Mobile Home Plant To Locate At Bunn Franklinton Negro Believed Killed By Train Sheriff William T. Dement reported this morning that a preliminary report from the pathologist at Wake Me morial Hospital indicates that Sinclair Moses, 32-year-old Franklinton Negro, whose body was found late Sunday, was killed by a passing train. ' Dement said in a telephone conver sation with hospital authorities he was told that Moses died of a broken neck and that the body contained multiple cuts, and bruises. Dement said the doctor expressed the opinion that the man had been struck by a train and that the cause of death was a broken neck. Hie body was found Sunday a round 7 P.M. along the railroad tracks a half mile east of the Burlington Mills plant on NC-56. Herbert Sipith, a relative of Moses, made the discovery. Smith and four others had launched a search for Moses who had been missing since last Friday. Those with Smith at the time were identified by Chief Deputy David Bat ten as Willie Johnson, Junes btis Smith, Sameul Johnson and Eddie , West. Batten said that Moses was last seen Friday by a friend, Otis Morgan, 21, and that Morgan had left Moses along the tracks while he went to a nearby store. ?'-* Several wounds were found on the body and Sheriff Dement asked for an . autopsy. He said today that he had been unable to reach a Seaboard Coastline engineer for questioning in the matter. He added it would pro bably be several days before he could clos^the case. This is the second case where a body has been found in the Franklin ton area under mysterious circum stances in recent months. Last July 20, two Negro men discovers*! the body of a Franklinton Negro woman in the Sour Mountain section of the county. Percy _ Hawkins, 60-year-old Negro auxiliary policeman was charged with murder in that case. County Fair Underway The 56th Franklin County Fair is underway here this week with grounds opening Monday night. Fair manager George T. (Jolly) Bunn announced earlier that the David B. Endy shows are to be featured at this year's edi tion. A large number of citizens visited the fairgrounds on the River Road here Monday night to take a first look at tha host of exhibits and the midway Rescuers Used Again Sunday According to a reliable report, the Louisburg Rescue Service was used Sunday as an ambulance ser vice, an event not unusual with the local public service minded group. The local unit was on standby at the Franklin Air Field where the CAP was staging a Fly-in when It was alerted to go to the scene of an automobile accident near Flat Rock Church, about eleven miles away. The rescuers found an overturn ed car and a man identified as Aaron Thomas Goode, c/m suffer ing from minor inuries The car ran off State Rural unpaved road No. 1105. Goode was transported to Franklin Memorial Hospital by the Rescue unit. A passenger in the car, identified as William Stewart, c/m/19 was uninjured. It was learned later that Goode had been taken by private car first to Youngsville where he could not find a doctor and later to Wake Forest When no physician was available there, he was returned to the scene of the accident and the Loulsburg Rescue Service was call ed. attractions. Judging of farm exhibit* will be held today as gates open at 5 P.M. Wednesday and Saturday are aehool days and ?ll school students will be admitted free before the hour of 6 P.M. Gates open Wednesday at 4 P.M. Thursday, Bunn says, all Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts will be admitted free if they come in uniform and Friday, Bunn says is "Everybody's d?y." Prizes will be given in Horticulture, , Field crops, club and farm exhibits, canned food, fruits, vegetables and meats, cakes, cookits, candy and bread, house furnishings, flowers, arts, crafts, and antiques, and in miscel laneous, which includes soap, honey and eggs. Two bicycles are to be given in a drawing to be held on Wednesday and Saturday, according to Bunn. Public Hearing Called On Housing The Louisburg Town Council has given notice of a public hearing to be held on Octdber 10 to determine if a Housing Authority is needed here. The notice states that "a petition has been flled" with the City Clerk "by 25 residents . . . setting forth that there is a need for an Authority to function . . . here". * The hearing is set for Friday night, October 10th at 7:30 P.M. in the Louisburg Armory. The notice says that all residents and taxpayers and other interested persons will be given "full opportunity to be heard" on two questions: (1) Whether insanitary or unsafe inhabited dwelling accommodations exist in he City of Louisburg, and/or (2) Whether there is a lack of safe or sanitary dwelling accommodations in the City of Louisburg available for all the inhabitants thereof. After the hearing, it will be left to the Council to determine whether or not such housing conditions exist and whether or not there Is a need for an Authority to function here. Averages Dip To Season Low Averages for the 245,475 pound* of tobacco sold on the Louisburg Market last Thursday dipped to a season low of $69.15, according to figures releas ed this week by William Boone, Sales Super viier. The average for the four day sales week also fell before previous weeks to a new low a( $71.20. The dip reflects a decrease in the quality of the offerings, according to ? ill Ml. Sales for the four days laat week, with dollars and daily avenge* an as follows: Monday. 241,865 pounds, $178,158.3*. $73.65 avenge; Tun day. 256,605 pounds, $183,776.30, $71.60 average; Wednesday, 238,128 pounds. $167,640.66, $70.39 avenge; and Thursday, 245,475 pounds, $169,757.63, $69.15 average. Sales for the season, consfcting of sixteen sales days, have reached 4,402,001 pounds for a total of $3,173,167.92 and a season ave^ of $72.00. Figures do not include Mon day's sales this week. The Federal-State Market News Ser vice said prices were fairly steady on the six markets still operating in the South Carolina and Border North Carolina Belt. On the Eastern Belt, about one-half of the pade averages were down main ly $1 to $2 per hundred pounds. Most others were unchanged. Top price was $98 per hundred for selected sheets of choice lemon leaf. The Eastern Belt offerings improv ed considerably Sales consisted of larger proportions of good and fair offerings. Volume was heavy. The Middle Belt losses amounted to chiefly $1 per hundred, with lead and smoking leaf bearing the brunt of the decline. Top prices was $84 for good orange leaf. Quality improved a vo lume was heavy. ?* ' Ti ? ? M Ag. Building Work Progresses Scene atom ?hows prograa to date on the $37,173.61 addition to t|M County Aefrultual, Build on M street here Workmen A own above are preparing the bulldinc'a roof. Contract* on the jprojact were.a?wd?