Most Of The News
I All The Time
B^jjMETEN
any Club Ladies [
pier The Annual
arden Contest
tal Of Twenty-Four Mem-|
bers Representing Six j
HHone Demonst ration
clubs. Enter Annual Fall J
\nd Winter Garden Con
ENCOURAGE MORE j
home vegetables1
Addition To Good That
vill Result For Members |
Who Enter. There Will j
Re Interesting LesI
son For Others
ETveniyfiour Demonstration
enrolled in
H i winter garden con
for the six months period
_ October 1. 193", and
"r.: March 31. 1938.
- . - state-wide contest
H-. re.! annually by the extendi
e t.. encourage more ]
gardens and a greater va-:
H vegetables during |
H months.
of these local|
1. watched with ; i
IP . ui ? , ,
I friends throughout .
I The contestants are j ^
I Mrs. Frank Mintz,
I ex Mercer, Mrs. Thad I
I Mrs Thurston ClemI
. - Carl Ward, Mrs. ErnI
I Mrs. W. B. EdIMrs
J. E. Dodson, Mrs. I ^
I Mintz, Mrs. B. R. Ben-1
I Mrs B. L. Russ, Mrs. Mil-'
Br.: Vaioen.
I Mrs. G. C. Mc-1
I K. B. Dresser.
I tab: Mrs. Jack Rey- y
I Mrs Ernestine Thorpe,'
|. Dan Brew, Mrs. C. W.J
J Mrs Hugh Oosterwyk,
I Verzaal, Mrs. Henry '
rial. Mrs. T. Rivenbark, Miss
ptnnabQw. dub: Miss Josle j
M: Pisgah club: Mrs. Berlyn
faster, county garden chairLittle
Bits Lc
Of Big News
News Events Of State, J
H&iion and World-Wide t
Interest During Past
Week
m Wont Run I
Cameron Morrison, former > j
"vernor and United States!
senator, announced Monday lie 11
decided not to offer for ]
'ro ennoin in lhn FiAinOPratiC I 1
next June. In a brief j i
'Htement which he issued to j
!he press at Charoltte, Mor- (
- . hIso expressed the hope |
that the Democrats of North
Carolina would "draft" Gov- j
truer Clyde R. Hoey for the j
tnatorship.
ut MX Crop
The AAA made a 2,000,000
reduction Monday in the I
" :i crop goal for next year. 1
Approving the 1938 agricultur-1 (
nservation program. Sec-,Mary
Wallace fixed its "goal";]
as cotton is concerned
a! 27.>100,000 to 29,000,000 1
The goal previously had!'
h?n placed at 29,000,000 to
acres. Officials Of'
Agricultural Adjustment j
tration said the change 1
ed upon because of,'
unusually large cotton 1
cr,JP this year. j'
i
into Deaths
At least 11 1 persons lost
heir lives in automobile acci- [
on United States highways
during the week-end.
^ if teen thousand of the per- j
sr)ns killed annually are pc< 1 fs'iians
and the blame for
Jhch deaths ay be placed
argcly upon the victims themMie
greater New York
Safety Council declared last
*Wk.
iouihrd
2.11.;.ton French freighter
''fl Mellah was bombed by an
; 'htificd plane off Barcelona,
Sunday and abandoned at
its icrew. Two French
"t>s immediately hurried to!
i'l ~^"r The warships reported
n i '1P crew was saved but
vessel was gravely dam(
p. freighter, belonging to
. aquet iine 0f Marseille whiLrrj'"'"!-is
service between
north Africa, was j
Port Vendres, Frenled
on Page 4)
| THI
NO. 40 4-F
U. S. S. Bh
0
w>?
pip*
%|r x:
?L 3?
VISITOR?The U. S. S
fleet, attracted considerab
harbor on her way to Wil
visit the boat at her moorin
ton before she sails Saturd
Will Let Sever
Of Paving Fc
Advertisement For Bids On
Project Already Has
Been Made And Actual
Letting Is Expected Within
Next Thirty Days
WORK WILL BEGIN
ON COLUMBUS SIDE
'roject Will Begin Where
Old Paving Leaves Off
And Will Extend To A
Point Near Clifton's
Place
Within thirty days, seven more
niles of Highway 130, leading
rom South Whiteville to Shalotte,
will be let for paving, officials
of the North Carolina State
lighway commission have anlounced.
