Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / July 28, 1943, edition 1 / Page 3
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AfiE 3 T_. | w7~v i r tv. ??V /\ Jx. I I son of Mrs. Thelma Brooks M I ) iktxS % H ILi I I Eachern and J. Courtland M ' in i i i mm Eachern, attended X. C. State Co lege, and is a member of Sign I _ . pirrpv WIT T T A MS Phi EPlison fraternity. He is we ^p.i.Al lH.ii.N \\ LLL1 Ai 1ft known in Brunswick county ha' " , , . ing spent each summer with h I Sreat aunts' Misses Carrie ar is 'hat of Miss Elizabeth Fannje Brooks at Seaside. ot Wilmington ami Lieu- Among those entertaining th ' -l;uk McEachern, United coupie since the announcement < Air Forces, which was thejr engagement were: Miss Ji ^fl Saturday afternoon, ijette Robertson, Miss Mary Di Tth in the First Methodist v;s Miss Betty Blue Willis Mi< ? Saint Petersburg. Fla. Mary C. Davis, Miss Marthatfun ';"i0 "nf ZrCm?nL W3S be,t' Miss Alice Sprunt, Miss E ,1 by the Rev Thomas, ]en McGirt, Mrs. W. Louis Fishe ^B nth. D. D., of St. Peters- Mrs. Thelma McEachern, Mr Norwood Orrell, Mrs. W. A. Mi ride was attended by her ^ . . W H. Henderson. Jr., f,irt' Mrs- T- D Love' Jr- an v ington as matron-of-honor Mrs- Henderson. !y his^cousinhCNonvood o! BIRTHDAY PARTY ^1. of Seaside as best man. '.. Miss Trudy McNeill entertaine V I IV ? W1IV ^VUII^VPV the late Mr. and Mrs. a number of her little friends t int Williams, attended her home here Saturday aftei >ge. She is a member ,noon. the occasion marking hi inster's Club and the seventh birthday anniversary, ial contingent of Wil- Following an afternoon spent i PAINTS .use Paint, inside paints (flat, semi-gloss and Varnish and enamel. Also Marine Paint, inCopper Paint for boats. L. H. HARRISON SOUTHPORT, N. C. MICE WITH A SMILE! jrchandise is sometimes scarce, but e never lacking in friendly service ospitality. That's why our customid it a pleasure to do business at our j : GALLOWAY General Merchandise Supply, N. C. -SCHEDULECHANGES DAILY SCHEDULE I.vh. Spurt. Ar. Wilm. I,v. Wilm. Ar. S'port. ' '"i a.m. *6:30 a.m. *7:00 a.m. 8:30 a.m. 7:15 a.m. 3:30 a.m. 1:35 p.m. 2:45 p.m. !>. <? a.m. *10:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 1:15 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 6:20 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:15 p.m. 10:00 p.m. 11:15 p.m. I SUNDAY SCHEDULE T HOa.m. 8:45 a.m. ' 9:00 a.m. 10:00 p.m. in:tn a.m. 12:00 noon 1:35 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 1:15 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 6:20 p.m. 7:45 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:15 p.m. 10:00 p.m. 11:15 p.m. ? SCHEDULE CHANGES ? I WILMINGTON, BRUNSWICK & I SOUTHERN RAILROAD CO. I W ILMINGTON SOUTHPORT I DISCOUNT YC 1943 Taj You can save One and 0n< on your 1943 taxes due Bruns\ you make payment during the n A statement will be gladly upon request. w. p. JORGEN was.-. TAX SUPERVISC playing games and contests rely I freshments were served the fol-J c- lowing guests: Roy Daniel, jr., j c-- Ray: Davis, Edwin Dozier, Tom 1- Williams, v Buster Williams, Bill la Williams, Gloria Lee Hewett, Karill en Swann, Nancy Swann, Alice j v- Brown, Louie Cox, Sylvia Carol, j is!Joan Jernigan, Delight Gay, J.oy; id i Lynn Bell, Davis Dozier, Mary [ | Elizabeth Lupton, Betty McGlam- I le ! ery, Mary Caroline Hunt, Jimmie I if [ Harper, Alneta Dixon, Jean Eve- j j j-1 lyn Thompson, Sammy Newton, I ( i-1 Iris Newton, David Dixon, Jimmie j ss j Jones, Sylvia Carol Hewett. II PERSONALS I id i i !Mrs. Leon Swain and daughter. [ ? Ann, of Beaufort, are visiting! Mrs. Amelia Swain, who has been ; a patient in Dosher Memorial j 'd Hospital for the past ten days. * it C. H. McCall and his friend, J. ;E r- B. Johnson, of Wilmington, spent j' >r a day here last week and enjoyed a fishing trip on the Morehead as! n guests of Capt. J. B. Church. | Mrs. W. T. Symmons and Mrs.; James Hammock spent several j days last week in Supply as guests of Mrs. J. H. Cannon. j Mr. and Mrs. Corbett Anderson j and daughter, Rose Marie, of Keyl? West, Florida, were called here last week on account of the death of Mr. Anderson's father, J, C. