The State Port Pilot Southport, N. G. Published Every Wednesday JAMES M. HARPER, JR.... Editor Entered as second-class matter April 20, 1928, at the Post Office at Southport, N. C., under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ONE YEAR . $1.60 SIX MONTHS . 1.00 THREE MONTHS .76 Wednesday, April 19,1950 A Day In The Life Of A Lazy Community Ask anybody who knows and he will tell you that nothing ever happens in Southport. Take Thursday, for instance. Of course, it was a busy day for the women of the Southport Baptist church, because they had company coming. In fact, they were serving as hostess for the annual meeting of the Woman’s Missio nary Union of the Brunswick Associa tion ; so it may be that there was some • slight acceleration in the normal pace of activity. And in the middle of the afternoon there appeared to be more than the nor mal amount of scurrying hither and yon as preparations were made for serving a benefit barbecue supper to more than two hundred twenty-five persons. It may be that some of the late-comers had to hurry a little, because at 3 o’ clock there was another benefit over at the school house. This one wras an enter tainment for the benefit of the Volunteer Fire Department, and it didn’t require too much preparation, since two out-of town fellows put on the show. Nothing ever happens around here, but you take Friday—But that was an other day. Telephone Survey This week Southern Bell Telephone Co. officials are conducting a survey to determine the degree of need and the approximate cost of extending telephone service into the rural areas of this coun ty. In doing this they are following earli er recommendations made by the Bruns wick County Farm Bureau, an organiza tion which has been unceasing in its ef forts to expand existing communication « facilities. Naturally it is too early to hazard a guess as to what wil result from this sur vey ; but it is obvious that there must be • some point of beginning if Brunswick is • to be served by a telephone network, - This may be that point. : Need Of Service Hundreds of yachts are now using the intracoastal waterway through Bruns ? wick county each day bound homeward 1 after wintering in Florida. They seldom _ stop this northward trek except for gas, oil, water and galley supplies. They are going home and in more or less of a hur ry In the fall things are different with these same boats. Some of them are be ing taken south for the owners who win ter at various points. Others go for no reason at all except to be taken out of the ice-locked, wintery northern waters. But all of them, regardless of the pur pose of going, start out before the north : ern freeze-ups come, and once they get " as far down as Baltimore they take it “ easy. It is not unusual for a yacht to 2 spend a week or two at some point in Brunswick waters. They are out of the freezing zone and there is no need for - them to hurry on. If an effort was made to interest boat ‘ owners and provide fresh water facilities : for caring for them, it is believed that it Z would not be a hard job to build up a re gular wintering point for northern yachts in Brunswick county. Town Creek has some beautiful sheltered areas of ample width and depth. The same can be said of Lockwoods Folly river and of the Shal lotte river, with the exception that a channel would have to be dredged to reach a basin area near Shallotte. In any event the three areas have fresh water that never freezes. The boats that go south just to get out of the ice would really prefer stopping at half-way points of the long trip they now must make to get accommodations in Florida. Gas and oil companies with an already big boating business in this area would do well to provide really first-class ser vice of which there is none now available, to boats in Brunswick county waters. Outstanding Achievement The Brunswick Electric Membership Corporation, a cooperative composed of rural people long neglected in the mat ter of electricity, has reached 5,700 con sumers through 1,200 miles of lines. That is an achievement of the first magnitude. Manager E. D. Bishop has just announ ced expansion plans to increase the miles of rural lines to 1,700 and the number of consumers to 7,500. And that is a con tinuation of the REA plan to provide electric service to all who cannot other wise obtain service. With this objective there can bo no quarrel. How many of these consumers would still be in darkness if there had been no REA? The obvious answer, of course, is that most of them would still be without electricity. The REA appears to be doing a good job of meeting its obligations and is, therefore, entitled to some wholesome What About This ? The Cancer Crusade, which inciden tally should receive universal support even if the contribution is limited to a few dimes or a dollar, serves to remind us of a rather frequent complaint heard in recent years. The preachment heard so often in the cancer fund promotion is that people should visit their doctors and be