Of The News *M 4|l The Time ELEVEN NO. 25 Mcers Added M County Red I Cross Chapter H. c. Corlette Is Elec.M. Treasurer, Mrs. W. P. *Hr:fnsrn '* Earned SecM,v And H M. ShanK first Aid Chairman Id INTEREST fM IN WATER SAFETY To Be Conducted Junior And Senior Ae Savers In South"H port Beginning ,-w members wore added officio I family of the County Rod Cross \\or..'iv while Miss KathI Kvtis. field worker repreH. the National Red Cross '.vss hero on a visit. H Corlette will serve of the local group; Hf p lorgetisen will serve ^H^v'ev and H M Shannon us first aid chairman. < chairman of the Brunschapter. Cross activities II. . high tor tsrunsI is a result of1 J. , of a Water I. iring the first I August Charles A. Mix. I Saving and First I . be here and I irse for Junior I" I;-.. c the coming pro- < I v n ijr Miss Myers si res[ he course is I ners in this I she expressed the I sectii'iis will ?? I puting 11 first aid I consolidated I the county during the I-;- I underI" ; work has n<eived the I "i educaI i Lusiemor first aid classes i ichool. m Bits Of Big News j lt*i Events Of State. Iihou and World-Wide Interest During Past ? . IP. Mure Convict iss Russell. Oklahoma bad farted for four kidnapings a murder, fell for a police Tuesday and was captured Kt a struggle. Posing as a Pan. Sheriff Champ CrawI iured th* gunman from a T. cabin on lonely Mulberry t 15 miles from here. "Don't t or I'll kill you". Crawford M. producing a gun. 15 not going to move," the he said 1 know you have 1W. Crawford found a load-1 ( Wolver on a bed inside the - Hussell had only $8.27. " Of State At increased enrollment of Estate students is indicated < Mvsr.ce applications at State I despite higher tuition i ? which will go into effect in j1 *Bber for non-resident stu- [ 8 registered in the three units1 ] Greater University of 11 " Carolina. The percentage i 'of-State students at State i l5st year, when enrollment i the record-breaking total T-55. was 17.6 per cent. All * of advance applications at i -' rar tV. l Mayer's office | % revealed that approxi-|; 20 per cent of advance ap- L r-"a thus far have been , students and prospective s residing outside of North tea. i ( . Carolina classroom tea- ' " r-5" expect salary increases "I about $275,000 next term, L ^5rren, secretary of the r --'-cation association, said following an all-day; r f of the salary schedule l of the school commis| ??**ver Warren, a memL ?e committee, said the j [ pcide how to divide j L= " ''- - '...dents, white tea[ 5" "' ;;rofc3 the $269,000 <QWfcii?d on plgt 4) i THI River Surve WACCAMAW RIVER?C Washington reveals that a s1 flood control improvement 1 Waccamaw River, pictured a Carolina. Survey Of Wa< / Ordered From Survey Ordered With View Of Possible Future Improvements, A Washington Dispatch Reveals FLOOD CONTROL WORK ON RIVER SOUGHT Just When The Survey Work Might Be Started, Was Not Known Here Today, But Expected Very Soon Major General Julian L. Schley, chief of army engineers. Saturday directed that a survey of Wacca-t maw river in North and South Carolina be made with a view of possible future improvements, a Washington dispatch reveals. Major Reed Wilkinson, district engineer at Charleston, S. C. has been ordered to make a field investigation of the river in both states. I.oca! interests have requested i that the river be cleared and | J straightened so as to accelerate t flood runoff, and that a channel j be cut front a point on the river near the North Carolina-South Carolina line to the headwaters ^ of Little river, so as to divert: flood waters into the Intracoastal j highway. This announcement should be of j (Continued on page 4.) Light Session ; In f nnntv f nnrt r 'il VVUUIJ wv?. . Only few Cases Disposed Of Here In Recorder's ' Court Monday; Judg- . merit Held Open In Sevcral Matters In Recorder's Court here Hon- v lay Dorsey Malone, colored, was 1 found not guilty of aiding and J abetting in the manufacture of 1 ivhiskey. 