The advertisement for bids or
he project has already beer
nade, and the actual letting is
expected within a period of thiry
days.
This project will carry the
laving well past Old Dock to a
loint near Clifton's Oyster Roast
The road is paved with a sandisphalt
surface to a point a mile
leyond Pleasant Plains at the
iresent time.
Last week a map of the prolosed
route to be followed from
Pleasant Plains to the New Briton
bridge was posted in the
Whiteville courthouse, and ii
showed no changes except the
elimination of some of the more
pronounced curves in the road.
/--? i
Waccamaw utns
Elect Offtcen
At a recent meeting of theii
l-H Club group the Waccamaw
girls elected the following tc
ierve this year:
Senior Club: President, Dorothj
Simmons, Vice-Pres.: Daphne
Bennett, secretary treasury: Nel
kValton, reporter: Alta Simmons
pianist: Mable Edwards, song
leader: Elsie Avant.
Junior Club: President: Erma
Bray, vice-pres.: Mac Ward, sec'
retary treasurer: Josephine Bra'
jy, reporter: Hettie Mae Norris
ind song leader: Miriam Win'
stead.
This Inquirey 1
From New Y<
A Long Island, N. Y? man
has written the Southport
Civic Club with a view of
moving here and engaging in
a slick business. Of course,
he did not put it that way.
His desire is to come here and
engage in the business of
catching and also buying and
shipping eels.
He states he wishes to make
Southport his permanent home
and that he expects to employ
a number of men at this eel
fishing business. His letter
was in the nature of an inquiry
as to whether a nonresident
of North Carolina
would be permitted to engage
in such an occupation.
He has been advised that,
according to local information,
he can engage in the
buying and selling business
upon the payment of the fish
dealers tax of $2.50 per year.
E SL
A Good
AGES TODAY
ie Passes Through
mggm imwi w ^
*" r.:
- '
7
:< -
-
# * jfc, S4
-Entail
> W%W
>ir-: ^
:/ - :* ' - -fen
0 9 * * ? X?
v,:. *
. Blue, one of the newest des
le local interest Tuesday as
mington. Many Brunswick c<
ig place in front of the U. S.
ay.?(Star-News Cut.)
l More Miles
>r Highway 130
* 1
BANDIT IS BOUND
OVER TO COURT
Captured after a gun battle t
1 September 25 at the scene of |
' a filling station holdup in this
County in which he received |
an almost mortal wound. Col- '
lins Thorpe, young Wilmington
man, was bound over to Sup- J
erior Court after a hearing
Tuesday in recorder's court in
Wilmington.
The charges against him
were larceny of an automobile,
said to have been the car he
used in the holdup, and two {
earlier cases of breaking and
entering.
Judge Alton A. Lennon fixed
bail totaling $1,000 in the
three cases.
"I don't even remember going
over there," Thorpe told
the court when he was questioned
concerning the Bruns,
| wick robbery.
L i ??^^
I
P.-T. A. County
Council Meets
! . -7- .
. First County Council Meettl
ing Of Year Will Be
: i Held Saturday At Shal \
lotte High School Audi
torium
The first County Council meetI
ing of the Parent-Teacher Asso!
ciation of this year will be held
!at the Shallottc high school Sat ;
urday morning, October 30, at I
r 10:30 o'clock. Local Parent-Tea-]
i cher presidents are urged to at- j
' tend and report the outstanding
r project which their school is un!
dertaking for this year. Other'
I officers and chairmans of com- j
. mittees are urged to attend this j
; meeting. J
Speakers for the county meet- j
i1 ing will be Mrs. J. A. Flowers,
Jr., of New Bern, State Parent
Teacher Association field worker.
> Mrs. C. E. Stephens, of Council,
-1 new district director and others.
(Continued on page four)
.^robably Came
ork City Slicker
| But, so tar as personally engaging
in the taking of eels |
or other fish for the market j
I is concerned, he will have to
wait one year until he has j
established residence.
This sounds like a very
slippery business with slick
possibilities, but it not out of
reason. Eels abound by the
million in the Cape Fear
River and in every big and
little stream that empties inI
to it. While the eel is not
highly touted as a local article
of diet there are niarI
kets where this product commands
a price that looks like
a premiujn over that of some
of the most highly rated food
fishes.
