jie Pilot Covers ! I flrunwick County m^THIRTEEN ~Nol ft. Caswe, I U.S. Nav IBaseAlU * >fc~ I, Official Announcement [r :rem Washington, D. CI I yesterday Huts fcnd Tb|| B speculation K e g a r ding I " InCHAsi price B IS NOT REVEALED I ,i Does Not Include En- ' Krt 2600-Ac re Tract, But , H Only 300-Acre Improv- i B ed Area In Seawall H-:, \.,vy ivjurtment com7Vk.iv negotiations of months duratiog for the ttlasc of historic Ft. Caswell the Cwwell-Carolina CorpoI; :s understood that the pur - about 300-acres K :.6e5..u,e tract, including triWings ride the seawall ... nr tht other physical IT.Wt --overrents on the property. not an '-vos received here yesB.;iv that a definite decision ."beer, made by the navy de use the Caswell K;iv instead of erecting a Hcibase at a site on the R. jbove Southport. However, the communication stated this action was not yet ofno news was released unofficial announcement c Washington. . v.-.:.; the primary purpose of ' B-; government in acquiring Ft. * K?dl is to use the buildings I facilities for a section base C Kr call craft, it is believed that ^E.. to use that property v.a'.ion that other de- I ^ftcpnents in the matter of coast * Hfc* may follow. It is known site has been under con nii,-. for certain phases of ^Bgcoel training, these develop^Bn being i jjitingent t>por? the' to locate the section base A Caswell. I .V announcement was made to just when the navy will tato its newly acquired lo^ ci; Fort Caswell has 45 buildBp en its unproved area, water _ with approved source of ^Rlj. electric power plant, sewfacilities. phone cable connecand a steel pier in good P Burning Permits Reauired Now v a W-i Law, Text For Which P I It Hereby Quoted, Be- " I ume Effective On First n m Dav Of October . rest Warden Daw- c ^k tees wishes to call the at- lc ^k*" of landowners to the fact, Htr the burning permit law be- u ^k effective on October 1. Per- p Bi) qo not cost anything, he rr out and only serve to help | v, forestry organization protect' ei Rf- soods from fire. a I Permits may be secured from b Hje of the following fire towers: n *, Shallotte, Orton, Maco. Reigel: or from any of the w ^ ?ty forest wardens. n 'til text of the law follows: s, "SECnox 1. It shall be unlaw- E B' 'or any persons, firm or cor- & ^BV;" ' start or cause to be ^ any fire or ignite any ma- ^ ^B areas of woodtr.der the protection of the b forest Service or within B" ttndred feet of any such pro- j, | lOontinuea on page 4) f Bolonel Thanks Whport People M ^?'?nel Nichols Expres.1 His Appreciation For 1 'fendly Welcome And I "??pitality Shown His Lu?P Davis Men _ following letter from Lt. ! F Nichols, commanding j the 94th Coast Artilery, ;^K^^rcra't, was written to i flfe ' B Bussells, following . ' visit of that outfit. The k? of general interest: Camp Davis, N. C? 1 September 30, 1941 ! Be1"1 B Bussells, rl' 'S*orth ('arolina. ^B -(v ^in Bussels: S-fto"' 0f the First Bat" k Coast Artillery, I wish r ' opportunity to ex' -SbtMUt aPPrec'ation for the ^Peratior, and the II jc(a7I"taluy extended to us [ ^ On Page Four) 1 TH1 27 11 Is Pu y as Site c jtted For, NAVY P _____ ___ $ : ?..'* >; S > ' V k.-' < . : ' . . . : ' ; : PURCHASED?Official Washington yesterday of th ^aswell-Carolina Corporatio; >ose of the navy in obtainin ation of a section base thei 3runswick Is , Running i - y * tdvices Received Here On Tuesday Night From Senator Reynolds Indicates Brunswick Site Being Considered TRONG FIGHT ON FOR BASE ender County Interests Working Hard To Secure Air Base That Will Involve Large Expenditure Although Pender county has reived its efforts to secure the rmy airport for bombers, the rospects that Brunswick county iav land the proiect seem to be ? * luch brigtiter. Last night Senator R. R. ReynIds wired W. B. Keziah of the hamber of Commerce the fol>wing with regard to the efforts: "With further reference to my Ire of recent date, I have* just ersonally contacted War Departlent regarding Airport for Brunswick County. Have been advisi that survey has been conducted nd site is under sonsideration, ut no definite decision has been iade.'' The local organization has been working along with other busiess interests