1 His brother, Joseph Malone, ! pleaded guilty to charges of manufacturing and was given 8 j months on the roads, this judg- . ment being suspended upon pay- | ment of a fine of $100 and costs. # Willie Clemmons, white, was ' found guilty of assault but judgment was witheld. Stacy Jenkins, colored, pleaded guilty to charges of drunken j' driving and was given 6 months on the roads. Judgment was suspended upon payment of a fine of S50.00 and costs, his driv- 1 ers license to be revoked for 12 1 months. ; Nannie Clemmons, white, faced charges of slandering an innocent < woman. Judgment was witheld. < Janie and Mae Clemmons, J white, were tried on charges of assault, judgment in their cases ' being continued. Judgment was handed down m 1 the form of a compromise in the case of Grover Hand, who was ' charged with non-support and as- ( sault. Under its provisions he > will furnish his family with a home and with necessary food and clothing and will be permit- 1 (Continued on page 4) 1 st; A Good 4-PAGES TODAY J y Ordered | ~ I P -? )fficial announcement from urvey with a possibility of ias been ordered for the ibove, in North and South Si s< ccamaw River:: IV W7 _ -I. * !l i w asningionf h Change Title Of {' Presiding Elder y _______________________ s Rev. \V. A. Cade, Wllming- jv Ion <lis(riet superintendent, 11 will be at Trinity Method- t ist Church Sunday morning v and will preach at the II s o'clock hour. Afterwards he |t will preside over the 3rd h quarterly conference. c Change in the title of Mr. v Cade's office from presiding 1< elder to district superinten- s dent is a result of the uniting conference and under the o new set-up the district sup- |V erintendent will he required I to hold only the 1st and 1th jc quarterly conference each [ c year. One reason for this jc plan is to permit him to de- ti vote more time to cvangelis- g tic work. is - d Shallotte Man p Dies Suddenly | frock Driver At Convict Camp At Shallottc Was Discovered Dead Under Wheel As He Starts To ^ Work George A. Register, 36, truck Iriver for the State Highway department at the prison camp) lear Shallotte, died at the wheel if his truck Monday morning. J - Coroner jonn u. caison was < ailed and pronounced the death! < lue to natural causes, probably I f in acute heart attack. From his i s nvestigation he learned that Reg-1 r ster had suffered an attack of t vhat he had believed to be acute 1 ndigestion a fgw hours before. 1 Vpparently fully recovered, he j i vent out to go to work, and j \ vas ready to start when the fatal j stroke hit him. When the truck was loaded, the; , -uards went to the cab and found j i lim dead, sitting under the steer- j ng wheel, it was reported. Coroner John G. Caison after in investigation ruled that he died if natural causes, a heart attack. (Continued on page 4) Funeral Held For Supply Lady Mrs. W. L. Phelps died at her iome near Supply Thursday folowing an illness of more than a ,'ear. The funeral services were in { :sharge of the Rev. Mr. Brinson' if Currie and Rev. P. T. Britt of ! Bladenboro. Mrs. Phelps is survived by her lusband, two sons, E. C. and L. J D. Phelps, of Supply, two daught-' ;rs, Mrs. John Sing, and Mrs. H. T. Sellers, of Supply, four broth-! ers, O. B. Sellers, W. J. Sellers, j G. R. Sellers, and E. E. Sellers, all: if Supply, and four sisters, Mrs. E. M. Parker, of Florence, S. C., Mil L. N. Clemmcns, Mrs. Berta, C. Hewett and Mrs. L. H. Phelp3,! ill of Supply. | ITE 1 News paper In Southport, N. CM Wedi Ji-Annual Report | )f County Nurse s Made Monday /Irs. Lou H. Smith Made Report Of The Activities Of Her Department During First Six Months Of Year )NE DIPHTHERIA CASE IS REPORTED "here Were Other Encouraging Features Of ' The Report Which County Nurse Made To Commissioners Mrs. Lou H. Smith made her eport Monday to members of he Board of County Commissionrs covering her activities during j he first 6 months of this year. Of particular interest was the act that during this period there as only 1 case of diphtheria reorted, and not a single case of yphoid fever. One case of scarit fever was reported. Following is the report as ; lade by Mrs. Smith to the [ oard: j Thirty-eight school visits, 1,000 ? chool children inspected by nur- | e; 060 homes visited; 7 visits . lade to county home; 20 visits lade to hospital; 27 conferences ,-ith doctors; 10 conferences with ounty officials; 955 office con: rences. Ten days of typhoid clinics eld; 5,000 people took typhoid loculations, in office and couny; 217 babies took toxoid this ear: 205 were vaccinated tor i mallpox. Four hundred seventy people . ere examined in this office for, lalaria; 170 malaria smears sent o laboratory; 20 Waasermann's . ere sent to laboratory: 12 other pecimens were sent to la bora ory; 318 persons reported to1 arc malaria; 17 reports on venal disease: five reports on I . hooping: eought; 1 ease of scar- , ft fever reported; 1 case of pinal meningitis reported. One visit made to State Board f Health for a conference; 5 isitors from State Board of | lealth; 2 trips made to take j hildren to eye specialist; 1 eye i linic held in the county. 