I Hie Pilot Covers j^-unswick County 0l, no. fourteen ""no Kper Playing I' Important Part In World Affairs |;H I ow Being Put To Many ! fBUses That Were UnH dreamed Of A Few Years Ago And Uses Still In-j creasing means MUCH to ARMED FORCES emendous Tonnage Of' ^Kaper And Paper Board { Required To Take Care ~ I Of Many War-Time Needs K; of the most versa-1 . : f the war, is find-l - undreamed of in) acetime I the production of many mills' an essential civilian items, ^ now replacing steel, aluminum, ^Rplate. rubber, silk, plastics and In many prodK iot only sat >ry but actually superior to e original materials. l of the decreased prod ticn of pulpwood, the basic < terial used in making paper, I the increased demand for 1' > lucts, many civilian usesj( H e been restricted. ) p . the unusual char-1 j Ilteristic of being aciapiaoie iui j K either in disposable goods or _ I lurable and durable goods, ' Ir.: cai i? formed or molded | any shape, structure I design , ^presenting the collective ef- ( Lts oi the industry's technolo sts, WPB exhibit of paper and I . ha? materials by its Iper and pulp division in Wash* Lton. D C, includes displays of piu:y lis. packaging mat| , articles fabricated from ] iper-base plastic, wearing aparel, household appliances and Cnishings, items of hardware, (nr. supplies, and special papers, [included in the display are Ich military items as shell controls gun covers and ordnance taps; shell grommets, bomb ' Legs and practice bomb fins; gas [ask canisters and hand grenade [tttoers: dUv/i?wi mserts, am- < lunition wadding, and primer [per: flare spacers and antitank line parts; bomber insulation and [ttison tanks; litter covers and pergency paper stretchers; surical dressings; delousing bags; sd gas detection arm bands; and iminated fiber helmets; aviator's When the Armed Forces needed ^ map paper that would not dis- c itegrate when immersed in water, ' liustry produced a map paper ' lat can be soaked by rainfall or ' imersed indefinitely in sea ' iter, and afterwards wrung out , id dried. i Tank commanders and pilots 1 tded maps that they could read 1 irag night battles without illu- 1 ination. Special papers that can I printed with fluorescent ink 1 ire made available for this pur- < A tremendous tonnage of paper t Mid paperboard is required for ' Bfaar.ce shell containers, water- ' ^ oof. light and strong. To meet needs of the Army, the paper I ^feustry has developed a durable | f Bater-resistant shipping contain- j 1 B commonly referred to as the j I B'-Box" or "Victory Box," built i B?ugh to withstand rough hand- e B-- ar.d prolonged immersion in < ^ ater. Paper ration boxes and 1 BMale First Aid Dressing pack- 1 Bp are a standard issue to ev- ? By American combat soldier the 5 B BTiK Army makes use of dispos- i Me paper-gun-covers and equipBW-wraps made of treated Per. to protect weapons and 1 Bpment in transit and while ] Bpng landings. There are limitSi uses for waterproof flexible Btouflage paper which possesses wet strength and fade resist(Continued on Page Four) J [Ration Pointers |j B GASOLINE?In North Carolina I B^ coupons are now good. ? sl?. \R _ stamp No. 14 good \ Bf 5 pounds through October. 1 limps Nos. 15 and 16 good for i B Pounds each for home canning t gh October 3L I s"(>Ks ? stamp No. 18 good i 1 Pa:r- Validity has been ex- ? MMed indefinitely. No. 1 "Air- t M*11' Stamp in Ration Book No. f B v'':|! * good Nov. 1 for one t B'^ATS, FATS?Brown stamps J B an,i E good through Octo- i B!"? Brown stamp F becomes j B.? 0ctober l" and remains good '. B a8h October 30. t K?0ESSF.D FOODS Blue 1 KrP2nU?,V' and W exPire ?cU B uc stamps X, Y, and t I ' s?ou through November 20. fro ). 25 BILLIARD fUfe. " M I ^Eim W N.M'i-.v P "* - .^1^1 gggl :V>- ? ;-35^r:j0 i JfF A1 SECTION BASE.?