' I the P'lot Covers I Brunswick County r^T?EN_ NO. j Christmas I Planning For Vets Underway j Cross To Serve As Co**e"Cy F<" Jununity Aid (1?HINGT0N. IX C.-ChristToiUill fmd our Army and ,.(ls idled with the j , ur ground and sea | f. Thev will not be forgot* :ti:r 'relatives and friends, ihers will want to homage. Community I may wish to contribute j ,-laiives and friends of j ,vho v"I >? the war mayl ,siression of their tribute 1.1 s>" remembering the ~ t their gifts to be and useful. Careful " well in advance of j ?.*,? necessary to achieve j here will be a Merry for all if gifts are !,j 0? the basis of suitabili'jrd if they have similar mome, value. so that hurt feelings :v avoided. Gifts must be ap:iaU' lest the joy of the[ V"v be marred by a gift of to an amputee, or a book j i blinded patient, cancan Red Cross hospital J r.ce personnel have been as-' by military orders, the sensibility of coordinating is'jr.ity interest. The Red executive in each hospital; i tenter with the commanding! !c regarding his wishes for . Christmas by the disKicr. of gifts, and by tradi-; holu.av activities in the :.i ar.u recreation rooms. Ap: lar.s will then be made ;c :j camp and hospital coun:l the Red Cross who will iterate with interested com-' t: croups and individuals in ry:ng them out. St tamp and hospital coun n.ch were organized to ac-; c: communities with the o .: Ijacent hospitals, can i: r'.;j I'cvtion of effort and bicn tvniciT* ..ujiit ** U. oi sr.tal to the patients, kfnduals and groups who icontribute to the Christt .afj.iness of wounded vete5 a:c urged to contact their r Red Cioss chapters im- ] -us preparation for the will begin early this IriefNews Flashes V N \SH TO SI'EAK Itv L. L N'ash of Greensboro Trinity Methodist l: - .Sunday morning at according to Rev. O. | ; . pastor of the church., s Mbiv :? cordially invited to # this noted preacher. CHRISTMAS AID h Grace K. Doshcr, local of the Red Cross Camp Hospital Count il, is asking ~ ' ho would like to donate r to he used for filling Chrlst! stockings for disabled vetcitals leave same at ' I Cross office at Southt or give it to her not later December 5. One filled "k'ttg costs si.50. sHlNTl\(i TRIP tack with them nine f" u<: tive ducks, Dr. L. C. E P. Weeks, E. J. Prcf I. Mintz Davis Herring ? $ B Krink rcturnefl home Fjf night from a two days trip at Currituck. ^INTT.R QUARTERS ' R (. s Amusement com* vhich owns and operates ^ "I the hc.-t known amuse.' Eroup.s jo this state, is back winter quarters at Lc,,\ 'dfiiiais of t'nc company (' Saturday and they had a ' ' rpri'u.' summer and fall lor the show. , AUTOMOBILES the general supposition >( ""il-1 he >ome time before r??. " . be ready for dei,v, machines reached |. 1 1,1 -""ithport last week. b*1 Mr-" i L. Lewis are I ? H trew Kord and Mr. and IK ^Y '' dettc have a new '. hor? ;i:l(u|iines being of ' vintage. y'T(-,) UPRK W-and Mrs" J- Hawkins of I 'p' 11 Part of the past 1. Itrj.' xv:th Mr. and Mrs. G. other friends. Mr. Kited., Was principal of the selioo! for serenl years. | Uught here. ] THI 36 Chiang Propose For China; C 5?? Hull Defends Action Of' j State Department In Keeping Fleet At Hawaiian Bases In 1941 NAZIS PLANNED CZECH INCIDENT * American Prosecutors Reveal That Hitler And Keitel Planned Assassination Of Nazi 'c Ambassador < ! 1 CHUNGKING ? Generallissi- i mo Chiang Kai-Shek has proposed a new deal for China, created a t supreme Economic Council to J tackle it and promised to "spare ) no effort to bring internal order j and security." "We must not allow internal | \ disturbances to make us lose sight; i of the basic need of the Chinese j people for a far higher standard, i living," he said in a statement an- j nouncing appointment of the coun- j < cil. ' While his troops drove more' ( than 100 miles into Manchuria?! about half way to the great city (t of Muken where Chinese com- j munists were reported massing?! he asserted his government was j i "acting to correct those disturb- j i iiiices. ; j WASHINGTON?Former Secre- j" tary Cordell Hull testified today j that he believed the State Department was thoroughly justified in wanting the fleet kept at Pearl Harbor in the critical days of late 1941." The former cabinet of- j ficer took the stand before the Senate-House committee investigating the Pearl Harbor disaster for an hour's questioning. Hull said, "we felt it would be more useful, especially after the fleet , was based at Pearl Harbor, that j, it remain there during the critical 11 state of relations with certain other nations?Japan especially.", J NUERNBERG?American pro-; , secutors disclosed