Institute Director Speaks On North Carolina Fishing Ida Mae James Gets Suspended Term Thursday Ida Mae James appeared in county recorder's court Tfcuraday to answer charges of assault and was sentenced to six month* in jail after the court found her guilty. The sentence was suspended on three years good behavior and payment of court costs. David Evans Baxter appeared before the court, charged with having no operator's licenac. He paid court costs. Lester Arthur Jr. and Richard Suggs, both charged with api-M ing, got off with light fines. Judg ment was that Arthur pay $5 and court costs while Suggs paid coats. Theodore Lawrence was ordered to pay* $25 and court costs after being found guilty of driving on the wrong side of the road. He was also charged with drunk driv ing, speeding, and possession of non-taxpaid whiskey but was ac quitted on these counts. The case against Alford Taylor, charged with speeding, destroy ing personal property, and assault was ruled malicious prosecution and the prosecuting witness was made to pay court costs. Bad check charges against George Equils and Josiah Long brought an order from the court for them to pay court costs and to honor the checks. Carroll Gene Davenport forfeited bond when he was called and failed to appear. He was charged with public drunkenness and using loud and profane language In pub lic. In another case in which bond was forfeited, Walter Sabiston. charged with improper parking, was called and failed to appear. Violation of shrimping laws brought orders to pay court costs to Duncan and Henry Willis. Clifton Lee Glover was given 30 days in jail after the court found him guilty of drunkenness on the highway. The sentence was sus pended on payment of $25 and court costs. Sammie Johnson was given 80 days in jail and roadwork after being found guilty of assault and Clyde Everett paid $10 and costs for turning in a false alarm. Roger L. Trott was taxed $25 and court casts for using loud and profane language in public and Juanita Rivers paid $10 and coats on eharges of public drunkenness and using loud and profane lan guage. Highway Commission Wins 1958 Safety Award < Raleigh ? The State Highway | Commission has been notified it has earned the "Award of Honor" from the National Safety Council | for its employee safety record during 1958. I The "Award of Honor" is the highest citation given by the Safety , Council and North Carolina's High- , way Commission is one of only six 1 similar state agencies to have ever received it. The 1958 award went to only two states? North Carolina and Texas. 4H Attend fllalri Attending the pre-school clinks throughout the county this spring wen US prospective first graders, aceordiag to the county health de partment, which conducts the clin ics This number is the fewest ever to attend preschool clinics but the health department believes many children were takes to their private doctors for check-up*. ' Dr. A. F. CWal. direcftr of the Institute of Fisheries, was the ?pother al the Thursday night meeting at lh* Montiead City Ro tary club at the Rex restaurant. Speaking on the fishing indus try. Dr. Chestnut told Ratarians that North Carolina ranks eighth among the 40 fish-producing atates in America aad sixth amoag the 14 producing states along the At lantic coast. Dr. Cbeataai pointed out that tha Institute of Fisheries Research has been of material help to the fish ing industry in North Carolina due to the many scientific studies made by ita staff. He added that it was learned through studies that there are three different kinds of shrimp in ?ur waters and that two of them are native to the area and remain here year 'round. Visiting Rotarians at the meet ing were Judson Blount of Green ville and Larry Eagles from Tar boro. Attending as guests were J. II . Dunlap and Carlton Fleetwood, of the State Department of Educa tion in Raleigh and Alien Knott of Kinston. Carteret Men Visit Nation's Capital Last Week Representatives from Carteret attended the Biveri and Harbors Congress and a hearing on a salt water conversion plant last weak it Washington, D. C. They were Mayor George Dill, Morehead