adion C. Morris, hunt ing without a license and uaing an unplugged gun, (10 and costs. The foregoing were tried before L. W. Hassell, Beaufort justice of the peace. Congressman Barden Reports on Coast Guard Property , Dredging of Creek Photo by Norwood Young To prevent such things as this, a grounded menhaden boat in Taylor's Creek, Congressman Graham Harden is attempting to get appropriations for deepening the channel. The Brunswick, Fred Fulcher, captain, went aground this past menhaden season with 425,000 fish aboard. The channel is maintained at a mean low water depth of 7 feet, not enough for loaded fish boats. A depth of 12 feet has been ap proved but the funds were not appropriated for the work. The Brunswick was refloated after a two hour wait for high tide. Beaufort Board Says Scout Building Poorly Maintained The Beaufort town fathers Mon * day night expressed disgust with the physical condition of the Scout Building on Pollock street and took action to set things right. The board authorized that the town attorney, Gene Smith, write letters to the five civic organiza tions to whom the building is on trusted and ask them to supervise opentfion of ihe building or let ?'ie *