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. James Hammock ; have as their guest this week Mr. 1 Hammock's mother, Mrs. J. P. \ 'Hammock, and his sister, Miss ? Vandalah Ham mock, of Pinetta, Fla. Mrs. Dorsie D. Kellogg, of St. r n, V ? TT> 1 ~ 4 1 -rcLtrisuui^, na., is a nuusc guest 1 of her cousins. Mr. and Mrs. A. < L. Lewis at the Section Base. t Miss Mary Ann Mollycheck who has been working at Charleston since school closed has returned home. Cadet Billy Bragaw left last 1 week for a Navy training field ' near St. Louis, where he is having his final training period as a bomber pilot. Mrs. J. G. Christian has returned from Savannah following a (visit with her parents, Mr. and 1 | Mrs. J. H. Young, i Donnie St. George is spending a few days here with his mother. Miss Eloise St. George is vis- ' iting Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Weathers in Goldsboro. Miss Doris Corlette is visiting friends in Goldsboro and FarmM ville. Making Howe In Shallotte Now Mrs. M. M. Rosenbaum and son. Roger, have returned to their home at Shallotte for the duration after spending the past two (years with Dr. Rosenbaum in San Antonio, Texas. The former Shallotte physician is now a captain in the United States Army but plans to return to this county following the war to resume private practice. MEDICAL PATIENT David Garris, son of Mr. and ! Mrs. Dave Garris, of Southport, was a medical patient at Dosher Memorial Hospital Wednesday through Friday of last week. Enjoy Your Meals At Our GRADE "A" CAEE IW. KUSS STATION SHALLOTTE, N. C. I )UR ces j-Half Percent vick County if nonth of July. furnished you SEN : j THE STATE PORT PILC NEWS || BRIEFS ' L i ? SERVICE MAX ILL Earl P. Ferguson of Bald Headi Island, 'a member of the Coast Uuard, entered Dosher Memorial Hospital Friday as a medical >atient. OPERATION Mrs. A. B. Crocker, of Winna- j >ow, underwent an operation for he removal of her appendix Sat-j lrday at Dosher Memorial Hospit- j Li. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Avant, of. Southport, announce the birth of j t daughter at Dosher Memorial | Hospital on Sunday, July 25. ANNOUNCE BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Smith, of Iceland, announce the birth of a ion at Dosher Memorial Hospital; >n Monday, July 26. PATIENT Mrs. E. M. Benton, of Bolivia, i mtered Dosher Memorial Hospitil Monday as a medical patient. ( TONSILAR OPERATION Two tonsilar operations were I lerformed Tuesday at Dosher' Memorial Hospital. The patients t vere: Bobby Muncy, Southport; ind Berta Sellers, Supply. PATIENT Miss Katherine O'Conner, of iVilmington, entered Dosher Mem>rial Hospital last Wednesday as i medical patient. i .> nunrii ij Mrs. Alex Fox, of Wilmington, vas a medical patient at Dosher Memorial Hospital Wednesday hrough Friday. MEDICAL ATTENTION Mrs. Sanders Parker, of Shal- J otte, entered Dosher Memorial i hospital last Thursday for medi-1 ;al attention. MEDICAL CARE Miss Mildred Traylor, of South-1 )ort, spent from Thursday thropgh j Sunday in Dosher Memorial Hos)ital. THINGS Vou Should Knowj ABOUT Public Welfare i Work I By Mrs. Maude Phelps IlriitiMvIck County "Welfare Super! n tendon I Another service afforded the [ >eople of a community by thei :ounty welfare department is, hat of arranging for adoption of children by those families desirng them. There was a time in years past vhen very few safeguards were ;hrown around this bringing together of foster, parents and fosef children. In those days people vould just go some place where j :hey had heard there was a child j :hey could have and took him into :heir home. Neither the parents I lor the child were properly safe- j guarded; often the biological par-j :nts would want the child back; lometimes the child turned out r> he mentallv deficient in later I life; and often property rights of ill parties were disregarded and the child thrown on the community for support in the absence of valid adoption proceedngs. Now, however, it is an entirely Jifferent story. People desiring to take a child into their home as one 3f their own go first to the county welfare department. The statute requires that petitioner shall ;mploy an attorney to handle Forms 1, 2, 6, 8. County Welfare Department assumes full authority only when child is ward of the LOST ? Five War Ration Books No. 2; two War Ration Books No. 1; contained in single wraper with Grover Brown's name. Return to him at Southport, N. C. I GREETIN CR K \ f i > WITH THE SA RAYI )T, SOUTHPORT, N. C. Agency. The home and the pros pective foster parents must b< thoroughly investigated and un derstood so choice of a child car be made intelligently. If this wer< not done it might be that in ? year or two the parents woulc find they were not suited to the child they had taken. Then comes a series of investi gations to be made by the Wei fare Department. Some penpl; .want a. child "with blue eyes >anc light curly hair"?often that if the only description they woulc