"4 h- ' M i 1 , PACE SIX (Second SecUonJ THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Bing At Park Two Days Thursd Hunter Pays $75 For Hunting On B. Ridge Parkway During a routine palrol on Sun day, Sept. 11, Ranger C. W. Senile of the Waynesville District of the Blue ftldge Parkway apprehended J. C. Lambert in Birdlewn, hunt inu on the Parkway near Soco (Jap. Mr. I.amhert was tried before V. S. Commissioner (icorge Crali: of AsruviUe and convicted of pos session of asi nihled firearms tnd hunting ith dogs on the Blue Ridge Paikwa.v Commissioner Craig fined Lambert S7.ri, Assi' iTiic ill this e.ise was i;iven by Asislant Oiii'f Hanger B. K MooilKiH. of Hlnc Kii!t;e i'aikway t.:ns ..-( I n:i.' a- tow :ij.yiia A "Ti'O I '.U K 1- r. . , Wilson M ' -kins ai .1 I- Hayw '.) c '; ;: r V ipg ov. ' not I- ' 'ors v ' I- i.i- . u-i tl wa run; imuii; have their Willis either broken down, and dog.' 1 .Jackson. me I'rol e: l ors lied tli::; IimiiI . I '.ii :! otl ; ah v 93 Attend Meeting At White Oak By JUANITA MESSER Mountaineer Correspondent Thi- While Oak Community De velopment program met for busi ness Wednesday night, September 14th. with Mrs. Robert Davis, chair man, presiding The meeting bc t;an with a number of songs by 1 he quartet after which Kev. Mr. Wil liamson discussed the Hospital Bond election. After the talk bv Hi v. Mr. Wil liamson, everyone joined in and playi d si .ci a I games. Ninety-three members were pres ent fur the occasion which is an increase in members and everyone beconn's more imeres'ed day b;' (lav in ihc program and what ii iiie, iis to ew i u.iiii' 1 1 1 i ( v . At thi1 i. !o. i el I J i; :m el inr. i . '. i . hiiK IH i w.- rv ! l.v the . tin Lark ir. must e: led o. must 1. 1 r...i!.v under plosicid restrictive control i leashed or tied' while inside the Parkway boundaries. AVAYM SVILLE LODGE No. lTli'J B P O E Meets Second and Fourth Tuesday At 8 P. 31. All Visiting Elks Welcome MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING Two Shows Daily Monday through Friday 7 Saturddy: Continuous Showinss from 11 Sunday: 3 Shows. 2. 4 and 9 P.M. & 9 P.M. A.M. LAST TIMES TODAY jjesperate MEN...qjDawlVbtiaH! lr,u$J& f I rv ijf8 More Heart-Warming Fun "hmf CROSBY wfc J ThanGING MY WAY" Ltxiz?" r" - f.v Ann f iff 1 m FRIDAY - SATLRDAY, Sept. 23 - 24 BLYTH T Uilfti ljli DOUBLE FEATURE ta .hmiW& :Mw r-4 z ! W$J$4fn fj 1 also SlWii (Sl "FALL IN" t". p Lh! ( WILLIAM TRACY and JOE SAWYER ALSO A NEW EXCITING SERIAL , L.,lr inj "The Devil's Henchmen" .jjWKi -"'VaXWx SUNDAY, September 25 r4CSM "THE SECRET GARDEIT 0 (In Technicolor) SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY. Sept. 25 - 26 - 27 Starring Mften 0lt Ca MARGAKET 'BR1KN and HERBERT MARSHALlT3 jKjSSS 1 MONDAY and TUESDAY, September 26 - 27 AKSO COf,OR CARTOON NEWS l4 . $ , ' f S, 5 ' ' jf "jH 1 Baptist Pastor To Conduct Radio Devotions Kev. L. G. Elliott, pastor of the Waynesville First Baptist Church, will have charge of morning devo tions over Station WHCC next week, Monday through Saturday at 9:15. Attention is called to the change in time for this program. When WHCC joined the Mutual Broadcasting System, morning de votions was changed from 9:30 to 9:15. The Sunday morning worship service will be broadcast from the Waynesville Presbyterian Church at 11 o'clock. The Rev. M. R. Wil- u03 Attend Marine Concert Friday The 120 hoys and girls of Waynesville llu'li School's junior and senior bands will go to Ashe ville Friday afternoon to hear some experts. Band Director Charles Isley said he is taking his musi cians to the matinee concert of the U. S. Marine Band at the City Auditorium. It is scheduled to start at 3 P. M. They'll be back in plenty of time for the kickoff of the Waynesville Tryon football game that night. It will be Waynesville's first home game ol the season. liamson, pastor, will deliver the sermon. Beginning Sunday, October 2, the Baptist Hour will be broadcast ev ery Sunday afternoon at 3:30 over a southwide network. Station WLOS in Asheville will carry this year-round Baptist Hour. PARK THEATRE PROGRAM THURSDAY - FRIDAY, Featured At Strand Sunday J'' POINT OF VIEW LEAD, S. D. (Ul'i-on i, , trio down inln il 17. .... 1 llr't mine vnnn ( wun6 niinci' v;is ii a cage wun his uncle ne reached .,uuu-iwn level vvlui,. 1, taW it.,i ,.tr 1 1. 1 Kt l II I I n in .. .I 1 u ; ' ' llll,(. ..c- KO'OK 10 gel His uncle replied, going down into the i-'stakf gid !! 'ti'ran'VOaii H111. "Trie Cat 'i I'-h.-k The Wist, ture coinedv stall ing Yvoi.ne Brady, opeiiing at the S!i:.iul Franklin Minister To Preach at Clyde The Rev. W. N. Cook, Baptist minister of Franklin, will be Kuest preacher at Clyde Methodist Church next Sunday at 11 a. m., while the pastor, The Rev. W. T. Medlin, Jr., is attending annual conference in Winston-Salem. There will be no evening ser vice next Sunday night. The Clyde Methodist Church young people won the attendance banner last week at a meeting of the Methodist Youth Fellowship Sub-district at . Morning Star. They had 21 out of an enrollment of 24 present for the meeting. " a new Western Technicolor adven !.'