PAGE TWO
THE STATE PORT PILOfT
_ Southport, N. Q, . *
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY f
JAIfES M. HARPER. JR., Editor t
Bute red u second-claas April 20, 1028, at t
tfeo Pojt Office at Southport N. C., under f
the act of March 3, 1870. j
? 1
Subscription Rates r
ON? THAR |Mb c
VX MONTHS 100 $
THREE MONTHS .U
' >
NATIONAL EDITORIAL1^/
W ASSOCIATION
1
I
Wednesday, August 21, 1940 f
<i - 'ft -Wi j.
No matter how badly the beach is ^
beaten and messed up, few things ever j
happen that time and tide' <Jo not make
as good as new.
s
Youth balks at being driven, but it j
can be led almost anywhere. v
?: s
Man makes a study of avoiding two of -v
his best friends: His dentist and his life 0
insurance agent. if
When a man talks of what he has f
done, he's a bore; when he talks of what r
j he is doing, he's an egotist; but when s
he talks of what he hopes and expects t
i ~ n??Ki4v/\lio 1
IU UU, lies fiinwiuuuo.
11 'ill Be Missed 1
c
Phil Buckheit, formerly of the adver- t
tising department of the WilnVir.gton r
Star-News, was a personal friend of ours,- ^
, so it is natural that his departure last 1
week for Greenville, S. C., to accept a *
similar job in that city was regretted by c
us. 2
But we have an idea that his leaving f
the Star-News family will affect more
than a few people in this section. He was s
the father of the Y.M.C.A.-Star-News *
basketball tournament that has been held j
^ in Wilmington each spring for the past 1
five years; he was back of the Star-News *
Golden Gloves tournament and was the
man who kept this competition alive. '
Through these and other similar activi- ,
ties he had cultivated unfold good will :
for the Wilmington papers among resi- r
At dents of Southeastern North Carolina, and
he will be sorely misspd try t^hem.
We are sure that they join with us to
wish Buckheit every possible success in
' i his new location.
Patriotic
wui nation a icaucia CIJIVI 4uanci
and make political capital of the draft
bill now pending before Congress, a
piece of legislation that has been design?
ed as one means to bring us up to the
J ; ?evel of any other nation in the matter of
a standing army. And while they quarrel1,
we stand unprepared for current world
conditions.
Never before has there been a finer
opportunity for the young men of the
United States to show their patriotism,
their love of country, than by volunteerIfi
ing for service in one of the armed services
of our nation, the tJ. S. Army, the
U. S. Navy, the U. S. Marines.
r A Moral From A Text
Our preacher preached a gOOd serfe]
I mon Sunday on "The Fruit of Suffering.,v
The only thing wrong with if was that
|y there weren't enough people to hear it. |
ne was using tne idea trrat every sorrow
has its compensation, that Only
through trial is character devefOpecf.
I < Simple, everyday illustrations were usedto
show that sorrow artd tragedy have
frequently laid the foundation for great
good. The sort of sermon,' in fact, that
lends some logic to the declaration that
whorfi the Lord loveth he chasteneth.
We heard him through, didn't let our
BB mind wander. But this was a thoughtjgl
provoking message that -tfe'd heard at
church, and later we found ourself tryI
n ing to fit the theory about the idea of
-.world conditions. We got to wondetiWg if
R i it may not be possible that tragedfy artd
jy the threat of disaster is being used for
I' good upon the democratic nations of the
world?
We do not think for a mOmeftt thaf
Poland, Holland, Denmark, Belgium artd
France were as Sodom and Goniorrah,
j nor, indeed, do we belieVe that the Nazi
war machine is God's messenger of venI
geance. But what we thirtk may be true
S "is that the democratic people of the
I world, those who have fought fOr artd
I iped the right of freedom of speech,
is?lom of worship and right to rule
jf I ^.^emselves, are being challenged onCe
' *
THE
rf6re fo stand up for those things which
hey believe to fee right, and to fight
or them.