give. They would not stop tc think that perhaps just any child "with blue eyes and light curly hair" would not fit into theit home. Physical examinations are giver all parties concerned because, for instance, it would not do to bring a tubercular child into a healthy home or to place a well child with consumptive parents. It is necessary to be certain that the home life the child will go into will be a wholesome one and not one where he will be subjected to influences that might turn him into a delinquent in a few years. Thus there are many things tc consider before children are adopted. Sometimes these investigation.' bring out the fact that the parents do not really want to take the responsibility of rearing a child but just think they do, because they hadn't gone into the situation thoroughly. It would be a grave error to have placed a child in such a home and it is much better for decisions like this to be made before, rather thar after, action is taken. More than 200 neighborhood leaders in Harnett County havt been of invaluable service in developing the farm labor program, reports County Agent C. R. Amnions. MANY AGENCIES JOIN IN DRIVE (Continued From Page Onel for services to armed forces, $40, 099,000 for United Nations Relief, $3,621,000 for refugee relief $800,000 for administrative ani campaign expenditures, and $12.808,000 for a contingency fund t( meet needs which may arise oui of changing war conditions. The budget, prepared by a-com mittee headed by Gerald M Swope of New York, is to covei needs of the member agencies o: the National War Fund for th< fourteen month period endinj October 1, 1944. In addition to the $125,000,001 to be raised for National Wai Fund agencies, local community chests and war funds are expect ed to raise at least another $125, 000,000 to meet needs on th< home front, and to finance socia and health services. In making his report Presiden1 y.ldrich said: "The budget com mittee has examined all request: for funds with a view to determ ining the extent of needed relief whether the relief could be sup plied from any other source whether supplies to meet th< need were available, whether ship ping space was available, whethei there was adequate supervision o: distribution, whether the reliei projects conformed to the strate gic requirements of the Unite( States, and whether costs of dis SOMETH] n n liifi 1 I I ^ I t ill W U.1VV. merchandise needs our business to see I to get what you vvai INSOFAR AS TH THIS IS STILI G. W. KIR SUPPL GS, MR. FA UTCHI ILL BE READY 1 ME EFFICIENT SA WOND & GAITHE with 13 i -' trihution were at a minirmuu." ; The net requirements of the -! National War Fund member agen1 cies for 1943 and gross budgets 5. for the fourteen month pen?'l i i ending October 1, 1944 are as 1 follows: ; | Service to Armed Forces; USO 1 (United Sere-ice Organizations). - $61,227,000; United Seamen's Ser vice, $4,125,000; War Prisoners ! Aid $2,320,000. I United Nations Relief: Belgian i War Relief Society, $325,000: II British War Relief Society, $5,i ,098,000; French Relief Fund. $2,I 183,000; Friends of Luxembourg. ! $121,000; Greek War Relief Asso ciation. $5,122,000; Norweigan i 70<ncL ; ; "... and tell my old gang down II at the Telephone Company that , ] I'm thinking of them. I see tons of telephone materials every day '' over here?in the form of tanks, shells and field communications ' equipment. We need a steady stream of these supplies to win? and being a telephone man, I 11 know that telephone lines have to ' . j .II. .IT . j I j carry many cam ujjccu/tgyruuuci tion and transportation of fighting equipment. So I hope you I homefolks are helping to keep the wires clear, for war calls which MUST go through. Love, BILL" I j Fellows like Bill Jones?on . j the fighting front?know what they're talking about when j1 they say that Victory depends upon an unceasing flow of sup> | plies. And at home, those dit recting the war effort rely on the telephone to keep munij tionsandmenmovingforward. rj These urgent calls pass through the same local tele, j phone equipment you use. Yet j facilities can't be expanded to ^ meet demands fully, because r the necessary materials are being made into planes, tanks s' and guns. 1, By avoiding unnecessary local calls?and by speaking briefly whenever you talk?you i help relieve crowded lines and switchboards for war duty. In that way you help speed vital war calls. Southerii BellTelephoiie ; filld telegraph com | | INCORPORATED [NG to BUY ays farm and family to he filled, and it is to it that you are ahle r*f Uilipn \7f\ 11 wnnt if". lit. TY1IVU y V/14 ?? M.HV AV? E TIMES PERMIT, . OUR POLICY. BY & SONS Y, N. C. RMER :IELD \ WHITEVILLE, N. C. 0 SERVE YOU A( LES FORCE THAT S R CRUTCHFIELDI UD CHANDLER, Au WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1943 \ I I " i ' 111 ' j ^ r?e?',^nr:^p0m1v^ h '* thk jifa court- m lief, $3,<50.000: Queen Wtlhelmtna statk of north Carolina Fund. $200,000: Russian War Ro-1 county of BRUNSWICK lief, $10,155,000: Urifted China Re-l''"'v8K M' SCOT1 J lief, $9,873,000: United Chechos- j JULIAN \V. SCOTT \* ! The above named defendant, Julian /Jr? Invak Relief. ?234,000; United' W. Scott, will take notice that an-ac- ? Yugoslav Relief Fund. $2,238,000: .'