Most Of The News All The Time THE STATE A Good Newspaper VOL. NO. SIXTEEN NO. 29 6-PAGES TODAY Southport, N. C., PORT PILOT In A Good Community The Pilot Covers Brunswick County Wednesday November 12,1952 PUBLISHED EVERl WEDNESDAY $1.50 PER YEA* Explanation Of Rail Operation At Sunny Point Plans For Connection With Two Principal Railroads Will Go Forward As Ori ginally Planned TWO RAILROADS MAY ALTERNATE Manner Of Handling Cars Inside Area Described On Basis Of Information From The Engin eers By W. B. KEZIAH With the Sunny Point Ammu nition Depot to be served by two railroads, some explanation of the methods of operation may be in order. The serving rail roads will serve only to the end of their own trackage, and from there the government engines will pick up the cars and deliv er them to the wharves or stor age yards inside the facility, re turning the cars in the same way when they are empty. The theoretical plan is for the Seaboard trains to leave their main line at Eastbrook arid trav el over their own track to the center of the trestle that will span the tracks of the Atlantic Coast Line. From that center they will be on government track. Atlantic Coast Line trains will leave their main line east of Leland and their train crews will bring the train to the pick-up yard over the government track. This set-off and pick-up yard will, according to information, have three 75-car tracks for the Seaboard and the same number for the Atlantic Coast Line. That is, each of the two serving rail roa'ds will have car capacity for 450 cars, or a total for both of 900 cars. Trackage in and out of the pick-up yard will be owned by the government, but train move ment into this yard will be made by crews of the two railroads. The two railroads will have in dividual operation so far as the pick-up yard. From' tlie yard to the facility it appears that the Coast Line and Seaboard will alternate on the job of moving cars, only one of these railroads operating du ring any given period. It ap pears likely that from the yard to the facility the Coast Line will do all of the operating for six months of the year and then the Seaboard take over for a similar period. The present plans are that when the trains move south to Sunny Point from the set-off and pick-up yard at Leland they will travel over 100-lb. rails. Al ong the route two well located pass tracks or sidings will be built. They will have 75-car ca pacity and will be available in the event another train is com ing north. When the incoming train rea ches the main yard at the site of the facility it will pass over an inspection pit. Should trouble be detected in any car of the train the car will promptly be switched to a special suspect track that has an earth barri cade on each side. The remain der of the train will then move onto the receiving section of the yard. This section will consist of six tracks, each capable of handling an entire train of 75 cars, or with a Combined capaci (Continued on Page i I Brief Newt Flashes IN MARINE HOSPITAL J. S. Arnold and Raleigh Wil lis went to Baltimore, Md., this week for treatment in the Marine Hospital. RETURNS HOME Dr. R. C. Daniel has returned home following treatment for pneumonia at the Dosher Mem orial Hospital. He has not yet been able to resume his duties at his dental office. PREPARING TO BUILD Mr. and Mrs. Donald S. Ty dings of Atlanta will be here December 1, and will begin buil ding their new ranch type home at Southport. Mr. Tydings is with the International Revenue Department in Atlanta and will retire about the first of March. FIRE DANGER ELIMINATED Good drizzling rains through out Brunswick County Monday and Monday night had the ef fect of giving everything a good soaking, thereby eliminating all immediate danger of major for est fires. The past several weeks with no rainfall made things ra ther dangerous. More Power To North Carolina This is the seed bed on which Carolina Power & Light Company will raise a mighty Dig plant— a 300,000-horsepower generating plant. The job started this month with formal ground-breaking cere monies Friday along the edge of the Cape Fear River, right foreground. A boiler 17 stories high and a 200-foot smokestack will be located within the rectangle.— (Aerial photo by John Browning.) 