at the war ( crimes trial of 20 top Nazis that i Adolf Hitler and Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitcl plotted in 1938 to j' assassinate their own German! ambassador in Prague to create j an "incident" leading to the in- j vasion of tiny Czechslovakia. The plot was just one step in j their numerous plans to subju-1 gate German neighbors that j were outlined in detail before the international military tribunal. Reading from captured German documents, American prosecutors charged that detailed plans for the invasion of Czechoslovakia ] were made April 21, 1938?just one month after Hitler overran Austria and assured the world he had no further territorial aspirations. WASHINGTON ? Allied diplo-' mats taking an increasingly serious view of the situation dc-, (Cont'nuec on '"age Kou^ Nation's Scouts Fellowship Fund | Executive For Cape Fear' Area Outlines Plans Of Scouting In Connection j With Fund ?' I Boy Scouts, Cub Scouts, Senior Scouts, and Scout leaders in the j Cape Fear Area Council will join I with Scouts from other councils ) in the United States in contribut-j ing to a World Friendship Fund, I Courtland W. Baker, Scout Exc- j cutivc, announced today. In keeping with the fourth j point of the Scout Law: "A Scout { is Friendly. He is a friend to all; | and a brother to every other | I Scout," these youth of America J and their leaders will help Scouts | in lands ravaged during World | War II to rebuild their organizaj tions, Mr. Baker said. In 1939, at the start of the I war, there were Boy Scouts and j I Scouters in the United States will | have an opportunity to take a 1 more personal interest in the j youth of other lands by means j of their participation in this fund, j It is wholly voluntary. There arc I no quotas and no amounts have j | been suggested. A shipment of Scout supplies, 'already been made to the Philip - -iot f,ll 1 pines as part or a inanvm, j the fate General Theodore Roosei velt. former governor-genera! of ! the islands and a vice president! ! of the Boy Scouts of America, i ' Administration expense have i , been provided by the National Council, so that every dollar conj tributed will be used to help reI build Scouting overseas. A Cub Pack or Scout Troop j I contributing $20.00 makes possible | | the following: | A pair of Morse signal flags, signal flag sticks, axe, sheath knife, flashlightt signal chart.; compass, liremaking set First! 'idnthuid on Fafs 6) EST/ A Goot 6-PAGES TODAY is New Deal reates Council Cases Heard In Court Monday Judge And Solicitor Handled Smallest Number Of Cases In Some Time At Monday's Session Only a few cases were disposed >f at Mondays session of the Reorders court. The work as shown jy the court minutes was as folows: Theodore Babson, larceny, coninued to December 10. Vester Jones, assault with deady weapon. 12 months on roads. 10 days stay granted. Richard McKoy, drunk on highvay, judgment supended on paynent of a find of $5.00 and costs. Willie Parker, drunk on highway, continued to December 30. Martin Brooks Smith, reckless rperation, prayer for judgment rontinued for two weeks. Clarence Smith, recgless operadon, judgment suspended an payment of a fine of $25.00 and costs. Clarence Smith, reckless operanent suspended on payment of a Fine of $15.00 and costs, fine remitted. Tennessee Men Are In County Twenty Real Bear Hounds And Tennessee Hunters After Bear In Brunswick Last Week Inquiries among bear hunters, md persons who keep up with such hunters, reveal that about 50 bears have been killed in Brunswick county this fall. The number is increasing steadily. Three bear-hunting stories in this paper this fall have detailed the killing of three bears in a day in different sections of the county. Numerous reports have been received of two and one being killed. E. I. Vereen of the Exum community was in town one day this week and was interviewed about recent bear killings in his community. He told of Wrent Mintz killing two in his cornfield a few days ago, both large animals. These and other bears have literally played havoc with the corn fields of Mr. Mintz and other farmers in various parts of the county. At the time he was here, a party of Tennessee bear hunters, with 20 real bear hounds, were hunting in Mr. Vereen's section of the county. They had killed three big bears in three days and were expecting to get plenty more before they returned to their homes in Tennessee. Mr, Vereen said that seven cars were required to transport the party and their dogs. Those dogs, he said, were really something wher it came to hounds. Mintz Resigns