\ cushioned billiard champion, ] ;he benefit of the men at the well Monday night. He is nov >f the 6th Naval District. Thi tour. Hoppe has been playi earned the game as a young! n his father's hotel at Corn and was acclaimed a "boy w jack in '93. Confident Bust This Week T *_ President Goodman Stated Three New 43-Passenger Coaches Should Be Here Before End Of Week, Barring Unexpected De-1 L 3USES FOR WHITEVILLE E RUN EXPECTED SOON ^ Officials Fee! Ti.?y Will Be 0 Able To Give Good Ser- h vice Just As Soon As I New Coaches And ? Trucks Are Deliv- h ered From Factories h Although the Studebaker and j " International people had promised! lelivery of coaches to the W. B. I & S. Bus Lines, Inc., by last week, I he machines have not yet arriv-! _ :d. It is understood from officials | ' hat three of them will positively >e here this week and will be i >laced in operation between Wil- | nington and Southport. Two will J >e used for the regular scheduled I uns and the third will be held in I f *ocnrvo for snecial trips and re- ] )lacement, should one of the regilar machines meet with an accilent necessitating repairs. The buses are each 43-passen;er, standard bus line coaches. Pwo were made by the Interna- n ional Harvester Corporation and n he third by the Studebaker Cor- s joration. In addition to the three e or the Wilmington - Southport a ine, two more coaches are ex- a >ected to arrive any day for reg- e liar schedules between Southport ind Whiteville. President Maurice c loodman of the W. B. & S. Bus o ..ines, Inc., stated to this paper, a ast week, that the tentative J ichedule between Whiteville and t1 louthport calls for buses to leave c ;ach place at 7:30 in the mornng, week days and Sundays. (Continued On Page Four* P Hard Going For ' The Ration Board 1 p VIrs. Jones And Mrs. Christian Both Resign From i Office; Mrs. Lewis Out J At Shallotte Because Of Illness The Brunswick County Ration loard has been having consider- ^ ible rough going during recent veeks and officials who contri>ute of their time and labor are itill having very much of a headiche. Mrs. Grace Doshcr Jones has ecently been compelled to resign is chief clerk to the board. The ;rials and worries were too much, or her health. She resigned some I o ;ime ago and planned to carry onlv intil a successor was appointed, j t ts the board was unable to im-11 nediately get any one to take her o >lace her health forced her out. ii Temporary helpers in her place r ire Mrs. John 6. Caison and Miss a feggy Carr. Mrs. J. G. Christian, another ? valued worker with the ration t (Continued On Page Four> est] A Good 4-PAGES TODAY CHAMP Millie Hoppe,world's three put on a demonstration for Naval Section Base at Gasr touring the coastal sector 3 was his first stop on this -? kalllimJa MAfl IT a . ug uiiuaxud 'i'j jcaio, nc sier standing on a soapbox wall-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., onder" with the cue 'way ;s Will Arrive o Start Work Son Was In Bed And Fast Asleep Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Outlaw, of Jouthport, went to bed as usual 'riday night. They woke up as sual Saturday morning and bean their accustomed chores. It /as not until Mrs. Outlaw had ccasion to enter the bedroom of er son, Harvey, who is in the lavy and who had not been home a several months that she knew er day was not as usual. What Mrs. Outlaw saw in Harey's bed caused her to call her usband. Sometime during the ight Harvey had arrived home nexpectedly. He had gone to his oom and gone to bed without wakening his parents. /ery Poor Crop 3ut Good Returns, teifer Pear Crop Reduced Five - Sixths, But Prices Were Exceptionally Good For Walden Creek Grow er Last winter was one of the lost unusual on record in the umber and intensity of cold pells. This unseasonable weather xtended far into the spring and s a result all fruit crops were lmost complete failures here and lsewhere in the state. A couple of years ago the govrnment took over lands of a lot f farmers in the Camp Davis rea. Among those losing out was lorace Fisher Harrison. After he government took his farm, he ame down into Brunswick and ought the Thompson McRackan lace. Among the permanent imrovements on this place were ome 12,000 pear trees. In 1942 Mr. Harrison gathered ,000 bushels of Keifer pears from hese trees. Last spring the cold layed havoc with buds, blooms (Continued on Page Two) Wrs. Craig Dies Of Heart Attack Vidow Of Former Southport Baptist Church Pastor Succumbs At Home Of Daughter In Monroe; Mother Of Mrs. Thompson McRackan, Of Southport Mrs. Helen Wilson Craig, widow f the late Rev. Braxton Craig, ddely known preacher and one ime pastor of the Southport Saptist church, died at the home f her daughter, Mrs. J. N. Clark, a Monroe last Wednesday eveling. Her death was attributed to , heart attack. Rev. and Mrs. Craig came to iouthport about 1924 and for hree years Mr. Craig was pastor (Continued on page 4) m i ! News paper In Southport, N. CM Wedi District Meeting N N.G.E.A. Hears State Educators Southeastern District Of