I*4 %
; I'Hot * A)\ ers
nswick County
0. FOURTEEN~NO
ly Papers
Out For
wood Drive
rive Underway To
te Pulpwood CutSouthern
States
)RT PILOT
THE CAMPAIGN
rive Is A Result
il Need Of More
lod To Carry
iVar Industries
Port Pilot today has
weekly and daily
>f the nation in a
aid the Government
the serious pulpwood
ition.
ond time since Pearl
the nation's nejvsx*en
called upon to
.'lious war material
it was the NewsScrap
Metal Camat
time scores of
ced shutdowns for
naterials. What the
complished in that
The situation was
II ith more than 6.000,000
Ks 0; precious metal collected.Mow
it is the pulpwood camIfir.
and it is equally serious beIse
hundreds of thousands of
Els of the nation's pulpwood
1 required for war purposes.
Tit' Victory Pulpwood CamIgn
was initiated ry the War
Eduction Board, with the coErat:on
of other Federal DeEtmonts.
war agencies and inItrj'.
It is designed to relieve]
Ireasnigly serious shortages in
Ipwood. the raw material which
Ekes smokeless powder, rayon j
I parachutes, plastics for airIr.e
parts, shell and bomb cas-1
Is and shipping containers for
[munition, foods, supplies, blood
Lsma and other necessities for
t armed forces and our allies.
[The campaign to increase the
eduction of puu wood for the
inufacture o* i.vlucts vitally
fcessary lor military needs overfcs
and for home front war uses,
addressed to farmers, wooded
owners, forest laborers and]
per available workers in the i
e major pulpwood producing ]
eas of the South, Northeast and j
ike States, where manpower j
ortages have developed because |
the withdrawal of woodsmen
r service in the armed forces or
her war work.
In anticipation of the present
(Co:.tinuxO on page 41
led Cross Moves
illliu 11CW V/1IH-C
ow Occupying Quarters
Next To Tax Collector's
Office; Brief Outline Of
Mrs. Grace P. Ruark, Executive
cretaiy of the Brunswick counRed
Cross Chapter, has moved
r office to the one formerly oc- j
pied by the local ration board j
the building next to the countax
office. Hours will remain
e same, these being from 9 to5.
This move was made necessary
' the increased volume of work
Inch must pass though Mrs. I
mark's office. Home service, a
,ry necessary and helpful duty
(rformed by the Red Cross for
nice men and their families,
increased both in importance
d in scope.
Acting as a medium of commutation
between the people of
ninswick County and their men
1 the Army and Navy, helping
1 solve war - created problems
hieh inevitably arise when men
t serving in distant places.
It was of this service General
(Continued on page 4)
Ration Pointers |
GASOLINE?In North Carolina
\-(i coupons arc valid until
November 26. All gasoline
taupons in the possession of
tar owners must be endorsed
"ith the owner's license number
lnd state of registration.
Sl'GAR?Stamp No. 14, good
!?r 5 llis, is valid through
October. Stamps Nos. 15 and
j? ar' uood through October 31
rr 5 lbs. each for home canning
Purposes. Housewives may aprJ
to fheir local ration boards
I '""re if necessary.
SHOES ? Stamp No. 18 (1
Plr) is valid through October j
L i'I AT, ETC. ? Red Stamps
; *> 1, and W, now valid, ex,)lr,
August 31.
PROCESED FOODS ? Blue
vafa1'S an(I T remain
d "trough September 20.
TH
i. 17
Cords^ of Pulpwoo
PULP WOOD PROTECTS
I *t an U. S. Army Ammunitio
;ected with casings made fi
which may be seen in small
wood and hundreds of thous
needed for smokeless powd
war.
New Principal
For Lelan<
i
S. D. Wright, A Former
Teacher Heads Leland
School For The 1943-'44
Session
SHALLOTTE FIRST TO
REPORT FULL hALULlY
Prof. Stone Announces Full
List Of Teachers In Both
High School And Elementary
Grades
A principal for Leland school
has been secured, according to
Miss Annie May Woodside, county
superintendent of school^ The
election of S.TX' IV Fight oi Gibson
to fill the place formerly
held by O. C. Burton paves the
way for a complete list of teachers
for Leland.
Mr. Wright is not new to
Brunswick county as he taught
for several years at Bolivia*
school.
Principal Henry C. Stone of the
Shallotte high and elementary
school has secured a complete faculty.
For the high school the
following teachers have been
elected.
