I.PAGE 4 SOUTHPORT. i BOLIVIA SCHOOL NEWS i SCHOOL NEWS i" COMPLETE COURSE | BOLIVIA TEAMS LOSE The class in First Aid, taught i The Bolivia and Shallotte has by- Miss Louise Asbury, has com- ketball teams met on the latter1 pleted its work and students tak- court Thursday evening, Novembc ing the course stood their exam- 27, for double-header. Two har inations Tuesday. but decisive games were playe CHRISTMAS PRESENTS with the credit of winning goin Students of the sixth grade jto "le two Shallotte teams. Th hate hit upon a very practical I 's won with a score of twenty idea for Christmas presents. The i *wo '? n'ne- Shallotte boy boys and girls are making their1 won a sco,e one point. Th own gifts for each other from' boys score was thirteen to twelve pine needles, shells dried flowers Tyler Potter and Harlee Mill ami other natural material. 'were h'Sh scorers for the Bolivi; I team v ,J RETURN CAME Members of the senior class this' Qn m,n the tw weak received their calling cards'* _ r . , i teams will meet again. The gam and memory books. I ... w ? , _ _ will be played on Bolivia s courl j INDIANS Both the Bolivia teams promis Ij?or the past lew oays sium-ms mat mis uouDie-neaocr game ?n of She 3rd grade have been study- be a determining one of the season in;* Indians. They have been Don't miss these exciting games learning "about the way Indians They will begin promptly at eigh livfr, travel, gather their food and o'clock, clothes and send messages. The. PRESENT PLAY niopt interesting part of the study The junior play "Hobgoblb has been picture writing, using house" was given last Frida; . the same symbols employed by evening, November 28. The pla; the Indians. was a success, with a large audi TEACHER LEAVES ence attending the performance Miss Nora Stevenson, 10th J Members of the cast were: Car grade sponsor, has resigned as Lewis, Tyler Potter, Ada Ma< home economics teacher at South- Swain, Dolly Mercer, Lillic Mai po^t high school to accept a posi- Hewett, Bige Bowling, Billy Kill tion at the Florida State School Lewis, Harlee Mills, Morrisoi foit Deaf and Dumb at St. Aug- Watkins. Doris Johnson, and Helei us$ne. Members of her home room Danford. Miss Pauline Wrigh welre particularly sorry to see her sponsored the play. Ada Mai got-' Swain was awarded first prizi I This Year 1 flfjljp' |i^?j I Wilming I Store | INVITE Y I * STOCKS ABE COMPLETE !* SELECTIONS ARE SPLENI * PREPARATIONS ARE SUC This vear Wilminnlon merchants knew :'S g need for more gifts and other merchandis . . . therefore the markets and manufac combed for the things you'd choose. Now are ready?Shop in them leisurely, enj g picking is assured when you choose froi now on display. I Shop Now! Decide Now! There's Fun For You In The 1 ? | Friendly Christmas Stores I , VW!LMIN6T 13C MERCI1AN fa Retail Division 01 Chamber 01 Com * > L . | for the best acting. Tyler Potter | and Helen Danford were runnerjups for second place. Miss Marie Hammond of the|el 1 Bolivia school faculty spent last! | week, end at her home in Fair-. ft 1 mont. Miss Claire Brooks, also of j | the Bolivia faculty. spent the ! f, s; week end with her parents at her j(] 1 ' home in Evergreen. BREAKS ARM T! ''! A. T. Lewis had the misfortune : SI * of breaking his right arm last SI e Friday when he fell while playing m on the school ground. He is a s i pupil of the second grade. | si NEW CLUB ORGANIZED Cl ' j The members of the MAROON J AND GOLD, Tlie Bolivia high tc I school paper staff met Wednes- M day, November 26. to organize a journalism club. The aims of this, I" club arc to have a better and I Tl G bigger school paper, to prepare j he ^ high school students for journal- j ,j ism work, to keep the commun-1 sp | ity informed of the school's pro-' lit i. gress, and to arouse interest in c t j creative writing. The club will i meet each Monday to discus plans : for the school paper, to write * *' j articles, and to study the techniques of news paper work. The Wi , "MAROON AND GOLD" editor ' 1 ai . is Miss Mildred Gilbert, a senior.1 Miss Mary Ellen Gibbs of the ' -- ! re 11 grammar grades ami miss i-auimc1 Wright of the high school are > | faculty sponsors. I < | WKINEK ROAST 1 11 Members of the eighth grade i' civics class enjoyed a wciner roast t Thursday, November 27. They be c I were accompanied by their teach-Ida ? j er, Mr. Tucker. Everyone report- in sn t's A I s I can IMS i 1: I ton I) 1 cl C, 1 'm O # |o! O U! I I I i m 1 CESSFUL | (here would be jjS ;e for more people turers have been ?.* Wilmington stores |j oyably. Wise gift || m the huge array $ ? 