N. Pu C. Education Association j Holds Meeting Here On < Thursday I WILKINS MAKES FINE ADDRESS TP Says That The Time For Discussion Has Passed, Xh And Action Is What Is f( Needed In These i Times Some of the important issues facing education at the present time, with pleas for greater plan- e3tl ning and more action, were the the subjects of discussion at the Fall stir Leadership Conference' of the uct North Carolina Education Agsocia- ma, tion held at Whiteville School, resj Whiteville Thursday, October 7, or meeting was splendidly attended pu] by representatives from the fol- via( lowing county and city administ- djr( rative units. Robeson, Bladen, paj Columbus, Brunswick, New Han- ^ over, Fairmont, Lumberton and ger Red Springs. A. B. Wilkins, presi- are dent of the Southeastern, presided, cat( and introduced Fred W. Greene, eas executive secretary of the associa- ya. tion and Alice Paulukas, the new ^tl field secretary. Orl Horace Sisk, president of the qk N. C. E. A., was present for the meeting, and was heard in a Cjfi short talk. Mr. Wilkins pointed out the im- iaLr portant part that teachers play orit in these crucial t imes, first as n,ii educators of the most important and vital resource of our nation q ?the boys and girls, and as lead- tad ers in the community. Our chil- 0ffj dren should in no way suffer from wu] the lack of quality or quantity of ,juc education during this emergency. an It is a grave responsibility, and age one that we should consider con- sen tinuously. wj]] "It is time," said Mr. Greene, mn "That we follow up our discus- Wil] sions with action. We have been wit] most verbal, but words are not OD' enough. Action is imperative." ten; Teachers need to get together not mei only among themselves, b'ik with iem others in the community, to get to q the bottom of these problems, to sen understand them, and with the cen combined help of all, to actually Pu'l revise our educational effort to and meet them. ped Some of the outstanding of (continued on page four) |^| Saw Son-In-Law With MacArthur Mt ? News Reel Of Scene Before j Lae Landing Shows Gen- ] eral MacArthur Talking To Colonel Kinsler In Mrs. J. W. Thompson, of South- gro port, was thrilled one day recent- Mr: ly when she went to Wilmington, Mis attended a movie and when the at 1 ~ V. loi.i news reel eaiue un iiei sun-iu-ian, wu Colonel Kenneth H. Kinsler, was Oct shown talking to General Douglas F MacArthur. Wu The scene of the picture was Clu the base where American para- girl troopers under Colonel Kinsler wh< embarked for the now memorable tho landing at Lae. It will be recalled j that Colonel Kinsler, in charge of several thousand paratroopers, who trained at Fort Bragg, was L the first man out of the transport has planes that carried the troops. of In addition to Mrs. Thompson, Uni (Continued on Page Four) a fc Fattening Up Ms On Wonderfu . It has been mentioned sev- pr eral times . that Orton Planta- ba tion, as well as other places in gr Brunswick, were stressing food th production this year. A repre- bu sentative of this paper went out he to Orton this week, walking all of the way except the last half 18 mile. A half day on the planta- fit tion was more than enough to sti show that food production has or really been the keynote. pu Arriving just at the lunch fa hour, entirely unexpected and inl without any ration book made ho no difference. The Orton boss 161 and his wife were just ready pr and it was but a matter of seconds to rustle out an extra wi plate. The lunch, and it was a 25 good one, was produced right sU there on the plantation. fcr After lunch, out on the re main farming section of the wi plantation, which is a part of hr the Lilliput Estate. Gilbert Reid, 16 one of the fire wardens, was be found with a tractor and huge be disc plow, building a fire lane T1 which would protect timber in gc the area and likewise aid in , ? >ORT A Good Comr nesday, October 13th, ew Offices Of F WPB Will Soon Be Established rpose Of New Movement Is To Stimulate The Production Of Pulpwood, hi Which Is Vital To War Cl Effort lie fa IIS AREA UNDER & ATLANTA OFFICE c? sri is Is Part Of Ail-Out Ef- ?? >rt To Correct For The fa Shortage of 2,500,000 tv Cords Of This Tim- 20 ber Product te hi Six regional offices will be fe iblished early in October by ov War Production Board to he nulate domestic pulpwood prod- fr ion and serve producers who is y be hampered by