Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / March 8, 1960, edition 1 / Page 2
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Seadogs Trounce Panthers 67-30, Bury Leland76-32 Victories Put Beaufort In Tournament Finals By GEORGE HUNTLEY III Like Ole' Man River, who nupposedly just keeps rolling along, the Beaufort Seadogs just keep winning basketball games. In district tournament play this week the Seadogs gained the tourney finals with resounding wins over Mt. Olive and Leland. In Thursday's quarter-final round the Seadogs walloped the Panthers 67-30 and then buried 4 Leland 76-32 in Friday night's semi- . final affair. Thursday's game, played at 4 1 p.m., brought together two of the j teams that met last fall in the foot- 1 ballplay offs for the state title but the game anything but resembled the close battl the two teams staged on the gnoiron. From the opening tap there was little doubt as to the outcome, as the Seadogs displayed a devastat ing offense and an impenetrable j defense. The meager 30 points they i allowed the Panthers was the de- i fending state champions' top de- j fensive showing of the tournament. ! Beaufort's Butch Hassell brought oh's and ah's from the fans, cheers from his team mates and moans of despair from the opposing coaches as he led the Seadog attack that completely bewildered the out' manned Panthers. Butch led all scorers for the game with a total of 23 points. Pud Hassell was close behind in the i point-making parade as he canned 22. Jim Reaves, with 11 points, was high for Mt. Olive. In Friday's semi-finals Beaufort was pitted against the team that lait year pushed the Seadogs all the way. before bowing in overtime 50-46 in the tournament finals. With the memory of this game still fresh in their minds, the Sea dogs went right to work to make certain that it didn't happen again this year. They scored on the open ing tap of the game with Butch tak ing the tip from Pud and driving all the way for the layup. This was the first of 31 field goals that Beau fort was to score in the game. The air-tight Seadog defense kept Leland from scoring for three and one-half minutes of the first quar ter. They finally got their first field goal of the game with the clock showing three minutes, 35 seconds to play in the quarter. Beaufort, meanwhile, was pumping in baskets at a torrid pace to give them a lead of 16-4 at the end of the initial period. Things didn't change much in the second quarter. The Seadogs more than tripled the score on Leland in the period as they scored 28 points to Lei and' 8 nine. The real period came with Beaufort sporting a gi gantic 44-13 lead. Beaufort coach Tom McQuaid re moved his number two scorer and top rebounder, Pud Hassell, from the contest in the third quarter to give Pud's injured knee some rest from the rough tournament grind. Chuck Lewis replaced Pud in the Seadog lineup. The rest of the Beaufort reserves came into the game during the quarter also and managed to hold the Seadog lead until the final buzzer. The win. Beaufort's 47th straight, advanced the Seadogs to the tour ney finals against Midway, 59-45 winner over Eureka Friday night. The winner of this game will repre sent District Two in the state play offs in High Point starting March 16. Behind Butch, who had 25 points for the game, was Ray Hassell who tallied seven field goals and a sin gle free throw for 15 points. Be fore leaving the game Pud Hassell accounted for 10 Beaufort points. Calvin Jones and Chuck Lewis each scored nine points. BOX SCORE Beaufort FG FT PF PTS| Jones. C 3 3 19 Jones, D 0 2 0 2 Hassell, P 5 0 0 10 Hassell, R 7 1 2 15 Hassell, B 11 3 3 25 Hassell, J 10 0 2 Hill 0 2 2 2 Salter 0^02 Lewis 4 12 9 Totals 31 14 10 76 Iceland FG FT PF PTS.. Wessell 12 0 4 Harrell 3 4 5 10 Blizzard 1 0 0 2 Daniels 2 0 0 4 Williams 4 0 1 8 Foy 2 0 0 4 Totals 13 C ? 32 The Harry Venters Visit Carteret Mr. and Mrs. Harry Venters, I Edenton, visited In Morehead City] Saturday. Mr. Venters is former assistant j county (arm agent in Carteret | counly. Mrs. Venters was a mem ber of the Morehead City school faculty and head of the school's classroom teachers association. The Venters stopped at THE NEWS-TIMES to renew their sub scription to the paper. They spent the weekend in New Bern with Mrs. Ventera' parents, Mr. and Mr*. O. C. Crump and also visited Mr. Venters' grandmother, Mrs. Lucy T. Cox. St. Louis was incorporated as * city ill 1822. ?