? * ^ r ? PAGE FOUR faktnUfaws ahcmt tfie AAA and ot/iek/ XT NSION WORM yj c/rorrv A/us SB , _ LotuUy Jigenr J. E. DOE Jrhe home garden contest in the ab< Calabash community was spon- n0( sjred by the Rev. J. Yeon Ma- , lone, rector, and Miss Elizabeth J^Murray, church worker of the Calabash Episcopal Church. bei jff had the pleasure of helpingj wa to judge the home gardens in the ;hai pis Ifai -V !eig I KEEP MV SMOKING ON k Ht "THE SLOW-BURNING SIDE I"? WITH CAMELS. THEY GIVE ( ME EXTRA MILDNESS AND ] the EXTRA COOLNESS J j / pe: PATRICIA ENGLISH, col noted lion trainer in{ ?t lor ' L. , In recent laboratory tests, j" CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of the 15 other "? of the largest-selling brands | tested ? slower than any of | | them. That means, on the av- j j SP< erage, a smoking plus equal to th( ICCI 'If | us< Wi ; ' SMOKES lik PER Ke PACK/ Z ? j oU FOR EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA *>a: COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVORCAMELS; Slow-Burning Costlier Tobaccos I Cc?r^ wj^ y it s ou to hel] ^ W We are alwa^ discuss the ere local busines and to advanci funds whene\ I t I K WACCA BANK & TI WHITEV FAIRMONT CHADBO CLARKTON TABOK C NORTH CA] Member Federal Deposit . MY FRIENDS, I am counting up port in t,hc second pi Saturday, June 22. I w -vote and influence. I * ! W. S. (BILL ' "The Friendly )SON jve contest on Friday afterMi, June 7. , iVe found all the gardens to in first-class shape, so far as ing free of weeds and grass s concerned; and most of them d a large variety of vegetables mted. In a few gardens the nilies were getting as many as ;ht different vegetables to use this time. A few had as many eighteen different vegetables 3wing in their gardens now. Df the eleven gardens judged, ;re is an average of 766 runig row feet of vegetables for :h family member. In otherrds, there are 45,195 rows of sretables intended to feed 59 aple. We consider these gardens irth anywhere from $50.00 to 10.00 each, and they are a fine monstration of what can be ae along the seashore in the y. of producing a part of the >d necessary for giving the nilies a balanced diet. I underind from Miss McMurray that good supply of the surplus jetables will be canned for nter use. The people in the Calabash nmunity are fortunate in hav; such leaders as the Rev. Male and Miss McMurray, who ve with the help of the people, ilt a nice little church and are w building a community hall side tho church. Also, one notices that a te.ge 1honoath the liveoaks across s road from the church and nmunity building has been aned up and will probably be id this summer for recreational rposes under supervision. I noed a croquet set for the use of ung and older people. Looks e people in this community are tting ready to begin getting ire fun and satisfaction out of tt would probably pay some ler communities to follow Calash in this respect. TO HOLD REVIVAL rhere will be a two weeks rival at New Hope Presbyterian urch, Winnabow, beginning the st Sunday in July. The Rev. G. Wilson, of Wilmington, will Id the meeting assisted by the stor, Rev. J. D. Withrow. v business [> business ITH CREDIT 1? A fs teauy iu idit needs of ;s concerns, e lhe needed rer possible. kMAW tUST CO. ILLE (CRN ROSEHILL 31'V SOUTHPORT ROLINA Insurance Corporation on your loyal sup imary election on ill appreciate your ) WELLS Candidate" ii AT PRESBYTERIAN oui There will be two preaching j,a. services Sunday at Southport . Presbyterian church, at 11 o'clock in the morning and at 8 o'clock ^ in the evening. The Young Peo- pel pies League will meet at 7:15 o'clock Sunday evening. wij we MRS. CRAPON BETTER ca< The condition of Mrs. C. M. ^ Crapon, who has been ill at her Pei home here during the past 10- ed days, is improved. ne: of THE WARlN REVIEW s , ws (This is the first in a series of wc weekly articles of world wide inTh tcrest). gri By Gene O'Brien be: To inaugurate tnis series we Ch will go back to 1933 for a review lor of events and statements lead- j pk ing up to the present conflict. : Ns j Here we will quote the numerous ; em I promises and ideals set forth by j ha I Adolph Hitler of Germany-all as Be worthless as wildcat mining j po stock. The broken vows are in in| quotation marks. siv February, 1933. "Our main : point is that the government let won't lie or swindle. We want to j coi be true friends to a peace which i will at least heal wounds from FI which we have all suffered." S May 1933. "Germany, France and Poland will continue to exist, g Germany wants nothing she is not ready to give to others ... oi Germany will tread no other path a: than that laid down by the trea- ni ties and have no thought of in- fc vading any country." bi October, 1933. "The Poles can- tl not think of Europe without i ai Germany and Germany cannot j bi think of