The
Pirale hog
By DOSS’E HEWETT
A I rgr crowd turned out for
the boll, game at Wampee Friday
afternoon We are proud of your
sportsmanship and support you
gave the team and cheerleaders.
It ra-ned a little, but no one was
discouraged from thp game. We
defeated them bv the score of
28-0.:.
The boys and girls interested
in basketball met Friday and it
seems as though we're going to
have two good teams this year.
Practice started Monday, and will
be held every afternoon after
school until the football season
ends. Until then the girls start
practice af 3 p. m. and the boys
at 7 p. m. Everyone practice hard
and let's have a good year.
During the student council’s last
meeting we decided to put a
Question box in the hall so that
the students can make worth
while suggestions to better our
school. Students, please co-operate
and take advantage of this ques
tion box by making your sug
gestions worthwhile.
The student council officers this
year are: President. Tommy
Russ: vice-nresident. Linda Gore:
secretary. Donnie Hewett; treas
urer, Carol Ann Hewett ;historian,'
Michael Stanley; parliamentarian,
| Lyn Holden; sergeant at arms,
Rebecca Hawes; representative,
I Bill Hewett, Carolyn Sanders,
; Wilma Holden, Mary Martin,
| Bobby Gore. James Walker, Don
! Mr.rie Fulford, Jackie Edw'ards,
Dora Milliken, Georgia Lewis,
John Ganns, Tommy Gore, Char
lene Platt, Christine Benton, Free
man Kirby, Barbara Hewett,
Carolyn Gray, Steve Love, Johnny
Corbett and Nellie Carlisle.
Seen Around: Connie having a
good time Friday . . . L. G.
Standing on Wamoee’s side at the
ball game . . . Shirley biting her
finger nails Saturday night . . .
Barbara winning first prize for a
rug Thursday night . . . The
freshmen taking their half-holiday
at the ball game . . . Faye liking
shorthand . . . Zelda going to the
dentist.
That's all for new. See you next
week.
CntTHCH SOCIAL
The St. Philip's Church Women
gave a farewell social Thursday
evening in honor of Lt. and Mrs.
Robert Laighton and family and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rvne and fam
ily. Lt. Robert Laighton is expect
ing to serve 2 years overseas
duty with the Navy. The Ryne
family is moving to Mobile, Ala.
Both families were verv active in
church and social activities during
their residence here.
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Southport Man Held
On Serious Charge
I H. E. Sanford, middle-aged
Southport white man, was ar
rested late yesterday afternoon
by Policeman Charles Johnson on
charges of molesting a minor
! child. His bond was set this mor
j ning at $5,000, pending a pre
liminary hearing Monday in Re
corder’s court.
According to information re
ceived from the alleged victim,
i Sanford lured her into a wooded
j area near her home and there
■ made improper proposals, which
i she reported as soon as she was
I allowed to return to her home.
Explorers’ Hall
Fetes US Effort
Daring and brilliant deeds are
commemorated in Explorers Hall,
a tribute to man’s desire to know
the universe in which he lives.
Situated in the National Geo
graphic Society’s headquarters on
Washington’s historic 16th street,
the hall houses relics of Society
exploration and mementoes of
other scientific feats.
Its scope is wide: the farthest
reaches of the universe and the
bottom of the sea; primitive
head-hunters and great states
men: polar regions and steaming
jungles: desolate wastes and huge
cities; ancient artifacts and ex
perimental aircraft.
Most prized is the Robert E.
Peary flag, according to Dr. Gil
bert Grosvenor,, chairman of the
society’s board of trustees and
for 55 years editor of the Na
: tional Geographic magazine.
Hand-sewn by Peary's wife,
this United States flag accom
panied the explorer on all his
polar expeditions. Admiral Peary
left pieces of it behind him to
mark important steps in man’s
struggle north.
j One segment, running com
pletely through stars and stripes
from upper left to lower right,
was placed at the North Pole it
self, which Admiral Peary was
the first man to reach.
Mrs. Peary gave the flag to
the society for safekeeping short
ly before her death in 1955.
Near its case, the broad fea
tures of an eight-foot-high stone
head confront visitors. It is a cast
of the carving found by a society
expedition to southern Mexico.
