~w * jj c$(o Itfi PHOTO BY PAT aUEARV Design Is Excellent Overall excellence of design caught the eye of the Carolina Shores Garden Club in bestowing Yard of the Month honors for June on the yard of Dean and iMura Spatholt, 2 Mashie Court, The Acreage. Existing trees, well-planned landscape garden areas featuring red hibiscus and complementary shrubs. Ferry Tourguides Answer Questions Four college students will serve as tourguides this summer aboard the Southport-Fort Fisher Ferry, of fering information on local points of interest as well as general informa tion about the state. This year's guides will be Tom my Whittington and Amy Matthews of UNC-Wilmington; Shannon Maullsby of Peace College; and Lisa Faulk of Cape Fear Commun ity College. From June through August the students will provide passengers in formation and free brochures on what to see and do in the vicinity, as well as information on restaurants and motel accommodations, said Brenda Marshburn, assistant man ager at Brunswick Town State His toric Site. The guide program is adminis tered by the Department of Cultural Resources, as are Brunswick Town and Fort Fisher. ? Ferry rides, one-way, arc 50 cents for pedestrians, cars, S3, bicycles, SI, and vehicles longer than 20 feet, S6. Passengers may board at docks outside Southport and near Fort Fisher at Kure Beach in New Han over County. Summer Ferry Schedule Leaves Southport Leaves Fort Fisher 8:00 AM 8:50 AM 8:50 AM 9:40 AM 9:40 AM 10:30 AM 10:30 AM 11:20 AM 11:20 AM 12:10 PM 12:10 PM 1:00 PM 1:00 PM 1:50 PM 1:50 PM 2:40 PM 2:40 PM 3:30 PM 3:30 PM 4:20 PM 4:20 PM 5:10 PM 5:10 PM 6:00 PM 6:00 PM 6:50 PM It ? '4t PHOTO CONTRIBUTED VOLUNTEERS from the South Brunswick Interchurch Council and Brunswick Adult Day Care Cen ter board of directors are renovating a former house/business on Al Street into an adult day care cen ter. Atop the ladders are David Carmichael and Ewell Evans. On the ground (from left) are Sky B ram ley, R.C. Eaton, Don Pringle and Art Stoveken. Center Preparing For First Clients A small crew of men, all volunte ers, arc busy painting, hanging sheet rock, cleaning out gutters and spruc ing up the future Shallotte center for Brunswick Adult Day Care Inc. Locatcd at 106 Al Street, the brick structure was once a residence and later a lighting center for Shal lotte Electric. Its owners, Mr. and Mrs. Alton Milliken Sr., are leasing the building to the non-profit orga nization and arc assisting with the renovation work. Once it opens ? possibly in early July, but the date depends on sched uling of a state inspector ? the cen ter will serve up to eight persons each day initially, drawing from a larger pool of registered clients. Pointing to the heated, insulated double garage, though, volunteer R.C. Eaton said last week that the center will have plenty of room to expand and serve additional clients in the future. Eaton had tackled the job of tear ing out the doorway to the bath room and widening it to accommo date a wheelchair. For safety reasons wood paneling in the house is being covered with fire-resistant shcetrock and the fire place covered up or enclosed. In general, however, volunteer Don Pringle said the house is in good shape and not in need of elaborate re working before it is put into use. While sprucing up both the interi or and exterior, board members are also putting together a "wish list" of furniture and other items the center will need before it opens, and re cruiting clients. Desired items range from a mi crowave and refrigerator to reclin crs, sofas, lables and chairs for ac tivity areas, bookcase and books, puzzles and the like, and rockers and other furniture for a glassed sun room that will be transformed into a screened porch. "And we'd like a pool table to go in the garage," said Pringle. Curtains and other, more decora tive touches will also be needed for the interior. As for clients, the Shallottc Cen ter will serve the same group of in dividuals served by its counterpart in Southport: adults age 60 or older who arc mobile or semi-mobile. Pringle said the center's services arc expected to be increasingly in de mand as Brunswick County's popu lation continues its rapid growth, es pecially in the senior sector. The center offers its clients phys ical and mental stimulation and fel lowship through planned activities that includc community scrvicc, such as making iray favors for local hospitals or tags for "Angel Trees" at Christmas. Clients can avail themselves of the center's services daily or on an irregular basis. For clients' families, the center can provide an occasional respite or break from the daily care routine, providing time for caregivers to handle other business, or even an opportunity for a family member to take daytime work. In many cases where home care is no longer feasible, use of the cen ter can avoid or delay admission of an elderly family member to a nurs ing home. Cost is S20 per day, Pringle said. For information on how to refer a client or to donate services or mate rials for the center interested per sons may call Jean Marshall, 919 457-0400, or Percy Bray, 579-3447. Chiropractic Center of Shallotte/Ocean Isle Hwy. 179, Ocean Isle. 579-3502 Dr. H.J. "Skip" Davis Most Insurances Accepted Mon.