Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Dec. 7, 1954, edition 1 / Page 10
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Proposed Plant Expansion This Year Exceeds 1954 Raleigh. ? Industrial expansion in North Carolina during the first nine months o I ISM in total in vestments planned was consider ably greater than it was (or the entire year of 1953, Director Ben E. Douglas of the Department of Conaervation and Development an nounced today. Mr. Douglas said that during the nine-month period this year there were 184 new and expanded in dustries announced with total in vestments of $89,223,000. The new and expanded industries provide a potential of 13,220 new jobs and the annual payroll is expected to be $31,731,240. A report given Mr. Doug las by Dallas T. D a i 1 e y, head of the department's com merce and industry division, shows that during the first nine months of this year there were. 85 new industries located or planned for construction in the state, and 99 expansions to existing indus tries. Investments planned for new industries total (51,30f<,000, with $37,914,000 earmarked for expan sions by existing plants. A department summary for the 666 entire year of 1953 showed 144 new industries, and 95 plant ex pansion* for a combined total of 239, with a total investment of $61,609,000. They provided a po tential of 16,264 new jobs. Mr. Douglas said diversification was a marked feature of n4w in dustrial plants and expansions planned for the State during the first nine months of this year. A breakdown of the 85 new in dustries planned during the period shows 18 in the textile products group, 14 in food and kindred pro ducts, 12 in apparel, 12 in lumber and furniture, six in stone, clay and glass products, four in mac hinery, four in electrical machin ery .three in chemical products, two in petroleum and coal products, two in printing and publishing field, and one each in tobacco manufacturing, fabricated metal products, and transportation, with the remainder being of a mis cellaneous nature. The nine ? months period was highlighted by the breaking of ground and the beginning of con struction of the $13,000,000 tobacco and cigarette manufacturing plant of the P. Lorillard Company^jn Greensboro, a $7,000,000 plant of the Lithium Corporation of Ameri ca at Bessemer City, and the an nounced $16,000,000 conversion by Western Electric and Douglas Air craft of the old Quartermaster De pot in Charlotte for the manufac ture of guided missiles. For a real old-fashioned Christmas aive her TWEED BATH DUO! $3?i lavish endearments are a keynote of Christmas. And lavish is the word for this Bath Duo . . . ounces of Tweed Bouquet, plus a big 6-ounce box of Tweed Bath ?owder, all done up in a pretty Christmas package! MOREHEAD CITY DRUG CO. A Good Drug Store Nothing Makes Her Happier Than Jewelry Wise Santas have learned that the surest way to make a woman happy at Christmas time is to give her jewelry. * No matter her age or her type, every woman is flattered by a gift of jewelry, whether it's real j?nd valuable or frankly fake. This is the kind of a gift that's a subtle compliment to the recipient, some thing gay and frivolous, something completely feminine. Frilly lingerie and furs fall in the same category, as contrasted This year's height of fashion ? the long rope of cultured pearls, which nun be worn many ways. Pictured are matching earrings and ring. If real pearls are too rich for your budget, you can buy inexpensive fake ones al most as effective. with the grimly practical kind of ??ift. such as a washing machine. And there never was a woman who didn't enjoy the flattery of a little frivolity now and then. This year you can't go wrong with a gift of a long rope neck lace. either of real culturcd pearls or merely colorful fake jewels, to be wrapped around and around her throat or knotted in a long string. It's the vogue of the moment, and no woman can ever have too mdby. Matching earrings and bracelet will complete the picture. Earrings may be discreet single pearls, correct for any occasion, tailored simple gold hoops for wear with suits and daytime clothes, or fantastic glittering dangles fo^ Eve ning wear. A new trick being used effective ly by fashionable women this year is combining gold and silver jewel ry. A. woman may wear a silver necklace with its twin in gold, one silver and one gold earring, an arm load of bracelets in both metals. It looks new and smart. In costume jewelry, the sky's the ' limit. Any woman would like sev eral ropes of gay fake jewels in different colors, to wear all at once, or half-a-dozen inexpensive bracelets to make a gay splash with a black dress, or a really splashy big rhinestone pin, to wear on a lapel. It's easy to flatter a woman with jewelry, whether you spend $1 or $1,000. The United States produced a record total of 80.151,893 tons of finished steel in 1953. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY $080 U 4/? 