Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / Jan. 3, 1962, edition 1 / Page 6
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Shallotte Divides Tuesday Twin-Bill WAMPEE, S. C.—Coach Doug Henderson’s unbeaten Shallotte Pirates smothered the Wampee Little River Indians here, Tues day night, 80-49, after the W-LR Indianettes had dumped the in vading Lady Bucs, 49-31. Top scorers for the Pirate teams were Judy Golden with 17, Gloria Russ with 10, Robert Gal loway with 33, Danny Stanley with 15, and Roy Mintz with 14. Best for W-LR were Gail Bul lock with 22 and Charlie Suggs with 19. Henderson's boys have now won six straight games and they did this one the hard way, coming from behind at 13-12 first quar ter lead which the Indian boys held over them. Galloway scored j 33 points to make it five games in which he has hit 30 or more points. BUY! Want Ads! ; HOLIDAY DRIVE-IN SHALLOTTE, N. C. Fri., Sat., Jan. 5-6 (Double Feature) a souped-up midget r BORN toI SPEED Hot Rods and Hot Tempers IGNITE! 'S' DEVIL onP WHEELS Lote Show Sat., 10:30 P. M. Sun., Mon., Tue. January 7-8-9 Ml Afi iila THE PEPPERMINT 10UNGEI HAW S#l mi'5ms* STS’»«wn»i must Wed., Thur., Fri. January 10-11-12 Conference Play Begins For Brunswick Cagers The Brunswick County confer ence basketball schedule begins Tuesday night and will continue until the annual tournament gets underway in Southport on Feb ruary 27. The schedule calls for three games between the four compet ing schools, and provision has been made for two weeks of open dates for filling non-conference committments. On theb asis of pre-season play, Leland and Southport boys would appear to rate the role of favor-1 ites in their respective divisions! while the Leland and Bolivia girls appear to be the strongest among the girls. Following is the conference schedule: Jan. 9—Bolivia vs. Leland at Leland; Southport vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw. Jan. 12—Leland vs. Waccamaw at Leland; Bolivia vs. Southport at Southport. Jan. 16—Bolivia vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw; Southport vs. Ie land at Southport. Jan. 19—Open. Jan. 23—Bolivia vs. Leland at Bolivia; Southport vs. Waccamaw at Southport. Jan. 26—Leland vs. Waccamaw at Leland; Bolivia vs. Southport at Bolivia. Jan. 30—Bolivia vs. Waccamaw at Bolivia; Southport vs Leland at Southport. Feb. 2—Open. Feb. 6—Bolivia vs. Leland at Leland; Southport vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw. Feb. 9—Leland vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw; Bolivia vs. South port at Southport. Feb. 13-16—Open. Feb. 23—-Bolivia vs. Waccamaw j at Bolivia; Southport vs. Leland j at Leland. J. V. SCHEDULE The junior varsity games will be played during the afternoon, with play starting at 3:30 o’clock. Following is the schedule: Jan. 10—Bolivia vs. Leland at Bolivia; Southport vs. Waccamaw at Southport. Jan. 17-—Leland vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw; Southport vs. Bo livia at Bolivia. Jan. 24—Bolivia vs. Waccamaw at Bolivia; Southport vs. Leland at Leland. Feb. 7—Bolivia vs. Leland at Leland; Southport vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw. Feb. 14—Leland vs. Waccamaw at Leland; Bolivia vs. Southport at Southport. Feb. 21—Bolivia vs. Waccamaw at Waccamaw; Southport vs Le land at Southport. Robert W. Autry Dies Wednesday Robert James Autry, 81, of Wilmington, Route 1, died Wed nesday in James Walker Memorial Hospital. Final rites were held Friday at 2 p. m. at Coble’s Oleander chapel by the Revs. B. H. Wooten and Carroll Wooten, with burial in Prospect Cemetery. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Etta Sanders Autry; a son, Clif ton Autry of Jacksonville; a fos ter son, Norwood Watkins, of Le land; four daughters, Mrs. Luther Pickett, Chinquapin, Mrs. James Whaley and Mrs. Olive Wilson, both of Beaulahville and Mrs. Jerry Williams of Raleigh; three brothers, Willard, Jim and John Autry, all of Wilmington; and two sisters, Mrs. Mary Sursley of Chinquapin and Mrs. Lilia Garner of Morehead City. KIMBALL'S Fine Furniture—Maytag & Frigidare Appliances Phone PL 4-6998 Shallotte, N. C. HUBERT BELLAMY, Prop. AMUZU THEATRE SHOW STARTS 7:30 P. M.—SOUTHPORT, N. C. Admission 25c - 50c WED.-THUR. JANUARY 3-4 [ MEL FERRER ELSAMARTINELLI ANNETTE VADIM* Roger Vadim’s ■ TECHHfRAMA Screenplay by Roger Vadim and Bogs Variland Produced by RAYMOND EGER - A Paramount Release TECHNICOLOR" FRI.