MlESDAY, SEPT. 25, 1!
IfFORlJM l[
dedicated to opinions of :
a mouthpiece for the
^Knd observations of our
readers, for which we
' responsibility. Contributhls
column must not
Kj three hundred words.
B THE PILOT:
B^ reasonably safe assumpB[
the future of Southport
K 0f the future of BrunsB^.ty
is revolving around
Kiy be accomplished withBjtext
few weeks.
B get the PWA loan and
^Ke terminals, property valBiouthport
will show an avBjicrease
of five hundred
B within a year from the
Be loan is secured, and we
Bsily estimate a gain to
K^usar.d inhabitants in that
^Business and industry of
B. will spring up to link itBth
the building of thej
Be do not get the loan j
B and are unable to build
Bnnnals now, it is safe to |
??vor will be
K that wc *?.?? ? K
build them. In that case
Hjst that we can expect for
Ert is 'hat we will have a
Ktricken fishing village,
B 0ple than we have now
Kth property values less
K is now e
seems to be a very good
Kt of securing the PWA
i(The writer can say of his
Knowledge that there are
I dozen citizens of Southport
Kig heart and soul in the unEjog.
They are giving of
time, their money and are
Ifident as men could be in
Eertaking in which they are
Eeiving the cooperation and
tt of their fellow citizens,
k effort is costing money
Jt will cost more to put it
U. It is a case of now or
P It is an effort in which
citizen of the town should
I not in giving or making
jerly donation. It is a matt
making an investment in
ndertaking that gives good
ise of going over and which
mean everything if it does
s is no time to be a chisler,
back and let others do the
in the hope that you will
>le to slip in and snatch
some of the fruits of their
l Your investment to carSH(
Furmt
DC
Fall F
One price tells more abou
tting our prices speak for '
kip in Value-Giving! All we :
o-The-Minute Style, the low
9x12 Foot
LINOLEUM RUGS
$4.85
Vood and Coal ranges
Jiterprise Coal circul,
001 BEAUTIFUL LAM!
Big Comfortable
LOUNGE
CHAIR
$15.95
EACTIFCL 9-PIECE DUNCi
I'NING ROOM suite,
jandsome 9-Piece Walnv
'OVERNOR winthrof
PINET desk
,pINET desk chair ..
Large 3-Piece
MOHAIR
T n
| ROOM SUITE
I $59.95
'oe Chippendale WING
PXM1NSTER SCATTER 1
1 20-piece solid Mahogan
f D - $25.00
I 3-Piece
WALNUT FINISH
I ROOM SUITE
I $39.75
f?Bifortable Inner Spring
K? Pet. Layer Felt MAT1
K? Pound MATTRESS, C
RHe Coil SPRING, Bu
I^SPRING, Helical Ti
I CONVEf>
I Sutton'C
i?i Fr?nt St"
?35
ry on the undertaking may be ,
the money that wins all, your |
failure to invest and do your
part may result in the loss of all.
Do your duty today. Make your
investment to the success of the
building of the terminals by pay- i
ing your part of the money that
the Port Commission must have
to carry on. They will be able to
work the harder and success will
be more assured if you, and every
citizen, invest according to
your ability in this great undertaking.
, i
It is now or never?it is everything
if we win?it is nothing
now or ever if we lose.
A CITIZEN.
Editor State Port Pilot,
Southport, N. C.,
Dear Mr. Editor:?
I am sending herewith a copy
of a front page article carried in
the Biblical Recorder, J. S. Farmer
Editor, Raleigh, N. C., September
11, 1935, issue. The article
is copied as per indicated from
the Pentecostal Herald.
I sincerely hope that you will
use the columns of your interesting
paper for space for the article.
"Boys and Girls Wanted?
Mr. Farmer explains?Brother
Thad K. Jones, of Timberlake, N.
C., copied the following article
from the Pentecostal Herald and
sent it to us for reprinting:?
1 "To Mothers and Fathers?
Greetings:?
| "We can use your boys in our
! business now and at any time i
during this generation. Two million
of your neighbor's boys and
girls are wanted. They are as
necessary in our line of business
as saw logs are tc a sawmill or
wheat to a flour mill.
