Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 4, 1939, edition 1 / Page 1
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Advertisers Will Find Our Col umns a Latchkey to over 1,600 Homes ot Martin County. THE ENTERPRISE Watch the Label on Your Paper, As It Carries the Data Your Subscription Expires. VOLUME XLII?NUMBER 53 Williamston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, July #, J939, ESTABLISHED 1899 Last Passenger Train Is Run Here Friday Evening Patting of "Old Iron Horse" Attracts Very Little Attention Making a last run through here last Friday, the passenger train of the Atlantic Coast Line attracted very little attention, its passing hav ing been accepted as a matter of course happening. Local station em ployees chatted with the engineer a few minutes, and the old iron horse running more than an hour late, sounded two short whistle blasts and backed out on its last scheduled trip. Its crew dismissed upon arrival in Plymouth later that evening, the train was returned to Rocky Mount the following morning behind a freight train. ! Making their first trip on a train, Several little children came m as passengers from Everetts, Station Agent V 1). Godwin stating that the company did a flourishing business that morning when patrons bought two tickets to Washington City and another bought one to Petersburg. Fenner Respass, taxi driver, bought the last ticket, and Mr Henry Cook, former resident, was the last white man to board the passenger coach when the train left here on its last morning trip An attendant at the station m one capacity or another for about 40 years. Will Huff had water in his eyes when he took the mail from the last train that evening At the present time the Coast Line is offering an express service on its freight trains, the shipments reach ing here about 1:30 in the afternoon. Mf -Johnson, representative of the ^L'Sirsi company was here yesterday investigating the schedules, and wlftil^Tt is possible that some changes Will be effected, no official an nouncement was made in connec- i Hon with an improved service, Martin Boy ^ ill Attend 4-H Meet When the annual 4-H short course is held at N C State College July 24-29, Martin County will probably have several representatives from among its farm boys and girls One of these will be Joe King Powell, of Robersonville, who was selected as the outstanding 4 H club boy in the county for 1938 The honor carried with it a scholarship to the State Col lege event, given by the Chilean Ni trate of Soda Educational Bureau, of which A. G Floyd is State director. The 4-H short course combines ed ucation, recreation, and inspiration and offers farm boys and girls an op portunity to exchange ideas, receive the latest information on agricultur al and home-making developments, and engage in programs of entertain ment and games. One of the features of this year s event will be a pageant depicting the 25-year history of 4 H club work in Nortli Carolina L. R Harrill. state 4-H club leader, and Miss Frances MacGregor, assistant state club lead er, have selected several county groups to act out in pantomine and song the various phases of they"1 training organisation. The annual state 4-H health con leat will lu nnotliLi highlight of the program, with the crowning of the 1939 health king and queen to be a part of the pageant of progress. Health kings and queens have been selected in each of the five districts for the State honors The State finals of the dairy dem onstration team contest also will be the winning team of two club mem bers receiving a free trip to the Na tional Dairy Show in California AAA Conservation I'rogram Has Been Help To Farmers The Agricultural Adjustment Ad ministration conservation program seems to be bearing fruit. At least over six million farmers in the Unit ed States seem to think so because that many persons are carrying out improved practices or. about 50 mil lion acres of farm -and. These far mers are adjusting their practices to include increased acreages of grasses and legumes, applications of lime stone and phosphate to make good pasture and meadow crops, planting forest trees, constructing ponds and reservoirs and protecting the soil from erosion by wind and water. They are terracing, contour farming, strip cropping and filling gullies All of this must result in a better soil for those who come after us. Forest Warden Announces His Assistants In County Entering upon his new duties last Saturday as county forest fire war den, Marvin Leggett, Griffins Town ship farmer, announced his assist ants this week. Many of them have been connected with the service for some time. Names of the assistants are: W. C. Ange, E. G. Smith, Arthur Revels, R. S. Price, W L. Ausbom, M. W Hardison, A. T. Roberson, J. V. An drews, Henry L. Hopkins, W. E. Purvis, W. M. Ulley, T. E. Goodrich, H. O. Roberson and T. W. HolUday. Little Hope Held for Colored ManLostin