examined, and thus detect the disease in its early stages. In simpler words, we are advised to have frequent checkups and in this way aid our physicians in get ting at the case, if there be one, early. RALEIGH ROUNDUP By Eula Nixon Greenwood WAR TALK . . . Visitors from North Caro lina in the Nation’s capital last weeek were as .c nded at the amount of war talk heard in Washington. WTiile we get good doses of this type of conversation via the press and radio here in the Old North State, it certainly isn’t the main topic of conversation. We still have the weather, Kerr Scott, the Senate race, and what the preacher said last Sunday. In Wash ington, Desease, nothing else seems to matter. You hear it from drivers of taxicabs and right on up the line to U. S. Senators and various members of the Cabinet. If the war atmosphere hangs as heavily over Moscow as over Washington, then some kind of shooting war seems. to be just around the cor ner. It is to be hoped that this is the same corner around which prosperity sat in 1930-31. I; NOTES . . . Reports reaching Raleigh are to he effetct that Senatorial Candidates Willis Smith and Frank Graham are running neck and-neck in most of the counties, with Graham having good strength in the upper Piedmont area of counties and Smith exceedingly strong in the mountain counties (with the exception of Burke) and in the Lumberton-Gastonia group of counties along the S. C.-N. C. line . . . Gra ham also seems stronger in the Northwestern North Carolina counties, with Smith holding his own in the northeastern and central east ern counties . . . It now begins to look as if the race may be largely decided by the sheer physical endurance and strength of the two men ... As the days become warmer and the battle becomes more vigorous, Dr. Graham will think longingly of the relatively quiet academic life at the University and Willis Smith will re gard law practice as a safe and sane existence . . . The Senatorial race of two years ago kill ed J. M. Broughton . . . J. C. B. Ehringhaus was never a strong man after the 1932 race with Dick Fountain; and Foundain was never the same after that ... Dr. Ralph McDonald was an invalid for several months after his 1936 campaign with Clyde R. Hoey ... We have only three ex-Governors now living . . . Mor rison, Hoey, and Cherry . . . . . . There is some disappointment that Rob ert R. Reynolds is not waging a more aggres sive campaign ... but he says he’s doing a lo of speaking before civic clubs . . . and plans t strat on a tour of courthouse speeches ver soon now, beginning in Raleigh. . . . . . Rumor persists in Washington that Pre sident Harry Truman will fit Dr. Frank Gra ham into an important, and comfortable, pos ition in Washington if he loses out in his bi for another four years in the Senate . . . . State Board of Elections Chairman Char les M. Britt is still in search of ways to remov some members from the local boards of elect ion . . . Evidently, Gov. Kerr Scott is stickinj right with his appointee in this regard . . . an a meeting of the State Board is being held her on April 13 . . . While the mountain countie have been most in the news with the anticipat ed changes, you may see trouble in some otbe counties ... and this is all regarded as in jurious to Frank Graham’s chances of being re elected to the U. S. Senate ... but the ball i rolling on these election board matters and an parently cannot be halted . . . Graham ma have the strength to weather them ... Did you see about Sen. Clyde R Horv’ Sr;VhVntCri0r Dcpartmcnt and praisinj 11 Frank HamPtion’s decisio: a irgmia Electric & Power, and not th Federal Government, should build the $27,000.00 aam at Roanoke Rapids, N. C. ? ... and die Roving Reporter {Continued From Page One) stand. In the first place there must be a sharp, clear photograph of the matter to be reproduced. Before the photograph can be us ed a metal engraving or plate must be made. Engraving plants are far and away too costly for the small newspapers and even for some dailies. The picture has to be sent somewhere to an en graving plant. Per inch the cost of the finished plate is three or four times as much as this paper gets per inch for advertising. For this reason, pictures are not gen erally used in this or other small newspapers that cannot afford en graving plant or pay the cost of the making of engravings. We said it here last week, and it is worth saying again: “Some other beaches may blow away and some may wash away, but those down here in Brunswick were put right here to stay.’’ This claim is founded on the fact that the weather maps of the United States Department of Ag riculture show that no hurricane has struck the Brunswick coast in 125 years. Such storms strike at Hatteras above us, or at Char leston below. Strong winds never sweep in over the waters of our southward fronting beaches. Un dertows are unknown in the gen tle surfs. Drowning has never claimed the life of a young or old bather at any of the Brunswick county beach resorts. nunareas or people living- out side of North Carolina, and hun dreds more in distant parts in the State take this paper. We take it for granted that they subscribe because they are in terested in some part of Bruns wick county. Where we are cor rect, we would certainly appre ciate it if those interested folks would do some'press agenting for us. When you find something in the paper about some place or something in which you are in terested, why not pass your copy on to some friend you know, who may also be interested in Bruns wick county? A word from in terested people to other people who may become interested will be generally helpful and will not hurt the friends who speak such words. The first of May and the open ing of the Brunswick county beaches will be followed by a lot of surprises on the part of people who were visitors last year and who come again this year. This surprise will be over the great amount of new building that has been accomplished in the year’s time, and which is still going on faster than ever. But folks have not been just building homes at the beaches. They have been building them all over Brunswick. It is a good indication of the present economic stability of the county to note the great number of new buildings of all sorts. Jerry Ball and Archie Thornhill, public relations men for the Stan dard Oil Company in Charlotte, put on a fine show here Thurs day night under the sponsorship of the Southport Volunteer Fire Department. A nice sum was raised and the audience had a great deal of fun. As usual when these fellows come to Southport they take, no money out of town with them. They pay their own expenses while here and have everything put up as prizes, from automobile tires down to washing and greasing jobs and engine oil. Every cent that was taken in went to the Fire Department. Jerry and Archie are coming back this year, they tell us, and on that trip another show will be staged either at Southport or Shallotte, depending cn there be ing a public cause in need of help. The burning of the Wells fish house last week had the effect ol showing Southport people that there is a good fireboat on the river. The fire had made aston ishing headway before it was dis covered and reported. The Volun teer Fire Department may be pardoned for not getting- there in time to do anything. The same can be said of the Coast Guard Cutter. Both got there a little late, owing to the late report of the fire. The loss from the fire was not great and the point of this paragraph is simply that the Coast Guard Cutter and Skipper Austin and his boys are standing by to help in moments of fire on or near the river. Hugh Morton, Wilmington's best foot forward, was a visitor in this office the past week. He is a wheelhorse in putting over the Azalea Festivals and in other things like that. Backing his push and energy he is deservedly credited with being about the best amateur photographer in North Carolina. Jimmie Woltz, now a year-round resident of Long Beach and en gaged / building homes except for th£ three months when he will be on the Fairmont tobacco market as one of its leading auctioneers, tells us that he is now building two houses at the beach. He has more to start just as soon as he can finish the pre sent structures. Building opera tions at Caswell Beach, Long Beach and Holden Beach are now the highest peak have ever reach ed. Myrtle Beach, about the best \ known beach on the coast in hundreds of miles in either di rection, has identical strands and a background like those of Hol den Beach, Long Beach and Cas well Beach in Brunswick county. The only difference is that Myrtle Beach got its development start long ago. The Brunswick beaches are only beginning with their’s, and they have much more to start and continue with than Myrtle Beach ever had. There is the great game fishing on Frying Pan Shoals off Southport and within easy reach of the Bruns wick beaches. Added to that is the mighty Cape Fear River inlet with its passageway for boats of all sizes at all times, into the in tracoastal waterway and the Cape Fear river. The river is an esset to the development of the Bruns wick beaches. Running up and clattering down the 100-foot stairway of the Bald Head lighthouse Sunday, may not have been in keeping with our age. In fact, we sort of anticipat ed having a Charley horse the next morning. The anticipations were not realized. The morning after our photographing friends left we awoke up feeling as chip per as a chicken that has found a fishing worm. Squire J. C. Tucker of Leland was here Monday and was kind of concerned about his subscription to this paper having run out and somebody in the office having lopped him off the list. It is a good time to say here that a great many subscriptions expire each week. There is absolutely no thing personal in anybody’s name being taken from the list. The list is checked over regularly for ex piration dates. When the office finds a subscription that has ex pired it is taken off in