Europe without thej p] [ Poles." I ei January, 1934. "The statement j T that Germany plans to coerce i se Austria is absurd and cannot be j ui sustained. We do not wish to interfere with the rights of others, b< to restrict their lives, to oppress ai or subjugate any race." sc August, 1934. "We are filled B with the unconditional wish to o] make the greatest possible con- w tribution to preserving peace." O 1935. "Germany neither intends J c to interfere with or annex Aus- ni tria nor to conclude an Ansch- s\ luss. We are the bulwark of the tc west against Bolshevism and will Si combat it, meeting terror with vi terror and violence with viol- N ence". sc January, 1936. "We cannot re- ol peat often enough, that we are di a peace-loving nation and after lo three years X believe I can re- n< gard the German struggle for lo equality as concluded." One t\ month later the German army tc occupied the Rhineland and denounced L/Ocarno. The gullibles, ]a England and France, were bomb- D ed with more promises and pro- la paganda and continued to believe ai the words of hypocrisy as handed ai out by Hitler. Their slogan was- ti 'Be careful-we can't risk a war'. March 1936. "We have no claim w to make on Europe except to live cc exactly as the others. We have tt in mind a legal order of Euro- m pean national states with equal fi rights." ie September, 1936. "Bolshevism is a mad, bastial doctrine-a threat w to us. I cannot make a pact with it a regime whose first act is not al j the liberation of workmen. In ti I Russia there is devcstation, grim tc I on/1 Tr? HoriYionv ol 1I1U1UC1 till 14 1 villi. All vvuiiuiij i (I I there is laughter, happiness and1 tt beauty." I gi "1937. "The period of so-called j ni surprises is over. Germany is a! c? guarantor of peace because she st warns all those who from Mos- ni cow endeavor to set the world m in flames." ni February, 1938. "Germany re- si spects Polish rights and all fric- m tion has been removed between j the nations making it possible to j w work together in true amity." On j bl March 11th Germany marched in- j si to Austria and took over the' a government. ti May 1938. "Our motto is-Never w War Again . . . We have assured bi Modern Men Farmers and m families have long s preciate the value oi ern stores where sto kept clean and fresh When you find combined with hone! bility you find men best. These are fes tried to incorporate i Shallotte Tr. HOBSON KIRBY SHALLOTTE THE STATE PORT r neighbors that they need re no fear of German aggresn i . . September 1938 . . . e Sudetenland is our last Euroin territorial claim." lanuary, 1939. "We have one 3h to make for this year-that may contribute to the pacifiion of the whole world. I think :re will be a long period of ice". Czechoslovakia was seizMarch 15th and Memel anted one week later. The risk war was too great for the lies, though, and Nazism went suppressed. April, 1939. "I have always upId the necessity of the Polish rridor." Russo-German pact ,'ned August 21, 1939. Poland is invaded and captured two eks later and on September 3rd ; Allies quietly declared war. e risk of war had been too eat while they could get such autiful promises. Possibly, amberlain would have held off iger with more of these idges.. The result is that the izi war machine had such an ormous advantage that they ve now rolled over Norway, lgium (with the help of LeoId) and Holland. At this writ! they have completed a decie rout of Northern France. NEXT WEEK: Latest war bulins with comments of foreign [ respondents. oating Prep School ipends Several Days Here (Continued from page one) tands on its side in a storm. But it is the school-boy crew t this 98-foot steel schooner id the voyage they took that lake the story. Landlubbers, >r the most part, they had to jgin ignominiously for two or iree days while the ship lay ichored, learning how to reak out and furl sail, steer a lotted course and all the oth chores on a sailing vessel, he rudiments mastered, they >1 forth to nnnlv them in act al practice. And so last September the )ys with Mr. and Mrs. Pond ad the cook, headed down the >metimes quiet waters of the ay for Norfolk and then the len, oftentimes wallowing aters of the Atlantic Ocean, ut between Cape Henry and ape Charles they sailed, begining to get the feel of the veils, and south around Hatiras to the coastal ports of authport, Charleston, Jacksonlle and Miami. Thence to assau in the Bahamas and luthward through the Tongue ' the Ocean, sailing only in aytime and always with a okout posted for coral "nigjrheads" and for ocean shalws that ranged as low as vo feet in depth, slowly down i Puerto Rico. And from there to tropical nds with the names of Haiti, ominican Republic, Virgin lands, Cuba, Tortuga Island, id leisurely northward again fter a long while, with the irn of the sun in its orbit. By day