PAGE TWO THE STATE PORT PILOT Southport, N. C. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY JAMES M. HARPER, JR., Edifeor ntered u second-clu* matter April 20, 1928, a tka Poat Office at Southport N. C., under the act of March 3, 1879. Subscription Rates ONE TEAR |1.6 DC MONTHS 1.0 THREE MONTHS .7 NATIONAL6DITORIALIflAl,W ASSOCIATION Wednesday, June 18, 1941 It's an ill will that bodes nobody good Ambition is wish-thinking that has lieen energized. A vacation is time you spend discovering that working wasn't nearly as bad as you thought it was. ' One result of this war is likely to be that this jitterbugging age of ours will be slowed back down to a waltz. Men are oftentimes like guns. The bigger the mouth, the bigger the bore. Girls should be more sincere in the evening. They can't laugh up the sleeve of a sleeveless evening gown. If time is flying by too fast for you, just try waiting for a busy phone line to . clear. Some people like to "live in a house by the side of the road," and let rest take its course. We see by the news that the hens are now laying more eggs than the radio comedians. If you take pot luck at your friend's house, be sure that it's not your unlucky day. Thirty Seconds Count thirty seconds?one-half of a minute. In that insignificant length of time fire destroyed $285 worth of property somewhere in the United States. In that time, fire attacked someone's home, someone's store, someone's factory, endangering life and irreplaceable possessions. And during each half minute of every day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, fire will continue to destroy ?285 worth of property unless we do something about it. No one should say that he doesn't know what to do. Basic fire prevention is simplicity itself. The National Board of Fire Underwriters recently laid down the rules for a successful fire prevention campaign in a few words when it said: "Look around you! Burn that rubbish! Stamp out that cigarette before you throw it away! Keep gasoline out of the house! Fight fire?before it starts!" Fird, believe it or not, has killed more Americans than all the wars in our history. And fire, today, is even more dangerous than in normal times. Fire menaces the defense effort. Fire in a key fac uviy may btup uie pruuuvuuii ui essential parts for days and weeks. And fire, at all times, wastes materials, labor, energies? and that most precious of elements, Time. Those institutions whose job is fighting fire are redoubling their efforts. The National Board, for instance, is using its full facilities, without charge, to help the Army and Navy departments prevent fire i| army camps, navy yards, munitions plants, etc. It is carrying on an aggressive, 24-hour-a-day fight against the saboteur. But, vital as this work is, it is no! efough. Every American must help if fire iijto be defeated. And that means you! Search The Title I We were talking recently to State Treasurer Chas. M. Johnson about the Phillip Allen property which the city o Sfcuthport and Brunswick county owi jointly. r"How did they acquire this property,' he desired to know? "Tax foreclosure," we said. "Do they have a good title," he asked "We don't know, but we suppose so,' we told him. "Then there are two important thing to be done," said the man who als< heads the Local Government Commission "They ought to get that title ironclad Then they ought to sell that land to some body and get it back on the tax books. We were particularly impressed witl the first of these two pieces of valuabl h advice, for unless there is an uncontestable title for this property it is easily with the power of its former owner to * institute litigation that not only will take * from the taxpayers several thousands of * dollars in the matter of sale price, but which niay bring about an insufferable delay in inducing some industry to locate 0 here. 5 j We have a county attorney and we - j have a city attorney. Neither the county j commissioners nor the board of aldermen should be satisfied until they have seen a report from these lawyers indicating that there is no possible flaw in the title to this property." . We Crow Our Bread 5 There is a great significance to this small grain program that is finding such favor with farmers of our county this , season. One thing it will do is to make for a better balanced farm