Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Aug. 20, 1954, edition 1 / Page 2
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I Roy Eubanks Re- Named Wrack Commissioner Governor Umstoad has reappoint ed Roy Eubanks, Beaufort. wfeck commissioner (or Carteret County, districts 1 through 3. The two year term expires Sept. II, 1958. Wreck commissioners take charge of the salvafe and diapoaal of cargoes from wrecked ships. They receive compensation in the form either of pay from the rtiip owners or a commission from the cargo sale. Wilbur Gillikin, Beaufort, and Rodney Harvey, Sea Leiel, were admitted to the Sea Level Hospital Wednesday night following a truck accident. Details of the wreck could not be learned because the ' Highway Patrol had not been noti fied of the accident by noon yes terday. ii ~~ ~ ii BACK INJURIES By DR. R. O. HARM M Morehead City, N. C. Thousands of working men know what Chiropractic can do for back injuries. They know that when other methods fail to give them relief, Chiropractic was successful. It is important for employees, compensation insurance carries and public in general to recog nize this fact. Actual studies have been made of injured workers cared for by different systems of therapy Chiroprac tic brings the worker through with less chance of the charge malingering, less cost to the in surance company, less cost for insurance coverage to the em ployer, as well as less interrup tion in the production line. Several large industrial firms are now employing chiroprac tors on a full time basis to care for their injured worker*. To the chiropractor, the spine represents the keyboard, as it were that locks up and unlocks the inherent curative powers of nature. (One of a series of articles published to explain and illus trate the practice of chiroprac tic). * Morehead City Stop Lights Start Working Wednesday Mayor Qaorge W. Dill, Morehead City, anaouaced Wednesday that Uie stop llghta in dowatMivn Mars head Cttjr are now in open tiaa The lighU have been up aince early in July httt due lo ?ieetrte*! difficulties operation was delayed. He added that there are atlll some minor adjaatments to he made and if the lifhts an working one day bat not the next, motorists should please bear with the elec triciaaa and be patient unfit the problems are ironed oat. The mayor laid the (top light system is the beat that can be bought. Because of the climatic conditions in thia area the town was afraid to invest money in a system that would not stand up under the salt air, he explained. Mayor Dill and Police Com missioner D. G. Bell announce that officers will be on duty in the downtown section for about a week until motorists and pedestrians be come accustomed to the lights.. WU1 be Warned No citations will be given should a motorist accidentally drive through a red light, but the offend er will be warned and asked to comply with the law. No left turns are permitted at the intersections of 8th, or 0th streets on Arendell. The mayor pointed out that this makes it safe for pedestrians to cross the street without having to dodge cars that heretofore were allowed to make a left turn (a U turn) across the tracks and go down the opposite side of the street. The mayor said the lights are timed to allow a pedestrian 25 seconds to cross Arendell Street. The lights will be in operation 24 hours a day throughout the year. Operation in the summer only would not be wiae, the mayor pointed out, because corrosion would result and cause trouble. The lights are timed to allow a ear to pass through the business district at 20 miles an hour, accord ing to the police commissioner. The train going east and west on Arendcll will not stop at rod lights Motorists who hare the groan light aorti and south will have to look aul for the train. Mayor Mil laid the train goes flowfer and eoaws la and out of town but once a day, so it should ?ot create a hazard. In caae of a fire, the stop lights can be controlled from the police switchboard at the town hall. All lights will be rtd and traffic will stop to allow the fire trucks a clear way through town. Town officials expect criticism because of the lights but add, "It's one of the thinga that has to be done to make the downtown area safe for pedestrians." When no left turns were permit ted in the business section in pre vious summers, businessmen com plained that it affected their bus iness. While the same complaints may be heard again this time, town officials believe that safety of pe destrians and motorists is impor tant too. Commented the mayor, 'This is merely another one of the growing pains experienced by a progressive city." Court (Continued from Page 1) by Judge Morris. The defendants were James Alton Wadsworth, John Huntington Wagner, Joy Dean Wieczorek, Woodrow Wilson An drews, Percy Hamilton Davis, and William Albert Stephenson Amon Jr. The state did not prosecute Wadsworth. Davis, Andrews, Wag ner and Amon paid costs of court. Wieczorek was taxed one-half the costs. A charge of parking in an im proper location was brought against Hiram Harold Leonard. He was found guilty and ordered to pay court costs. Pleads Guilty Leeman Daw pled guilty to fol lowing too close and paid costs. Edward Neal Jones was taxed one-half costs for permitting an un licensed person to operate an auto mobile and Geraldine Braswell Jones was taxed one-half costs for having no operator's license. J?e Gillikin, charged with non support. and Clarence E. Smith, charged with issuing