they sailed, so many atches at their stations exeiting the master's orders with le snap of old seamen, so any hours (never less than ve and a half) at their studs. Trigonometry they learned ithout realizing it, painlessly. was necessary in the adsorbing daily task of navigaon which they were learning 10. Passing mark in these and 1 ntlinr onliioof c urga 1 flfi antl ley understood why. No marin of error was allowable in ivigation, and it seemed logiil to apply the same strict .andard to other studies. And it only that. If they didn't take their daily perfect grades. > meals, no go-ashore, no lending money until they did lake them. But, ah, it was fun. The arm sun and the cool greenlue ocean; dungarees and leakers; fishing?they caught 1,500-pound shark in the opics. They could shoot birds ith the stipulation that every ird brought down had to be naBKBOHnP chandising embers of their ince come to aptrading at mod?cks of goods are and up-to-date. these features sty and dependa:handising at its itures we have nto our business. ading Co. , Proprietor n. c. PILOT. SOUTHPORT. N. C. eaten. That let out the albatross, and after one bitter experience it preserved the seagull species from any further molesting. There were trips ashore, and trading clothes, fish hooks, soap and the like to natives for voodoo drums, mats, hats, curios and presents for parents back home. An empty, scrubbed can was good for a dozen bananas, each party to the trade highly pleased at the bargain he was getting. There were lazy porpoises that followed the "Morning Star" for days at a time, so tame the boys would reach down and ride them with one foot. There was rough weather, and there were days when the breeze stirred so lightly that the 250-horsepower Diesel had to be pressed into service. There were trips ashore in the two Chriscrafts, or sailing in the diminutive red-sheeted little sailing boat the "Morning Star" carried. (Cut and story courtesy THE ; CHARLOTTE NEWS) DISTRICT MEET-" NOW IN SESSION (Continued From Page 1) R. Harrill, state 4-H club leader and Miss Frances McGregor, his assistant. A highlight of the day's activities was the picnic lunch spread beneath the trees in the grove about the courthouse at the noon hour. Recreational activities and a dress revue were the features of ] the afternoon program. LEGION AUXILIARY ELECTS OFFICERS (Continued on uage 4.) tion is to be held June 25-27 at High Point. During the business session it was reported that $100.00 had been paid on the pledge the organization made to furnish one of the rooms in the Dosher Memorial Hospital ..nnex. It was also announced that all obligations to state and national headquarters for 1939-40 have been met. Appoint Alternates For Republican Judges (Continued on uage 4.) Longwood, L. M. Steward; Ash, Ira Long; Waccamaw, John Smith; Exum, Oston Phelps. There will be no further registration for the primary, except those who have become of age or otherwise have become qualified since the closing of the registration for the first primary. Tuesday, June 25 the registrar will meet at the court house to canvas returns of the primary. SUPERINTENDENT IS ENCOURAGED OVER BIG APPROPRIATION (Continued from page one) in that the money for these projects is in the form of a loan instead of an outright grant. This increased appropriation, said Mr. Bishop, would indicate that there will be ample funds available for the expansion of all projects and that an intensive campaign will be carried on in the development of new extensions. With these facts in mind i those people in various sections I throughout the area served by the Brunswick Electric Membership Corp. project who are not yet receiving service should, in the near future, put forth every effort to secure the necessary memI bership to qualify the building ot lines to uieir communities in order that we may be able to take full advantage of the possibilities in the R. E. A. program during the next fiscal year of the government. SOCIAL SECURITY AID TO COUNTY (Continued from Page 1) al Social Security Act, through last year, it is estimated from official sources by Charles G. Powell, chairman of the N. C. Unemployment Compen sation Commission. Brunswick county received a total of $84,288.82, divided as follows: Old Age Assistance, $29,621.00; Old Age and Survivors Insurance, $1,458.45; Unemployment Compensation, $13,258.37; Aid to Dependent Children, $13,455.00; Aid to the Blind, $3,966.00; and the five services, $22,500.00. Eighteen counties received more than half, $14,751,181.53, or 50.6 per cent of these funds; 15 counties received $13,356,710.65, or 45.8 per cent; ten counties received $10,697,110.20, or 36.7 per cent; and five counties received 23.77 per cent, or $6,925,893.64. The five counties receiving 23.77 per cent of the total for the State are, in order and