I fte Pilot Covers I jrnnswiek County NO. 4. Ejngressma IgxplainPrc k'ewFarm Line Will Be Held At If O'clock Saturday Af. | ' In The Auditorium Of Shallotte School Lfting WILL BE P NON-POLITICAL L Held For Purpose Of Eainmg To Farmers Kanees Made In AAA ||n Order To Be KeI cognized By Court general mass meeting of the of Brunswick county will pi Saturday afternoon, Marat 2 o'clock in the Shallotte Ki auditorium at which time pressman J Bayard Clark discuss thi new farm bill Ktiy passed d.v Congress to K;' the AAA program. K meeting will be entirely partisan, and is planned for purpose of giving Brunswick tr farmers an idea of what K'may expect from the new K set-up. County Agent J. E. jln urges every man who Ebly can to be present for meeting. is understood that Mr. p win discuss just what the pm of the Supreme Court on did to the farm program wy of invalidating the AgriKrai Adjustment Act and King out certain restrictions limitations of the power of Kress under the constitution Kact legislation in the aid of Kulture; just why it is that Kress can now pass legislaK that provides only for a Ktaiy program; just how it Koposed to aii yv-'se fanners K co-operate with the governK in the new program, and essential the voluntary coKiUon of the farmers with the nam nrn. THE 6-PAGES TODA\ nClarkTo ) visions Of Bill March 7 HTCUJIICIU UUUC1 UiC "CW Battle Bits I Of Big News Iks Events Of State, lotion and World-Wide I Interest During Past Week Wkved Of Office I A routine War Department I ft' relieving General John K Hagood of his command B < the Eighth Corps area in I Southwest aroused a storm ' criticism in the House I "wiay. Representative Blan of Texas, said the order B#? because of General Halloa's criticism of WPA ex Mtures before a House I tkommittee several months If! general described B A funds as "stage money" W Guard Speech B J-rging speakers to guard B -"c radio utterances, parties' ! on politics, Owen D. warned Monday that I ^om of speech for a man ||M8e voice can be heard a 5s' hundred feet is one thing" I? for a "man whose voice Iki heard around the I it is another. Wing Costs Amid cries of "It can't be B^V from city working girls '-scussing a clothing bud fot Sl.50 a week comes deassurance from State anf6 Ulat can be done" 5 e country. At least, girls HJ? ave in rural sections can j? Suite nicely on that sum, KL ^ss Willie Hunter, ex ??IOn Olr.fV.. .. . . specialist, ana ul'a Mclver, assistant K speciaust. And what's BC ,the two say, girls can r88 for even less. Iftf Session t!h'ngton Tuesday the m tL'/ of a special session m C iei5i8lature in *ate?gh m-.,. than a conversational B^ M. .Vernor Ehringhaus, B^irerp.0 y Presided over the B>%1 StCe. ^HSidering the proUk J,?*??' compact, is meetBViw North Carolina NS?! delegation for I wiued from Page 1 ) I BAVARD CLARK gram is to its success. He will discuss in some detail the aims, purposes and provisions of the :new act and give to those who are interested all the information 'that he has been able to gather at Washington upon this all-important subject. County Toi To Be" Games Will Begin Friday A Be Concluded Wi Afte The annual Brunswick t tournament will be played on Friday and Saturday, J announcement made Tuesdi principals and coaches held ! In spite of the fact that there was an agreement to hold the tournament this year in the Southport gymnasium, there was a strong move to play the games again in the Waccamaw gymnasium. H. D. Epting, principal ol the Leland school, was the most outspoken sponsor for the Waccamaw gymnasium, declaring that he doubted if the Southport gymnasium would accommodate tournament crowds in safety, i As a result of this question Principal C. A. Ledford, of the l Southport school, has agreed tc have the balcony around the loca (court inspected by engineers before the tournament date. In the opening game Fridaj afternoon, waccamaw gma Shallotte at 3 o'clock; an houi , later Waccamaw boys play Iceland. The first game on the evening program finds the Bolivia girls facing the Leland lassies al j7 o'clock; at 8 o'clock Shallotte boys will play Shallotte. | Both South port teams drew a bye in first round play. Winners jin the preliminary games wil: match to determine which shal' jmeet the Southport boys anc girls in the semi-final games Sat urday morning. [ The finals will begin at 2 :(X 'o'clock when winners of the mor jning games play holders of th( semi-final byes. | Republicans Meet Saturday At Supply C. Ed Taylor, chairman of the Brunswick county Republican ex jecutive committee, has called a convention of members of his party to be held at Supply Saturday morning, February 29, al ill o'clock. The purpose of this meeting will be to choose delegates to the state congressional and other conventions, and for the transactior of such other business as maj come before the convention. Airhlnnp Alnrkcr On Shrimp House Information was received here jthis week by Mayor John Erikser that WPA funds were available jfor painting an airplane markei Jon top of some building here