The eels are here, plenty
of them. The New Yorker
has been invited to come on
and engage in the business
Iof procuring them for the |
market
41 ? ]
1 News paper In
Southport, N.
1F
Southport *
\j
A
m
L
* L
&
V B:
^gggggggggtm ' Bi
. P
..... .. si
troyers in the United States,^
she came through the local]di
junty people are planning to|o
Customs house in Wilming- P;
ai
Citizens To Hold
Advertising Meet|
Thursday Evening ;S
Plans For Year-Round Ad-'g
vertising Program Will a]
Be Discussed By South-, c,
port's Citizens And Busi-jM
ness Men
COMMITTEES ARE f
NAMED BY MAYOR 1
Are To Submit What They1
Consider Workable Plan |
To Meeting Tomorrow ~ |
Night In County
Courthouse
A city-wide mass meeting has i
been called for Thursday night.
in the courhouse at Southport by I
Mayor John D. Ericksen to dis- j
cuss plans for an all-year adver- ?'
tising campaign that is designed ^
to promote local interests. | ^
A preliminary meeting was
held last Thursday, and at that U1
time a committee was appointed,n(
to discuss workable plans for,
raising an adevrtising fund that S1
will make it possible for a re- P
presentative local agency to work , tt
in full cooperation with the ad- j
vertising group of the State | e<
Board of Conservation and Devel-I J'
opment. 1P'
The following list of accom- j
plishments and of future aims J gi
has been compiled for local con- vl
sideration: I w
(Continued On Page 4.) w
Hospital Is On !j
Approved List fc
. r
Brunswick County Hospital,;"
At Southport, Is One Of
67 Institutions In North
Carolina Recognized By j
American College Sur-! f
geons 11
The Brunswick County Hospital, j
at Southport, is on the list approved
by the American College j
of Surgeons, and is one of the ?j
67 institutions in North Carolina
receiving this recognition.
Officially announcing the 1937,
list of 2,621 Approved Hospitals,
at the Twentieth Annual Hospital
Standardization Conference which
opened in Chicago Monday morning
with the Clinical Congress 4of
the American College of Sur- m
geons. Dr. George Crile, Chairman in
of the Board of Regents, said: oi
"The 1937 Hospital Standard- a|
ization survey concludes two dec- c<
ades of successful effort by the | hi
American College of Surgeons tojal
assist the hospitals of the United c<
States and Canada in rendering
better care of the sick and in- c<
jured. Today 2,621 hospitals arc ft
awarded full or provisional ap-1 in
proval. At the end of the first E
field survey in 1918, only 89 hos-iT
pitals were sufficiently well!cl
equipped, organized and admin- iir
istered to merit approval." I b
Commenting further upon the'
surey, Dr. Crile declared: B
"The fact that one out of ev- j E
ery 14 persons in the United P
States and Canada went to some jd'
hospital in 1936, with the proba-! in
bility that the same ratio will | lc
be maintained in 1937, suggests I
how important hospitals are to | C
every community. At this rate, iu
if we assume that different in-1a
dividuals each year enter hos- j
pitals, every 14 years the en-.
(Continued on page 4.)
I I
P0R1
A Good Comr
G., Wednesday, Oct<
baptist Meeting I
Next October At
Prospect Church j
nnual Session Of Bruns-1
wick Baptist Association
Was Held Wednesday1
And Thursday Of Last I
Week At Mill Creek
IT
ARGE ATTENDANCE
DURING MEETING
??. N
ast Week's Sessions Were
Well Attended And Large
Congregations Enjoyed
Messages From The
Speakers
The annual meeting of the d(
runswick Baptist Association sl
as held Wednesday and Thurs- p
ly of last week at Mill Creek tc
aptist church and was featured c<
f the appearance on the pro- p<
am of several prominent guest
>eakers. w
Next year's meeting will be Si
sld at the Prospect Baptist T
lurch on Wednesday and Thurs-.w
ly after the third Sunday in cl
ctober. The Reverend B. R. ui
age was re-elected moderator cf
id John Jenrette was re-elected
erk. a
Last week's meeting was char- C
:terized by an enthusiastic re- tt
>onse on the part of the con- ni
negations to the prominent vis- _
ing speakers that appeared on _
le program. Included were R. D. I
Dvington, of Thomasville; Dr. 1
R. Collum, Wake Forest; the
everend C. A. Upchurch, of
aleigh, who represented the
iblical Recorder; "G .G. Page,
umni secretary of Campbell "
ollege: M. O. Greene, of Kings
fountain Association; and the
(Continued on Page 4)
,ong List Tried
Before Recorder
eport Is Made Of Cases |
Disposed Of Before'
Judge Joe W. Ruark
Last Week And On Preceeding
Wednesday
Numerous cases were disposed
: here in Recorder's Court last
Wednesday before Judge Joe W.
uark.
