Rovin' Reporter (Continued from page one) Theological seminary at Louis ville, Ky. We were freshening up .on our religious matters in or der to be in good standing with the numerous Baptists who are expected to be at Fort Caswell next year. Saturday, the first cool day of ! this end of the year, we ran a- I cross a very attractive jacket, i worn by a still more attractive I girl. The garment was unmistak- \ ably Japanese in its origin. Most CATHOLIC INFORMATION The Voice That Cannot Be Stilled From a building surrounded by the City of Rome is raised to the ?world time and again the voice of a single man ? a man who is spir itual ruler of almost 400,000,000 Catholics-civil ruler of a few hundred subjects in a country of some 160 acres? the Vatican -State. - Often his voice is raised in benediction, in spiritual direction ? raised to fulfill the obligation I imposed upon his predecessor, the first pope, by the command of our Lord to St. Peter: "Feed my lambs! Feed my sheep!" ? raised by authority of Him who said: "Who heareth you, heareth me." No army or navy or air-fleet or submarines has the Holy Father. No forts or entrenchments or ' weapons of defense. Yet time and again his voice rings out, rebuking warlords armed to the teeth? deploring murder and per secution and the robbing of man of his innate rights ? censuring those who deny God, who make a god of the State, who make of their own race the elect of man kind. Again and again without fear or favor, the Voice of the Vatican is raised against the enslavement of the laboring man through ex cessive capitalism, the slaughter of the innocent through so-called mercy-killing, the crime against man's body through sterilization, the sin against God and nature 1 through contraception, the threat against civilization through God less education, the ruin to family and State through divorce. No matter how popular the sin or the error ? no matter how threatening he who is rebuked, the Voice of the Vicar of Christ comes forth that he who has ears may hear, that the evil may be made manifest, that men of good will may know and act and be saved. Peter, the first Pope, and many other Popes, raised their voices and were murdered. Our present Holy Father and his successors may suffer a lige fate; but the Voice of the Papacy cannot be stilled; for that voice is the echo of another which 1900 years ago guaranteed its own perpetuity by the promise: "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my word shall not pass away" (Mark 13:31). If it's anything Catholic, ask a Catholic ! For further information write P. O. Box 351 Whiteville, N. C. girls would have told us that they got it from their sweetheart but this one. Miss Polly Bennett, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. H. B. j Bennett, did not even wait for ) us to ask where she got it. She said with pride that her brother, who is in the Navy, sent it to her. i Rev. and Mrs. B?nnett have two fine sons in the Navy. Almost as many women as men i are now subscribing for this pap er. This brings us around to re marking that superior civil court I will be in session next week. A lot of good? for-nothing husbands will just naturally be here. We hope their wives will tell them | not to go back home before they have given us their subscription or renewal to the State Port j Pilot. i All of this hard football drill ing of the Southport boys by Coach Saunders is certain to have one good result. It will toughen up the boys physically. 1 Southport may not be able to ; put out a winning team this first year. But the boys are get ! ting what it takes to make a i good team, and they are swall 1 owing what they get and liking it. according to what they tell us. ^ Five of the young colored girls i and boys who graduated from the , Brunswick County Training School last spring have left to enter college where they will ! | continue their studies. They are, Charlie Swain to Elizabeth City; j Laurie Mimms, Shaw University; I Lizzie Mae Gore, Hampton In stitute; Ernestine Clemmons, St. Augustine - College; Viola Han klns, N. C. State at Durham. W. F. Smith of Florida, State j Fire Marshall, is spending this j week here with his sister. Mrs. ' Ethel Fullwood. Calling at this i office while we were out. he left : a note saying that when he mis sed getting an issue of The State j Port Pilot the world seems up- ; side down. He added that he ap- j preciated The Pilot more than ? he would the New York Herald and that Brunswick county was 1 to be congratulated on having , "such an outstanding paper." About the nicest field of croto larin we have ever seen is being grown by Thompson McRackan, across Walden Creek on the river ! road. The stuff is as thick'as any- [ thing can grow and is shoulder I high to a grown man. Although i it has no feed value, this stuff is | rated one of the best known soil | builders. Some time before frost 1 Mr. McRackan will have many tons of humus forming material to turn under for next year's crop. Rice Gwynn of Longwood told us this week that we could tell gun crazy folks that there are plenty of quail this year. The Longwood man keeps posted on birds more than any landowner we know of. Proof of this knowledge of his may be had in the numer ous sportsmen who begin to culti vate his friendship at about this time of the year. Roy Grissett, young Grisset town man, served about six years during the war, most of this time overseas. He came home with a honorable record and got a job as a policemen in Wilmington. There, apparently in a case in which there were higher ups, he was convicted of a crime and sent to State prison. He has now served about two years and has made a model prisoner, according to all that can be learned. It would seem that his case in now one in which the American Leg ion can afford to take a look, with the object of aiding him to get a parole, if they find