65 \ hildren examined; 1 T. B. clinic icld in March. 160 persons were ;iven the examination; 3 preehool clinics held; 7,500 miles ! Iriven during these six months; case of diphtheria reported and ' io typhoid fever. aood Catch Of \i Big Fish Made /isitors Here Front Lum-1 berton And Raleigh Have Fine Luck Fishing For Barracuda Sunday A party from Raleigh and an-1 ither from Lumberton brought | n seventeen bararcuda Sunday.11 rhe Luniberton folks apparently t :arried off the honors for the lay as they took eleven of the, ish. The Raleigh folks got only j1 six barracuda. Both boats claim-11 ;d the loss of a good many fish! I hrough breaking away. A num-ji jer of the Raleigh party said they: i ost fifteen in that manner. A i 'air sized number of other fish 1 vere also taken, these being dol- t ihin, bonita and blues. js (Continued from page 4.) If Water Is Wh Then Their Pr< The report of water re- I source engineers, sent here last week to make a preliminary survey to determine if a daily supply of fifty mil- | lion gallons of water was available, will be favorable it has been learned. The re- I port is being submitted this | week and in addition to showing the presence of the desired quantity, it will show the location as being less than a third of the distance in which it was expected to be found. Orders were to cover a 20-miles radius of a cer- j tain point in search of water. The discovery was made scarcely seven miles from the I point of need and by utilizing certain headwaters only about five miles of conduits 1 would be required. The preliminary report will be followed in a very short > P0R1 A Good Comi lesday, July 19th, 1931 Destr VISITOR?The U. S. D( Saturday by Captain H. T. ! nloted by Captain Tom Sellc "ear Pilots Association. The spent three days in the up-ri (Cut Courtesy Star-News.) Homecoming At New Hope Is Planned Sunday The 45th anniversary of the founding of New Hope Presbyterian church will be !> observed Sunday when annual homecoming day is observed. Each year this is an event n looked forward to by regular i members and by scores of friends and former members. Rev. H. G. Bedinger, D. D? president of Flora MacDonald College, will preach at 11 o'clock. At noon there will 1 be a picnic lunch spread on tables in the oak grove surrounding the church. In the afternoon comes the session which each year proves to be about the most j enjoyable feature of the celebration. Everyone gathers in the church for an informal period of speech-making, and during this time varied and humorous experiences arc shared by those present. \ir Port Plans To Be Talked iVilmington Man Will Be Here One Day This Week To Talk Over Possibility Of Constructing Flying Field Meares Harriss, Jr., of the Penlineton Flying Service, Wilming-1 .on, will meet with a committee J >f Southport citizens sometime j his week relative to the estab- j ishment of an airport at South)ort. He will present a plan lookng to the establishment of a ield here. The meeting is being arranged jy W. B. Keziah, secretary of he Civic Club, to which organisation Mr. Harriss wrote Satur(Continued on page 4) at They Need jblem's Solved time, it is understood, by a corps of civil engineers who j will make a thorough investi- j gation and determine upon : ways and means of placing the water where it is desired. The territory gone over last week embraced both the streams and watersheds of Lockwoods Folly River, Town Creek and Allen's Creek, j Some surprising results were found. Actual measurements of the flow in all of the streams were made and one of them showed a flow of forty-four