Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / June 20, 1945, edition 1 / Page 4
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I Page 4 The State Port Pilot Southport, N. G. V Published Every Wednesday ? JAMES M. HARPER, JR Edi (On Leave of Absence, In U. S. N. R.) ' jM Entered as second-class matter April 20, 1928, gjj the Post Office at Southport, N. C., under Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES fONE YEAR $1 iSIX MONTHS 1 fTHREE MONTHS Wednesday, June 20, 1945 [! Would Please Them Do we want to please and give ne courage and heart to the Japanes people? Naturally, the answer is "No. Yet we will do that very thing the 30th of June conies and goes an with it goes the report to Japan ths the American people have fallen dow on subscribing to the 7th War Loan. The war in Europe is over. Th blood of America's sons is no longe being shed over there. But for thos who fought and died there it will b an everlasting disgrace and dishonc if the people back in America do nc loan the government for which the died the money with which to finis the job. Don't for an instant forget that w still have a war with Japan. Don think that you have to buy anythin as your part of helping to win this wai You are not buying anything when yo 4'. | buy War Bonds. You are simply invest 1 ing your money in the safest way i rtf1 can be invested. You say you do not want to pleas I the Japanese. It is not what you saj . $ it will be what you do, between no\ and June 30th, that reveals the rea 1 answer. ' | Brunswick Making Progress R. F. Beasley, widely known edito ft of Monroe, spent last week at I,onj Beach. Coming here with Mrs. Beasle ? for a few days of rest, Mr. Beasle; f did not come as a stranger. A numbe < of years ago he often came here am h at that time he believed in the possibil I ities of this county, however distant : I realization of the possibilities migh Coming in last week almost the firs Egfl thine he said UDon meeting fVipiiHs , was that the good roads, good schools good churches and good fanning ii , Brunswick were astonishing when h compared them to what he found her | fifteen years ago. The transformatioi |j in farming and in farm living was es IE pecially pleasing to him. He thought as rpany others now think and know I that Brunswick has been, and is stil making, solid substantial progress. I Storm Must Be Brewing r| When the war in Europe ended, th I Pacific Theater naturally began t J (claim most of the newspaper head lines and still does. But, it is note worthy that the ending of the war i: Europe has not yet brought any sensa tional reports of great gains or at tempts at great gains in the Pacific. We were holding our own and mak ing gains in the Pacific when the wa in Europe ended. We are still holdin | our own and making gains, but as ye ! there has been no great surge forwarc ! such as many of the American peopl S expected. It takes a long time to shift men an i supplies from one ocean to anothei I iiru:i~ ii - - ?l ??line ujere is no doubt that man } thousands of American, British, Car adians and Australian soldiers wh ?' fought Germany and Italy are alread converging in the Pacific, it may tak time before huge concerted action i taken. One thing is sure, the storm is brew 1 ing. It will not be long now until th ' Japanese people will realize, as th i American people already realize, tha the doom of Japan is written in th V| books. igj Not Ruled By The Spanish | As a sort of prelude to the war i 1 Europe the Spanish people were ovei thrown by Franco, the puppet of Hit ler and Mussolini. Although neither Hitler or Mussolir now have the power to give aid t their long-time mouthpiece and all} Franco still' rules Spain, and you ma be sure he rules it in the same wa that his friends and masters of othe days bade him. THE When Spain was undergoing her many years of civil war she had enough traitors to place Franco in power, with the powerful aid he received from Italy j and Germany. With both Hitler and Mssoliui supposedly dead, the aid to tor keep Franco in power has increased j instead of diminishing. Spain is now "I overrun" with German and Italian offifit. 