Most of the News All The Time THE STATE PORT PILOT A Good Newspaper In A Good Community The Pilot'Covers Brunswick County Volume No. 22 No. 22 10'Pages Today V SOUTHPORT, N. C WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1962 ___ 5c A COPY PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY Consecration Service SERVICE—The Rt. Rev. Thomas H. Wright, Bishop of the Diocese of East Carolina, will consecrate St. James Episcopal Church at Shallotte on ' Friday evening at 7:30 o clock. The church could not be consecrated until it had beeh completely paid for. The Rev. Nelson B. Hodgkins of Whiteville is minister in charge.—(Staff Photo by Allen.) Cotton-Peanut . Election Is Set For December 11 Brunswick Farmers Will Have Opportunity To Vote On Continuing Quo tas Fpr These Crops Brunswick county cotton and peanut farmers will go to the polls on Tuesday, December 11, to decide whether quotas will be In, effect for the 1963 crops, according to Manager Ralph I*. Price of the Agricultural Stabili zation and Conservation Service In Shallotte. This will be the seventeenth time in the past nine years that county cotton farmers have voted on quotas. Regardless of how the vote goes, acreage allotments will re main in effect for the 1963 crop but could change in 1964. The vote will be for only one year. If two-thirds or more of the farmers voting favor quotas on the 1963 crop the price will be supported at between 65 and 90 percent of parity for those who plant within their allotment. But those who exceed their allotment will be subject to marketing quo ta penalty on the excess cotton. If less than two-thirds of the farmers voting in the referendum approve quotas for the 1963 the support price will be 50 percent of parity for producers planting within their allotment. But there will be no penalty for cotton Continued On Page 3 f. I Brit/ BUt Of '-news-1 THANKSGIVING SERVICE Thanksgiving services will be held at the Concord Methodist church in Supply Thursday morn ing beginning at 10:15, accord ing to Rev. Harry Jeanneret. OYSTER ROAST An oyster roast will be held at the Prospect Baptist church in Supply after Trankggiving ser vices Thursday morning. REVIVAL SERVICES Revival services are in progress this week at Bethel Baptist Chur ch near Southport with the Rev. R. T. (Tom) Greene as guest preacher. Services begin each ev ening at 7 o’clock. UNION SERVICE Union Thanksgiving Services will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock at St. Phillips Episcopal Church in Southport. The Rev. Mark Owens will bring the message and the Rev. Ed ward Jordan is host minister. TURKEY SHOOT The annual Winnabow Volun teer Fire Department Thanks giving Day Turkey Shoot will be held at the Winnabow fire house beginning at 1 p. m. according to Tom Rabon. In addition, Western Stagecoach rides will be available for, the children. At the end of the festivities, a drawing will be held and some lucky child will win a toy fire truck. Congressman Here On Annual Rounds Congressman Alton A. Len non Will Make Tour Of Brunswick County Wed nesday Congressman Alton Lennon ex pressed great satisfaction at ,the results of the general election in i Brunswick county during his an ! nual visitation here Tuesday. In keeping with his philosophy of trying -to see the people ' he represents yearly, Congressman Lennon was in Southport Tues day. He will spend Wednesday touring the county at large. Congressman Lennon hopes ' to learn by discussion with the citi zens of Brunswick county some of their problems and needs in connection with the national gov ernment. “I feel that it is essential ,to keep in contact with the people to find- out what they are think ing,” he stated. Congressman Lennon said that he would rather talk with the people than to have them write to him. "When a' person writes you, he is usually motivated by something he has read or has been told and thus reflects more heat than light,” he explained. Congressman Lennon said that he was highly pleased with the results of the general election in Brunswick county. "This shows the work of a well organized and dedicated Democratic party.” He expressed appreciation to the voters of the county for their support in reelecting him to Congress in the general election. As for the Republican victories in the Congressional races in North Carolina, Congressman Lennon said that he was "ter ribly disappointed.” "I was terribly disappointed that the Eighth and Ninth Con gressional districts did not reelect Paul Kitchen and Hugh Alexan der, both of whom I have known for many years. Both were fine Congressmen.” - Congressman Lennon said that . ^-Continued Or. rage 3 Teachers Talk Of Home Needs Improving Home Experien ces Was Discussed At Meeting Of The Vocati onal Homemaking Teach ers Last Week Improving home experiences were discussed by the Brunswick County Vocational Homemaking Teachers at their monthly meet ing in Shallotte Wednesday. In discussing home experiences, it was pointed out that the state requires each student