p Morehead City Social News Kvelya W?ter?rd, Sactty gfltar rh?M M1T? Mr and Mrs. J. D. Helms and son, Lee. Fayetteville. and Mrs. Helm's molfeor. Mrs Haruld Had dock, who is visiting the United States from Warrington, England, spent the weekend with Mr Helm's parents. Mr. and Mrs W. C. Helms Sgt. Maurice Thuotte, Camp Ia jeune, was also a guest. Mrs. James Whorton and daugh ter, Betsy, arrived yesterday to visit Mrs. Whorton's sister, Mrs. Raymond Bryan and Mr. Bryan. Frank Marino Jr. left Thursday for New York City and I.ong Is land, to visit his aunt, Mrs. Joseph Gengo. and his cousins, for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs Pou Bailey and two sons, returned to Raleigh Sun day after spending the weekend here. Mrs. G. H. Jackson left yesterday to visit her niece, Mrs. Zeke Co zart. at Wilson, before returning to her home at Raleigh. Mrs. Jack son had been visiting Mrs. Rich ard Swindell for two months. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Wade and Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Wade and daughter, Libby, of Goldsboro, re turned Saturaay from a ten-day visit with Mr. and Mrs. Dudley F. O'Brien and family at Jacksonville, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Swindell and son. Edward Jr. will arrive to day from Cameron. La., to visit Mr. Swindell's mother, Mrs. Rich ard Swindell. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin North Wil lis and children, Patty and Mar vin Jr. have returned to their home at Windsor after spending the weekend with Mr. Willis's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Willis. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rudolph, Kansas City. Kan., recently visited their son, Mr. Cecil Rudolph and Mrs. Rudolph. Mr. F. L. Fussell was the guest of Mrs. W. H. Jackson Sunday. Mrs. Fussell returned home with him after spending a week here with her mother, Mrs. Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. K. V. (Jooper left last week to make their home at Dallas. Tex. Mrs. Cooper is the former Virginia Couch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Couch, More head City. Mr. George Wallace is in.ftew Orleans this week. Dr. and Mrs. Carl Patterson, Durham, spent last week at Atlan tic Beach. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Kerr. Dur ham, spent last week with Mrs. E. L. Tilley at Atlantic Beach. Mrs. D. C. Sabiston. Jacksonville, visited recently with her mother, Mrs. W. H. Jackson. Mrs. David Reid, Cherry Point, and Miss Elizabeth Lambeth left yesterday for several days visit at Winston-Salem. Mrs. Dale Aeilts and sons, Stev en, Dickie and David, of Cheyenne, Wyo., will arrive next week to spend several weeks with her mo ther, Mrs. Richard Swindell. Mrs. E. M. Fowler and daughter, Melba, of Chapel Hill, are visiting Mrs. Fowler's brdther and sisltr in law, Mr. and Mrs. Percy How land. Buddy and Johnny Davis have returned from visiting friends and relatives at New Bern. Mrs. Franklin Moffitt and sons. Earl and Brower. Charleston, .V. Va., and Miss Eva Webb, La Grange, were the guests Thursday and Friday of Mrs. Moifitt's fa ther, Mr. Earl Webb and Mrs. Webb. Mr. Theodore Webb, Pine Bluff, is spending this week with his brother. Mr. E. W. Webb and Mrs. Webb on Bogue Sound. Mrs. J. C. Taylor returned to Fernandina Beach, Fla., Friday. Mrs. Carl Bell returned to her home at Raleigh yesterday. After several days there she will visit for several weeks in the western part of the state. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Shuford and daughter, of Hickory, arrived yes terday to spend three weeks at the B?'ll cottage on Sunset Drive. Mrs. J. E. Jones returned over the weekend from a two week va cation at St. Petersburg, Fla. Mrs. Jones nieces. Mrs. V. M. Mont gomery and Miss Edith Ritz, both of Baltimore. Md , vacationed with her. Mr. N. W. Taylor III, Chapel Hill, spent the weekend here with his family. Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Woodcock I and Wayne Morton returned to Staten Island.