There is nothing healthy about an attiude
of selfcomplacency, and that was
he state into which the democracies had j
'alien. The suffering of a 20th century |
car with all its horror could be the sor- j
6w from which the fruit of a new world
irder may spring if the forces of good
ire still strong.
barm Program
Recently the tobacco farmers voted
ipon a three-year program for control of
>ro<fuction of flue-cured tobacco. There
was practically no opposition to control
or one year, but the idea of a three-year
irogram frightened many of the farmers,
who refused to cast their ballot for the
ong term plan.
Sunday we spent a pleasant hour with
Valla'ce Moore walking over his liundredtcre
farm, which is probably the most
irofitable agricultural venture in Brunswick
county. Pears is his principal crop,
md he has 30 acres of pear trees in
'arious stages of development. Watermelms,
sweet potatoes and hogs suoplement
lis income.
But the thing that struck us most forceally
was his casual concern for the elenent
of time. "These young trees were
et out this year," he said, pointing to a
hrifty young stand of fruit trees. "Now
* ware fhev'll realiv brine in;
II Hk/VUV vv.ll J vv>^u ? ?, w
ome money."
Ten years! How many tobacco farmers
lo you know who have the vision and
he courage to look ahead ten years? Not
nany. Tobacco is a hundred-day crop,
fou make it while the making's good,
fou plant it and hope the price will j
nake it profitable. You work and slave .
>n it and you don't even take time to
frow feed crops, nor to plan for the
anrfly food supply. Let tobacco do it all.
Well, a man like Wallace Moore will
till be farming and doing well with his J
-aried crops and his balanced program I
ong after the biggest tobacco producer
n Brunswick has had his farm sold for
axes.
Shears And Paste
<0 LONGER "EXV
nt (The Wilmington News.)
So far as the American Legion is concerned,
its ^'-service members are no longer to be
saddled with the "ex." Henceforth they will
be service men. The "used-to-waser" handicap
is gone. They are to be scratch men for home
defense, and in that position, in any race,
there is ho place for "has-beens."
In this arrangement, the powers that regulate
our military affairs in the present crisis
- -1 -? 4.U?
snow sound judgment, not umj ueeause me
soldiers of the last great war have had combat
experience and are creatures of discipline
but because every one of them knows the importance
of home defense and, if still fit, is
ready to answer any call to duty.
It is hard to picture any man who saw service
with the A. E. F., however limited or inconspicuous,
failing to sign the roster now
when the nation face3 a greater crisis than
that other one that found them in the armed
forces ot America. The campaign for members
in which the American Legion is to engage
should be nothing more than a process of registration
and1, assembly.
Not all members of the A. E. F. are now
enrolled in the legion, nor has there previously
been any imperative reason that they
should be. But with a definite need now, and
art ftnportarit duty for them to perform, it is
inconceivable tliat any not physically incapacitated
should hold back when the call comes.
it H obvious that when the National Guard
is called for intensive training over a long
period of time its duties must be taken up by
some other organization. It is equally obvious
that fh2 organization best qualified for this
job is the American Legion, whose rosters are
made up of military men, skilled in maneuver,
trained in combat, already fully disciplined.
When fhe legion membership Campaign
opens in Wilmington if is only fair to assume
that every man hereabouts will be as quick
to answer the caH as he was in 1916. If we
know the temper of the veterans and the
Wilmington spirit, COmm'aiicfer Wilbur DoshCr's
ta'Sk, during that campaign, will be to
stop the rush at registration headquarters,
rather than to drum up volunteers.
When softie people begin chewing the
rag, it's safe to bet fpat there's some
dirty linen mixed up in it.
w- ? -'
If snoring cap be called "sawing
WoOd", most men have several httrtdred
cords sawed out.
4?^ - s ?
A- fellow who's stack up, is generally
;able to gum up the Works mighty easily.
&
STATE PORT PILOT, SOUTF
; Why We Should If
Protect Our "|i
Forests From *
p * A
r ir e
? ? d
? * ? ? # * d
' 9
(BY LESLIE INMAN) d
We should protect our forests
from fire because the forest is "
composed of trees and other life, }
the trees being the oldest and J'
largest of living things. Trees are
in one way or another more a
closely associated with our daily ri
lives than any other class of liv- ?
ing things; yet most of us know
little about them and can hardly "
tell one of these friends from another.