to have two home experiences during the school year. They must be cor related with the homemaking taught in the classroom. The teachers also evaluated the visits of Miss Ann Lassiter, As sistant State Supervisor, to the homemaking departments of the county’s schools. She was in Le land Wednesday, Bolivia and Shal Coattmied on page three CONGRESSMAN LENNON ; Income Increase Study Is Held This Matter Brought Before Brunswick County Voca tional Council Last Week Methods to raise the income in Brunswick county were discussed at the monthly meeting of the Brunswick County Vocational Council which met in Supply Tuesday, according to Chairman A. S. Knowles. The results of a survey the Council had made showed that the income could be raised with the addition of a large scale of truck crops and livestock. In this connection, a five-day school on livestock started in the county Tuesday with a tour of ' farms around Bolivia and Shallotte. Mrs. Ena Gray, Shallotte; Mrs. Lorraine Soles, Waccamaw; Mrs. Lila Hogg, Bolivia; Mrs. Jessie Best, Leland; and ASC Manager Ralph Price attended the meeting and gave a report on the work being done in their communities. Plans for the next meeting were discussed, which includes electing new officers and establishing a tentative program of work for the council. Soil Election Scheduled Soon Soil Conservation Supervisor Will Be Elected During Week Of December 3-8 In Brunswick One Soil Conservation Super visor for Brunswick County will be elected by popular vote in an election to be held during the weeks of December 3-8. The Brunswick County board of Soil Conservation Supervisors at a recent meeting in Shallotte, de cided to nominate T. C. Lennon of Supply for this post. They are now circulating a nominating pe Continued On Page 3 Brunswick Boys And Girls Make Good 4-H Record 4-H Members From Bruns wick Make Good Showing In Annual Honor Pro gram Sponsored By. Star News Brunswick county 4-H members made a good showing in the Star-News Newspaper sponsored 4-H Honor Program, when they won 7 blue, 6 red and 7 white ribbons Saturday in Wilmington. More than 568 exhibits were entered in the 205 classifications of the contest, which was spon sored by the Star-News for the fifth year in a row. State 4-H Club Leader L. R. Harrill spoke at the evening ses sion and emphasized the import ance of leadership in the 4-H program. Duplin county took first place honors with 88 points. Carteret was a close second with 87 and Was followed by Bladen 74, Sampson 65, Columbus 56, Ons low 55, New Hanover 52, Bruns wick 46 and Pender 45. Susan Gray, Brunswick’s top winner, took a blue ribbon for her tomato juice, a red one for her berries and white ones for her pears, vegetable sov 3 and ceram ics. Belinda Holden won two blue ribbons for pies and her native sea shells, a red one for her: cucumber pickles and white ones for her beets. Ruby L. Hickman took a blue ribbon for her laundry bag, a red one for her display of shrubbery and a white one for her leaf col lection. Sheila Snipes won a blue rib bon for corn muffins, a red one for her lamp and a white one for bar cookies. Martha Rabon won a blue rib bon for cucumber pickles and a white one for her wool suit. Harvey Bell won a red ribbon for his plate of hot peppers and a Wiiite one for his quart of soy beans. Jimmy Gray won a blue rib bon for his cushaws while Bar bara Knowles took a red one for her washable cotton blouse and skirt. Meta Gail McNeil was Continued on Page Three Atkinson Gets Dredging Work Norfolk Concern Will Carry Out Certain Maintenance Dredging Operations On River Atkinson Dredging Company, of Norfolk, Virginia, is the apparent low bidder for maintenance dredg ing to be performed in Wilming ton Harbor. Bids were opened in the office of Colonel J. S. Gry giel, District Engineer, Wilming ton Corps of Engineers District, last week. Atkinson Dredging Company bid was $533,520. Three other bids were received for the work, and ranged in price from Continued On Page 3 Discuss Plans For Brunswick Town DISCUSSION—Mrs. 01m B. Sikes, of Monroe, front center, was in Southport Friday for a discussion of the project for restoration of certain gardens at Bruns p^Tcf °™n‘ h®r ln th? Picture are, front row, Mrs. Roscoe D. McMillan, of Red Springs first \nce-president; and Mrs E. A. Palmgren of Charlotte, past president and member of the committee, on the back row are Stanly South, arch aeologist in charge at Brunswick Town; Mrs. James M. Harper, Jr., member of the committee, and Mrs. Henry Stevens of Warsaw, also a member of the commit tee.