Newspapers / State Port Pilot (Southport, … / Sept. 21, 1938, edition 1 / Page 4
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I PAGE FOUR || T? 1 I J UNDERGOES OPERATION Wiimabow Lady Friends of Henry S. Goodwin ? of Bound Brook, N. J., will b T\* Qu/|/jnr<|ir interested to know he is doinj JL?I"o OUUUClIly nicely following an operation ii a New York City hospital. Mr Mrs. Baker E. Robbins Died Mrs; Go?dJi" s?n e . , , c , Skipper , visited Mrs. Goodwin i Sudden y Sunday While moth M A)ex Lind here b On Visit With Relatives August. In Wilmington j PROMOTION DAY Mrs. Baker E. Robbinson. 58. j rne Xrinity Methodist Churcl witjow of tne late Hadley M. Rob- gcjiool will observe "Promotioi bins of Winnabow, died suddenly _. ' , ... ? .1 Day' on next Sunday at 10:0( Sunday morning while on a visit J ... with relatives in Wilmington. o'clock. The primary and junioi She is survived by 3 sisters, (departments will render a pro ? on/1 r?artifir>Qtps will b( Mrs. Warren Davis, of Peters- jg | burg, Va., Mrs. Lila Kester, of jgiven. | Lumberton and Mrs. George ! There will be preaching servic Swain, of Winnabovv; and by 2les both morning and evening bj brothers, John C. Gore, of Peters- the pastor. burg, Va., and Eric Gore, of Win nabow. Al TO ACCIDENT Funeral services were held Mon- Richard Wallace, of South Bosday afternoon at 4 o'clock from ton, Mass., was admitted to th< Lebanon Baptist church. Winna- j Brunswick County Hospital Sunbow, by the Reverend B. R. [day to receive attention for injurPage, and interment was in the I ies sustained in an automobile church cemetery. ! accident. ****** j! Thank You I1 Tobacco Farmers I ; ; J ... For the most successful season in ] \\ CRUTCHFIELD'S HISTORY. j [ We are proud to report we have j [ served our old customers and gained | hundreds of new patrons during the season. We will expect to serve you j ! next tobacco season. > I CRUTCHFIELD'S j II WAREHOUSE j )i Ramon And Gaither Crutchfield !' Li f 1 j | Proprietors I j* WHITEVILLE, N. C. i f*WVKM*KMMMXKXKXXXX##XXXX*X*XXXM* p a THE FIRST DAY OF FALL:? And there comes the reminder that summer clothes are too light-weight for continued school wear. Bring the youngsters to see us, for we have a stock of sweaters, coats, wool dresses and shoes for both girls and boys. You will find that you can buy the kind of ready-to-wear here that you want your children to be able to wear?and at reasonable prices. G. W. Kirby & Son SUPPLY, N. C. PREVENT THAT WINTER GOLD! Do not wait until a cold strikes you to begin doctoring it. Begin now by building up resistance. Vitamin products are your answer to the question as to what you should take. Ask us about our oral (by mouth) cold vaccine as a cold preventative. More effective than hypodermic administration. Act now and avoid unnecessary loss of time from j-our work. t Watson's Pharmacy Co. SOUTHPORT, N. C. "" " 1 \ Coastal Fair Will e Open On Sept. 26 r 9 ' i I Six days and nights of hilarious ! fun and instructive entertainment, , ] combined with tingling spine-chils I ling thrills are promised for the a ! fourth annual Coastal Fair which I will open in Wilmington on MonJ day, Sept. 26. 11 The Fair will have the bigj i gest prize list, the greatest agj gregation of free acts and firer I works and the largest midway .' yet to be assembled in Wilmingi ton, according to Wm. A. Redschau, secretary and treasurer of r the Fair association. Warehousemen Of : County Named In Anti-Control Suit Warehousemen on All Four Markets Of Columbus ( County Named In Action ( In Wake Superior Court ( PROTEST PAYMENT 11 OF WEED PENATLY I ! Tobacco Warehousemen !| Ordered To Show Cause | Why They Should Not Be Restrained From Collecting 50 Per ; Cent Penalties i I J Tobacco warehousemen of each j of Columbus county's four marj kets have been named in an i action in Wake Superior Court f started Friday for an order proj hibiting the collection , of penalties on tobacco produced in exI cess of quotas established under the agricultural adjustment act. Filing a complaint asserting that the act is unconstitutional, the growers obtained an order I directing tobacco warehousemen j in the four flue-cured tobacco belts in the state to appear at II a hearing here September 27 to 11 show cause why they should not j be restrained from collecting the I 50 per cent penalty. HARRIS SIGNS ORDER i Judge W. C. Harris signed the ! order and will conduct the hear| i ing. * ! | The jurist explained that the ! j growers would request a tempoi! rary order at the hearing, and if ! it