giwPv' Hlost 01 The News gi 4J] The Time ?jj^LVE. NO. 31 iXPD wiiliam H, 19 G'Cloc I Injuri Sti * And Head Injuries . r0Vt- Fatal to Prominent! Bouthport Citizen; Fu-J |K,ra| To Be Tomorrow j ^BlREHCl'SE OF V W B & S BURNED Of Undetermined Ori'K Caused Estimated t^Hlamage Of $5,000.00 Here Yesterday S H \V: Southport real | -'.nance man. died' |M} . -i'k this morning in j Hospital. Death, a i -ult of injuries to jjfli : j- : . -. st sustained yes^H,v aftoi 'it when he was i^Mci " i nts from the ex^K i)f ammonia tank in '5M A' B .v S. railroad ware^W.: at :- that structure was - wered at the railr ,-h rtlv after 6 o'clock. I . the fire depart citizens arrived j ? itni'. the warehouse was j e As firemen battled valr to check the flames, and I revent their spread to the see home next door, the air y rent with the noise t. explosion, and the crowd xctators that had clustered the blazing building fell . nth one accord. i the excitement of the mo- j saw what actually i ae.l to Mr. Walker. Just j to the ' Xplosion he had bepn . i.:,? iirectly behini. uie i re home, and when he was j following the blast he I :\r -: ox the ground in the [ rat i A flying fragment from j expl x. apparently had j i hin upon the head and on i *Y L. c. Fergus, whose I :r. the same block, was | 'xxi.ately to render first ( ini following a hasty exam- , M: Walker was removed ; Memorial Hospital. [ right his condition was prok extremely critical, and is given little chance to live $ the night. Walker was one of the widely known and highly tK citizens of Brunswick " For 14 years, from 1916 I h 19:;n, he was register c ai,. t for the past two { s he has served as manager i' -is Real Estate Agency . touthport. ' '* was 62 years of age and r a life long resident of Bruns- s I He was the son of r nd Charlotte Vereen r was married to the | j Ruth Evans. 1f in addition to his I a iree children, Mrs. B. \ William H. Walker, | inifl Walker, all of, )ne brother, D. Itfour siste"*J, Mrs. Dilv and Mrs. W. S. t ued on page 4) f c Governing jj ; Of Library u0 ie Sellers, Local c in, Prepared A r Rules For Library _ ml any confusion re- 1 . lions governing the 1 ic Library may be, bi following set of; compiled by Miss1 librarian, and is be-, for benefit of library i t .dent of this city in;b _ may borrow books f ary without deposit a ship fee. t* dents may borrow.y ut of a deposit of j, be refunded when v iiiurned. If iy be kept 14 days;. ' i i "7 days" and may d for two weeks. overdue are subject i one cent per day. 0 ray fine will debar; a el library. la is injured, defaced or o replaced on demand ^ or ' cost. C may be reserved on g of tv.o cents; as soon as ^ ' h ted is returned to 1 fy be person reservingj I wid be notified. ! TH1 8-PAGES 5Sp . Walker E k This Mor ies Sustaint Daughter Of M 50 Cent Debt A Stories of superior and al- I most unbelievable honesty crop ] up none too frequently and are I far outnumbered by stories of j 1 dishonesty. Most such tales are I told about the notoriously dishonest, scant attention is 1 paid the good deeds of hon- j i est folk who tread the straight 1 and norrow every day; yet these latter are the really deserving of acclaim. . i ] Rev. J. J. Adams left the < pulpit of the Baptist church at i \% nlievine years i Marsh Hen S Be Cpen I *7irst Chance Of Season For j" Local Nimrods To Show I Their Skill; May Not Get J Chance If Tide Is Not|| High DTHER HUNTING J , SEASON DATES J Jird Hunting Season To: j Open On November 28th, , This Year; Change Is , Made In Dove i Season i Drag out your shotguns and , ;et your shailow-darft rowboats . iverboard, because Monday ush :rs in ens marshhen seascn. i , However, unless the usual signs ( >cl:e themselves there'll be little I I nore than the legal right on the I < lide "of hunters before about the i * nlddle of the month, for hunting ' narrhhen is a business to be ' >ersued at full moon high tide. . September full moon is on the | ixteenth. There are a couple of points ibout the shooting season that bounty Game Warden Eustace i tuss wants cleared up. One is! (] hat no bird3 may be killed beorc sunrise nor after sunset. The ither is that no Federal stamp 3 required for marshhen hunting. I iowever, a regular hunting icense is a requisite, and woe be et nto the man who is caught with- in >ut one. ac Other dates and information ^ oncerning the hunting season has! ?