■~V: : The Pilot Covers Brunswick County THE STATE POST PILOT A Good Newspaper In A Good Community 1 If Most of the News All The Time VOLUME 42 No. 10 10-Pages Today SOUTHPORT, N.C. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1970 5C A COPY PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY Powell Bill Pays f $140,000 To Towns Brunswick County towns will receive a substantial share of funds provided by a one-half cent gasoline tax, according to an announcement by Lauch Faircloth, chairman of the State Highway Commission. • The Powell Bill funds, based on 1960 population and non-state mileage, are returned annually to North Carolina cities and towns. This year’s state total is $11.9 million, more than $700,000 above last year’s allocation.' Brunswick County towns that qualify for the Powell Bill funds, and the amount each receive, are Bolivia-$ 1,312.81; Boiling Spring Lakes- $ 53,138.14; Holden Beach-$3,361.37; Long Beach —$47,668.77; Ocean Isle Beach-$5,144.33; Shallotte —$4,940.80; Southport-$15,359.05; Sunset Beach-$4,534.49; and Yaupon Beach-$5,339.05. The total for Brunswick County is $140,798.81. The amounts for Long Beach and Boiling Spring Lakes are among the highest in southeastern North Carolina: only Wilmington, Jacksonville and Lumberton receive a larger share of the Powell Bill funds. The two Brunswick County towns rank high because of the extensive network of roads in the Tranquil Harbour and Boiling Spring Lakes developments. Officials Visit Brunswick Board Two officials of the Economic Development Administration, together with three board members of Southeastern Economic Development Commission, met Monday with members of the Board of County Commissioners. John L. Frailey, of Huntington, West Virginia, regional director, and Ronald Ingle, of Raleigh, head of the State Planning Division for EDA, told the board of the interest their organization has in the Brunswick county area and reported on some of the projects in which there has been participation. Both had spent the weekend in Brunswick and had visited several points of interest. Also present for the meeting were Mrs. A.P. Henry, Jr, and Orrie Gore, Brunswick county representatives on the board of directors for SEDC. Earlier that day the commissioners had appointed V.A. Creech, Jr., to fill the unexpired term of John L. Barbee, who recently resigned as one of the Brunswick representatives. Mrs. Henry and Mr» Gore asked the board to pass a resolution designating SEDC as a regional planning and economic development agency representing this county. It was made clear this would not be in conflict with affiliation with the Cape Fear Council of Governments, a 4-county operation. After a lengthy discussion of the various factors involved, the board voted by a 4-1 margin to endorse the resolution which previously had been passed by all 10 of the other counties comprising SEDC. The Board received a petition for improvement to the road leading off Road No. 1523, Town Creek Township. It was approved and ordered sent to State Highway Commission. Commissioner Creech introduced a resolution entitled “A Regulation governing the issuance of permits that require approval of a sewage disposal (Continued On Page Four) Memorial Fund Receives Gifts Checks are coming in for the Katie Blake Memorial Fund for Dosher Memorial Hospital and the people heading this project have been very much encouraged with early response to the announcement made last week. Arrangements have been made to set up a special account at Waccamaw Bank and Trust Co. in Southport where checks made payable to this fund may be mailed. The project was conceived to honor Mrs. Katie H. Blake, a former nurse at Dosher Memorial Hospital, whose death occurred on July 11, Friends who wanted to do something in her honor have decided that funds contributed to a memorial fund will be made available to Dosher Memorial Hospital for use as the sponsor’s share in providing a modem obstetrics unit. Cost for the completed project is estimated to be $80,000. L.T. Yaskell, chairman of the Board of Trustees for the hospital, said this week “We are very much pleased with the response to this undertaking and we at Dosher Memorial Hospital are very grateful that this ha* been chosen as a plan to honor Katie Blake. We need this facility very badly.” Patrol Boat At Southport This is the Raleigh Bay, ocean going patrol craft nojy in use by the N. C. Division of Commercial and Sports Fisheries, which arrived at Southport Tuesday afternoon and moored at the Southport Boat Harbor She will be operating in local waters for the next several days. New Patrol Boat Raleigh Bay Here On Visit The Raleigh Bay, newest patrol craft owned by the State of North Carolina, arrived in Southport Tuesday afternoon for a brief stay at the Boat Harbor. She was greeted by Mayor E.B. Tomlinson, Jr., Emest E. Parker, chairman of the Division of Commercial and Sports Fisheries for C.&D., and several other local citizens. The new 61-footer will be used by the Division of Commercial and Sports Fisheries, Department of Conservation and Development, to enforce fisheries regulations in the ocean and Pamlico Sound. It will also be used to check Russian fishing boats, and fishing boats from other countries, that have been fishing within 12 miles of the North Carolina coast for the past couple of years. Boats from other states fish offshore North Carolina and violations sometimes occur. Prior to launching of the $70,000 RALEIGH BAY, the State did not have a patrol boat large enough to safely patrol ocean waters during rough seas. The boat is large enough to be in the ocean whenever commercial boats can get out. State jurisdiction of ocean waters ends three miles offshore; Federal government has jurisdiction to 12 miles. International waters start at the 12 mile limit. Thy wood boat is named for the ocean area between Cape Lookout and Cape Hatteras. It is powered by two eight cylinder GM engines and can develop speeds to outrun any commercial fishing boat. Mrs. Roy G. Sowers, Jr., wife of the Director of the Department of Conservation and Attend Board Meeting Economic Dev^w Eco?