Local Softball League Battles To Get Underway Wednesday Present Plans Call For Twin Bill Every Wednesday Afternoon The City Softball League, reor ganizing after losing much of its tal ent to the armed forces, will play its first games on Wednesday, July 8th, Krtth a doubleheader beginning at 1 o'clock. Lacking a sufficient number of players to continue as a church league, the loop this year will be :omposed of four well-matched learns chosen by league officials. The ists of players and the teams with which they will be affiliated will be posted in the window of The Enter prise by today or tomorrow. Present plans call for a double peader every Wednesday afternoon, with possibly two single games per week to be played at twilight, around f:00 o'clock. This would give each earn a minimum of two games a week. Pinal plans as to the schedule, the tames of the clubs, and other details will be presented or popular ap proval when the teams meet for the rst time on Wednesday. Inasmuch is the league will be operating un ier the handicap of limited manpow er this year, it is imperative that ?ach of the fifty or sixty players who pas signed up with Secretary Dil on Cobb be present for the opening [ames, for the first meeting will argely decide the fate of this popu ar summer recreation. Softball is a comparatively new iport in Williamston, but since its ntroduction four years ago it has jrown in player-participation and particularly in spectator interest. [Tie first organized league, featuring he Independents, Vagabonds and he VEPCO Hotshots, produced some pigh-scoring marathons, and while he Church League produced some -un-aways, the brand of play im proved greatly in such a short time. [Tie cellarite Episcopalians, winners >f only two games in 15 during the -egular season, surprised everyone py winning the play-offs the first rear, but predictions ran truer to 'orm last season when the Christ ens' fine club defeated the Episco palians in the finals. Now that Williamston is without paseball for the first time in years, Softball has a bigger than ever op portunity to provide an inexpensive ind wholesome recreation for peo ple who can make their contribution a the war effort by amusing them selves without using tires and gas pline. A full turn-out of players on luly 8th will insure the league's ex istence, so everyone is urged to be present. Eyewitness Account Of Nazi s Drive Into "Land Of Pharaohs v> Imperial Army Sought T o Meet Axis but Fighting Was Delaying Action Witnessing the fall of Matruh, Richard D. McMillan, newspaper correspondent, describes in the fol lowing story the German drive in^f Egypt last Sunday: Marshal Rommel sent his tanks and 88-mm. guns weaving across the desert like a boxer seeking a weak spot to by-pass Merea Matruh with the obvious aim of cutting it off and swinging hack to invest it, exact ly as he had done at Tobruk. The Imperial Army, fighting with screens of armored cars, sought to meet every Axis feint, but at best its operations appeared to be mainly of a delaying nature in a bid for time. TTie fighting has been fairly tough for the last 24 hours, and now the battle is on again, as grim as ever. The enemy pushed through a gap which engineers had made in the mine fields south of Charing Cross, a scant half dozen miles southwest of Mersa Matruh, and fanned out east ward along the plateau of the lower escarpment, seeking to cut the coastal road and isolate the British base anchoring the north end of the desert line. The main column aimed at a point about 15 miles east of Mersa Matruh, but it ran into stiff opposition while Imperial tanks impeded the slow progress of the Axis armored forces by attacks from the south, driving them down a gulch. I saw a British regiment with anti tank guns go into action against the enemy's left flank about 15 miles south-southwest of Mersa Matruh. As usual, Rommer had sent up self propelled 88-mm. cannon on which he appears to rely even more than on tanks. Accurate fire of the Im-. periol 25-pounders made the enemy hesitate, the column swung back, and then headed due north toward Mersa Matruh. The first phase of the new battle was fought in stony patches of flat ground atop the first escarpment. The plateau was a swirl of dust as can non shells plowed into the blister^ ing limestone and earth. By 11 a. m. Saturday, Allied bomb ers were over the target area, and a huge curtain of smoke engulfed the desert. Transport and guns scurried like ants over tracks six mcheg^deep in dust and joined the fight. ~ U. S. Servicemen Are Highest Paid Of All Fighters With the voting of $50 base pay for servicemen, privates in Uncle Sam's army are now richer than many a common civilian. Gone is the argu ment that the young man who enters the armed forces is making an un due financial sacrifice. It is believed that another bill to eive cash benefits to the dependents of those in the service will likely go through Congress. This would pro vide $28 for the wife of a man in the service. Added would be $22 from the soldier's pay, making $50 for the dependent, and at the same time leaving $28 for the use of the man in the service, an increase of $7 over the old $21-a-month base pay. It is improbable that the ma chinery for making the payments to dependents will be set up and func tioning before November. Undoubtedly the United States soldier is the best treated and high est paid serviceman ihC world has ever known. His food is of the fin est quality, most of his recreational needs are taken care of at govern ment expense, his equipment is rap idly becoming second to none, and his spiritual needs are ministered to by an army of chaplains. Even before the pay boost, it was evident that most of the serious con demnation of the treatment and wages of servicemen came from out side sources. The advent of the USO has taken care of recreational needs. The nationwide drive for books has delivered to cantonments large amounts of serious and frivolous reading matter. Soldiers, sailors and marines now are welcome visitors in hundreds of thousands of homes throughout the land. Two things, however, that hurt soldier morale more than anything else in the early days of the citizen army are now remedied. First, the United States boy in the service now has a definite