- FRIDAY, JULY 22nd., 1949
Classified
Ads.
iLjLiiaLJ
ToL:cco Grov;ersln Duplin County
' f 4
S ai
DUr LIU, TIMES
t, V
't-l
j.!? Approximately 8,000 flue-cured
-tfcat!co growers in Duplin County
aVe eligible to vote in the referen
dum to be held Saturday, July 23,
on flue-cured tobaceo marketing
quotas accordlngto Joe E. Sloan,
' t chairman of- the County ACC. The
referendum will be held in accord
ance ytth the law which provides
tjjf Marketing quotas on flue-cured
"'tobacco (or the 1950 crop. In the
' referendum, growers may vote for
.' quotas for three years beginning
With the 1950 crop; may vote for
quotas for 1950 only; or they may
" vote against quotas, However.'mar-
' ketlng quotas cannot be in effect
unless approved by at least two
' thirds of the growers voting in the
referendum. Marketing quotas fur
i "- nlsb growers with a method of ad
justing supply to demand and help
. growers obtain fair prices for the
tobacco they produce.
- i Any person who has an Interest
v , in the 1949 crop of flue-cured tobac
: .v co as an owner. tenant, or share-
- - cropper is entitled to vote in the
' referendum," Mr. Sloan said."How
ever, no person is entitled to more
, :' than one vote even though he may
Dust The Labor Trust
:is ! By: GEORGE PECK
In ls9t we passed the Sherman
Act which made Illegal monopolies
f trade and commerce. Theodore
JteMcvelt used this Act as his "Bib
Stick" to bust the business trusts.
In 1914 came the Clayton Act
with amendments to the anti-trust
laws. Labor anion thought this
Act would exempt them, but the
JO. S. Supreme . Court held that
anion which monopolised or re
strained trade or commerce were
punishable under the -Sherman Act
in spite of the provisions of the
Clayton Act. v :
... In 193S Congress passed the Nor-rts-LaGuirdia
Act limiting the use
of Injunctions In Federal courts In
certain labor controversies. Since
the passage of this act the Supreme
Court, In a series of decisions, has
held that a union pursuing its. own
.objectives and not conspiring with
employers Is not liable to punish
ment or penalty under the Sherman
Act, for any restraints of trade or
monopolies It may cause.
Theodore Roosevelt, during his
Presidency, broke up the business
combines and monopolies that were
'in restraint of trade. It was during
- the reign of another Roosevelt
Franklin that monopolies; far
'more injurious than business mono
polies had been, were created. To
-day there Is no legal restraint im
posed by Federal law, other than
- short delays, on any- aetie by a
labor union which might have the
effect of shutting down an entire
industry. - .
.As a result; Inudstry-wide unions
n
fit fiuA.
e i
" i. ). "WWW
". t ...::., A; IF
. . - if : jr. a
Tckt tta wheel...
try tha "Feel"
I I h" '
i-' rC-D DEALER'S ;
be engaged in production of' flue
cured tobacco in two or more com
munities, or states." Mr. Sloan ex
plained that if marketing quotas
are approved, individual acreage
allotments will be continued in I9
60. Individual allotments for 1950
will be about the same as the 1949
allotment for any farm which has
produced up to 75 percent of its
allotted acreage in any one of the
past three years.
"If quotas are approved, pric.
support loans at 90 of the parity
price will be available on the 1930
crop of flue-cured tobacco if pro
ducers approve quotas in this ref
erendum. Regardless of the out
come of this referendum, price sup
port leans at 90 of parity will be
available on the 1949 crop as a
protection to farmers," Sloan said.
It was emphasized that the loan
program affords growers the op
portunity of obtaining loans based
on grades. Loans furnish a protec
tion that eliminates some of the
price risks from tobacco growing.
Mr Sloan taid Duplin's 1949
crop of tobacco is indicated at ,iu
proximately 20,000 acres.
have grown in power and number.
The Tjnited Mine Workers now is
able to shut off the supply ol coal
to the country any time John L.
Lewis lifts his bushy eve'nro'vs,
without feat of any restraint under
Federal statutes. The automobile
unions can shut down all the auto
mobile plants, the railroad unions
can halt all the railroads, etc., etc
We have created a Frankenstein as
a direct -result of the passage of
the Clayton and Norris-LaGuardia
yvcts.
uur system or government was
devised to prevent concentration
of power in the hands' of any gov
ernment group. But now we have
erected, as a result of Congression-j
al legislation, monopolies which
can exercise arbitrary power and
which Can bring this nation to its
knees whenever they desire to ex
ercise that power.
Tne remedy is to strike at the ex
istance of this power by breaking
up big .industry-wide unions into
smaller unions, so that the econo
mic power remaining to smaller
unions will not be sufficient, if
exercised, to do grievous damage
to the country as a whole.