was granted, a date would be ! set for a hearing on their peti! tion for a permanent order. I. M. Bailey, attorney for the | growers, said there were 351 de1 fendants and over 600 affidavits, including H. I. Ogburn of Sanford, president of the state anticrop control association. Other attorneys for the growers are L. R. Varser of Lumberton, former state supreme court justice, and F. L. Gavin of Sanford, former U. S. district attorney. In addition to the restraining ; order, the growers ask, pending j settlement of their action, the J impounding of sums collected a3 penalties; and the return of penalties they already have paid. (Warehousemen collect the penalty by deducting it from the sale price of tobacco and torwaroing it to the secretary of agriculture. The penalty on $100 worth of I luuaau, xur instance, wuuiu ue $50). The plaintiffs contend that the | adjustment act is unconstitutional on the grounds that: 1.?The growers are engaged "solely in intrastate commerce" over which congress has no power. | 2.?The measure is a violation | of the fifth amendment to the ! constitution providing that no | person shall be deprived of life, ! liberty or property without due 1 process of law; and of the tenth amendment providing that powers not delegated by the constitution to the United States are reserved to the states. 3.?The act delegates to the secretary of agriculture powers "not even within the constitutionI al powers of congress itself." I j 4.?It "attempts to prescribe, I limit and define the powers, funcI tions and jurisdiction of a state I court ..." I Referring to a referendum conI ducted to determine whether the II growers wished control, the plainII tiffs allege that they "were deI'ceived into action against their 11 interests and subversive of the 11 purposes of the act." MANY DEFENDANTS Marketing allotments, it is al| j leged, were issued late in August, I after some of the tobacco had alII ready been sold, and as a result I j each of the plaintiffs had between I! 1,500 and 150,000 pounds of toI bacco in excess of his allotment. II The value of this excess tobacco, IJ the complaint says, is over $100 11 for each grower. |i Warehousemen made defendants I in the action operate in the folJl lowing towns: Wendell, Smithfield, Rocky I Mount, Tarboro, Wilson, WhitcI; ville, Fairmont, Lumberton, GoldsI boro, Wallace, Kinston, Farm ville, I Greenville, Washington, N. C., I Williamston, Ahoskie, RobersonI ville Louisburg, Warrenton, HenI derson, Oxford, Dmham, Mebane, I Burlington, Winston-Salem, Mt. I Airy, Stoneville, Reidsville, RoxI boro, Clarkton, Fair Bluff. Tabor I City, Chadbourn, Aberdeen, Car! thage, Sanford and Madison. ? HE STATE PORT PILOT. SC Bishop Purcell Addresses Meet At Carver Creek Members Of The District! i j Conference Were In Session At Carver's Creek On Friday 1 'SELECT 21 LAY j; DISTRICT LEADERS ' Number O f Conference Representatives Were i Present And Made Ad- i dresses, I n c I u ding Dr. M. T. Plyler, Of The Christian Advocate i The Wilmington District Con- : i ference of the Methodist Episcopal 1 Church, South, convened at Carv- j' ers Creek Church, four miles east | of Council on the Wilmington- j, Fayetteville Highway, at nine- j' thirty o'clock last Friday morn-, i ing with the Reverend W. A. j i Cade, Presiding Elder, in the [ i j chair. The large auditorium of 11 i the church as well as the spacious < i slave gallery were filled shortly ; I before Dr. O. P. Fitzgerald, Past- j ] I ? " * Whlfavilla enr.Hncted the ; Ui ai ??*hvvwhv, v opening devotional. Preachers, lay delegates, and visitors from the j thirty pastoral charges in the district attended. It was one of the largest religious meetings ever held in Bladen County, and hundreds declared that it was one of the most successful and enjoyable session of a district conference j which they had ever attended. "After the devotional, the Presiding Elder called the conference [ to order and after completing the organization for the transaction ! of business, he asked W. D. j Maultsby, Bladen County Historj ian and local Methodist Layman, ! to extend the address of welcome. Mr. Maultsby expressed the keen delight of the people of Carvers I Creek Charge and their great pleasure in having the conference meet at the old "hutch on this occasion. He traced briefly the history of the church and reminded his hearers that they were treading on Holy ground. The i Quakers first held religious serI rices there during the early part ! of the Eighteenth Century. That '< pioneer Methodist preacher