VastRiverSwamp Little hope was held today for, Robert Bond, 20-year-old colored man who disappeared in the vast river swamp, near here, last Wed nesday, Hunters who have frequent-1 ed the swamp declare no man can hardly live there for more than a few days, and they doubt if Bond will return alive. Going into the swamp last Wed nesday with his father, Luke Bond, and two others to hunt turtles. Bond was said to have soon lost his way. The elder Bond lost his way and spent Wednesday night in the swamp and the other two came out ahead of him. Searching parties, numbering as many as forty men, have entered the swamp each day, but they have been unable to establish any trace of the man. An appeal has been made by Sheriff C. B. Roebuck to the CCC authorities in Beaufort County and plans are virtually complete for broadening the search tomorrow. The search by the CCC boys was delayed because most of them left the camp to spend the long holiday at their homes. Sheriff Roebuck ex plained. "We have made every effort pos sible to advance the search, but we have made very little progress bat tling the thick undergrowth over the 19,000-acre swamp, the sheriff said. AGENT Recently appointed by the county commissioners, Cleopatra Tyner, colored home demonstra tion arent. started her work in the county yeoterday, it was an nounced by Lora E. Sleeper, home agent, who will supervise the work of th new appointee. The new agent will confine her work principally to members of her own race. Her services were made available when the county authorities made a small appropriation to supplement State and federal funds. Commissioners In Uneventful Meet Monday Morning l ux Cev) Will Br I i iiiiihmI At S|MM-ial Meeting loi ter in Month ? An uneventful business calendar featured the regular monthly meet ing of the Martin County commis sioners here yesterday, the minutes of the session indicating that the au thorities came very near observing the day as a holiday. The session was rather lengthy, however, and the commissioners held long discussions but took no definite action when it came to disposing of the problems. The 1939 tax rate will await ac tion until the commissioners meet in special session about the middle or latter part of this month Some attention was given the listings at the meeting, but the authorities did not study the budget figures. A $1, -050 appropriatiorrwas grantd for for estry work in the county during the new fiscal year, the commissioners aisposing~of ihe request that the State department might formulate its plans for the service without de lay. District Forester P. W. Tillman, of Rocky Mount, appeared before the board and asked that the appropria tion be increased to $1,250. The re quest for the additional amount was denied. Several property owners appear ed before the board and' asked that their listings be -reconsidered. The u/'Ty d'^CUSRCd a* h'Hgth hut no decreases were allowed. A resolution was passed authoriz ing the closing of a few feet of road in Griffins Township near the John A Griffin filling station. Reports were heard from the var ious department heads, and Miss Lora Sleeper, just back from a trip to Europe, talked interstingly of the visit. Messrs J E. Pope, R L Perry, C. Abram Roberson and R. A. Haislip were present for the meeting Special Demonstration In Pickling To Re Held Here Mrs. Minnie Eldridge McTeer, widely acclaimed home demonstra tion agent, will give a demonstration in pickling at the home agent's of fice in the county agricultural build ing on Friday of this week at 10 o'clock, it was announced today by Miss Lora E. Sleeper who is just back from an European tour. The demonstration is for leaders in clubs and home agents in the 15th club district, Miss Sleeper explain-, ed. Patrons Fighting A Losing Battle For Passenger Service Conflicting A?l\ ice of Author. ilien Leaven Them W oiulfr ing Where To Fight Scotland Neck, June. 30. ? Fifty seven years ago citizens of Scotland Neck, then a struggling community of a few hundred souls, banded to gether and raised $25,000, which was presented to the Atlantic Coast Line Railway or its predecessors, in ex change for which the railroad agreed to begin operation of a passenger train to the community, without rail facilities and which depended chief ly on water-borne traffic up and down the Hoanoke River. This afternoon the last passenger train touted its whistle with a long mournful blast, for the State Utili ties Commission has agreed that the Atlantic Coast Line may abandon its passenger service on this line, ef fective tomorrow The order of Com missioner Stanley Winborne stipu lated that the railroad would be al lowed to halt passenger service but would have to make arrangements for adequate express and mail serv ice. The mail service has been ar- | ranged. The express service will be in the form of an express car tied on- I to a freight train, and citizens de-.