—(Staff Photo by Allen.) Shallotte Man Dies Instantly Of Pistol Wound Arren Cox Dies Instantly After Being Shot In Chest, Reportedly By Lee An drews ' ;| ■ ■ ■ 1 An estranged husband, for sometime a resident of Whiteville, remained in critical condition at Jamfs Walker Hospital in Wil mington at noon today, following what Brunswick County officers have called murder and attempt ed suicide which occurred in the Gause Landing area about 2 p. m., Friday. Arren Taylor Cox, 73, a retired government employee, was shot to death in the bedroom of his home after what is believed to have been a recurrence of domes tic troubles. Lee Andrews, in his 40s, son-in-law of the victim, is a patient in the Wilmington hospital with a .22 calibre pistol bullet wounds in his chest and forehead. Brunswick Coroner Lowell Ben nett said Cox was shot three times, also with a .22 calibre re volver, with one bullet glancing off his hand and going through a bedroom window. The other slugs entered his heart area, Continued on Page Three smwmmmms&b TIME and TIDE Twenty-five years ago this week the Intracoastal Waterway was unusually crowded. During a period in the preceding week a total of 37 boats and yachts stopped at Southport. The reason for the large number of these pleasure craft was that it was time to begin the migration to the warmer Florida waters during the cold weather up north. Also, Southport is almost precisely the halfway point between New York and Miami. Local citizens were looking forward to the Thanksgiving day feast to be held in every home the following Thursday; efforts were being made to collect delinquent taxes that were due this county; a Japanese bishop was to speak at a Thanksgiving day service. Fifteen years ago this week a food campaign was being carried on in Southport as part of the Catholic project to raise food for the needy persons in Europe. It was to be a part of the world-wide campaign to supply the poverty stricken people as a result of the war. The project was called “friendship train." A gas-tanker truck went out of control and crashed into a filling station at Leland. E>amage to the store was estimated to be in excess of $5,000. Tax. listers for the coming year had been appointed; fine catches of jockfish were made, with one weigh ing 19-pounds. | Ten years ago this wee| the citizens of Southport, especially . those on the waterfront, jwere disturbed over the decision to . move the Coast Guard Patio! boat from the Cape Fear area. The i boat was ordered to Norfik 43 days before and was yet to re turn. However, the Air did have boats almost identical to the 83-footers, but to theiesidents who had become used to the 1 craft it was not the sam« tiling. j The docks in Souths* were becoming crowded with the in- s creased waterway traffwJmd plans were being made to enlarge C°«iflued On Page 3 State Garden Club President Visitor •3 Holidays Begin For Thanksgiving All consolidated schools of Brunswick county will ad journ for the Thanksgiving holidays at noon Wednesday and will return Monday morning. City and county of fices will be closed Thursday. Also observing the Thanks giving holiday will be the post offices, the banks and Southport Savings & Loan. Most of the business estab lishments of the county will remain closed on Thursday. Drayton Cooper To Leave County Tenders Resignation As Pas tor^ Of Southport Presby terian Church And New Hope Rev. Drayton Cooper, for- near; ly two years pastor of the South port and New Hope Presbyterian churches, announced to his con gregations Sunday that he is re signing his post, effective Dec. 16. The Rev. Mr. Cooper told his churches that he has received, and accepted, a unanimous call from the congregation of the First Presbyterian church in Kershaw, South Carolina. The town of Ker shaw is located in piedmont South Carolina, about 50 miles south of Charlotte. “We have enjoyed our work in these communities very much,” the Rev. Mr. Cooper said, “but we feel very definitely, that we should accept the work in South Carolina.” The Kershaw church has nearly 150 members, and is considered one of the leading congregations in Bethel Presby tery. Since coming to Southport, the minister has been active in both church and civic affairs. During his pastorate here, the local Pres byterian church paid out the re maining indebtedness on the new educational building, formed a new Boy Scout troop and added learly a dozen new members, most of them on profession of :aith. He- is a member of the South port Junior Chamber of Com merce in which he served on sev eral committees, is active in the eity Civil Defense organization, ind is the local observer for the Jnited States Weather Bureau, ■le is also an active amateur adio operator and has had sev :ral articles published in national nagazines of both religious and ecular nature. Mrs. Cooper has been an active Continued On Page a 'Mrs. Olin B. Sikes Of Mon roe Attended Meeting Of Committee On Brunswick ■ Tow»' Project " ’ -■*- *■** i The Brunswick Town Project Committee of the Garden Clubs of North Carolina held its first meeting in Southport on Friday morning and later in the day visited the site £.t Brunswick Town which is to be the next major project ot this statewide organization. Mrs. Olin B. Sikes of Monroe, state president, and Mrs. Roscoe D. McMillan of Red Springs, state first vice-president, met with the committee which is composed of Mrs. James M. Harper,. Jr., of Southport, project chairman, Mrs. Henry