million gallons daily. Another stream that was expected to show a great deal gave a response of only about five million gallons daily to the instrument. In one instance a location was found where an expenditure of only a few thousand CContinued on page 4) r piL munity } PUBL1SI oyer Passes South ^ 'r# ' ' M / ' 'ft g&i, ., ' ' * * * * ?t t < ;strover Anderson was pilot* 3t. Georjre and on her down srs, both of whom are membi Anderson, named in honor ver port and was visited by Negro Capturi Escaping ? James Hodges Grabbedi Sheriff Dillon L Ganey's Gun And Black Jack And Made Escape Tuesday WAS RECAPTURED FOLLOWING CHASE Negro Spent About A Couple Hours In Swamp Before Being Recaptured; Bloodhounds Used In Chase James Hodges, negro was cap- j tnrcd about 11 o'clock yesterday! morning about two hours after he had taken a gun and blackjack, from Sheriff Dillon Ganey, ofj Brunswick county, near Loland, and escaped into a swamp. Sheriff Ganey said he had arrested the negro on a charge of assault anil disorderly conduct and was taking him to jail in his car when Hodges suddenly reached into the pocket on the; automobile's dashboard, grabbed ! the officer's gun and blackjack [ and jumped from the car after a tussle. The negro was surrounded in a swamp and captured about a mile and a half from the scene of his escape. Bloodhounds from the New Hanover prison camp were I brought to the scene and placed j on the negro's trail. Captain ] Aiken, of the prison camp, said I the dogs struck hi3 trail and enabled the posse to locate Hodges in the swamp. The negro surrendered when he discovered he was surrounded and the gun and blackjack were recovered. He is being held in the Brunswick county jail at South- { port and will be tried next Monday. Sheriff Ganey said. Sheriff Ganey escaped unhurt in his tussle with the negro. Southport Boys Back From Camp Johnie Simmons And Paul Dosher Of Southport Attended CMTC At Fortj Bragg For Past Month Johnie Simmons and Paul Dosher of Southport were among the 6S8 young men of North and' South Carolina who Friday com-! pleted a 30-day voluntary period of training in the 1939 Citizens' Military Training Camp at Camp j Sykes. Under the command of Brigadier General Wm. Bryden, U. S. Army, in Command at Fort 1 Bragg, the trainees were given instruction in field artillery, with emphasis on the three-fold ob-| iective of military preparedness, good citizenship and body and character building. A total of 93' reserve officers from field artil-' lery regiments of the south aided in instructions during the camp period. The military phase of camp1 life gave the trainees actual ex-j perier.ee in the- horse drawn field (Continued or. page 4) ,0T iED EVERY WEDNESDAY port jd up river to Wilmington river trip Tuesday she was ers of the Wilmington-Cape of a Wilmington native, thousands of civilians.? ed After From Sheriff t Alligator Found * ? In Local Garage A new use for :t garage was <lisenverr<l Sunday when si three and one-half foot allgator was found In the garage at the Wm. T. Ottoway home. The Ottoway family had gone to the beach for a swim, and upon their return the wayward reptile was discovered in his strange quarters. Even then, his new surroundings were no stranger than the treatment to which he was speedily subjected as lie was made prisoner and hound, this formality being attended to by Buster Northrop and the Ottoway boys. Since there is a limited use for three and onc-lialf foot gators, the sinimal was killed the next day. Sentelle Case Is Continued Case In Which Southport Man Is Accused Of Drunk Driving Will Be Tried Monday, July 31 GASTONIA, July 17.?Case of R. E. Sentelle, 63, of Southport, former legislator and dry crusader, arrested here recently on a charge of drunken driving, was continued again when called in Gastonia Municipal Court today. Sentelle was arrested here July 7 and later gave bond. In addition to this case a case is now pending against him in the Mecklenburg County Superior Court at Charlotte on a charge of violating the liquor law as a result of his arrest there last November. City Solicitor O. F. Mason, Jr., explained the new continuance was ordered because H. R. Prather, Gastonia policeman who arrested