the belief that the subscriber would have renewed it he wanted to keep getting the paper. The lables show all subscribers when their time is out. William Crowe, Jr., Wilming ton, is following some ideas that are in line with our own. Recent ly Mr. Crowe purchased the old Rev. C. N. Phillips home in South port. Still more recently he has converted it into two nice apart ments for rent. He tells us that he advertised in the Saturday Re view of Literature offering two apartments at Southport for rent. His advertisement had hardly ap peared, he says, before he re ceived ten inquiries from northern and eastern people who want to move here. Mr. Crowe states that he wishes he had three or four nice apartment houses like the one he has, and that he could quickly fill them with very de sirable people. 555 SCHEDULE WB&BBUS LINE Southport, N. C. EFFECTIVE TUES., JAN. 20,1948 WEEK-DAY SCHEDULE LEAVES SOUTHPORT *• 7:00 A. M. 9 ;30 A. M. *1:30 P. M. 4:00 P. M. 6:00 P. M. LEAVES WILMINGTON 7:00 A. M. »9:30 A. M. 1:35 P. M. 4:00 P. M. 6:10 P. M. 10:20 P. M. *—These Trips on Saturday Only. **—This Bus Leaves WinnQbow at 61IO Daily. - SUNDAY ONLY - 41 LEAVES SOUTHPORT 7:30 A. M. 10:50 A. M. 4:00 P. M. 6:00 P. M. LEAVES WILMINGTON 9:00 A. M. 1:35 P. M. 6:10 P. M. 10:20 P. M. Not Exactly News Billie McDowell is a pretty fair left-hand pitcher, so it was something of a surprise when a visiting Shallotte team led by "Black Jack” Robinson jumpped on him like a merry-go round in a game here last week. But now the secret is out. Coach Carmichael of Shallotte also is a lefty, and has been pitching to his boys a lot in batting practice. McDowell was just throwing them some more of the fare they were fattened on . . . Biggest sport fishing news of the season thus far has been the nice catches of speckled trout made at Holden Beach in the inland waterway. When he climaxed the Volunteer Fireman Benefit show Thursday night presiding over an auction sale of donated commodities, Jimmie Woltz of Long Beach gave many of his firends their first opportunity to hear him practice his profession. In the fall he is a tobacco auctio neer on the Fairmont market . . . Seems like Principal Harry T. Sanders can’t stand a sea son when he has no more than one coaching chore. Right now in addition to his work with the Southport baseball team he Is coaching the annual senior play. Walter Sellers, young Supply man, is earning himself quite a reputation as a builder. Cur rently he is constructing a nice cottage at Long Beach for Mr. and Mrs. Richmond Gal loway . . . FOUND DEPT.: Rocky, the sassy little Boykin retriever belonging to Mr. and ■Mrs. Tommie Gamer. A Southport friend spot ted him gamboling about the lawn of his new owner In Wilmington and reported his where abouts . . . Dogwood is now at the height of its beauty in Brunswick. If you asked him the nature of his business C. G. Ruark, Southport merchant who keeps store next door to the Amuzu theatre, probably would answer without hesitation that he is a hardware dealer; but at show time his big busi ness is in ice oream and hot peanuts . . . And speaking of the movies, “Dancing In The Dark” starring William Powell, is the feature at traction Thursday and Friday at the Amuzu . . An old favorite of ours and one of the best wartime movies, “Guadalcanal Diary”, plays on the same days at Shallotte theatre. More houses are under construction at Long Beach at the present time than at any other period in the history of this development. Dr. R. H. Holden says that the same condition pre vails with respect to Holden Beach. We are planning to go down there to have a look for ourself sometime soon . . .The Rovin’ Reporter lead a photographic expedition to Bald Head island Sunday morning and experienced some difficulty in explaining just how the place earned the reputation for being sub-tropical. Owner Carl Watkins was over at Long Beach' during the week-end getting the pavilion in shape for an opening early in May. He hopes to have the dining room open full time and full scale this summer; and bingo (the legal kind) may be added as an amusement feature.. Here several days ago, R. B. Babington, prominent insurance man of Gastonia, told us that he had a new year and a half old boy coming along for us to train as a fisherman. For several years Mr. Babington has been accusing us of having taught his oldest boy how to fish. One result of this teaching was that John’s dad had to buy a place at Howell’s Point so that he could go there each summer and have some fish ing. Even at our age we are learn ing that when we get dates or events mixed some one is bound to correct us. And such cor rections are welcomed. Three weeks ago we had a stox-y re lative to old ships and president William Howai-d Taft’s visit to Wilmington and Southport. George W. Rapplyea had * told us he thought the visit was made in 1912. Following publication of the story A. E. McKeithan of Atlanta, Ga., wrote us and cited that the date was November 9, 1909. He said the fact