amounts: Guilford, $1,652,425.64; Mecklenburg, $1,485,325.97; Forsyth, $1,438,687.16; Gaston, $1,193,139.30, and Buncombe, $1,158,315.56. The next five added to the first five to receive 36.7 per cent of the total, are Durham, $1,016^881.61; Rockingham, $731,320.18; Wake $696,753.17; Davidson, $649,109.62; Alamance, $677,151.98. The eight other counties, added to the ten above, which receive slightly more than half of the total amount, are: Rutherford, $588,586.73; New Hanover, $539,957.27; Cabarrus, $529,203.21; Catawba, $515,104.26; Rowan, $486,748.98; Iredell, $471,101.59; Robeson, $468,871.97; Cleveland, $454,497.32. And the other seven counties, added to the 18 listed, making the 25 counties which re?? ceived more than 60 per cem of | It is al the total, are Wilson, 5435,177.04; of the C< Pitt, 5430,594.50; Halifax, 5423,- every farm 249.40; Edegcombe, 5420,174.02; man who t Surry, 5407,063.12; Nash, 5405,- sel? on tl 144.14; Richmond, 5386,913.16. control be Counties receiving the smaller tunity for s amounts are Camden, 530,146.16; tjlat every Tyrrell, 537,079.51; Clay, 538,358.- ^ presente 07; Hyde, $41,328.59; Pamlico, QUr (obacc1 $47,341.51; Currituck, $47,343.39; time that Dare, 550,959.26; Alleghany, $51,- or not the 648.92; Perquimans, $53,423.90; jn effect? , Jones, $57,393.10. not they v _ " for one ye Brunswick Tobacco Farmer To Vote On Control July 20 (Continued from Page 1) ROUTINJ regarding the control of tobacco BE and tobacco situation before him (Contin in deciding how he wishes to mons, whit vote on this most important ques- Tommie tion. and failed Other facts and details will be charges o presented to the County com- Capias was mittee on Thursday of this week Tommie and as soon as the committee has ed guilty received all of these details, they driving anc will at once give publicity to Judgment it in order to get this informa- payment oi tion to every farmer within the costs. His i county. Prior to July 20, the voked for County committee will hold meet- C. D. insrs in every township to dis- found guilt cuss proposed changes with the given i m growers and also give last min- Judgment ute information as to the condi- payment ,o tions of the tobacco situation. $35.00. CARLOAD DIXIE PRC BED . . SPRING AND MATTRESS ff\ $5.00 each gj I Smart Windsor bed of strong metal; brown enameled . . . TWp 90-coil spring with crimp top 5" R? and steel drop cross slats in faR |-g orchid enamel finish. 45-lb. I soft cotton mattress. V ' St; BUY ANYTHING TOTALING $1 ?ON EASY PAYME ALWAYS" ? " MSTER-MI^ED ^ ^ HOUSE PAINT $2.69 gal. i IN 5-GAL. LOTS Always of Top Quality, be- JJ2r cause?always made of the finest ingredients obtainable?One gallon covers 450 <S5 square ft. (2 coats) of sur- 1 / face in good condition. \J^/ Screen 1(1. ML ENAMEL, qt. J7C Seroco BARN AOj* AN^PAINT, Gal. V5C ======= WILM1 WEDNESDAY, ^Jn^, M so the sincere desire Noah Hardwick/^^^B rnnty committee that tried for violating er and every business- law. Judgment was win vishes to express him-" Robert Holden and le great question of er* Holden, white, who. ^B given ample oppor- last week for assault hc^^B mch expression in order case dismissed Upon possible fact that can that each pay the costs C^*H rd will be prrsented to Irvin Waters, colors lti^B a farmer prior to the week for aiding and they vote on whether receiving stolen good y wish control to be not guilty. *= and if so, whether or ? ffi| rish it to be in effect LIVE-AT-HOME H ar or three years. MEETS P|?> J (Continued From PiT? feels that it is rnorf*? E SESSION than ever before tha>t;>::'^B FORE RECORDER under their program ued from page 1.) the food, feed, seed ^l!? e. with assault. on the farm. Morev to L^? Ellis, white, was called items may be a little mn B to appear to answer than usual another vea^1^! f reckless operation. Late summer, fan a , i issued. gardens, chickens. ]jves, <? Prevatte, white, plead- and other topics of to charges of drunk be discussed at these 1 was given 4 months. Farmers will also have was suspended upon tunity to ask questions 1)1 f a fine of $50.00 and ing topics which they W<#,H driver's license was re- to have cleared. 90 days. The following schedule,* Babson, white, was observed: 'H :y of assault and was Monday, June 17, 2 . ? onths on the roads, lotte school; Tuesday, .w^B was suspended upon p. m. Waccamaw school v.^B -J?- -,n n ' f costs ana a ime ui uay, juik xv, l p. m j, | (over county agent's office I OF SAVINGS! )GRESS SALE f OIL RANGE $2 down. $3 Monti 0 OR MORE Reg. 39c ^ ;NTS? value Z4t ? 'iRIDE FOR HEALTH BOYS' and GIRL'S mil r i r. IN 2 OFF I "When Bought With Red Tube I Our Regular List Price 1st LINE.. 1st QUALITY I ALLSTATE I SAFETY TREAD TIRES BE SAFE WITH OUR B UNCONDITIONAL 18-MONTHS GUARANTEE J INGTON, N. C. 8

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