0T. 66 PROOF OLINMORI DISTILLERIES COMPANY, lOUIIVILLI, KY. Christmas Demands Re-Telling Of Dickens' Tale of Tinv Tim ^O/wfo Ropes of beads are glittering, fashion-wise gifts, says the Jew elry Industry Council, and com paratively inexpensive. Famous jet fighters can now be assembled by any lad and mounted on swivel bases. From a kit by. Revell. ?" It is a bitterly cold day before Christmas but the cold and bitter ness within Ebcneeier Scroogc makes the weather mild by com parison. He cries "Humbug!" to every thing, especially the "Merry Christ mases" of his nephew and under paid clerk, scoffs at the poor and chases away the carolers. That night he is haunted by the ghost of Christopred liarley, hif business partner dead seven years. The spirit tells Scrooge he will be 'Oiltown, USA' To Play Thursday In Beaufort "Oiltown, USA," released by Billy Graham Evangelistic Films, will be shown in Beaufort Thurs day. Arrangements for showing the film are in charge of the Rev. W. T. Roberson, pastor of the First Baptist Church, who has engaged the high school auditorium for the showing. Evangelist Graham amazed the entertainment and religious world with the world's first Christian western film, "Mr. Texas." More than 5,000,000 persons saw the film in its first two years of showings, and the Graham organization re ported that over 200,000 persons made "decisions for Christ" through the ministry of the r.c ture. "Oiltown, USA" was filmed dur ing Graham's crusade in Houston, Texas, and features the young evangelist and his team in their meetings in Rice Stadium where the attendance was as high as 60, 000 for a single service. Featured in the 90-minute, full color film, are Colleen' Townsend Evans, Paul Power, Robert Clarke, Georgia Lee, Ralph Hoopes, and the stars of "Mr. Texas," Redd Harper and Cindy Walker. The doors to the high school will be opened at 7 p.m. with the picture beginning at 7:30 p.m. All seats are on a "first come" basis, with no admission charge. Man Finds Girl Scouts Don't Want Male Leader Pontiac, Mich. (AP)Ward Man cour, 39, of nearby Milford, the father of three girls and husband of a Girl Scout leader, volunteered his services when he found a lead er was needed for a Girl Scout troop. Scout officials, after consulting national headquarters, finally told Mancour, "Thanks anyway but this is one job reserved strictly for women." chained after hia death and forced to walk the earth if he doea not now mead hia stingy ways. Three ghosts visit Scrooge The Ghost of Chriatmas Paat leada him back to his lonely childhood. With the Ghoat of Chriatmas Present, he sees the poor celebration of his clerk Bob Cratchit and the happi .ess that filla even the heart of tile crippled Tiny Tim. And on to his nephew's holiday meal. The laat ghost, of Christmaa Yet To Come, shows Scrooge his lonely grave, his nephew deeply in debt and the sad Cratchit household where Tiny Tim is dying. Scrooge trembles and begs the spirit for a chance to honor Christmas. Scrooge awakes as a new man, makes good his pledge, helps his nephew and the Cratchits and be comes a second father to Tiny Tim. (From "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens) Letters to Santa (Editor1* Note: After Santa Claua checks the letteri he receive!, he forward! them to THE NEWS-TIMES We would like to publish all we have received, hut Santa has said it will be all right with him if we run only as' many as we have room for. He said he knows the boys and girls will understand). Dear Santa Claus, 1 want you to bring me a big tractor like Hot's and anything you think I'd like. Love, Chria Chappell Dear Santa Claus I am a little boy 7B years old. Won't you please bring me a few things. A pair of wading pants and rubber coat. A straw hat and a umbrella. Thank you, Santa. 1 am your ever loving Little Captain Pepper Dec. J, 1954 Beaufort, N. C. Dear Santa Claus, ? I am 7 years old and in the sec ond grade at school. Please bring me a Bycyle, set of finger paints, two puppes and a doll wint lots of cothes. I Love you Santa. Will you bring me wath I want. Love, Patricia Marie Potter Beaufort, N. C. Dec. I, 1954 Dear Santa Claus I am 3 years old. Please bring me wath I want. My sister is write ing this letter for me. 1 wath a nurse set, a Bride Doll, a Electric Stove, a Record player and a Dusty set. Love Georgina Potter A SUBSCRIPTION TO THE NEWS-TIMES MAKES AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS PRESENT PHONE THE NEWS-TIMES CIRCULATION DEPT. 6-4175 < ^ this! This pedal does more than just feed gas to an eager and high* powered V8 engine. When you give it the extra nudge thpt moves it beyond the full throttle posi tion, something happens that never happened before in an automobile. \ou hear a businesslike purr, which tells you that twenty power vanes, deep inside the 1955 Dynaflow Drive,* have changed their pitch? just like the variable pitch propellers m a modern air liner. A nd with the tome result In the way you Ket-up-and-go, with ? safety-surge of power for pulling out of a tight spot on the highway. MIITON tnu BUI K? wo y? the Bvtcfc tofte Shew Alternate Teesctey KewNgs Words can't describe it. It's a new sensation ? something you simply must try for yourself. There's nothing like it on the 1955 new-car horizon. Fact is, there's a whale of a lot to see and sample at your Buick dealer's. beneath it all there's good old fashioned integrity in every nut, bolt and rivet. But, this year, don't simply make a visit to the showroom where tfacac trim and thrilling new beauties are oo display. The smart thing to do? if yo? want to There a fresh new styling. There's higher horsepower in every Buiek V8 engine. There's a new Airpower carburet***- And 236 HP le *e IIoxmuut* 236 HP Im riw Son* 236 HP la 4m CmKM 1 8S HP In tfw Smoai - and mH <r#fc fcaffar gat w<?ug? to booM know what ? what ia new automobiles ?is to get behind the wheal of a 1955 Baiok ad drive It How aboet doing that aoonP Thrill of tho traar is Bulclc MOBI I V BVJ1CK C?MPA?1 1708.10-12 BridfM St.
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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Dec. 7, 1954, edition 1
10
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