-SAT. JANUARY 5-6 "ZCESARE DANOVA-SEAN McCLORY-JOAN STALEY, 8utde!UJte»6»JUlfSW8« • Produced by BYRON ROBERTS * Eudhw Producer ALFRED ZIMBAIIST • threr'.edfcy EDWARD BERNDS IA ZRB PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE SUN.-MON. ^0® k. AND FABULOUS J^thetw/sT ImOWFiLUl ■ FOR THE TIME© JANUARY 7-8 ■» CHUBBY CHECKER *}-W www?wwww? DION VICKI SPENCER uhimc WWW THE MARCELS CLAY COLE WED.-THUR. JANUARY 10-11 Nakina Beats Eagles Twice By JIGGS POWERS NAKINA—Coach Bill Atkin son’s Nakina Indians had to go into overtime to down the Wacca maw Eagles, 60-53, here, Tuesday night, after his Indianettes had beaten the Eaglette girls from across Waceamaw River, 37-22, in the opener. Top point-makers for the win ning teams were Linda Simmons of the Indianettes with 18 points and Bruhilda Register—-playing at forward in place of Hazel Stevens, out with the mumps— added 11; along with Indian stars Albert Neal Register with 17, All Columbus Jimmy Dew with 15, and McCoy Gore and Jackie Brock with 10 each. Pace-setters for Coach Tommy Shutt’s Eagle clubs were Mary King with 11, Earl Hughes with 27 and Vernon Hughes with 20. Defensive standouts included Sharon Long, Lyle King and Vern Hughes of the visitors; and Na kina’s Jimmy Dew, Tony Long, Mylindia Jenrette and Lorena Whaley. Lefty Linda Simmons sank her running half-hook with 6:56 left in the first quarter, Bruhilda Reg ister tallied on a 5:35 foul shot, and Bruhilda added an overhead set with 4:27 left to run the In dianette advantage to 5-0. Mari lyn Stanaland had Waccamaw’s first points on a fielder just be fore the first quarter closed with Nakina leading, 9-2. The local girls were never headed, leading at the half, 16-8; and at the third period half, 27-12. The boys’ game was dose much of the way, but it had appeared that Atkinson’s boys had the de cision pretty well in the bag with an 8-point (49-41) lead with little more than a minute to go. But, Coach Shutt’s Eagles erupted for enough markers, mainly on the good shooting of Vern and Earl Hughes, to tie the count at 51-51 as the regulation game ended. Earl Hughes put the visitors ahead at 53-51 with a push as 2:56 was left in the three-minute overtime, but Register tied it at 53-all at 2:38. Then, Sub James Sarvis stole the ball from the Eagles and went in for a 1:51 lav up that left the Braves in front, 55-53. Then, Dew hit on a jump Mrs. Frank Brown Dies In Hospital Mrs. Lillie Sanders Leloudis Brown, 63, of 505 North 21st St., Wilmington, died Friday at Cape Fear Memorial Hospital. at 1:24, Jackie Brock added an other at the 50-second mark and Register sank the final point of the game, a foul shot, with 12 seconds left on the clock to give the homeboys the final count of a 60-53 triumph. Register had started the game with a 7:56 push and Tony Long and Jim Dew both had baskets before Earl Hughes found the range for Waccamaw. The Braves held on at 6-5, 9-7 and 13-12. but stretched their lead a mite to 15 12 at the quarter. They had a 3-point (25-221 Margin at the half. The Eagles finally tied things up at 29-29 on Vern Hughes’ shot with 5:26 left in the third period and Earl Hughes gave WHS its first lead, 31-29, at 5:18, but Albert Register tied it for the home five. 31-31, at 5:11. Ronald Hughes’ foul shot at 5:04 made it 32-31. WHS. The Visitors went into the third-quarter turn in front, 39-35. Register registered at 6:43 in the fourth frame to make it 39-39 and Tony Long fouled out shortly afterward with the count still the same. Register made it 41-39, NHS, at 6:04 and Atkinson’s boys rolled up a 49-41 advantage on baskets by Sarvis, Brock, Dew, and Register, before Earl Hughes’ brace of fouls at 1:04 pulled Wac camaw close again at 49-47; Vern Hughes’ 1-and-l at 35 seconds made it 49-49; then Dew’s jumper at 29 seconds and Vernon Hughes long push with 13 seconds left made it 51-51, as time on the regular tilt ran out. Then came Nakina’s winning overtime surge. GIRLS: Nakina (371— Simmons 18, J. Register 6, B. Register 11, D. Arp. Jenrette, Whaley. Subs Dew 1, Marlowe, H. Arp, K. Blackmon, Reeves 1, Sing, Piver. Waccamaw (22) Inman 7, Stana land 2, King 11, S. Long, L. Ward, Little. Subs—Browning. Smith, B. Long, Bennett, McBride, D. Ward 2, Russ. BOYS: Nakina (60» M. Gore 10, Brock 10, Dew .15, Register 17, T. Long 4. Sub -Sarvis 4. Waccamaw (S3) R. Hughes, D. Hughes 2, King 4, E. Hughes 27, V. Hughes 20. Sub —Smith. I BRAKE SPECIAL BRAKES RELINED *17.87 Includes ‘Genuine’ Ford Linings, Fluid, and Labor. CAPE FEAR MOTOR SALES “Your Friendly Ford Dealer” SERVICE DEPARTMENT 215 Market — Wilmington, N. C.