Volurne No. 22 No. 38 8-Poges Today A Good Newspaper In A Good Community SOUTHPORT, N. C WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1963 5c A COPY . PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY tm* Home Demonstration Workshop BUSY—The Furniture Refinishing Workshop, sponsored by the Brunswick County Council of Home Demonstration Clubs, was in session today at the extension building at Supply. Among the early arrivals were Mrs. Ina Mae Mintz, Mrs. Sarah Kopp Mrs Daisy Mercer, Mrs. Annie Mae Mercer, Mrs. Mary W. Earp and Mrs. Mabel Reid. (Staff Photo by Allen) Saturday Night Miss Brunswick Pageant Everything Set For Third | Annual Brunswick Coun ty Pageant At Shallotte High School Nine girls will compete for the title of Miss Brunswick County in the auditorium of Shallotte High School Saturday night be gining at 8 p. m. This pageant is sponsored by the Shallotte Junior Chamber of Commerce. The contestants include Bar bara Gail Sellers, Jacqueline Dare Pigott, Jean Alton Gilbert, Lois Jeanette Smith, Hanna Frink; Amelia Jean Holden, €5ar«-i olyn Johnson, Linda Long and Pat Bartells. The new Miss Brunswick Coun ty will receive a $500 scholar ship, sponsored by the Waccu maw Bank and Trust Company and the Southport Savings and princess ring, a two week vaca princess ring, a two week voca tion, at Sunset Beach, sponsor ed by M. C. Gore, a trophy and a wardrobe of clothes, sponsored by the Shallotte Jaycees. She will also represent Brunswick county at the Miss North Carolina Pag eant in Greensboro during July. . The first runner-up will re ceive a $200 scholarship and a trophy and the second runner-up a trophy. A trophy will also be presented to the girl voted Miss Congeniality by the other girls. Gil Burnett, a Wilmington at torney, will again serve as mas ter-of-cermonies of the Miss Brunswick pageant. Mrs. Peggy Hood of Southport is the director Of the contest while Waters Thompson and Mrs. Early Smith are in charge of the decorations. Sparkie Davis of Harrell’s Music Store in Wilmington will furnish the music for the pageant. Miss North Carolina Janice Elizabeth Barron of Morganton, will be guest' of honor at the pageant. A dance will be held immedi ately following the contest at the Armory to honor the new Miss Brunswick County. Judges for the pageant will be Helen Osteen McBride, Barbara Rogers and Faye Taylor, Myrtle Beach; Robert L. Triplett, Wil mington; and Albert Sharpe, Lumberton. Brty BtU ~Qf I ‘-NEWS-1 BOARD TO MEET Members of the board of coun ty commissioners will meet next week as a Board of Equalization and Review. BENEFIT SUPPER An old fashion chicken and dumplin supper will be served at Ocean View Methodist church at Yaupon Beach Friday between 5:30 and 7 o’clock. OYSTER ROAST An end of- the season oyster roast, sponsored by Sharon Meth odist Church, will be served Sat urday from 5 to 8:30 p. m. at W. E. Bellamy’s Store. Since this will be the last oyster roast until next fall everyone is urged to take advantage of it> and bring a friend. LOIS JEANETTE SMITH Williamson In Favor Of High Bridge Project | Brunswick County Repre i sentative Explains His | Action In Connection I With County Manager i Bill By ODELL WILLIAMSON Last week your representative ! in the General Assembly introduc ed a bill to set forth the profes sional qualifications for a Bruns wick county manager, if the county commissioners should de cide that it is feasible for us to employ one. The county already has the authority to fill such a position; my bill simply insures ■ that the person employed would have a college degree with a minimum of one year’s courses ■ (or the equivalent) in business administration. The bill has al ready passed the House, and I foresee no difficulty in getting Senate approval also. Last Thursday I was happy to see about 28 prominent Bruns wick citizens among the 700 peo ple, mostly from Wilmington, who came to Raleigh for a Highway Commission hearing on the pro posed new bridge over the Cape Fear River at Wilmington. Among the group were our coun ty commissioners. After several years of debate, confusion and in decision about the kind of bridge needed, the determined crowd de scended on Raleigh to present a united front in favor of a high level four-lane bridge and an ear ly beginning on construction. I predict that the Highway Com mission will render a favorable decision within a few days—if it has not already done so by the time you read this. With a four-lane bridge as a beginning, we can start thinking about four-laning Highway 17, of which the bridge is a section. One of the main things I hope to accomplish while in Raleigh is to get the State to spend the $500,000 authorized in the state wide bond election for any worth while project toward port devel opment at Southport. To see what could be done to speed up this project, I was able last week to meet with E. G. Anderson, mem Continued On rag3 * MRS. PEGGY HOOD Bruton Elected NCEA