program. Land that , formerly was used chiefly for the proI duction of the cash crops is being diverted to grain. A second important result is to add an other link in the live-at-home farm proj gram that we have preached over and -j A over again to our readers. ^ man ?nu 'produces his own bread on his farm is ' just that much harder to discourage when ' depressions come. Roosevelt Crocks Down No action of recent months has brought about a greater feeling of reaffirmed faith in the democratic system than was evidenced by citizens of this section when President Roosevelt called out the Army to settle the airplane factory strike last i week. Many of us had begun to wonder just where was the end to what certain unscrupulous labor leaders were being per, mitted to do to retard the defense program through the subtle sabotage of strikes. Labor may never say that it was treated unfairly, that snap judgment was used, nor that all would have been well had there been no government interference. It seemed to us that the President waited full long to take this drastic stop, but we more than forgive his resitancy when' 'se see the firm follow-up manner he has | used to keep other labor rows from rear: ing their ugly heads. : It's An III Wind Ronald Hocutt, director of the N. C. Highway Saftey Division, is wont to see a silver lining in the prospect of gasless ; Sundays proposed by Secretary Ickes in an effort to meet the impending gasoline shortage. "It's an ill wind that blows nobody good" Hocutt comments. "While I am not prepared, on the basis of information 1; have now, either to advocate or condemn "gasless Sundays" it is interesting to speculate as to the probable effect such a restriction might have on our traf. fic accident toll." Hocutt then quoted figures to show that for the 449 accidents in North Caro, iina since the first of the year through May 31st, 109 of them happened on Sunday. The same is true of the accidents in Columbus county, except rather than 25 . per cent of the fatalities happening on . Sunday in this county, 40 per cent took , place on the Sabbath. A check shows that , in Columbus county, out of a total of 19 , fatalities on the highways since January . 1st, a total of 8 of them happened on . Sunday. So, while "gasless" Sundays are not to j - be desired if they can be avoided, at the , same time, they might serve to drastically reduce the amount of traffic on the highways and in turn, reduce the number of fatalities. ; The customer is always right?on the 3 spot when there's a penny to be saved. f 1 The Italians are going to be loyal to II Duce if it takes every German Hitler's > got. Some people try to cover up their misdeeds by spilling dirt on their friends. Just a word of advice: Don't let there s be too much prude in prudent. o " u Generally, if you're itching for fame, l' you break out with ambition. ? Don't look too sheepish or you might ^ give yourself away?if anybody would e have you. THE STATE PORT PI Among i fishermen" BY BILL KEZIAH N. L. Duncan of Benson got a seven-pound bass from Orton pond one day this past week. At the same place J. E. D. Johnson and L. O. Dixon, both of Johnston county, got 32 large | grey heads and several fine bass I during a few hours of fishing. * ? ? Menhaden boats operating for several miles down the I coast were reporting great I schools of blue fish and mack! ere! all of the past week. These i great game fish were feasting ! on the menhaden. They are of | good size and will be moving ! up and along the shoals for | sometime to come, giving great ' sport to anglers when they | arrive here. * * * j Thursday C. G. Vogell, A. H. Rion, Wyche Dickert and Van j Buren Burch of Columbia got a | large and small tub and three | large water buckets full of blues while fishing from the E. M. Lewis. Mr. Vogell, an enthusiastic booster of the Southport fishing, usually makes more than a dozen trips here each year. He is planning on a month-long trip soon. * * * , We have been sort of unreconciled at the unexplained failure of Frank L. Johnson, secretary of the North Carolina Soft Drink Bottlers Association, to appear at Southport on regular schedule. This week Frank wrote us he has not been very well, but he hopes to get here soon. He asked that we bring suit against Postmaster Yaskell for wasting fishing plugs on