What do we protect when ^
we protect our forests? We protect
our homes, our furniture, our p
bf ind. ixi'/t in box goes gone a
Today's column was the first ^
prize winning essay In the high ^
school division at Waccamaw r,
mrr , high school, n
! It was writ- f<
j ten by Leslie S
i i i * , ' Inman, memf
; her of the '
' senior class, p
.. who is the cr
i * s?n ?f ^'r- p
K' * and Mrs- A- 0
R. Inman of ri
Ash commim- O
~~? ity. He knows |?
what he is writing about, be- ^
cause he has helped to fight ^
fires. Having completed his ^
high school work last year, c
he hopes to be able to go to p
college this fall. p
a
paper, our pencils, and even our j
automobiles. The fuel that keeps
us warm and the poles that sup- v
port our message lines are made . w
of wood. The many rapidly in-! 0
creasing uses of wood show us a
that we must protect its repro- j \.c
duction or else its supply will be p
soon exhausted. j rj
It is a well recognized faci: S(
that the greatest enemy of the! w
forests of the United States is j
fire. There are on an average j p
about fifteen hundred board feet1 j<
per acre and about seven ccrds j p
of pulp wood per acre in the | js
forests of the United States. Of-jtl
ficial recotds show that in recent g
years forty one million acres of! b
this valuable timber land has been |
burned over annually. The annual j (,
cost of fire in the United States I tl
is five hundred million dollars I
The cost of forest fires alone is! y
one hundred million dollars, saying
nothing of the beauty of the j;
landscape and the lives that are u
lost.
Protecting the forests from fire
is protecting the most valuable p
resources that a country has?its |
soil. When fire destroys the for- e
est it is indirectly destroying the j
foundation on which a nation has j d
to build its civilization. ! p
When we preserve our hillside a
forests from fire we prevent
floods and check melting snow, p
thus nermittinc the water to flow a
gently in small streams instead 7
of rushing madly in torrents b
down the slopes.
Our forests keep the water pure a
and cause the streams to furn- d
ish a constant and regular supply
of this important liquid for com- a
mercial and home use that we d
would not have if fire should It
sweep our forests. a
How dots fire have anything c
to do with soil erosion? The grow- h
th that helps hold the soil is de- v
stroyed and there is nothing left s;
to defend it from exposure to rain v
and storm, hence the soil of the 4
fields washes away taking the u
wealth of the farmer with it. P
There is another service that our *
forests render; they serve as a a
windbreak, preventing the storms P
doing great damage to our crops, t
houses and barns. They save *
much of our valuable soil that the h
wind would otherwise blow away. '
ivow are our forest worthy of *
protection from fires? 0
The most destructive enemy *
that our forest has to confront '
is fire. Think of the value of wild 1
animals to humanity. Although 0
their service has somewhat T
changed, and they no longer serve
man with food and clothes, they %
are playing an even greater part J
in the human race than ever be- *
fore. We are told by authorities
that if it were not for these c
little creatures that within a few s
years we could not raise any J
crops at all, therefore wildlife
is greatly responsible for the c
abundance that our fields are 1
now producing. They help man (
by preying upon the bodies of
insects for their food. Should we j
not think enough of these little
creatures to protect their lives. (
This can only be done by protecting
our forests from fire.
When we keep fire out of the 1
woods we are keeping fire out
of the homes of thousands of an- '
imals. The birds must build
their nests in the
forest and have shelter in .
severe weather. They must have
the forest to hide in when stalked |
by enemies. The forest must supply
them with seed and berries
for food. The deer is one of our
most highly prized animals and i
yet fire may completely destroy ,
his existence. It might destroy
his food and hiding place, or it !
might even take his life. The '
, I
L.
(PORT. N. C.
lought of fur-bearing animals
aould impress further on us the
nportance of keeping fire out
f our woods, These animals take
ollow trees and stumps for their
ome and are not warned of an
ncoming fire until it is too late
3 flee, hence the inevitable rtjlt?a
scorching, painful death,
.nother reason for keeping fire
ut of the forests is that by so
oing we are protecting our soliers
that are fighting the inects
that are invading the kingom
of humanity.