*w> sm. CONCRETE MASONRY ATTR ACTIVK INKXPINSIVI FIRM AN INT lay, loot luting, and attn ttfcw aaaaaato Uocka ara the Waal material for building i And f**? . . . etpecitlly for till "DO IT-YOURSELF" fen of today. Concrete blocks urn lpai|i?iidn aa ay to ?a<i?Um and add beauty and watoa to your home. Far quality block . . . |Mkto Mate W Sterne equipment . . . aaa aa today. ?o IV TOOAY? >THI CONCMTI MASONRY WAY MOREHEAO BLOCK & TILE CO. INC Hmm pa mito 'at Mmu art. A t A group of Morehead City hoys with damaging a sign on highway Sheriff Hugh Salter examines the has been apprehended and charged 70 at the western edge of Beaufort, partly-demolished sign. NCEA Sponsors New TV Series, The School Story The North Carolina Education association and the National Edu cation Association entered the tele vision field this month with a new 13-week scries of half-hour films entitled The School Story- The se ries is being offered in the fifty states. According to A. C. Dawson, ex ecutive secretary of the North Car olina Education Association, this scries marks the first time that a national non-commcrcial television series has been "built around the problems, aims and achievements of education in this country." "The series is timely, for public education is rightfully being made the dominant issue in the cam paigning for the Democratic pri maries," Mr. Dawson continued. "I am pleased that the candi dates for the various offices are recognizing the needs of the public schools and are placing first things first," he stated. The School Story will be avail able to eight television stations ia North Carolina and in 261 major TV markets during the 1959-60 school year. Viewers of the series will see many important issues in education explored? from how first graders learn reading skills to the curriculum program of a compre hensive high school to the techni cal laboratories of a great univer sity. The eight cooperating stations in North Carolina are presenting the programs as a public service fea ture of their programming. In this area the program it be ing carried by WNCT at 9:30 a.m. each Sunday, ending with Sunday May 29. The series started this past Sunday. Program topics are as follows: March 13? TV: New Frontier in Learning; March 20? Mike Makes His Mark; March 27? And Gladly Teach. April 3? Crowded Out; April 10 ?Not by Chance; April IT? They Grow Up So Faat. April 24? Plan for Learning; May 1 ? A Shoe box Full of Dreams; May 8? Report on Tomorrow. May U? The Golden Key; May 2S ? Pursuit of Wisdom; May 20 The Big Classroom. A number of agencies have co operated with NEA pn different ti tles in the series. These include Harvard University, the New Jer sey Education Association, the Sears-Hot buck Foundation, the US Steel Corporation, the University of Oklahoma, the Walter Reed Army Medical center, the Greater Wash ington Educational Television as sociation, and several NEA depart ments. Included in The School Story se ries will be the following films: The Big Classroom, a new film | showing how the learn-as-you-go approach of NEA-sponsored tours enables teachers to bring back new firsthand knowledge to their class es. The Golden Key, which reveals the influence a teacher has on his students. In the film, Lee A. Du-| Bridge, president of the California 1 Institute of Technology and a 1959 Golden Key award winner, takes his former physics teacher, O. H. Smith, through the fabulous facili ties of Calteech. Plan for Learning, the story of what happened when one commun ity needed to build a new school. Report on Tomorrow, which shows how closely business exam ines the educational facilities of an area in which it might expand. Pursuit of Wisdom, which shows how scholarship is nurtured and emphasizes that it must be used to benefit mankind. They Grow Up So Fast, a dra matic episode which points up the values of a good program of phy sical education. TV: New Frontier in Learning shows how a "live" teacher ean use classroom television to add an exciting new dimension to educa tion. Driver Hits Parked Car In Morehead Saturday Mi?s Hortense Boomer, More head City, was the driver of a car that struck a parked car at tfth and Shepard Street at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, according to the More head City police department. Police captain C. E. Bunch, who investigated the mishap, said that Miss Boomer wai going west oa Shepard street at 7:30 p.m. when her car collided with a IMS Pon tiac belonging to Albert B. Jones, 1204 Shepard St. She told officers that she did not realize she was so close to the Jones vehicle. Police estimated damage to Miss Boomer's 1954 Chevrolet at H7S and that to the Jones' car at $150. No charges were filed. RtDDYMIX ' PAVUlNimy I CONCRETE. 4 *?