The original was left in its
agelong resting place. Beside the
need stands a reproduction of the
oldest dated work of man found
in this hemisphere—a stone frag
ment carved with Maya-like sym
bols for a date calculated to be
291 B.C.
Screens display thousands of
color plates from the National
Geographic magazine, symboliz
ing the society’s pioneer work in
color photography, going as far
back as 1910.
An exhibit of color photographs
by the magazine’s staff decorates
the walls. These pictures were
made from pole to pole, in deserts
and palaces, in cities and rural
areas around the world. Beside
some hang awards given them in
various competitions.
Popular with all ages but espe
cially children, Explorers Hall
has been visited by as many as
7,300 persons in a single month.
They see other exhibits in
cluding:
Ancient Greek jars brought up
by the National Geographic Socie
ty-Calypso expedition from a 2,
200-year-old resting place on the
bottom of the Mediterranean.
Enlargements from the Society
Palomar Observatory Sky Survey,
which mapped the heavens to a
distance of a billion light years.
A light year itself is six million
miles.
The sun compass designed by
the Society’s late Albert H. Bum
stead for Admiral Richard E.
Byrd to use in his first flight
over the North Pole, where mag
netic compasses are valueless.
VETERANS DAY SUPPER
A covered dish supper is being
served this (Wednesday) evening
at the Legion Room of the City
Hall. Legion members, other vete
erans and their wives are doing
this as a part of the Veterans
Day celebration.
Subscribe To The State Port Pilot
Distributed In This Area By
Electric Bottling
Co., Inc.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
TV Program Schedule
WECtT CHANNEL fi WILMINGTON, n. cT
Thursday, November 12
6:45 Farm Beat
7:00 Tod&y
9:00 History
9:30 Science
10:00 Dough, Re, Mi
10:30 Treasure Hum
11:00 Price Is Right
11:30 December Bride
12:00 Truth or Con.
12:30 It Could Be You
1:00 Hy nn Time
1:25 Ne'vte
1:30 Barbara Wills
2:00 Queen for a Day
2:30 Thin Man
3:00 M.llionaire
3:30 Roots
4:00 House On
4:30 Edge of Night
5:00 Kiddie Time
5:30 Popeye
6:00 Ben McDonald
7:00 Weather. News
7:15 Doug Edwards
7:30 Playhouse
8:00 Bat Masterson
8:30 Staccato
9:00 Markham
9:30 Tennessee Ernie
10:00 Bourbon Street
11:00 Weather. Jack Paar
Friday, November 13
6:45 Farm Beat
7:00 Today
9:00 History
9:30 Science
10:00 Dough, Re. Mi
10:30 Treasure Hunt
11:00 Price Is Right
11:30 December Bride
12:00 Truth or Con.
12:30 Could Be You
1:00 Salvation Army
1:25 News
1:30 Barbara Wills
2:00 Queen
2:30 Thin Man
3:00 Millionaire
3:30 From These Roots
4:00 House On
4:30 Edge of Night
5: CO Kiddie Time
5:30 Popeye
6:o0 Ben McDonald
0:1® Jeff’s Collie
7:00 Weather, News
7 • T5 Doug Edwards
7 30 Real McCoy
8 00 Troubleshooters
8:3ft Art Carney
1C:DO Shubert Alley
17:00 Weather, J ack Paar
Saturday, November 14
10:00 Howdy Doody
10:30 Ruff N Reddy
11:00 Fury
11:30 Circus Boy
12:00 Dance Party
1:00 Mr. Wizard
1:30 Feature Film
2:30 Playhouse
3:00 Li be race
3:30 Coast Guard Film
4:00 TBA
4:30 Big Picture
5:00 All Star Golf
6:00 Jubilee U. S. A.
6:30 News
6:40 Football Scoreboar*
! 6:55 Weather
I 7:00 Lone Hanger
7:30 Gale Storm
8:00 I’ve Got A Secret
8:30 Robert Taylor
9:00 Bachelor
9:30 U. S. Marshall
10:00 Adventures
11:00 Wrestling
Sunday, November 15
12:00 Herald of Truth
12:30 This Is The Life
1:00 The Answer
1:30 Oral Roberts
2:00 Pro Football
4:30 Championship Golf
5:30 Time: Present
6:00 Lawrence Welk.
