Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / July 10, 1940, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR Takntlhws about tfie AAA cuul others ( \?f3^RvA*rA XT WSI?N WORK \ jWlfgjMI ctrom- jfte St _ x ^ y "J (jbuntsj JSqeivtr J. E. DODSON The day is coming when Bruns-1 charge of this work fc wick County farmers will pro- wick county. 1 wl" 1)6 . ? ... help interested farmers duce enough small gram on the.r jn with Mr Ginn. farms to take care ot all farm mattress ordi needs with a surplus for sale. ; the a.A.A. Committei We have a few farmers who sc() on about 800 applies have produced this year as much cotton mattresses. An o as 25 to 30 bushels of wheat per p]ace(j wjth the Federal acre. ment for enough cotton I am confident that when there jng t0 make 720 mattrc is sufficient wheat, oats, barley cause 0f a revised ru and rye produced in the county, time ij?,it for putting we will have some enterprising cations for mattresses business man build a mill suit- extended indefinitely. able for making flour and prob- | ably mixing feeds. We have a U , . large acreage of soil suitable for * nit. t i\ r ,v art the production of soybeans, which //<?/*? Ofl is from year to year becoming more popular as a money crop, Mr and Mrs B j and will eventually crowd out flnd sQn of gt Petersbl cotton and tobacco to a certain extent are visiting Mr. and M We realize that in order to'Woodside. His parents crow the above named crops, it from Southport to Flor is necessary to have machinery he was a DOy 0f j2capable of both planting and har- anf) thj3 js hig fir vesting them. These may be had f by small groups of farmers band- visit in 33-years. ing themselves together so that Mr. Woodside says th; one of their number can become wanted to come DacK a master borrower, and in most fore, but that he just ne cases, the money can be had aged to get around to from the Farm Security Admin- here where he lived a istratior,. YV. M. Ginn, in the post makes him feel young 01 office building, Wilmington, has he says. GREAT CHINESE PHILOSOPHER ^ AMERICAN i 'Mjjm r f ^ ^ \ {Jm">D s? ELMORE MOTOR Bolivia, North * PICKLE RECIPE / ""x. | From J. B. Atkinson comes the ' I following contribution, which he J \ calls the "Baby Bear" pickling . Jfik; ' recipe, to make sweet pickles. 1 ' j tablespoonful of salt to half-galHFIf. |lon jar: one-third teaspoonful jsacharine; 1 tablespoonful picklSgWj I ing spices. Fill jar half-full good ! vinegar, finish filling with water, I I seal and let stand 4 weeks. Mr. (Jesse said he's tried this recipe and that its a good one. ir Brans i C" get Winnabow News CRM I Mr. and Mrs. Lcroy Poloogt of, smen pas- | Wilmington were visitors here ' itions lor , Tuesday morning. ider wasj Mjss Creech of Wilmington Governand tick- sPent Part of the week with Miss ,'sses. Be- J Ethel Satterfield. ling, the j Mrs. Rudolph Fulcher and chilin appli- | dren of Galveston, Texas, is vishas been 'ting her mother, Mrs. Minnie ; Knox and family. ? Miss Janet McDonald of Wash- ] . ington, D. C., spent part of the I week with Mrs. A. P. Henry. [ 'isit Mrs- Rudolph Fulcher and chilI dren and Miss Sallie Betts Knox Woodside vis'ted Mrs. Ed Newton in Southjre Fla P01"1 6' " | Mr. and Mrs. John Vines and rs. R. T. cjjjjdren of Wilmington were visi moved itors here Thursday. ida when | Mr. and Mrs. Lawson, Mr. and years of Mrs' Steadman McKeithan and ; Mrs. Florence Gay of Wilmings re urn lon were visitors here Thursday | evening, on their return trip from it he has Holden's Beach, long be- Everett McKeithan of Wilmingver man- ton was a visitor here Thursday. it Being Mr' and Mrs' J a t>ulllvan s a boy'of Wilmington were visitors here nee more Thursday afternoon. Mrs. A. P. Henry and daughter, Miss Elizabeth, Miss Louise .DISS**' \ ? < ';*r 1 .... u \ > .0 THSRST QUENCHER '-" <'" y b EMAND ^ VAIU[ JO0n **tis[ L COMPANY Carolina THE STATE PORT Freeman, and Miss Janet McDonald visited friends in Southport Friday afternoon. Mrs. Laura Huffines of Burlington is visiting Mrs. S. O Craven. Dr. E. G. Goodman of Washington, D .C., is spending three weeks with his mother and aunt Mrs. E. G. Goodman -and Mis.* Lillie Sandlin. Mrs. Henry Rogers spent the week in Chinquepin with hei sister, Mrs. Annie Mobley. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Lewis oi Mount Airy are visiting W. D Lewis and family. Mrs. Arthur Furgerson and Earl Henry of Southern Pines spent the week end with theit brothers, Albert and Norris Henry and families. Maxie McMillan and family ol Mullins, S. C., spent the week end with R. H. Wunderlick anc family. BUSY DAY FOR RECORDER JUDGE (Continued from Page 1) costs. Louis Schmidt, white, pleaded guilty to charges of driving without operators license and was adjudged to pay costs. E. K. Ward, white, was found guilty of speeding. Judgment was suspended upon payment of onehalf the costs. . J. J. McKoy, white, was found not guilty of violating the rabies law. Sam Formy, colored, was charged with bastardy and pleaded guilty. Judgment was held open upon condition that the defendant and prosecuting witness marry, Levy McGee, colored, was found guilty on charges of non-support, Sentence of 6 months on the roads was suspended upon pay? * >' AA ??? infft mem ui ^o.uu pci muitm ****%/ clerk of court for benefit of his child. The defendant was placed under bond for $200.00 and was taxed with court costs. Archie Robertson, white, was found guilty of drunk driving and was given 6 months on the roads, judgment being suspended upon payment of a fine of $50 and costs, his drivers license to be revoked for 12 months. LITTLE THEATRE MOVEMENT STARTS (Continued From Page 1) Yellow Shadow", was decided upon. This will be first on the program of the dramatic group, Postal cards were sent out to a number of people. Others who are interested in dramatics, whether experienced or only aspirants, are encouraged to join now. The next meeting is to be held on Monday, July 15, at 8 o'clock with Edward Taylor. There will be an election of officers, casting of players in "The Yellow Shadow", and selection of a name for the organization. The present membership includes Misses Evelyn Loughlin, Susie Sclleis, Louise Niernsee, Lucy Anderson, Leila Hubbard, Helen Deane Sutton, Ellen Newton, Josephine Moore, Marion Frink, Margaret Walls, Annie M. Watts, Frances Bellamy, Josephine GET THE "EXTRAS" , WITH SLOWER-BURNING j CAMELS I THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS -BEAT Tf Don't let the w< Come in and see tl we have for greatei during the torrid sui Shallotte 1 HOBSON KIF SHALLOTTE, miBKTHEflBl*3E!CS3HE9BXHI PILOT, SOUTHPORT, N. C. Smith, Mary Alice Lewis, Letha and Gilda Arnold, and Myrtle Brown. Dan Walker, Claude McCall, . Tom Gilbert, Edmund Newton, William Sellers and Edward Taylor. Joint Board Meeting ' Considers Bus Drivers (Continued from Page 1) which he said, "It apears to me " j that Brunswick county is now taking care of as many things ' [ as it can with its taxes." j So the matter of adult school | bus drivers, which has the- back11 ing of the prominent citizens ' j throughout the county, is being "(held in abeyance. I This, too, is the statue of a request from Leland for funds with f which to construct a new build11 ing to house a lunch room and 11 library. i Bishop Darst Pays Annual Visit To St. Phillips 1) (Continued from page one) list." Bishop Darst frankly advised his I listeners that we face a dark per[ iod, a possible return to condi, tions of the middle ages unless advances made in the name of Christianity and of freedom can ' be saved. i His advice to members of his . congregation was for a reawakening of a sense of personal re| sponsibllity, a condition in which each one shall adjust his relations 1' with his fellows according to j Christian ethics. He chided his , | listeners for the present-day tend| ency to take all things for granti ed and everything easy. "Our j country was not founded by men jand women who thought like this, nor who acted like this," 1: he said. j "Christianity is on trial", he ooiH and nnon the outcome rests the future of civilization." ' FIRST REUNION OF BATTERIES '| COMES TO CLOSE (Continued from page one) [ incidents to happen at the reunion was enacted on Tuesday when Governor-Nominee J. Mel' ville Broughton, who addressed 1 the veterans at an open air mass 1 meeting that afternoon in the beautifull oak grove at Southport, was decorated with a red reunion badge of Batteries "B" and "C", 2nd Trench Mortar Battalion. The governor-nominee, in replying to a query by a veteran as to whe- j ' ther he would honor the trench | J mortarmen by wearing their red I I badge, said: "I, myself, am hon! ored in being permitted to wear it." j The accolade for having travelled the furtherest distance to attend the convention was present| ed hv Roy L. Bangsberg, editor 'of Tffl^aCrosse (Wisconsin) Tribune, to Frank Jan, whose speedj ometer registered exactly 1,300 j miles in his motor journey from Montezuma. Iowa, while the prize ; for having been the first to reach Caswell for the reunion was given toDeGraff Green, who, with Mrs. | Green, arrived here last Saturj day night after motoring from J [Hammond, Indiana. Walter Dej fenbaugh motored from Matai mora, 111., with Mrs. Defenbaugh THAT EXTRA SMOKING IN I CAMELS IS NICE ECONOMY, TOO J I :?