3-County Credit Body Formed By ‘Duck’ Bradshaw Association Service To Be Made Available To Mer chants, Doctors, Dentists And Others The Tri-County Credit Asso ciation, Inc., has been formed to make available to merchants, doc tors, dentists and others of Co lumbus, Bladen and Brunswick counties a credit information serv ice and assistance in the collec tion of bad accounts, according: to I an announcement by William (3. ] (Duck) Bradshaw, manager. Bradshaw said "a survey among merchants in the area indicates a definite need for such serv ices” and pointed out that an up to-date credit service would be made available to merchants of such towns as Fair Bluff, Ever green, Cerro Gordo, Shallotte, Supply, Southport, Bladenboro, Chadbourn, Elizabethtown, Bolton, Acme-Delco, Hallsboro, and Ta bor City. Phamplets calling attention to the plan have been distributed in the various trade centers of the three counties. Emphasis was placed on the po int that the service will work to the advantage of the buyer who has good paying habits as well as to the advantage of those affilia ted with it. Persons who have | unforeseen financial difficulties will also be helped through the laision agency. Workable plans for easier terms will be worked out whenever possible in hard ship cases, Bradshaw said. The association began function ing today, Bradshaw having com pleted organization details during the past several weeks since his arrival from Durham where he’ has been engaged in business. W. B. KKZIAH Our Reporter Through copy having been lost after reaching this shop, the Waccamaxv school reports have been absent from this paper for the past two weeks. This has i not been through any fault of the young ladies doing the work for the school. They have always been first in with their news and their copy has ranked with the best. It is pleasing to note that they are back again this week and it is hoped that neither they or any of the other school reporters will miss another week during the school session. One of the up state fellows really interested in Long Beach i is M. H. Waynick, owner of a j home at the Beach for several ! years. He has always been a j real booster of the place where I ever he was. Recently Mr. Way nick came into this office and paid us for a subscription to a prominent up-state man who lat er, it developed, was one of the j best friends the editor of this paper ever had. This week, and Mr. Waynick came in again, bringing with him Charles J. Hunt, one of the county commis sioners of Guilford County. Mr. Hunt had heard so much of Southport and Long Beach from Waynick that his first act af ter meeting us was to subscribe for the paper. He said that from all he had heard, and he had beared a lot from Waynick, this county is really set to go plac es. We have always been credited with being bull headed, with with sticking to our belief in things. For more than a quar ter of century, since we first knew this town, we have stead fastly believed that something big would come to this area, and it would come through the broad mouth of the Cape Fear River. We held to this belief until long after many of our friends had either died or else given it up (Continued on page 4) Contractors Had Much Information U. S. Army Engineers Had Completed All Tests In Effort To Furnish Work ing Data For Bidders On Dredging McWilliams was SUCCESSFUL FIRM Object Has Been To Exped ite Project Wherever Pos sible In Effort To Have Operation Run Riigiit Looking over the charts made by the Army Engineers for the guidance of contractors in ma king their bids and also for them to follow in executing the work, one becomes impressed with the monstrous job that the engineers have had on their hands for the past two years. Hundreds of borings have been made to determine the character of the operations that will be necessary. In some areas a mod erate amount of shell rock or soft limestone will have to be re moved from short distances be low the surface. At another point there is what might be de scribed as a "floating rock”. It has earth above, below and all around, and. it is fairly hard but of comparatively limited area. But real hard rock of the kind where removal would present huge engineering problems is not found anywhere except in spots about 52 feet below the surface and the dredges will not go that deep. From the findings that result ed from the exhaustive borings by the engineers, it does not ap pear that the conratcting firm will encounter any great obstacle (Continued on Page 2) Dredging Outfit No Stranger here The McWilliams Dredging Co., soon to start operations on the river at Sunny Point, is not a stranger to work in Brunswick County. This company