When we ward off forest fires
'e protect fish and reptiles that
ave been and still are so helpiil
to the human race. It is hard
3 believe, but records show that
bad fire often kills fish and
eptiles by exhausting the supply
f oxygen. We should protect our
>rests from fife because in this
ray we protect trees, wild flowrs,
fungi, algae, and other forms
f plant life all of which are
estroyed in a forest fire. The
oil itself contains life which suports
the plants that grow on it,
nd this life is easily destroyed
y fire. These little microscopic
lants are as essential to the
rowth of plants as sunshine and
lin. Fire burns the vegetable
latter that goes to make up the
sod of plants thus injuring the
rowth of these plants.
We should protect our forests
rom fire because fire injures
oung, middle-aged, and old trees,
t destroys seedlings that could
row into valuable tree stands. To
reserve these seedlings is our
nly hope of a forest of tomor3w.
We should outlaw fire beause
it destroys large quantities
f standing timber and other proucts
such as turpentine boxes,
nd because within a few hours
beautiful landscape may be
jrned into a blackened mass of
Inders by greedy licking flames,
'ire by weakening our trees preares
the way for insects to enter
nd do great damage.
Another incentive for protectig
our forests from fire is the
alue of wild flowers. Although
e seldom think of these in terms
f dollars and cents they are
dually worth thousands of doltrs
each year to be? keepers,
'roin the flower comes the bee's
iw material for making honey,
5 when we burn wild flpwers
e are buring hortey.
One of the essential reasons for
rotecting our forests from fire
i the fact that timber and other
lant life will grow on land that
i suitable for nothing else. If
lese areas are deprived of their
rowth of what benefit will they
e?
In Summarizing the effects of
irest fires we should mention
ie following:
1?Forest fires injure and kill
oung, middle-aged, and old trees.
2?^Fires destroy seeds and seedngs
that would grow into valable
tree stands.
3?Fires consurte large quantiies
of timber and other forest
roducts.
4?Fires destroy leaves and othr
litter on the forest floor.
5?Fire impairs the soil, reuces
its productive capacity,
repares the way for erosion and
ffects streamflow.
6?Fire destroys animals and
lant life, including valuable forge
.?Fire impairs and destroys the
eauty of the landscape.
8?Fire opens the way for damge
by insects, fungi, and other
estructive agents.
China is a good example of
nation that allowed fire to
estroy her forests. The land cal:d
China was once looked upon
s the most progressive and most
ivilisrp/l rnimtrv rtn onrfh Hhino
ad beautiful forests through
/hich flowed streams of clear
anitary water. In the forests
/ere an abundance of game. In
he streams wOre many fish. This
did life rendered much to the
eople of that country. China's
ich fields were yielding large
mounts of produce and her peoile
were prospering fast. Then
he people became careless, leti'ng
fire destroy large tracts of
er timber until there was pracically
no timber left. This killed
he wildlife and the fish. The soil
f the once fertile fields was
/ashed away, and the yields of
hese fields became little or nothng.
Soon the streams that had
ince furnished pure water were
nuddy and unfit for use. Famine,
lisease, poverty, and waste pre ailed
in this country that had
ince been so prosperous. China
lad lost its forests, the fOundaion
upon which a country must
lepend to retain its soil. The
rail being the foundation of a
sountry, China had lost hers,
herefore her civilization had te
lecline. Will we or will we not
irofit by this great example?
What do we burn when we
>urn the woods?
We burn the house and the
lousehold goods.
What do we burn when we burr
he tree?
We burn the house of you anc
ne.
What do we protect when we
protect the tree?
We protect the home of the
ibhey bee.
What do we save when we save
the pine?
We save the timber for those
behind.
Greatest human concentration
in the world is found in the little
principality of Monaco, which hae
i population of some 24,000 persons
in an area of only 370 acres
i
i
- -----I
- NOT M
; ;?
Sue us if fox hunting on horseback doesn't be|
come the season's most popular sport here this I
j fall. Fre'dere not only has an eleven-dog pack,
but now has a top-notch mount in Walking Boy
j. . . . Isn't there a good opening for somebody to j
operate an oyster roast here this winter?