Tennyson Robinson, white, was p
for slander, but an action of ~
)1 pros was taken. I
D. Z. Ward, white, was char- J
ed with threatening to destroy
roperty. Action of nol pros wasj i
ilrftM in tViIo no oo
men in uno vacb.
Dr. D. T. Atkins, white, plead-|
i guilty to charges of assault, jc
jdgment was suspended upon
lyment of the costs.
L. C. Rourk, white, pleaded
iilty to a technical charge of
dating traffic laws. Judgment i
as suspended and' the costs
ere remitted.
M. H. Pratt, white, was found b
iiilty of transporting intoxicat- J ((
g liquor. Judgment was suspen- j a|
xi upon payment of the costs. a]
Johnie Bryant, colored, was fl
lund guilty of driving a motor ^
:hicle without an operator's li-: ^
:nse. Judgment was suspended J fl
Jon payment of the costs. ' A
Elder Hewett, white, was found j g
(Continued on Page Four) ja,
ixams For 4-H b
Club Members *
-?: I
lealth Project Is Part Of ] Si
Work Expected To Be (hi
Carried On During Year
By Members; Mrs. Lou
H. Smith Will Co-operate ~
I
One of the requirements of j I
H club work is that every i
ember carry a Health Project |
i addition to a home economics
agricultural project, the home
fent has arranged with the
junty nurse for a series of
salth examinations to be given
t various schools throughout the
)unty.
Mrs. Lou H. Smith has kindly
jnscnted to follow this up with i
second examination next spr- j
ig, recording each score in the
(rl's 4-H health record book,
his, together with the records
ich individual girl keeps durig
the school year, gives a
asis next spring for selecting
ot only the queen of health for
runswick county but also the
irl who has made greatest imrovement
in her health score
uring the year. The final scorig
will, of course, be done by a
ical physician.
This service is free to all 4-H
lub members, and each one is
rged to be present and take j
dvantage of it.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday, November 1, Bolivia
(Continued on page 4.)
r pil
nunity
ober 27th, 1937 rvzusi
Jrunswick Nati
Wilmingtc
&
oseph Rourk, Born In
Brunswick County And
Reared In Southport,
Named Last Week To
Succeed Chief Joseph
Lane
AKES OFFICE ON
FIRST OF NOVEMBER
ew Chief Likes Southport J
And Is Frequent Visitor
Here; Has Relatives In
Southport And Shallotte
Joseph Rourk, named Satur- \
ly by Mayor Tom Cooper to ;
icceed Joseph Lane as Chief of
olice for the city of Wilming- j
in, is a native of Brunswick |
>unty and was reared at Southjrt.
"I don't know anywhere in the orld
I'd rather live than at '
Duthport", the new chief said '
uesday when interviewed in j
Wilmington. "I never miss a
lance to go down there, and I
sually manage to go when I 1
in do some hunting or fishing." 1
His brother, Charlie Rourk, has
home here, and his nephew, j1
rawford Rourk, is engaged in
le fishing and shrimping businao
of C!/MjfV?r*/M'f "T ltlfP tPT> I !
too OC UVUHlj/ui t. a. ? ?v g - , |
^ew U.S. Destr
Through City
*
'TWOULD BE BETTER I
IF CATS LAID EGGS
Sylvia, the five - year - old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Huntly, was playing in
the back yard of their home
one morning last week when
she came running in and calling
excitedly, "Oh, Mother! A
Come see what Miss Louise's j
hens have hatched."
There was no denying her
insistant young daughter, who
eagerly led the way to the
chicken house in the backyard I
of the Dr. D. I. Watson home. '
"There," she said triumphantly,
pointing to three baby
kittens.