County Home Job Will Return To Leland And Resume Farming; Chas Hickman Named As New Home Keeper Stephens Mintz, who resignoc as chairman of the board of coun ty commissioners to take charg( of the county home a year ago when no suitable person could bt found to handle the home, ha; resigned the position of keepei and will return to his farm neai Leland. Mr. Mintz, who is a Baptisi minister, has made one of th< best keepers that the home ha; had in many years. Under hi: administration and that of Mrs Mintz the inmates of the hom< have been treated in a splendic manner. Their leaving the jel is a matter of general regret. Th< decision to resign and return t< the farm came as a result o the bad health of Mrs. Mintz. At a call meeting of the boar; of commissioners this past week Charles Hickman, who was ii charge of the home some year: ago and who made a splcndj; keeper, was appointed to succect Mr. Mintz at the home. He re ,*,-1 nu'incr fn the noor nav fo ?'6"v" v"*"(5 I I ? the work and the fact that hi could make much better monc; as a carpenter and builder. DR. DAVIS AT DUKE Dr. J. V. Davis, Shallottc am Southport dentist, has been a pa ticnt at Duke Hospital at Dur ham for the past several days He has been undergoing a genera checkup and it is understood hi will be able to return home thi last of this week. \TE i News paper 1: Southport, N. CM Wei Dawn Over Death ; jM " WM ' B Br /mL[ JM . HR&tt b '' ''^p B BB^B 11 Coast Guard Photo ON A SMALL ATOLL on the road to the Philippines. A comrade pays bis last respects to a fallen buddy ' who lies In the parched coral sands while at home Victory Bond dollars pave the way for aid to the hero's Tamily. Ready To Run Power Line j Cooperative Utility Company Ready When Build-1 ing Costs Are Less Prohibitive *! An official of the Brunswick J County REA stated this week' : that the Electric Memoersmp j Corporation is ready to run power j Jines from Southport to the Brunswick River Bridge, just as i ! soon as bids for the clearing of i the right of way and the erection | j of the pole line, at a reasonable j ! cost, could be secured. The cor-1 1 poration makes it a practice to I ask for bids on such work and j | thus far bids on various short j lines in other sections of the (county have been out of reason [ in cost. Pointing out that the number j of new homes along the River j Road has more than doubled in ' the past few years and that there | I are now some very potential in- j I dustrial possibilities that will re-1 | quire current, the REA official, j J who asked that he be not named, j j gave it as his opinion that if reasonable bids could be secured J for the clearing of the right of' way and erection of pole lines could be secured, the River Road project was one of sufficient im- ] portance to be started right | away. A survey of the River Road by I the State Highway Commission to ' determine the exact course to be 1 followed when the road is paved, | would be helpful to the REA. ' APPOINTED TO ANNAPOLIS ' John Carr Davis, son of Mr. 1 and Mrs. W. S. Davis of Southport, has received an appointment to the Naval Academy at Anna-, I polis. He is now undergoing preI lininary training at Camp Perry, I Va., before standing the Annapolis I examination. AV. B. KEZ1AH l| ; On a recent morning we were j;up and had a fire going about an >'hour before sunrise. A couple of . yachtsmen dropped in for a few i minutes to wait until some place 1 opened and they could get break) fast. They were on a sport cruiser ; bound for Florida and had spent ) the night here. Wc fell down f on learning the names of our visitors and what state they were 1 from, but they were unmistakably , northerners. With dozens of i chugging shrimp boats having ) awakened them, as the boats set J out for the day of fishing, both 1 men were keenly interested in the . commercial fishing and could not r get too much information regard2 ing it. Just before they left to f return to their boat one of them remarked: "You have the greatest natural place for development of sport fishing that I have ever 1 seen. Your Frying Pan shoals . with its coral bottoms and the . absence of shifting sands makes i, your part of the coast the ideal I place for a great sport fishing e development." E ' ? A ccufls of years ago 0&zr. *- - - - POR' n A Good Cc ,WsriavnNovemteL Thirty Seven Record Dischargt 1 The number of service men at women who have Med them* vice discharge papers at the off. of Register of Walton has now reach* hundred Seven or eight su< papers come in for recording ea. ^OwTng t^the increased numbthe Pilot finds it nece??fry omit