HOSPITAL NOTES Mwckead CHy Hoepilal IMscbrH affr Irfalarit: The Rev. Willard Watson, Har ked Island. Saturday; Mr. Fletcher Bell, Morehead City, Friday; Mrs. Robert Currier, Newport. Ttyirs day; Mrs. Vernon Hancock. Have lock, Thursday; Mr. Lee Jones Jr., Morehead City, Friday; Mr. Kate June* Jr., Harkers Island, FHilf Tommy Morrow, Morehead City, Thursday; Mrs. Maxwell Willis, Harkers Island, Thursday. Discharged alter operation: Mrs. Harold Freeman. Stella, Saturday; Mrs. Violet Whitley, Newport, Saturday; Mr. Harry B Taylor, Havelock, Saturday; Mrs Guy Carr, Morehead City, Satur day; Mrs. L. C. McCain, Newport, Friday; fcucy Marino, Morehead City, Friday. Discharged: Mrs. B. E. Cummins and daugh ter, Harkers Island. Saturday: Mrs. Don DeMole and daughter. Have lock, Saturday; Mrs. Luther Ed wards and son, Morehead City, Thursday. Admitted: Mrs. Sadie Howland. Morehead City, Saturday; Mr. Warren Alli good. Beaufort, Friday; Mrs. Char lie Phillips. Beaufort. Thursday; Mrs. Alfred B. Reynolds. Newport, Friday; Mrs. Walter Willis, Har kers Island, Wednesday. Sea Level Hospital Discharged: Mrs. Clara Belle McGirk. Alexan dria, Va., Thursday; Mrs. Neta Neilson. Sea Level. Friday; Miss Patsy Lawrence, Beaufort RFD, Saturday: Mrs. Dorothy Souther land, Morehead City, Sunday. Admitted: The Rev. Ray Hemrick. Harkers Island. Saturday; Mrs. Ruth Robin son. Smyrna, Sunday; Sylvester Guthrie, Harkers Island. Sunday; Mrs. Bertha Gaskill, Beaufort, Mon day. Out-of-Town Couple Wed In Baptist Church Friday Miss Shirley Ann Godbold of Tallahassee, Fla., and Mr. Donald Derby of Anacortes, Wash., were united in marriage Friday, June 11, at eight o'clock in the evening in the First Baptist Church. Dr. John II. Bunn performed the ceremony. The bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Godbold and son, Terry, of Tallahassee; Miss Ar\n Godbold, Tallahassee; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Derby of Anncortes wen? i>?esent. The couple will make their home at 106 N. 9th St. STORK NEWS Births at Morehead CKy Hospital: To Mr. and Mrs. Luther Ed ward Edwards, Morehead City, a son, Luther Edward II, Sunday, June 6. To Mr. and Mrs. Donald Henry DeMoie. Havelock, a daughter, Lin da Kay, Tuesday, June 8. OBITUARIES ROY DAVIS Graveside services for Roy Davis, 60, of Smyrna, who died Thursday night in the Veterans Hospital, Durham, after a long illness were held at 3 o'clock Saturday after noon at Ocean View Cemetery. Beaufort. The Rev. Gordon Bell Davis officiated. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. J. J. Davis of Smyrtia, four sisters, Mrs. Joel H. Davis of Harlowe, Mrs. James E. Holland of Smyrna, Mrs. Orrie Holland of Falls Church, Va., and Mrs. William Sourwine of Seat tle, Wash.; seven brothers, Graham L. of Smyrna, Harry T. of Raleigh, Lloyd W. of Smyrna. Ernest J. of Beaufort, Capt. James W., USN, of Washington, D. C., Maurice of Fall* Church, Va., and Robert Ddward of Tucson, Ariz. MRS. ELLEN Dl'DLEY x DICKINSON Mrs. Ellen Dudley Dickinson. 87, died Monday morning at her home at Beaufort RED. Euneral services will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon at Tuttles Grove Methodist Church, with the Rev. R. M. Poulk officiating. Burial will be in the clrarch cemetery. The body will be taken to the church an hour before the services to lie in sUte. Surviving Mrs. Dickinson are a daughter, Mrs. Ada Harvey of Beaufort RED and 19 grandchil dren. MRS DEMI. A UfTON Mrs. DeliU Lupton. 79, died Fri day afternoon at her home at Sea Level. Funeral services were held at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon at the Primitive Baptist Church, Sea Level, with Eldrr Eddie Humphrey officiating. Burial was in the Sty ron Cemetery. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Laura Dickinson and two sons, John W. and Harry D., all of Sea Level. _______ ? OSCAR GILLIKIN Oscar GUlikin, 53. died Saturday afternoon in Morehead City II os PKfL . Surviving are hi* wife. Mrs. Mag dalene Gillikin; two daughters, Mrs. Gladys Morton of Morehead City, Miss Nancy Gillikin of the home; one ion, Ray, U8N, station ed in Japan; three sisters, Mrs. J. S. Hardison of WaahtagtoBr Mrs. Allan Lawrence of Ofway, Mrs. V . 1 1 .1 ? Mil HutUrla -I ?? *- -111 ? . lvcii im u ifiiuu oi iwanmamwrK, Help Children Learn to Eat By Respecting Personalities 2? ? i Twins may look alike, but they often eat differently. By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor No two children are exactly alike in their eating habits. Even the twins who look as much alike as two peas in a pod, eat different ly. Perhaps one of them spoons in food with his left hand, while the other operates steadily with his right! So watch out for your own youngster's particular quirks. Giv^ him nutritious food but don't wor ry if, once in a while, he shows some temperament about eating. Is he ready to feed himself? Ev en though his spoon seems to hit his ear oftener than it goes into his mouth, it's best to let a child feed himself when the urge to do so comes upon him. If you are pa tient, uncritical and casual, he'll soon learn to use those eating utensils easily and well. And he'll get a lot of satisfaction out of his self reliance, too. Does he go on a food jag occa sionally? Has he been eating all his cereal and junior fruits but leaving his milk? Then be versa tile! Put a few drops of red food coloring in his milk; he might like it pink? Or maybe he would like to sip it through a colored straw? Or have it served in that special mug with the picture on the bottom that Grandma brought him. Help your youngster learn to chew by gradually, but regularly, adding foods that require chewing to his meals. Continue to add new foods so he can learn to like va riety ? and don't get discouraged if he only eats a bite or two the first time. He'll do better by and by When we suggest that you re spect your child's personality, we are not suggesting that you go to "JiiT^tCTigths to persuade him to eat. Don't offer him rewards for down ing that vegetable. All that will teach him is to expect a reward for eating; it won't help iiim to ap preciate good food. In other words, don't coax him. Don't ask him to take a bite of carrot "for Cinderella'! and a spoonful of spinach "for Little Jack Horner!" All he learns from coaxing is that he can get special attention from you when he doesn't eat. If your youngsters are to be healthy, they need foods from the?e groups: milk and milk products; eggs; meat, poultry, fish; fruits and vegetables; bread and cereals; butter. In addition, they need fish liver oil or some other source of vitamin D. There are lots of foods in these categories, so don't do battle. Johnny refusing his liver? Try another meat. A main dish most youngsters like is made this way. Cut a baked potato in half lengthwise. Remove the inside, mash with a little salt and butter. Add half as much strained or junior (chopped) meat as potato and mix well. Re fill potato shells and reheat in ov en. For an extra dividend, top each stuffed potato half with a strip of partially cooked bacon and crisp under the broiler. A tempting "nog" is a good way to step up milk intake. Serve the nog cool, rather than cold. Few children under three like milk chilled even though they go for ice cream. Orange Nog Ingredients: 2 tablespoons strain ed egg yolks, Vk cup strained or ange juice, 1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon sugar. Method: Mix the egg yolks, or ange juice, milk and sugar; beat enough to blend. Serve at once. Makes 2 servings. ~sm Columnist