/. v- *ry wxf.p co/ycgc re , 6-4859 70 * L , N Echoes of the Post (Continued from Page I) "They marry very young; some ?t thirteen or fourteen; and she that stays till twenty is reckoned a stale maid, which is a vary in different character in that warm country. The women are very fruitful, most houses being full of little ones. It has been observed that women long married and without children in other places have removed to Carolina and be come joyful mothers. . . . "The girls are not bred up to the wheel and sewing only, but the dairy, and affairs of the house they are well acquainted withal; so that you shall see them whilst very young manage their business with a great deal of conduct and alac rity. "The children of both sexes are very docile and learn any thing with a great deal of ease and meth od, and those that have the ad vantages of an education write very good hands and prove good accountants, which is much cov eted, and, indeed, most necessary in these parts. "The young men are commonly of a bashful sober, behavior; few proving prodigals to consume what the industry of their parents have left them, but commonly improve it . . . "I can affirm by experience, not by hearsay, that any person with a small beginning, may live very comfortably and not only provide for the necessaries of life, but like wise of those that will succeed him. "Provision being very plentiful, and of good variety to accommo-' date genteel housekeeping, and the neighboring Indians are friendly, and in many cases serviceable to us in making us wares (nets or traps) to catch fish in, for a small matter, which proves to great ad vantage to large families, because those engines take great quanti ties of many sorts of fish that are very good and 'nourishing. Some of them hunt and fowl for us at reasonable rates, the country be ing plentifully supplied with all sorts of game." There were more than fifty ani mals named as inhabitants of the North Carolina forests. Among * Rector Lists Lenten Services The Rev. E. Guthrie Brown, rec tor of St. Andrew's Episcopal church, Morehead City, has an nounced the services (or the Lent en season. i , , i There will be holy communion Fridays at 5 p.m. Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m. the services wiU include a color film strip with record: March 9, litany, and Bible S c r o 1 1 s (filmstrip); March 16, evening prayer and Bible Cities: March 23, litany and Tri umphal Entry and Cleansing of the Temple: March 30, evening prayer and Passover Supper and Betray al: April 6, litany and The Trial. At 5 p.m. Sunday, March 27, Hardy M. Ray will present A Lay man Reads the Bible. During Holy Week there will be holy community at 11 a.m. Mon day, Tuesday and Wednesday, April 11, 12, and 13. On Wednes day of that week there will be eve ning prayer and the film, The Cru cifixion, at 7:30 p.m. At S p.m. Maundy Thursday there will be Holy Communion and the film, Holy Week in Jerusalem. The Good Friday service will be gin at 2 p.m. and include evening prayer, litany and sermon. On Easter Day, Sunday, April 17, there will be holy oommunion at I a.m., church school at 9:30, holy communion and sermon at 11, and the Young Churchmen will meet at 7 p.m. them were the "Buffelo. or wild beef, bear, rabbet, elks, stag, squirrels," and many others. All of which were a plentiful source of meat for the settler's tables. The bear was obviously one of Law son's favorites. He devoted Bach space to Its habits and valu? to mankind. Of the bear he said. "The flesh of this beast is very good and nourishing, and not inferior to the best pork in taste. It stands betwixt beef and pork, and the young cubs are a dish for theg reatest epicure liv ing. "I prefer their flesh before any veal, beef, pork, or mutton, and they look as well as they eat, their fat being as white as snow and the sweetest of any creature in the world. If a man drink a quart thereof melted, it never will rise in his stomach. We prefer it above all things to fry things in." Many birds and water fowl were available to the inhabitants of the early colony. "There are great flocks of wild turkies in Carolina," Lawson said. "I have seen about five hundred in a flock; some of them are very large. I never weighed any myself, but have been informed of one that weighed near sixty pound weight. I have seen half a turkey feed eight hungry men two meals." Topsail Inlet is described as be ing "above two leagues westward of Cape Lookout. You have a fair channel over the bar, and two fathom thereon, and a good harbor in five or six fathom to come to anchor. Your course over this bar is almost N. W., Lat. 34 44'." From these waters were taken many food fish that have not changed much in the 260 years since Lawson's days. Some of the more familiar are described as fol lows: "Spanish Mackarel are in colour and shape, like common mackarel, only much thicker They are caught with hook and line at inlets and sometimes out a little way at sea. They are a very fine and hard fish, and good of taste. They are about two foot long or better. "The blue