Henry C. Stone, principal. Mrs.
Edna Russ, math., Shallotte; Ida|
Creech Mintz, commerce, Shallotte;
Emma Oliva Baker, English
and history, Shallotte; Mary
Frances Hill, English and Spanish,
Cedar Grove, N. C.; Margaret
Hipp, home economics, Clinton,
S. C.; J. F. Caldwell, history,
Smyrna, S. C.
For the Elementary grades the
following will serve: Emily Angelia
Hubbard, eighth grade, Clio,
S. C.; Muzette Wilkerson, eighth
~ro/1o Drtiiofomnunt TM fl.: Edith i
giaUCllVUU^VlllVUMV, ... ,
B. Breedlove, seventh grade, Murphy,
N. C.; Eva Helen Israel,
seventh grade, Rosman, N. 'C.;
Edna Mae Fowler, sixth grade,
Newberry, S. C.; Mrs. Mae Home
Russ, sixth grade, Shallotte;
Glene Cooms, Russ, sixth grade,
Shallotte; Molly Hague Clay,
fifth grade, Columbus, N- C.;
Mrs. S. T. Russ, fifth grade, Shallotte;
Sarah Louise Clement,
fourth grade, Inman, S. C.; Annie
F. Russ, fourth grade, Southport;
Flora Beatrice Moore, fourth
grade, Brevard, N. C.; Gertie Taylor
Stovall, third grade, Oxford,
Brightie G. Hoiden, third grade,
Shallotte, Gladys Thomas, third
(Continued on page 4)
Claims He Ga\
The Porter S
A story in this paper last week
related how Garland B. Portei,
I manager of the North Carolina
State News Bureau, had been mistaken
for the real thing in porters.
The incident happened here
recently. Regardless of the fact
that he may not be the real thing
in porters, he was Johnny on the
spot when the wife of a Navy
officer asked him to carry her
bags up stairs.
The story credited Porter with
being asked to carry the bags, and
that he passed the duty on to
"his assistant" Ben Patrick,
North Carolina's official photographer.
Ben was understood to
have, and perhaps did, receive the
tip which the grateful lady tendered.
From a letter received from
the news bureau man this week
it appears that his honor has
been impunged, or something. He
(Claims he carried the bags him
EST
A Goo<
S-PAGES TODAY
d=Cords of Shells
?Above are cords of shells
n Dump. The shells are prorom
pulpwood, a cord of
. insert. The cord of pulpands
more like it are badly
er and other munitions of
Secured
1 High School
Wandered Around,
Is Now Back Home
David Perkins, young South|H)rt
colored man, enlisted in
the Navy three years ago, a
time when it was mighty hard
* for colored men to get in that
branch of service. By persitance,
David made the grade,
got in and now has a good record
behind him to show for
three years of wanderings in
various parts of the world.
Recently David, who is a
son of Mary Perkins of Southport,
arrived at a new base
aboard the submarine chaser on
which he is stationed. He oi>ened
his eyes one morning, got on
deck and found he was tied up
at the dock at the Section
Base, with Southport and his
home barely two miles away.
County Court
Has Few Cases
Very Little Time Required
T* ? Ll.wJIn M/vnrlav fnnrf
iu uauuic iTtuiiuuj .
Cases Before Judge John
B. Ward
All work waiting the attention
of Judge John B. Ward in Recorders
court Monday was dispensed
with in very short order.
With the docket cleared, court
was adjourned at noon. The following
cases came up:
Max Myers, reckless operation,
continued to August 23rd.
Roland Long, driving drunk
and reckless operation, $50.00 and
costs, license revoked for 12
months.
George Behaler, non support,
continued.
Lester Foster, speeding, sixty
days on roads, judgment suspended
on payment of fine of $25.00
and costs, $15.00 of fine remitted.
Newkirk Sullivan, assault with
deadly weapon, six months in jail,
judgment suspended on payment
of fine of $25.00 and costs.
Jack W. Hilton, reckless operation,
90 days in jail, assigned to
(Continued on Page Four)
re The Lady
iervice Himself
self, when asked to do so. He further
alleges that the tip for the
service was given Patrick who
divided the swag with a local
man, the two spending it for soft
drinks, and not sharing the
wrongly acquired gains with him.
In a letter to the editor the
porter portrays his grievance. This
letter is published in full, below,
The public can at least give him
his due credit, even if he nevei
gets the quarter.?The Editor.