Permission was received to have j the marker painted on top oi the Fodale Brothers shrimp house i&nd this will be done within the jnear future. STA1 A Good Newsj Southport, N. Citizens Should Protect Timber Forest Products Are Valuable Source Of Income In This County And The Forests Should Be Well; Protected (By Dawson Jones) Brunswick county is one of thej i leading timber producing regions 1 \ in the state of North Carolina.! , Many varieties of trees grow j I here, particularly the long leaf i pine which seems to thrive. It is j remarkable to notice the short ] time in which a fine timber crop can be produced even with a minI in.um of care and attention. / bout 82 per cent of the entire | area of this county is forest land, i Therefore, a large portion of taxi es necessary to carry on our | county government must come, j from our forest. When the forests are allowed to be destroyed the 1 taxes will naturally go up. This effects everyone who lives within | the borders of Brunswick county, fit is to everyone's advantage to j protect the forest. I'he people are fast awakening to the value and necessity of pre serving the forests from fires, but. there are other things just as important if this is to be a i good timber producing county. 11 One of the things is the careless ! practice of cutting a section bare j without leaving an occasional (Continued on page 6) ornament Dl? TTA A T-T l iaytu jl jlv^ jl c kfternoon, March 6, And Will ith Finals Saturday irnoon county high school basketball in the Southport gymnasium darch 6 and 7, according to ay following a conference of [ Monday night. !* | '] FINDS KNIFE HE HID A IN OAK 30 YEARS AGO Hallsboro, Feb. 18.?A few days ago C. S. Sasser, local > farmer, found a pocket knife in the heart of an oak tree which he hid 80 years ago. Mr. Sasser said that his fa[ ther, A. S. Sasser, bored a [ hole in the oak to plant a steel brace which supported an old-fashioned winepress, and that he (the younger Sasser) slipped the knife into | that hole with the blade open | to keep from lending it, and ' j promptly forgot what he had | done with it until the hole in j the tree had grown over. During a recent storm the wind blew the tree down and " | the knife was retrieved in bad ' j shape, a mere skeleton of the 1; Barlow which was placed in j there 80 years ago. I Garden Contest ' Still Going On ) Although Handicapped By .1 Unusually Bad Weather, ?| Fall And Winter Garden Contest Is Still In Progress I The fall and winter garden if | contest, though handicapped by jsnow and extreme cold weather i, this winter, is still being pushed ijby the State College agricultural l I extension service, j j "Don't be discouraged," Miss . Mary E. Thomas, extension specialist in food and nutrition, adj vise home gardeners entered in r i the contest. "Other people's gar! Hon'a have been set back, too. "Don't give up and quit keep! | ing your records. All you who rj (Continued on page six.) Teachers Receive Pay This Week y ______ Approximately $10,000 will be > paid this week to teachers in the t consolidated schools of Brunswick 5 county as salary for the fourth r school month. Because of the irregularity > with which the schools have r operated since Christmas, not all > faculty members will be paid on ; the same day. Twenty teaching ? ?tviAnfh days comprise a, suiwi I RTPI id Community uary 26th, 1936PUBUS WPA Boom With Better Weather Caldwell Says That WPA i Forces Are Just Waiting For Break In The Weather Before Beginning Full Program Announcing that 523 people j were at work on Works Progress Administration projects in Bruns-j wick county, Robert D. Caldwell, listrict WPA director, said today, j 'We are just waiting for the weather man to let up on us and | EPOI paper In A Goo C., Wednesday, Febr Brunswick Boys And Girls Form i A Service Club ' Organization Meeting Was Held Last Wednesday At Supply; Club Leaders From New Hanover County Present L OFFICERS OF CLUB !{ ELECTED AT MEET < Work Of Service Club Sim- 1 ilar To That Performed By 4-H Groups; Mem- |' ship Of High School Graduates Last Wednesday evening a number of the high school grad- , uates, both boys and girls, of Brunswick county met with the J home demonstration agent, Miss Marion Smith, at the county agent's office at Supply, for the j, purpose of organizing a service club in Brunswick. Harold Jeter, extension service 1 worker, of Wilmington, was present. Mr. Jeter spoke to the eager' young listeners concerning service t club work. C. E. Dillard, county agent of j ! New Hanover county, was also I | present and brought an interesting message to the Brunswick county high school graduates as I he gave an outline of the work i of the service club in his county, | and told something of the good | work that is being done by the 'New Hanover service club. The 'Brunswick county girls and boys were especially interested in the recreational program, carried out in~ the New Hanover county ser(Continued on Page Six) Receive Report Of Diphtheria Sixteen Cases Of Diphtheria Have Been Reported In North Carolina Since j January 1; two In Brunswick County ! Sixteen cases of diphtheria have been reported in North Car. ?