Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / July 2, 1957, edition 1 / Page 2
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My Fourth (Continued from Page 1) Ayr qwflutsui. abfyt ? *P. *" sailboat racos will begin. The sailboats will follow a course from Capt. BUI's Waterfront Restau rant dock to a point spat of the Atlantic Beach bridga pad fcgck ice. a pul During the sailboat race ling boat race will be conducted along the waterfront. A crew frpm the Coast Guard buoy loader Ci>n iter baa issued a challenge to ait will even comers. They will even furnish their competition with a boat. Fishing boats leave Atlantic Beach. Morahead City, Marshall berg, ilarkers Island, Atlantic and Cedar Island early each morning for trips to the Gulf Stream fish ing grounds. Twin BUI Slated Tbe Morebead City UtUe league has scheduled a double header for the Fourth. The first game, be tween tbe Small Frys and Moose, will begin at 2:30 p.m The second game, beginning at S p.m., will pit the Idle Hour and the Hooli gans. The games will be played at the Little League field at Camp Glenn. The Beaufort LUtle League will have a single game between CG VFW and the Moose. Game time is set for S p.m. at the I.itUe League field at the American Le gion fair grounds. All Star Game The county baseball league all star game is scheduled for 1:30 p in. Sunday at Smyrna. Tbe game will be preceded by a beauty con-1 test. Teams from the east and west will battle for the favors of the county baseball queen. Fort Macon State Park will be open for visitors every day. The park features a swimming beach, hiking trails, good fishing spots and the historic fort itself, which is open to the public. Sound and ocean fishing piers will be open to the fishermen who get a thrill out of pulling 'em in from above. Landing a fish from 20 feet above the surface o( the water, they say, is quite an experience. water skiers Paradise Water skiers have the smooth waters of Bogue Sound for cutting capers. The more adventurous skier^ can take to the ocean off Atlantic Beach for their spills. The beach, of course, is one of the biggest attractions. Kiddie rides, amusement centers, dance pavilions and refreshment bars dot the beach area. Air conditioned movies are in Morehead City and Beaufort. They offer a welcome break to many visitors who don't want to get all their sun at one time. At night, driye in movies scattered through the county give folks a chance to roll down the windows of their cars to catch the cool ocean breezes and watch the show "dressed as you are." Churches Give Aid Mrs. James D. Rumley, Beau fort Red Cross representative, an nounced that the pastor of the Beaufort Methodist Circuit, Rev. Robert Poulk, has turned in $14.10 for survivors of Hurricane Audrey. He collected the money at his churches. icing Torn Down Photo by Bob Seymour IV Firat Free Will Baptist Ckureh is beiag rated to make room ler a mm Vildip* Workmen began tearing down Hut First Free Will Baptist Church at Bridgea and Tenth Streeta, Morehead City, yesterday. The Irame structure will be replaced by a M5.000 block and brick build ing. The Rev Seldon Buliard, pas tor of the church, says the new building will go up as soon as the old one can be torn down and the lot cleared. The new building will house the sanctuary. It will seat 300 in the auditorium and 100 in the balcony The growth of church attendance was given as the reason for the Home Demonstration Meetings Are Announced Mrs. Flay Garner, home agent, announces the following Home Demonstration Club meetings for (Jus week: The Wild wood Club will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. B. O. Ketner. An organizational meeting will be held at llarkcrs Island tomor row afternoon at 2 p.m. in the recreation hall of the Latter Day Saints Church. All women inter ested in joining the Home Demon stration Club are asked to attend. Meetings scheduled for the Fourth of July have been post poned. The North River Club will hold its meeting Monday at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Jerry Thomas. The Broad Creek Club has post poned its meeting until next Thursday at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Hazel Radford. The Bettie Club will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Cur tis Pake. The first tax-supported free cir culating public library in the U.S. was established in 1833?only 124 years ago?in Peterborough,, N. H. large building. Architect for the building is the Kev. Boyd Shook of Kenly, N. C. Church services will be conduct ed in the educational building un til the new sanctuary is completed. The educational building was built five years ago at a cost of $22,000, according to Mr. Bullard. lie says that the total value of church property, after the new building is completed, will be about $55,000. Members of the building commit tee are Asa Cannon, Willie