Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / Nov. 2, 1949, edition 1 / Page 3
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SOC I AL Lp/cn Hall l-gutne Ba'1 sponsored byj Lj Auxihary of Shallotte ? American Legion at the jut at Shallotte Monday to lareglv attended de y neat Her. L everybody was in cos- ! Lpy of which were strik Cutiful O! unusual. Ed L ami R P- White, Jr., L prizes for the original II itself hadcome in for lUtiful and artistic de k Excellent music was p thn>t;i;iMiit the evening ? ?omw and his orchestra fteungton. W At Shower jeKii W lliams was hon ;l stoik shower Wed ugl'.t at the home of her jlrs. Archie Evans. ^ ?ere played and enjoy ? were won by Mrs. ih. Mrs. H. T. Bow- j ? Betty Kauser, Mrs. Uning. Mrs. Herbert Ro (j Mrs. Tyler. (aunts of punch, sand tookies were served to wing guests: Mrs. Hazel Mrs. Norma McDowell, t Bowmer. Mrs. Eliza ^rav. Mrs. Betty Kauser, 1 K Parker. Mrs. Dorcas cs. Mrs. Ellen Watts, Uiia Sellers. Mrs. Peggy Sirs. Ir.'.ogene Wellings, Robinson. Mrs. Evelyn ijlrs. E. F. Gore, Mrs. E. Mrs Dave Garrish, Rogers. Mrs. Opal Mrs. Catherine Lewis, j Potter. Mrs. Roma , ,l of Southport and Mrs. ; [toil of Wilmington. X_:ams, who left Sunday ' r:i Va.. to join her hus- : [waved many nice pre- J News From leher Memorial Hospital i Mrs. Brice Helms of j ich announce the birth j | r. Tuesday. Mrs. Curtis McCall of tr.our.ce the birth of a at Wednesday. [kc Mrs. Willie Clemmons ' iv announce the birth of j pr on Saturday. Ihtrna Ann Shannon of j ii spent Tuesday until J as a medical patient. Gale McNeil of Bolivia j [teical patient from Tues- i si Saturday. Bcrr.ss of Southport en- | i Wednesday as a medical j Evelyn Hawes of Supply |seical patient from Wed ati Sunday. pe E. Hewett of Supply N?y until Sunday as a i f patient. toy Reeves of Shallotte 'is a medical patient on ' Bobby Muncy of South on Sunday as a MUZU heatre kthport, N. C. fcssior ? 14 c and 30c kw? Nightly? October S,? 1st Show ? st?t at 7:00 P. M. May? 1st show starts ?> 6:30 P. M. Nov. 3-4 ? "ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON" "n Technicolor) tennis Morgan Janis Paige t?rtoo?_ kH ' ^NS OF HATE" Tim Holt Nan Leslie i Don'tFool Your Wife" | . (Comedy) ,TuUes-- Nov. 7-8? LOVES MARY" 0nald Regan Jack Carson ??ter Yeggs" ^artoon) ALK ALONE" ? Lancaster Li^beth Scott ^amerl2_ Incoming _ f!0fThe Red Witch" 4ytl? ? Gail Russell 2,000,000 Pledge Cards for CROP Rural families throughout the country are using cards like those shown above to pledge their contri butions of bulk commodities tq ease the suffering of the needy all over the world. More than 2,000,000 of the pledge cards are being distributed to farm families in the Christian Rural Overseas program (CROP), the in terchurch overseas relief project. The harvest season drive is concen trated in this and 32 other agricul tural states. Small grains, meat, milk, cotton, and other farm com modities are needed. Sponsors of CROP are Catholic Rural Life, Church World Service (22 Protes tant denominations) and Lutheran World Relief. Marjorie Swift, of CROP'S na tional office in Chicago, holds up the 2,000,000th pledge card in the Christian brotherhood program. medical patient. Oscar Garner of Southport en tered as a medical patient on Sunday. ' < Mrs. Grace Jones of Southport entered on Sunday as a medical patient. Mrs. Rebecca Autrey of South port entered as a medical patient on Sunday. Baby Carl Bowling-, Jr., of Sup ply entered on Sunday as a medical patient. PERSONALS Mrs. T. E. Hickman has re turned from Nashville, Tenn, where she spent some time with her daughter, Mrs. Tom Gilbert. On her way home she visited Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Wilson in At lanta, Ga. who returned with her. Mrs. Clayton Hickman has re turned from a visit to Nashville, Tenn., and Atlanta, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Warner of Wilmington visited Mrs. C. Ed Taylor Saturday. IX HOSPITAL Mrs. Ruth Kye of Winnabow was a patient in James Walker Hospital Wilmington recently. She was suffering from a severe at tack of headaches. AT PRESBYTERIAN The "Goal" will be the sermon topic at the Southport Presbyter ian Church Sunday night. This is the second in a series on | athletics of life, Last Sun4ay the' , pastor preached on "Getting Into | the Game." j VISITED COLES'S < Mrs. Guy Lewis of Claremont, jVa., and her son, Guy Lewis, Jr., | of Wilmington, spent part of the I past week with W. G. and Miss | Lillian Collins near Orton, New Bricklaying Machine Invented, ? Small Device Estimated To Effect Saving Of $100 Mij lion Per Year In Building Cost _____________ t j . . I I A bricklaying machine that steps up the speed of building 3 to 4 times its usual rate has been invented by two Montgomery, Ala. World War II veterans and will be marketed to the building trade immediately. A small-job size, for home and farm use, will be made available through state agencies. I The device 5oes not automatically (lay bricks but with a frame that insures true walls, guides that direct quick accurate placing, built-in spirit levels and a | large size scoop that beds 8 j bricks witn one scoopfull, the process of laying proceeds about as fast as a man can pick up bricks and Jay them down. The machine is said to save up to 36 cents a square foot in wall construction costs and will bring brick building definitely within the low-price field. Acceptance of ( the device by the building in dustry is expected to effect a saving of $100,000,000 a year. GOOD GULF For Dependable Auto Performance Get Your Winter - Check Now ENNIS LONG