and individuals to ecure this defense project for irunswick. It is understood that ome six million dollars will be ivolved in the construction and hat approximately eight thousnd men and many planes will be ased at the field. One of the local contentions i that not one cent of defense unds has been spent in Brunswick county and that the area ould be used by many defense '(Continued on page 4) What Kind Of This, We Whew! If we can get time out from wiping off the perspiration we'd like to inquire what kind of October weather is this we are having? The temperature for the past three days in Southport has shoved up past the 90 degree mark?yesterday it was 91. This is something unprecedented for October in Brunswick, and nobody around here can remember the mercury ever going past 90 in October. But even at that, Southport has been faring much better than some towns and cities of the country?Richmond, Washington, and New York reported temperatures during the weekend ranging up to 94 degrees, and Philadelphia at 8 o'clock E STi A Goo 4 PAGES TODAY lased By Section Southport ROPERTY | -U*' ';V - ?'? v """' . . . * ^ m&Mmk announcement was made in e sale of Ft. Caswell by the n to the U. S. Navy. The purig this property is for the lore. Still In r For Air Base J 4 * I i Malcolm Frink Has Close Call Malcolm Frink, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Frink, was at home yesterday afternoon from the University of North Carolina after attending the funeral of William H. Sloan, Jr., in Garland yesterday morning. Young Sloan was drowned Sunday afternoon in the Catawba river when he and Frink and another University student were forced to abandon a motorboat in which they were riding after the craft had caught fire. Young Sloan, ap parently demoralized by the apparent danger of their situation, attempted to swim to shore without removing his clothing. He went down when he was about half way. Albert Arnold, a Southport man was on shore and swam toward the drowning youth, but failed to reach him in time. He dived several time in deep water in an effort to recover the body, but was unsuccessful. Frink and the other youth received painful burns before being rescued. Homecoming Day At Antioch Sunday Homecoming day will be observed at Antioch Baptist church on Sunday, October 12. Former pastors, present and former members and friends are invited to attend this all-day session, which is the second annual homecoming day celebration. One of the feature attractions October Is Just Ask You? last night reported a temperature of 94 in the downtown area. The weather prognosticaters hadn't yet come forth with their explanation of this phenomenal weather. GenerallyBrunswick county people may expect some freezing weather somewhere toward the end of October, and if it happens this year, there's got to be a drastic change in the temperature from what it is now. Some people are freely predicting that the hurricane which is making up off the coast of Florida now may bring an end to the heat wave when the tail end of it hits this section, if in truth it does. ? \TE d News paper Southport, N. C., We Bus Drivers Hear State Official Talk On Safety C. C. Brown, Equipment Engineer For State School Commission, Attended Dinner Given Friday Foi Drivers YOUNGSTERS TOLD OF RESPONSIBILITY Open Forum Session Held To Give Principals And Drivers Opportunity to Ask Questions Wanted School bus drivers of Brunswick county were honored Fridaj night at a dinner given in theii honor at Shallotte high school C. C. Brown, equipment engineei for the department of educatioi was principal speaker and other! in attendance included the schoo principals, members of the countj board of education, the countj superintendent of schools and th< county mechanic. In a brief and informal talldirected to the young bus driven Mr. Brown sought to impresi them with their tremendous re sponsibility. He told them thai North Carolina transports mori school children more miles eacl year than any other state in thi union. There are 4,900 schoo buses in operation, he said, car rying 355,000 children to school and 85-perccnt of these vehicle are being driven by student driv era. t "You are a hand-picked group,' he told the young boy and gir drivers. Your school principals your neighbors and others havi said by their act of naming yoi as a bus driver that you are thi best person in your community for this job. Your very presenci here tonight is a result of theij fine vote of confidence in you. "You will never have a mori responsible job in your life thai the one you now hold, regardles; of whether you become leader in your church your school o! in your government. The safety o the boys and girls who ride witl you to and from school each daj should be your first and las consideration. Your job require constant viligance. "I want to call your attentioi to the fact that while Nortl Carolina is transporting more chil dren more miles to school witl greater safety than is shown bi the record of any other state, yoi are operating your buses on high ways of a state that has one o the worst fatality records in thi United States. I warn you, there fore, that you must not only lool out for yourself, but must to constantly on the alert for thi mistakes of the other fellow." During the open forum sessioi which followed Mr. Brown sue ceeded jn clearing up numerou problems that have been preplex ing the principals and the drivers I oufc r^nvorninnr UU TV ?J UVTVI lllllg Returning Men Selectees Who Have Com pleted Twelve Monthi Training Automatically In Enlisted Reserve Corp: The War Department has au thorized the discharge of certaii men in the armed forces and th relief of others from active fed eral service, General J. Van ? Metts, State Director of Selectiv Service, pointed out today. "Thes men are now returning to thei homes," Director Metts said, "an: in their interest I wish to clar ify their position under the Selec tive Training and Service Act o 1940." Men inducted through Selectiv Service, who have served their 1 months and are released fror active service, are transferred b; the Army to the Enlisted Re serve Corps. Yet, the Directo pointed out, a man discharged fo some specific reason prior to com pletion of his twelve months' serv ice, being separated from any mil itary organization, is subject t reclassification under the Selectiv Training and Service Act. Men who enlisted in the Arm; of the United States subsequen to September 15, 1940, for on year's service with the Nations Guard are definitely discharge from the military service at th expiration of their terms of enlist meht, the Director said. Thes men are subject to registratio and classification under the Selec tive Training and Service Acl But under War Department regu lations they are priviledged t enlist promptly in the Enliste Reserve Corps or in the Nations {Continued on page 4) P0R1 In A Good Con dnesday, October 8, 19 POl i 1 i H ^i* r V \ r ' nBKKMK9H|r > l f f % I HBI I^8 Ei i?y > MPgB 3 i LANDMARKS?Two pi; 3 shown above. The top photo ! in 1725. The lower picture s s mer home. This tree is a con r j Visiting Troops I Stage Thrilling ; SearchlightShow t 3 Five silvery fingers raked i the sky over Southport Tuesl day night for an enemy plane - which wasn't there, and Southl port citizens looked on in / amazement at a glorius display j of Uncle Sam's elaborate pre parations for keeping enemy f bombers from these shores. e The Second Battalion of the - 94th Coast Artilcry was in t town ,and five giant search3 lights and an anti-aircraft gun e were set up on tne garrison i grounds where four-score years ! x ago cannon were mounted to | . defend Ft. Johnston. But never s in all the war-torn history of . this section was there a more colorful display from fighting equipment. The beams reared upward for what appeared to be a distance of several hundred feet, and . there was frank skepticism I when the men in charge said that tho lights' rays were traveling as much as six miles. Near the close of the two-hour practice period, however, doubts were dispelled when the five 5 lights converged on old Bald Head tower on Smith Island n and showed it standing there 0 as plain as day. It was the first time in many a year that local 1 citizens had seen anything of e the old lighthouse at night, e and was the only time in hisr tory when the