SOCI AL L*tjjjooi E Hock! and Neils 1 Southport were mar t??.s-c-on Septe '"V jorgensen is a vet fttoVld War II and is a ' . Cossi.' Jorgensen and vi- Joriellsen South * ;h0 Cvar he has been % the Bolivia Lumber [J ^ bookkeeper. Lnsen is from Hagers ? but has made her home with her sister, Mrs. Chas. M. Trott, for the past three years. Jenrette ? Mint z Announcement has been, made of the marriage of Miss Betty Lois Mintz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mintz, of Leland, to Dupree Wade Jenrette, son of H. D. Jenrette and a former resident of Waccamaw township. Mrs. Jen rette is a graduate of the Leland high school. Mr. Jenrette graduat ed from the Waccamaw school 0 ^ H'?f - CAN A W?ETTE 1 MAKE THE i CAMEL 30-DAV . TEST AND < YOU'LL KNOW I Ust SO MLPifafa 30-Day -fesf-revealed'\ c THROAT IRRITATION | due i? smokffjf&nHk/ , in this test, hundreds of men and women icimels?an average of one to two packs a iK <0 days. Each week their thfoats were ex /ft noted throat specialists ? a total of 2470 roas-and these doctors found not one single ffcott irritation due to smoking Camels. KOM GAS to GROCERIES... ftatever your need may be, drive in at the GOOD GULF STATION And Ask for What You Want. IIS LONG SERVICE STATION U. S. No. 17 Supply, N. G. SCHEDULE f? B. 8C B- BUS LINE Southport, N. C. IFECTIVE TUES., JAN. 20,1918 WEEK-DAY SCHEDULE I SOVTIIPORT LEAVES WILMINGTON 7:00 A. M. M A. M. *9:30 A. M. 30 A. jr. 1:35 P. M. 30 P. M. 4:00 P. M. P.M. 6:10 P.M. <:OOP. M. 10:20 P.M. .?These Trips on Saturday Only. '-This Bus Leaves Winnabow at 6:10 Daily. - SUNDAY ONLY - ? SOrTHPORT LEAVES WILMINGTON 9:00 A. M. 1:35 P. M. 6:10 P. M. 10:20 P. M. announcement To Our Friends and Customers In Southport . . . ?THAT? RICHFIELD ? KEROSENE and FUEL OIL Will Be Delivered In Southport THIS WINTER BY fountain OIL CO. WILMINGTON, N. G. We invite you to call us now (Phone 2-3793), or write us, and -V()ur home on our list to receive a regular supply of Clean Burn ^ RICH-HEAT fuel > T ?' ? . 4 DELIVERIES TWICE WEEKLY and afterwards served for five' years with the army. PERSONALS Joel Moore, Jr., has returned to school at the Citadel in Char leston, S. C. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Ruark have returned from a visit with relativ es in Western North Carolina. J. W. Thompson, Jr., of Raleigh and G. Butler Thompson of Lum berton spent the week-end here with their mother, Mrs. J. W. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Prevatte spent the week-end with relatives in Red Springs. i John Hazelton, now serving in the U. S. Navy and stationefl at Portsmouth, Va., spent several days recently here with his mother. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Kidd of Penns Grove, N. J. are spending a few days in Southport. Miss Mary Lee Norment of Charlotte has been visiting relati ves in Southport. News From Dosher Memorial Hospital Miss Edith Walton of Shallotte was a medical patient from Mon day until Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Rivenbark of Bolivia announce the birth of a son on Tuesday. Mrs. L. H. Phelps" of Supply' entered on Monday as a medical patient. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Pox, of Lex ington, announce the birth of a' son on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Simmons of Shallotte announce the birth of a daughter on Tuesday. James W. Flowers of Leland spent Tuesday until Monday as a! medical patient. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Johnson,1 of Southport, announce the birth of a son on Wednesday. /trt/1 * Over 5 million Maytafi ?old fax mor? than any other waihar. Com la ??< ph* yow ?*r mw ROBINSON'S SOUTHPORT, N. C. Frank Cumber of Philadelphia, Pa.,' spent Thursday until Friday as a medical patient. J. W. Evans of Freeland enter ed as a surgical patient on Fri day. Mrs. Alice Lesh of Bolivia spent Friday until Sunday S3 a medical patient. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Singletary of Southport announce the birth of a daughter on Satutdtl?. Mrs. Bessie Hickman of Inland fentered on Sunday as a medical j patient. - I Mrs. Mamie Curbie of Supply entered as a medical patient on Sunday. Mrs. Hannah Dennis of Long wood entered on Monday as a medical patient. TO ATTEND MEETING Miss Josephine Moors, Girl Scout Executive for Cumberland county, spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joel Moore. Miss Moore will leave Saturday for Winter Haven, Fla., to attend a Girl's Scout Profess ional Workers Conference. Mrs. Moore will accompany her and the two will bfe gone a week. VISITED AT CASWELL Mr. and Mrs. Harris Nelson of Leaksville-Spray spent the week end at their summer home at Caswell Beach. They h$d as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mor son, of Raleigh. Mr. Nelson and Mrs. Morson are grand children of Governor John Motley More head, for whom Morehead City was named. VISITING IN GEORGIA Mrs. Clayton Hickman and Mrs. Thelma Fisher left Satur day for Atlanta ,Ga., where thfey were to attend a meeting of the Daughters of America yesterday. Mrs. Walburg Moore and daugh ter, Kay, accompanied them and the four are spending a few days visiting relatives in Atlanta. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Alex Fox Lexing ton announce the birth of a son, Charles Alexander, Jr., at Dosher Memorial Hospital on September 27. HIGHWAY MEETING The regular meeting of the State Highway Commission will be held in the office in Fayette ville on Thursday, October 14. OPEN FORUM A col d mu dedicated to opinion! ft the public. A afanthDlece for the Tie*? and observations of our friend* and readers, for *blrt *? acctptr ?o responsibility. Contrtbn tlons to tnls column must sol exceed line kindred words. Southport, N. i Editor, State Port t?ilot, Southport, North Carolina Dear Sir: Truly Mr. Kendall has made out an able cause in behalf of the beekeepers relative to the bear situation and for my part I shall not try to tell him what to do about it. However, in your edi torial column last week you pub lished "What Shall We Do With Mr. Bear?" That, Sir, is not for you nor any of us to decide rela tive to extinction of his species. To prove my point I give you the following' from Outdoor Life Magazine, September, 1948, from the article entitled, "A teacher of Religious Discusses Conversation." "The earth is the Lord's, how ever. Every beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills. I know all the fowls of the mountains: and the wild beast of the field are mine. These are words ascribed to God in the 50th Psalm. "Hiis means that Ownership of fish and game is merely a holding in trust. The fisherman or hunter must never think of natural resources as something he may dispose of at will. For his use of them Is a sacred r&Jpon sibility." Now let's hit the subject from another angle. Tills concerns wol ttni s Jeep ? Um the all-purpose "Jeep" u a tractor to pull your firm implements; as a truck to tow 5,300 lbs; and haul 800 lbs.; x a runabout to take you to town or through the pasture; Use the ''Jeep" power take-off to ran your farm equipment; Fleming Willys COMPANY 304 N. Second St. WILMINGTON, N. C. HERBERT JOHNSON, SOUTHPORT, N. C. ves, and BEARS from an article complied by Fred R. ?epp called "The Battle With The Wolves." "Typical of the plaintive notes left in the diaries, letters, and reports of those'times are records of settlers in North Carolina in the middle. eighteenth century. In 1752 appeared the gloomy admis sion that it was useless to try to raise cattle until |the wolves and bears were wipped out." Wolves are gone from North Carolina, BEARS are still here and cattle raising is considered profitable, why not apiaries? Surely there are methods of control for most living things other than extermination. Very Sincerely, W. T. Fullwood, Jr. Queen Contest, Wrestling Take Feature Honors Mias Cecilia Horne Crown ed 1948-49 Queen After Sixteen Contestants Par ade Before Judge? * - GRUNT AND GROAN BOYS STAGE SHOW Most Enthusiastic Crowd In History Of Event Gathers For Full Day Of Enter tainment Amid thunderous applause from the most enthusiastic Farmers Day crowd in the four-year his tory of the event, Miss Cecilia Horne of Whiteville Township was crowned 1948 Farmers Day queen