Tnis can easily be accomplished
by amending the anti-trust laws to
provide that monopolization of the
supply of labor in any Industry en
gaged in interstate or foreign com
merce shall be prohibited, notwith
standing the provisions of the Clay
ton and Norris-LaGuardia Acts,
which the Supreme Court has de
cided exempt unions from the anti
trust laws, under such a law, the
courts would have the authority to
adjust the remedy to the facts in
each case and could, in each case
of a disolved union, prescribe tt;e
no
nv7o
y N;'- '.. '
4
MRS JOHN LANDRUM HAWKINS, who before,
her marriage On July 9 at the Wallace Presby-r
terian Church was Miss Doris Ann Bytd, daughter
ot Mm and Mrs. J. Julius Wells of Wallace. MA
Hawkins is the son ef Mr. and Mrs. S. Paul Haw3
kins of Shelby.
limitation of size of any of the com-j
pi-nent parts, and the amount of
cooperation which would be per
mitted between them.
The remedies which have been
discussed in Congress, such as sei
zure of plants of employers whose
employees are on strike or enjoin
ing a strike impairing the national
welfare, but only for a limited per
iod, reach only the sympton, of the
disease of monopoly and do not
strike at its roots. Unless Congress
and the people decide to eradicate
the disease at its source, i.e., by
breaking up the big unions, ana
limiting the size of their compon
ent parts, we shall continue to be
afflicted with strikes, unreasonable
labor demands, and continued tur
moil, all in utter disregard of the
national welfare.
The business trusts were busted
Ford's new Overdrive Is an optional extra that pays off in actual savings as well
as In the surging smoothness it adds to your ride. In Overdrive your engine speed
. drops 30 while-car speed remains unchanged. The resulting savings of up to
15 In gas plus the sdVings In oil, engine life, and repairs more than repay
the original cost. But more Important is the quieter, effortless ride, the flexibility
and power response you get. And it's controlled by the touch of your toe for
passing in a flash ; s i and a smoother, more relaxing ride on the road.
' . jT -
J '"" - '1 '
i 1 All . - .-,: .
V i i ill Jf V v' mt 7 i
ir;, , . i r 1 i i is ifi
Mi
-liiimi
it's now time' to bust the labor
tniftst
Stale College
Answers Timely
Farm Questions
Q. What is this Oxford type ven
tilator I've been hearftg so much
about?
A. It is simply a ventilator loc l
ted along the rige of the tobacco
barn. It shdould be built to permit
openings ranging from four square
feet down to fulldy closed. Ridge
type ventilators have been found
helpful In the close regulation of
w. r.t
I REFERENDUM REMINDER "Tm no tobacco farmer," r -ys
young Larry Allen of Wake County, N. C, "but Saturday, July 2 s is
an important date for everybody. That's the day every flue-rui ed
grower landowner, tenant and sharecropper should goto his com
munity polling place to vote On TOBACCO ASSOCIATES and
MARKETING QUOTAS. My Daddy says tobacco farmers have tha
best program they've ever had, but they must vote Saturday, July
M to keep (hat nrograBV
temperature and humidity late in
the cure.
Q. Why is it necessary to detassel
corn l3ing produced for hybrid
seed?
A. The pollen from the tassel is
likely to fall on the silk of the same
plant, thus producing an inbred.
To produce a hybrid, all tassels are
broken off from plants being used
REMEMBER TODAY
.TOMORROW
WITH A
PHOTOGRAPH
BY
KRAFT'S
STUDIO
IN MOUNT OLIVE
Phones 217-J or 230
COMMERCIAL,
PHOIOGKU'HI
A SPECMLTY
PINE LUMBER
FOR SALE
4" TONGUE & GROOVED
SHEATHING & ROOFERS $45.00
5" " " 552.00
2X4 DRESSED $52.00
Souf hmonf Mfg. Co.
PHONE 317
ROSE HILL, N. C.
i rzr i
QUINN WHOLESALE CO.
OF WARSAW IN DUPLIN
Distributors Of
POLAR BEAR FLOUR
GROCERIES, FEEDS, SEEDS
MILFORD QUINN, Mgr.
N. C. CONSOLIDATED HIDE CO., INC.
Foot of Waynesborough Avenue
Former Weil's Brickyard
GOLDSBORO, N. C.
PHONE 1532 Oft -2330 COLLECT
D7 CALLED IMMEDIATELY WE WILL
PICK UP DEAD CATTLE, MULES AND HOGS
FREE OF CHARGE
THE DUPLIN TIMES
Published each Friday in Kenansville, N. C, County Seat of
, DUPLIN COUNTY
Editorial business and printing plant, Kenansville, N. C.