1 the! cers and soldiers who fled there to escape punishment. There are even sug gestions that Hitler, once reported dead, may be living as a refugee in "00 Spain. .75 One thing is certain. All of Spain's ~"j new found citizens, acquired from de funct Germany and Italy, are heart and soul in their support of Franco. The Spanish people no longer rule Spain. w The unhappy country has been taken over entirely by quislings and fugitives. if | The Shock Is I.ate d |( j What should shock us most now * " ? i n ? ? " | about the revelations or receni ueiumu n | atrocities, is the fact that we are so shocked. e Now in the news-columns of the r daily papers, the photographs in pae pers and magazines, the eye-witness e accounts, the tales of returning solr diers, the terrible motion-picture reit cords, we are seeing what the Germans y did (or allowed to be done, it is all h one in a totalitarian state), to slave labor, political prisoners, and prisoners e of war. Yet it is an appalling revelat tion of our own state of mind that we ? had to wait for these revelations to drive the shock home to us. u Does anyone still think this is a new _ manifestation of Germanism? Did no t one ever stop to consider that if you train the cream of your university e youth (long, long before Hitler) to t fight dues for the scars that were hon i-L C 4. v oraoie oil meir iaces, you were creating 1 Lublin camp? Did no one ever stop to consider that when the cruel brutality of conscript army training (long, long before Hitler) led both to the highest suicide rate in the world and to emigration from Germany, Dachau was being built? Did no one ever stop to conv. der that the extermination of the Jews ' of Europe by the Master Race would r lead straight to the starved skeletons of ^ French, Polish, Russian, British, and American prisoners of war? Why are we shocked now ? Was not t the time for shock in 1870, in 1914, in 1933? Germanism has merely reached ^ its logical and inevitable conclusion. , These things?Dachau, Lublin, Vught, Stalag 9?all the horrible list?these 'j are but the end results, foretold?long e before Hitler, long, long before V-E e Day. ii Everybody Will Get Caught?Later ' Members of price panels, whose job it is to enforce OPA regulations, are volunteers. Recently in Westfield, N. J. an entire price panel resigned, with this statement: "It has been apparent e to the price panel for some time that 0 price control has not been effective in our territory, principally due to the disinterest and lack of cooperation by n the general public. After two years of strenuous effort in trying to enlist consumer and merchant support, we find that our efforts to stem the inflationary trend have been of little value. Experr ience has shown that while most con? sumers admit that price control is 4 necessary, they are unwilling to make '? any personal sacrifice to make it work. e Too many people are willing to pay prices over the ceiling to obtain what d they want." " The italics are ours. In those words y lies the key as to whether we have un. controlled inflation or not. The governo ment is doing what it can to prevent y runaway prices. To enforce the regulae tions it is estimated that one person out 5 /vf ntrnvu fiirn in tKo PAiinfru wmilrl li o V i t ? V.1 J 11?C 111 fllb WWllVX,* " VM1V1 "? I V to be an enforcement officer. So the chances are you won't get caught when e you pay more than the ceiling price e for chicken ... or when the butcher it slips you a steak without requiring e those red points . . ". or when the man at the gas station fills your tank so you can go on a jaunt to the country. You won't get caught now. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are doing n those things?and others?every day. r- They form a group who believes that t- anything goes?as long as you can get away with it. They even boast about 4j it. But . . . watch it . . . when prices 0 double, and the cost of living soars ft where pay envelopes can't compass the y cost of food and clothes and rent any more, and evervbodv's eano-ht tViov'll be the first to shout: "Why didn't the government do something about this?" V. STATE PORT PILOT, SOU! The Rovin' Reporte (Continuea From Page One) going about his pleasure of wa< ing' and prodding with his gij He took one flounder that weigl ed nine and three fourth pound Another weighed eight and half pounds. In all he got 1 j big fellows. He was so please ] with his performance that h I left instructions with our frieni i Mis. E. M Cox, that she te 'us about it. Ten days ago Brunswick pe< i pie were going about the neec i ed matter of investing in wa j bonds in a manner distressing! | slow. Maybe they were