7:00 Politics - I960
7:30 Hall of Fame
9:00 Dinah Shore
10:00 Loretta Young
10:30 Border Patrol
11:00 Theatre
Monday, November 16
6:45 Farm Beat
7:00 Today
9:00 History
9:30 Science
10:00 Dough, Re, Ml
10:30 Treasure Show
11:00 Price is Right
11:30 December Bride
12:00 Truth or Con.
12:30 It Could Be You
1:00 Hymn Time
1:25 News
U30 Barbara Wills
2:00 Queen For A Day
2:30 Thin Man
3:00 Millionaire
3:30 Roots
4:00 House on
4:30 Edge of Night
5:00 Kiddie Time
6:00 Ben McDonald
6:30 Susie
7:00 Weather News
7:15 Doug Edwards
7:30 Shirley Temple
8:30 Wells Fargo
9:00 Peter Gunn
9:00 Peter Gunn
9:30 Pat Boone
10:00 77 Sunset Strip
11:00 Weather, News
Tuesday, November 17
6:45 Farm Beat
7:00 Today
9:00 History
9:30 Science
10:00 Dough, Re, Mi
10:30 Treasure Hunt
11:00 Price Is Right
11:30 December Bride
1~;00 Truth or Con.
12:30 Could Be You
1:00 Dr. Barnwell
1:25 News
1:30 Barbara Wills
2:00 Queen
2:30 Thin Man
3:00 Millionaire
3:30 Roots
4:00 House On
4:30 Edge of Night
5:00 Kiddie Time
6:00 Ben McDonald
7:00 Weather, News
7:15 Doug Edwards
7:30 Dennis O’Keefe
8:00 Amos ‘N’ Andy
8:30 Wyatt Earp
9:00 Donna Reed
9:30 Startime
10:30 Arthur Murray
11:00 Wea„ News, J. Parr
Wednesday, November 18
6:45 Farm Beat
7:00 Today
9:00 History
9:30 Science
10:00 Dough, Re, Mi
10:30 Theasure Hunt
11:00 Price Is Right
11:30 December Bride
12:00 Truth or Con.
12:30 It Could Be You
1:06 Hymn Time
1:25 News
1:30 Barbara Wills
2:00 Queen For A Day
2:30 Thin Man
3:00 Millionaire
3:30 Roots
4:00 House On
4:30 Edge of Night
5:00 Huckleberry
6:00 Ben McDonald
6:30 Serenaders
6:45 Football Forecast
7:00 Weather, New s
7:15 Doug: Edwards
7:30 Wagon Train
8:30 Millionaire
9:00 Perry Como
10:00 This Is Your Life
10:30 Wichita Town
11:00 Weather, Jack Paar
Balding Papas Pass Losses
To Sons, Says Hair Expert
If you are bald, as are 43 per
cent of the men and eight per
cent of the women, it probably is
because you have inherited a ten
dency to baldness. The same is
true of premature gray hair.
So reports J. D. Ratcliff in
an October Reader's Digest ar
ticle, “What You Should Know
About Your Hair,” a summary
of what medical science has
learned about the some half mil
lion hairs that adorn or annoy
the average person.
Individual hairs in the head
live two to five years. Then the
follicle that produced them
shrinks and goes into a resting
phase and the hair drops out. A
certain amount of loss is normal
—about 80 hairs a daj\ At all
times something like ten percent
of the follicles in the/scalp are
resting, and 90 percent are active.
Nearly all glands have some
influence on hair growth. A
lagging thyroid often leads to
hair loss and the corticosteroid
hormones, such as cortisone, are
powerful stimulants to hair
growth.
In one experiement 68 people
suffering from alopecii areata, a
rare baldness-producing disease,
were treated with hormones.
Some had been bald fo: 25 years.
About 60 percent grew complete
heads of hair. However as soon
as hormone doses were stopped,
follicles became dormant again,
and hair dropped out.
—Injection of hormones directly
into the scalp is under trial at
the world's only hair-clinic at
University Hospital, a division of
New York University-Bcllevue
Medical Center. Dr. Norman
Orentreich, in charge, has found
growth of hair profuse around
the injection spot.