^ N. Y., Saturday, af j ter spending a week here with Mr. -j Woodcock's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivy Woodcock. Jerry W. Willis, and Milliard Eure accompanied them to New York to spend a few days. Club Officers Attend Meeting at New Bern Mrs. A. B. Roberts, president of the Woman's Club, and Mrs. Truman Kemp, vice-president of the club, attended a business meeting of officers of district 12 of Woman's Clubs at New Bern last Tuesday. Plans were made for the district meeting to be held at Kinston in October. Ittte'Alvah Hamilton Jr., presi dent ef the Junior Woman's Club, ,Mrs. Harvey Hamilton Jr., past president, Mrs. Coolidge Merrill, and Mrs. C. W Marrow, officers of the jupior club, also attended. Obituary NORMAN I.ARKEE Norman I.arkee, 54. of Morehead City died Sunday evening shortly after being admitted to Morehead City Hospital. Funeral services will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon at the Dill Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Noah Brown, pastor of the Free Will Baptist church, officiating^ Burial will be in Bay View cemetery. Surviving are his wife, a son, Norman Jr., both of Morehead City, a daughter, Mrs. William Perrigo, Camp Lejeune; two sis ters, Mrs. R. A. Cherry, Kentucky, Mrs. J. E. Holston, Charlotte, and three grandchildren. I p.m.? Board of Conservation luncheon, Blue Ribbon Club, west of Morehead City 6 p. m.? North Carolina Fisher ies Association fish fry (or C&D, t'apt. Bill's Restaurant, Morehead City 6:45 p.m. Rotary Club, Jnlet Inn, Beaufort 7 p.m. Business and Profession al Women's Club, Holden's Res taurant, Beaufort# 7 p.m. Newport Businessmen's Association, Community Building, Newport 7 p.m. Morehead City School Band Concert. Recreation Building, Morehead City 7:30 p.m.? Community Theatre try outs for See How They Bun, civic center. Morehead City 7 30 p.m. ? Coast Guard Reserve Unit, Coast Guard Station, Fort Macon Roaealttv ojt \ .V*0 ^ornvalVotv %A #y|\vo Se\\$ sSrai? ? ? , j(Bt ? \ Like your telephone, the YELLOW PAGE SECTION of your telephone directory is one of the inoet useful tools of everyday living in your home or office. Nine out of ten tele phone users regularly refer to the Yellow Pages of their directory to find out tvho does what in your home town. Glance through the Yellow Pages and find a wealth of information. Then use it regularly. That's what it's for. THERE'S NO BUYERS GUIDE ? LIKE THE CLASSIFIED Carolina Tdephone and, Talagrapli Company ? T ?? aryqn*, Pates, Honor . Gov. and Mrs. Hodges Mr. ?nd Mrs. Raymond Bryan, tioldsbom, and Mr. a*d Mrs. Ed win P?le, Laurinburg. rniertuiuxl at | bulfct dinner Saturday sight at the Bryan's simmer ham* on Evans Street, for the members of the Stale Port Authority, with Gov. and Mrs. Luther Hodges honored guests. The* hostesses served a seafood casserole, ham. asparagus, grape fruit and lime jello salad with sgur cream sauce, spiced crabap plea, cheeae biscuits, and pecan pies. Preceding the dinner, guests were entertaiaed at a cocktail par ty aboard the railroad car of Mr Mason King, Washington. D. C.. at the port. Mr. and Mrs Howard Coffey. Lenoir, entertained Friday night at ? dinner for tlve authority mem bers at the Atlantic Beach Hotel. Mrs. Phillips Hostess To Thursday Bridge Club Mrs. Jasper Phillips was hu&tess tc the Thursday Bridge Club last week. Arrangements of summer flowers were used to decorate the home. Mrs. Gus Davis won high score. Mrs A. T. Baugh was second high and Mrs. H. A. Weeks won low. Cheese ' spread and crackers, cookies and iced drinks were ser ved. Mrs. Bruce Willis will be hos tess to the club when it meets Thursday, Aug. 4. Hospital Notes Morehead City Hospital Admitted: All on Wednesday: Mr. Robert Ensminger, Harkers Island; Mrs. R. G. Garner, New port; Mrs. Anita Lewis, Beaufort; Mrs. Ross Willis, Newport. All on Thursday: Mr. J. D. Cost low Jr., Beaufort; Mrs. Eddie Lew is, Morehead City; Mr. Kerney Merrill Jr., Beaufort; Mrs. Re becca Styron, Davis; Mrs. Weston Flipping, Kinston; Mr. Vincent Becton, Beaufort; Mr. John