fish is one of our best fishes, and always very fat. They are as long as a salmon, and, in deed, I think, full as good meat. These fish come (in the fall of the year) generally after there has been a black frost, when there ap pear great shoals of them. "The Hatteras Indians and oth ers run into the sand of the sea and strike them, though some of these fish have caused sickness and violent burnings after eating of them, which is found to pro ceed from the gall that in some of them is broken ?iid harmful, r. "Mullets the same as in Eng land. and great plenty in all places where the water is salt and brack ish. "Shads are a sweet fish, but they are very bony; they are very plentiful at some seasons. "Fat-backs are a small fish like mullets, but the fattest ever known. They put nothing in the pan to fry these. They are excellent sweet fish." One of the fish Lawson referred to has either become extinct, or, at least, no longer plays his tricks in Beaufort Inlet as he did in Law son's day. "The Divil-Fish." he said, "lies at some of our inlets, and as near as I can describe is like a skate or stingray; only he has on his head a pair of very thick strong horns, and is of a monsterous size, and strength; for this fish has been known to weigh a sloop's anchor, and run with the vesael a league or two, and bring her back, against the tide, to al most the same place. Doubtless they may afford good oil; but I have no experience of any profits which arise from them." As further evidence of the peace and safety enjoyed by the early settlers of Carolina, Lawson said, "ftotice that this province has been settled, and continued the moat free from the insult? and bar barities of the Indians of any col ony that wu ever seated in Amer ica, which must be aa a particular providence of God handed down from Heaven to these people, espe cially when we consider how ir regularly they settled North-Caro lina, and yet how undisturbed they hove remained, free from any for eign dangers or loss. "This ts a place whore no mal factors are found deserving death, or even a prison for debtors, there being no more than two persons, as far as I have been able to learn, ever suffered as criminals, al though it has been a settlement near sixty years; one of whom was a Turk that committed murder, the other An old woman for witch craft." This peace and tranquility was not to last for long after Lawson's return to England, however. To the time of his departure there had been little need for organized towns because of the peaceful na ture of the Indian, and the fact that commerce was carried on by stopping at large plantations aituat ed along the various watercourses of the state. Towns were established more frequently when the Indians be came hostile. The concentration of people in towns gave them more protection from attack, and they became centers of trade. This is another story, and will be told at a later date. Legal Notices COMMERCIAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS The following regulations were adipted at the January 18, 1960, meeting of the Board of Conserva tion and Development in Raleigh, North Carolina, under and in ac cordance with the regulatory pow ers vested by Chapter 113, Section 135 and 136 of the General Statutes of North Carolina in said board. These Regulations have been filed with the Secretary of State of North Carolina, certified copies dispatched by registered mail to the Clerks of the Superior Court of the twenty-one counties having commercial fishing waters and ad vertised once a week for four weeks as provided by law. Any violation of these regulations under the provisions of law consti tutes a misdemeanor. New regulation No. 65 under Food Fish on page 23 of the Rules and Regulations: 1. It shall be unlawful during the closed season on skad and herring, April 25 to June 1, and extended to July 1, to set gill nets, pound nets, or to pull seines between the high way bridge across Albemarle Sound at Pea Rktge and the folk-Southern Uailroad grktofin miles west for the P<jf?qf(t 3 *k lng shad, rock, herring and other commercial fish. (From January 1 to April 25 it shall be unlawful to take herring in Albemarle Sound east of the Norfolk-Southern Rail road Bridge across the Sound with gill nets of stretched mesh less than three inches when fished). From July 1 to January 1 in thia same territory, it shall be unlaw ful to take herring with gill nets of less than three and one-half inches stretched mesh when fished. 2. Unchanged. 