tower was plainj ly visible from Southport after .. nightfall. ,. The searchlight session over, f the men soon were at play. A dance in their honor was being held at the Army-Navy Club 2 building, and during the evening n practically every one of the more than 400 men dropped by, _ most of them to linger. ' Music for the dance was furnr ished by the 94th orchestra. Arrangements had been made ,_ for Mrs. J. W. Ruark to serve as i chief hostess for the occasion, 0 her assistants being Mrs. H. W. e Hood, Mrs. H. C. Corlette, Mrs. J. D. Sutton and Mrs. J. G. y Christian. Mrs. C. W. Easley spent ^ most of yesterday afternoon pree paring punch for about five hunL1 dred?it turned out not to be d enough?and Mrs. G. E. Hubband e and Mrs. A. T. McKeithan served. _ If anybody's name has been omite ted, its a shame, for the cooperan tive effort on the part of the ,_ ladies conspired to make this a ^ most enjoyable occasion, and of!_ ficers in charge of the men were 0 highly appreciative of the local j effort. j J. J. Loughlin, Jr., was coordinator of the program. I [PIL y ,1 V [?2? hHBFQ 11 HB9 ^i>^Bg? J.* |riWB ' ^ ,*' ? r Y- -V, " ' \ ? ? T ?__ / ' iices of interest for every i is a view of old St. Phillips hows the Indian trail tree i stant source of interest to n Brunswick Coi Is Hit-Ai Murray B. Robbins, Filling Station Proprietor, Hit And Fatally Injured By Automobile DIED FEW HOURS LATER IN HOSPITAL Coroner John G. Caison Empannels Jury But Says There Are No Clues To Driver Murray B. Ribbins, 54-year-old resident of the Winnabow community, was struck by a hit-andrun driver early Sunday evening as he was crossing the highway from his Bell Swamp filling station to his residence on the op posite side of the road. Robbin's body was discovered about 250 feet down the highway toward Bolivia, where it had either been dragged by the car which hit him or where he had been flung by the force of impact. He was rushed to James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington where he died shortly after midnight. The following jury was empanneled by Coroner John G. Caison: W. E. Bell, Joel L. Moore, Price Furpless, A. E. Furr, R. L. Thompson and J. Berg. Coroner Caison said that only minor clues were available for officers to work on, and that nobody has been arrested in connection with the case. Funeral services were held this afternoon at 3 o'clock from the Mill Creek Baptist church with the Rev. A. L. Brown of Southport, officiating, assisted by the (Continued on page 4) Convict Proba Little Rest I Walter Stevens, Columbus county negro serving an 8months sentence on the roads at State Prison Camp near Shallotte, may have only a very short vacation when his term is up about the first of January. Monday a warrant was issued requesting the presence of Stevens before Judge Walter M. Stanaland of the Recorders court in Southport on January 5th, 1942. The warrant charged him with breaking into the store of G. T. Ruark at Shallotte last Tuesday night and stealing therefrom a quantity of cigarettes. At the same time another warrant was issued, charging Stevens with breaking into the store of D. C. Andrews at Shallotte on the same night and ,0T HED EVERY WEDNESDAY ~ ?i1 f . ' U 7? 1 * "* ,'fjl Jp^C" . "3J E jKjk( lew visitor to Southport are i Church which was erected a the side yard of the Cranaturalists. unty Man id-Run Victim * ' - Tropical Storm Heads This Way Small-craft storm warning was received here this morning and local seafaring men were advised of a small tropical disturbance that was centered near Alma, Ga, last night and moving east-northeastward. This is the same storm which tore its way across Florida and through a part of Georgia, leaving in its wake nine dead and countless injured in addition to large property damage. While the gale was known to be headed in this direction, , there was not much uneasiness locally since the rorce 01 me blow was diminishing rapidly. Negro Is Fast, So Is Justice Colored Employee Of Visiting Circus Captured Sunday Night After Running Out Of Laced-Up Shoe; Sentenced Monday ? I Wallace Miller, colored employee of the Shelby Circus, must have | established some kind of record for