alligators. ? * ? G. R. Shafto, president of radio station WIS in Columbia, S. C., is coming up on the 21st for a few days of fishing. Mr. Shafto is o? no relation to the Bobby Shafto that Mother Goose wrote about. He is a fine sportsman and a camera crank of some note. Like C. C. Vogell, with whom he will come, he is already strongly sold on the Southport fishing and a great booster for what we have here. * * * Gordon Patrick, manager of the Buenos Aires branch of the National City Bank of New York, never caught a fish until last week. But in the States from Argentina for his vacation. he came to Southport for five days of fishing and got it. We will bet our last year's hat that Gordon will be teaching the folks down in Argentina something about fishing before the summer is over. * * * We are kind of astonished at Uncle Henry (Judge Henry Dannehl of Fredericksburg, Va.) He is 70 years old and last week he came to Southport with a bunch of younger squirts from New York and Maryland. He kept up with them for five days and nights, going with them to Long Beach at night and getting up at anywhere from 2 to 5 o'clock each morning to go fishing. He left here as fresh and chirpier as any of them. Uncle Henry caught the biggest barracuda taken by his party. He told us that St. Peter had been holding the gate open for him for sometime, but he was not ready to go so long as he could still come to Southport and go fishing. * # Recently some of the Bridger boys at Bladenboro saw a picture in The Washington TimesHerald, showing Bob Wilson and his catch of fish at Southport. In due time the picture was shown to Dr. S. S. Hutchinson of Bladenboro. Up to then, the Doc had not known there was any good fishing nearer than Florida. He immediately got the fishing fever and came in last week with a bunch of the Bladenboro boys, one of whom, Roy Lennon, caught the first sail that was ever purposely gone after in Southport waters. We have the sails and marlin alright, it has just been that the barracuda, amberjack and dolphin were so sure that no one cared to look for their more elusive cousins. * * * Mrs. F. L. Formyduval of Wilmington came in from Bald Head Island one day this past week with a 34-pound red drum, about the largest such fish that has been caught by a woman anywhere on the lower North Carolina coast this year. Last month Mrs. Formyduval won the monthly prize of the New Hanover Fishing Club for the largest drum taken by a woman during the month. That fish, like this one, was taken from the beach on Bald Head Island. * * * John Boyd Finch and his LOT. SOUTHPORT. N. C. I This Week In ... . DEFENSE President Roosevelt, declaring I a strike at the North American Aviation plant in Inglewood , Calif., was impeding the defense ; program, ordered the Army tc |: operate the plant after workers j rejected Mediation Board terms I Tor settlement. Two days aftet | taking over, the Army reported "100 percent efficiency" with all employees returned to work. The President said plants \vhich he might be forced to place undei Federal control will be returned to private management as soon as possible. The House voted for an amendment to the 1912 Army appropriation bill to prohibit the payment of funds to any individual or company failing within 1C days to abide by Mediation Board recommendations for settlement of disputes. The Senate approved a declaration that striker or lockouts in defense industries are "contrary to sound'public policy." The Mediation Board announced settlement of three labor disputes, including the dispute of the soft coal industry. The U. S. Conciliation Service announced settlement of 34 additional disputes. SELECTIVE SERVICE Selective Service Headquarters ordered reclassification of all registrants "impeding the defense program." The order said "the citizen who has been deferred because of the job he is performing in the national defense program cannot expect to retain the status of deferrment when he ceases to work on the job for which he was deferred." TVio Cnnntn jinnrnvpil Jl bill to defer men who reach their 28th birthday by July of this year, except those already in the Service. FOREIGN' AFFAIRS The State Department announced sinking of the American freighter Robin Moor in the south Atlantic by a German submarine. Announcing the rescue of - only 11 of 16 persons forced to abandon the