The Amuzu offers customers a brand new hit
| picture for the coming Monday. Joan Crawford
| and Frederic March starring in "SUSAN AND
| GOD," the play that was such a smash success
I on Broadway. Rita Hayworth is featured in the
^ screen version. This one's really NEW! . . . Spot,
i beautiful English setter owned by Dr. R. J. Hyj
att, is one of the finest looking dogs we've ever
| seen and from reports is an even better hunter.
She comes from a family of champions of the
bench and field and would be a champion herself
if ever entered in competition .... Speaking1 of
dogs, every night at 9:30, Jack, the town's pet
j pointer, walks into Watson's Pharmacy for a
I serving of ice cream. His visit never varies more
than five minutes . . .
Politics are in for a real boding now, it seems.
Willkie has challenged the president to a series
of debates on the foreign condition and re-armament.
The Republican candidate would make an
excellent debater with his quick wit and repartee
.... Don't mistake us, the WinchCH pinch-hit|
columnists are going over swell. One of the later
ones, written by Bob Hope, is a scream, as that
comedian usually is . . . Tommy Dorsey's, "I'll
Never Smile Again," continues to be the number
" hal,afI nf the dav. while Will Bradley's "Beat
Me, Daddy, Eight to the Bar," is running rings
around other suing songs. . . . Oscar is lost,
] strayed or stolen, and Mr. Keziah is becoming
i SPORT STUFF Winn^
BY DAVID WATSON Mr and Mrs 1
children, Misses
Don't count those Dodgers out and Buckie oi
of the pennant race yet. Sunday are visiting Mrs
they took a twin-bill while the and 'amily.
Reds were bowing to the Cards a M'iss Rebecca
couple of times. Pee Wee Reese Saturday from
will be lost the rest of the sea- where she visitei
son. That lowers their chance at Katherine who is
the flag, but Durocher will keep Hospital ai
the ole pep in the Flatbush team. we are Slad to
. . . Lefty Grove is lost for the Mrs Marie B
rest of the season as he broke 'er> Virgin
a bone in his foot, being hit by are ^'ting thei
a ball . . . Leland went into a 9' Goodman and
tie for second place in the Cape "n.
Fear League Sunday when they <-Jco- B Foulki
lost to the Pepsi-Cola nine 10-7. ^siting his sisti
To night the Beats will meet the du Ront and 1
Wilmington Pirates at Legion cbain. Del.
Stadium. Bullock will face Shoaf P?-ul Merritt
of the Pirates and it looks like a day from visit
real game in the making. The Altoona. PaDuke-UNC
football game on the Mr- and Mrs16th
of November is practically 'v'a and Mr. a
a sellout now. Only about a thou- ?' DaytOn,
Sand tickets left . . . Latest Go- da^ evening wit]
mez gag: When weak hitting "^r and MrsDahlgren
was being photographed 2 c dlen of B<
by a couple of gals, the pitcher da^ afternoon v
? r>.L. rm-_t son and family.
remarKeu, ne careiui, r>o.ue. max may
be your screen test for 20th Friends of M
Century?Newark". If Gomez man wil1 be Sla'
doesn't start winning he is liable doin? nicely af
to beat Dahlgren there . . . Operation Mond;
With the Indians and the Tig- Dosher Memona
ers playing jittery ball the Mice 'Ebe camping 1
in the American league is just ardsville incIudiI
as doubtful as ever. Neither may J" Henry,
win it. All teams in the first di- Henry, Carl Lev
vision have a chance at it . . . r'' **oy Rabon
Next year we predict a lot of Ernes^ Lewis, W
holdouts on the Yankee squad. Alden Potter
They are the highest paid ball Mllton Murre" 1
players in both leagues. If they Bohvia returned
come in fourth place this yeat? after a thril,inf
they may?all of the salafys will soon to be. fo
be cut. Joe DiMaggio is the only ^oyed tbe triP '
One who will yiot be likely t'o get 'ent'
a setback. . . And all' of the n*n7i^?
