PAGE t I 'internes Can't 1 Coming This "Internes Can't Take Money" coming Thursday to the Carolina is the story of a young mother, played by Barbara Stanwyck, whose child had been taken from her while she had served a prison sentence. The wherebouts of the child are known only to an unidcrworld character who demands a large sum of money for the information. She meets Joel McCrea, an inv terne, in the out-patient ward of a hospital, and they fall in love. He is given a thousand dollars by Lloyd Nolan, whose life he had saved. It is the sum demanded from Miss Stanwyck by the gangster. She pleads with McCrea to give her the money but does not reveal her reason for wanting it. But McCrea had taken an oath not to accept any money from his patients during his intcrncship. Their romance is halted temporarily when Miss Stanwyck tries to steal the money from McCrea. The young doctor discovers the true complexion of things when Miss Stanwyck is forced to put love for her child I ahead of honor. In the gripping climax which follows Miss Stanwyck's destiny is worked out by the intervention of gangland. McCrea's medical skill and the grateful Nolan. NEXT WEEK Wililam Powell and Luise Raincr are co-stared in another dramatic adventure story of international intrigue, in MetroGoldwyn-Mayer's adaptation of Baroness Orczy's novel, "The Emperor's Candlesticks',, which comes to the Carolina Theatre Monday. S Carolina Yacht Club Will Sponsor Races In Southport (Continued from page 1.) the event an outstanding success. Briefly, the program calls for sailboat races to be staged in the Southport harbor on the afternoons of August 12-13-14, dances in the evening of those days and a banquet in honor of competitors on Saturday evening following the last race. There will l>e a meeting of local citizens this week for the purpose of naming committees to look after the details of entertainment. Southport citizens attending the meeting in Wilmington were Allen Ewing, W. C. Reeee, E. R. Weeks and James M. Harper, Jr. iFJfajajararefafajajETHiarazraiajar boykttk h< tobacco smith's har | root i Arsenate of Leat | onlTiorsi g WALKING c | Plenty of Good Sc "HARDWARE ! | "" We Arc P McCLAR I S And would like fi S see this new I Wilson Implei WHITEVJ |?iDarajHiZfaj,5^JHjamEJEJHJgJHJ5 WILMINGTON Cari To#ooo ^ 3 ? : : . 9?b$^| H J THl'RS., FRI., j \ /,j SATURDAY mmmttim JLLY 8-9-10 ake Money" Week To Carolina j j^ocial j^jecurity | Question gox As another service to its readers. The News Reporter each week will give authoritative answers to questions on the Social Security Law. By special arrangement with Stacey W. Wade, .Manager of the Social Security Board of| flee at 11G S. Salisbury Street ' in Raleigh, the Social Security ' Board has consented to pass on the accuracy of answers to ' questions 011 Social Security, which may l>e asked by employers, employees, and others, through The News Reporter. Address inquiries to the Editor. The News Reporter. Answers will be given here in the order in which questions are received. This is an informational service and is not legal advice or service. In keeping with Social Security Board policy names will not he published. THE EDITOR. Q. No. 1.?My employer says he has to keep my Social Security account number card. Can he do that? A. AO. i.?l\o. >vn cmpiujrci may not keep the account card of an employee. He must give it to the employee, although the employer must keep a record of the number so he can make the reports required of him by the United States Treasury. Q. No. 2.?I am a nurse employed in a dentist's office, but he says he does not come under the Social Security law and I do not have to have a security account card. Is that so? A. No. 2.?No. A dentist, engaged in private practice of his profession is an employer, within the scope of the Social Security Act, when he employs a nurse, or anyone else for any work in the course of his business. He must get an employer's identification number. For this he sfHJHmjaiaHJHJHJajHrajajHfajajHnIg 3RSE-DRAWN | SPRAYERS | sjl) SPRAYERS | )USTKRS | 1 and Paris Green S BENT I 1AI L I ULT1VATORS | iund Soy Bean Seed S i and PAINTS jjj <Iow Selling g EN TIRES >r our customers to | tire we have! | ment