ship. Under Secretary Welles told the press that international law requires precautions must be taken for the safety of I passengers and crew before a ship is sunk. SHIPS The OPM granted full priority I for materials necessary in the j building of 289 merchant ships | for U. S. and Great Britain and the 312 special lease-lend vessels. OPM Production Director Biggers, speaking at Quebec, said, "almost every ship now building in our rapidly expanding yards is ahead of schedule." The Maritime Commission directed the Southern Pacific Company to deliver for national defense purposes its entire fleet of 10 vessels (66.600 tons), formerly used in coastwise trade. LEASE-LEND AID President Roosevelt reported to Congress that $75,202,425 of war materials have been transferred to the democracies since enactment of the lease-lend law and $4,277,412,876 has been allocated for further aid out of the $7,000.000,000 provided by Congress. He tsaid that work has started on (agreements with foreign govern ments on the terms and conditions of the aid they receive. CIVILIAN DEFENSE Civilian Defense Director LaGuardia stated organization of medical groups, auxiliary police and fire units, sanitation, and first aid squads are the necessary basis for adequate home defense. He said panic is to be avoided under all circumstances and it will be necessary to educate the public to the absolute necessity of obeying instructions. Mr. LaGuardia said firemen and policemen from 40 Eastern cities will be trained in combating poison gas and incendiary and high explosive bombs in 17. camera are going to be a valuable aid to the promotion of the Southport sport fishing industry. When the first sail of the season was brought in by the Torobill Thursday, John was right there, made some fpjod pictures and developed the negatives ready for use the next morning. Pictures are more and more useful, especially in connection with fishing. A good cameramen always standing by will be of great value in showing what Southport has in the way of game fishing. * ? ? This week will see a lot of fine sportsmen coming in from the District of Columbia. Maryland and Virginia. We are hearing real often from Don N. Carpenter, hunting and fishing editor of the Washington Daily News, and from Bob Wilson, the "Up The Stream" man on the Washington Times Herald. They are singing the praises of Southport pretty far and wide in their papers. Jimmie Briggs of WRAL station in Raleigh and Charley Parker and Bill Baker of the Department of Conservation and Development are also hammering at things?and doing a good job of it. There are a lot of others, and to all of them we are grateful. I - NOT EXflC Yankee, the Fergus' Trish setter, has turned surly?but there's a reason. The other day Dr. Daniel decided that he didn't really need a bird dog, so lie made Dr. Fergus a present of Spot, his English setter pup. Resentful because of the division of affection in his master's household, 1 Yankee began to pout, and on one occasion he ] spent such a prolonged visit with one of the , neighbors that Mrs. Fergus had to go over and I biing him home .... These folks around here 1 who do a little horseback riding will take a back [ seat when they learn that Mary Mathews (Mrs. Charlie) used to ride a cow pony 11 miles to 1 school every day when she was a somewhat 1 younger girl in New Mexico . . . Incidentally, the Mathews hope to be able to get a couple of western ponies for use on the island before many more months. J ( Metroscopes. That's a big word that we had i no idea what meant until Bremen Furples informed us that it was the technical term for threedimension movies like the short he will show Friday and Saturday at the Amuzu. Special glasses? they'll be furnished free?are used by the audience. "Arkansas Judge" is the feature attraction two-week courses at Edgewood.ced a campaignI Arsenal, Md., under the direction fense consumer, jof the army Chemical Warfare | portation officii i Service. Trainees will return buying and stori: J home and instruct fellow towns- ter's coal this su 'men. .. , .... fhe load that mc OPM announced it will soon """ , ' begin a nation-wide campaign to a defense mat collect ?crap aluminum from upon the transpo civilians. A test drive in Rich- "in? next fall. T1 mend. Va., and at Madison, Wis., iconsumers agains it was said, produced