World series money that they use CHCRCI
to get? Maybe they will have to The Piney '
go on relief this wiriter. Dickey cburch fo,1{s en
and Gomby get over $20,000 and1 dutin^ and Picn
these two will get the worst of camaw Friday,
the new wage scale redUcti,oriS... Misses Mary i
DiMag get $28,500 the top paid fieId and Miss A
kYank. Several get around fifteen last Monday f01
thousand a season and they are to sPend 016 w
' .... ... .. .... .... ? . PH'VTf
uuc lur a. cut aiso . . . L?aiesi
baseball odds for New York: In ? , Youn& p
the National, Cincinnati 1-3 and ^ pe Pre
Brooklyn 2-1 while in the Artier- "Pent Saturday ,
ican league it is the Indiarts 7-5, , Beach wh<
Detroit 7-5, the Yankees 6-1, a Picnic suPPerBostbn
10-1 artd the White Sox , 8 Mary Ja
12-1. The Yankees will really ^ington is Vlsl
break the bookies this year ... R' "*ohl
If Babe Dahlgren, Yankee first John ,
baseman is is we read it the w ln Maxt
other day . . . hitting 20 points mother- ^
more than he did last year, why Friend!> Ml
was he ever given a contract and sorry to know a
asked to report to StPete last sick'
March? . . . The Pirates (Pitts- Mr3' J' D' W
burg) are now taking another spent Iast week
little skid after playing beautiful mother' Mr3- J<
1 ball for about a month . . . Diir- Rev" D' D- ^
ocher thinks the Dodgers will win Westminster, So
' the pennant, as they play about Bailey Lev,'la ar
the last seventeen games at ?b- York aty ar
bets Field and there is where it fa^er'
s will be decided. Good lUCk, Leo. Friends ?f M
Football usually ushers baseball are s6ri^ 16
> out very fast, this season with Jalne3 Walker I
both leagues it looks like a photo men*~
; finish and base ball will get Dr' and Mrsmore
attention than it has in hast Just~a~
years. The world series and the ^ d0 Iose w
1 Duke-Tenn. game wilt come along they did
' about at ?e 9a e time- Which house.with' pow.
, do you perfer? We rather listen We.u know befc
to Duke win . . . but on the 16th you can't win tl
, of Nov. We want a different mission.
WEDNESDAY, AUr.ll^r ;| lW
fLY NEWS ~f
anxious about the little fellow u7"'"">N^Esa
"ft ***?
Bragaw will furnish him with another
Thanks, out loud, to PIC magazine for.' *'*1
of printing our request. <!!)K|
The next greatest campaign, outsit EpS
presidential race, will be the AMERic^,.
of DEMOCRACY. It's built on the Co
and is for all Americans. Watch for jt
JB re-organizes the band this fan
present some new ideas and new faces t ^6*1
two weeks have seen the completion 0[
popular songs, by him, ami one hymn
worthy of some notice. Two of : ? pops 3. ' 'HI
prislngly catchy . . . School lays. (jear
those graduated, are looming up before ,J 'B
and with this will come many : tle
forts. S I
Buck Devane, Southport negio was . . Kb*
bfeing the most powerful man in the count-r M, i
he was younger. A two-hundred pound
fertilizer under each arm was just Hfc
him . . . Members of the Thompson far:itJM
sent the pilfering of their breakwater rervl Jg.j
plan to take action to stop their (iisannw^B^
4f\v mnrA than nnt? >, IHftS
? " an U Sta^H
port came from there, they say. g *
Seems that we were the last to learn b"t W"
to Leila Hubbard and Watters Thon-.pso- 'Ef
terpsichoreans. for winning the waltz conte^B '
the Wrightsviile Beach Water Carnival.