3. It shall be unlawful to set gill nets in the Cbowan River from March l to September 1 for the taking at shad, rock, herring or other commercial fish. It shall be unlawful to set pound nets or pull seines In the Chowan River from April 25 to July 1. (Gill nets will be permitted above Holiday Island January 1 to April 25, with three inch stretched mesh when fished. All gill nets must be removed from this area when the season closes on April 2S). Substitute paragraph (f): All gill nets shall be marked by visible corks or floating buoys at each end and must not be set within 400 yards of any pound net set (Except as otherwise noted in this regulation. Local NoHoa* paragraph 1-3, the gill net mesh shall not be leaa than three and one-hall inches stretched when fish ed. All gill nets shall be set paral lel to the shoreline). All other regulations in conflict with the above action are revoked. Certified to be ? true copy. C. 0. Holland, Commissioner Commercial Fisheries WUUam P. Saunders, Director Department of Conservation and Development f23 ml 8 15 NOTICE North Carolina Carteret County In the Superior Court S.P.D. No. 1516 Thurmoo Lawerence, Jr., Petitioner vs. Walter Stewart. Walker Gynn, Charlie Stewart, Daniel Pigott, Murry'Pigott, William Pigott, Josie Pigott, Lillian Pigott Willis. Flor ence Pigott, C. G. Cask ill. Mrs. Graham L. Davis. John C. Batche lor, Burton G. Stewart, Mrs. J. G. Smith, Maude Mason, Lydia Mur phy, Irma J. Hanson, Thelma Stew art Whitehurst, Henry Whitehurst, Leo Lawerence, Oneal Gillikin, D. T Lewis, Winfield Gillikin, Charles Hancock, Avon Hancock, Mayebelle Guthrie, G. W. Huntley, Jr., Safrit Lumber Company, and a tract of land in Carteret County. To Whom It May Concern: The parties above named and all other parties or persons interested will take notice that on the 31st day of December, 195?, the above named petitioner filed a petition in the office of the Clerk of the Su perior Court of Carteret County, North Carolina, to have the title to certain lands therein described registered and confirmed pursuant to Chapter 43 of the General Stat utes of North Carolina, and amend ments thereto, and that summons has issued returnable to the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court the 18th day of April, 1960. Said lands are situate in Carteret Coun ty, State of North Carolina and de scribed as follows: Straits Township: Beginning at a point known as the Leffers Pine, an iron pipe; thence N 35-00 E 544 5 (eet to station two (2); thence S 49-30 E 30 feet to station 3; thence continuing S *9-30 E 210 feet to sta tion four (4); thence N 18-30 E 105 feet to station five (5); thence S 49-30 E 1962 feet, with a ditch, to station six (6); thence S 33-30 E 111 feet to the Cahill corner, sta tion seven (7); thence N 50-00 E 815 feet to station seven (7); thence S 61-00 E 109.5 feet to an iron pipe, station nine (9); thence S 24-00 W 1885 feet to an iron pipe at sta tion ten (10); thence S 7-00 W 185 feet to station eleven (11), an iron pipe; thence S 84-30 W 150 feet to an iron pipe at station twelve (12); thence S 16-30 W 1237 feet to an iron pipe at station thirteen (13): thence N 85-00 W 495 feet to an iron pipe at station fourteen (14); thence S 27-30 W 726 feet to an iron pipe at station fifteen (15); thence N 44-30 W 693 feet to an iron pipe at station sixteen (16); thence N 62-00 W 1,802 feet to an iron pipe and/or concrete monument beside an old cart road at station seven teen (17); thence N 22-30 E 1636 feet to a concrete monument at sta tion eighteen (18); thence S 60-30 E 1,850 feet to an iron pipe by a stone at station nineteen (19); thence N 18-30 E 250 feet to an iron pipe at station twenty (20); thence N 80-00 W 2,900 feet to an iron pipe at station twenty-one (21); thence N 40-30 E 1,050 feet to an iron pipe at station twenty-two (22); thence S 50-00 E 175 feet to an iron pipe at station one (1), the point of be ginning, containinc 258.70 acres. Description from map by Marvin C. Willis, Registered Surveyor from a survey made in November, 1959. This the 16th day of February, 1960. A. H. James, Clerk Superior Court, Carteret County flS-23 m 1-8-15-22-29 a5 Quiet-Test the Quietest ! ????/I ***o nvftfptf rood you *knowl You can roll; fcaar the Mima In iW new Oldl far "60! Held for tto n|H?l road irwuU . . . try U at all ipaedi. Old* mobile '? amooth mannafa apeak qnietly of new taahtT and new achievement! la ?onnd control It'l the only ear with Vibra Tbned body monntinf ? that nak op vibra tlon. New nylon-?leeved ihork abaorberi airare ? aofter ride, tna ita naw Una m qoieter. Saa k at your dealer* 1 1 into an old, at ?m umai autnomho qualiTt hauiii miliilAi SOUND CHEVROLET CO., INC, 1301 ARENDELL STREET ^ ^ TO? IIWWWIIH NOIM WHIM TON OO OVM TO MM WOW M TNI TUM TO T?AM . . . Ml AM AfPUIIM TOAATI
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
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March 8, 1960, edition 1
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