and 1 greatest of all circuit riders, Bis' hop Frances Asbury, traveling on i horseback from New York to Georgia, preached to the people of Carvers Creek in 1792 and organized the first Methodist Society in Bladen County. He stated that TAUB1 Motor Oil Sat An unheard o dable MOTOR r-. - save, tsnng x, 39 PLATE HEAVY Ugf Battery H With old one. Renewed to rigid specifications at a big saving. Only? $1.99 With Old One t Other Batteries $2.85 to $14.95 . SPECIAL $4.95 Exchange 1 18 Months Guarantee < Seaboard Gas SAV Have you tried SEAI missing one of the greatest by the State of North Ca better than gas sold for Try a tank full today anc the improvement in car pe FREE BONUS CARDS WI' Visit Our Booth September 26 A FREE GIFT TO BE SURE TO STOP GET FULL DETAILS O AT OUR HOT WATER HE^ m $2? Up To $16.95 2nd S. Grace St. Phone 3CM HJTHPORT, N. C. the Wilmington District Confer-' ence had met on one other oc-' casion at Carvers Creek. This was in 1867. Reverend R. P. Bibb was the pastor and Dr. L. S. Burkhead, of sainted memory in the North Carolina Conference, was the Presiding Elder. With Reverend C. N. Phillips at the Secretary's table, the business of the conference got un- j derway. The roll of the district was called and substitutions of lay delegates were made. After appointing the various committees for the work of the conference, the chair called for reports on; the spfritual life of the church. | This was followed by a report of the financial state. Reverend A. S. Barnes of the , Methodist Orphange in Raleigh. Reverend R. W. Bradshaw of the Conference Board of Christian Education, Durham, Dr. M. T. Plyler, Editor of the North Carolina Christian Advocate, Dr. Walter Patten representing Louisburg College, Professor F. S. Aldridge representing the Golden Cross So-! ciety, Dr. W. K. Green of Duke i University, Reverend W. L. Clegg I of Bethel, and other connectional men were presented to the conference, and each spoke, briefly for his cause. Among other visitors ivere: Reverend W. C. Martin former Presiding Elder of this District, Dr. W. V. McRae Presiding Elder of the Fayetteville District, Reverend L. M. Hall of Dunn, and others. Promptly at eleven o'clock the Presiding Elder introduced to the inference Bishop Clare Purcell af Charlotte, presiding Bishop of | this Episcopal Area which incudes all the conferences in North and South Carolina. After singing a hymn and after a pray;r by Dr. F. S. Love Pastor of Grace Church Wilmington, the j Bishop read a scripture lesson and ] rased his scholarly discourse on! the first verse of the 24th Psalm: The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof, the world and they that dwell therein". He pointed out that these words were simple but of very deep signi-! ficance. He pictured the world in, .vhich we live as a very "big" hi'orld, a small world, and as a nost valuable world. Me marveled at the great progress the White. Race has made in the field of Science and deplored the fact I that the peace of the world is greatly disturbed at this time be-: rause of the greed of selfish ir,lividuals and a failure to apply and live the phylosophy of the' Prince of Peace. Stating that he took no stock in the theory advanced by many present day authors that the colored races of the earth?the brown, the back, ind the yellow?would some day MATS , only 5c qt, PLUS TAX ur container f price for a good depenOIL. Pour your own and 2, or 5 gal. containers. ur a virTOR i\v><r\ av>? * >-??? AUTO RADIO I SATURDAY ONLY fins $15.95 [Complete with tubes, generator and distributor suppressor. \ few close-out house sets. ?rced at $6.95 to sell fast. 2ome in and hear them play. ; 18c E E 3c PER GALLON 50ARD? If not you arc 1 values in town. Certified rolina to be equal to or almost 3c gallon higher. I you will be amazed at rformance. TH EVERY PURCHASE! ?County Fair October 1st EVERY VISITOR! IN AND SEE US! F OUR CASH OFFER STORE! ^TERS?15 Models Don't get caught short _ by the cold weather. Any heater from $6.95 ^ up will be installed I FREE until October " 1st. Save $2.00 over regular price by buying now! 30, Wilmington, N. C. HHHHSHHM wipe out the white or Caucasion struction. The eat Race, the Bishop declared that in it is God's, while the colored (races represnt- At the noon 1 pd three-fourths and the white picnic dinner wi only one-fourth of the people of table more than the earth, it is the White Race which hud been which has given and is still giv- grove of majestii ing Christianity to the people of! church. The gooc this earth. The