tennis rackets were mentioned last week Hi
had, and the other pair, too, from what a- JR
Anyway, The Brendle-Young npi ising aj,
down and Young goe6 back to Georgia
illusions of invincibility. jw
(W NCWS IanC' ^'ss Ida Clark of
| Ga., have beer. ' Srnest
Curtis and ^e'd. their mother and R
Fralii and Nancy! w^? is very yl
f Gainsville, Ga., ? Bftg
E. W. Taylor BOLIVIA NEWS
Johnson returned Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gill of Dst
Waycross, Ga., Ohio, have been visiting h< iBf*
i her sister Miss entSi Mr and Mrs Johr "lis
3 a patient at A. ,, . ? , Hp
. . . , . , Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Joh-jm^H
id is doing nicely
know. children, Jimmy and Winnie 1>H
rock and daugh- returned from their trip to m-R^
fa, of Richlands, teo, and Nashville. Tenn. Bp
r aunts, Mrs. E. Miss Ruby Mintz and
Miss Lillie Sand- visited Plymouth and Ma>RF
Richmond and Noifolk. Vt A
e and family are cently. JE
:r, Mrs. E. Paul Johnnie King and his ara^E
family in Mont- ture boys have returned
mountains where they um HI
returned Thurs- camp. BS
ing relatives in Mr. and Mrs ; -r-ior.
and son. Nelson of Raleigh.
J. E. Gill of Bol- and Mrs. Walter Howard ofhHj
nd Mrs. Edward quay Springs H
Ohio, spent Mon- ing their vacation at CsraB
l the Taylors. Beach and with their parents IB
W. A. Kopp and and Mrs. J. D. Johnson. K
Olivia spent Sun- Little Amelia and Hsr.Kj
rith D .R. John- Malpass are visiting their shB:
er, Mrs. Verda Malpass fvH
iss Louise Free- are in the Methodist orpiag^E
J to know she is in Raleigh. Mb
ter an appendix Mr. and Mrs. Foster Mntibr^B
ay afternoon at gone to Durham where F&Hj
1 hospital. will be a patient in Duke ?>He
party from Barn- pital. ff
lg Mr. and Mrs. Billie Moore and Miss IdB
Miss Elizabeth Moore Leish were quitely atK
a ? J rtirrht in
^13, A. f. Henry, ??CU oaiuiuaj ? -?
, Robert Burris, S. C. H
ebster Swain and fors. Garven Mercer is
and J. M. King, home from Doshtr
and Jack Cox of Hospital. fl
Saturday night Lendore Mercer is vintir,'
r experience not mother, Mrs. Lillian H rat H
rgotten. All en- Miss Ruby Mir.tz has re:."^B
0 'he fullest ex- to Wilmington to resume
duty at James Walker Mearf^B
?t Week) Hospital after being ;H
1 PICNIC several months due to lie'.es
Grove Methodist Donald Russ has be : '^Bb
joyed a pleasant Ing his sister at Carolin? BuiW
ic at Lake Wac- K
, a Plenty Of Signs E
and Ethel Satter- At n \ (Vr<H
Virginia Pope left Of Rft Hit
r Carolina Beach .. H
eek. Mr. and Mrs. Frank
SUPPER snd children spent the M
eoples League of with r,Jlatives at Hiarlesio sbyterian
church got an eye fu,! o( "" JjJM
afternoon at Cas- 1,1811 was
;re they enjoyed cane th*re a u"k ix':i'
city was still without
ne Wade of Wil- !'?hts; sidewalks w.oe torn v'E
itihg her cousin, the roots of &re'u trees m M
ison. ' blown over; trees h.-nns X-'
11 l,rf?>red
Tharp spent last IOUS wrecKagc aim
*>n visiting- her and lota; and ljut' t0 ,he clc*fjM
of drains, me roadway
"? John Reid are one block was stfl suhWfl I
"he has been very water to the depth of over3 :*M
Sunday, a we.1: ttter tht*"*B
ithrow of Leiand brought no rest bu?W* H
: with her grand city employees . we"
>hn Reid. ed in removing wieckage3 H
wis and family of Paring damages H
uth Carolina and I
ld fam,ly ?f New Island Produces
LT""* "M An Odd A??-""'!
kioi an ?* If p""1'
lospitai for treat- fa,d Head ! , b^B
to town Sunday " ;B
Joseph Akerman 1 3trikin*' ; 55 JL M
? . Fields. The plan
Tar Heel fan. If mal, save for a nose-Ill"
e will know why on one side pr. ["\'r I
Duke's a power- ness to the well ' "
er to spare . . . The appearan d : the
ire long. After all'ls, Aowever. surh that it
tern all. . . . Inter-j doubtful if Fields would K
jpHmented. I
I