/ hanZ',JZ'^~S,OM" I f^k ? I ?fc%25^ iE HEATeather get you down, te hundreds of items - comfort and health mmer months. frading Co. tBY, Proprietor - - - N. C. iand their son, Roland, in order sim to be able to answer "here" re-i (when his former top sergeant, had David Jones, called the roll. of I Henry H. Harris, formerly of V Raleigh, who coined one word j atte that the veteran trench motar-1 clue men will never forget, to wit: B. "Diobedia," and Robert F. Per- J. I rin, came by train from Phil- A. adelphia, in order to be with their ji war time buddies at this first Mo< reunion of their outfits. V The veterans, during their more Enj serious moments, expressed some Joh I concern over the fact that Fort F Caswell is no longer a coast de- Pat fense and they voiced the hope Car that the govejjiment would give villi serious considerations to propos- Jes.' als not only to re-arm this old Chs fort, which guards the mouth of Cape Fear river and thereby ^ protects Wilmington and up-state points from possible invasion, but that an Army-Navy Seaplane Base would be established here. i During their lighter moments the veterans recalled many humorous incidents that were enacted while they were in training at Fort Caswell, citing the time a guard shot a cow one dark night when the bovine failed to heed his command to halt; the time G. Pearlie McKeithan and five comrades were imprisonI ed for refusing to wash windows land scrub floors, which they later (washed and scrubbed and after which they were returned to the | guard house for a few more hours of confinement; and the time an improvised stove leg, j which was a Yankee "dud" that had been hurled at Confederate Fort Caswell during the North- M South war, exploded, and "Cush" Harris, who had grabbed a hot potato when the stove blew up.' 1 I Would Like TO BUY Some Ungraded TOBACCO I Will Be At NELSON'S WAREHOUSE Whiteville, N. C. From July 15th On Be Sure To Brin? Your Ferrr Seriel Number TOM POOL NELSON I ^ To. Land Advertisem ment of taxes di will begin in thi August. I PAY UP B1 I AVOID THE I ADDED EXPEI* I Chaj WEDNESDAY juiy I ply turned right around and WilmingtorJa^^^^^BB an his .steps until the " 'later" reunion were a, burned a blister in the palm Pearlie McKeithan [lis hand. nerman, C. David 'p-state North Carolinians in S. LeMoyne, v3|t , ndance upon the reunion in- Andrew H. Harris^ ? led the following: S. B. Muse, Walker, William L r wi F. Holmes, Clyde Brawley, Shepher, and Marvi i. Orr, A. H. Borders, Charles Those from' oui'",8' Dixon, Jr., Charlotte. Walter Butler \ta"!, Ul<MK Dhn V. Batchelor, Carl D. Walter Defenbaueh >re, Raleigh. 111.; H. H. Harris ev1I4;,<^E8I William G. McCall, Claude L. Pa.; Robert F. perr flish, J. A. Ficker, C. O. Mace, phin, Pa.; Frank Jan '1 n L. Jones, of Hendersonville. Iowa; DeCraff Gree red P. Wood, Edenton; Bailey Ind.; W. E. Ca.storick, Hickory; John M. Lane, D. C.; Edgar L. thage; Morris Chizik, Ashe- ens, Ga.; Robert ;; W. R. Cox, Greensboro, Washington, D. c p se L. Harris, Siler aty; burg, LaCrosse. \\v1 tries G. Cowan, Mount Olive. Watkins. Norfolk Va^ FULL LINE OF ^B WESTINGHOUSE APPLIANC[H COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER SPECIAL BARGAIN H Two Kerosene ELECTROLUX Refrigerators we are offering at a sacrifice. COAST ROAD SERV. STATlijl SHALLOTTE, N. C. jgjjjf THI CONVENIENCE I When you leave on that long-planned ?* f trip this summer, you won't want to ftits risk carrying large sums of cash. Yet you will want the convenience of Sp* ready money. The answer? Travelers Checks, ( M course. They are good only if signed Mwby you. If lost or stolen before you gWB countersign them, your money will MBE be refunded. Get your supply at this bank. B|? WACCAMAW BANK & TRUST CO. If WHITEVILLE FAIRMONT CHADBOURN ROSF.HIU |H CLARKTON TABOR CITY SOITHPOBI H NORTH CAROLINA ? Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation MbS Advertise I for Taxes I ent of land for sale for pay- H le Brunswick county for M B s newspaper the first week in B iFORE THAT TIME AND B EMBARRASSMENT AND B ISE OF ADVERTISING. Hi >. E. Gause I 1 COLLECTOR I
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 10, 1940, edition 1
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