J. ROBERT GRADY, EDITOR OWNER
Entered at the Post Office, Kenansville, N. C.
as second' class matter.
TELEPHONES
Kenansville, 255-6 Warsaw, 49-2
SUBSCRIPTION BATES: $3.00 per year in Duplin Qounty;
(3.50 per year outside 'Duplin. County, in North Carolina;
$4.00 per year outside the State ot North Carolina.
Adverttsinf rates furnished on request. -
t Democratic Journal, devoted to the material, educational,
jconomic and agricultural Interests of Duplin County!, M
as the female line. All the pollen
is furnished by plants being used
as the male line.
Lite
"Saved my
A God-send for GAS-HEARTBURN"
When excess stomach arid muses painful, sufTocn'
I riff cili, smir Htomurh antl iH-urtlmni, tK'torn muull
prescribe tlio fiistint-actlnR tiicdlcitn'a known hu
-ymntoniMtic relief mcdlrltieallkc those in Ilell-;in.-I'lthlcta.
No luxiitlve. Bell-unn hrlnffH comfort In n
jiuy or return nouie to us mr aouuio money duck (cy
BELL-ANS for Acid !n'i"t'f"'
FOR SALfc
SASH, DOORS, SHEET
KOC" ROCK LATH,
ROCK WOOL, PLASTER,
LIME, CEMENT, BRICK,
MORTAR, PAINTS, TER-RA-COTTA
PIPE, DRAIN
1ILE, WHITE ASBESTOS
SIDING, ASPHALT
SHINGLES, ALL KINDS
OF ROLL ROOFING -
ROOFINJi, BRICK
Z. J. Carter & Son
Wallace, N. C.
CLA8SIFRD SATES
Two cents per wonz, himmm
eharre of SOe. Unless you have
aa aeeount with us pleaee sea
money, stamps, money order
or cheek with ads. Farmers:
use the Time Classified ads;
If you have wiythlnc to sell
or exchanre, or want to buy.
we will aeeent produce for
payment
FOR BETTER PROTECTION
INSURE WITH
FARM BUREAU MUTUAL
Write, or See
W. SPICEB, KENANSVILLE. N. C
SEE ME and make appointment
to do your auto body and fen
der repairs, also replace your
broken glasses with new Shatter
Proof glass.
A. C. HOLLAND,
KENANS VIIJJE.
PLENTY OF GOOD WATER
FROM A DRILLED WELL.
WRITE FOR ILLUSTRATED
BOOKLET AND ESTIMATE.
GIVING US DIRECTION AND
HOW FAR YOU LIVE FROM
YOUR PCSTOFFICE.
HEATJ5R WELL COMPANY, INC
RALEIGH, N. C.
First Class Plumbiag and
HEATING
All Work Guarauteed
GEORGE P. PRIDGEN, JV
Phone 226-1 Wawaw.N.C.
U. S. FIRE LOSSES 1948 SBVEN
HUNDRED AND TWELVE MIL
LION DOLLARS MORE THAN
ANY YEAR IN HISTORY. PRO
TECT YOUR PROPERTY WITH
R. W. BLACKMORE
Reliable Insurance Service Since
September, 1902.
WARSAW, N. C.
TYNDALL
FUNERAL HOME
nf Momrr ouvs
Heena at Wawe PwJlht
Burial AsaoOaOor
Pheaw TO
Funeral Dlnetors, Bsnbatme
Ambulance Bervtee, day or nhrti
MRS. M. M. THIGPEN
BeulavUle. N. C.
Representative For
CLINTON FLORAL
COMPANY
WARSAW. N. C
oooooooooooo
WHEN YOU NEED
SERVICES OF AN
AUCTIONEER
CALL
BILL HIIIE5JR.
Phone 270-lt- 26S-6
WARSAW, N. C
OOOOOOOOOOOO
WARSAW
APAAM
LODGE
KO.C73
AT7:S0. ALL MASJTIWWASONS
AfiE INVITED TO JCtXftEf).
MEETS EVERY SECONO AND
FOURTH TUESDAY NIGHTS
c
3
vutvilUave
by building your
new home of firesafe
concnETE i
A house of whatever archi-
tectural style or floor plan fits .
your family requirements will
have longer life, lower main- , -tenance
cost and greater fire
safety if it has concrete walls
and subfloors and a firesafe
roof. Let us tall you how to
get such a house built now
using our quality tested
concrete block.
SMITH CONCRETE
PRODUCTS CO.
KINSTON, N. C. ; PHONE &412
"We Build To A Standard '
Not To A Price"
DEALERS:
Duplin Mercantile Co.
Kenansville, N, C
Co. .