— RO 3-6221 ANNOUNCEMENT FOR SHERIFF m I hereby announce I my candidacy for the | Democratic nomination ; for Sheriff of Brunswick County, subject to the wiil of the voters in the ■ May Primary, i It has been my privi lege to serve for two terms as Sheriff of Brun | swick County, end dur i ing these years I have | done my best to main II tain law and order with k a minimum of fanfare I and dramatics. It al 1 ways has been my pur I pose to deal fairly with every man, regardless ot his race or station in life, and of it is my good fortune to once more be rturned to this office, this still will be the policy we will follow in the Sheriffs Department of Brunswick County ED V. LEONARD Candidate For Democratic Nomination For Sheriff OF BRUNSWICK COUNTY She was a native of Pender County, the daughter of the late Richard T. and Mary Catherine Canady Sanders and a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of the latter Day Saints, and of its Na tional Woman’s Relief Society. Final rites were held Sunday at 2 p. m. from the Church of the Latter Day Saints by Bishop J. M. Shingleton, and Speakers W. Calvin Walton and J. Thur man Skipper with burial in the Latter Day Saints Cemetery at Hampstead. Survivors include her husband, J. Frank Brown; a son, Kostos G. Leloudis of Wilmington; a daughter, Mrs. James G. Hender son of Wilmington: a stepson, Franklin A. Brown of Seagate; a foster daughter, Mrs. Ivey Sel lers of Supply; four stepdaught ers, Mrs. Thomas L. Jones, New port News, Va., Mrs. Jerry Hailey, Raleigh, Mrs. Paul K. Banks, High Point, and Mrs. W. D. Hasel, Oklahoma City, Okla.; two broth ers, E. M. Sanders, Leland and John E. Sanders, Salt Lake City, Utah; two sisters, Mrs. Lizzie Boyette, Middle Sound and Mrs. Henrietta Wolf, Ucon, Idaho; and 20 grandchildren. Want Ads Get Results Mayor In New York Harold Greene, general manager | and mayor of Boiling Spring ? Lakes, left Tuesday afternoon for a slightly larger community— New York City. Greene will remain for the bal ance of this week in the Northern 1 metropolis, whence he was called on promotional activities by Reeves Associates, developers of the huge Brunswick County pro ject. Greene utilizes the airlines for his trip. GARLAND'S PLACE VARhfUM foWN—ON LOCKWOOD FOLLY RIVER PHONE DAY 4-6176 NIGHT 4-6179 Fresh Sea Food & Oysters—Wholesale & Retail Vi PRICE SALE BUY THESE ITEMS NOW AND USE THEM NEXT CHRISTMAS WE NEED THE SPACE —YOU’VE GOT IT. OUR LOSS, YOUR GAIN CHRISTMAS CARDS, CHRISTMAS PAPER & GIFT WRAPPING DECORATIONS—LIGHT SETS (Indoor & Outdoor) RIBBON, TAGS, SEALS, TINSEL AND EXTRA BULBS. These Stems Now At V2 Price, So Hurry, THEY WON’T LAST LONG AT THESE PRICES Kirby Prescription Center FAST—ACCURATE PRESCRIPTION SERVICE HOWE ST. GL 7-6100 SOUTHPORT, N. C. annual For a very limited time only! BUY FAMOUS State Pride LUXURY PERCALE SHEETS FOR LESS THAN THE PRICE OF MUSLIN« 72 x 108” flat or twin fitted 81 x 108” flat or double fitted 42 x 38 V2” pillow cases Why settle for less when, you can buy percale? Here are sheets that are made according to our own exacting specification at an amazing price! Stock up now and save. CANNON'S COLOR-MATCHED BATH TOWELS! SOLIDS! STRIPES! 22 x 44". HAND TOWELS WASH CLOTHS • 2 for 1.00 . 3 for 1.00 * 6 for 1.00 Buy these in solid colors and made-for-each-other companion stripes. Solid Colors . . . dynasty green, fern green, empire bronze, firefly yel low, shocking pink, palace blue, dawn pink, celestial blue, white. Stripes . . . dynasty green, palace blue, empire bronze, shocking pink. SAVE ON KOOL FOAM AIR-CONDITIONED PILLOWS DELUXE 21 x 29 x 7” reg. 9.99 SUPER PLUMP 20x27 Vi x6V4”, reg. 8.99 7.99 6.99 World’s finest pure foam latex pillows. Never gets lumpy or bumpy. Allergy free! Washable, fully zip peted Sanforized cover! Thick, Acrilan Acrylic Blanket! 5 Colors! warm lightweight 7,88 reg. 9.99 It’s the season for blankets! Here's one that is not only featherlight, but oh-so-warm! A completely washable blanket with beauty that fluffs right back. Pink, white, beige, blue, green. Wide nylon binding. Mothproof, mildew proof, size 72 x 90". LINENS i1 " 1 i On Sale Now • BELK’S THIRD FLOOR
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 3, 1962, edition 1
6
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