4uch Moving Is
Going On Locally
e v e r a I Families Move
From One Apartment To
Another And Into Other,
Homes During Past Fewj
Days
The past week or ten days has j
een one of unusual activity for ^
imilies moving into new homes1
rid apartments. Last week Mr.1
id Mrs. G. W. Bunker moved I
om the Dozier apartments into I
le Mrs. J. W. Jelks apartment; j
Tr. and Mrs. Bill Wells moved
om their home on Atlantic i
venue to the recently renovated i
erg house on Moore Street. Mr.
nd Mrs. M. R. Saunders moved ]
om the Leinhert apartment in- j i
> the house vacated by the !
fells.
In the business district James
fard, former cnrollee at Camp, i
apona. has opened a business j i
sxt to Arthur's store. The i
outhport Shoe Repair Shop has !
;en moved from next door to
le Amuzu Theatre into the same ' i
(Continued on Page four) <
-uckless Sea Gi
Of Scientif
Saturday the weather roan j
did not hold out any promise
of good sport fishing
for the next day. In fact. '
his predictions were so much
the reverse of anything good <
that parties in various por- |
tions of the state were noti- |
fied by telegraph to stay at j
home. ;
But the warning went unheeded
by two Raleigh physicians,
Dr. Emmett Rand
and Dr. Harold Glascock.
Everybody knows that where
there are two doctors there
is need for an undertaker,
so these visitors were accompanied
to Southport by H.
Paul Yelverton, of undertaking
fame, and Alfred Wallin,
the rank and file being from
Raleigh.
Sunday arrived as a cold
day, a rough day. But the
two doctors, the undertaker
and their one companion,
who did not realize that he
.OT
1ED EVERY WEDNESDAY
ve Named ^
>n Police Chief '
? j
ha'
JOE ROt'RK ch
vis
iown and go out on the boat .
with the boys", Wilmington's new ho
police chief said. cai
For a number of years Chief- mi
elect Rourk, who will take office ?"
bu
on November 1, was engaged in ,je
the banking business in Wilming- su
ton. More recently he has serv- iai
ed as auditor for the New Han- cit
over Alcoholic Beverage Control
..H
&roup. vi,
? qu
oyer Passes s
Tuesday Noon
lir
Met At Cape Fear River th
Bar At 11:30 O'clock On gr
Tuesday Morning By Pi- Ei
lot Boat And Captain as
Bill Styron Directed The
River Trip L'
IN WILMINGTON FOR ^
NAVY DAY PROGRAM iw]
'pf
Craft Named For North |sc
Carolina And Came Here |m
From Norfolk; Will ! Fi
Will Come Down ico
The River Some
time Saturday I fij
Morning Jti
. in
The U. S. S. Blue, new destroyer
of the United States fleet, ti<
passed Southport shortly after | tu
noon yesterday on her way up Ei
river to Wilmington, where she or
will be the principal object of in- th
terest in the Navy Day celebra- fe
tion today. ar
The speedy craft was met at
the Cape Fear river bar at ap- r
proximately 11:30 o'clock Tues- ft
day morning and Captain Bill I
Styron, one of the youngest mem- j
bers of the pilot association,;
hoarded her for the trip to Wil-;
mington. At 12:10 o'clock the! p
Blue was abreast the U. S. Gov-1
ernment dock and was making J
good time.
The Blue will remain in Wil-1
(Continued on Page 4)
Senior 4-H Club a
Organized Here (be
! pr
The Home Demonstration Ag-1 jn
ent, Mrs. Marion S. Dosher, met I pc
the high school girls of South-1 ^
port high school Wednesday, and !
organized a Senior 4-H Club. The ! p?
following officers were elected: j ^
President. Delphia Lennon; j ^
rice-president, Idell Smith; sec-jnc
retary-treasurer, Vina Clemmons; I
song leader, Lillie Rogers; club hire
porter, Nancy Lancaster; pian- ^
1st, Carrie Hewett.
The club adjourned to meet _
igain the next fourth Friday, the p.
date for the meetings. I
nil Is Subject
fic Experiment;
might be along for experimental
purposes, chartered a
boat and embarked on the
bounding deep.
Towards sundown when
shadows of anxiety were
gathering in the minds of
persons on shore, along with
the encircling gloom, the
. boat hoove in sight around
Caswell point and long before
it reached its dock Undertaker
Yelverton was
broadcasting the fact that
they were bringing in 125
trout and 187 other fish of ' (
various sorts. j (
"That's not all," said Dr.