"As we expect to operate in
; every state in the union and in
! every town and city, with your
[ beautiful little village included,
I we naturally infer that you are
I in sympathy with our work and
; will help furnish material. Our
I business is one of the largest in
! the world. We largely control the
National and Municipal elections,
j We give liberally to all charit
j able institutions and pay large
dividends to churches. We manu|
facture boys into drunkards, murderers,,
criminals, paupers; we fill
i prisons and asylums; we flood the
j land with prostitution and vice,
j We make it our special business
to rob your homes and populate
! hell. We work against home,
j Heaven and purity.
"We are a success. Glance at
i
XXXXXXlXXXXXXXXXS
DP FOR ALL YOUR
:ure and Rug
IRING OUR ANNU,
urniture
t values than a hundred words! Ai
themselves?we offer this concrete
need sav is SUTTON-COUNCIL'S
prices tell their own thrilling' stor;
Solid Mahogany
COFFEE TABLES
$4.95
i
ATORS, Heats 2 to 3 rooms
PS, PICTURES AND MAHO
Mahogany
DROP LEAF
TABLE
$16.75
*N PHYFE
Regular $200.00 Value
it DINING ROOM SUITE ...
? SECRETARY
S-Piece
TAPESTRY
LIVING ROOM SUITE
Reversible Cushions
$39.50
? * ? d?4A r\t
CHAIR, Original price ^iu.ui
RUGS, each
y or Maple Bed Room Group
CHEST $30.00
4-Piece Modern Walnut
BED ROOM SUITE
Excellent Quality
$59.50
MATTRESS, Durable Tickii
TRESS, only
otton Combination Filler
ilt for Comfort
e
IIENT TERMS CAN BE AR1
ouncil Furn
"SERVICE WITH A SMILE"
WILMINGTON, N. C.
THE I
Good Dairy Cowsj;
Pay Best Profit!
]
Low Producing Cows Prove j
Expensive Rather Than A
Profit, According To R.
H. Ruffner Of State College
_?
Ten good cows are more profitable
than 20 low producers.
In fact, low producers are often
an expense rather than a profit,
declared R. H. Ruffner, head of
the animal husbandry department
at State College.
A cow giving six quarts of milk i
a-day just about pays for her
feed, Ruffen said. She pays nothing
for stable rent or for the
labor required for her care and
milking.
But a cow giving 10 quarts of
milk daily will yield a net profit
of $40 a year. Ten such cows
will produce a clear profit of
$400 a year. Cows giving more
milk produce an even larger return.
The exact figure, of course, will
vary with local conditions, the
price of milk, and the cost of
feed, Ruffer added.
Many dairymen who did not
make money last year are thinking
of buying high priced cows.
In many instances they would do
better to sell their lowest producers
and endeavor to raise the efficiency
of their better animals.
Every dairyman should seek to
develop a herd whose average
production is at least 8,000 lbs.
of milk a* year, Ruffner pointed
I out. Top quality cows frequently
I nxA/liino Q ? v# ?r or
I Surplus
Undivided I
DEPOSITS
The W.
rary Federal
up to $5,00(
| J/1WUV& f,UVV ^/wuiimw mm J - ?
more.
! our record in the United States:
j 160,000 persons drop into a drunI
kards grave every year; 50,000
I are suicides; 10,000 babies less
| than a week old are murdered,
I and 60,000 who are never born
] are murdered; 60,000 mothers'
I girls die each year as prostitutes;
I 50,000 mothers' girls are seduced
every year. Last year there was
j an increase of 3,900 murders and
I homicides and 3,000 suicides.
! "Give us your patronage
1 through your votes. Send us your
boys and girls; we will do the
rest.
"Yours in co-operation against
God and Heaven,
"THE DEVIL AND THE
LIQUOR BUSINESS."
i I
li
5 Needs jj
)
\L ||
SALE I
>t
id consistent with our policy of j (
proof of our continued leader- ) j
QUALITY, Sutton-Council's up- ) (
f, JI
)(
???? : j
Full Size j
POSTER BEDS } j
Al- S I
*J)D.I70 rr
$39.95 [
$24.50 1 I
jj
GANY TABLES S i
);
RUGS! RUGS!
Largest stock of our History i
9x12 ft. AX.MEVSTER j,
$24.75, $29.75 and up I
Newest Fail Patterns ] i
Jl
I
$149.50 !