Writes Three Columns a Week at 98 Richard T. Wiley at his typewriter. "Pittsburgh (AP)? Dr. Richard T. Wiley, columnist (or the weekly Elizabeth (Pa.) Herald, is running out of material to write about. He is 98. Wiley Uirns out three columns a week, two on local history and another called "Wiley Wit and Wisdom." He thinks he is the old est working newspaperman in th? country. Starting as a typesetter at 19. he has been almost continuously with the Herald since then. In 1876, he became editor and ]>ublisher. He is also the author of several books, which brought him an honorary doctorate of literature from Wash ington and Jefferson College, o I Washington, Pa. Injured in an automobile acci dent in 1949, he ia confined to a rocking chair. "I'm beginning to feel like an old man," he admits. His memories go back to the Civil War. He recalls the begin one brother. Vernon of Otway and one grandchild. Funeral plans are incomplete. MISS EVELYfc MINTZ Miss Evelyn Mintz. 36, sister of Mrs. Paul Branch of Morehead City, di?d Thursday in James Wal ker Memorial Hoapital, Wilming ton. Funeral aervices were held at JO o'clock Saturday morning at the home in Wilmington and burial waa in Oakdale Cemetery. Surviving are her parents, two sisters and one brother. nings of electric light, the phono graph, movies, radio, automobiles. He considers radio the one in vention in his lifetime having the most far-reaching effects. He sees little real change in the small weeklies, but metropolitan papers "put too much emphasis on crime these <*ays," he says. In his columns. Dr. Wiley prac tices the nearly lost art of the paragrapher. "It is a good thing to have money in circulation constantly. A good way to accomplish it is for all to pay their debts promptly." Or: "A fellow should not get puffed up over the idea that he can break the law and always get away with It. The turkey that evades the Thanksgiving axe often gets it in the neck about Chriitmas." Looking back over the vast changes he has seen, Wiley thinks that people are improving little by little. "Not just the way people live, but the people themselves." For a happy life he recommends: "An honest one, and I might add, a religious ohe." He's a Choir Man Dubuque, Iowa ? (AP) ? After SO years. J. Earl Bott of Dubuque Is still going strong as a choir Singer Ha started bis choir ca reer as a boy soprano hare and later sang in St. James Protestant Episcopal Church choir in Chicago. While in the Navy he waa a mem ber of otber choirs at New London, Conn.; Hamilton, Bermuda; Gibral tar; Valvetta, llalta; Spalato, Yu goslavia: and Rone, Italy. Hair Trend Survey Shows Girls Change to Red Hair Br VIVIAN MOWN Af Newafeaiiires Realty K4i?#r ? Redheads are coming back. Hair detective, Harry Robins, says that before the wow (liei you'll have a yea to be a redhead. s Robins, director of educational research for a hair preparation houae in St. Paul, Minn , makes surveys of hair trends. Says he: "Funny thing about hair color ia that it is regional and runs in cy cles. But one shade always pre dominates. The Weat Coast has been slaphappy over red hair for a long time. Movie stars Lucille Ball. Rita Hayworth, Susan Hay worth and others helped influence it. In Chicago and Miami silver blonde is the rage." Robins got interested in detect ing hair colors on a regional basis when he ran ads in a St Paul, Minn paper looking for blondes for hair tests and got no replies. i? Someone suggested Chicago. There he wm deluged. Lighter hair shades are more likely to predominate in states bor dering water, he says. New York and Boston favor a blonde where as the Midwest conservative pre fers brown. Robins says the red trend is be coming increasingly obvious at beauty shows and in national sur veys of beauty experts. I.ast year