rtie Pilot Covers L,nswick County THE STATE PORT Most of The News All The Time jst Leaders ieCt Caswell Site Saturday Of ?cean ^ofr Jf for Purpose of Ob ? Chemical Analysis Shing^ciht,eS ?foECLOSEEIDEAL .Expectation Is That Vill Be Approved ,r twenty-five promi * ministers and lay i ?n inspection of Fort bturdav afternoon. In o inspecting the build-, ving the property a; ?ing over, they took) ll;e bathing water at | points on the beach, j -ples have already been i v the State chemists for | -lysa of the Caswell | j-d Caswell water is no1 if. Powell, one of I of Caswell Beach I ,-rtHS Fort Caswell, says fte waters analyed last ' that they showed no pol Sams Nelson, prominent jj-Sfray textile industra B r. analysis made year ist and got the same re H Mr Powell. There was :on then and the analysis _^made for the Baptists eqxeted to show any. very probable that the CtoUna Baptists will have I a definite step looking .[cthase of Fort Cahwell, ?je end of this week. They | lite what is termed a rea-! Us. The WAA officials j ara time ago that they *C the property in a way idibenefit and be pleas it people of the nearby pr d the rest of the Iu su. ?prospect of the Army Ifie property for a big S( center, it now appears ? area surrounding Fort Is solidly united in the the Baptists will be j iiy the place. Not' only' sympathy all for the; . Mi entire North Car-: Cwressional delegation in! ftn has endorsed the sale pserty to them. Should weed :n purchasing it I t to turn the historical1 into a great seaside as Prad for the use of the *li over North Carolina. '? it will also be open to ral public, according to ?t of one of the minis '*'13 in the inspection H M Baker and W. B. Southport were with Kt>ng party Saturday. Mr Baker is largely fir the interests of the 1 tong attracted to Fort 'ItfNtwt Hithtt I Bl-RXS Wallace Moore home ??'er Road was destroy- ' J?5 ?f undetermined origin r10 meet [ *'ePJlar meeting of the r t?ons Club will be held U Tkursday) at the C0"1* I ?,'llnS at 1 o'clock. New be installed. FEES res'dents who wish 5 f' Wlt'1 the department fe-M spra-vinS residences J! :n^s 'n an insect con 15jam way contact Mrs. . I-,avis and make the L^Posit with her. 1^- cheaper ^? slight reduction in the N UvT and the fact r,?. ?. been elimated hL . is '"tended for tractors and in to . * resulting in cheap keM^re purP?ses- The est T"* 1S 12-cents ^'??S-cents in 1948. '?"lionr r-BaId Head Sun* ""Wrton attB"tIer Thomp* ^?on., i ey' and sev" "ipinc f," aaw a huge tar V Th?m. tke water ear 1 b*in. y described the Uj." 0Vl?r seven feet in ?M oth?"mm?r Bertram *"? wr ulhPort sports ?*here * b'S tarpon in %av. w une was ?e?n. &1 broke their lines. Conference Champ WINNER?Halstead Holden, Shallotte youth, is shown receiving the Bill Hendrix trophy following his victory in the Southern Conference Track and Field meet in Chapel Hill recently. The Brunswick county boy is conference champion in the half-mile event.?(Wilmington News Cut.) Brunswick Boy Counted On To Keep Up Work By Jake Wade (Special to the State Port Pilot) Cruising somewhere in a UnitedStates Naval Reserve Unit is Halstead Holden, A Brunswick county boy, and while he's enjoy ing the ride, he's thinking right now of his best sports love, track. Halstead a few days agc> wrote Dale Ranson, one of his track coaches at the University of North Carolina. At the time he? was in Portsmouth, England. His; next destination, he said, was j Cuba. He's wondering about Car- j olina's cross country team next. fall. Holden whose home is at I Shallotte, is a letterman ih both j cross country and track. His j specialty in track is the 880 j yard run, at which he worked faithfully this spring, but never! quite came up to expectations un-j til the Southern Conference | championship meet late in May. Then he hit the jackpot. He ran the 881; in a fine 1:56.8 to win the title, dethroning Frank j Magill of V. P. I. It was his best job of the year and it earned him a place on the Southern Confer ence team in the inter-conference meet with the Southeastern Con ference legions. He's young, ana