. .ii lo, C'hi.r'.'s L'ohorii and Sect Tin at re Su ndav. Mr. General meeting of the Circles of Woman's Society of Christian Service, Clyde Methodist Church, will be held at the church Thurs day at 2 P. M. Like Father, Like Son Proved in Jail Cell ZANESVILLE, O. (UP) A fath er and son who hadn't seen each other for 20 years were reunited in a cell at city jail. Robert McNutt Campbell, 29, of Pleasant Vftlley was arrested on a charge of intoxication. An hour later, his father, Mac Campbell, !(. was arrested, also charged with intoxication. The father and son had not seen each other since the son moved from here with his mother in 1929. The mother had divorced th. father five years earlier. Davis Thinks Ii Musi Be Special Event I.ee Davis, Haywood county Hos pital administrator, figured it was a special occasion of some sort when he saw the hospital dining room at noon Friday. II had a new look. Gay .summer flowers decorated the tables. The table at which Mr. Davis was to sit was centered with a beauti ful birthday cake. He was right. It was a special occasion. It was his birthday. The members look time off dur ing I heir lunch hour to remind him of it with the surprise party and a gift. II was a double celebration, in cidentally. It also turned out to be the birth day of Mrs. Ellen Freeman, the hospital's superintendent of nurses, and the information turned the tables, giving the surprise-givers a surprise. Mrs. Freeman was promptly pre sented wilh a beautiful gift. Mr. Davi:; and Mis. Freeman thanked the members of the staff for their friendly consideration. Then everyone went back to work. The employees on the oilier two shifts shared in the birthday, too, though they could not attend the noon dinner. There was a birthday cake for each shift. The event was another bit of evidence of the spirit of congenial the 11 1,,..: BiPtiaivI "II tiler,. ,.. .r'liew. lllllle ' '''' CY,.. . I i! ,, ,;"ivi in,,,, Use the Want Ad pa,-, ,. -,J ,'' ' ,'Mg, renting, or retuinni , lli ni' Nn,n. .S cooperation that th,. ,,,,,,, VI sesses. ' m e, .' ! ...... . ,ri0lt j, WAYNEsS PROGRAM Mi.... . 10. .... ''I. S'-!'TEM s,;"'t at 7:1,", p THURSDAY AND I K!!y H WALL Slarrinj; KODerl luylor and Audrey T0tII ALSO CI.1! r-'rii-iv , or.i,r,. 1 1: n MiUKT SUBJECTS SATURDAY I I'TI.MHKR 2) "BADMEN OF MISS Slarrinx DUN MS MOIUIAN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 'JCf J you 'II love! Margaret O'BRIEN ANGELA UNSBURY GEORGE MURPHY PHYLLIS THAXTER MONDAY SrlTDHl "PANH Star liod C; -AL! SLLLd SHORT COMING If "BLON THE D 1IIPJW LTU U TOE I Over twenty years ago, the Congress of the United States passed the Railway Labor Act. f It was hailed by union leaders as a model ; for the settlement of labor disputes. efficiently or the unions ignore ai Provisions of them are Disregard There are five ways under 4 THE leaders of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemcn, 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 trike, but the. leaders of these railroad unions have ignored the ordinary pro cedures established by law and insist upon imposing their owe 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 I 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 ihe 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 Kfe. T he President of the United States ap-J pointed a Fact Finding Board to investi gate and adjust the Missouri Pacific dis pute. This Board reported, in part, as follows: -. . . It to wnh s deep tense of regTet that are obliged to report the failure of our mis- sion. It seems inconcelrable to ns that a ' coerdre afrike should occur on one of th Mtion's Bjor transportation systems, with all of th Uisses and hardships that would 1 follow, in iew of the fact that the Railway Labor Act provides aa orderly, efficient and I complete remedy for the fair and just set 1 tlement of the matters hi dispute. GrleT ' ances or the character here under discussion are so numerous and of such frequent occur ; rence on all railroads that the general adop l Won of the policy pursued by the organisa tions in this cas. would soon result In the complete nullification of the Bail way Labor Art. . . - Obviously the railroads cannotjbe run ing of contracts: lDecision by I001" justmcnt Board. 2 Decision by by" ' 3 jjecisiu" vj , ij hr courts. The Missouri Pacific j ; onrirelv willing to J have shut ao lasses u- - . c nnn pnO There are abouwa empires, and afft, -iiimnloyeionw-: theirsteoo nf work to 22,500 Missouri Pa served by; J?m yae .1:. .ionsofco -rih lawftfuBsrfl .iffasa 1 i a. - - I