$74.50
$34.50
$6.95
$3.95
Large 2-Piece |
LIVING ROOM SUITE I
High Grade Upholstering
Wood Carving?$130.00 Value ; j
$75.00 ] j
) [
)?Now $20.00 j |
$1.95 J
i Open Stock i I
VANITY $40.00 j j
4-Pieee Solid Maple
Colonial Design j
BED ROOM SUITE J |
$59.50 "I |
r !
ng $19.75
$9.95 j |
$4.95 '
$9.95 J i
$5.75 J (
it
RANGED j |
iture Co.
Phone 1070 j ;
STATE PORT PILOT, SOUT
Proper feeding and management
of the herd will do a great
leal to stimulate milk production
and keep it at a high level,
Ftuffner added. And good feed,
much of which can be produced
at home, need not cost more
than the wrong kind of feed.
Another important step in herd
improvement is the breeding of
cows to bulls which can transmit
to their daughters a capacity for
heavy milk production.
As these calves mature, they
may be kept in the herd while
their somewhat lower producing
dams are sold.
TREAT CEREAL SEEDS
TO CONTROL DISEASE
Smut diseases on wheat, barley
and oats can usually be controlled
by treating the seed just
before planting in the fall.
The following treatments have |
been found effective by Dr. S. G. I
Lehman, professor of plant pathology
at State College.
First of all, clean the seed.
Run it through a fanning mill, if
possible, to remove large clumps
of smut and unbroken wheat
grains containing smut spores.
Covered smut on wheat may
be treated with copper carbonate
or ethyl mercury phosphate. Put
two or three ounces of the former,
or one-half ounce of the latter,
on the seed in a closed barrel,
or like container, and roll it
around on the ground until each
seed is covered with the dust.
When copper carbonate is used,
the seed may be stored or planted
at once. When ethyl mercury
j phosphate is used, the seed should
fSi "y MIV i iww >?IW wsi
|j| FREES
While you are
week attending co
ill tomohile to us an<
battery and tires
your car and chan
are in the courtrc
We Carry a C
STANDARD C
?* * ?
| Hood Sen
II | - Southpo
Whitevill
jt RESOURCE
Jj| Cash on Hs
.|| U. S. and N
Jl Municipal I
i| Notes Secur
M Notes Secur
If Notes Secur
|| Other Loans
|| Banking Ho
|| Less R<
I? LIABJLITIE
<|| Capital?Co
{ If Capital?Pn
\
/ 4
HPORT, N. C.
Second Week Of ;!
Radio Programs <
Carolina Farmer Features,
The Daily Presentation
From WPTF, Raleigh, j1
Sponsored By Extension ]
Division Of State College j j
Carolina Farm Features, the
daily radio presentation of the (
State College Agricultural Extension
Service Station WPTF, Ral- 1
eigh, began its second week Mon- 1
day. 1
Special attention has been calbe
put in sacks or a pile and allowed
to remain for 24 hours.
Loose smut on wheat must be
treated with hot water. The de- J
tails are somewhat complicated,
but county agents or Dr. Lehman
will be glad to furnish full in-1
formation upon request. ?
Both kinds of oat smut may
be controlled by applying ethyl j
mercury phosphate in the same!
way as treating wheat for cover-1
ed smut.
The covered smut and the'
black loose smut on barley may
| also be given the same treatment
j as covered smut on wheat, but
the brown loose smut requires
the hot water treatment.
The two loose smuts on barley
are hard to distinguish, and where
the crop seems to be affected
with one or the other, it is advisable
to get laboratory tests of
the seed, or else secure diseasefree
seed from another source.
sm
ERVICE
MWiM mm m mmm m F*'
in Southport next
urt, bring your auJ
let us check your
We can grease j
ge the oil while you
iom. i| |j
omplete Line of
UL PRODUCTS
rice Station j
rt, N. C. ; 1
i
Condensed Report C
Waccaunau) Bu:
e, N. G. Ghadboi
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSH
S:?
md and in Banks
T. C. Bonds
Jonds and Notes
ed by U. S. and N. C. Bonds .
ed by Listed Stocks and Bom
ed by Cash value Life Insura
>
use and Fixtures
;serve for Depreciation
otat,
V A ...........
Simmon
eferred
0
'rofits and Reserves
3TAL
Deposits September
Deposits September !