details and here after the names of the person Ming t discharge and the address will glThe following have had the papers recorded during the pa week: Walter M. Robert E. Shannon SouMpor Henry E. Bozeman, Shallptte, dolph Stanley. Bolivia; Gardn McCumbee, Ash; I*"*1 *J? ker, Southport; Jack J. Gallowa Bolivia; Alvah Cox. Bolivia; Oy Dixon, Supply. Corbet L. Ha kins. Bolivia; Miss Mattic Robinson, Wlnnabow. Miss Jewell Hewett, Shullott Lewis Cleyon Evans, Laurinbur, John H. Hill, Southport; Ruf Graham (address not given); Ea M. Tharp. Leland; William J Todd, Shallotte; Harry E. liams, Shallotte; Edgar U Go. Soutliport; Wilbur F. Wigner, livia; Lanie W. Benton, Ash. Aaron Moore, Winnabow; Jam White Jr., Lcland: Andrew D.?t' ' ..?? non, Southport: Miss Emma U Harreison, winnaoow; van Early Wells, South port; Normi (Continued on Page 4) Officers Elected P.-T. Associatioi Mrs. L. C. Fergus To Hea Local School Organiz; tion; Mrs. R. C. Dani Secretary At a meeting of the local Ps cnt-Teacher Association Mrs. C. Fergus was elected preside of the organization. Mrs. Jam Harper, acting as tempora chairman, conducted the elect! and then turned the meeting ov to Mrs. Fergus. Robert B. Thompson was elei cd vice-president, Mrs. R. Daniel was elected secretary a Mrs. Ed. C. Newton will be tre surer. It was decided to meet ca month on the second Thursd night, beginning with the mon of December. The president w appoint before that time a pi grain tuimiuncc wnan mu y, pare a program for the mecti in December. | The eighth grade won the hi holiday for having the most i presenting them at the meetii The award is made on a percei , age basis, which gives each ro< j an equal chance to win it. Discussion was held on the ca teria which will be in opcrati | after the Christmas holidays. WING Reporter , Youngblood was District Mana; i for the Southern Bell Telcphc j Company. His headquarters wi at Raleigh, but when work ea: ! up on him he was always do ! at Southport having a good ti iwith his friends. The same thl j could be said of W. B. "Tub! . Bryan, manager of the Wilniij J ton office of the Bell peoj j Tubby was always down he j communing with Clerk of Co ' Oom T Ronnoff P/?iYininW I uam A* wiuivvk, ^......?. ! Charley Gauso, R. C. St. Gcoi 'and ribbing and getting him; ' ribbed by us. Both Sam c ! Tubby have been tnwsferred other and bigger fields. We hi never met the guy who t< Sam's place at Raleigh and was beginning to look like were not going to meet Tubt successor, although we had i qucntly seen the green car \v the Bell Telephone insignia its doors around town. Than giving evening we saw the ( i knocked ourself down to its | cupant and were greeted with inquiry: "I have been looking you for weeks, where have ; (Continued on Pegs Four} r pi! immunity I8th7l945 Brunswick Shi e The Prod r- j s-1 ^ Good Boats And Hard Work Making Production Run High When Prices 'r_ Are At Their Best =,c THE MARY CLARK ai| TOPPING CATCHES ;h Finding Good Grade Of Shrimp And Breaking All er Previous Records to ly Thanks to the many big diesel ie powered trawlers that range be from 5 to 15 miles offshore and go out in practically any sort of 4r weather, Monday and Tuesday were near record breakers in t'. shrimp production at Southport. U1 The boatmen are literally hitting er the jackpot and bringing in a '1- J real harvest. | For each of the two days the *e smallest boats averaged about 30 n-1 ^ j bushels of shrimp, plus fish. A ' j dozen or so of the bigger boats averaged 50 bushels per day and ' better. Ttfe Mary Clark, top g" boat of all of the fleets, averaged US 87 bushels for each of the two irl days, and had bad luck at that. ' With the temperature falling late in the evening and the shrimp e, clustering in a great mass on othe floor of the ocean, she scooped up such a net full that the es ' j whole bag of the net tore off and lost an estimated 75 bushels, as 3U the winches were drawing the iel trawl aboard. 