had the job of dredging the huge Bruns-1 wick River lay-up basin, Tow»| Creek township. This ship lay-up basin is entire ly in Brunswick County. The job of dredging was much small er than the present and future dredging operations that will take place at Sunny point. Still, the basin was a formidable job, owing to the huge mass of sun ken logs and stumps far below the surface in the basin area. It is said that many solid stumps, as much as 35 feet in circumfer ence were found far down. Logs were everywhere. They had to be chewed up by the^dredges. Large Docket Is Disposed Of Here Variety Of Offenses Cover ed In Long List Of Cases Tried In Brunswick Coun ty Recorder’s Court Mon day A long and varied list of cases were up for trial Monday in Brunswick County Recorder Court with the following judgments being rendered: Betty Ann Hayes, no operat or’s license, nol pros at the in sistence of arresting officer. Elmer Dempsey Ganey, speed ing, fined $5 and costs. Joe Hedgecock, assault, threat en to kill, remanded to juvenile court. R. D. Simmons, destroying per sonal property, 30 days, suspen- : ded on good behavior for two years and costs. William Hardy, reckless oper ation, judgment suspended on condition that defendant make restitution in amount of $251 for property damage and pay costs. James H. Todd, no operator license, fined $25 and costs. Donnie J. Daniels, assault with deadly weapon, motion for jury trial, bond set at $800. Eunice Davis, assault with dea dly weapon with intent to kill, bound over to Superior Court, bond set at $1000. Ernest Marlowe, public drun kenness, fined $10 and costs. Malcolm Garland Smith, reck less operation, fined $25, costs. Clyde Johnson, reckless oper ation and operating without val id license, fined $40 and costs. Arthur David Leach, improper equipment, half costs. James W. Brown, no opera tor license, fined $25 and costs. Austin Phelps, allowing minor to operate, costs. Nancy J. May, no operator li cense, fined $25 and costs. Alfred M. May, aiding and abet ting in operating without li cense, nol pros. Garcia Butler, improper equip ment, one-half costs. (Continued on Page 4) Museum People Show Interest In Sunny Point Think That Some Fossils May Be Uncovered Dur ing Dredging Operations At Sunny Point CURATOR ASKS TO BE INFORMED Portions Of Prehistoric Ani mals Already Have Been Discovered In These Parts And Hope For More The North Carolina State Mu seum is credited with being much interested in the government’s operations at Southport involving the dredging operations, the op erations of drag lines and the general construction involved in the building of the railroad and sidings. 1' The interest lies in the possi ble discovery of fossils uncover ed in the operations. Curator Harry T. Davis, writing W. B. Keziah this week, pointed out that portions of prehistoric ani mals, such as mastodons, have already been discovered in this area. Some really important .finds may be found in the work soon to get underway here, he says. At the suggestion of Curator Davis the local man will contact |,the Army Engineers to ask that inspectors, etc., keep a close look out for fossils. The various con tracting firms will also be ask ed to have their foremen be on the watch and report any dis coveries. The last of this month when things get underway, Cur ator Davis will probably come down and spend some days ma king a personal search. Artesian Flow Very Plentiful Boiling Springs Located In Eastern Part Of Bruns wick County May Have Grgat Value The Ancient Mariner’s plaint of “Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink,” is hardly likely to ever come true with re gard to drinking water in the eastern part of Brunswick Coun ty. The boiling springs on Al len’s Creek, even in the dryest periods the county has ever had, have an artesian flow of 43 mil lions per day. And that is a lot of water. It would more than provide for all purposes in the largest city in North Carolina. And it is pure and uncontam inated, clear and sparkling. Com ing of itself, from deep down in the earth, it is ready for con sumption as it is. Just a few years ago a visit ing doctor to Southport went out to one of the half-dozen huge springs that provide the big flow. He is said to have drunk of that water, tested it and to have af terwards said that if he lived in Southport he would drink no water except that which came from the boiling springs. With 43 million gallons avail able daily from the flow to the surface, it is