.'Zmen'e.'l'R, {he s^rior^ounTf t Refugee Relief; Refuge Relief j Brunswick county. North Carolina, by , ^ ? the plaintiff to secure an absolute Trustees, S2.809,000; United States divorce from the defendant upon the Committee for the Care of Eu- ground that the plaintiff and. - the rnnpnn Children <s*19nnn defendant have lived separate and -f ropean cnildren. 8S1J.UUU. apart for more than two years next : preceeding. the bringing of this ac. FOR SALE ? 900-acre tract of tion: and the defendant will further I land located about 6-miles from|?te jtoUte^hat^ he 0{8 thT1c1?k o? Southport on the \\ ilmington superior Court of Brunswick county, highway. Inquire at The Stev- in the courthouse at Southport. North ens Airenev Southnort \T C .Carolina. within thirty days after the ens Agency, ouuuipun, a. v.. (-lhe ,,ay of jujy jj,43 aluj aniiWer or ? ?: ? ~7 i demur to the compalnt In said acLOST ? Hound dog. white with tion. or the plaintiff will apply to brown ears. Reward if returnedI the Court for the relief demanded in to G. B. Lewis, Bolivia, N. C. !saUI complaint. . This 7th day of July. 1943. WANT A IK Clerk Superior KCouuTIf TV All f AUlJ Brunswick County lost ? War ration book No. 1. notice Mary Eleanora Gorden, South-1 in the superior court nort n p 1 statk of north caroina ' county of hrunswick WANTED?We pay highest mar-1 UMSgHINES' McLAMB I W.m,?inrr A Mil I ket prices on hogs, pies and The above named defendant. Mitchell cattle every Monday Honest MeLamh. will take notice that an aci Weight, cash on delivery. Shal-!tiu" entitled as above has been com ?r,. . ,, , . __ __ inenced in the .su|>oiior Court or i lotte Stock Market, M. S. Hus- Brunswick County, North Carolina, by ton Mer. plaintiff to secure an absolute divorce from the defendant ?'oon the -T ground that plaintiff and defendant H(I A [ W have lived separate and apart foe vl -'CinL/u more than two years next preced ? ? ins the bringing of this action; UnilXISTItATRIX NOTICE and the defendant will further Having duly qualified as the ad- take notice that he is required to apministratrix for the estate of C \V. pear at the office of thee Clerk of Barry, deceased, late of Brunswick the Superior Court of Brunswick 1 county, state of North Carolina, this County, in the Courthouse in Southis to notify all persons holding claims port. North Carolina, within thirty against the said deceased to present days after the 29th day of July, 1943, them to the undersigned on or before and answer or demur ot the com.lulv in, 1911, or this notice will he plaint in said action, or the plaintiff pleaded in bar of their recovery. All will apply to the Court for the relief persons indebted to the said deceased demanded in said complaint, will please make immediate pavment. This 7th day of July. 1943. This July 7. 1913. S. T. BKNNRTT. ANN IK rU'SS. Clerk Sujierior Court of Administratrix for the Estate of Brunswick County C. W. Barry, deceased. 7-2So NOTICE! NOTICE! See us for your Doors, Windows, Square-Deal Wall Board, Strong-Milt Wall Panel, Paints, Insulation Board, Rook Wool, C'ertain-Teed Roofing, "Century" Asbestos Shingles and Siding, Briek, I.lme, Cement, Plaster, Flue I.lning, Lumber and other Building Materials. SMITH BUILDERS SUPPLY, Inc. Castle Hayne Road WILMINGTON, N. C. PHONE 3339 I ' ABWifl?C?BW?BH?a?I????^W _ ________________ ? * d Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y. Franchise Bottler: J. W. Jackson Beverage Co. W&MESM W HMHHHHi I CHECK THESE Hardware ... Paints * Ready-To-Wear ..,. Shoes i Accessories... Notions Groceries Seeds... Feeds j SHALLOTTE TRADING CO. Ilobson Kir by, Prop. Shallotte, N. C. ! . || I . . ' 1 IT _._L i i arenouse i A i IAIN THIS SEASON.. IERVED YOU LAST YEAR .... Dn The Sale . 1 ctioneer j - I . 1
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 28, 1943, edition 1
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