being fleet of foot Sunday night when he ran right out of his laced-up shoe while fleeing from the Tom Hickman home into which he had been caught peeping a moment before. He was caught and turned over (continued on page four) bly Will Get _ between Terms stealing therefrom an iron safe containing approximately $100. The safe was carried away, broken into and the contents removed. Deputy Sheriff M. C. Tripp and other officers who investigated the two robberies went to the convict camp and arrested Stevens. Practically all of the money from the Andrews safe was found hidden in his cell. It was located in a small heater, in the bedding of Stevens's bunk and in his shoes. Stevens was a trusty at the camp, and it was understood that he just felt a craving for some cigarettes, etc, as well as for some pocket change. So he took a night off from the camp and his fellow lodgers and really got himself in trouble. 1 I I . Most Of The News All The Time $1.50 PER YEAl - j N Y A Project ' Brings Training To Young Girls Eighteen Young Brunswick County Girls Being Given Opportunity To Earn While They Learn MISS DOZIER IS THE SUPERVISOR Typing, Shortland, Bookkeeping And English Are Subjects Being Taught In This Class Eighteen girls representing a number of communities of Brunswick county arc now enrolled in a NYA training class for which Miss Margaret Dozicr is supervisor. Recently when the work, which is a 56,010.80 project, was stopped county officials raised such a fuss that NYA officials re-opened the program which is destined to give practical vocational training to a score of young Brunswick county lassies. The girls arc required to put in a minimum of 80 hours each month in clerical work, which is a part of their training in typewriting, shorthand and bookkeeping. Their practical experience is . being gained in several county and municipal offices where they are supplying clerical assistance that would not otherwise be available for these offices. In order that NYA student service may be uninterrupted for these offices, the month is divided into two work periods, with one set of girls working from the 18th to the 4th, and another group coining on the 4th and leaving on the 17th. Miss Dozier, the supervisor, says that there is room for at least three more students in the course and is anxious to interview * prospects this week. The pay is $19.00 per month for the 80-hours work. The following girls are working in the following offices: County auditor: Marjorie Potter?Irene Clemmons; Register of Deeds: Madeline Robinson and Mavis Watkins?Letha Arnold and Katharine Willetts; Clerk of Court: Evelyn Autrey?Arnett Stanaland; County Superintendent of Schools: Thelma Sellers?Elizabeth Henry; Welfare: Doris Lewis?Ethel Willetts; Board of Health: Eula May Smith?Lcttic Sellers; Home Demonstration: Othelia Outlaw and Marjorie Jones?Evelyn Loughlin; City Hall: Margaret Bartclls. Former Resident Passes Suddenly T. H. Lindsey Died Suddenly Friday Morning In Wilmington Hotel; Former Senator From Brunswick Thomas H. unuscy, iormer r State Senator from Brunswick County and a resident of Durham for a number of years, died in his room at a Wilmington hotel Friday of a heart attack. Mr. Lindsey, who represented the old Tenth District in the General Assembly of 1931, was a son of Mrs. John M. Lindsey ol| Durham and the late Mr. Lindsey. | He lived in Southport for 18 years , and was prominent there in | church and civic affairs. (Continued on page 4) _______ , Tide Table Following is the tide table for Southport during the next week. These hours are appro- [ vimately correct and were furnished The State Port Pilot through the courtesy of the Cape Fear Pilot's Association. High Tide Low Tide TIDE TABLE Thursday, October 9 9:41 a. m. 3:40 a. tn. 10:07 p. m. 4:13 p. m. Friday, October 10 10:19 a. m. 4:10 a. m. 10:31 p. m. 4:31 p. m. Saturday, October 11 11:02 a. m. 4:42 a. m. 11:40 p. m. 5:33 p. m. Sunday, October 12 11:51 a. m. 5:23 a. m. 6:35 p. m. Monday, October 13 ' 0:36 a. m. 6:28 a. m. 12:47 p. m. 7:45 p. m. Tuesday, October 14 1:17 a. m. 7:49 a. m. 1:49 p. m. 8:48 p. m. Wednesday, October 13 2:11 a. m. 8:38 a. m. 2:33 p. m. 9:42 p. Ob :J '