> ecently been released by the be (Continued on page 4) Newspapermen When Th Not even the glamour of the in Dbacco market season in neigh- fo oring counties could check the low of newspapermen and camera es rtists into Brunswick county last of I'eek. All sections of the state bi ,-ere represented by people seek- pi lg something interesting in the le ray of news or pictures. With ei eu? exceptions, all found what ki hey were looking for. w Outhstanding, perhaps, was th .awrence Leonard, sports editor a( f The Greensboro News. ' Here ai , month ago, Leonard became pi great admirer of this section ai f Brunswick. Last week he ran hi own for a few hours with the 3iamber of Commerce man. His C ,im was to get some pictures ai or a feature story he will short- al f run In The Greensboro News, bi nddently, he advised he was com A ST. A Go< TODAY "AT / lies At ning Of sd At Fire inisier Pays kfter 24 Years rerred to in the State Port pilot as "the man who looks like Neville Chamberlain". He travels about this section selling: Bibles. About 24 years ago Miss Ella Adams, then schoolgirl daughter of the minister, bought school supplies from George McNeill's Drug Store amounting to fifty cents and charged them. At home she found that her father had been palled from his pulpit and they all left Whlteville before she could pay her piddling bill. Last Monday personally Mrs. Ella Adams Brooks stop|>ed at i A MaVaIII q Mil (inna in iVhiteville, en route to visit her rather in Southport from her home in Washington, D. C., for a sandwich, paid for the sandwich, identified herself and paid the fifty cent debt that had been forgotten many years ago. eason To Vext Monday \ Change Name Of Menhaden Boat There's no longer a boat in the local menhaden fleet called the R. B. Hawley. Not that anything has happened to the double-decked craft of Captain John D. Erikion, for she's still afloat and seaworthy. Her name's been changed. R. B. Hawley is the name of the president of the CubanAmerican Sugar Co., from whom the local boat was purchased. Her name was not changed at that time, but recently permission was granted t?y the department of commerce to change the name to U. H. Cozart, in honor of the presiient of the Brunswick Navigation Co. jood Luck On Fishing Trip >ut-Of-State Visitors Discover That Big Game Fishing From Southporl Is Plenty Good A. F. DeGreve, political writ for the United Press in Washgton, D. C., became a strong ivocate of the Gulf Stream fishg off Southport yesterday. Mrs. eGreve, who accompanied him, icame even stronger. She caught (Continued on page 4) Make News ey Go Fishing g back September 8th and 9th ir seme fishing. Another interesting and interited visitor was Mayon Parkei ' Parker Brothers, Ahoskie. The others own four county newsipers and they are rated the ading weekly newspaper publish's of North Carolina. Mrs. Par;r and little Miss Julia and Joe ere along and after staying foi tree or four days Mr. Parkei ivised he was taking them home id was going to round up a irty from Ahoskie to come dowr id go gulf stream fishing with m, about next week. Paul Pillsburry, Columbia, S owner of the Pillsbury sigr id outdoor advertising, was here so accompanied by Mrs. Pillsirry and their daughter, Mise (Continued on page four) ' * ' ATE od News paper Southport, N. C., W "FIRE Men O Suggestion For J Dedicating The New Yacht Basin From Yachting Magazine > Has Come A Tip That 1 Fleet Of Small Boats Will Be Here In October OF COURSE, YACHT BASIN COMES FIRST Delay In Beginning Dredging Operations Means That Improvements Will Have To Be Rushed The government dredge, Henry Bacon, is still pounding away day and night at the removal of a few small shoals on the inland waterway near New River. No one here knows when this task I will be rinlsnea ana permit me I vessel to come on to Southport to begin work on the new yacht basin. She was originally scheduled to come about a month ago, at the time she was released from the shipyard in Norfolk. However, a few small shoals had developed in the waterway at various points and it was considered the interest of economy that these obstructions be removed while the ship was on her way here. When she arrives, working three crews Jor 24-hours each day, she will be able to complete the new yacht basin in something' like ten or eleven days. The oil company that is to construct the r servicing facilities wi" yequire more time than that. However, - when the first yachts begin to 1 move south this fall the basin will be fully completed and the | servicing facilities wilt have been constructed to the point that all . boats can be taken care of nicely From Yachting Magazine this past week came a valuable news tip that may