Marks. Charlie Barker and Mr. Bullard, chairman. Kilroy Wasn't First One Here New Haven, Conn. (AP)?Kilroy wasn't in the near eastern city of Dura-Europos in 253 A.D., hut Art va, Rasnak and Aparsam were. They can prove it. They wrote their name;; on the wall of a synagogue and the sig natures are still there, 17 cen turies later. Archaeologist Carl H. Kraeling tells about it in a new book publish ed by the Yale University Press. Not accusing Artva, Rasnak and Aparsam of being mere "Kilroy was here" wall scribblers, he sur mises that they were officers with the Persian army which overran Dura-Europos in 252. Apparently, says Kraeling, they were impress ed by Jewish murals in the syna gogues and signed their names as a warning to soldiers not to dam age them. Dura-Europos, abandoned in 256, eventually disappeared beneath desert sands until its re-discovery in 1921. Court (Continued from Page 1) ood WUfie Mosley, public drui* eonest; James David Marsbburn. following too close; Thomas J. Carr, driving on the wrong side of the road; James J. Coitrtt, careless and reckless driving, and Paul Niekulia. speeding. Paying costs were Jerry I^ee Jones, speeding; DameJ J. Wilson and Walter Frederick Hewby Jr., driving on the wrong side of the road; Otis Sharpe, an driver's li cense and improper registration; Minnie Johnson, disturbing the peace and using loud and profane language; and Nestor C. Turns, engaging in an affray. Gets Hospital Expenses Torris collected his $98 hospital bill from Benjamin Joshua, who was charged with assault. Joshua also paid court costs. Judge Morris dismissed two cases. Howard B. Henry, charged with failure to yield the right of way. and Frank J. Moore, charged with drunken driving, were not tried. The judge ruled that the cases should be thrown out. Other defendants not tried were: Charles I^ee Carter Jr., no driver's license, parked on a highway at night with the lights out and ex pired license plates on the car; William F. Willis, non-support; Leo Garner, drunken driving and care less and reckless driving; John Henry Lee, drunken driving; and Bill McKnight, breaking, entering and indecently exposed McKnight is currently in a gov ernment hospital, according to clerk of court A. H. James. The judge ruled malicious prose cution in the case of William M. Giilikin, charged with assault. The prosecuting witness was charged court costs. Forfeit Bonds Those who forfeited bonds were: Biii I. Cleve, Donsul E. Wilson, and Alan B. Shaw, speeding; John A Johnson, failing to slow for in tersection; Linda C. Davis, driv ing without a license; Cora G. Davis, allowing an unlicensed person to drive. Jesse James Giliikin, George T. Lawrence, and Russell W. Gaskill, no drivers license; John Tinkley, T. E. Smith, Hector H. Guerra, Earl Alphin, Justin Simpson, EUa Mae Blevine and Lawrence Colvin, public drunkenness. Earl Alphin, destroying county property. Louis C. Frazier. no li cense and possessing non-tax-paid whiskey; J. D. Hodges, violating fishing laws. Port Calendar Kinderdyk ? Arrived at atat* port Saturday with steel wire rope from Antwerp. Sailed Sun day with tobacco and frozen chickens for Hamburg, Antwerp, Amsterdam and Kotterdam. Esso New Orleans?Due at the Esso dock today or tomorrow with petroleum products for Standard Oil. Marine DowChem ? Due at state port today or tomorrow to load glycol for the Dow plant at Frceport, Tex. South Wind?Due at the state port Friday to load tobacco. Fisheries Commissioner Reports On First Six Months Activities Coming Aboard! Photo by Jerry Schumacher The Holland-American Line's Kinderdyk takes aboard a cargo of tobacco at state port, Norebead City. The Kinderdyk doeked Satur day and sailed Sunday. Children Give Good Will Aid Summit. N. J. (AP)?More than 100 youngsters in this area believe that good will is the same in any language. Situated near the Kilmer Recep tion Center, stopping off point 'or Hungarian refugees seeking a new home in this country, the young sters are undertaking a project aimed at helping Hungarian chil dren master the English language. They do this by compiling home made dictionaries East the dictionaries contains aKout gao^pjc tures of everyday item*--?rlipjsad by the children from magazines? with the English words for the items beneath each picture. When a dictionary is finished, its "author" presents it In person to some young Hungarian newcomer. Complete Job Albuquerque (AP) ? Lorenzo Lente of Albuquerque decided somebody didn't want him to drive his pickup truck one day recently when he found: Fertilizer in the gasoline tank, sand in the oil and a broken distributor. Lutheran Federation To Sponsor Conference Springfield, Ohio (AP) ? This summer U. S. Lutheran churches will act as host to the first inter national church - sponsored meet ings of social workers in Protest ant history in this country. The Lutheran World Federation is sponsoring