that he went on an excursion to Wilmington on that date. Now comes H. B. Clemmons of Ashland, Kentucky. He says that Mr. Keithan’s date of Nov. 9, 1909, is right. Mr. Clemmons tells where a marker can be found at 3rd and Princess street in Wilmington, where Mr. Taft spoke. Mr. Rapplyea who has been around most of the world since the event happened was short in his memory by about three years. Kentucky and Georgia had it right. County Agent A. S. Knowles told us Monday that one of his clients had called at his office and advised him that the Rovin’ Reporter had it in the State Port Pilot for him to go around and see what ailed the client's calf that could not see. The agent claims he has now had every kind of a call on earth. For our part, all we know about it is that on? of our fan readers near Sup ply wrote us and told us his calf was blind and couldn't see. He asked us what he should do about it. Not being very hep to blind calves, we replied through the paper, telling the county agent to go around and see what ailed the calf. BAPTIST WOMEN Continued From Page One leader; Mrs. L. M. Clemmons, Bo livia, assistant young peoples lead er; Mrs. L. J. McKeithan, Bolivia, Royal Anbassador counselor; Mrs. Rifton Sellers, Supply, G. A. Counselor; Mrs. A. S. Knowles, Supply, Sunbeam counselor; Mrs. Ruth Gay, Southport, and Mrs. W. H. Mintz, Leland, Y. W. A. counselors. MALCOLM FRINK Continued From Page One nothing of any car being behind him until his machine was struck. The Ford was the property c William Kincaide of the Oak Is land Coast Guard Station. H stated that Frink had borrowe the machine. SENIORS PRESENT Continued From r-age One Claire Potter; Beatrice Barr; Lena Ward; Mabel Warren, Joa James; Mrs. Granville, Rebecc McRacken; George Jones, Robi Hood; Tommy Granville, Tomm Bowmer; Sally Davidson, Cathei ine McRacken; Mr. Merritt, Bobb Spencer; Miss Dalrymple, Pegg f Arnold. e SURVEY BEING 1 Continued From Fage One officials It is hoped that results of the present survey will either make it possible for Southern Bell to ’’ expand its facilities into this new a area or will cause to leave the 1 way open for the organization a of a co-op. y In television a channel is the y invisible path over which a station y sends its signal. CATHOLIC INFORMATION Is Our Lord Still On Earth ? When Saul was knocked off; his horse, before he became St. Paul, he heard a voice saying to him: “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?” And he said, “Who art thou, Lord?” And he said, "I am Jesus whom thou persecutest” (Acts 9:4-5). Now, as far as he knew, Saul had never persecuted Christ. Our Lord had been put to death sev eral months before, as everyone knew, and from the Bible we know that He had gone up to join His Father in Heaven. And yet Saul was accused of persecuting Jesus, when -all he had done was to throw Christians into jail. Saul later found out that Our Lord had once said, “As long as you did it to these, my least brethren, you did it to Me” (Matt. 25:40). So, after careful thought, and directed by the Spirit of God Him self, he finally wrote: “Now you are the body of Christ” (I Cor. the sufferings of Christ, in my 12:27). “Who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up those things that are wanting of flesh, for His body, which is the church” (Col. 1:24). That’s pretty plain. It means that the Church is the body of Jesus. What else can we take out of those words? But if the Church is His body, it must act as He acted. It must forgive sins. It must make its home with the poor, rather than with the rich; it must cry out against oppression, wherever it be; it must speak as one having authority; it must refuse to be overrawed by the people it would save; it must have a kind of ancient youth, an unlimited sup ply of energy, which must grow with maturity; it must have lite in abundance to give away; it must have a permanence which resists persecution; it must be cordially hated by the powerful ones of this world; it must do and say, throughout the ages, everything that Jesus did and said. We Catholics believe devoutly that our Church is the mystical body of Jesus. We believe that our Catholic Church is the abid ing presence of the Savior in our midst. Each of us thrills at the knowledge that we are a part of that body, a cell, sharing our faith with the hundreds of millions of our brothers, living and dead, and enjoying the interplay of other-worldly energy between the Head and members of that body. For further information on Catholic beliefs, write to: P. O. Box 351 Whiteville, N. C. haQACdl LEGGETT’S Southport, N. C. : ' ■■■ — : —J =^==5 CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER I I wish to announce that I am a candidate for nomi nation as a member of the Board of County Commissio j ners on the Republican ticket subject to the will of the voters in the Primary Election on May 27. If nominated and elected I pledge myself to fulfill the duties of this important office to the best of my ability. C. W. KNOX