Just nc j being urged to invest in thes ! securities, they were busy aboi [other things. Something had t be done. LeRoy Mintz, count chairman for the bond drive, an j this roving reporter decided tha something had to be done t j call attention to the drive an interest people in buying bond! | It appeared that some adverti; I ing might help. Since this ide | was, arrived at a total of 2 Brunswick business houses hav j been approached and asked I they wanted to join in sponsoi ing war bond advertising. Of thi number that have been seen e> actly 22?every man and woma who has been seen?who joine ] in paying for war bond advei I tising. The amount they shoul ! contribute has been left entirel j to tuem. Not one has contribute less than $5.00 to the cause. I is easy to see that the busines people at Shallotte, Supply an Bolivia are all sold on war bond being: a good investment for th folks of Brunswick. Southpoi and some other sections of th county may come in next wee for advertising of the final stage of the bond drive. Never thought we would ru across a Shallotte fisherman, sev eral of them, who could no identify a fish of any sort. Neith er did we think we couldn't. Th other day Amos Stanley biougli a bis fellow to Shallotte. wit ] his catch of other fish. When h i asked us what it was we wer so completely surprised that w forgot the name of the crittei We knew what it was but coul not think up its name. Severs fellows said it was this and sev eral othe:s said it was thai Finally one guy said it was steamboat and that was wha we knew it to be at times whe our thinking machinery was func tioning properly. Sheriff C. P. Willetts of Bo] ivia, Ford Dealer at times whe there are Fords to deal with, i getting ready for post-war activ ities. He has been moving som buildings from property he own and this week he confided to u that he hoped to get started o a large new brick Ford plant some time this year. He said th building would be 60 by 100 feel It will be quite an addition t things at Bolivia. Having been raised 011 a fair it puts us in high spirits whe we see B; unswick farmers wit good crops. By the same loke we feel bad When things ar not so good. The crops are no our baby, we just feel a bit 0 kindred interest in the other fel lows business. While crops ar pretty good this year, we got th blues last Saturday just to g around and note how badly rai was needed. With Glenn M. Tucker to b in charge of their school the com ing session the folks around Lc land are already laying big plan to rejunlvate things, to put pe into the school work and buil it up. Mack Jones, whose fathe would be a good sport fisherma if he did not associate too muc with post master Yaskell 0 Southport, is a sort of a secre tary of the school upbuildin committee. When he and the oth er good folks at Leland star out to aid in improving thei school they are handling some thing that has a lot of Dotental ities. The section around Lelan is one of the fastest growing i: Brunswick. The Leland school i cap-able of growing fast and fa and of contributing to commur ity growth. W. E. Gore, young Shaliott man, has returned home after three months tour of the Pacifi with his expenses paid but noth ing else and /lothing for him t do. He is still not clear in hi mind as to why the trip wa made. Having had several year of experience with the U. ? 'Army Engineers he signed up months ago to go to islands fa down in the Pacific and worl on a dredge there. In a way al went well, his ticket was furnish ed, likewise sustenance. The onl; trouble was that the job was no there when he arrived. Afte some weeks of drawing his sus tenance and "Helping Isaac with out pay." He was provided witl a ticket back home. His fathe is understood to have providei him with a shovel apd set hir to mixing concrete as soon as h returned. Maybe it is born into them t be that way. Maybe the bu company people impress upoi their drivers importance o courtsey and consjderation t thG fcrflVAlino" miWIn vviucneve way you will have it, we hav THPORT, N. C ' ' " i .. j run across some very accom- j j mcdating bus drivers around here i land we" feel higher regard for i i the bus companies as a result of meeting up with such drivers. It l* happens that we have to ride i 9' Grayhound buses fiom Shallotte | ? to Supply every week, and often i ? between other points Nearly ev- ' try time when we board a Gray- I 'e hound bus we find that Joe What- < jj ley is the driver. Always in good i humor, alert, energetic and of i pleasing peisonality, be makes a l fine impression on his passengers 1 r ? 