"To The Editor:
To say that I was surprised at
the account of my energetic stay
at the Camellia Inn, as carried in
the Pilot of August 11, would be
not quite correct. I am never
surprised at the way Bill Keziah
presents me in a bad light as
regards my physical and mental
exertions, and the way he tries
to give Ben Patrick credit for all
the hard work I do.
(Continued on Page Four)
ATE
i News paper Ir
Southport, N. CM We
Home Owners ^
Fill Northwest <
In Rapid Manner
Section Has Had The Great- F
est Growth Of Any Part
Of Brunswick During The
Past Two Decades
LELAND SECTION MOST F
THICKLY SETTLED
Much Of Area Around f
Northwest Township
Town Now So Thickly
Settled That Heavy
Population Could
Be Shown
c
A frequent remark from vis- s
itors to Southport is that the Le- a
land section of Brunswick county P
Is growing by leaps and bounds,
new homes being built and old n
ones repaired, and the town is ra-ld
pidly becoming one of the most t'
heavily populated centers of
Brunswick county. ?
In town this past week former n
j county Forest Warden Dawson w
Jones commented on the strides a
that his community is making. d
He stated that in a large area ?
there were now five times as
many residences as existed fif- 0
teen years ago. These residences P
are nearly all occupied by the
owners and are good substantial a
structures, many of them being n
of brick. Although he did not 0
mention the fact Jones, himself, 0
owns one of the nicest brick rei
sidences in the entire county, P
about two miles from Leland.
r, v,?,,0 v,?ilt 1
Otuico y wuiti o ?a?t wuiinj
good homes' in recent years. Fori J
' several miles from the Brunswick
River bridge westward on Route
74 residences are almost as thick
as in the average city. This condition
exists not only on Route 1
74, the same thing may be found
down the Southport road and
along all roads in the township.
New citizens have bought lands
and built homes wherever they
could find lands that were fob
sale. ^
The great majority of the peopie
work in Wilmington at vari- ^
ous'industries. A great many oth- u
ers have regular employment at v
the various fertilizer factories in
| Northwest Township. Many more
are employed by the Spiritine .,
Chemical Company, the Gulf j'
State Cresoting Company and the
Taylor - Colquitt Cresoting com- ^
pany, all of which are located
near Lelaqd.
While the township cannot be
described as agricultural, County ?
Agent J. E. Dodson recently stat- ^
ed that the Leland and Northwest ^
township folks had entered into
the Victory Garden spirit more E
heartily than any other section of u
the county. Of the many good w
farms scattered about the township,
most are said to be center- n
ing heavily on the production of tl
foodstuffs this year.
Navy Wallops '
r\ r\ l
toast buarders
s
Navy Baseball Talent Had
Field Day With Local
And Wilmington Coast
Guards Sunday
The Naval Section Base presented
a cavalcade of sport in the B
form of a double-header Softball Ij
contest last Sunday. The contests ^
were played on a field known asj*1
the Sand-Spur Stadium and one c]
would have to travel a long way
to witness two more exciting a
games than those on that histor- t!
ic field. t<
The Wilmington Coast Guard v,
team that has been carrying J a
away softball honors in that city T
went down to defeat before an | n
All-Star enlisted team, in an ex- b
tra inning game, 6 to 5. The ei
teams were evenly matched, j T
, However, the locals succeeded in a
tying the score in the final inning:
(continued on cage four)
High Praise To
Brunswick Man _
i a
| Dennis F. Benton, Of Lei
land, Offers His Service
To U. S. Army Engineers
i Despite High Salary In
Civilian Occupation h
ri
A dispatch from the public re-;tl
; lataions office of the U. S. Army; S
' Engineers in Wilmington, this n
i week, paid tribute to the pa-y
friotism of Dennis Franklin Ben-'
' ton, a Brunswick county man, re- T
i siding at Leland. The dispatch had f!
i the authorization of Captain W. j fi
! F. Fowler, public relations and j L
i recruiting officer, and was as fol-J
1 lows: p
"Mr. Benton, a forty year old V
(Continued on page 4)
&
?