111 Although only around 60 or 65 trawlers arc wot king this year, the production has already broken j that of any remembered previous | season, even during the years Q when there were around 200 [ boats.. j j By their work at a distance 1 | offshore the big boats have re ! vealed a practically new shrimpj ing area and their production has j gone on through all but the roughest of weather. The shrimF lL , dealers believe that another yeat j i will sec double the present num'' ' ber of big trawlers operating ryiherc " Annual Meeting c To Be Held nd ;a~ . ! T Credit Association Will ch j Meet On Friday; Two =if I nirertnri From Bruns ith wick County rill j ? o- Member ownership of the asso re- ciation will be the theme of th< ng; annual meeting of the Wilming j ton Production Credit Associatioi ilf to be held at Wilmington it re- Room 131, Custom House, ot tg. Friday, November 30, at 11 it- o'clock, according to an announce >m merit made by H. B. Rivenbark secretary-treasurer of the asso fe- ciation. on This is the twelfth annual meet ing of the Association, whicl - makes short-term agriculture ? loans to farmers in Brunswick New Hanover, and Pender coun tics. According to H. B. Rivenbark two directors for the coming yea; will be elected and officers wil also be chosen. "Due to the lifting of travc restrictions." Mr. Rivenbark said "we arc expecting one of the lar gest attendances in the history o ! our association. There is alway a great deal of interest in ou annual meetings, particularly ii the report on the operations am accomplishments of our associa 'cr t'on duri"K the proceeding year |nc This year we expect to have som ere Hvcly discussions on experience sed of our mcml)crs-" wn John R. Morris is president o mc the association. The directors arc ! Chas R. Rogers of Rocky Poinl ?. J. W. Sellers, Jr., of Supplj John B. Ward of Ash, and Johi jIp R. Morris, of Wilmington. xe, un Presided At Meeting N. C. Press Wo met rtB self mrl Mrs. James Harper relurne (o Monday from Charlotte whcr ve she spent the week end attendin a meeting of North Carolina. Pres jt Women. As president of th wc state organization Mrs. Harpc iv's Pre3't,cd at thc business sessioi .^c_ Miss Marian Frink, daughter c .jtll Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Frink, now on reporter on the Wilmington New; attended the meeting also. Er tertainment for the visiting pres ' women included a luncheon s the Steak House, an informal recej fortion at the Varicty C!ub of Ul | Hotel Charlotte, and a privat ! screening at tl:e Ctirolma Itaatr ,0T [ 91.60 Per yea* publisi rimpers Hit uction Tackpot V. Bond Sales Continue Slow J County Has Reached Only 37 Per Cent Of Its Goal In Victory Loan Drive According To Report According to reports from Prince O'Brien, of the Waccamaw Bank and Trust Company and LeRoy Mintz. Brunswick county chaiiman for the Victory Loan j drive, Brunswick county has | bought 37 per cent of its quota. The drive will be over on the 8th I of December, only a short time ! from now. If Brunswick is to go over the top in this drive as it has in all others there will have to be a lot active buying of Vic| tory Bonds between now and the 8th of December. "When you are asked to buy Victory Bonds," said Mr. O'Brien, no one is asking you to give a i cent for anything. They are simply asking you to invest some of your money in a mighty good security?the best security in the world, Both Chairman Mintz and Mr. fV Rripn arp atill rnnfidpnt that | Brunswick county will go over the ; top with the purchases of the j bonds before December 8th. Mr. Mintz said yesterday that it was | impossible to see every body and ask them to buy. For this reason ! he hopes that the patriotic men 1! and women of Brunswick will buy bonds of their own accord without i waiting to be asked. Gov. May Dredge Lay-In-Basin i ? | Only One Bid Received In j Washington For Dredging ' Of Giant Basin On Brunsi wick River I*'In Washington last week the Maritime Commission received only one bid for the huge jot | of dredging the lay-in basin foi )! surplus merchant ships on the 1 Brunswick River. This bid was an offer to do the dredging al a price of sixteen cents per cubic yard. It was promptly rejected. The project calls for the moving of nine million and six hundred thousand cubic yards of muc from the basin area. The rejecting of the 16 cents per yard bic means either that new bids wil be called for or the basin will be dredged by government vessels. Despite the fact that bids foi : the dredging have been rejected , it is understood that the worl , j will begin at an cariy aaiu. 11 ' Big Local Demand | Building Supplies i Order* Amounting To Ovei 11 A Million Feet Of Lum I ber Keeping Ahead 01 One Saw Mill In present day building, lum r j ber is not the only material used 1 It usually also takes plenty o 1 j wallboard, brick, cement, an< I, various other things. Taking thi . | into account, a remark made yes f j terday by Felix Garner, opcrato 3 ,of the Bolivia Gumoer company r was significant. Mr. Garner stat 31 ed that he had orders waitinf I from Brunswick county peopl " | for more than a million feet o , lumber. ej While much of this will go in s to the construction of outbuild ' ings and repairing homes, th 