City, Gene Smith, Beau fort town attorney, and W. H. (Piggie) Potter, mayor-elect of Beaufort. Tbe hearing on Mm government's proposed plant for converting salt water to fresh water was conducted by Dr. A. L. Miller, head of the Dffice of Saline Water, Interior De partment. North Carolina towns interested in being the site of one of five such plants include Southport. Wrightsville Beach. Manteo, Bel haven. Buxton, Kill Devil Hills, Elizabeth City, Carolina Beach, VIorehead City and Beaufort. Mayor Dill said his interest in he plant cooled considerably when t was learned that a million gal- | ons of water would be converted laily, and no plans made for dis tributing It. "What would we >fo with it?"- the mayor asked. He said that after the govern- ( nent builds its proposed five , slants, it hopes to sell them to corporations or municipalities. Mayor Dili said that relative to Morehead City harbor improve ments, the North Carolina delega tion hopes to get funds for the project during the second session of the current Congress. Driver Cited After Car Runt into Ditch Dorsey Martin, Beaufort RFD, was charged with drunken driving Sunday afternoon after his car, a 1955 Dodge, ran off highway 70 five mites east of Beaufort. State highway patrolman W. E. Pickard said the car was headed east, ran off the left and into a ditch. Damage to the car was esti mated at MOO. The driver was not hurt. Military members of the review ing stand at the Armed Forces Day parade in Morehead City Friday were guests at a luncheon at the Morehead City Country Club prior to the parade. Lockwood Phillips, publisher of THE NEWS-TIMES, was host. I VISIT ATLANTIC BEACH . . . - LIVE - SEA LIFE EXHIBIT Something to Show Your Guests Thi. Qm Feature U Worth Ywar Trip To Atlantic I?eh ? INDOOR EXHIBIT AH Local SeaHfe front * Skriap to a Shark ia Beautifully Decorated AfMuriwk ? OUTSIDE EXHIBIT So* Uob?, AlKgatort up to IS Fool, Taaae and Wild Pnrpelni. and Large Sea Twrtlee with the Boy Riding Theea. LOCATED AT SOUND fOOL ON THE CAUSEWAY BRING YOUR CAMIRA ' NOW OPEN ON ATLANTIC BEACH CAUSEWAY A Science Academy Honors Student Clareac* styroa Jr., aenlor it Motahaad Cily high iM. has baea elected I* iuaior membership in the North Carolina Academy of Science. John A. Yarbrough, secretary treasurer of the academy, notified Clareace by letter lait week tfcat becauae of hia "flne showing In tha Westinghouse Science Talent Search (or UUS-S9, sponsored by Clarence Styroa Jr. . . . receives membership the North Carolina Academy of Science, you have been elected to junior membership . . The membership is without cost to the recipient and will run through the 1959-60 school year. Clarence has accepted a scholar ship to Davidson College, where he will enroll in the (all. As a junior member of the Academy of Science, he will receive the Colle giate Academy Journal, published by the academy of science. Mr. Yarbrough points out, ". . . our collegiate academy is open to you both to present reports on your projects in science and to publish some of the better reports. The North Carolina Academy is sin cerely interested in you and your progress in science. We wish tor you the very best." Thieves Strip Boat At Marina Sunday Night A 60 hp Mercury outboard motor, steering wheel, battery and con trols were stolen Sunday night from Gordon Itardesty's boat at Lewis's marina on Radio Island. The theft was being investigated yesterday by the sheriff's depart ment. The boat owner, Mr. TIar desty, lives in Beaufort and op erates Hardesty Motors in More head City. Six Moath Term The six-month jail sentences giv en Cecil Best of Morehead City in recorder's court last week are to run concurrently instead of con secutively, as reported in THE NEWS-TIMES Friday. Best will serve six months on a whiskey count and for violation of a sus pended sentence. Port Calendar Manehead City Mr Part Sonthlaad Due Wednesday t? load tobacco for Europe. Kara ? Due Friday to unload cargo ol asphalt Platidhk? Due Sunday to unload cargo of asptalt. Wahak Due May 29tb to load tobacco for Europe Black Falcon? Due May 31 to load tob*et? for Europe. Woman