advance predictions of popularity indicated ash blonde, and such was the case, he says. Even gray haired women think nothing of coloring their hair in youthful shades these days, he says. Some go in for silver blonde hues or smoky tones. Others color their hair but leave a little gray at the temples to give their hair a more natural look. fyew hair coloring processes are quicker and easier, he says. New colors have a developer action which works very quickly coloring MOattaMk Crownaville, Md (AP) ? Jor dan Dorsey thought be had the burglar problem licked by remov ing the front doorknob and hiding it nearby everytime he left the house An intruder found the knot* and let himself in. The loot* One can of beans, eaten on the prem ises. and lightening the hair in one pro cess, taking only from three min utes to one-half hour as compared to yesterday's all-day coloring jobs. Not every woman should color her hair, Robins advises. Eyes and ?kin must harmonize with hair color. Lighter shades are fine for older women providing skin is light, but olive-skinned types must select medium hair colors. Red and dark reds go with al most any type, however Medium ash blonde is good for women in the 40s and 50s. Robins says: "Whatever happens let the wo man beware of trying to get the hair color she had at 16. Skin pig mentation, face lines are changed. A good hair colorist should be con sulted to help make hair color look perfectly natural. Vic Vet fays r- ' ? ? ^ W TWA** 'THAT Vo? OMM9 NUMCf ft WHICH YOU MT FROM VA WMfN Y0O RRST APfty *0? a U n??t IS VERY imkhtmt um it EVIBY?* vsu wcrrf ?. voJu MT FASTER sttv"* ? ' J vT? ? I Pm ImH l?lwa*UM i*l?l ??' VKTKRANti ADMJNMTKATION Blood fifU Around Norfolk. Neb. (AP) ? Martin Leu has donated his 200th pint oi blood to the Norfolk Lutheran Hospital bloofl bank. Leu has giv en the 25 gallons in the past 4l4 years. He was the blood bank's first donor Dec. 29, 1949. Court Apalogltw to Two FBI Uod*rcoy*r Ag?nt* Detroit (AP) ? Haroid Mikkel >on an t MiUoa SMtwlr* were ar reted for loitering in an after hours drinking place Tttt occa sion was a membership party of the Civil Rights Congress, which ii on the attorney general's list of sub versive organisations. They meekly pleaded guilty and accepted $10 fines and a year's probation. Later the two were re galed as FBI undercover agents when they were surprise witnesses at a trial of Red leaders. Judge Frank G. Schemanske called the pair before him: "This court owes you an apolo gy," he said. "For what you did at that Communist trial the coun try owes you a vote of thanks." East Meets West Norman, Okla. (AP) ? William R East and Robert H West, Un,: vanity of . Oklahoma freshmen, are roommates. East's bed is on the east side of the room and Weft's opposite. They plan to be mar ried next summer to high school sweethearts in a double wedding. THERE'S A LOT BEHIND THE BOTTLE OF MILK YOU ENJOY Penny for penny, that bottle of milk on your doorstep is a terrific buy. Dairy Foods provide 30% of a family's nutritional requirements for 15% of the family food dol lar. America's dairymen are constantly improving the quality of the milk you con sume through improved methods and better breeding. We are proud to be a part of America's great dairy industry. THE HOME OF PABST RAVEN RAMBLER (Preferred Pedigree Bull) Our Junior Herd Sire Sea of ? Weber Huelwood Burke Raven ? "Excellent" Gold Medal Proven Sire Dud? Pabot Rambllde Colanthui ? "Very Good" Fat ? Mi dayi ? 2K jm. ? 789.50 pounds Milk ? 365 days ? 23S45.00 pounds Breeders of Purebred Holstein-Friesan PRODUCERS OF GRADE A MILK WE WELCOME VISITORS AT OUR DAIRY FARM BffVSIOEFflRm Bos 407 ? Marthmd City, North Carolina H H ? l STEIN f- R 1 1 [J I A N Phone 6-3928

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