a junior, so Coach Ranson and the other Car olina track coaches are counting on him next year. He has a lot of natural ability, is an earnest workman and is a good compet itor. Winnabow Man j Dies In Wreck J. R. Walton, Greyhound Bus Driver, Died In Acci dent Monday Near Smith field J, R. Walton, whose home is at Winnabow, was killed instant ly Monday morning when the Greyhound bus which he was dri ving was in head-on collision with a milk truck on Highway No. 701 near Newton Grove. This highway accident, describ ed as the worst tragedy of the holiday week-end in North Car olina, ~ claimed the lives of two other persons, both of them oc cupants of the other vehicle in volved. Following the collision, the bus burst into flames, and only heroic work on the part of members of, a crowd which quickly gathered prevented further loss of life. Walton's body was jammed be hind the wheel and efforts to extricate it before the fire took over proved fruitless. However, reliable reports from persons at the wreck are that he was dead) before fire ever reached his body. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Virginia Clemmons Walton, to ?whom he was married about a t year ago; his parents Mr and, j Mrs. Henry M. Walton of B?llvia', (Continued on P?ff? five) August 2nd Set As Date For Opening Georgia - Florida Belt To Open On July 26 To Get 1949 Season Underway; Dates For Other Markets Set BOARD ADOPTS ONLY ONE NEW REGULATION Warehousemen And Grow ers Get Ready For Sales In Twenty-Three Co lumbus County Ware houses The chant of the tobacco auc- j tioneer will be heard again in Columbus County's twenty-three tobacco warehouses on Tuesday August 2. Announcement of the opening date paved the way for ware housemen and growers to get ready for the 1949 season. Flue-cured sales will get under way on July 26 when auction markets in the Georgia-Florida belt will open. The North Carolina Border Belt and South Carolina Belt open ings on August 2 will be follow ed by other belts as follows: Eastern North Carolina on Au gust 18; Carthage, Aberdeen, Sanford and Fuquay Springs on August 29. and the remainder of the Middle Belt on September 1;' and the North Carolina and Vir ginia Old Belts on September 12. The 1949 opening dates for the flue-cured tobacco markets were set in Raleigh Thursday by the Board of Governors of the Bright Belt Warehouse Association in an executive session at the Sir Wal ter which followed a public hear ing. Growers and representatives of growers' groups attended the pub lic hearing, presenting their re quests and recommendations with regard to the opening dates for the forthcoming marketing sea Continued On Page Four Brunswick Man Still Patient i Roger W. Willetts Recover ing From Serious Injuries i Sustained In Automobile Accident In Virginia Still in the Kings Daughters j (Hospital at Stanton, Va., Roger IW. Willetts, son of Mr. and Mrs.! J. F. Willetts of the Mill Creek community, is slowly recovering from injuries received in an auto mobile wreck about a month ago. Reports from the hospital are to the effect that it may be over I two months before he can be dis ' charged. Both he and his wife 'suffered broken legs and other injuries, thftse of Mr. Willetts be-j ing much the more serious. It is | expected that Mrs. Willetts will j be discharged from the hospital) in a few days. I | Mrs. Willetts is a native of IStanton. The couple had beenj home to visit Mr. Willetts people and were on their way back to ( Yorktown, Va., where Mr. Willetts | is erriployed as a Naval instructor, when their car was wrecked with the resultant injuries. Street Paved With Blocks Of Ice Visitors to the waterfront in Souttiport- ? Tuesday afternoon rubbed theii: eye?', in disbelief when they sfiw tlje section in front of Mack's Cafe, literally paved with blocks of lice. Some of-, the idle onlookers might have thought this was a unique way to beat the 90 plus heat, -but not the employees of Southport, Coal & Ice Com pany. Those fellows were trying to retrieve as much of their spilled cargo as they could sal vage. ?