1 Joe Cochran, Southporter who I " loves his rod, reel and what the i y nearby freshwaters afford, chased i )t; us down at noon the other day ' le to advise he had gone out fish- ' it ing ea: ly that morning. The re0 suits of his trip and the use of y a Creek Chub had been that he ; reeled in four nice fish. They ' totalled seven and three fourth j 1 pounds in weight. As usual, Joe 0 hooked a big one on this trip, brought it alongside the boat and 1 5' there?it got away. M i ? Forgetful of the fact that if c there was any fish up there worth < ? fishing for the Yankees would ( 11 have caught them, Herman Stanaland of Shallotte and Char'f ley Wells of Southport, set out , for Ocean City, Md., and points " north, to do some fishing, last j (i week. Mrs. Herman at Shallote j heard from Herman Saturday, j (J They had arrived at Ocean City y with both trawlers, thought ^ ll Ocean City was a beautiful place, t l. but up to that time had not done j s any fishing us the weather had ( 11 been bad since they arrived. | s 1 ? e A resident of the Brunswick . I Kiver Btidge comunity, near Wil- ' e mingtonu, remarked to us Satur^ day that one of the greatest im- 1 s provements they hud benefited by up there was the appointment c 1 of O. VV. Perry as a Rural Police- r II man. Perry, said this citizen, soon ' ' closed up two or three of the 1 worst places in the community 8 " and he is always wide-awake in e the matter of keeping on the J 1 lookout for anything that is a h violation of the law and which e may be regarded as injurious to e a community. Two city employees have re- J d cently spent about a month giv- ^ il ing the Old Southport Cemetery a complete cleaning up. As has ^ recently ben remarked, the city ^ a is without funds for keeping this ^ t place of the dead in the order n in which it should be kept. It simply does the best it can do I with a little aid coming in from non-residents who have dead I- buried heie, and with many lon cal people giving good care to s their own plots. It has been sug- . gested and is now repeated that e people who have moved away, s leaving their dead in the cemes tery, would be pet forming a fine . n act if they would set aside $3.00 J or so to be sent to the city each f e year to assist in keeping the 1. graveyard in order. A number of o people are now doing this. | Seemed like we were hearing " 11 from one of the Brunswick folks n this week when Bill Baker, as- . Ii sistant to the director of public ^ n information for the General Foods e Corporation, in New York, wrote it us and demanded a two-year re- ! if sume of all that has been going I- on in Brunswick county. Bill, as e an ace camerman for the North e Carolina Department of Con- ^ o servation and Development, was j n a frequently visitor here and else- . | where in Brunswick county before the war. He said the main . e thing was that he wanted to " i- know about all the folks down i- here. s s p This is not Christmas time, , U neither is it our birthday. The r latter not happening around until n December 10. If there was no ^ h confusion the resulting conclusion if is that Engineer Oliver Brown of f i. the State Highway Commission, , g decided in his own mind that I. the aroma of our favorite Gran- j t ger smoking tobacco, combined ' r with that of a three-year old 3 pipe, was too strong for the pub-1 ( l_ lie welfare. Anyway, he invaded d our privacy yesterday, plunked * n down 13 boxes of Edgeworth and s departed before we could thank e r him. All that we are wondering ? _ about is what has ailed our!11 friend, Herman Stanaland, at'. | shallotte, during the past two '' e weeks. a a 1 c A projected alligator hunt at 8 _ night on some placid nearby i 0 waters seems to be sunk for the1 J s moment. The participants in the; < s undertaking were to have beenj s mnsign Billy Bragaw, Jame3 Fer- a ; ger of Orton Plantation and our- r 3 self. We were to do the paddling,! ,. Jim was to hold the flashlight, 1 l5 with which to shine their eyes '' I! and the Ensign was to do the P catching. The trouoie arose when 1 ^ Jim decided he had to go to ii r Goldsboro this week, and that if i< ] h We can furnish you w r materials as follows: Insuh d Roofing, Brick, Cement, Roi n | Board, Plaster Board, Do ej Hardware, Kyanize