a bad check, were not prosecuted. Wyon Gray Lewis paid court costs for having an expired oper ator's license Charges of careless and reckless driving, passing at an intersection and failing to yield the right of way causing an accident were brought against Harold Lee Od berg. He was not proaecuted on the charge of careless and reckless driving but was fined $10 plus court costs on the other charges. Sentence Suspended Frances Lee Sheppard was sen tenced to 30 days in jail, sus pended on payment of a $30 fine and costs, for speeding and care less and reckless driving. Howard Fulton Baker and Rob ert Fulton Baker were taxed one half costs for fishing from a re stricted bridge and loitering on a highway bridge. The case against Vandie H. AI llgood was left open. He is charged with non-support and abandonment. Also left open was the case against Jimmie L. Tolbert for having an expired operator's license. The 29 cases which were contin ued are Chester Woods, assaulting a female; Jtmet Taylor, disturbing the p?ace and being a public nul sar,it; Ernest Brown and J. T. Crown, possessing non-taxpaid whisky; Ted Day, bad check. Charged with speeding are Her bert Jones, Wllham Cromwell Johnson, Gordon Poling, Peter Colon Grant, and Edwin Ware Rob inson. Lester Dickinson, Harrison Hor ton and James Brpnton are charged with assault, and James Brmnton and Theodore Johnson are charged with issuing bad checks. Five persons are charged with not having an operator's license. They are Jack R. Bell, Mildred Rose Styron, Charlotte Keberdre Scheall, James Lee snd William Hardy Willis. Richard James Scheall la charged with permitting De Paul Offers Shorter Nurse Training Plan Six Months' Internship Program Will Begin In September Internship for student nurses, a new experimental program in nurs ing education, will be inaugurated at De Paul Hospital, Norfolk, in September, it was announced yes terday by Sister Aloysia, director of the hospital's School of Nursing. The new program will condense the present three year educational period into two and one-half years and add a six-month nursing intern ship to students for practical surgi cal and medical nursing at the hos pital prior to the granting of a diploma. The program, just approved by the Virginia State Board of Nurs ing Education, has been under study for more than six months. It was proposed to the School of Nursing advisory council at the annual meeting in May. The internship plan calls for stu dent experience as actual grad uate nurses under a situation where the students may receive continued instruction in the area to which they are assigned before the diploma is awarded, Sister Aloysia said. The plan will put the two and one-half year educational period on a higher plane, she said. It will in no way reduce the hours of classroom lecture or clinical in struction previously given in the three-year program. Students will continue specialized training periods under those agencies with which the hospital maintains affil iation. During ner iniernsnip, me stu dent nurse will be assigned eve ning duty, night duty, servo as leader of the nursing team, work in ward administration and will have the privilege of electing spe cial duty in which she feels espe cially interested. Applications for admission are being taken at the School of Nurs ing for the September term. Tui tion for the entire three years in cludes room, board, linens and uni form laundry service, it was an nounced. Scholarships and loan funds are available and informa tion about them may be obtained through the school director. Sister Aloysia explained that thp hoe^jtal was the first in Vir ginia to inaugurate affiliated train-* ing in nursing mental patients. Students now spend 12 weeks duty in Seton Institute of Psychiatry, Baltimore, Md. Another first for the hospital was the affiliation for special ex perience in nursing tuberculosis patients. The hospital sends stu dent nurses to the Veterans Hos pital in Oteen, N. C., for an eight week period. Students also do eight weeks of special work with the King's Daughters' Visiting Nursing Association; . two weeks with the Norfolk Department of Public Health and a week with the Carrollton Oaks Nursery School for obsefvation of the well child dur ing their 12 weeks of pediatrics experience. Quick Braura Fox? Orangeburg, S. C. ? (AP) ? There was no gun handy when a fox ahowed himself near a resi dence here. Caldwell Brown picked up a tire pump and took off on foot after the animal ? caught it, too. and killed it with the pump. an unlicensed person to drive an automobile. Charges of failing to stop at a stop sign have been brought against William Clifton Rose and James Paddison Pretlow. Isaac Blango is charged with following too close and Andrew Green Jr. will face a charge of careless ?nd reckless driving. Aloraa Thomas Redd Jr. is charged with driving drunk after his license was revoked; Jack Har lan Harmon, passing at an intersec tion, and Matthew A. Marshall, driving drunk. lildnow fWNoU)! Adding a room? Building closet* or iHiItn? Ju*t name the job . . . we've got the iuht ma- ( terial* at real ?avin(i to you I See u* NOW! Safrit Lumber Co. LENNOXVILLE ROAD ? BEAUFORT ? PHONE 2-4511 THE WOODMEN OF THE WOULD OFFERS YOU: ? 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Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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Aug. 20, 1954, edition 1
2
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