such to be deserving. Seventeen violent deaths on the highways in Brunswick during the first eight months of 1949 is a very bad record. Things will be lucky if the remaining four mon ths of the year go by without more highway deaths being added to the roll. Even at the risk of their being charged with persecut ing the motorists, there seems to be nothing the highway patrol can do except to bear down on all who violate the speed laws. So far as can be learned nearly all j of this year's 17 deaths resulted | from fast and reckless driving, j If one may believe the fisher- j men, ocean waters off the Bruns wick coast have never had so j many fish as they now hold. At | least not in the memory of sport and commercial fishing. Operat- j ions have revealed unprecedent- : ed number of menhaden as having | apparently taken up permanent ' residence in this area. To feast 1 on the dense schools of menhaden have come great numbers of food I and game fishv At other points 1 on the coast the menhaden in- 1 dustries appear to have to depend I on seasonal migratory menhaden, j Here they can be found the year- j round. Very few large watermelons : have been seen in Brunswick county this year. Practically all j that have been offered for sal?j have been medium in size, or even , smaller. So far as can be learn ed the preparation of the land, fertilization and cultivation has been just the same as in previ ous years. The melons just did not grow large and nobody seems to know just why. Last week some mention was made in this column about R. D. White of Shallotte admiring the fine construction work of the old Hood building, now the tax col lectors office. Mr. White said that the bricks and brickwork was the best he ever saw and he always stopped to admire it. It may in terest Mr. White to know that j since the paper appeared with the story dozens of people have stop ped at the corner of the building to take a look. At one time Fri day about 20 men were squinting at the bricks and mortor. Just when we were beginning j to think that he was breaking j his record of never missing at- 1 tendance on a term of court, Har vey Milliken of Waccamaw town ship showed up Friday. Without in the least intending to reflect on Harvey we are foced to admit that every time we see him we catch ourself wondering if he can get a full meal anyplace, when he Is away from home. L. C. Brown of Longwood, a county commissioner away back and a good one while he was, stopped us on the street the oth er day to ask who was going to run for sheriff next year. We will have to be diplomatic about it and tell the truth. We don't know who is going to run for that of fice. If we started out to list the names of all who have said they were going to' run, we would have this column filled with noth ing but names. Time may shorten the list and it may increase it. One thing is certain, there will be a lot of candidates for sheriff next year. One group of workmen that have never been out of employ ment in Brunswick county this year have been carpenters. If any of them have been out of work, it was not long enough for you to notice it. All sections of the county have witnessed the building of new homes and the remodeling of old ones. The per son who has not been over the county in the last five years would hardly recognize things if he went over it .now. So far as we can see there is no indication of a let up in building. If A. L. McKeithan, fbie Long wood citizen, does not get to Southport during criminal court week each September, we know from past experience that we will see him at Shallotte the very first time we go there. Court week seems to be his regular period for his getting ahead with a years subscription to The Pilot. He did not get to Southport last week but we found him waiting at Shallotte Saturday. Speaking of subscriptions re minds us that while we were tramping around Shallotte Satur day getting news matter and ad vertising and keeping two jumps ahead of the police, we picked up 23 new and renewal subscriptions to The State Port Pilot. That helps with the expenses of getting around. At the same time it may help others. Samuel- Kravitz of New York subscribed saying, "The Pilot will help me to keep up with what is going on at Shal lotte". Except for a period of about a year during which he was in business at Wilmington, we do not remember a term of criminal court over a period of 25 years, that was not graced by the pre sence of S. F. Wftlletts of the Mill Creek community. But he failed to show up last week. During the fall term of crimi nal court it is something rare if we fail to see our good friend W. M. Carter of the Hickman's Cross Roads community. That is one period of the year when he nearly always comes to town. The fact that court is in session real ly has little or nothing to do with it. Mr. Carter just comes to see old friends. Summer visitors for three years spending their vacations at Cas well Beach and Long Beach, Rev. and Mrs. B. H. Johnson of Mount Airy and Winston-Salem and Dr. Thor Johnson of Cincinatti will be regular residents of Bruns wick in another year. They tell us they will build their summer home at Caswell Beach this win ter. > , GOVERNMENT HELPS (Continued From page One) i pasture program this supplemen- j tal grazing should get considera- j tion. The AAA will aid farmers in i seed and fertilizers but they | should get prior approval and purchase orders from the AAA office. VISITOR FIGURED (Continued from page one) J consciousness. The New York newspapers stat- J ed that a total of 28 shots were | fired by the negro, Kravitz and other officers. The remarkable thing being that no one was kil led. The brother of the Shallotte man has six citations for bravery and meritorious service during his j twelve years as a detective in i Brooklyn. VISITOR SUGGESTS . odntlnued rrom page Onei wide distribution of