| clare this will be totally inadequate This will be the type of service furn ished on the entire line from Par-1 mele to Weldon, affecting about sev en little towns and thousands of cit izens, some of whom will have no passenger or bus service from now on A committee of citizens represent ing the affected towns appeared be | fore Commissioner Winborne^at Ra 1 - eigh on Wednesday to protest the | commissioner's order. They were told by Mr. Winborne that their] only recourse was to take the matter to Superior court. So they raised the I funds to employ attorneys and today | these attorneys consulted with judge of the Superior court. They | were told their resourse was before the Utilities Commission and that the superior court could not act on an injunctive proceeding because there was no cause of action before it. So now, John Q Public is won dering to whom he should appeal to get his trains back, since he has been shuttled from Utilities commission to Superior court and back again. ISine Hoym Will Enter CCC C(tmp? Thin Week Nine Martin County boys, seven white and two colored, will enroll in the CCC service?ut Washington tomorrow. The names of those to report t< Washington for examinations are George uunch, Charles Libert Bui-1 lock, Franklin Leroy Cox, and Jo-1 seph Chester Taylor, all of William ston; Ben Long Weaver, of Hassell; I Alston Wesley Gurganus, of James-1 ville, and Harvey Wright, of Dar dens Alterantes are Frank Edward I Taylor, of Hamilton; James Phillip | Williams and Robert Theodore Har dison, of Jamesville. The names of the two colored boys scheduled for service are Joe Ter rell and Augustus Braswell, both of Williamston. Alternates are David Bullock, of Robersonville; Clifton Walton, of Oak City, and James Wil lis Lloyd, of Williamston. Highway Accident Record While the automobile claimed the life of a little girl, accidents and wrecks were few and far between in the county last week despite thfc fact that the county's rolling stock was put in motion on an ex tensive scale by vacationists and visitors. Traffic, while setting no new record for volume, moved in fair ly large blocks through here during the week-end, hundreds of peo ple from around Raleigh and Durham going to Roanoke Island For. the first time in several weeks no property damage was reported-from automobile wrecks in the county, the death of a lit tle colored girl in Poplar Point Township making the only blot on the county's safety record last week. A comparison of accident records for the past week and for the first months of the year follows: ? Property Accidents Injured Killed Damage Last Week's Record 1 0 1 $ 000.00 Prior Record 23 22 * 8 6,800.00 TOTALS 24 22 - 1 *6,800.00 Death Strikes On County Road Late Saturday Evening I on lYurl I- Killnl When Striul B\ \lex Mobley 1?? On a Tittle used country road and j under very unusual circumstances, death claimed the life of Lou Pearl Biggs, seven years old, late last Sat urday night near the home of Mr. and Mrs. Slade White in Poplar Point Township. Struck by a car driven by Alex Mobley, the color ed child's neck was broken and she died instantly. Accompanying her mother and I one-year-old sister, the girl was said to have darted into the road, mak ing it impossible for Mr, Mobley to avoid striking her. Witnesses told Sheriff C B. Roebuck who investi gated the accident, that it avoidable on the car driver's part. The little girl's death was the sev enth on the highways and streets of | this county this year. A number of people attended an ice cream supper, and most of them were making ready to return to their homes when Mr. Mobley, section master for the A C L. Railroad com pany, was returning from a visit in Everetts to his home in Palmyra, 'i saw the group, slowed my car down and blew the car horn The crowd withdrew to the side of tlie road, and just as 1 started to increase my speed the girl with her one year-old sis ter darted into the road. 1 stopped my car within its length," Mobley told the investigating officer The baby torn from its sister's arm, was thrown clear of the car and was not injured ? ? Will Arthur Rhodes, Charlie Roe buck and George Purvis witnessed | the tragedy, and told Sheriff Roe buck that the driver of the car was | nut to be blamed. A formal hearing m the case will be held Thursday morning at ten o'clock before Justice J L. Hassell here when it is expectd the driver will be exonerated. Market Review For East Week Feed markets turned slightly weaker during the last week in June, states the U. S. and North Carolina Departments of Agriculture 111 the weekly news service review. A slack demand from feeders reflecting abundant pasturage in most central western and eastern states together with relatively low grain prices was the principal weakening influence. Oil seed cakes and meals averaged lower, but corn by-product feeds were not materially changed. The in dex number of wholesale feedstuff