1 i Save Now! | i I Bulging, | ! Of y m ON^fe I TS *^1 imerce p - . THE STATE PORT P1L( BOLIVIA NEWS Mrs. Frank Johnson is recup ating from a recent illness. Miss Catherine Cannon visitedj iends in Charlotte recently. Early Gill has returned home om James Walker Hospital folwing an appendix operation. ; Miss Juanita Cannon spent i hanksgiving with Miss Claude tainback at Henderson. Misses tainback and Cannon are classates at Louisburg College. Miss Bertha Hilburn visited her i ster, Miss May Belle Hilburn, at impbell College recently. Mrs. N. B. Leonard has leirned from .a visit with Mrs. J. j Danford at Hampstead. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Thigpen of idianapolis, Ind., visited Mr.1 ligpen's sister, Mrs. Geo. Canin, and family last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Johnson icnt last Sunday with their, lughter, Winnie, at Meredith Colgc, Kaleigh. Miss Norma Dell Kobinson, of j orl'olk, Va., visited friends at1 alivia last week. Etl Mercer of the IT. S. Navy as ?a Bolivia visitor last week, j Mrs. W. K. Cox visited her son j id daughter-in-law, Mr .and Mrs. irtis Cox, at Birmingham, Ala., cently. Shallotte Village Mrs. W. It. Register is visiting ' r son, Sherman Register, and ' tighter, Mrs. Waldo Register. Wilmington a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Milligan and ' lall daughter spent the day' . I siting tneir parents, inursuay. Mr. and Mrs. Blister Greene. Dm Whiteville, were visitors of r. and Mrs. Johnie Zandy Stiny Mr. anil Mrs. Hilda Todd were si tors in Wilmington Saturday. Mesdames J. M. Chadwick, Jr.. j id J. W. Chadwick, were visits of their sister-in-law, Mrs. ! aman Sellers, who is ill James alker Hospital, Monday. Mrs. C'rean Parker spent last :ek with her daughter, Mrs. J. . Chadwick. Oscar Sellers was a week-end iitor to his mother. Mrs. Jerd illiamson. Mr. anil Mis. Smithy Evans ti Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Goodson New Port News. Va? andWilington, were visitors of Mr. and is. J. M. Chadwick, Jr., Sunday ; ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Leonard d children were visitors of relives in Wilmington Sunday. Bobbie Williams, of Wilining- j n. spent the week-end with his a delightful and worthwhile J ogram at the weinner roast. HI-Y CLl'B MEETS Rev. Walter Pavy of the Bolivia j ethodist church and Rev. A. L. own of the Southport Baptist 1 lurch met with the Bolivia high hool students Thursday. Novemir 27. to discuss plans for HI-Y ; ub work for this year. This: orthwhile club has for its pur-, ise the aiding in the physical, ental. and spiritual development I school students. The club will j eet again on December 3 at' even o'clock for an organiza onal meeting. Y (TP f' VbLLl if. * if t )T, SOUT_HPpRT,_N._C. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Johnie Williams and children were in Boone Neck Sunday visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Bert 'Williams were visitors of Mrs. Williams' mother, Mrs. Abbie Davis, Sunday. RETURN HOME Mrs. D. M. Davis has returned home from New York, where she was called three weeks ago when her mother, Mrs. L. Miller, suffered a broken arm when she tripped and fell over a rug at her j home. Mrs. Miller is a former resident of Southport. ! CLAY SMITH GETS HIS COMMUTATION (Continued from page 1.) Recently he has been serving as | the assistant to the state veterinarian who is testing cows for bangs disease in Brunswick coun- i ty, filling the place of the men! supposed to be furnished by the county for this job. SPRUNTS RETURN TO ORTON HOME (Continued From Page One) pcrty the greatest advertising as-1 set that Brunswick county has. The constant publicity breaking' around the beautiful gardens has drawn to Brunswick county thous-j ands of people who would other-; wise never have heard of, much j less seen, this lower coastal por- ( tion of North Carolina, 'more are half a dozen Southport's in the | United States, hut all through the 1 country Southport, North Caro-1 lina, stanus out tne most prominnetly. I Establish Goal For FSA Farmers In 1942 (Continued on page 4) call for a 109,000 pound increase ' in milk; a 32,450 dozen increase in eggs, a 375 per cent increase in soybeans and 2000 acre i net ease in peanuts for oil etc." WEED GRADERS ARE IN DEMAND (Continued from page 1) the two higher grades (Associate and Assistant) must not have passed their fifty-third birthday: for the Junior grades the maxi-; mum age limit is 35. Applications must be on file with the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. O., not later than December 