Company I 1LLE, N. G. | fn J5JHJHJ5JHISJ5J5igjHJ5IHJSJ5J5fEJEJtJi?l Blina WILMINGTON Together again in a story worthy of their i talent and your praise POWELL k RI n ER "THE CHWetitli CflflDlESTICHS" Mttro-Goldwyn. >4 \ MONDAY., TUES., WEDNES., JULY 12-13-14 J'QUSNAPSH SYMBOLS O V SK v |l ,;; ^flHI ^L B WSm %j!jtjti0r "The summer comes with flower and bee,?" THE beauty ot flowers is an attraction and a challenge to every camera owner. Frankly, good flower pictures are not easy to take and for that reason success brings more than ordinary satisfaction to the amateur photographer. Di.A?oi?1ioliMnir O Inrp-fl ImflfTfi and patient work with the camera are the essentials of flower photography. The best camera to use is one with a long-extension bellows, enabling one to focus close to the flower, and having a ground glass focusing screen on which you can see the image hefore snapping the shutter. But, if you haven't such a camera, good work may toe done with ordinary folding or toox cameras, provided a portrait attachment is used to obtain a large image. This supplementary lens, which comes with a table of focusing distances, makes it possible to work within arm's length of the subject. Always use a tape measure to determine exactly the specified distance between lens and flower. Panchromatic film gives the best rendering of thd tone contrasts among the colors. Flower pictures need to be vividly sharp; hence, a small lcr3 opening should usually be used?f.lC or f.22 ?or the smallest stop on box camshould get form SS-4 from the nearest post office or Social Security Board Field Office and file it - immediately. You should file immediately for an employee's account number, using form SS-5 which you can get from your post office or your nearest Social Security Board Field office. Make your number known to your employer. Q. No. 3.?Does the Social Security law apply to persons under 21 years of age who are employed in covered occupations ? A. No. 3.?Yes. Q. No. 4.?I am just opening up a new business. Do I have to apply for an employer's identification number? A. No. 4.?Yes. Q. No. 5.?I have just received mv rnnv nf Fnrm T hnvn "V ?IV "* - " ? several employees who do not have account numbers. What am I required to do? A. No. 5.?First, ask each employee if he ever has filed an application for an account number. Any employee who has not applied for a number, using Form SS-5, should do so at once. Application form can be got from your post office or nearest Social Security Board Field Office. Second, employees who have applied, but have not received a number, should file again?using Form SS-5, paying particular attention to question 14 on that form. When they get their num1 bers they should make them known to you so that you car make your informational returns I to the Treasury. Subscribe to The State Port $1.50 a year. THESE MEN HAVE FAITH IN TOWN (Continued from page 1.) j married a Miss Buck, for whose family the town of Bucksport, S C., is named. Their father ofter told them that it was the claim of their grandfather that Southport had a greater harbor thar New York City. "Southport woulc have become the New York oi the United States if it had not been for two Yankee jackasses in the United States Senate whc thought that the New York harbor was the better one and votec for its improvement, while politicians then and since then gave . ' Southport the go-by." POSSIBILITIES FOR PORT GOOD (Continued from page 1) into Southport would help won 1 derfully, and your railroad connections with the truck lines at j Navassa are very potential oi contributing to development." I Mr. McGee also thought thai I the resort development at Fori Caswell was bound to contribute [ immensely to the future of this immediate section and Brunswicl THE STATE PORT PILOT, ! OHMIkj F SUMMER v^5rL Ho1 - m ' h PjHh iW laBBSiiBBm : jJj^L jjSg I'M idi eras, and the camera should be on a tripod or held securely with a camera clamp. The exposure should be from Vi to one second. Wind is a problem, of course. At such close distances movement of the subject makes more difference. It is worth while to wait for a moment when the blossom Is motion- i less. If you find the wind too blowy, devise