President Principal Of Waccamaw High School Elected Head Of Brunswick Edu cation Forces For Next Year The election of new officers highlighted the meeting of the Brunswick county division of the North Carolina Educational As sociation which was held Wednes day afternoon at Waccamaw. The new officers, all from Wac camaw, include President L. A. Binton, school principal, Vice President R. C. King and Mrs. Mary Dawson, secretary-treasur er. They were named by a nom inating committee, were unani mously elected, and will take of fice next year. ‘ The feature speaker for the meeting was Mrs. Phoebe Em mons of Raleigh, field consultant of the North Carolina Education al Association. She had words of praise for the members of the General As sembly for “going to work for education”. She said this was the first time bills affecting edu cation had been introduced early in the session. Along the same line, Mrs. Em> mons spoke kind words for Re publicans introducing educational bills. She said the Republicans were making the Democrats con scious of the needs of schools. As for education itself, Mrs. Emmons said the responsibilities Continued On Page 5 Set Examination For Postmaster :f| Job At Leland Civil Service Commission Announces Closing Date For Applications To Fill Existing Vacancy An examination for Postmaster at Leland at a salary of $5,365 a year will be open for acceptance of applications until April 2, the Commission announced this week. This examination has been an nounced under revised qualifica tions standards agreed upon be tween the Commission and the Post Office Department. Competitors for the - postmaster vacancy in this city must have at least 1 year of experience (education above high school level may be substituted for 6 months of experience) showing that they have the ability to maintain sim ple records of accounts or that it has given them a knowledge of postal procedures. Competitors must also show that they are of good reputation and that they can meet and deal with the 'public agreeably and ef fectively. Applicants must take a written test. Those who pass will be as signed final ratings on the basis of this test and on their experi ence, and fitness for the poistion. They must have resided within the delivery of the office for one year immediately preceding the closing of . the examination. In addition, they must have reached the(r 18th birthday on the clos ihg date fqr acceptance of appli cations. Persons over 70 years of age cannot be appointed. Complete information about the examination requirements and in structions for filing applications may be obtained at the post of fice for which this examination is being announced. Application forms must be filed with the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C., and must be.received or postmarked not later than the closing date. • : ■ New Registration For Long Beach Blanks Being Mailed This Week To Property Own ers Who Are Eligible To Vote In Coming Election This week, registration forms will be mailed to all residents and property owners of record of Long Beach in preparation for the municipal election in May. Special legislation permits not only residents, but also freehold ers, or property owners, who have registered to vote in municipal election of commissioners. The five commissioners elect the may or. Under the General Statues a resident is described as one “whose residence is in the Town of Long Beach six months or more out of the year, and thirty days of which immediately pre cede the day fixed for election of town officers”. The election every two years is set for the Tuesday following the first Mon day in May. Continued On Page 4 Southport Man State Official In Blind Work Lt. Col. William O. Beasley Has Been Named State Representative Of Nation al Society For Prevention Of Blindness . s?it. Col. William O. Beasley of Caswell Beach has recently been appointed North Carolina State Representative of the National So ciety for the Prevention of Blind ness. Col. Beasley retired in 1962 from the Army to his home on Caswell Beach, and has been ac tively working with the Society. The National Society for the Prevention of Blindness is the only national voluntary health agency engaged in the prevention of . blindness through a total pro gram of research, service, and education. The Society’s research has shown that half of all blind ness can be prevented if current scientific causes of eye diseases and injuries can be applied for the benefit of the community. Nationwide screenings show that about 10 per cent of pre school children have eye trouble requiring corrective treatment, and it is estimated that one fourth of school age children, or approximately' ten million chil dren, need eye care. There remain at least 122,000 eye accidents among children each year in spite of the progress which has been made in this field. Among adults, glaucoma, an eye disease which leads to blind ness if untreated, has