-Fri. 8:30-12 & 1:30-5:30, Thurs. 8:30-12 Hwy Sunset. Beach 904 4 Mile Hwy. 179 Rd. ? DR. DAVIS Ocun Isle Nematodes Not Always The Bad Guys There are good nematodes and bad nematodes. "Bad" nematodes feed on plants. "Good" nematodes feed on in sects and may help gardeners re duce traditional insecticide use. Insect control for cultivated plants is in the midst of a revolu tion. Traditional chemical insecti cides are still being developed, but biological insecticides are taking on a new credibility. Numerous small companies are evaluating novel ap proaches to controlling common gardening pests. Last week I had the pleasure of as sisting Rick Brandenburg, Ph.D., an extension entomologist at N.C. State University, in establishing mole cricket control demonstration plots. The tawny mole cricket is a ma jor pest of turf in the southern coastal plains of North Carolina. This native South American insect is unusually destructive to most species of turf grass. Traditional insecticides often do not provide the level of control nec essary to prevent the loss of the grass stand. 1 have witnessed home lawns and acres of turf on golf courses that have been nearly de stroyed by late autumn or early spring mole cricket activity. The mole cricket has the ability to move in the ground. Not only can the mole cricket move from one place to another, adult mole crickets have been known to burrow up to four feet deep in the soil. Birds, C.BRUCE WILLIAMS Extension Area Turf Specialist THE PLANT DOCTOR moles, mice and other animals will feed on mole crickets but evidently the mole cricket is able to tolerate or evade most of its enemies. Brandenburg is evaluating in demonstration turf plots the effec tiveness of a biological control for mole crickets. In its native land mole cricket populations are partial ly kept in check by a parasitic ne matode. A company by the name of Biosys picked up on this fact and is now cuituring and marketing insect specific parasite nematodes. These nematodes only attack mole crickets or closely allied insect pests. The nematodes can be sprayed onto the soil with conventional spray equipment They are attracted to the carbon dioxide gas insects ex hale. Once the nematodes penetrate the insect, a natural bacterium is re leased by the nematode that quickly kills the insect. Insects infected with the nematode will usually die in 24 to 36 hours. The nematodes cannot survive in the soil without an insect host so nematodes do not have the residual activity of other biological control measures such as milky spore disease. Randy Martin, Ph.D., an entomol ogist working for Biosys, is excited about the potential and future of bio logical control measures for insects. New Methods have been developed for culturing nematodes that allow them to be grown on a special nutri ent media in large tanks. The technology to grow the insect parasitic nematodes is perhaps the single most important obstacle in the way of large scale biological control. For home gardeners an insect parasitic nematode product called BioSafc that claims to control grubs and immature larval insects is now commercially available. (Send your gardening questions to The Plant Doctor, P.O. Box 109. Bolivia. N.C. 28422.) Class Of '71 Makes 20th Reunion Plans The Southport-Brunswick High School Gass of 1971 will hold its 20th-year class reunion July 26-28. Class members who have not re ceived information arc asked to contact one of the following per sons: Richard Faulk, Regina W. Alexander, Nat Parker, Ethel Zach ariadis, Debra J. Swain and Betty J. Cowans, said Mrs. Alexander, who can be reached after business hours at 919-457-6040. Society Raises $4,200 The Brunswick County Unit of the American Cancer Society raised 54,200 with its jail-a-thon last Thursday at the National Guard Armory in Shallotte. Officers "arrested" approximately 15 people, who were given a tele phone and asked to get pledges for the cancer society as bail money. Herbie Ward, chairman of the an nual fund drive, had hoped to raise $5,000 in pledges and contributions to support the American Cancer Society's programs in research, edu cation, patient services and rehabili tation. "Even though we didn't reach the goal, we're pleased with the turnout and the results," Ward said. Ward said members of the South Brunswick Isles Civitan Club vol unteered as judges and jailers. Atlantic Telephone Membership Corp. also provided free phone ser vice for the "prisoners." STAFF PHOTO BY SUSAN USHER SHALLOTTE POUCEMAN Keith Croom slaps handcuffs on Brunswick Beacon staff writer Doug Rutter before taking him to jail last Thursday during the American Cancer Society Jail-A Thon. We are pleased to announce the association of Leonard E. Reaves HI, M.D. in the practice of Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology & Geriatrics with Lee Langston, M.D. and Jon Langston, P.A.C. at 341 Whiteville Road, Shallotte Accepting appointments beginning July 8, 1991 754-8731