SERVICE STATION U. S. No. 17 Supply, N. G. The new bricklayer was deve loped primarily to provide a means to lower the cost of GI 'housing and to provide a cheaper | and better form of construction to replace the jerry-built houses that poor materials and high costs have imposed. Repeated tests have proved that by using the machine 2,000 to 3,000 bricks can be laid in an 8-hour day, and the simplicity of the operation makes it practical to build many types of buildings without the aid of skilled labor. According to the inventors, Paul Sommers and John Hodgson, this new speed and saving will bring an immediate increase in the num ber of brick homes which will benefit the entire industry and provide jobs for thousands of masons. The machine, which is light in weight and inexpensive" is of special interest to the farmer and home owner. With it, the farmer can build his own silos, outbuildings, even his own home with an important saving. The home owner can build hi3 own garage, walks, walls, foundations, partitions and additions. Soapstone is used chiefly in roofing paper, foundry facings, insecticides and as a filler for asphaltic paints. Buried Sunday REV. MARVIN K. BEASLEY, Chadbourn minister and modera tor of the Columbus Baptist As sociation, who was buried Sunday at Richmond, Va. He has served as pastor of Pleasant Hill and Pleasant Plain Baptist Churches for four years. Noted Throat Specialists report on 30-Day Test of Camel Smokers. . . NOTOHE SING1E CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION i CAMELS! Y?. time ?nr? Un fir din ?? of ooteif throat specialists after a total of 2.470 woekly examinations of the throats of buodrtds of men aw) women who smoked Camels, and only Camels, for 30 coosecutna days. I MADE THE 30- ? % DAY TEST AND My DOCTOR'S REPORT WAS NO SURPRISE TO ^ > ME! I KNOW CAMUS ARE MHO -MY THROAT TOLD ME SO WITH EVERy PUFF AND EVERY g g&A. pack! Fish can fast for long periods and should not be fed on journeys taking leas than four or five days. Use of pumice and pumicite reached a. record ' 607,746 tons in ithe U. S. in 1948. WINTER CLOTHES f Now it is November, and time for the first chilly winds of winter. Be sure to have the family ready for the first visit of Jack Frost. ? We have a wide selection from which to choose the winter wardrobe for the entire ? family. R.GALLOWAY General Merchandise SUPPLY, N. C. CATHOLIC INFORMATION Modern minds shall pass away, but . . . Nineteen hundred years ago a| Roman orator was publicly scoff ing at the teachings of the fol-( lowers of Christ; and as he was speaking a priest in the cata- 1 combs was saying a Requiem Mass, while a woman was weep ing and smiling and praying. | She was weeping because of the loss of a beloved husband. She! was smiling* because he had con fessed his sins to a priest and had gone to his death with his God in his breast. She was praying be cause she believed God would heed her entreaties to take her hus band soon from Purgatory into ! Heaven. Today many blind leaders of the blind are preaching against the "absurdities" of Heaven and Heir and other fundamental Christian beliefs; and while they are preaching other widows are weep ing and smiling and praying for, exactly the same reasons , as the , woman in the catacombs nene- 1 teen hundred years before. Nineteen hundred years hence, ! a new crop of blind leaders will be resurrecting dead and dis- 1 counted heresies of the ages be a fore and preaching them as the 1 I latest variants of "Modern I Thought" and "Scientific Enlight-J | ment." I And while they are preaching, Catholics of the 39th century Will be assisting: at Mass, confessing to a priest, praying for their ? dead in Purgatory, and adhering to all the Catholic beliefs that we adhere to today- -that the early Christians believed and taught in the first Christian century. For every Catholic knows that neither time nor man can alter ? by a whit the truths which God revealed to man and about which Christ Himself said: "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass away" (Mark 13:31). Every year on the second day of November (All Souls' Day) every Catholic priest throughout the world offers up Mass for all departed souls. During the entire month of November, the Church exhorts every Catholic in the world to remember in his pray ers the dead of all ages and all peoples. So you see, dear Neigh bor, we (Catholics pray regularly for your departed ones and some day we shall be praying for the welfare of your own immortal ' soul. If it's anything Catholic, ask a Catholic! For Further information write . P. O. Box 351, WhitevUle, N. C. ? The New Enlarged? RT SHOP INFORMAL OPENING THIS EVENING THURSDAY NIGHT, NOVEMBER 5th Open For Business Friday Morning, November 6th FAVORS AND REFRESHMENTS FOR EVERYONE FEATURING A COMPLETE MUSICAL DEPT. . . . Consonata Electronic Organs, Jessie-French Pianos, Musical Instru ments qnd Merchandise, Sheet Music, Popular and Classical Records ? AND A COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPT. With A 24 Hour Developing Service ? GIFT WRAPPING SERVICE - VISIT OUR NEW MODERN SHOP The Art Shop ? \ Located Next Door Tq JL A. McNeill & Sons Drug Store AN INVITATION W e cordially invite every one to attend our infor mal opening this evening (Thursday) from S to 10. tfa mlfy-biAJL gets the pick of all the wonderful HALLMARK & GIBSON CHRISTMAS CARDS we have. Come soonl CHRISTMAS CARDS IMPRINTING SERVICE BEULAH MARTIN MARION MARTIN
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1949, edition 1
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