hardships of (charge spared n Christian missionaries in China I ing this a real and other fields were described' food and to spai vividly and a plea was sounded J that we increase the number of I 1 T home and foreign missionaries. I Vy flPPjl ?. ia tViaf u'nrlH i I ne i3isilt?p oaiu n.?v W..W | at one time was large but today] Honrjv I it is a very small world. What I * lullUj ? affects one part affects vitally; the other. It is possible today for yea Wagons < the voice of one man to be heard i Home C by every living person at one For Modera tick of the clock. The only solu-1 Whisnant Se tion for the ills of the human | family is in Christ. He related I One of the r an incident which took place at things a housewi Southampton. England during the the dinj room World War. Two fathers accomp- tea or , anied then- sons to the boat on Mjss Mammie N. which they were to embark. One CoU assistant son was going to the battlef.eU, ^ home f the other to the mission field.-H e )l0Uge fuinishi parting word of the so dier-father These wa to his son was "Give them hell made at home 0 The other father, embracing his a lnoderate sum miss.onaiy son sa.d "Give them but also eE Til Ch''.st ^ The Bishop declar- t() ye,.ve more ed that the Christian way is the whisnant inted only way, and that when we as Ca in food individuals or nations rebejroom and taki , against it, nothing remains but i sin, sorrow, strife, war, untold back ^-e ^ suffering, and at last utter de- easier with a tee Sears 52nd Ai The Year's Most Ext 1? TUBE ELECTKJ(^C^| 1 ratio . . . one foreij $?$1111' ' ' . -band. 0. ( to !>.7 M. C. to gHys^fcgKeaw^^B short wave > lo IX M band. See this radio today! 8 TUBE BATTERY TABLE J\ "Tops" in compact cry battery table radios! Giv( thing- splendid performance, superb tone and eco ration. American broadcast 545 to 1725 K. C. ' wave: 1.8 to 6.2 M. C. Foreign and American Stati Beautiful all-walnut horizontal cabinet with recess: panel of figured stump walnut. ray-; $5.50 ::x J Wk A restful companion! And -i n s WZtf Good-looking, too ty'0 I ?iH J ||ps3 home. Strong hardwood 1 r*-"' "|V>r HMh upholstered in homespun |?| J newest colors and pattern (. * ROCKERS 9 x 12 FELT BASE Rt * ?i fjM1'^B jf : Goods cut to ! ' !*" ipjH lc3S rug18 at O, m-mi ?ut a seam! h' MtrSa' fsh, attractive KH^sftITS5S[j|patterns WEDNESDAY, SF.PT E| th and all that's wives also find the coffee or tea sem hour a delicious on a wheel tray beside th *&Sm is served on a rather than on the m eighty feet long As dishes are emptu!!!*'Bll erected in the the course of a meal ^ VH e oaks near the be set on the bottom 1 women of the the wagon where they othing in mak- of sight until thev ?- . feast. They had the kitchen. ,I: re" ?1> ^tie. j Mrs. L. E. Gore! of jm. ByS 'OVC A |*A surgical patient at th.' ay* nic wick Hospii4, , W - UAmA. was admitted Sunday (,?* n Homes ca> "ucnti?n- H UP-STATE PEOPLE fl -an Be Made | ASK ABOUT )r Purchased te Sum, Miss (Continued From Pa-, . ivs tics around out there, j, jL nost convenient night. 8^ fe can have for Local citizens, who have ana kitchen is a j interrogated for the pun**, vheel tray, said taining their views or!V .Bg Whisnant, State ject, seem to think the extension spec- venture has possibilities (r nanagement and individual or firm ! to purchase and outfit , Kr? which can be vessel. IB"1 r purchased for Jp , not only save |S PLEASED ,V!TH Ik ,able the hostess W0RK OF KEZlfl graciously, Miss (Continued from pa?e , ?V" .u ,. our committee member* into the dining active as thjs M|(W_ g empty dishes tising committee might dtchen is much Way clear to raise my a BR i wagon. House- More power to-um friend 'B^He iniversary Sal :iting Value Parade! g SOLE S P E C I A I.! I 'u-h Button jjHRlj&SI . 9H Month ^HgnH i Charge ^|mB| of getting [versary! Mark- ' eon"i!et'?errU',lM:l! WORK SHOES BE nve with lit to rn super spread jk ^ ^ gfiftS . . . Ameriraii fll f Of) B ?k I sX sensation . . . ^ ^R| A $1.98 Wilt: W /lODEL Heavy Leather Upper. lc?M& . ,- position soles for long crH Comfortable and sturdy. SB A1K^'S Ml'(:lfl 1? .MORE CASTTROTTTH ^ Pitcher Pumps 9 38 $1.581 big anniver- rF-^P REGULAR SUM VtL'L* own enamel- ? ring, soft cot- WHITE CLOSET SEA?* $2.38 Values 5i^r iiipf) so I a joy to any Neatly tapestry . . 9 is. Comfortable = ~ (Tl/lQQI It base yd vDl JLlU^ H Jxl2. Border- VfJ^B gh gloss fin- genuine aristocrat^ es 5 p. m. Daily.
State Port Pilot (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 21, 1938, edition 1
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