prices declined to 104.4 compared with 105 7 for the previous week. Farmer's stock Virginia type pea nuts in the hands of millers are rap idly lessening in volume. Market prices for best farmer's stock Vir ginias are holding up and for best jumbos, 4 to 4.10, a few 4.15 cents per .pound- is bchng?paid on a delivery point basis. Best bunch and best shelling stock, however, are barely up to last week's price levels Northern wholesale poultry and egg markets ruled mostly steady this week, although a firmness developed in some markets for rock chickens, crosses and leghorns. Philadelphia closes firm on fancy quality offer ings following light receipts which were closely cleared Moderate re ceipts, however, of ordinary quality moved slowly. ?Reduced?marketings?influenced rising potato markets during the past week At the period's close U. S. No. 1 cobblers were quoted in New York at 3 00 to 3.25 a barrel against 2.25 to 2.50 a week ago. Sack vaiues also increased with late sales at 1.75 to 1.90, as compared with mostly 1 25 to 1 40 a week ago. Cucumber returns to North Caro lina growers were also gfeater with the bushel basket quoted this week in New York at 2.00-250 against 1 75-2 25 a week ago. LendingS/wmling Drive Is Gigantic As predicted a month ago, Presi dent Roosevelt called upon congress last week for a new lending-spend ing drive of gigantic size Over and above WPA, PWA and other relief appropriations, the plan envisions outlay of $3,860,000,000 in self-li quidating loans for non-federal pub lic works, express highways, rural electrification, rail equipment, farm tenant aid and foreign credits to promote U. S export trade It is ex pected congress will consider this broad proposal immediately The record speed, however, with which the tax bill was passed?less than two weeks, compared with an aver-1 age time of 60 days required for en actment of revenue bills of other years?indicates that congress is in no mood for such a protracted ses sion as undoubtedly would lie re quired to enact the president's en tire program. The major part of it, therefore, probably would be shelv ed until 1640. Tobacco Market Will Open on August 22nd: Opening is Three Days Earlier Th an It Was List ^ear IVesideul J. S. Ficklen I'oinl* Out Duugcr* in a Short Selling IYrio?l The Williamston Tobacco Mar ket will open for the 15135) season on Tuesday, August 22. in accordance with a decree handed down by the United States Tobacco - Association in annual meeting at White Sul phur Spring*. West Virginia. last week-end With Treat pivssuu- be ing brought to bear by dirt farmers, the association is having the markets opened three days earlier this sea son than last The schedule of market openings Georgia. July 25; South Carolina and Border, August 3, Eastern Caro lina. August 22. Middle Belt. Sep tember 7. and Old Bi ll, Septembei 14th ?White no definite action was, u^. |h>i ted in connection with a proposal to shorten the selling day or limit sales to four days each week, J S Ficklen, of Greenville, president of the association pointed out that the shortening of the selling season was presenting a very difficult problem to the buyers and packers <?t tobac ?Kiokleti asserted the situation (le , serves most serious study as uvfrays I and means for correct ion of the con stantly increasing difficulty." The association adopted without | argument tin report of the sales nun nuttee. wlmii recommended th.it all markets be closed on November 11, Armistice Day. Tom W Blackw 111- ot Winston Salerrl, member of tlve sales commit tee, recommended that the associa tions urge warehousemen to effect uniform grading. efiminatiou <?f strainage, waste and foreign mater ial, better bundling and avoidance of large piles of tobacco on ware house flo<?rs. HlackwcH also suggest ed that the maximum weight of each package be limited to 500 pounds In bis presidential addles* to the association s 30th annual convention, Ficklen said it is "evident that some policy satisfactory to all must he found, not only to prevent a further shortening of tin* season. hnt~to ex tend the time of the selling period beyond that which has been used j for the past several seasons. 1 Ficklen said that last year the selling season in all belts of the flue cured areas and in the hurley dis trict was "shorter than ever before in the history of the trade " The association adopted measures 1 at its meeting last year to regulate j the?"speed "f sales, the method of packing tobacco offered for sale and j the spacing of-haskcts. b'dh on the j flue c ured and Lui Icy auction sales "During the last crop," the asso elation president reported*- "it is gen | dally agreed that the sales were more orderly conducted under these regulations than they had been in the pu.st Tlii'i e wen1 irpoits that cer tain markets wire at times violating the speed rate. These reports were brought to attention of the proper authorities on the