* _.. ri .nf rtf Tnnnonr onna since uie mac ui. uauuaij, according to Mrs. Lou H. Smith, county nurse, who says that two of them were from Brunswick county. I Mrs. Smith declares that she is ashamed of the fact that Brunswick county was forced to report I cases of this disease, innoculations for which have been available for a long time from the \ county nurse or the family physician. | Mrs. Smith advises all mothers to have their children immunized against this disease as soon as they are 6 months of age. The | toxoid will be administered by 'any practicing physician, or the ! county nurse. Short Session Of Recorder s Court Only two cases were disposed of here last Wednesday before Judge Peter Rourk in Recorder's court. J. W. Johnson, Bladen county | white man, was found gu'lty of j operating an automobile with improper lights and was required to j I pay a fine of 15.00 and the costs' I in his case. J. B. Prince, white, was char-! 'ged with violation of the speed | law, but the action against him was nol prossed. 'Old French Mine S Intn Pmrf JLJLAO.VP ML V* ?. M? The all-steel motor ship Lexington limped into the Southport harbor Saturday afternoon and has been tied up here since at the railroad dock awaiting motor replacements that must be made before she continues on her way to New York with a load of green lumber from Georgetown, S. C. After developing motor trouble, the boat was adrift and" unreported off Frying J Pan shoals for 48 hours, i Temporary repairs were made by Chief Engineer Randal] Schleigh and, aided by a rising tide, the vessel came in ' we will really get our workers i jn the job." Caldwell said that WPA projects have been operating- remarkably well despite adverse weather conditions. "We have demanded a real day's work from everyone working on WPA when it was at all possible to work," he said. This policy is in line with the latest regulations from Harry L. Hopkins, national administrator of the Works Progress administration in Washington, Caldwell said. In a letter to local administrators Hopkins said that habitual and intentional shirking will not be tolerated, and that in case such shirking existed em(Continued on Page Six) Convict Is \ In Attem Scarboro Faircloth, Columbi cally Wounded Tuesd Escape Scarboro Faircloth, Col tical condition at the Brim being shot Tuesday morning fellow prisoner, attempted of convicts working near Ex LIGHT SNOW FELL FRIDAY EVENING The ground in Southport was practically covered Saturday morning with a light snow that fell early Friday night. The warm sun soon removed the last evidence of this second snow of the year. Out in the county, the fall was heavier. About the middle of Friday afternoon the rain turned to snow, and by nightfall the ground was completely covered in many sections. The snow continued after dark, and a fall of four inches was reported at Shallotte. Wilmington was blanketed with snow and ice of sufficient depth that the draw bridge over the river could not be raised Saturday morning to let a ship through. Epidemic Over At Camp Sapona Quarrantine Imposed On Local CCC Camp Lifted Today (Wednesday) And Men Went Back To Their Work The epidemic of mild cases of influenza and serious colds released its grip upon the men of Camp Sapona this week and the week-old quarantine was lifted today by Dr. William Dosher, company physician. During the past 10 days, at least 100 men enrolled at the local camp were confined to their beds with influenza or (Continued on page 6) weeper Came iturday Afternoon under her own power. Captain Bonner Bussels was the pilot aboard. The Lexington was built by the French government and was used during the world war as a mine sweeper. She is 150-feet in length and carries a crew of 10 men. Captain Oscar Gallis is in char- [ trfk I o ? Parts for the damaged mo- ; tor were expected to arrive today (Wednesday) in Wil_ mington and it was thought likely that repairs would be completed and the boat ready to sail by the latter part of this week. Most Of The News All The Time $1.50 PER YEAR rownWhen : Overturns; f Recovered Tragedy Occurred During Early Hours Of Thursday Morning As Men Returned To Ship Anchored In Harbor ONE MAN RESCUED BY YACHT ALTAIR Several Boats Spent All Day Thursday Dragging For Bodies Of Missing Men; Dynamite IJspfl Snndav ?? J Four men were drowned during the early hours of Thursday morning in the river channel a short distance from the pilot dock when a rowboat in which Bill ! Creech, Southport man, and four members of the crew of the freighter Chippewa were returning to the steamer capsized. Their cries for help were heard by Captain Kempton Adams, of the yacht Altair. This craft proceeded at once in the direction of the men, but E. Arnio, member of the crew of the Chippewa, j was the only one rescued. He was found clinging to the side of the overturned boat. The men lost were: Bill Creech, I of