here Friday night. Five out-of-town judges pond ered the beauty qualifications of 16 finalists for 45 minutes before arriving at a decision. A mass of people which filled the area around the stage on the Railroad Plaza looked on. Miss Pauline Nye of Wacca maw was voted the No. 2 position and Miss Mildred Gore of Bug Hill copped third-place honors. Dave S. Neilson, executive sec retary of the Whiteville Merchants Association, who served as mas ter of ceremonies, presented a variety of gifts from the mer-! chants of Wihteville to the three j winners. The queen contest, staged thiS| year under the direction of Mar-1 tin Schulken, was climaxed by the] crowning of the new qeen by MlsS Nancy Green of Hallsboro, 1947 Farmers Day queen. The judges who selected the queen were Vic Goodman of Wil mington, Slim Mims of Florence, S. C., W. Z. Barkley of Wilson, Edward Clark of Elizabethtown nnd James Monroe of Elizabeth town. The final event on the Railroad Plaza stage was preceded by the ; wrestling matches promoted by Jim Crockett of Charlotte. A re cord throng around the stage wit jnessed the grunt and groan art ' ists. Many of them were their ' first wrestling bouts. Wally Dusek of Omaha, Ne i braska, too the first one-fall ! mat'ch from Pete Managoff of ! Newland, N. C. in 23 minutes, 'while Joe Corbett of San Francis ,co, Calif, took two of the three | balls from Earl Wampler of Des : Moines, Iowa. Wampler grabbed 'the second fall, but lost the third and deciding fall In a matter of a few minutes. The wrestling matches were generally ranked near the top among the Farmers Day features. The day's program was as full of entertainment as the proverbial dog with fleas. Contests, magic show, rifle shooting exhibition and greasy pole climbing all combin ed to make the day outstanding. Disability Pay Papers Advised Leonard W. Barrett, district officer of the State Veterans Commission- today advised WWII veterans wno have service-con nected disabilities rate at 60 per cent or more to take immediate action to obtain the increased compensation they now are en titled to because of their disa bilities. Mr. Barrett warned that eligi ble veterans must file birth certi ficates of children, marriage re cords and proof of the depend ency of parent. These documents must befiled before December 1. If proof is filed prior to Dec. 1, the increased compesation will be retroactive to September 1, oth-j erwise only'from the date proof is received by the Veterans Ad ministration. England maintained a monopoly on graphite for lead pencils for 200 years. A total of 200,799 forest fires occurred In the United States last year, as compared with only 172,278 the previous year. Dam age in 1947 was estimated at more than 55 million dollars. Read The Want Ads 30,000 ITEMS IN STOCK SECTION OF OUR LARGE PARTS DEPT. "We Serve The Man Who Services Your Car" Our large stock is at your service, . . . Mr* Dealer ? Garageman Service Station Owner ! Call Us For Prompt Service Our delivery service to your place of business . Saves you time and money. BRAXTON AUTO PARTS, Inc. "The Parts People" WHITEVILLE, N .C. 1931 Wholesale 1948 an amazing offer.. for an amazing new radio! TABLE MODEL COMBINATION Here is your chance to get this omozing new G-E Table Model Com bination Radio with the famous G-E Electronic Reproducer. For a limited time only we will offer you. TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD RADIO Bring in your.old radio and get $30 allowance, then pay on our easy payment plan. This is General tlectric's Finest Table Radio-Phonograph! You have never seen . . . never heard a finer table combination. Now, you can have a combina tion table model radio ... at the lowest possible price for a genuine General Electric .. . known for quality. ? . 'The only G-E table model with $inQ95 the famous G-E Electronic I ^ Reproducer... new record beauty virtually unmarred by needle ? scratch or surface noise. Natural Color Tone for both radio arid phonograph. Plays up to 10 records automatically with quiet changer. See it today . . this offer is for a limited time only. Kings Electrical Sales Co. SHALLOTTE, N. C.