markets in ques tion and we think, in practically ev cry instance, he situation was cor rected." Ficklen said he saw danger also in the situation created hv the c rop control law The 15138 crop, undo the control law, brought consider* bly higher prices for the low gradt and somewhat lower prices for th high grades, he said. "While "this situation probahl stimulated to some extent exports t countries which usually take lug grade leaf, on the other hand thes f"ieigir countries which usually pui chase the lower grades bougl smaller quantities from the last cro than otherwise would have been tl case, but for the very high prici placed on the lower grades of leaf Ficklen said "The great danger in this situatio lies in the fact that once a mam facturer begins to use foreign grow substitute tobaccos, it is. very cfiff cult to get him back to the use of oi tobaccos when, iri time, the price si uation adjusts rlSeTf." ? Ficklen recalled- that the eontn program failed of adoption in tf last referendum and that the 102 crops are being grown and will 1 sold without any marketing restrii lions. The association president said prediction that the wage and hot bill would have " a disastrous effe< on certain branceg of the leaf tobai co industry" had "come true." A'o Action In Taken Tor Rural Route Txtcimion Cuming here last week, Postal In spector Condcrman took no action to effect extensions on the rural routes originating at this office. The matter is before the authorities, and action is promised within the next few weeks. STKIkK Alter anno unci uk last Friday that operation* would be resum ed at the plant of the North Car olina Pulp Company in this county 011 July 10. it wis learn ed yesterday that employees at the parent mill in Delair had re jetted the proposal approved by their leaders and would continue the strike which halted work at both places eight weeks ago. Of ficials at the Plymouth unit were unable to make any predictions as to w hen operations would be resumed as a result of the new developments. All differences-' between the have been settled except a de mand for a "closed shop ' Both sides are standing firm on this proposition, with the next con ference between the contending groups set for tomorrow . Small Number Of County Marriages P During Past Month of l.ircioc. Sniull<'?l I or Vnv June Since tlo \ rar I Tin niimlwi I>f mnmiiiirs m Mai tin Count) undfcwi-nt a marked de crease last month compared with these m previous months this year ami in the years since 1982. The is suance reported by the register of I deeds was the second smallest this | year and the smallest for the-month of June since the depression, and compares with seventeen a year ago and twenty-four two years ago The marriage law, while effecting a decrease in marriages within the county, is not responsible for the marked decrease, reports from var , ious sources maintaining that eco mimic conditions are having some ! thing to do with the business drop at the license bureau As far as it could be learned, no couples from this county who mar ned butside the State have filed health certificates in compliance with the law It is not definitely known what procedure is to be followed in filingJJie health certificates, but jt is understood that those who vio late the marriage health laws are 'subjeet to proserin ion . ; Licenses were issued last month to | the following couples White Jesse Wood, Jr.. and Nancy White bur: t, both of Wilhamston. Lester Terry and Eicon Bailey, both of this county Kufus V? rnon Hunting, of Bethel, and 1/ela Brown Barnhitl, of Wil liamstnn ?' ' ' Janu s Edward White and Martha E. White, both of Bel tie County. Colored Sail) Moore and Allie B Gamoi, both W Martin County. Fred liarAmy Jones and Kuth Cirif I in, both <n ir/is county. lioy Bell arid Levolia Lynch, of Martin County. Hoter Little, Jr., and Carolyn Cran dall, both of Martin County. Edward Griffin and Ixiuise Wool ard, both oi this county. ? ???. bW/cgc President Offers 11 is Vieir ??? I>i Kai l T. Compton, president t Massachusetts Institute of Technolc gy. writing the foreword to a ne book, describes a survey of 54,01 officials of 500 companies which ir dicatcs that a college trained ma is 18 times as likely to be presidei of an industrial corporation as a noi college man, 12 1-2 times as like! to be treasurer, twice as likely to I m charge of production, 18 times i likely to be an engineer and 12 tiirx as likely to be a sales official. T1 new book, ' EngineeringOpportui itics," edited by It W Clyne ar published by Appleton-Century, d scribes the chances for the young ei gineer in each of the 2li fields, wi each field "covered" by an enginei who has already attained success ib Tbf book is~ listed as reeomrncm ed reading for the 8,000 enginee who graduated this June and wl seek to acquire a useful backgroui of the industry they plan to enter b fore talking to the employment ma ager . JT' HOLIDAY