Paints, Lumber when necessary pei cations are furnished. Cal 0! quirements. DIAL 2SMITH BUILDEF ?j WILMINGTt e i mi. i ii_ * ne took his family with him he' would have a logical reason for not going gaitor hunting. Four birthdays on one day for J ine family. Father, son and grandchildren. As reported by a :orrespondent from Supply this week. Is something new for the oook, according to our derivationsJ if what constitutes an unusuai thing. Once in a while, in cases nvolving triplets or quadrlplets, J three and four in a family may nave the same birthday. It just fias not ever happened before that* we have heard of three gen- j nations in one family, as in the' :ase of John Thomas Clemntons, father, son and grandchildren all laving the same birthday. Last week we talked to a young'* soldier, Sgt. Walter Jones of Southport. He enlisted long be-1 fore the war started, was at j Pearl Harbor when the Japs put their foot into it. He has served nore than six years, has had a j lard time of it since Pearl Har-j lor and is now eligible for a hon-j liable discharge under the ooint system. The trouble with him is that he does not know, cannot nake up his mind whether he vants to leave the Army or not. with him the past three or tour ( rears have been tough times for rinr to now look back upon. Still, j re has the Army spirit. The stuff gr Jilt- you call esprit decorps. He ra loes not want to leave to other i Q{ 'ellows all of the task of finish- ^ ng the job. When he left to reurn to camp he was still unde- C(. :ided what he would do. IWKING CARE OF P DESTITUTE CHILD r (Continued from page one) jn trade. Half a dozen tax matters oc- tj( tupied the board during the renainder of the days meeting. All nembers, O. P. Bellamy, A. P.1 yc luss' and J. N. Sowell, were in Ri ittendance at the session. j \v COURT HEARD rRIVIAL CASES ^ Continued Knm? riep nn*?. ? . t.. Tn noy uaney, improper oraxes, -ointinued to June 25th. Margaret Taylor. speeding, ^ udgment suspended on payment if a fine of $10.00 and costs, sj ine remitted. Joe Holmes, operating car with S? i metal rim. judgment suspendd on payment of a fine of $25 pc ind costs. a Anson Nelson, destroying ^ rops, nol pros. *1 Brother Bullock, reckless operF1 ition, nol pros. _ 7" Valentine Kreidel, reckless Nl iperation, nol pros with leave. "e William James Parker, speedng. judgment suspended on paynent of a fine of $10.00 and osts. al Pi Jesse W. Hobbs, speeding. * udgment suspended on payment f a fine of $10.00 and costs, ^ ine remitted. ' Harry Gore, reckless operation, notion for Jury trial, case to uperior court. Same defendant A. lso bound over on a charge of J on support. James VV. Cause, speeding, ~! udgment suspended on payment ^ f a fine of $10.00 and costs. | W iAPTISTS HONOR d* 3FC. "SMITTY" i? (Continued from page One) j he Glider Infantry, he was kited in action in Belgium on the*" Ifteenth of January of this year. R n his death the church loses F, ts first member due to the war. On a recent Sunday night, in Re onor of "Smitty", the members Ni f the Southport Baptist church' e7l a special service. At this 801 ervice Miss Susie Sellers placed W gold star on the church flag. ,'hief R. M. Cooprider, himself . serviceman member of the hurch although not a resident of ? louthport, spoke on the subject an f, "What I, as a Serviceman, m' Ixpect Prom My Church". Chief looprider, who has just returned Ml o Southport from 14 months of ch uty in the war zone, also sang an solo, "Sunrise". * |ho . I STARTING WORK ~~ i DN TEACHERAGES *" 1 ''ontlniief From Page One) | rials and construction, proceeds ? rom the use of the buildings be-' tig used to retire these bonds. It is understood that the buildrig at Shallotte will be considerbly larger than the one at Ash, he Shallotte school being the larest of any in Brunswick county. IULY FIRST IS DPA DEADLINE (Continued from page One) nee of the year, said the OPA elease. Permits may be obtained from he Local War Price and Rationtig Board, OPA said today. The ermit entitles the farmer to do he same amount of slaugnteras in the r/irrooriftn/H"" --- !>ei 3d last year. 1:3 9:f 8:1 ith non-rationed building fi* ition Board, Rock Wool, 8:S :k, Sand, Plaster, Beaver ors, Windows, Building Terra Cotta Pipe. Also ?:c mits, ratings and certifi- 5-4 1 or see us for your re- ?:? 