P. Jones, Clinton; Mrs. James Robert son, Newport; Mr. Herbert Utley, Morehead City. Mrs. Herbert Gray, Newport, Saturday. Discharged: Mr. John P. Irvin, Swansboro, Wednesday; Mrs. Lu ther Leonard, Morehead City, Wed nesday; Mr. Thomas M. Bill, New port, Thursday; Ralph Gable, Goldsboro, Thursday; Mrs. Steve Guthrie, Newport, Thursday; Mrs. Jack Lewis and daughter, More head City, Thursday; Mrs. Matt Nelson, Morehead City, Thursday. All on Friday: Mrs. Milton Mo rey and son, Morehead City; Mr. Steve Roberts, Morehead City; Mrs. Preston Taylor and son, New port. All on Saturday: Mrs. Fred Gar ner, Beaufort; Mrs. Richard Kit trell and daughter, Morehead City; Mr. Plymouth Moore, Salter Path; Mrs. H. T. Pigott and daughter, Beaufort; Mrs. Bennie Taylor, Newport. All on Sunday: Thomas Barbour, Newport; Mrs.' L. M. Garner and son, Newport; Mrs. Calvin Ashley and son, Marshallberg. Sea Level Hospital Admitted: Mrs. Mamie Wade, Smyrna, Thursday; Mrs. Delores Rose, Atlantic, Friday; Mrs. Esther Gilgo, Atlantic, Saturday; Mr. Mur ray Pigott, Gloucester, Saturday; Mrs. Annie Tew, Stacy, Sunday; Brenda Honeycutt, Harkers Island. Sunday; Mrs. Mary H. Peyton, Har kers Island, Sunday. Discharged: Mr. David Gillikin, Beaufort RFD, Thursday; Mr. Mon nie Norman, Merrimon, Friday; Mrs. Delores Rose, Atlantic, Sat urday; Mrs. Esther Gilgo, Atlantic, Saturday; Mrs. Letty Gavetti and son, Atlantic, Sunday; Jackie Coop er Willis, Harkers Island, Sunday. Club to Meet Mrs. Alger Willis will be hostess to the Willlston Home Demonstra tion Club Thursday at 8 p.m. at Davis. California!) Requests Batch of 'Real Stuff Carbondale, 111. (AP) ? Sassafras, used by pioneers as a spring tonic, has been shipped to V. L. Webb of Sacramento, Calif., who requested a batch of the real stuff from gen uine Carbondale sassafras trees. He said he had been buying sassafras in California drug stores, but their product was weak and tasteless. The chamber of com merce dispatched the makings promptly. Kiaticky Straight IiiHmi Whiskey *21? Hm AtAv M IMlarv feme. Beautician Also Conducts Fishing Classes Weekends at Lake Texoma Ry MITE HENWUVON Dallas. Tex. (AS) ? Meet Hen I rietta Tracy, who'll trim your pails week days and teach you how to fish on Sunday. Miss Tracy, a red haired woman of 42, may be the only manicurist who doubles ?s fishing expert. During the week she spruces up hands at the swank Hotel Adplphus barbershop here ? smiling, polite and urbane in white uniform. Weekends she turns into out doorswoman extraordinary. Henri etta heads for shimmering, 142,700 acre Lake Texoma and teaches people mostly wives and young boys ? how to fish and pilot boats. She has been doing this three years, and the barbershop regulars think she's quite a gal. "Hi, Tug boat Annie!'* one chlded the other day as his face was lathered. She laughed and shot back. "Don't you wish YOU could go fishing every weekend?" "I've always loved fish in'," says Henrietta, "ever since I was a lit tle girl." Born on Louisiana's Cane River, near Nachitoches, she cast her first line at 6. She went to beautician school and began manicuring here in the 1930s. But weekends usually found her drifting across ax lake, rod and reel in hand. Three years ago she decided lots of folks want to learn about fish ing but don't know how. Henrietta began weekend classes, aimed mainly at wives tired of feeling like outcasts on hubby's fishing trips and youngsters getting their first taste of the outdoors. She started by renting a metal boat and running it with a three horsepower engine she owned. Since then, she estimates, some 100 persons have taken her course. She has bought a 22 foot cruiser (Mis* Henri) with a 40 horsepower engine. It cost $3,000. Friday nights after work Henri etta gets in her 1950 sedan and drives the 60 miles or so to Lake Texoma, which straddles the Texas Oklahoma border north of Dallas. She has no lodge or building there, just the cruiser. She stocks it with tackle, bait, ice and water. Henrietta meets two groups each weekend- the first