DKATHS Ileath observed no holiday as Mr. and Mrs. America took to their wheels last Saturday to en joy a Ion* July rest. As the holi day period wore on, the death count Increased, late reports claiming nearly 400 dead and many hundreds Injured on the highways and n freakish acci dents. School Building Gaining Impetus In Martin County ? Five Project* Now Underway Or Vrc To Be Started Vt Early Date A school building boom is well underway in the county at the pres ent time., the office of the county board of education announcing this week that three projects are under way. two of them nearing comple tion. and two more to be launched within the next few weeks. Scattered in five of the ten town ships, the current building program calls for an outlay of only $21,834, the Works Progress Administration furnishing $10,334 of that amount. The first of the projects, a gymna sium.?~4K?nearing?rnmpletion A* iJamesville The county appropriated ; $1,500 for the building, the WPA contributing?uppioxirna teiy?$2,000.? 111 addition to that amount, the citi zons of the community raised a con siderable amount for the purchase of lumber Built under the supervision of Kader Rogerson, the building is lone of the best of" its kind in the | county. 1 A second project, similar to the j one. in Jamesville and contracted un der the same conditions, is well ad ; vanced at Oak City. The launching of a fifth project in the county?is? I pending the completion of the gym nasium at Oak City. A third project has just been started in Bear Grass Township to replace the building that was burn ed at Ccdaj Hill or Woolard's. The county is replacing the old building with a four-room structure costing > $(j,134, of which amount the county is appropriating only $2,800. The I WPA is tunoshing the remainder. I The Old building was burned last Match. | The fourth- project calls for the Construction of three additional rooms to the colored high school building in Williamston Construc tion of the addition will be advanc ed without WPA participation, school authorities explaining that the work will be handled largely by the manual arts students in the school. The county is appropriating $3,200 to cover the entire cost of the build ing Construction work will get under way on the fifth project at Rober sonvjllc just as soon as the gymna sium is completed at Oak City. Plans call for the construction of an agri cultural building there to cost $7, 500, the county appropriating $2,500 and the Works Progress Administra tion the remainder of the amount. ? Export Tobacco Trade Improves Washington The United States tobacco export trade unproved its general position in the first five months of 1939 over the correspond ing period in 1938, according to fig ure., released today by Benjamin D. Hill, chief, tobacco division, depart ment of commerce-. Although the total exports of Am orican leaf tobacco for the first five months of this veai WIT** ahont LI million pounds-less than the exports of the first five months in 1938, ex poi tt i s noted an increased move men! of over 17 million pounds of British-owned bright flue cured to bacco from warehouses to manufac turers in the United Kingdom in that period. Thus, the net improvement of the American export position at the end of June was about six mil lion pounds. Comparing exports of the first of the corresponding period a year ago, shipments oT'dark Virginia in creased nearly a million pounds, Maryland and Ohio exports increas ed about 175,000 pounds; cigar leaf increased 330,000 pounds and stems advanced nearly six million pounds. Chief declines in the export trade were in bright flue cured tobacco, which totaled 118,053,447 pounds in 1938 compared with 99,886,603 pounds thus far this year. Burley shipments declined from 5,595,530 pounds 19. 4,702,078 pounds in the periods under comparison. Grand total value of exports for the first five months of 1939 was $42 810.972 against $52,578,642 in 1938. ? - Morv Subtcrihert Added To The Enter/trite Lint The Enterprise has added the fol lowing names to its reader list: Oscar Little, Robersonvjlle; Noah Peel, Williamston; Mrs. Raymond Abbitt, Ocean View, Va.; R. G. Har rison, Henderson; Martha Hoell, Rob ersonville; C. L. Hadley, Williams ton; Stephen Manning, Williamston; H L. Roebuck, Robersonville; Bettie Jones, Robersonville; P. L. Salsbury, Scotland Neck; Dr. W. H. Harrell, Philadelphia; David Keel, William ston; Mrs. J. E. Moore, Williamston; Mrs. R. C Bailey, Williamston. H L. Gardner, Williamston; W. T. Pollard, Williamston; S. D. Griffin, Williamston; W M. Harrison, Wil liamston; J. H. Ayers, Oak City: J. W Cherry, Hassell; W. L. Moore, Jamesville; Mrs. Anna Jones, Wil liamston; Charles Manning, Wake Forest. ? \ h*
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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July 4, 1939, edition 1
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