government dc Lrictions on scarce material equipment, the Newspaper yt pwood Committee has been ad- so :d by A. B. Hansen, deputy or :ctor of the WPB Pulp and pe >er Division. at he offices, each of which will to rice all pulpwood producing ? as in their sections, will be toed at Boston, for the North- f tern states; Charlestown, W. V. , for the Appalachian states; anta, for the Southeast; New eans, for South Central states; :en Bay, Wise., for the Lake tes: and Seattle, for the Pa c Northwest. A seventh office _ 1 be maintained at Ottawa, On- r io, to work with Candian auth;ies in stimulatnig Canadian pwood production. AIDES ASSIGNED ? "he regional aides will be athed to the proper regional WPB ces, but their sole function al I be to increase pulpwood pro- P' tion and thus help overcome fii estimated 2,500.000-cord short- lo which threatens war and estial civilian requirements. They I maintain contacts with pulp Is and pulpwood producers, si 1 act as WPB liaison agents al h field offices of OP A, WMC, " T and U. S. Forestry and Ex- 1 sion Services of the Depart- al it of Agriculture in all prob? relating to pulpwood cutting. "hese regional offices, Mr. Han said, are designed to de- ' tralizc the operations of the pwood unit of the WPB Pulp ! Paper Division and thus ex- W; ite production. m tl issionaries To ? tl Give Talks Here w fa And Mrs. W. A. Wun- al ich, Returned Missionar- n es, To Tell Of Work In I) Haiti ** Twenty Thousand Souls Saved Five Years" will be the backund for the stories Mr. and ). W. A. Wunsch, returned isionaries from Haiti, will tell the Wayside Gospel Mission at inabow; and Dixon's Chapel on ober 15-18. 'riday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. nsch will speak to the Bible 1 b at Dixon's Chapel. Boys and Ha, s as well as the older folks twe > are cordially invited, will He roughly enjoy the thrilling stor- litt [Continued On Page Four) J wa; HOME ON LEAVE anc ,t. (jg) James Harper, USNR, reg recently completed a course ing Indoctrination at Princeton ste versity and is now at home for eig irief visit with his family. inc cov my Hogs ? il Chufa Crop ? ? use otecting the big new Orton cow a j rn. Orton has a small but pUI owing herd of cows and from t|e e facilities that are being ser ilt, it is evident that a large bre rd is being provided for. jt, But of chief interest was an acre field of chufas. Four or re Orton employees were just Ic irting out to fence off an acre so of this chufa field for the rpose of turning hogs in to tten. The field will be divided to several fenced areas for gs in different stages of fat- Mi ning, a sort of streamlined oduction of pork. It is understood that last nter Orton had only around medium sized porkers to lughter. At this stage it is not 1 town how many animals will Bri ach the killing stage this cd inter. But it is interesting to Wi tow that the plantation has mu 0 hogs and pigs. Quite a num- qui r of the hogs already weigh A. tween 400 and 500 pounds, fur le 18 acre field of chufas will In 1 far to adding weight to all. hai (Continued On Page Fourj PIL nunity 1943 publish; lis Wood Crop Very Be mber On Small Farm Helps Only Five Years; Farmei Because O: A story that is replete with t iman interest comes out of v ratham county concerning 01- c ! Burnett a 38-year-old negro g rmer who, with his household >ods, an 18 year old mule, a ii >w, two small pigs and 50 bu- b lels of grain, was worth $571.- h i five years ago. n Today he owns a 132-acre t rm, a young and healthy mule, p m cows, a heifer, and a calf, s 10 chickens, three large fat- u ning" hogs, a sow and a shoat; t s barn is bursting over with v ed for the livestock and hSs vn pantry in his neat farm e >me has, 363 quarts of canned v uits and vegetables, his family t well clothed and well fed. He h ies not owe a dollar. y To go back five years, this 0 >ung colored farmer was in a v irry plight. The little he made i a rented farm all went to v ly interest on time purchased s ipplies. In desperation he went v the Farm Security Adminisi .A cy 1 n t .attie aaies aon In Columbi * S; Twin Names But No Blood Relation T Several weeks ago Ensign id Mrs. Herman Hartman -j. issed through the ordeal of tiding an apartment and were cated in the home of Mrs. la Potter Watson. Mrs. Hartan's name is Marguerite. She from Baltimore and the Engn is from Pennsylvania. Each e only childs in their rcspecve families. 