purely problematical how much could be obtained by pumping. But good sources have said that with the aid of pumping a hundred million gallons could be obtained daily, without hav ing to go very deep. The springs are just a couple of miles or so beyond the Sunny Point reservation. The new gov ernment railroad will pass with in a couple of hundred feet of one of the big springs. That spot can be counted on as a point (Continued on Page 2) PRECINCTS Hoods Creek . Leland . Town Creek . Bolivia . Southport No. 1 Southport No. 2 Mosquito . Supply .. Secession . Shallotte . Prying Pan . Grissettown . Shingletree . Longwood . Ash . Waccamaw . Exum . Official Tabulation Election Returns a a o W c o to 2 S ffl a a 'J5 .o o a cs o & 03 SJ ho 2 x o c ho c o iJ o X o > V —J M 148 262 325 186 255 364 34 109 153 191 220 57 152 88 213 93 76 32 114 231 292 145 124 51 200 187 310 140 181 j 186 137 287 176 76 148 270 242 113 304 406 43 124 163 210 209 58 170 91 205 83 59 28 86 212 280 94 82 44 179 170 276 137 178 171 132 292 186 90 148 265 316 182 281 397 32 113 148 182 194 60 175 85 213 90 69 32 104 247 310 115 88 53 192 191 302 157 179 168 139 289 177 83 139 259 312 196 298 409 41 127 150 195 202 55 157 87 210 86' 661 139 255 313 200 289 401 37 121 149 194 205 54 160 90 205 107 721 154 284 324 194 274 400 36 119 150 189 201 531 1521 83; 202! 851 651 38 111 262 306 110 77 45 189 181 287 141 33 84 219 286 99 69 44 178 179 286 140 177, 179 181! 186 133i 135 289! 297 17li 172 76! 85 30 83 216 289 100 74 42 184 183 288 133 179 182 130 276 167 76 149 ,267 327 J.89 230 333 40 126 168 212 208 57 176 101 210 91 67 s o ■§ 0) n w 53 154 249 310 180 167 51 187 168 287 146 182 152 129 283 178 82 TOTALS 2926;2869128981263712950 j 282612989 j 2991 2965 j27741267112632 j 295112958 Republicans Protest Returns In Brunswick As Democrats Win Story Of Father Appears In Life Jacob Epstein, Father Of Mrs. Norman Hornstein, Re cognized As England’s Greatest Living Sculptor Life Magazine last week de voted one full page and half of three other pages to featuring criticsJacob Epstein,, who is hail ed by critics in the United States and England as being England’s greatest living sculptor. The pay-off conies from the fact that the distinguished, often criticised, often praised sculptor is the father of Mrs. Norman Hornstein of Southport. Jacob Epstein, the subject of the life feature story, war born in New York City, the son of Russian-Polish immigrants. He made his way through his studies by selling drawings to magazines. In 1902 he went to Paris, France, and three years later he settled in London for good. His four-story brick home in Kensington, 'England, is now a gathering place of notables and near - notables. Epstein is at the peak of his fame and enjoys a steady flow of guests, rather than going out and visiting am ong kindred artistic spirits. Mrs. Epstein died in 1947. Four of the couple’s five children live in England and are often visit ors at the Kensington home. Mrs. Hornstein, here in South port, i3 a long way from being able to make frequent visits to her distinguished father. Her marriage to Dr. Hornstein came about when he was finishing his medical studies in England, just before World War II. The Doctor, Mr s. Hornstein and their two children passed through all of the blitz on Londan. At the very start of the war he had turned his skill as a physician and surgeon to the aid of the suffering Briitish subjects work king with the British Medical Corps in London. When the Am ericans came, he transferred to the home country forces, and when the war was over he came back to his native America, bringing his wife and children with him. November Fishing Brings Good Luck One-Day Ban On Hunting Lifted A ban against hunting up land game in North Carolina was lifted Tuesday morning by the State Wildlife Commission after being in effect only one day. The ban was imposed be cause of the forest fire dan ger and with rains coining the day it became effective it was lifted the following morning. “It is felt that the apparent ly general rains of Monday had the effect of reducing the dan ger,” said the Wildlife Com mission in a report from Ral eigh yesterday. Youths Arrested After Wild Ride Out - Of - State Pair Found Justice Swift And Sure As They Crossed Into North Carolina For Car Thefts Arrested Sunday night by Cpl. O. H. Lynch and Patrolman M. S. Wilkins after a wild 95-mile an hour chase, James Harris Wicher, a 16-year-old Augusta, Ga., youth, and Arthur