been found in about one out of every fifty persons over age forty. Blindness Continued On Page 4 Twenty-five years ago this week a front page photo of Capt. Tommy St. George appeared. Despite being seventy years of age, he was still an active member of the Cape Fear Pilots Associat ion. A photographer from Fox Movietone Newsreels was to visit here to photograph interesting sites in the area, especially Ft Caswell. In the interest of area publicity, the Southport Civic Club was mailing out over 5,000 post cards with picture and infor mation of Southport to interested people across the country. Twenty years ago this week it was announced that farmers must have permits to deliver meats. The purpose of the stamp ing was to halt black market operations. County Red Cross funds were approaching the goal set for the year; $1,300 of the goal of $4,000 was already deposited in the bank. Representatives from the State News Bureau visited here and were taken on a survey of the county’s agricultural activities by Bill Keziah and County Agent J. E. Dodson. Fifteen years ago this week vegetable plants were almost ready for shipment to the Long Island region of New York. The transporting of the plants was to be done by the Lindner Broth ers, truck farmers from Southport. Contributions totaling $2358 were given by members of the Southport Baptist Church congregation to go in their building fund. This raised the total to approximately $15,000 with anoth er $15,000 necessary for the completion of the brick veneering work on the sanctuary and completion of the educational build Coutinued On j>mga 4 . i Shallotte Meeting SESSION The first session of the Tour-Arama program for Brunswick and New Hanover counties was held in Shall otte Tuesday night. Shown discussing the program are from left to right, Brunswick Sponsor G. E. Henderson, Shallotte Chairman M. H. Ruark, Shallotte Mayor R. W. Cheers, SENCland Travel Council Chairman Glenn Tucker and Director W. K. Dorsey of Distributive Education at Wilmington College. (Staff Photo by Allen.) Area Attr, Given ---3 Water Lines To Be Extended Soon Two thousand feet of six-inch water main will, be installed in Deepwater . Heights ' within the next eight weeks at virtually no cost to the Southport tax-payers, according to City Manager C. D. Pickerrell. The greater proportion of the money to be used for the project was paid by the property owners of the area. “I want to personally thank the property owners for their splen did cooperation in connection with the project,” City Manager Pickerrell stated. The pipe for the Deepwater Heights project will be ordered Thursday. Arthur Greene Gets Sales Job Charleston Man Becomes Sales And Promotion Manager At Boiling Spr ing Lakes Arthur M. Greene of Charles ton,' S. C., has been named to succeed Hal Reeves as Sales and Promotion Manager of Boiling Spring Lakes, local resort and retirement development, it was announced this week by officials of Reeves Broadcasting and De velopment Corp., developers of Boiling Spring Lakes. Reeves, who' has headed up the development since February, 1962, will remain at Boiling Spring Lakes for the next several months to assist Mr. Greene in becoming familiar with the operation of the development. The new manager joined the company several months ago as regional sales coordinator and has been engaged in establishing broker-dealer sales forces in va rious cities throughout the Caro linas. He has been in the land development field for many years, having represented two of the largest companies developing new communities in South Florida. A native of New York City, Greene has lived in the South since 1941. having been assigned 'he Southeastern territory for the A.merican Lending Libraries, a :oast-to-coast library chain, as an analyst. Prior to coming to the South, he was associated with the foreign service bureau of the Chi cago Daily News and was a dis trict manager of the Automobile Jlub of New York (AAA). Returning to the newspaper 'ield in 194”, Greene was a fea ture writer for the Charlotte Ob server until entering the J. S. laval Air Corps in 1943. He was i member of the Public: Informa ion staff at the Jacksonville 'laval Air Station until May, 946, when he received a civil ervice appointment as Public In (Continued On Page 4) . actions Spotlight : First Of Three Sessions In Tour - Arama Program Conducted Tuesday Night} Second Session Thursday - * An invitatioiii to join in an all out effort to further the economy | of Brunswick and New Hanover i counties through the development of the historic, recreational and travel aspects in the two coun ties and to join with the other four counties in the SENCland area in a total program was ex tended at the first session of the Tour-Arama program held in Shallotte Tuesday night. The value of the sessions, two more of which are to be held in Shallotte Thursday and next Tuesday, in stirring community leaders of SENCland into a reali