°™c Development Administration and of the Southeastern Commissioners f pnient Commission attended the regular meeting of the Board of anTSH p f°* Brunswick County Monday. Shown, left to right, are Orrie Gore Regional Director anA" ™mh*rs <>i ECDC; Mrs. Shirley Frazier; John Failey, by Spencer) ’ and Ron IngIe’ head of State Planning Division, EDA. (Photo Development, christened the boat August 1. Captain of the RALEIGH BAY is William R. Willis, Atlantic. Hie boat will work from its home dock in Morehead City. Nat Smith and men at his Glouchester boatshop, built the vessel. Burning Permit Law Effective County Ranger Kenneth Johnson would like to remind all citizens of Brunswick county that between October 1 and June 1 it is necessary to first obtain a bur ning permit before doing any burning within 500 feet of any woodlands between the hours of 12 o’clock midnight and 4 o’clock in the afternoon. The State Law 14-139 relating to the brush burning permit reads as follows: “Starting fires with five hundred (500) feet of areas under protection of the State Forest Service—It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to start or cause to be started any fire or ignite any material in any of the areas of woodland under the protection of the State Forest Service or within five hundred (500) feet of any such protected area during the hours starting at midnight and ending at 4:00 p.m. without first obtaining from the State Forester or one of his duly authorized agents a permit to start or cause to be started any fire or ignite any material in such mentioned places between the first day of October and the first day of June, inclusive. No charge shall be made for the granting of said permits. During periods of hazardous forest fire conditions, the State Forester is authorized to cancel all permits and prohibit the starting of any fires in any of the woodlands under the protection of the State Forest Service. Any person, firm or corporation violating any of the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not more than fifty dollars ($50.00) or imprisoned for a period of not more than thirty (30) days.” Burning permit agents are located throughout Brunswick county and will be pleased to issue your permit. The names and addresses of the burning permit agents in your are as (Continued On Page Four) Library Fund Drive Begins At the September meeting of Friends of the Library of Brunswick County, Monday through Friday of next week was designated as the time to campaign for funds to raise $4,900 to complete payment on the Bookmobile. Mombers -’Of various civic organizations of Brunswick County are donating their services to this project. They plan to contact families in the county and request a donation. There will be a representative at each Waccamaw Bank to accept donations on Friday, October 2. One of the features of the drive will be a telethon and there will be a campaign worker at each Waccamaw Bank to accept calls from those wishing to make a donation. Individuals or businesses donating as much as $50 will receive free pulbicity on October 7 in the NEWS MEDIA. The Friends of the Library of • Brunswick County are hoping this project will be the first step toward a better library in Shallotte and the building of a library in Leland. Support your Bookmobile—the library at your door. Harvest Day Being Planned “Harvest Day” festivities are being planned at Shallotte First Baptist Church, according to Rev. C.L. Turner. The all-day service will be Sunday, October 4, beginning with Sunday School at 10 a.m. Special worship services, dinner on the ground and special singing afterwards will be the highlights of the day, Rev. Turner said. “The Southern Harmoneers, The Hickman Family, The Sabbath Home Choir, The Young Spiritualists, Miss Sue Clem mons, The Gospel Echoes and many other singing groups from the surrounding area have been invited,” said Rev. Turner. “The following Monday, revival services begin with the Rev. Paul Nix, pastor of Wrightsville Beach Baptist Church, as the guest speaker. The public is cordially invited, Rev. Turner concluded. e And Tide Dillon Jenrette, young white man of Waccamaw township, had been indicted for the murder of Louis W. Ganus. That was headline news in our issue of September 18, 1935. Four Brunswick county officers working on the case had been mistaken for bank robbers while on a trip to Whiteville during the investigation. The Whiteville InbffnCnCOnnn^ket was going strong 311(1 had its s*ghts on a 20,000,000-lb season. Rough roads had led to the postponement of school opening in Brunswick, Oak Island Coast Guard Station had been mentioned in an article in Motor Boating; and Sears was offering a $10 reward for (Oontimud On P«f» rout) Anti-Poverty Budget Reduced By $62,000 A cutback of $62,000 in federal funds has caused Sencland Community Action, Inc., to tighten some of its programs and drop nine persons from its staff. The budget change was made public Tuesday night when he agency board of directors held its regular monthly meeting. The revisions were okayed by