Southport; J. M. Conklin, of ';New York City; M. H. Strahan, Baton Rouge, La.; and Thomas Casey, Long Island, N. Y. The body of Strahan was sigh|ted Monday by Charlie Swann and Tony McKeithan, Southport fishermen, off the point of Battery Island as they were returning from their shad nets. The body was towed to the Southport dock, where it was turned over , to Coroner M. A. Northrop, j Location of the remains of Strahan came as an anti-climax to the intensive four-day search for bodies of the drowned men. Throughout the greater part of the day Thursday several shrimp boats, whose expense was paid by owners of the Chippewa, plied back and forth through the Southport harbor dragging for the bodies. this work was under the direction of Warrant Officer W. H. Barnett and the coast guard crew from Oak Island station. Rain i [ fell in torrents Friday, but the (Continued on Page Six) | Leland Women In Monthly Meeting The Leland Home Demonstration Club met February 18, at ! uie nome or Mrs. K. B. Dresser. 1 Each member received a valentine. Games and contests were enjoyed. The leader prepared and served hominy date pudding to the following members: Mrs. Dan Lewis, Mrs. Lee Blake, Miss Marr ion Smith, Mrs. C. A. Watts and Mrs. K. B. Dresser. Members are looking forward to a Saint Patrick's party next month at Mrs. G. C. McKeithan's home. The club accepted with appreciation an invitation from the Phoenix home demonstration club to visit them the first Tuesday | in March. I Tide Table Following la the tide table for Southport daring the next week. These hours are approximately correct and were furnished The State Port Pilot through the courtesy of the Cape Fear Pilot's Association. I High Tide Low Tide Thursday, February 27 11:24 a. m. 5:17 a. m. 11:48 p. m. 5:30 p. m. Friday, February 28 6:15 a. m. | 12:20 p. m. 6:27 p. m. Saturday, February 29 0:45 a. m. 7:23 a. m. 1:20 p. m. 7:35 p. m. Sunday, March 1 1:47 a. m. 8:34 a. m. | 2:25 p. ra. 8:44 p. m. Monday, March 2 2:54 a. m. 9:38 a. m. 3:34 p. m. 9:47 p. m. Tuesday, March 3 4:03 a. m. 10:34 a. m. 4:40 p. m. 10:43 p. m. Wednesday, March 4 5:04 a. m. 11:25 a. m. 5:34 p. m. 11:85 p. m. . . * . LOT HED EVERY WEDNESDAY FourMenDi Small Boat One BocF # SKUNK LOSES FOOT, BUT GETS REVENGE A skunk whose foot was frozen fast to a steel rail of the VV. B. & S. railroad one morning during the extremely cold weather, following the first snow of the season, had his erring limb amputated by the wheels of the work car. The car was stopped and one man, who evidently did not know about skunks, got off to put an end to the suffering of the little black and white animal. An unwilling victim of this act of mercy, the little fellow died gamely with a final flourish of his tail that embellished his would-be benefactor with a never-to-be-forgotten fragrance, sending him into retirement for the day. W. K. Cox, in charge of ] maintenance on this end of the line, is authority for this story. I Voutided Lpted Escape ts County White Man, Critiay Morning In Second Attempt umbus white man, is in criiswick county hospital after : as he and Vaughn Speight, to escape from a road crew tim mil. * Speight, white, also is from Columbus county. It is reported that this same pair succeeded in escaping from the prison camp near Whiteville several months ago. Guard R. B. Holden fired the shot that dropped Faircloth and brought Speight to a stop without using the other barrel. The wounded man was taken immediately to the Brunswick county hospital, in Southport, where an 'emergency operation was performed. Buckshot wounds were in the back of his head, the right side of his abdomen and in his arms. j Faircloth was transferred to the Brunswick county prison camp, near Supply, last month from the Columbus county camp. He had served 6 months of a 15 to 20 months sentence. The attempted escape Tuesday was the first to occur at the ! Brunswick county prison camp since last July. Fatal Wreck In County Friday Bradford C. Royal, High Point Man, Died Following Wreck Which Occurred When Coupe Skidded On Highway 20 Bradford C. Royal, 57-year-old salesman of High Point, was instantly killed Friday afternoon shortly after 1 o'clock when the light coupe he was driving skidked, left the highway and turned lover in a ditch near Malmo, on [route 20, about thirteen miles .west of Wilmington. Coroner Asa W. Allen said the cause of death was pulmonary Ishock. | The man was taken to Wilmington by Billie Ganey, of Le{land, but was pronounced dead when entered at James Walker Memorial hospital. Mr. Ganey told state highway nntmimen that the Chevrolet I coupe driven by Royal passed his machine, traveling in the diIrection of Whiteville, and that a few minutes later he came upon the scene of the wreck. The top (Continued on page 6) Moving Wing Of j School Building The second wing of the old school building was torn away last week and is being moved by WPA workmen to the colored school, where it will be used as a vocational building. The project is under the supervision of A. E. Peterson.