9? tbout two weeks ago Chief bi id Mrs. Henry Hartman also ti( issed through the some or- at tal and found themselves lo- SI i.ted in the home of Mrs. Ida Fi jtter Watson. Mrs. Hartman's Fi ime is Margaret. She is originly from Charleston but has th sided in New York since she bj as 16. Chief and Mrs. Hart- Q1 an are each only children in ca leir respective families. JT1 It may be added that none of 0 ie.. Hartman's are blood., rela- ? ins. Neither the Ensign and bi a H'lfn Of* fhA fllipf And Ills I pi ife had ever heard of the other C< mily until the Chief arrived ; the home of Mrs. Watson. th sh airyman Gets " Name For Herd W. Haynes, Of Winna- 3U bow, Gets Exclusive Name 38 Of "Cypress Lawn" For His Herd Of Holstein- _ Friesian Dairy Cows ( \vo or three years ago V. W. Jl yes bought the property be- |j sen Winnabow and Bell Swamp, has recently completed a nice le home just off the highway. B tr. Hayes is understood to alys have had a fancy for cows 1 dairying. Following up this ard, ho has been steadily buildup a nice little herd of Hoiin-Friesian cows and now owns hteen head of these animals, or luding a number of good milk j,a rs a nd pure bred heifers. He-ce getting well embarked in the hc ry business. cll tecently the Holstein-Friesian . sociation of America awarded ln . Hayes the exclusive right to th i the name, "Cypress Lawn" as lerd rame in registering his *>> :e bred Holstein-Friesian cat- w' Incidently, the association re- th ved more than 500 prefixes for eders having membership with to in the year 1942. ecl Pi equirements For ? Joining WACS?? ? fu rs. J. A. Russ, Who Has ra Charge Of Enrolhnent In be Brunswick, Releases The th Specifications For Join- w' i fd t was stated last week that 's rnswick County has been ask- ** to enlist three ladies in the th VCs before Oct 15. It is very ti< ch desired that acceptable and SP ilified ladies apply to Mrs. J. P? Russ, of Shallotte, who wiJI nish all information and aid. of order that prospective enrollees E' re a better understanding of 41 {Continued on Page Two) OT ED EVERY WEDNESDAY Was His R sst Farm Crop Pay Off 40-Year Loan In p Is Now Well-Fixed L?SA r s. ration, seeking a loan that pould enable him to buy for ash and perhaps enable him to et ahead a little. The FSA became interested i his case, suggested that he gi uy a farm and offered to lend im the money with which to lake the purchases, in addition p o operational loans which would , iermit him to pay cash for his upplies. He bought the farm inder a 40-year loan and his inerest on the money borrowed pas three per cent His first year as farm own- in r-operator he made little head- d< pay. The second year he did bet- b< er, managing to pay a little on W lis loan each year. In his 4th N ear he managed to pay $450.- ti i0 on his loan, he had mean- c> phile greatly improved his farm, ti This year he found himself VI pith about 35-yearly payments H till hanging over his farm. This D pas more or less of a night- p (Continued On Page Four) ri ? H leduled ? lis This Week * a ales Will Be Held At Ta- tl bor City, Thursday At 2 p. m. Friday di OTAL OF 98 HEAD CATTLE ARE IN LOT 6 CI wo Carloads Of Jersey Cattle Recently Brought ci To The County For Sale, Under Owner- 61 ship Of Bank And a Business People Two carloads of Jersey cattle? n' I head?will be sold in Colum- r( is County this week in two aucan sales?Tabor City Thursday dl . 2:00 P. M. in Baldwin's le ables and at the County Home arm, Whiteville, 2:00 o'clock dl riday afternoon. le These cattle were selected in ie drought area of Mississippi d' r Assistant County Agent, J. P. k ninerly and bought by the Wac.maw Bank in cooperation with f< oups of business men in Tabor 81 ty and Whiteville to be sold in fi is section at cost, as a contriition to increasing the milk sup- ny on the farms of Columbus sl aunty. a In the opinion of Mr. Quinerly, ese young cows and heifers lould make good family cows. d any of them will freshen before c< iristmas. All are kind and ai untie, since they came from nail herds and were handled ev- p, y day. p; Ooi'nn nnrahrad unnno1 Hi ilia nf J IX perior breeding will be in these .les on the same terms as the oi (Continued on Page Four) ti )aks Plantation iuys Car Of Cows eautiful Plantation Owned By New Yorker Adds Carload Of 40 Head Of Cows To Already Large Herd The beautiful Oaks Plantation i the River Road, above Orton, is recently purchased and re- H ived