the executive board before approval by the other directors. The program hit hardest by the cutback is Neighborhood Centers. The board agreed to eliminate six aides from the staff at a savings of $23,400, reduce fringe benefits by $2,808, cut travel expenses by $3,960 and reduce consumable supplies by $450. Reduction in the t Nieghborhood Center budget was $30,618—about one-third of the proposed amount for the program. The total budget request for $514,000 was approved last month by the Sencland board but the federal OEO agency would allow only $451,442. The amount Sencland asked for was the same it received last year, but executive director Charles Mumford said anti-poverty agencies throughout the nation have received less money for this program year. The Sencland agency, which Name Speaker For Telephone Meet Atlantic Telephone Membership Corporation will hold its 13th Annual Meeting in the Shallotte High School Auditorium Friday evening. Dr. Kermit Traylor, Minister, First Christian Church in Winston-Salem, will be the featured guest speaker for the occasion. Dr. Traylor, a native of Alabama, was an all-conference basketball center in Handley High School, from which he graduated. He received an A.B. degree from Atlantic Christian College where he was again an all-conference basketball center, and then attended Vanderbilt University earning a B.D. degree. A year of graduate study at the University of Chicago followed. Dr. Traylor has held pastorates in Virginia, Ohio, and North Carolina, and has been minister of First Christian Church, Winston-Salem, over 13 years He has served as a member of Board of Trustees of Atlantic Christian College and as president of the Christian Churches in North Carolina, the highest office his church could give him in the state, as well as president of the Winston-Salem and Forsyth County Ministerial Fellowship. In 1960 Dr. Traylor received an honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from Atlantic Christian College. He presently serves as moderator of the weekly television panel “Parsons to Persons,” and is also a member of the Winston-Salem Kiwanis Club. A son, Dan Traylor, who is 7 feet tall, was an All-American high school basketball player and is now attending the DR. KERMIT TRAYLOR University of South Carolina on a basketball scholarship. Dr. Traylor has broad speaking experience before church, business, professional, fraternal, civic and school groups throughout North Carolina. Reports reviewing growth and progress during the past year as well as a report on current operations and service plans for the future will be features of the annual meeting. Directors will be elected from District 5, Supply— Varnamtown—Holden Beach area; and District 7, Winnabow—Boiling Spring Lakes Area. The George Deaton Show will provide entertainment. Many useful door prizes will be awarded as well as a grand prize. In addition, gift momentos will be presented to each member attending the meeting. Refreshments will also be served. was started in 1966, serves Columbus, Bladen and Brunswick counties. Next hardest hit program was Emergency Food and Medical Service which was cut back $22,479. Included in the budget revision were reductions for fringe benefits, $935; travel, $4,800; consumable supplies, $300; postage, $60; three telephones, $1,080; utilities, $180; and school lunches and medical services, $7,324. Two Outreach workers were eliminated from the Emergency Services staff, saving $7,800. No adjustments were made in the Family Planning and Planning budgets, which remained at $35,230 and $10,752, respectively. Other programs affected by the fund reduction were Administration and Manpower. Hie salary of the executive director was cut $600 and the deputy director’s pay was trimmed by $400. Fringe benefits were reduced $120; travel was cut $480; and other costs (publications and two vehicles) were reduced $1,280 for a savings in the Administration program of $2,880. Savings in the Manpower program, which amounted to $6,581, were made possible by the reduction in the director’s salary, $300; the assistant director’s salary, $300; (Continued On Page Pour) Holden Again Heading ASC ASC Community Com mitteemen, acting as delegates to a county convention held at the ASCS Office in Shallotte Monday re-elected Curtis Hewett of Shallotte to a three-year term on the County ASC Committee. Arthur W. Bellamy of Shallotte was re-elected first alternate to the County Committee and George H. Skipper of Leland was re-elected second alternate. Edgar L. Holden of Supply was re-elected chairman for the next year and Ira A. Potter of Win nabow was re-elected as vice chairman. All new terms of office will begin October 1. The County ASC Committee is responsible to the State Com mittee which provides general direction and supervision. It carries out its responsibilities through the community com mittees and the coirnty office personnel. It generally is responsible for the ad ministration of all ASCS programs approved for the county. Brunswick County Visitors Several prominent federal and state officials spent the weekend in Brunswick -ounty and were guests of honors Saturday night at a reception in the Community Building. Shown in the receiving line are Mrs. A. P. Henry, Jr , Thomas Harrelson; Fred Steele, chairman of the Coastal Economic Development Commission; John Frailey, Regional Director, EDA; Mrs. Frailey; Ron Ingle, N. C. Economic Develop ment Director; James H. Johnson, N. C. Farmers Home Administration Director; J^rg. Jbhnson. Shown greeting Mr. Ingle is Mrs. I. D. Harrelson of Southport. (Photo by Spencer)