result in big dedication ceremonies for the basin, and possibly a big Gulf Stream fishing tournament, about the 23rd of October. One of the big yacht clubs in New York is arranging a conducted cruise of something like 100 to 150 power boats down the waterway, leaving New York October 14th. Several places down the coast are ports of call for this cruise and an effort is being made to have the longest call of all to be at the new yacht basin. Many of the boats are sport fishing cruisers that are closing j their summer fishing operations in New York and New Jersey on October 13th. The idea is to have tVio whnb flopt hprp for d^dira tion ceremonies for the yacht basin and to have all possible craft to participate in a one-day I fishing tournament on the Gulf. The fishing season here closes much later than in New York and New Jersey. With the boats ! operating there until October 13, ' it goes without saying that all sorts of big fish will still be off the Brunswick county coast when ' the fleet arrives here. Dedication ceremonies and a fishing tournament with these luxurious craft participating will result in wonderful publicity for the bagin and also for the big 1 game fishing off Southport. Fishing Good Over Week-End Gulf Stream Parties Had l Unusually Good Luck At Southport During Past , , Week-End Gulf stream and all sort of ! sport fishing got going again with a bang over the week-end. : Parties came in from all over the state, with the Greensboro ' and High Point areas apparently ! the most generously represented. The mackerel, trout and blue fishing was not so good, owing to ! the fact that the water was still i muddy. Tautogs, sheephead and i other bottom fish bit well off , Bald Head, Fort Caswell and Long Beach. Red drum also showed up on Bald Head, Cap-.' tain J. E. Pinner getting a 47- j 1 pounder and a nice catch of : smaller ones. Saturday Churchill Bragaw, of i Orton, with Jimmie Briggs, of (Continued on page 4) ? ~ v- ' - r - ' . ' r; _'j > P0R1 In A Good Con ednesday, August 28th, "kE * * * * * rdered, Jury List For September Term Superior Court Fall Term Of Criminal Court Will Convene At Southport On Monday, I September 30th JUDGE WILLIAMS WILL PRESIDE Much Interest Sure To Be Shown In Coming Trial Of Four Local Negroes Held For Assault The fall term of Brunswick | county Superior court for trial of criminal cases will convene on Monday, September 30, with Judge Clawson L. Williams of Sanford, . presiding. More than the usual amount of I interest is sure to be centered in this session because of the trial of the Southport negroes for assaulting two local officers. Not until the grand jury has investigated the facts of the case will 11 De Known just wnat, charge will be preferred against' them. j The jury list for the term was j drawn Monday while the board of, county commissioners was in session, and the following men were named for jury service: j E. D. Milliken, Ash; S. S. jciemmons, Supply; Peter Hewett, [Shallotte; H. R. Lancaster, Boljivia; M. A. Phelps, Bolivia; W. (L. Stanley, Shallotte; Robert Mc-j I Lamb, Ash; J. T. Hickman, Bol-1 ivia, G. H. Caison, Supply; T. A 1 Henry, Leland; Claude Moore, j 1 Southport; Gilbert Brown, Sup-1 ! ply; J. D. Bender, Supply; W. B.' j Phillips, Ash; S. L. Kirby, Jr., | Supply; Geo. W. McLamb, Shalilotte; B. M. McKeithan, Bolivia; A. C. Bellamy, Wampee; Harry Robinson, Southport; J. I. Gore, Winnabow; J. A. Bellamy, Ash; Mack A. Moore, Supply; C. S. Lewis, Bolivia; O. R. Mintz, Ash; J. A. McNeill, Southport; Carl Long, Wampee; M. E. Chadwick, Supply; B. W. Hewett, Shallotte; J. R. Ennis, Leland. Recorder Has A Busy Session Monday Was A Busy Day Fnr Itfcrlrro Walter M w? V HMgV ?? m?wi ??* Stanaland; Many Cases Grow Out Of Traffic Violations In Recorder's court here Mon- ' day a heavy docket was heard by Judge Walter M. Stanaland, many of the cases growing out of traffic violations. Billie Willis, white, was charg- 1 ed with driving without an operator's license. His case was re- ] manded to juvenile court for trial. Floyd Hewett, white, was found 1 not guilty of aiding and abetting ' in operating a motor vehicle without operator's license. Murdick Simmons, white, plead- j ed guilty to charges of operating without operator's license and was taxed with costs. W. A. Willet, white, pleaded I guilty to charges of reckless operation. Judgment was suspended upon payment of costs and a fine of $25.00. Daniel Kern Reeves, white, pleaded guilty to charges of being drunk and disorderly. Judgment of 30 days on the roads