PORi
i A Good Com
dnesday, August 18, l1
Volume Of Weed I
Offerings Shows
Decided Increase
l<
'rescott Reports That The
Friday Sales On Thel
Whiteville Market Were
Over Half A Million
(
'RICE AVERAGES
REMAINING SAME
>lo Change In The Prices
Being Paid On The Local
Markets After 10 Days
Of Selling
Tobacco markets of Columbus
ounty experienced the heaviest ]
ales of the season on Friday, j
fter fairly heavy sales on the ,
receding day. 1
Averages are running pretty s
luch the same as in the previous
ays of selling, approximately $41 <
o $42 per hundred. i
P. S. Prescott, supervisor of j
ales on the Whiteville tobacco ]
larket, reported that the local t
rarehouses sold in excess of half i
million pounds of weed on Fri- (
ay for the largest day's selling i
his season. i
Something like 400,000 pounds
f weed had been sold on the (
receding day, Prescott said. i
From Tabor City, Chadbourn,
nd Fair Bluff, the other three ]
larkets of the county, likewise
ome reports of increased weed '
fferings. ]
Howevir, sales today are ex- ]
ected to be relatively light. 1
fn f-fnl/1 Hflofinrr i
1U 1AU1U 11VU1 Ulg |J
On New Bus Line
.ower Section Of Brunswick
May Get Daily Service
From Whiteville Via|
Ash, Longwood and Grissettown
The North Carolina Utilities
lommissioner will hold a hearing in |
:s office in Raleigh on Tuesday,
iugust 31st, to consider-a req
est for a franchise by the
Vhiteville-Seaside bus line, which
i proposing to institute pasenger
service between the couny
seat of Columbus and the
>wer part of Brunswick.
The application lists the route
hat is to be followed as begining
at the court house in Whiteille,
going through South Whiteille
and proceeding on 701 to
he junction of 130, following
his highway through Old Dock
i Columbus county to Ash in
Irunswick, thence following an
nimproved road through Longrood
and Grissettown to Seaside.'
The promoters of the line are
ot listed on the application for
he franchise.
?ong Record
Of Church Work:
!. N. Mintz Has Been A
Deacon In Elah Baptist
Church For 42 Consecutive
Years; Special Services
^
Mr. S. N. Mintz of the Elah
laptist church section, near Leind,
has a record of continuous
hurch service that few people ?
ave ever equalled. He has been
deacon in the Elah Baptist ?
hurch for 42 consecutive years.
The members of the church had j
special meeting Sunday night, ?
le entire service being devoted
) the long record of Mr. Mintz i |
rith the Elah church, as deacon
nd Sunday school adult teacher. {
here will also be a special ser- .
ion preached next Sunday night,
y Rev. G. T. Hickman, dedicated ]
specially to the beloved brother. J
he public is cordially invited to
ttend this service.
..eland Man Dies v
Here Saturday \
?' : s
tephen Franklin Benton c
Widely Known Resident c
Of Leland Passes At Lo- I
cal Hospital
Following a long illness, Step- <
en Franklin Mintz, widely known t
ssident of Leland, died Jiere in
le Dosher Memorial Hospital \
aturday night, after a long ill- <
ess. Mr. Mintz was in his 72nd >
ear. '
Funeral services were held 1
hesday afternoon at 3 o'clock J
rom the graveside in the Mintz ?
imily cemetery, with the Rev. ?
ester Akors officiating. <
Pallbearers were: G. B. Skip- l
er, Paul, Klutz, Frank Benton, L. i
V. Benton, E. J. Skipper, and I
(Continued on Page Four) ?
r PiL
munity
943 PUBUS1
Commissioner!
. Jorgensen
*.
Capable Young Official Reappointed
For Two Years
At Meeting Of Board
Here Monday
3THER MATTERS HEARD
\T MONDAY'S MEETING
Jury Selected For September
Term Of Superior
Court And Various
Other Matters
Handled
At the regular meeting of the
3runswick county board of comTiissioners
W. P. Porgensen, pres:nt
tax collector, was appointed
'or two more years to fill the
same office.
On the motion of A. P. Russ,
seconded by O. P. Bellamy, and
nade unanimous by the vote of
3. I. Mintz, Jergensen was apjointed
"current and delinquent
:ax collector of Brunswick Coun:y
for two years beginning with
Dctober, 1943 to collect each
fears' levy during that period of
:ime."
A jury for the September term
)f Superior court was drawti and
s as follows:
F. P. Potter, W. E. Bellamy, J.
B. Kirby, J. H. Royals, P. C.
iVoodard, O. P. Holden, Reubin
r. Caison, Henry Fulford, I. D.
Fulford, Carl Clemmons, Herbert
Brown, J. B. Sermons, Johnnie
VI. Varnum, Supply; J. V. Chadvick,
A. L. Meares, D. C. Million,
Shallotte; G. M. Smith, D. P.