Sentelle, is at the beach on his vacation and could not be in court. The case was set for hearing July 31. Convicted of driving while drunk in a trial in Montgomery (Continued on page 4) M. />. Wat kins In Veterans Hospital M. B. Watkins, assistant clerk of court and prominent Brunswick county citizen, was carried to Columbia, S. C., Tuesday by S. B. Frink and Chas. E. Gause as a patient for the Veterans Hospital. Watkins has been a patient at Dosher Memorial Hospital since he suffered a slight stroke about 10 days ago. Although his condition was said to be satisfactory, it was thought better to remove him to Columbia, since he must remain in the hospital for some time. The Pilot Covers Brunswick County ' I $1.50 PER YEAR Washington Men Have Good Luck At Gulf Stream This Is About The Only Newspaper Story Ever Written With Frying Pan Lightship Date Line On U ____ 4 ARE ENTHUSIASTIC OVER RESULTS Member Of Party Is Having Fish Frozen In A Block Of Ice To Adver- [ tise Southport In Washington (By W. B. Keziah) Frying Pan Lightship, July 18. ?Sun up this morning found us out here cruising around in the neighborhood of perhaps the most isolated outpost on the coast of North Carolina. We are not exactly sure how often the men working on Diamond Shoals lightship further up the coast get their mail. Out here at Frying Pan the boys get their's only once a month. They are 35 miles from any land and duty requires them to remain where they ara day in and day out. We left Southport at something like 2 o'clock this morning on board the E. M. Lewis of Captain Hulan Watts. Just off the bar the waters were a bit rough. Arriving at our destination, the Gulf Stream, we found the reverse existing. The sea wao aDOui as caim as a com pancaae, a condition that does not argue well for good fishing. Your real ^ sport fish gets active when * things are rough. Thing did not break so bad, however. On the way out Julian d, Lolly of Washington, owner of the famous Old Harvey Restaur- <* ant, got a strike from a good J sized barracdda and landed him. Before anyone else could show m his ability as a sportsman, Friend a Julian got another strike, and this ft time it was an amberjack that I ran to the neighborhood of 45pounds. It also ran to various other neighborhoods before it H was gaffed^ and brought aboard. j In successfully landing that fish, as he finally did, Mr. Lolly did real well for a country boy, but Uj it looked like the efforts of that ]9 fish was going to put his captor in the hospital from over exertion. fl While the party's faithful colored attendant was busy messag- M ing Mr. Lolly and restoring his jl health following his' conquest of |C| the amberjack, another great rucus was raised. This time Senator O. A. Stanley, a former Governor of Kentucky and now chairman jl of the United States-Canadian Boundary Commission, had hold I of a whale of an amberjack. He HI brought him to gaff in slightly less time and his fish was only a mite smaller than that taken a few minutes before by Mr. Lolly. i His sense of his own personal qualifications as a sportsman outraged by seeing two of his companions exercise priorty over him f in making catches, Colonel Bill Chantland, also of Washington, ? got busy at about this time and f in quick succession he landed a j couple of baracuda that could i well dispute for the claim of being the biggest such fish taken here this year. I For a time things looked W gloomy for Ed C. Ostrow. He is ! '; (Continued on page 4) Tide Table ! Following l? the tide table (or Soutbport during the next week. These hours are approximately correct and were fur* nished The State Port Pilot ! through the courtesy of tlw Cape Fear Pilot's Association High Tide Low TUB i TIDE TABLE Thursday, July 20 10:28 a. m. 4:19 a. m. 0:42 p. m. 4:36 p. m. Friday, July 21 11:23 a. m. 5:07 a. to. 11:36 p. m. 5:31 p. m. Saturday, July 22 I 5:59 a. ns. 12:17 p. m. 6:31 p. m. Sunday, July 23 0:31 a. m. 6:55 a. ra. 1:12 p. m. 7:35 p. ja. Monday, July 24 1:28 a. m. 7:55 a. a. 2:09 p. m. 8:40 p. na> Tuesday, July 26 , 2:25 a. m. 8:54 a. a, 3:08 p. m. 9:38 p. m j Wednesday, July 26 3:29 a. m. 9:50 a. i*. | 11 4:08 p. m. 10:32 p. cn j *

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