Stevens of Warsaw, Mrs. E. A. Palmgreh of Charlotte, and Mrs. Earnest Parker of Southport. Prior to the morning meeting members of the three garden clubs of Southport, which were responsible for the projects ac ceptance by the state group, were invited to Mrs: Harper’s, home for coffee and to meet the state president. ' : ■ • , • Stanley South, archaeologist in charge of excavation at Bruns wick Town for. the State Depart ment of Archives and History, appeared before the group' and told of the history of the site and explained the connection be tween-the work being done now and the work the ciubs are be ing asked to undertake. He show ed slides of the ruins and the area which will be beautified. It was decided by the group to concentrate on the Nature Trail as the first part of the pro ject, leaving the restoration of Maurice Moore’s Garden as a sec ond step. Ways of financing this were discussed. Continued on Page 4 Leland Jaycees Seeking Charter Dale Coker Elected Presi dent Of New Organiza tion Which Is Being Spon. sored By Southport Jay cees In order to complete application forms to the state and national headquarters,' the newly organized Leland Jaycees will meet Friday night at the Leland Fire Depart ment, according to President Dale Coker. During tl\e meeting final details will be worked out in order for the chapter to join the state and national group. A report from the membership committee will be heard and the date for “charter night” will be selected. The club last met on Thursday, November 8, at which time offi cer’s and directors were elected. In addition to President Coker, Continued en Page Three Christmas House Scheduled For December 9th Three Garden Clubs In Southport Cooperating In Presenting This Year's Holiday Event “Christmas From The Forest” will be the theme of the annual Christmas House sponsored by the Southport Garden Club with the cooperation of the Live Oak and Woodbine Clubs, according to Mrs. J. A. Gilbert and Mrs. L. J. Hardee, general chairmen. The show will be held on Sun day, December 9, in the Com munity Building and will be open to the public from 2 until 6 in the afternoon and from 8:30 until 9:30 o’clock that evening. A chairman of each division * has been appointed from the I Southport Garden Club, with one * member from each of the other ! clubs to assist in securing & - number of entries in each. It is I hoped that persons other than - club members will enter their ar- * rangements and ideas so that the « community may profit from this. ; Following are the division chair men: Registration and Placement: I Mrs. Dallas Pigott, Mrs. J. M. - Harper, Mrs. Grace Rourk, Mrs. * M. M. Hood, Mrs. Harold Aid- * ridge, Mrs. C. E. Bellamy; Tree: " Mrs. A. D. Harrelson, Mrs. Leslie l Bellows, Mrs. Tom Gilbert; Win- " dows: Mrs. J. T. Barnes, Mrs. I Clinton Bellamy, Mrs. C. D. Pick- - erell; Doors: Mrs. D. C. Her- * ring, Mrs. Roy Robinson, Mrs. * Basil Watts; Fireplace: Mrs. C. ; A. Graham, Mrs. Johnnie Duffie, * Mrs. Alice Henry. Mobiles: Mrs. E. C. Harrelson, I Mrs. Henry Harry Donnell, Mrs. - J. B. Warth; Living Room: Mrs. * Fred Burdette, Mrs. E. J. Pre- * vatte, Mrs. Harold Aldridge; * Coffee Tables: Mrs. Dallas Pigott, - Mrs. M. M. Hood, Mrs. H. A. “ Schmidt. Dining Room: Mrs. Alice St. j Geofge, , Mi;s. Grace Rourk, Mrs. G. ,W,- Fisher, \ g Guy Garrett, Mrs. Fran Key, Mrs. Bobby Jones; Wreaths or Wall Hangings: Mrs. Ernest Parker, Mrs. Bryant Potter, Mrs. Jack Hickman; Kitchen: Mrs. J. E. Continued on Page Three Urge Purchase Of More Bonds State Savings- Bond- Chair man Urges More Purchas es Of U. S. Savings Bonds During This Crisis W. H. Andrews, Jr., Jefferson; Standard Life Insurance execu-. tive and North Carolina State Savings Bonds Chairman today called on County citizens for ad ded support of the U. S. Savings, Bonds Program in light of the Cuban crisis. In a letter to Aubrey Johnston, Brunswick County Savingsj Bonds Chairman W. H. An drews, Jr., repeated an appeal from Treasury Secretary Doug las Dillon which stressed the “vi tal importance of keeping our1 country strong” and stated that “the help and participation of every citizen is a necessary part of such national strength.” Secretary Dillon’s appeal noted that Savings Bonds contribute greatly to the economic strength on which our defense efforts de pend, and called the act of buy-" Continued On Page 3 > Tide Table Following Is the tide table for Southport during ' the week. These hours are approximately correct and were furnished The State Port Pilot through the courtesy of the Cape Fear Pilot's Association. Thursday, November 22, 4:15 A. M. 10:31 A. 4:21 P. M. 10:54 P. Friday, November 23, 5:01 A. M. 11:21 A. 5:06 P. M. 11:36 P. Saturday, November 24, 5:45 A. M. 12:07 A. 5:50 P. U. Sunday, November 25, 6:26 A. M. 12:17 A. 6:30 P. M. 12:51 P. Monday, November 26, 7:04 A. M. 12:57 A. 7:08 P. M. 1:33 P. Tuesday, November 27, 7:42 A. M. 1:34 A. 7:46 P. M. 2:14 P. Wednesday, November 28 8:19 A. M. 2:12 A. 8:23 P. M. 2:55 P. gS* gg gg gg g gg gg