Mintz, John Ellis Dodson, Anson
Babson, Corbett Coleman, O. L.
Weed Product
Af Ft
A Am* V>V4.JIX AV A. A.
*
Prisoner Of War
Writes Parents
After more than a year of
suspense Mr. and Mrs. D. A.
Harvell of Bolivia have heard
directly from their son, Edward
Lassiter, who since the capture
of Bataan has been a prisoner
of the Japs.
A card received from him
was in his own handwriting and
is a source of happiness for
those who had failed to hear <
from him. It reads as follows:
IMPERIAL NIPPONESE
ARMY?I am interned in Osaka
Uneda Bunsko, prisoner of war.
My health is usual. I am working
for pay. Please see that
everything is taken care of.
My love to you. ,
Young Harvell joined the
navy in 1937 and since then has
served as signalman. He was
taken prisoner during the bat- 1
tie of Bataan. He has two brothers
in the service. One, i
Woodrow is in the A. A. F.
and is at Elgin Field, Fla. He ,
has been in five years. The sec- i
ond, Hugh Duncan, is now at
Camp Campbell, Ky.
|
Change In Hours j
For Ration Office
Mrs. Grace Jones, Chief Clerk11
>f the local Ration board, announ- j i
^ i Ai- - A. 1 ...Ill Un I i
:es lousy uuil new jiuuis w,?
ibserved at the ratioiv office. i
The hours will be from 9 to 4, '
he hour from 4 to 5 to be used' i
inly for necessary office work. The I (
rnblic is asked to transact their! i
msiness with the ofice Before asj
10 one will be admitted after that <
;ime.
North Carolina
Boys Havii
Accompanied by five youngsters I
vho are much interested in the 1
lutdoors, Mrs. Roxie Collins j
Simpson, Taxidermist at the 1
State Museum in Raleigh, is 1
ipending ten days here. The boys
ire John Trott, Jr., and Jim Ivey l
if New London; John Coffey, ;
Gorman McCulloch and Ernest
Hitchell, Jr., of Raleigh. Mrs. '
Simpson is secretary of the North i
Carolina Bird Club in which all 1
he boys hold membership.
Their first day out on the ;
vaters and woods was without l
ivent. A trio of Southporters who I
vere intent on fishing carried
hem and one of their hosts, '
Douglas Jones, to Orton early one <
norning. Mrs. Sltnpson elected to
lerve as the propelling power for
i rowboat and she wound up the
lay with a badly blistered hand, i
vhich later became infected and
equired medical attention. The
x>ys, themselves, acquired sundry
mnburns, chiggers, etc. In addi
,0T
HED EVERY WEDNESDAY
> Reappoint
Tax Collector
;
W. P. JORGENSEN
Long, Ash; T. J. Watson, Leland.
R. H. Sellers, J. C. Maultsby,
Winnabow; J. N. Arnold, Southport;
J. Dallas McKeithan, Earlie
E. Evans, D. E. Evans, and E. A.
Evans, Freeland.
Also attended to by the board
of commissioners were the following
matters.
Eyota Farm was ordered placed
on the 1933 valuation. It being a
fraternal organization and only
holding a remainder in the property
subject to Crownstream's
(Continued On Page Fov*
ion Placed
gure As 1942
Flue Cured Crop Of 796
Million Pounds Is Being
Predicted By The Department
Of Agriculture
DECREASED YIELD
SEEN BY EXPERTS
On All Types Of Tobacco,
Prediction Is That There
Will Be Considerably
Decreased Per Acre
Yield
WASHINGTON. ? A flue cured
tobacco crop of 795,074,000
pounds now is expected for this
year by the Agriculture Department
as compared with an estimate
of 771,499,000 pounds a
month ago, but the total 1943 tobacco
crop is expected to be almost
identical sn size with that
of last year.
Prospects as of August 1, the
department announced today, point
to a crop of 1,411,703,000 pounds
of all types. The total last year
was 1,412473,000 pounds while on
July 1 of this year a 1943 crop
of 1,396,610,000 was indicated.
Through the prospective production
of flue cured tobacco in
creased during July, me prospects
for burley, dark fired and dark
air cured fell off slightly.
The indicated flue cured production
would be about two per cent
less than last year, but nearly
eight per cent above the ten year
average. Yield per acre is heavier
in the Georgia-Florida area than
was expected, and now is indicated
to be 900 pounds per acre in
Georgia and 790 in Florida, the
department said.