was suspended upon payment of a fine of $25.00 and costs. Willie Hewett, white, was found guilty of drunken driving. Sentence of 6 months on the roads was suspended upon payment of costs and a fine of $65.00, his license being revoked for 6 months. Jack Bowen, colored, pleaded guilty to charges of drunk driving. Given 6 months on the roads, this judgment was suspended upon payment of a fine of $50.00 and costs. His license was revoked for 6 months. Abraham Frink, colored, was found guilty of being a nuisance and was given 30 days on the roads. Notice of appeal was given and bond was set at $50.00. Alfred Newton, white, was found guilty of being drunk and disorderly and was given 4 months on the roads. Judgment was suspended upon payment of a fine of $25.00 and costs and upon condition that the defendant reiContinued on page 4) r pil nmunity 1940 PUBLISH Flo * * ? * * Held Ft I IN THE WA1 3C?S^E^fe? - 1 .w*r?ft^3Wl p ~. >-r^ S8iLij>WWfa?MMi ON SALE?Warehouse s are familiar to Brunswick cou of the year as they carry theii Tobacco A vera 20-Cents i * : 1 si Holiday Monday For Officials MONDAY HOLIDAY 14 Unless the board of county commissioners decides that j their first Monday meeting ;S precedent is too well establish- ! ed to be abrogated because of ! a holiday, Monday will be a 1 day of inactivity for county officials. The board has a special session Thursday. All county offices will be Jjr closed for the day Monday In g, observance of Labor Day. This will include Recorder's 01 court, which took recess Mon- tl day to meet again on Monday, ^ September 9. gi To Be Ready For " Work May 15th M. O. Nelson, Jr., of White- 01 ville, Announces That He tt And An Associate Will;o( Erect Mill M. O. Nelson, Jr.. of White- T ville, anounced Tuesday that he g? and an associate have already | purchased a 75 barrell per day | capacity flour mill and that it1 will be installed and ready for' operation on or before the 15th I sj of May. "If* Land has already been leased ~ on the corner of Thompson and 8 Virgil Streets in Whiteville for I" the erection of a building suitable for the business *1 di Approximately five or six peo- it pie will be employed to operate li, the plant, with expert millers in j a charge. Mr; Nelson says that the (e equipment to be installed will be | the best available to manufacture | 100 per cent bleached flour either: plan or self-rising?as the cus- j P( tomer desires. ( j'? Going Back To Trip With Fin Many people do not know \ that the purchaser and also the i driver of the first automobile < ever owned in Brunswick county are still living. What be- t came of the car history sayeth t not. I It was back in the winter, of s 1911, same year that the rail- 1 road came to Southport, when v J. J. Loughlin, Sr., went to s Henderson and purchased a Cor- a bett automobile, the first ever r bought by any citizen of Bruns- t wick. The contraption was c painted a bright red and was j topless. Its engine was some- r thing in the order of those that e were latter used in the Model I T. Fords. 1 The machine cost $450.00 v there in Henderson. Mr. Loughlin paid the expenses of bring- I ing it here, used it 5 days and ( paid out $210.00 more for re- s pairs. He then sent it to Wil- i mington and placed it in Clyde t Lassiter's garage for repairs. c That is the last he wants to i remember it. At the time there < OT ED EVERY WEDNESDAY CAT * * * t >r Grar ?* i REHOUSE |; ->- '-* ^y'v^w SJfwEL^y^^BB it * cenes like the one above nty farmers at this season 1940 crop to market. ges Over \t Whiteville mith Sflvs That the White- ! ville Market Is Enjoying The Best Season Thus j Far In History [AS ALREADY PASSED THREE MILLION MARK ales For First Six Days Of This Year Are Al- j ready Far Out In Front Of Those Last . Year "It's the best season, so far, i the history of our market", lid M. S, Smith, sales supervisor | t the Whiteville tobacco market lis morning. "Today's sale will 5 the largest sale of locally rown tobacco in the history of ic m&rke't and the quality of the Iferings is somewhat better than as sold last week." "So far this has been the best jeing week of the market, with ily six sales days thus far le market sold a total of 5,500,)0 pounds of tobacco for an ofcial average of $20.20 per cwt. he first four sales for the 1939 ason showed a total of 2,898,iS pounds sold for a total of 545,469.14, making an average of 18 81 per hundred pounds. Bodes selling more tobacco during le first four sales the market lows a much better average per mind. The break of tobacco offered