zation of the travel industry po tential' was stressed by Chairman Glenn Tucker of the SENCland Travel Council, the feature speak er of the meeting. He pointed out the work being done on the national, state and area level to influence the travel industry. “The United States Travel Service of the Department of Commerce is making an all-out effort to attract foreign visitors to our country,” he stated. “On the state level, the Travel Coun cil of North Carolina, the Division of Advertising of the Department of Conservation and Development and the Department of Public In struction are all at work to de velop the travel industry in the state. The - SENCland Develop ment Corporation is concerned with the problem on an area level.” "But on a local level, it is up to you,” he stated strongly. Chairman Tucker, a resident of (Continued on Page 4) Livestock Men Form Association Preliminary Meeting Is Held Monday Night At Supply .j With Wilbur Earp Nam ed President A representative group of forty farmers met at the Extension Service Office Building in Supply Monday night and organized a County Livestock Association. The purpose of the association is to promote all phases of the livestock industry to increase in come, reports A. S. Knowles, Act ing County Extension Chairman. Wilbur Earp was elected presi dent, Worth Mercer was elected vice-president and Ennis Swain was elected secretary and treas urer. Six directors were electd, one from each township as fol lows: Northwest, H. O. Peterson, Jr.; Town Creek, Roy Swain; Smithville, George Lindner; Lock wood Folly, Harold Robinson; Shallotte, James D. Bellamy; and Waccamaw, Ernest Stanaland. The officers and directors will j meet again on Monday at 7:30 ! p. m., in Supply to plan a pro- j Continued On Page 5 j Brunswick Now In Accelerated Projects Area Two Municipal Groups Plan Meetings To Discuss Plans For Sponsoring Projects In This Program In order to take advantage of the fact that Brunswick county has been' made eligible for federal issistance under the Accelerated Public Works Program, the Southport Board of Aldermen will meet Thursday night to discuss the matter, City Manager C. D. Pickerrell said Tuesday. City Manager Pickerrell was informed Thursday by Congress man Alton Lennon via telegram that the county has been declared i disaster area by the Secretary 3f Labor on account of the high rate of unemployment. Although the city manager ad mitted that he was “somewhat dense on the matter”, he said he was making every effort to in form himself about the federal issistance program. The disaster designation makes Brunswick eligible for matching federal funds for public works projects on a 50-50 basis. But there can be only one project ?oing per community at a time. City Manager Pickerrell said some of the projects to be dis cussed by the Board Thursday nclude drainage, an extension of the water lines and street paving. He said that he does not have iny idea how the federal pro gram will effect the proposed small boat harbor here. Besides Brunswick, New Han iver was also declared eligible for the funds because the two counties are tied together as a abor market due to the fact chat a large number of Bruns wick residents are employed in Wilmington. Each month the Secretary of Labor designates areas having substantial unemployment for at east nine of the preceding twelve months or which the Secretary of Commerce declares as redevelop ment areas under the Area Re ievelopment Act. In order to be designated as a lisaster area, the state Employ ment Security Commission must make a labor survey. That survey was made in January and results showed that Brunswick county lad an unemployment rate of ap proximately 16 per cent. When chat rate was coupled with New Hanover’s, the combined rate for Continued On Page 4 Presbyterian Minister Arrives The Rev. Robert Childs, Jr., Pastor At Southport And New Hope Presbyterian Churches A man who graduated from a Baptist Seminary is the new min ister of the Southport Presby terian church and the New Hope Presbyterian Church at Winna bow. Rev. Robert Childs, Jr., 27, na tive of Jacksonville, Texas, took over the pulpit of the two Bruns wick county churches this month. He is a graduate of the South eastern Baptist Seminary at Wake Forest and was employed as a chaplain at Camp Butler, a youth offenders camp, and as assistant minister of the Presby terian church in Jacksonville, be fore coming to Brunswick county. 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. HIGH LOW Thursday, March 14, 10:27 A. M. 4:20 A. M. 10:56 P. M. 4:29 P. M. Friday, March 15, 11:02 A. M. 5:00 A. M. 11:35 P. M. 5:05 P. M. Saturday,, March 16, 11:41 A. M. 5:45 A. M. 5:46 P. M. Sunday, March 17, 0:19 A. M. 6:36 A. M. 12:30 P. M. 6:36 P. M. Monday, March 18, 1:13 A. M. 7:34 A. M. 1:27 P. M. 7:36 P. M. Tuesday, March 19, 2:13 A. M. 8.38 A. M. 2:33 P. M. 8:44 P. M. Wednesday, March 20, 3:18 A. M. 9:39 A. M. 3:38 P. M. 9:49 P. M.