The difficulty is that several
hundred such shots would be
needed to grow a full head of
hair, and the injections would
have to be repeated every few
months. This method is more
practical when used in special
circumstances to grow eyebrows,
or hair in some types of patchy
baldness.
Hair has some remarkable at
tributes. It is as strong as alum
inum. If the hairs of your head
were woven into a slender rope it
could support a suspended weight
of 2000 pounds—about that of a
small car. Head hair grows three
eights to three-fourths of an inch
a month—faster in summer than
winter, faster during day than
night.
The old saying that in times
of great stress hair will turn
white overnight probably is un
true, pigment is buiJt into hair
deep in the scalp. After the hair
emerges, pigment cannot be al
tered. As we grow older pigment
production slows and finally
stops. Then hair grays and final
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Former Citizen
Dies In Georgia
Joseph H. Young, former
Southport citizen, died Wednesday
afternoon at his home in Garden
C’ty, Ga. He was 84 years of
age.
The deceased was a former
U S. Marshall and a former
member of the Georgia State
Legislature While he lived in
Brunswick county he was engag
ed in the turpentine business.
The deceased was a Mason and
was a member of the Garden
City Methodist Church.
Funeral services were held Fri
day afternoon from that church,
with the pastor, the Rev. George
Clary, in charge, assisted by the
Rev. Mr. Dell. Interment follow
ed in the Hillcrest Cemetery in
Savannah.
, Survivors include the widow,
Mrs. Minnie M. Young, of Gar
den City; four daughters, Mrs.
J. G. Christian, Wilmington, Mrs.
Stella Young Sunday, Savannah,
Mrs. Robert B. Thompson, South
port, and Mrs. Emory Murphy,
Garden City; and one son, D. B.
Young, Moultrie. Also surviving
are eight grandchildren which in
clude Mrs. Tilghman Poole of
Durham and Joseph YoUng and
Miss Judy Young, Southport.
Say Sex Second
In Love Matches
Why do we fall in love? Prof.
Robert P. Winch, Northwestern
university sociologist, knows why
50 young husbands and wives did.
The results of his eighte-year
study of them are reported by
Morton M. Hunt in a Reader’s
Digest article, “How Do We
Choose a Mate.”
According to Winch’s evidence,
the love of man of woman and
woman for man is basically self
serving: its primary purpose is to
benefit the lover, n6t the beloved.
Each of us, he says, tends to
fall in love with someone whose
personality is the complement of
our own and through whom we
can therefore relieve our own
frustrations and vicariously live
out our impossible wishes. A
tough, brusque, hard-driving man
may long in secret to be a cared
for child again.
He cannot do this, so he falls in
love with a timid, frail girl whom
he enjoys sheltering—and through
whom, by proxy, he enjoys that
would-be other self.
ly whitens. From present evi
dence, a tendency to premature
graying is an inherited charac
teristic and nothing can be done
about it.
r
She, meanwhile, has always !
yearned to be more aggressive j
and competent, and because she
identifies her life with his, she
indirectly achieves her wish. Sc
each benefits and fulfills the j
other—and so love, though selfish
in its origin, succeeds in becoming
a mutual blessing.
Winch believes this dovetailing
I of psychological needs to be the
essential reason for love and a
far stronger force than sexual
desire, beauty, or similarity of
tcotes. These needs change as
boys and girls go to work or to
college.
Former Resident
Passes Saturday
Mrs. G. W. Dudley, a former
resident of Southport, died Satur
day night at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. J. D. Sutton, in
Patterson, La.
The deceased was 94 years of
age and was well known in
Gutting Victim
Treated Tuesday
Barney Ludlum was brought to
Dosher Memorial Hospital during
the early hours of Tuesday mor
ning, suffering from severe cuts
across his face and on his shoul
der.
Jason Martin, resident of the
Silver Hill community, was ar
rested and charged with assault
whh deadly weapon, inflicting
bodily injury. The case will come
up for trial Monday at Recorder's
court.
Southport, where she lived with
hpr daughter and her family un
til about 18 years ago, when they
moved to the Louisiana town. In
addition to her daughter, she is
survived by 5 grandchildren and
several great-grandchildren.
Horses and mules are expected
to decrease another 8 per cent
during the 1959-60 feed year.
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