1 j greater per cent, apparently, i : j Intended for the construction o new homes. ' I Mr. Garner's company is th 111 largest supplier in the county fo ; rough and finished lumber. Stil there arc a great many smalle mills and mills of the type know: as ground mills. Taken alto ' gcthcr, these outfits produce great deal of building lumber an d the sum total of all undoubted! c indicates that citizens of thi S county now nave, oruers ior ?o s cral million feet of lumber wail c ing to be filled, 1 t Even with the Brunswick lun i. bcr mills badly behind in fillin ifj orders, it should not be taken fc a granted that they have to pr< 9. duce everything needed in th i- county in the way of buildin a material. Lumber firms an it dealers in building material, oui )- j side of Brunswick county as we ic us in the county, arc now furnisl cling a huge amount of buildin t. j r.iatonal. ii a Most of The News | All The Time , i?D EVERY WEDNESDAY Much Building Leland Section Of The County I Said That About A Hundred New Homes Have Been Built This Year In The Leland Area MANY BUSINESS PLACES ARE ALSO BEING BUILT Community Interested In New Ship Basin And Anxious To See River Road To Southport Paved The Leland and Brunswick ; River Bridge sections of Bruns: wick are filling up with new homes and home owners more rapidly than any other sections j of the county. George McKei: than, plumber and well known : resident of Leland, stated Satur? I day that at least a hundred new ; residences of all sizes have been | built in the communities during' I the past year. Such work is ! just really getting started. ! A good number of new business | buildings have also been con! stnieted or are in the process of construction. Mac Jones is now nearing the completion of a new two story concrete block furniture store. 56 by 66 feet. Along a one mile stretch of the road near the Brunswick River eight new homes are nearing completion. Among these builders aro Harold Bragdon, J. D. Edwards, Claude Skipper, Buck Long and Bill Skipper. The names of the others were not learned by the representative of this paper. At the present time the interest of the Brunswick River Bridge section is centering around the new ship lay-in-basin that is shortly to be dredged. This basin, on which the work should soon start, will undoubtedly add much to the development of that part ' of Brunswick county. ' Another matter in which the j folks are greatly interested is in ' getting the River Road paved from No. 17 to Southport. This road passes through a fine farming se./loi:, is rated as being the j , finest scenic route in the county ; and offers many industrial possibilities as it runs right down the Capt Fear River. Former Pastor i Is Honored i . , New Church At Penderlea Named for Former Southport Presbyterian Church Pastor Rev. J. R. Potts, formerly pasj tor of the Southport Presbyterian " | church, now pastor of the Wal, lace church, was honored last t! week by having the new Presbyj tcrian church at Penderlea named I for him. A committee of five | Presbyterian ministers selected the name and the church is to be known as the Potts Memorial Presbyterian church. ( The church was organized on Sunday, November 17, with 110 charter members. Eighty of these members were received into mem' bership by letter from other ' churches and thirty were accented by profession of faith. The tribute of having the * church named for him was in honor of the long service of Rev. C Mr. Potts as a Presbyterian 1 minister and for the faithful service that he has been giving the people of the Penderlea community for the past several years. - Hayes Plans To ; t Leave Shallotte _ i Well Known Physician And c Surgeon May Move. To s Fairmont Near Old Home f At Beginning Of Year 0 Dr. J. W. Hayes who has been r located at Shallotte for the past 1 seven or eight years and who has r built up a large practice there, n is said to be seriously considering moving to Fairmont the first of j| a the year. ^ Dr. Hayes is a native of Lake y City, S. C., 15 miles from Fairs mont. His uncle, a practlcizing physician at Fairmont for many .. years, has been in bad health for : ; the past year or two and is said ' to be able to handle only cmerg gency cases. Dr. Hayes, if he ir moves to Fairmont, will take over v_ his uncle's nracticp in aHdifiAn ie general practice. Fairmont has g no other physician. ,d Fred Mintz, of the Coastal Drug .)| t- Co.. in which Dr. Hayes has his ?. 11 office at Shallottc. says that In i- all probability he will be able to ' g get another doctor to take over ' the cracUc^ ct Dr. Hajee. i ' ' (