Resumes Work on Degree After 66 Years Ithaca, N. Y. CAP)? After an in terruption of (0 year*, Mrs. Cathe rine L. Bradley, >4, is working again for her nutter's degree in Latin and English at Cornell Uni versity. Except for writing a thesis. Mrs. Bradley had completed all the re quirement* when she was a gra duate student at Cornell in 1197. "I didn't write my thesis then," she recalls, "because I decided I wouldn't go on with my teaching after all." In 1497 she married Lyman H. Bradley, also a Cornell student. Candidates for the master's de gree are required to write a paper on an original research problem and to pass a final comprehensive oral examination. Regarding the subject of her thesis, Mrs. Brad ley says: "I think It probably will deal with 'pax' (peace) in Livy, or per haps with Tacitus." Livy and Taci tus were Roman historians. Mrs. Bradley taught Latin and Greek in a private school near Philadelphia for a year before en tering Cornell in 1896. The widow says her four chil dren and same of her six grand children studied the classics, but net the way she did at Smith and Cornell. "Now," she says, "they dress up in togas and lie down to eat. They haven't the grounding and discipline we had." Mrs. Bradley resides most of the year in Tallahassee, Fla. Her sum mer home is in Spencer, near Cor nell's campus. Last year she delivered a four hour address on the 10 minor He brew prophets in the Bible before a church study group. Cornell has other ties in the Bradley family. Her daughter, K. Mary Stimson, was a member of the class of 1932; a son, Benjamin O. Bradley was in the class of 1934. Two sons-in-law, Tuure A. Pasto and Clinton R. Stimson, were in the classes of 1934 and 1935, re spectively. The Wishful Fnhlic New York (AP) ? The Cancer Fund is $18.M richer because of the public's penchant for tossing coins into fountains. The Renault display at the recent International Automobile show included a lily pond, which although not intended as a wishing well, turned out to be just that. The money was do nated to the Cancer Fund. p. mi! ? Ujjii noimi luivQ For English Honor George William Huntley III hai been ? Inaleri tor the annual 1 Achievement Awards program, sponsored by the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE). I* its second year, the awards program is being conducted throughout the nation to grant rec ognition to outstanding high school seniors for excellence in English. The writing abilities and literary awareness of each nominee will be judged by local state commit tees. The winners will be announced in January 1M0, by the NCTE, and the names of the Awards winners will be sent to every college and university with the recommenda tion that these students be con sidered for scholarship assistance. According to J. N. Hook, NCTE executive Secretary, the Awards program was initisted last year in response to President Eisenhower's statement that America needs its Emersons as well ss its Einsteins. Founded in 1911, the NCTE is s professional, not-for-profit organi zation of teachers of English at all levels. Currently the circulation of the council's five professional pub lications is over SI, 000. Negro News Mere he ad City Hospital Admitted: Wednesday, Mrs. Leah Hester, Morehead City. Discharged: Thursday, Mrs. Es sie Mae Reed and son, Beaufort. Friday, Mrs. Leah Hester and daughter, Morehead City. Saturday, Miss Isadora Carter, Havelock. Birth at Morehead City Hospital: To Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hester, Morehead City, a daughter, Thurs day, May 14. Obituary MRS. CARRIE SMITH Mrs. Csrrie Smith of Baltimore, Md., died Sunday at St. Joseph Hospital following an illness of eight weeks. A former resident of Morehead City, she is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Beatrice Jones of Morehead City. Mrs. Jones has gone to Baltimore and is visiting at 1120 E. Lanvalle St. Funeral arrangements were in complete at press time yesterday. Members of the Christian Star Church, Morehead City, will give a program at Maco Church Sunday at 3 p.m. The members wfll leave the church by bus at 12:30. The fare is *2.30 