this picture, Mr. Hemmer said: "I hope that when you folks catch another big tarpon you will take up a collection through your newspaper, have the fish mount ed and hung in a prominent place i in Southport. It would be an at traction for visitors and you could also display it in other towns and cities. It would be well worth what you would have to spend to have the fish stuffed. It is a nice thing to tell folks of ' the big fish, but it is even more j convincing to be able to show j them the fish." COVER CROPS WILL ty Committee before seeding. ] Seeding must be completed and a j report of acreage filed in the ' office of the county comnjittee | by Nevember 1. Interested grow- 1 ers should make immediate re- J quests for prior approval so funds , may be set up for 1950 payment. | County Agent A. S. Knowles I points out that those crops or combinations of them are parti cularly good for wint,er grazing, and he reminds growers that ar rangements tor seeding these grains should be made during the latter part of September. RETfRX To Mr- and Mrs. sons have return* ,N ?f ihe Pinohui st his* ^ The>" Have summer at ShaUi > Holcle". niuther of ^ HOME FURNISHINGS & APPLIANCES CAS RANGES: ? Tappan ? Magic Chef ? Caloric ? Hardwick WESTINGHOUSE: ? Refrigerators ? Electric Ran ges. LINOLEUM: ? Large selection of rugs or piece goods If You Want To Invest In Comfort And Convenience. KINGS ELECTRICAL SALES CO. SHALLOTTE, N. C. WHY THE MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILROAD STRIKE? Over twenty years ago, the Congress of the United States passed the Railway Labor Act. It was hailed by union leaders as a model for the settlement of labor disputes. The leasers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, Order of Railway Conductors, and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen on the Missouri Pacific Railroad have refused to avail themselves of the peaceful means provided by this Act for settling their dis putes. They insist that they be the sole umpire of their own disputes over the meaning of contracts. There is no Need for Strikes With all of the available methods for the interpretation of contracts, there is no need for a strike or even a threat of a strike, but the leaders of these railroad unions have ignored the ordinary pro cedures established by law and insist upon imposing their own interpretations of their contracts by means of a strike. The wheels have stopped rolling on the Missouri Pacific. They may stop rolling on other railroads at any time. Recently the Wabash Railroad was forced to dis continue operation for several days under similar circumstances. What are These Strikes About? These strikes and strike threats are not about wage rates or hours. They result from disputes over the meaning of exist ing contracts. They cover claims for a full day's pay for less than a day's work, or for payments for services performed by others who were fully paid for the work done. President Truman's Board Condemns Strike There is an established legal method for handling disputes involving existing writ ten contracts? just as there is such a method of settling any contract dispute which you may have in your daily life. The President of the United States ap pointed a Fact Finding Board to investi gate and adjust the Missouri Pacific dis pute. This Board reported, in part, as follows: "... it is with a deep sense of regret that we are obliged to report the failure of our mis sion. It seems inconceivable to as that a coercive strike should occur on one of the nation's major transportation systems, with all of the losses and hardships that would follow, in view of the fact that the Railway Labor Act provides an orderly, efficient and complete remedy for the fair and just set tlement of the matters in dispute. Griev ances ?f the character here under discussion are so numerous and of such frequent occur rence on all railroads that the general adop tion of the policy pursued by the organiza tions in this case would soon result In the complete nullification of the Hallway Labor Act . . Obviously the railroads cannot be run efficiently or economically if the leaders of the unions ignore agreements or laws. Provisions of the Law which are Disregarded There are five ways under the Railway Labor Act to settle disputes over the mean* ing of contracts: 1? Decision by National Kailroad Ad justment Board. 2? Decision by System Adjustment Board for the specific railroad. 3? Decision by arbitration. 4 ? Decision by neutral referee. 5 ? Decision by courts. The Missouri Pacific Railroad has been and is entirely willing to have these dis putes settled in accordance with the re quirements of the Railway Labor Act. Regardless of this fact, the union leaders have shut ^Jown that railroad Innocent Bystanders Suffer Losses and Hardships There are about 5,000 engineers, firemen, conductors and trainmen on the Missouri Pacific. They are known as "operating" employes, and are the most highly paid of all employes on the nation's railroads, but their strike action has resulted in the loss of work to 22,500 other employes t the Missouri Pacific. In addition, they have imposed great inconvenience and hard ship upon the public and the communities served by that railroad. The Railway Labor Act was designed to protect the pubUc against iust such in terruptions of commerce. . If these men will not comply with the provisions of the law for the settlement of such disputes, then all thinking Americans most face the ques tion, "What is the next step 7" Modal R-1049 Beautiful 10-cubic-foot refrigeratorAVideside freezer holds up to 33 pounds of frozen foodj. 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And Scr\i^e Our First Name. r CALL US DAY OR NIGHT FOR SF.IU 1< c s. L. FULLER & CO Your Case Farm Machinery Dealer S.L. Fuller Roy Elliott L.K.F^ Day Phone 164-J " Phone? Night ^ WHITE VILLE ,