For all types of tobacco, the
average yield per acre is indicated
i Continued on page 4J
Bird Club
ig Great Time
tion, when they returned to the
joat landing they found that the
party that had carried them out
had done a fade-out and left them
to walk back.
It was some eleven miles from
the boat landing high up on Orton
Lake to Southport. In addition
there was some exceedingly
warm August sunshine. Nothing
daunted, Mrs. Simpson and the
half a dozen frying sized youngsters
set out for home on foot at
3:15 p. m., or that was the time
they claimed to have started
back. At 7:30 they arrived with
the tongues of most of the boys
hanging out from thirst and the
exertion of walking back, not to
mention the exertion they previously
had from walking through
the woods, rowing on the pond
and scratching chiggers.
Next morning at 7:00 they were
up and off to Shallotte, where
they spent a day acquiring more
(Continued Cn Page Four,)
i ! .
Most Of The News
Ail The Time
$1.50 PER YEAR
Tobacco Ceiling
Revised By OPA
| In Recent Ruling
Ungraded, Untied Top Price
To Be $38 A Hundred,
While Graded, Tied Has
$44 Ceiling
CLARIFIES EARLIER
WEDNESDAY RULING
Much Dissatisfaction Had
Been Expressed To The
Earlier Ruling, Which
Made No Differential
The Office of Price Administration
the latter part or the week |
set a maximum weighted average
purchase price of 38 cents a
pound for ail flue-cured tobacco
sold untied, tnus establishing a
differential between tied and untied
tobacco.
This action, OPA said, will not
affect the over-all maximum
weighted average purchase price
of 41 cents a pound for the 1943
flu-cured crop.
Flue-cured tobacco is grown In
Virginia, North and South Carolina,
Georgia and Florida. In the
Carolinas and Virginia, it is customary
for growers to grade their
tobacco, tying leaves of corresponding
quality into "hands."
In Georgia and Florida, on the
other hand, the tobacco is sold
on the auction markets in a untied
conditions. Buyers of the untied
tdbacco naturally have considerably
more work to do in rehandling
the tobacco after purchase.
??fi ro ra*
Dealers anu nuuuiav^....
buyers, recognizing the additional
work performed by the growers
who grade and tie their crop,
have voluntarily paid approximately
two cents more per pound
for corresponding grades of tied
and sorted tobacco than tor untied
offerings.
When maximum price regulation
No. 441 was issued July 24th,
a weighted average maximum
price of 41 cents a pound was
established for the entire crop
with a differential. This was done
in the interest of simplified control
and in the belief, OPA said,
that the traditional differential
would be maintained.
However, since the opening of
the markets, the farmers in the
Carolinas, having kept informed
of the prices prevailing for untied
tobacco in Georgia, have become
alarmed that their sorted and
tied tobacco will not bring the
customary higher prices because
of the limitations of the over-all
weighted average maximum price
of $41 a hundredweight, OPA confessed.
This resulted in a disruption of
normal marketing practices, the
agency said, with tobacco moving
from Squth Carolina into Georgia
and being sold there untied rather
than sold tied and graded. This
movement imposed a heavy drain
on transportation facilities. Unduly
heavy sale of untied tobacco
could become a serious problem
in view of what has been reported
to OPA as a manpower shortage
in the South, it warn said in
Washington.
NEWS
nnirrc
DiULiO
SON ARRIVES
Lt. and Mrs. Earl I. Brown an|
nounce the birth of a son, Ralph
Edward, at Dosher Memorial Hospital
on August 32. Mrs. Brown is
the former Miss Anna Taylor of
this city.
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Fox, of Wilmington,
announce the birth of .
a daughter on August IS in the
Dosher Memorial Hospital.
WAS PATIENT
Miss Juliet Johnson, of Bolivia,
was a patient in Dosher Memorial
Hospital on Wednesday and
Thursday.
.MEDICAL PATIENT
S. A. Potter, of Winnabow, was
a medical patient at Dosher Memorial
Hospital from Wednesday to
Sunday.
RECEIVES TREATMENT
Mrs. A. B. Crocker, of Winnabow,
entered Dosher Memorial
Hospital for treatment on Monday.
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TONSILS OUT
Little Patricia Marlowe, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Marlowe,
and little Santa Lee Aldridge,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Aldridge, had thefr tonsils removed
at the Dosher Memorial Hospital
on Monday.
I
i.