a full car load of Hereford r< iifers. The animals were pur- F iased from a farm at Elkton, pi western North Carolina and fl ere are 40 head in tne lot. S The Oaks Plantation is owned N r F. P. Adams, of New York, F ho spends much of his time on w e plantation. He already had a n le little herd of about 40 Here- R rds, headed by a huge register- ^ 1 bull of the same breed. Hie tl antation is managed by J. J. ^ imseur and his son, Joe., Jr. P uring the past few years they Lve brought the plantation up where it may be well termed le of Brunswick's most beauti- u 1 and model farms. The Hereford is everywhere w .ted as one of the best types of P tef cattle. It is understood that e recently acquired 40 head ill be used for breeding pur>ses. Farmers who are acquaint- ^ I with the fact that this county o: well adapted for raising both w :ef and dairy cattle are hopeful ? at the move by the Oak Plantain to raise beef cattle may read through all of the good isture areas of the county. Hie two Ramseurs, Jim Ferger, Orton, and County Agent J. ir Dodson are to investigate an a en east of Mill CrCek Baptist pt (Continued On Page Fourj. ci f j a tfost Of The News All The Time m $1.50 PER YEM I londay Session Cleared Cases j In Rapid OrdeF tate Highway Patrolmaty O'Daniel Again Leads In Number Of Arrests Qf Defendants In Recorder's Court PEEDING IS AGAIN MOST NUMEROUS} ines For Fast Driven Went All The Way From $20.00 To $75.00, Costs Added In All Cases With defendants pleading gullfy . rapid order, a lengthy Record's Court docket was finished sfore noon by Judge John Brard on Monday of tilts weekot Including cases that were oonnued from previous sessions, a leek up on the warrants showed, lat the arrests were made by irious officers, as follows: Stat* ighway Patrolman W. V. 0'aniel, 6 arrests; Patrolman R. C. ridgen, 2; Patrolman R. E. Sher11, 1; Chief of Police Ottp ickman, 2; Rural Policeman p. . Ganey, 2; Rural Policeman W. . Evans, 1; Deputy Sheriff F. jU ewis, 1. - > Judge Ward handled the foliwing cases in about the shorty me in which a like number ot ases have ever been handled in lis court. Wiley G. Wells, speeding, (0 ays in jail or $25.00 and costs. Earnest Taylor, Jr., speeding. 9 days bn roads or $25.00 and >sts. William Frank Hix, speeding, ipias and continued. Willis Frink, improper brake^ 9 days on roads or $10.00 fin* nd costs. Governor Brown, speeding and o operators license, 60 days op lads or $20.00 and costs. Henry Williamson, assault with eadly weapon, nol pros wtyjl ave. LeRoy Warnett, assault with eadly weapon; nol pros ? | ave. , 1 William McMillan, assault witM eadly weapon, with intent tq ill, continued to October 18th. | Charles A. Webster, possession, >ur months on roads, judgment ispended on payment of $25.00 ne and costs. T. W. Stricklin, possession, four lonths on roads, judgment BU; eended on payment of $25.00 fine i id costs. W. A. Foster, speeding, $20.00 ne and costs. E. G. Lamgley, speeding, 'SO jys on roads, judgment suspend1 on payment of fine of $75,0# id costs. Norma K. Sloan, speeding an< . issing a car on curve, 60 days In '4 ayment of fine of $50.00 gn<) William Resnick, speeding, $20.9 fine and costs. Woodrow Hart, assault, connued to October 18th. V' NEWS | j BRIEFS i " * COMPLETES TRAINING ).,! A Press Relations release from. Hutchinson, Kans., announces lat Aviation Cadet George War* m Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. rancis London Lewis, of Southart, has completed primary ight training at the Naval A& tation here. Transferred to the aval Air Training Center, Corus Christl, Texas, Cadet Lewis f ' ill win his wings and a comlission as Ensign in the Naval eserve or 2nd Lieutenant In the larine Corps Reserve on compleon of further flight training lere. He is a graduate of Southort high school. M FINE BUCK DEER Hunting at Marsh Branch, 8atrday Isaac Willetts, of Winnaow and several other hunters 'hose names were not learned, agged three fine buck deer. . PATROL WINS PRIZE The attendance prize of passes > the Amuzu Theatre which was ffered by Price Furpless was f -on by the Wolf patrol of the toil Boy Scout Troop. THINGS ARE FINE 4 R. B. Lewis, one of the indust,ous farmers living midway beveen Bolivia and South port, was f i town yesterday. Said he had bout 30 nice hogs and be apeared generally satisfied wllfc ~ dating conditions. i

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