18, 1911. Interested persons are urg-j cd to consult or obtain a copy | S) A* ;-;i- il e* $ t10,1 DIKECT RELIEF fiom miseries t! colds?coughing, phlegm, irritation, ilogged upper air passages? rub throat, ciiest, ;;nd b. ok with Vicbs VapoRub. Its poulUce-andvapcr action brings relief v. ithout 1 ciosi r. J. rlso, fc3 head COLO "sniffles", BH -ji. . ML | nick a spoonful 3jL'cf .Vapeltuh in M hot water. Then ??S3h- i?" have the chiid ft & I breathe h the M B V?? r\s steaming vapors. VapoRub ! U lL ^ ^ < Elmore Boli\ m of the examination announcement, giving full details or requirements, opportunities, etc., at any first? or second-class post office, or at the Commission's central office in Washington, D. C. OLD-FASHIONED CHURCH BAZAAR (Continued From Page One) George is president. There will be a number of attractions including a cake, pie and candy sale, a fancy work booth, a large table of surprise packages, hot dogs, punch, an old fashioned country store and a fish pond for the children. CLOSE WATERWAY FOR MANEUVERS (Continued From Page One) converiienced. Comments and suggestions as to more appropriate hours for closure of the waterway are "solicited. LACK OF FARM GARDENS COSTS COUNTY $9,984 (Continued From Page One) pie because of a lack of gardens. 'Phn fniiciiQ rnnorf shows that 247,127 of the 278,276 farms in the State had a garden, leaving 31,149 without a garden. The total value of all gardens in the State was 814,773,625, or an average value of ?60 per garden. Little Dare County on the coast reported the highest value per garden, $153, but there are only 55 farms in the county. Fortysix of them had a garden. The Extension horticulturist says that the vegetables which can be grown in a half-acre garden would cost the farm housewife ?225 if bought at retail prices. One-tenth of an acre will produce an abundance of vegetables for one person. A family -of five, .therefore, would negtl half an acre for garden crops. Just Receive I NICE, Y | Broken and Re We also have i mules we have trad you can get hinvpri We Buy, Sell 01 We are dealers some good buys in i /vrmri I LiCWld amu?? ? sH "prp [ 'iij? > _ jr Motor Cc ria, North Caro ik i WEDNESDAY, DECEMRcn I 'points VALUE wonderful OF PREVENTION where they art u iflSj OF WOODS FIRE damaged by (Continued from page one) count ; ' ' M| water that feeds the streams and times the "larIielln?^^R lakes, resulting in more fish for ' uo'"' Product. was marketing t the sportsmen. They also result , ? ? ? . * t0P of th?t thi-v in much protection for game. Last brjns_ . ' ..,^H but not least, the lands on which harvesting woods are growing, in which fires. in such a ,a7^B are kept out, are steadily in- Jvoun? creasing in fertility. If the time: j ever comes when it is desired to j banest'"? in i few : harvest all of the timber and turn jwhole county while it the land to farm crops the lands jto be fores' ' will possess more natural richness | ed, will be a' : than could well be figured in dol-1 annual crop <it wood ? Ilars and cents. ani to the fact that North Carolina A I ,5 I | was first among all of the states xY 1V1 / I|Hq j in the union in the number of Til J< \ 'I'n sawmills. However, California, K r Hf SO . i i'pnpT Mr | Washington and Oregon, with | ____ 1 wi\l n virg:n timber, each exceed North Progr.iri For v7T?B: Carolina in IuiiiIkt manufactured, j Occcr.tb"- n These states are now cutting more limn North Carolina, but the: Wednesday 1'"irvlmJ^^B people cut there are faced with .^^ UOPKINJ* H the fact that they canot replace1 with Judy Canoitf the timber they are now cutting. and Bob Crosby Here in North Carolina, especial- '*ls" 1'< hR ly in Brunswick, land-owners arcj Friday - Saturday-. replacing timber faster than it j "BLONDIE GOFt Hi is being cut. This is especially LATIN" BR true of the areas where forest ,;,l p .. . HF flies are kept out. , V'je S"!^W Young southern pinefe have a AN? ' Ur.L^ J - -||;,% 'B THOSE WHO'VE TRIED j "UNFINISHED R IT . . . SAY OUR . BUSINESS" ?| with Irene Dunn? BE OYSTER ROAST Is All That We've ' Claimed It To Be Wednesday . ThurMh^T* "MAN HUNT" MS W. RUSS, Station with Walter Pigeon B TEXACO PRODUCTS I Also "I OOTIIAI.^thrhjj^E 1 ^FRIST^HOWATT* HNOHBOicnMBBBBBBUna^I several good traded-in mules and also some good J9 ed in 011 Ford tractors. If you need a good nurlc ^B ced right. r Trade for Gash or on Terms. See Us S i for Ford Automobiles and Tractors. And have H| ised cars, trucks and tractors. jfl -Peay Motor Co. I TABOR CITY, N. G. I ^ * * * * ^ ? * I mpany I lina I

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