\CCAMAW BANK & TRUS
1 Deppsit Insurance Fund and
).00 by the Federal Deposit
N
I
ed to addresses by E. Y. Floyd,
lirector of the tobacco program
n this State; D. S. Weaver, agricultural
engineer; and J. F. Crisjvell,
director of the cotton program.
Floyd's talk concerns the new <
tobacco contracts, which are now
jeing signed by growers over the i
State. This will be of particular
nterest to weed growers.
Criswell will speak on the new
cotton contracts, explaining the
future of the cotton adjustment
program, and Weaver will tell
about the rural electrification
program.
The programs for this week,
which open each afternoon at 2!
o'clock, are as follows:
Monday, John A. Arey, "Win-1
ter Hays for Dairy Cows"; Tuesday,
E. Y. Floyd, "Tobacco Contracts";
Wednesday, Dr. J. V.
Hofmann, "North Carolina Forests";
Thursday, J. F. Criswell,
"New Cotton Contracts"; Friday,
D. S. Weaver, "Developments in
the Rural Electrification Program";
and Saturday, Miss Mary
Thomas, "Foods."
Folger Johnson of Chatham
county is conducting a demonstration
in raising capons for the
market. He has a flock of 150
of these birds.
ii Folks Her*
)!
)!
|| Skipper Flour, 24-tb Si
)! Mountain Peak Flour, 2
| Hartness Choice Flour,
j | Green or Ground Coff<
4-ft?. Flake White La
jj 8-fts. Flake White La
j |
; | t We have plenty of
Meal, Wheat Middling!
I ( tion, in fact anything i
|j > Grocery Store?
'
II YOUR TRADE
II
!! Garrel
'j [ WHOLESALE
[j | J. F. Garrell, Prop.
II
/
'/ The Condition Of
ok & Trust Co
.*-? TV f Fairrr
II U9 1 1 V-?? ?
4ESS SEPTEMBER 14, 1935
$2,380,528.68
182,323.30
"* 179,788.10
"" 20,550.00
is"* 85,550.00
nee 12,782.00
*. 42,073.34
." 7,805.55
$ 50,000.00
"" 50,000.00
25,000.00
65,154.01
14, 1934?$2,234,291.91
14, 1935?$3,073,955.24
t .
T COMPANY is a member o
the funds of each depositoi
Insurance Corporation.
%
THREE
SUPPLY NEWS
Miss Ida Sellers has returned
to Wilmington after spending
several days with her brother-inlaw,
Mr. P. T. Clemmons.
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Hewett,
of Wilmington, visited relatives
and friends in Supply Tuesday
Mr. A. S. Hewett had the misfortune
to get one of his negro
men hurt at his saw mill Wednesday.
Grover Sellers, of Supply, made
a business trip to South port on
Monday and while down there he
saw his cousin, Elton Hewett,
who is home visiting his parents;
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hewett, of
South port
Friends of Mr. D. H. Caison are
glad to hear that he is improving
from a recent stroke.
Farmers are having quite a
time gathering their hay owing
to the wet weather.
Captain A. W. Clemmons, of
Shallotte, stopped in, to tell
friends this week that he is fixing
to open up the Mid-Way
Filling Station on the Southport
road.
Currituck farmers report an
unusual amount of "horse trouble"
due to mouldy feed and impure
water.
?K3t3(KMt3(3CKKKKK30|
; They Are l|
it
i 75c | \
!4-tb Sx 80c )
" Of- j
Z4-Tb 5x oat j||.
se, 2-tbs 25c I
rd 55c |
rd ; $1.10 [
) |
Abruzzi Seed Rye, Fish j [
s, Dairy Feed, Hog Ra- | j
carried in a First Class ) [
J !
J !
APPRECIATED ! |
I Bros, l!
and RETAIL j j
WHITEVILLE, N. C. i |
j|
lont, N. G. ?|
2,861,522.08 3
368,319.38 &
34,267.79 ||
?o nn A mo oc ffiS'
$0,?U<?,XVi7.4eJ m*
w*
eK jm
Gtijp
mijm
190,154.01 ?
3,073,955.24 g
$3,264,109.25 g/?4
f the Tempo-,. Sf
- are insured >' R
/
* * ?
" ' Sir-'^
A il . 7 A-y . -&t> it">* - . ,1