enough of I 'ng at high pric the metal to build 16 pursuit 'supply of bitumil planes or two and one-half bom-'P'e for all needs, bers. PRI< OIL j Administrator Defense Petroleum Coordinator the Office of P Ickes told a press conference that tion and Civilian curbs on petroleum consumption ed with the indi along the Atlantic Coast appear to prevent unju.' inevitable but the degree of re- creases in coffee, striction would depend on public j board, crude oil cooperation in conserving oil and automobiles. Mr. gasoline. He said the American j certain auto firn Automobile Association has pled- recently announci ged a campaign to cut down con- because they "e sumption of gasoline by motorists with the favorab by slower driving, elimination of 1 tion of the Indus1 hasty "getaways" in traffic, and i proper engine adjustments. He ^ WII,,,W'1 1 11,1 IW" said Bureau of Standards tests j I showed a car which gets IS miles I to the gallon at 30 m.p.h. will i get only 8.6 miles to the gallon 11 at 80. POWER The Federal Power Commission ,1 reported "many areas of the I III. country are now . . facing power'! shortages . . . Unless orders are I II placed immediately for large 11 jamounts of additional capacity jl for 1913, serious shortages willjM l develop ..." I j OPM Director General Knud-11 sen announced OPM has formally I approved the St. Lawrence Wat- I / jerway and Power Project "as I V r , part of the all cut difense effort." I The President allotted 8200.000 j I for construction of a cooperative I | transmission system to carry ; I power from the Pensacola Dam I . T to 15 REA cooperatives in Kan-'l I, sas, Arkansas, Missouri, and I ! Oklahoma to provide for develop-: I j ment of zinc deposits for defense. ' I 1 f'/lt V vvnw The Office of the Bituminous I Cool Consumei-s' Counsel announWAR DOG CP Unless your dog h< Rabies before July 1,1 prosecution. The pen roads or a fine of $50.0(1 ? i The Following Men Will NORTHWEST TOWN CREEK . SMITHVILLE LOCK WOODS FOLLY ... SHALLOTTE WACCAMAW A fee of 75-cents for ea vaccinations at regularly a{ dog inspector is forced to c is $1.00 for each dog. BOARD OF CO Brunswicl WEDNESDAY. Jimr ^ H TLY NEWS - | .... About the nicest fathoi we know of is that existing h.-t. . P T. Bowmer and his young son 7 , |l youngster is his dad's first mat. tN,tt. 3 and sea. 1| Joe Leighton and his band I Thursday night at Long Beaeli. . :l ! go north to spend most of the around Pittsburgh, then later 1., 1 Dance fans around here hope ( j them in the fall. That boy's frank ,, ... c I ner is going to make him a lot .. I Carl Gunnerson, Standard Oil i I once served for a period of a ye.u .,r as fireman on the old steamer Will t If you want to know the reason \ . t(-,., Frying Pan lightship do not - , the boat, just ask Harry Sell, tl. jsi,, word barracuda?name of the hie inhabit the waters thereabout . . >t, . I 0 learned more about the theatre cii. j? ' ington City while there on his 1 . I * he did the homes of the vair I agencies. -endorsed byde-| I'ltlOIUlllS I price and trans-, OPM placed i. \ 1 js?to promote j acid, aluminum - i ng of next win- per. and syntb i. I mmer to lighten | fun priority eonti .i . ,p , I cement of crops jnounced p,I orials will place sufficient quiiiuiii rt system begin- I terials for he office warned! Vice President \V,!| J t "panicky" buy-j ing in Washingt es and said the mocratic way is ious coal is am-j to put off n< |es until after the ?ES that more material will |, t Henderson, of able for defense. [ a rice Administra- DEFEN'sk hoi SIXg Supply, arrang- Defense istries concerned Palmer I J stified price in- ; been completed lt.2f 5 plywood, paper dwelling unit I, gasoline and'26 states and terri: Henderson told | ing to the Confer1 | -f is to withdraw tional Housing I ed price rises P la ire inconsistent i to ask Congress 1 I 3 le earning posi- S500.000,0nd try." .homes in dofer.S' NEW 1 942 I (ilco Radios I \.re Now Available- I iSH or TERMS I EGGETT'S I SOUTHPORT, N. C. I NING I VNERS I is been vaccinated for I 941, you are liable for I alty is 30-days on the I L or both. I Vaccinate Your Do<>:- f] GEORGE GAINEV I] T. W. SWAIN 11 GOLEY LEW IS | S. O. HEWKI I II ... WARREN MILLIKI N II .... LAFAYETTE JONES ich dog will be charged for || ^pointed clinics. Where the 11 :all at residences the price 11 MMISSIONERS I I County. I