for adults and $1.50 for children. The Ladies Home Instruction Club met at the home of Mrs. Rosa Shepard Thursday. Devotions were led by Mrs. Ethel Allen. It was decided that the last Vneet ing of the year will be a party the first Thursday of June. This week's meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Ethel Allen with Mrs. Lossie Bell Yancey as hontess. Mrs. Shepard served strawberry shortcake and coffee. ^ OPEN X NEW Nf OCEANANA BEACH TAILOR MAM FOR LOCAL AND NEAR-BY PEOPLE A True Family Beach On the Ocean You ere iitvHed to be our gw*l elwIiiNly free *ieugk lek for Storting Sunday, May 24, the admission will be Adults 50c, rHlilrin 25c Just think . . . the admission covws all this* Ample paved, centralist! parking, shower, jrsalm mom, picnic tablet, avail able lunch and deck chairs and wnhmNasr children's play (round, ocoan Hi* In*, Kfo guard wrtlab a Florida-like beach dub, and meet of all, a pleasant atmesphere. So plan nowla spend your summer days with your friends ON POIT MACON ROAD VfcMftl PROM ATLANTIC MAOt MAM INTERSECTION t Chorus to Pmtnt Concert at 8 Friday At High School The Morehead City High School chorus will present its spring con cert at S Friday night u> the school auditorium. The chorus, under the direction oi Ralph Wad*, includes freshmen, sophomores, juniors aad ?eaiors. Numbers will include songs by the boy* glee club, girls glee club, the full chorus aad as an instru mental number a piano duet. TWre will be no admission charge. The chorus presented concerts at Atlantic and Smyrna schools a month ago and made its last pub lic appearance in Morehead City at the union Christmas service at the school. The United States, India and China are the world's three largest producers of cotton. fbnd Du La*. Wt*. (AP>? When aa imHiafiit truck ?iw pulled in here he wa? met by local police who had tfcia m., B.f.g # OPEN \ NEW OCEANANA FISHING PIER FREE FISHING 'til 5 P.M. Saturday, May 23 All who enter on Saturday before 5 P.M. can fish 'til they leave the building. Outside gate to pier will be left open every night until Saturday. THE ADMISSION TO FISH AT THIS FISHERMAN'S PARADISE STARTS 5 P.M. SATURDAY - $1.25 Just Think ? Here's What You Get For $1.25 At the Oceanana Fishing Pier 1. The longest pier on the east coast? 1200 feet. This puts you out where the big ones are, and prevents crowded fishing. 2. We have an inspection and spectator admission of 25c, which will give the fishermen more privacy and will keep the sightseers from interfering with your fishing. The in spection admission can be used on the purchase of a fish ing ticket. 3. Oceanana Fishing Pier offers roiling service for your fishing needs and refreshments. This will keep you from leaving your place. 4. Extra-Extra brightly lighted with no ever rail light poles to interfere with your ccnting. This new, modern bright light ing system will certainly make night catches better. 5. Comfort stations on Pier will save the fisherman many long walks. 6. Full 24 hours fishing from anytime you enter. 7. Hot food available 24 hours a day in the beautiful fisher, mon Cliff? Shoo thi nitr 8. Ample paved, controlled parking. Rsh where you can park in ofl y weather. 9. Fishing uJmissiun gives yaw privilege to use the Oceanana Club Reach for the day. Free dressing room, free beach, picnic tables, playground equipment. When you tire of fish ing en)oy the beach. 10. A beautiful, safe, luxurious resort witk the necessary fea tures for the part of the family who da not wish to fish. So now you da not have to leave the family at home when yaw go fishing at the Oceanana Fishing Pier. 11. Paging system . . . leave ward at home and office that you are at the Oceanana Fishing Pier and you can always re let -i?l i m n n rt mil m tm 1 1 vvivo Trior in i purTQnT Cull. 12. Most of all the admission covers a desirable and pleasant atmosphere. We are so proud of this fisherman's paradise arrangement that we are inviting you to be our guest and see for yourself. So visit the Oceanana Fishing Pier any time before 5 PJM. Saturday, May 23, absolutely free. ON FORT MACON ROAD MUE MOM ATLANTIC REACH MAM ENTRANCE