the event, the Lu theran World Conference on Social Responsibility. Sessions will be held on Wittenberg College cam pus Aug. 7-10. An estimated 500 of the denomi nation's top leaders are expected to meet with the social welfare workers from the federation's 57 member churches in 29 countries. I 2L? | Cars Collide at Corner Of 13th, Fisher Streets No one was injured in a two-car collision at 13th and Fisher Streets Sunday night. Clem M. Styron, driving a 1853 Ford, was driving east on Fisher Street. Charlie Johnson, in a 1948 Plymouth, was headed north on 13th Street. Both men are from Morehead City. Lt. Joe Smith of the police de partment did not make any charges. lie estimated damage to the Ford at {200 and to the Ply mouth at $150. The catch of./iqfish and shellfish in At art k CaMjma-contceticd waters M " "uat ?ix months al ur for Um beat six jn?ptha a U?1 J*aa generally better than for the cor responding period last year. The State Board of Conservation and Development received thia in formation yesterday aa it convened at the Morehead Biltmore Hotel for the first of its two-day sprnjner sessions. I State Fisheries Commissioner C. (lehrmann Holland, bead of the C k D Department's commercial fisheries division also reported that considerable work has been done to rehabilitate the state's oyster industry. Mr. Holland said 291,0ft five peck tubs of seed oysters were planted in bottoms specially select ed by Dr. A. F. Chestnut, director of the Institute of Fisheries Re search, during the first half of thia yegr. Also planted in selected areas were 124,099 tubs of shells lo which young oysters could cling and grow to commercial size. The oyster catch for the first six months of 1957 totaled 86.298 tubs against 75,131 for the same period last year. The shrimp take totaled 609,656 pounds with heasfs off compared with 554,947 for the corresponding time in 1956. There was also an increase in the clam catch, with 24.372 bushels be ing taken against 12.992 for the same period last year. The soft crab catch totaled 8,511 dozen against 7.089 dozen for the same period last year. | The soft crab catch totaled 8,511 dozen against 7,089 dozen for the first half of 1956. The hard crab catch amounted to 12,708 barrels against 12,571 for the same period last year. The catch of escallops totaled 4,335 gallons compared with 9,015 gallons for the corresponding time in 1956. The catch of food or finfish to taled 21,510.000 pounds compared with 20,306,211 pounds tor the same period last year. There was a drop in the catch of menhaden, with 34.867,000 being caught against 60,978,000 for the 1956 period. Body is a Body Says Policeman Hobbs, N. M. (API ? To this Hobbs city policeman a body is a hndv ? whether it'a standing up or lying down. 1 ne patrolman was dispatched recently alter a telephone caller reported a man lying in the slyeet "who may be injured." The policeman's laconic report of the incident: "I was unable to find anyone ly ing in the street but 1 saw a man nearby staggering along who ap peared as if he might have just gotten up from the street. I took him into custody." The man was booked for druak Conductors Use Unusual Punches New York (AP)?Every day 10, 000 men across the country sign their names with a punch. They are the nation's railroad conductors, and eaeh has an iron and steel punch which leaves a hole as distinctive as his handwrit ten signature. These designs range from a goat's head to a miniature Sootty dog, and the Crass of St. Andrew to a boxing glove. Steelways, official publication of American Iron and Steel Institute, said the practice of punching sig natures was introduced more than a century ago by Pappy Ayera of the Eric Hailroad who saved his railroad thousands of doUars an nually by foiling free riders. fisheries , (Continued from Page 1) fpfres workjn,g with Mm Smart mcnt of Cuuwrvntion and Devetop nrnt'i commercial bshcnes di yiiipn in aofprcmg fttmtnl rules Md regulations guvaroiog conusor cial fishing Pointing out the division has pnly otae patrol boats (o work in the waters of 32 coastal counties, Hol land said: "We already have a hard enough job making shrimpers abide by the relations we al leady lyive." W. H. Potter of Beaufort askrd the committee to request Governor Hodges to name a Stale Waterways Commission to review, standardize and regulate the state's inland waters in a manner comparable to powers recently held by the State Highway Commission for primary and secondary roads. "I wish you had made this re quest a year ago," said Chairman Morris, who pointed out it would take an act by the state legislature to give the governor authority for naming such a commission. Morris Burrus of Hatteras asked the committee to authorize him to use a hydraulic type of device to take clams in the Hatteras area. Burrus said use of such a device will not harm other species of fin fish or shellfish