toly is definitely better in qual y as a whole, Mr, Smith be- ! >ves, and today's sale will be record breaker he thinks. He ie!s sure that bidding will be uch more spirited than heretore because the break is com>sed mostly of locally grown bacco. ? The First it Automobile vere a number, of cars in Wilnington and garages were just :oming into being. J. J. Loughlin, Jr., then foung Joe, was chauffeur of he car during his fathers brief >eriod of ownership, which reiulted in the loss of something I ike $666.00. Joe is credited ! vith having driven the machine | ibout town a bit. and to have j ictually steered it for several | niles out in the country and j lack. This trip out in the j :ountry, as well as the entire leriod of ownership, was in the niddle of winter. When the ipochical trip to Smith's Cross toads and back was completed, foung Joe forgot to drain the vater from the engine. Despite the fact that the } Brunswick County Chamber of j Bommeree swears that it never J mows, sleets or freezes much ! n Brunswick county, it froze hat night and bursted the head dean out of the one and only lutomobile engine in Brunswick :ounty. ,r ? The Pilot Covers Brunswick County $1.50 PER YEAS IaR ? * * * * id Jury Four Southport Negroes Ordered HeldJFor Trial Coroner's Inquest Into The Death Of Charles W. Easley Was Held In Brunswick County Courthouse Monday TWO OF ACCUSED PRISONERS FREED Chief Of Police Mel Lewis And Dr. L. C. Fergus Took Stand To Testify Before Coroner Caison Following an inquest into the death of Charles W. Easley, for- 1 mer Southport peace officer, Monday night in the Brunswick , county courthouse, Coroner John G. Caison ordered four of the Southport negroes charged with being among his assailants held for err and iurv investigation. Nelson Hanklns and James B Bowen are being held under bond fl of $2,000.00 each; James Green ' fl is being held under $1,000 bond B and Snooks Clemmons is being B held under bond of $500. B The coroner's jury found no B cause for holding Toppy Hanklns B nor Robert Hewett, and James B Joyner and Douglas Swain both B have been at liberty for three jlB weeks after an action of not pros 1 fl with leave was taken as to them. : fl Dr. L. C. Fergus, Southport '. fl surgeon, who performed an au- , fl topsy upon the body of Mr. Eas- fl ley a short time following bis J fl death, stated that the prim?Vy fl cause of death was hemorrhage from a gastric ulcer; secondary cause of death was pneumonia; fl contributory caijse of death were ,-B blows sustained by Mr. Easley on fl the night of July 14, said to have fl been inflicted while he was as- fl sisting Police Chief Mel Lewis to make an arrest. Dr. Fergus stat-, fl ed that Mr. Easley had been . fl totally disabled from that time B until the date of his death. Officer Lewis was the first and B only other witness to take the B stand. He told of the officers' B scuffle with Nelson Hankins as B they sought to place him In their B car following his arrest, and he B related having seen others whom B he identified strike Mr. Easley B during the fight. B In their verdict, members of B the coroner's jury recommended B that Nelson Hankins, James B Green, James Bowen and Snooks B Clemmons be held under sufficl- B ent bail for grand jury investiga- B tion. It also was their recommen- B dation that Tippy Hankins, Rob- B ert Hewett and James Joyner be | released. Solicitor David Sinclair attended the hearing, and he publicly > BB congratulated the jury members upon the soundness of their ver- , |B diet. "That was a fine verdict," ^B he told them. "We want to hold B the ones we believe are guilty, . but those who apparently had "* ^B nothing to do with the trouble had better be turned loose now B than later. I believe that you i H (Continued on page 4) B Tide Table I Following Is the tide table B for Soutbport during the neafi B week. These hours are apprw B ximately correct and were fur? B nished The State Port PQet B through the courtesy of the B Cape Fear Pilot's Association B High Tide Lew XMf B TIDE TABLE B Thursday, August 29 B 1:02 a. m. 10:09 a. m. H 4:23 p. m. 11:00 p. m. |l Friday, August 30 H 3:02 a. m. 11:04 a. m. flj 5:21 p. m. 11:50 p. m. B Saturday, August 31 B 5:55 a. m. 11:58 a. m. B 6:11 p. m. fl Sunday, September 1 B 6:44 a. m. 0:41 a. m. B 7:00 p. m. 12:53 p. m. H Monday, September 2 B 7:80 a. m. 1:80 a. m. I 7:46 p. m. 1:46 p. m. H Tuesday, September 3 H 8:17 a. m. 2:17 a. m. B 8:33 p. m. 2:37 p. m. B Wednesday, September 4 . H 9:05 a. m. ' 3:03 a. m. ^B 9:23 p. m. 3:26 p. m. I 11