for 12 hours Saturday, the second for 12 hours Sunday. She furnishes everything except food. She says she can teach you the fundamentals of boating and fislt ing in three 12-hour stretches. Her charge: $15 for 12 hours, a total of $45 for the course. "The first thing I teach 'em is how to handle a boat safely. I show how to start the engine, steer and row. Then we go into fishing. I Miss Henrietta Tracy show 'em how to put a minnow on a hook . . . how to still fish, east, troll, put out trotlines. "Fishing is bard work, and the secret is patience. Keep your line over the side, and don't dabble it up and down. The minnow will do the dabblin'. The best time to fish is 6-8 a m. and 5-7 p.m. 1 don't know why, but they seem to bite best then Sometimes it's good fishing at night, between midnight and 2 a.m. The best night fishing is July and August. Coast Guard Suggests Boaters Notify Relatives Seaford, Va. (AP) The Coast (iuard suggests that persons who will be delayed on boating trips notify relatives. W. A. Mitchell's boat developed engine trouble enroute here and he put in at Hampton and spent the night. Next da^ when he ar rived here he was surprised to find the Coast Guard, commercial ves sels and private craft scouring the York river and Chesapeake Bay for him. His family had become alarmed. For 25 years, Mrs. Blanche El ton of Dormont, Pa., has worked every Wednesday as a volunteer for the American Red Cross, mak ing about 400 surgeons' masks every year. ?' W w m *m Swantboro ' Mrs. Joyce Gallagher led Friday (or Staten Island, N, Y? to visit her uncle. Dr. W. W QulMnberry. Sunday visitors in tbe Tom Gutti rie Sr. home were Mrs. Guthrie's lister-in lay, Mrs. Jackson Parker ?nd children Jean an4 Eloi.se. Sil vai'dale; Mis Lucy Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Taylor, Punta Gorda, Fl?.. and Mrs. Laura Cannon, Cedar Point. Sgt. and Mri. Earnest Corey and three children. Jacksonville, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mtt: Vv W. Norris. Mr. and Mr?. Eifforn Smith had as their guests for a week Mr. and Mrs Sam Black and children. Sam, Billie and Jeanie, of Norfolk. Va. Also visiting the Smiths were Cpl. Donald Campbell. Cherry Point, and Mrs. Richard Perkins on, Nor folk. Va. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Daughorty Sr., of Kinston. spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur King. Parking Meters Installed Early . Jacksonville Beach, Fit. (AlO? This towp's first parking meters were installed last year before the ordinance authorizing them became effective. By the time the law look effect, cor^cientious packers had poured over $300 into the machines. Since tlte money was collected without authorization of law. the city do nated it to the March of Dimes. , Now the situation has been re peated with 200 more meters. On the date they were supposed to go into operation, officials found they already had collected $164.35. Mosquitoes were very little known, scientifically, until the end of the last century when their role in spreading human disease began to be noted. ? * C""- XR AT ii im1 jl j it Bells ?V ttw. WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIALS ONLY 9 A.M. to 12 Noon 500 YARDS POPLIN VALUES AT 59c YD. BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED PLAIN COLORS 1' to 10' Yd. Cut 39 ^ yd. PHOTOGRAPHY DAY ALL DAY WEDNESDAY JULY 27 Eastman Kodak MOVIE CAMERA 8mm $37.50 Argus LIGHT METER $16.95 Argus Slid* Projector May be adapted to film atrip or latMMtlr ilide ckw|?r, $48.50 Bftviic Biwkiy? CAMERA SET P^Bllll ?itk Vlaak ? ? tmm - Mk Iw $13.65 * FREE YOUR PICTURE MADE FREE IN ONE MINUTE ...MADE WITH A POLAROID CAMERA. ? Color Slide Demonstrations ? Movies Right in the Store ? Free Advice By HERMAN GISHWIN, Galetki Representative All EKTACHROME Color 120 and 620 Film Purchased Today Will Be Processed Free. BUY YOUR ANSCO AND KODAK FILM AND SYLVANIA BULBS . . .GET YOUR DEVELOPING AND PRINTING DONE HERE. Morehead City Drug Co. "A GOOD DRUG STOKE" Plion. 6-4360 811 Ar??*ll Si. City, N. C. =