a wind-breaker of some sort. Hazy days, or when the sun Is shining under light clouds, makes the ideal time for flower pictures. Direct bright sunshine Is not desirable, but if you can't wait for better conditions, give your subject the protection of a cheesecloth screen. Better results ore obtained In the early morning or late afternoon when the light is less harsh and comes from the side. This is especially true for cup-shaped flowers. Nearby foliage, or other blossoms not wanted, may be tied back with string or cut away. A piece of stiff gray cardboard placed behind the flower often Is a better background than the natural one. Sometimes, if you are patient enough to wait, a roving bee will enter the chalice of your flower. Click! Your patience is rewarded with a picture that is a perfect sym- I bol of summertime, John van Guilder. county. Caswell will become one j of the most widely known points; anywhere on the coast, he be-1 lieves. LITTLE BITS OF BIG NEWS (Continued from page 1.) of a whimpering, self-labeled sexslayer of three small girls Monday while his wife tearfully protested his innocence. District Attorney Huron Fitts, ; of Los Angeles, said he would ask the grand jury Tuesday to indict the WPA worker, Albert Dyer, 32, on the strength of his own confession he lured three little girls from an Inglewood Park playground, led them one ; by one into a ravine and strangl- i . ed them. He then violated their I I bodies, Fitts said Dyer told him i and several other officers. The1 prosecutor said he would use the confession and other evidence to bulwark his demand for a death penalty. Holiday Toll America's Fourth of July arci- , : dent fatalities soared to 437 j ; Monday night as the 161st In ! dependence Day anniversary cele- , . j bration drew to a close. How- [ I ever, only two of the deaths were ' | directly attributed to fireworks. . , j Traffic accidents took the highi j est toll, 46 states reporting 247 ' , deaths 17 more than were killed 1 in highway accidents during the i corresponding period last year, j Drowning fatalities climbed to 104, surpassing all other records in the past eight years with I [the exception of 1931 when 181 , were drowned. Eighty-four met violent death from other causes. ,| ! j Celebration Begins 'I II The history of the 110 men, women and children who tried to i i plant the first English settlement I in America, only to meet a strf i ange and mysterious fate, was t j told in dramatic pageantry at j i | Manteo as North Carolina began > a 63-day celebration of the founding of Sir Walter Raleigh's ! I "lost colony" 350 years ago. j ! Advertising Program Governor Hoey launched North Carolina's two-year advertising program Friday by calling for I a sweeping beautification pro- j ' j gram and admonishing every Tar ' ' Heel "to become a sales agent" 1 for the state. In an address over j? state-wide radio hookup, the govern* r outlined agricultural, \ industrial and scenic "resources" ^ of North Carolina and predicted : the advertising campaign would J "add immeasurably to the per1: msnent growth, progress and dei velopment of the state.' HHHMH SOUTHPORT, N. C. if SSS HARRY Announces Stror ?In 1 For Coming 1 Years of warehouse sei possible an organization e by none. Every possible e together a group of men i the best in warehouse ser HIGHEST IN LEAF Pi as seen in our organizah best in warehousing. HARR1 Owner an Hunter Y. Lea ASSISTANT SALES MGR. ONTH1 George T. I Jud Hooks E. J. Hestei Willard Hu Frank Matkins / TICKET MARKER , ri Fi Frederick B. Holderby BOOKKEEPER Walter E. Pierce ASSISTANT Lea's W ! "SELL YOUR L 0 Whitev 0 WEDNESDAY, JULy v r G. LEA I I^H lgest Organization I fears? I obacco Season I wice in Whiteville has made II qualed by jew and surpassed II fjort has been made to bring H that are qualified to give you Jfc vice which in turn means the W\ RICES. Such familiar names f; Ion is your guarantee of the I / w w? A I L U? : d Proprietor I J. H. Barrick f auctioneer -l] E FLOOR I 51air, Mgr. r JH ^ins \ B Thurston Lennon weight master ||| RICAL ? I J. Lester Powell Stephen McDaniel 111 book men js rarehouse I EAF WlTIl LEA'S'' I ille, N. C I -

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