3339 IS SUPPLY, Inc. iij )N, N. C. II 5 :C mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm us __ WI LOOK Ou < U. was also stressed that farm- I s who sell meat must collect ition points according to the ficial point chart provided by ' le Board, and must agree to 1 >ld all prices within the legal ilings. IANY ARE LEAVING OR THE SERVICE {Continued trout page 1' duction into the service. They , issed their physical examinajns some time ago. The 26 colored men who left sterday were: Andrew Morant, idp-eland S : Herbert Adams. 'innabow; Dock Bryant, Leland; ' tto Collins Cause, Shallotte; 1 imuel Grlssette, Shallotte;,' ;orge Warren reiom, Leland; | mes Henderson Johnson, Shaltte; Leo Knox, Leland; Lee rthur Hewett, Supply; Alonzo ivis, Navassa; David James nail, Leland; Leroy Stanley, < lallotte; Gaston Jones, Leland; j imuel Troy, Leland; Leon Stev-1 ison. Supply; Sherwood Gore,! mthport; Leroy Waddell, Le- j nd; Atlee Gore, Supply; Paul! inior Odems, Leland; John! anklin Baldwin, Leland; Oscar mes Vernon, Leland; Henry bert Mitchell, Supply; John / Diwood Bellamy, Leland; Sam1 Lee Robbins, Leland; Henry (e Patrick, Leland; and Hardy illard, Jr., Leland. The sixteen white men who e to leave for induction next j resday are: William Thurston' man, Freeland; Hollis SigsbyJ ard, Ash; Kellum O. Reynolds, >liv/a; Lloyd McKeller Babson,'1 ih; Floyd Henry, Jr.. Leland; | Iwin Elliott Leonard, Shallotte; laxton K. Sellers, Bolivia;:' tnes Ivan Evans, Shallotte; Ro-1 rt Clemmons, Supply; Thurston ( ttle, Freeland; Charlie Marshall cDowell, Bolivia; Carl Lamb,; ilivia; John Thomas Robbins,' 1 innabow; William Robert An-; rson, Shallotte; James Edgar nes, Southport and Leonard C. ; nldf Ohollntto 'ELCOME BACK A ETURNED SOLDIER ROM INTERNMENT {Continued from page one) ibert Inman and children, of xonville, S. C. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Long and \ n, D. T. Long, Mr. and Mrs. C. Stephens and children,! larles and Jonathan Stevens, of ilton. Mrs. Horace Holden, Mrs. C. Holden, Miss Grace Peterson d Miss Audrey Holden of Wilngton. Leroy Stanley, of Southport; r. and Mrs. Donnie Chestnut and ildren, of Myrtle Beach. S. C.;! d Cpl. Rifton E. Holden, the noree. A sumptuous dinner on the ble and a big oyster roast were joyed by everyone present, all j more enjoyed because there a W.X&STBU Southport 1 T Tn n/^r TI ?U5 ^L,M] Effective Jui SOUTHPORT TO Monday - ! LEAVE Read Down AM AM I'M PM 7:?0 9:00 4:00 6:00 Smitlipoi 7:90 9:30 4:30 6:30 .Supply 7: 15 9:45 4:45 6:45 Itnllvla 8:00 10:00 5:00 7:00 Wlnnahc 8:15 10:15 6:15 7:15 Lanvale 8:30 10:30 5:30 7:30 Vllmlng SUNDAY 8C 10 10:45 4:00 6:00 Southpor 10 11:15 4:30 6:30 Supply 5 11:30 4:45 6:45 Hollrln 10 11:45 5:00 7:00 WlnnallO 0 11:55 6:15 7:10 I.anvale 15 13:10 5:30 7:25 Wllmlng SOUTHPORT T (EXCEPT S 10 1:30 9:30 Southpor 15 1:55 9:55 Mill Crei 15 2:05 10:15 IVInnubo 10 2:20 10:30 l.nnvnle 10 2:50 11:00 Shipyard SHAIJ.OTTE TO (EXCEPT S 5 1 15 Shallotte 0 1:30 Supply 0 1:50 Bolivia 0 2:10 Wtnnabo 10 2:30 Lanvale 10 3:00 Shipyard :PNE5PAY; JUNE 20. 134? r BELOW / )0 have been times when neither the honoree nor his friends could feel sure of ever seeing each other again. BRUNSWICK WOMEN STAGING MEETING (Continued From, Page One) Monday. June 25. visiting Neighborhood Leader in Funston L'uiiiiuuiniy. Tuesday, June 26. Miss Mary E. Thomas, Extension Nutritionist, will visit county and assist tiome agent ttain 4-H Neighborlood Leaders, This program will be continued on Wednesday. June 27th. GE For General Electric refrigerator equipment which is nirw available for grocery stores, meat markets, cafes, hotels, hoarding houses, drug stores, schools, hospitals, etc. rt o i I See your (//: aeaier? City Cut-Rate Store Harry Robinson, Prop. SOUTHPORT, N. C. S LINES, Inc. N. C. EDULES le 16, 1944 WILMINGTON Saturday arrive Read Up AM I'M I'M I"" r* I 8:30 3:011 8:30 7 50 j| 8:00 2:35 6:00 7:20 7:18 2:20 ( I. i J ' ,W 7:30 2:05 4:3C 6:50 7:15 1:50 4:15 ? } ;!! ton 7:00 1:35 4:00 6-'0 K HEDULE t 10:25 3:00 7:45 1135 9:55 2:30 7:15 10:5o 9:40 2:15 7:00 10:40 w 9:25 2:00 6:45 10 -6 9:15 1:50 6:35 10:16 ton 9:00 1:35 6:20 10:0# O RHII'VARD CXDAY) t 9:00 6:25 1:25 k 8:35 6:00 11:50 w 8:15 4:40 11:36 8:00 4:25 11:20 7:25 9:55 II:B? Mf I SniPTAUD I ISIIAY) 5:35 130 5:20 1:15 5:00 12:55 w 4:40 12:35 4:25 12:20 3:55 11:6* J j
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
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June 20, 1945, edition 1
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