Glasscock, "you see this big (
dead seagull? Well, I was
trolling and he swooped down
and swallowed my squid,
hook and all. Before we ,
could get him aboard and Dr.
Rand and 1 could operate, he j )
died on our hands and we
have turned him over to the
undertaker." ?
The Pilot Covers 9
Brunswick County I
$1.50 PER YEAR I
inniversary Of I
Camp Sapona Is I
Observed Here I
inquet Held On Thursday I
Night In Mess Hall With 9
Number Of Ladies Guests 9
On This Special Occasion 9
VST COMMANDING jJ 3
OFFICERS SPOKE 9
imp Thrown Open To 9
Visitors During After- H
noon And Climax Was 9
Reached During The 9
Evening With 9
Dance ^9
rhc third anniversary of the 9
ablishment of Camp Sapona H
Southport was fittingly celcited
Thursday night with a ?H
nquet in the mess hall at whl- 9
a number of past officers and H
litors were present. B
Thursday afternoon was open B
use at the camp, and several 9
rloads of Southport and Wilngton
visitors were conducted
observation tours through the <B|
ildings and grounds of the mo- H
rn plant that has attracted 9
eh favorable attention in Civil- B
l Conservation Corps officials 9
Enrollees were permitted to in- 1^9
te their best girls to the ban- 9
et which was held at 6:30 ^9
:lock in the mess hall, and a
mber of Southport citizens and
eir wives also were present, tother
with other visitors.
Following the banquet, which
is another triumph for the cullary
art of the mess staff,
ere was a brief, informal proam
that was presided over by
isign K. E. Cotton, who served
toastmaster.
Guests were welcomed by Lt.
ihn W. Sample, and response
as made by Mayor John D.
ricksen. Captain J. R. Madden,
ho was in charge of the camp
hen it was moved to South>rt,
engaged in a few reminienses;
he was followed by Post
aster L. T. Yaskell. Captain
red B. Leitzsey, another past
immander, also made a few rearks,
and was followed by W.
Marr, one of the boys in the
st group to reach Southport,
vo other official visitors were
troduced to the guests.
At 9:30 o'clock in the recrcam
hall there was a dance fearing
the music of Vincent
iserman and his popular young
chestra. The hall was attracrely
decorated for the occasion,
aturing a color note of orange
id black in the hallowe'en spirit.
Repairing And
Painting Done
to i
ainters And Carpenters
Are Busy Making Improvements
In Appearance
Of Several Places In
Southport
TU- n.l.M U.,n Iwwvn
i in' [;aai itw witiw ima uccn
period of unusual activity for iflj
liiding, making repairs and Im- S
ovements and otherwise chang
g the appearance of Southport fl
imps and business places for fl
e better.
Among the homes recently re- fl
tinted are those of Captain and IS
rs. Halod St. George; Dr. and fl
rs. Frederick B. Bond; the Ar- . fl
>ld apartment; The Creech 1 fl
mic on Atlantic Avenue; the ifl
>use on the corner of Atlantic IB
venue and Nash Street; the R
(Continued on page 4.) fl
Tide Table I
Following Is the tide table ' fl
for 'Southport during the next fl
week. These hours are appro- fl
ximately correct and were fur- fl
nished The State Port Pilot fl
through the courtesy of the fl
Cape Fear Pilot's Association. fl
High Tide Eow Tide ]fl
TIDE TABUS fl
Thursday. October 28 fli
3:38 a. in. 9:43 a. m.
3:47 p. m. 10:13 p. m.
Friday, October 20
1:26 a. m. 10:30 a. m. U
4:48 p. 111. 11:02 p. iu. flj
Saturday, October 30
5:22 a. m. 11:31 a. ni.
5:42 p. m. 11:48 p. ni. fl
Sunday, October 31 |fl
5:10 a. m. 0
3:30 p. m. 12:20 p. ni. H
Monday, November 1
3:52 a. ni. 12:32 a. m.
1:13 p. m. 1:05 p. ro. fl
Tuesday, November 2 fl
1:30 a. ra. 1:15 a. m. S
1:51 p. ra. 1:49 p. ra. fl
Wednesday, November 3 . fl
3:07 a. m. 1:37 a. ra. ^fl
1:28 p. iu. 2:31 p. m. H