W. Smith, 17, of Langley, S. C., vv^-e each given two years for car theft when they were tried in the (Continued on Page 2) King Mackerel Continue To Be Big Attraction For Sportsmen Who Are, Keeping Southport Boats Busy WEEK-END TRIPS VERY PROFITABLE With Many More Good Days In Prospect During This Month The Outlook Is Good For Sportsmen Pishing continued good off Southport during the past week, with king mackerel again fea turing the catches. A Monday trip aboard the Idle-On II netted Harold Lance and party of China Grove 26 king mackerel and 11 bonita. On the same day P. Barringer and party of Sanford were out ab oard the Botfly and reported 20 bonita, 2 amberjack and 12 king mackerel. Tom Britt and party of Lum berton were out aboard the Ca det of Capt. Howard Victor and came in with 12 king mackerel, 12 bonita and 3 amberjack. On board the Patricia were Charles Ferris and Alex Huben, both from Connecticutt. They had 12 king mackerel, 9 bonita and 4 amberjack and reported that this is the best place along the coast that they had found to fish. Clyde Alexander and party from Landis were out with Capt. Walter Lewis aboard the John Ellen and had 27 king mackerel, (Coutinued on Page 4) Final Vote Shows Odell Williamson To Be Winner Over W. A. Kopp By Only 57 Votes For Repre sentative EISENHOWER GETS COUNTY MAJORITY The Next President Carries Brunswick County By A Margin Of 7 Votes; Hewett Is Only Coun ty Winner Official returns from last Tuesday’s general election have failed to make sufficient differ-" ence to upset any of the Demo crat candidates on the county ticket, but the final count show ed Dwight D. Eisenhower get ting a majority of seven votes in Brunswick. With their margin cut to a 57-vote majority for Odell Wil liamson over W. A. Kopp in the race for House of Represen tatives, the Republicans on Mon day lodged a protest against the certification of Williamson as the winner and called for a re count. The protest was brought by Irving Tucker, Whiteville at torney, in behalf of Kopp. He also represented Cecil Robbins, who trailed W. J. McLamb in ■ the race for Judge of Record er's Court by only 124 votes. The act under which the re count was called for Williamson is tile law which gives the right to any candidate who trails in a primary or general election by not more than one per cent of the total vote. Tucker pointed out that there was exactly this difference in the Williamson Kopp vote. The board of elections, which began its canvassing duties on Thursday and held adjourned ses sions on Friday and again on Monday, turned down the request for a recount on the grounds that the returns had been filed with the clerk of court on Fri day. Tucker said this morn ing in Whiteville that he is awa iting word from John Wilkinson, Washington lawyer, as to wheth er a writ of mandamus will be sought in an effort to compel a recount. The protest charged numerous irregularities in the conduct of* the election, as follows: That]] in Northwest township the pre cinct officials issued no township * ballots after 1:30 o’clock, al though they had a supply of these ballots; that in the count of township ballots, no actual tally was taken, but that an es timate was made to arrive at the totals; that D. L. Gainey re mained inside the polling place at Leland precinct; that *' vote for D. R. Johnsc gress was estimated counted in this precin Hoods Creek the to of votes was altered^HBi returns had been signecT by ection officials; that only oii^Z tally sheet was kept in this prefc cinct; that the ballot boxes for”, Hoods Creek precinct were re moved from the polling place to the home of Leo Medlin, a Dem ocrat candidate for county com missioner, for counting; that Medlin entered the polling place 12 or more times the day of (Continued on page four) Tide Table Following is the tide viable tor Southport during the next week. These hours are approxi mately correct and were furn ished The State Port Pilot through the courtesy of the Cape Fear Pilot’s Association. High Tide Low Tide Thursday, November 13 4:32 a. m. 10:46 a. m. 4:38 p. m. 11:01 p. m. Friday, November 14 5:18 a. m. Jl:36 a. m. ,,5:24 p. m. 11:45 p. m. Saturday, November 15 6:02 a. m. 0:00 a. m. 6:08 p. m. 12:24 p. m. Sunday, November 16 6:46 a. m. 0:26 a. m. 6:51 p. m. 1:10 p. m. Monday, November 17 7:29 a. m. 1:08 a. m. 7:35 p. m. 1:54 p. m, Tuesday, November 18 8:14 a. m. 1:51 a. m. 8:20 p. m. 2:39 p. m. Wednesday, November 19 9:00 a. m. 2:34 a. m. 9:08 p. m. 3:26 p. m.