and asked permis sion "to use it just for a year." lie contended there are "thousands of clams" in bis area. He was reminded that a try-out of the hydraulic device in the Morehead City area sometime ago did not prove too successful, But Burrus insisted he thinks the method a practical one. Liaison committee of the C&D Board and the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission met late Saturday to define lines of division of fishing waters be tween commercial and sport fish ermen. The CAD group is composed of Charles H. Jenkins of Ahoskie, chairman, F. J. Holing of Siler City, and Cecil Morris of Atlantic, while the Wildlife Resources com mittee is composed of G. E. Bell of Rocky Mount, chairman, R, M. Carr of Wallace, and J. A. Bridger of Bladenboro. A controversy developed shortly after the joint committees went to work when H. B. Duffy of New Bern, representing the Craven Wildlife Club, asked that the Wild life Resources Commission be given sole jurisdiction of fresh water in the New Bern area from each highway bridge over the Trent and Neuse Rivers inland on the grounds the Wildlife Commis sion stocks the area with fish. Lee Japues, a Naw Bern commer cial fisherman .opposed the move, saying that if the request is grant ed "you might as well put the most of us on welfare." C. C. Willis, New Bern seafood dealer, also opposed the request and charged in a letter sent to and read by Commissioner Holland that tp his (Willis's) "personal knowl edge for 40 years" sport fishermen have fished the New Bern area for rock fish during the spawning sea son in March and April. They even did it this year," Mr, Willis said. Worth Harris, Cedar Island, who said he represented 15 or more commercial fishermen and himself In the Cedar Island section, asked the CAD Department's commercial fisheries committee to ban day shrimping from Swan Point Shoal to the north point of Back Bay in Pamlico Sound on grounds boats destroy nets during daytime shrimping. Night shrimping is al ready banned in this area. Around 100 commercial fisher men attended the hearing, which also featured the presence of mem bers of the advisory committee on commercial fisheries, whose mem bers are: A. W. Daniels of Char lotte, chairman. Monroe Gaskill of Cedar Island, Representative Dick O'Neill of Hyde County, and Eric W. Rodgers of Scotland Neck, W. H. Mason, Mnrehead City, Arnold Daniels, Wanchese, and Louis Har dee, Southport. / Mamie Van Doren, the sqltry Hollywood film blonde, was born in Rowena, S. D. It was 47 degrees bslow zero on that day. Culligan'Soft Water Service GUARANTEED t (. MIARANTNO BY ?900 HOUUKUPINC *&St$SK C ulllga n Strvic* provMee tha aaalaat, most economical way to fiava aoft water In your homo. Thara'a no tqulp mant to buy, no work to do. Ifa oom plololy automatic... and If* DOUBLE GUARANTEEPI ? >50 put mm ?4iM Mpauiw t* CalllfM ***?' Call WW* Welcome to North Carolina " pnoto ty' Jvrry tknu.uaua>r Governor I-other Hodges, right, (eU together with Itliu^Awrl- the If. C. State Parte Authority. The three men were dteomrhH the can line official J. V. Gorge, center, an* Edwin Pate, chairman of line's aaaenncement of making More head City a regnlar port of call. The Holland-American Line an nounced Sunday that Morehead City hat been added to ita lift of porta given regularly scheduled aervlce. A Holland American Line ?hip will dock at the port each month. State porta authorities said that Sunday could very easily ho one of the moat important datea In the htatory of the port. The announcement aria made at A luncheon ahwf the KMerdyk Sunday. The Holland - American Linn vessel's captain, C. J. Elsot, was host to Governor and Mrs. Luther Hodges, Morebead City Mayor George Dill, Rep. D. G. Bell, CAD Board officials and State Ports Authority chairman Edwin Pate. J. V. Gurge, New Y?rk, freight traffic manager of the Una, aid the decision to make Monbead Cltg a regularly ahsdulod port van made after It was determined that it would he profitable Governor Hodges responded that the line was "taking a safe risk . .. and we'll make It pay for you." Port authorities said later Uiat scheduled service is the life blood of a port. "It will chaiue our en tire program of solicitation,''' apjd Mr. Pate. ''Now' we can protqiw shippers a definite ship at a speci fic time rather than an poeaatopsl "^Holland - American Line ie a world-wide company with 10 to IS ahipa in its North AUantie nervice, according to porta autborttiea. U ia owe of the principal ahippers oI in the world. Until tobacco moat of iU tobacco haa loft Hamp ton Roada. Va. Tim neat HoUand-Amorican ahip scheduled for t Ita past la Mm Sckle dyk on Aug. 0. . - 9 ?AW OLD 1 i I 9 BOTTLED BL BONO m
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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July 2, 1957, edition 1
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