cause. He knows that what he is doing is not for some hazy future use but for immediate fighting. Second, the training courses with the finest modern military equipment, are now at a point where the trainee is always hard at work doing something both constructive and interesting. He has little time to sit in idleness, worrying about how to spend his spare time. Actually the pay boost probably All day Saturday sporadic strug gles continued under a coppery sun. While Imperial armored units strove to anticipate Axis feints, infantry struggled to cover the roads. A young British major broke the news that the Germans had reached Garawla, a strategic point southeast of Mersa Matruh where the railway along which the main Axis body ad vanced from south of Sidi Barrani joins the coastal main line from Mer 1 sa Matruh to Alexandria. They Fought For Freedom Nazis in occupied France called these five Frenchmen saboteurs; their own people call them patriots. They are pictured as they waited for a firing; squad to do its work. One of the accused men lifts his hands in a plea of innocence. The others, though they kneel, show no terror to their captors. Defiance is their only emotion as they await death. (Central I'reat) By MISS KATIIERINE MANNING The best yet is to see some of our local talent selling cooks a week-end ensemble from the rummage sale collection. To watch Miss "X" grab a handful of her mother's size 40 and vow that it makes her victim look like a pretty drawing is downright intriguing And did you notice all those bodies in town last week-end? gives the average serviceman more I money for his own personal use than he ever has had in his life. The $50 represents clear profit, with the ex ception of the cost of a few person al ilimiS-imd-iaundry^4J?do?t>te44y, a great deal of the extra pay will be invested in War Bonds, judging from the early responses to a campaign furthering their sale among soldiers, i sailors and marines. It must not be forgotten that the serviceman has a personal stake in victory as large as that of, any citi zen His realization of this fact is being shown on battlefronts throughout the world. Why it looked as though peo ple had turned out for a State Fair. But home or elsewhere . . traffic jams aren't rubber and gas saving devices, are they? And speaking of devices ? have you heard about Mr. J. C. Eubanks' latest? If they are all as rare as that gadget, bring 'em on. But the final jolt came when we spied a shabby ole dog play in' nurse maid to a local "Ham bone." The young darkie in question had fully reached his majority . . . the ripe ole age of three ? ? . And when we saw him squattin' in a wash tub with suds droolin' outta his mouth and ears, he was shreaking like a siren. But his yell wasn't one of fear . . on the contrary. During his bath he bad hurled his wash cloth miles from the tin tub; so the dog (uninvited though he was) had decided to lick the chap clean BUT IT EVIDENTLY TICKLED! But news that would far surpass any current events has honored our fair city. It's not national; nobody has shot anyone; Ethel Wynne has again turned down her insurance agent; and people are still being unpatriot ic: but things will happen in spite of that . . . the event . . . Mrs. C. G. Crockett's chrysanthemums busted into bloom at 6:00 a. m. today. And so we come to the end of this stinking column . . . Which all re minds me, have a good time this week-end NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina Martin County. As provided for in Section 2688 of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina, notice is hereby given that the Town of Williamston will offer for sale at public auction to the high est bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in the Town of Williamston on Monday, July 27. 1942, the follow-1 ing described tracts of land in the! Town of Williamston, to-wit: Lot No. 1: Being Lot No. 16 in the Moore Field, adjoining Amy Purvis on the West fronting North Street 78 8 and running back to two paral lel lines South 41-45 feet East to the depth oi uu ieer. being ihe same land purchased from Williamston Land and Improvement Company by | George Rice and Jane Rice of record in Book E-l, page 112 of the Martin County Public Regiitry. Lot NM8: Beginning 73 feet from Broad sHKt on a street at the cor ner of Lot No. 1, in Block B in the Moore Field plot, thence Eastward ly along the line of Lota 1 and 2 about 130 feet to Lot No. 4, thence Southwardly along Lot No. 4 to Jane Rice's back corner, thence along Jane Rice's corner about 130 feet to a street, thence along said street to the beginning, and being the same land purchased of H. M. Burras by George and Jane Rice. Lot No. 3: Beginning at the cor ner of Pine and North Streets in the WUliamston I .and and Improvement Company, Moore Field running North 42 degrees East 72.8 feet to Augustus Purvis' corner, thence along his line South 41 3-4 degrees East 130 feet, thence South 42 de grees West 72.8 feet to Pine Street, thence North 41 3-4 degrees West along Pine Street to the beginning and being Lot No. 19 and being same land purchased from Williamston Land and Improvement Company on the 24th of October, 1904, and re corded in Book MMM, page 225, and also being the same land deeded to Clarence W Griffin by B A. Critch er. Trustee, on August 9th, 1941, of record in Book C-4 at page 121 - Tins the 29til duy of June, 1842. TOWN OF WILLIAMSTON, By J. L. Hassell, Mayor. R. L. Coburn. Atty. jy3-4t Special July 4th REDUCTIONS 25 Per Cent Off ON ALL STRAW HATS Also Liberal Reductions On ALL WHITE SHOES lie Sure and See Our Larue Assortment of P R I N T I) R E S S E S $1.69 See Us For Your TOBACCO TWINE ? LANTERNS THERMOMETERS, ETC. Martin Supply Co. Summary Of Uniform Annual Budget Estimate Of Martin County, North Carolina For the Fiwul Year Be^iiuiin^ July I. 1912. And Fading June 30, 1943. Published in Com/diance with Requirement of the "County Fiscal Control Act"?.See. 7, Ch. 116, P. L., 1927. FUND COLUMN 1 i r c* a Is COLUMN 2 COLUMN 3 t o ?? ? H COLUMN 4 ?stfS* the, 1*1 2 i h COLUMN 5 J u i t lis ?8 ? u. COLUMN 6 ii = a 1 u COLUMN 7 I COLUMN 8 I -o g h H e County General Fund $ 55,724.00 Poor Fund 21,300.00 Health Fund 7,790.00 County Debt Service Fund 55,740.00 ?SOCIAL SECURITY: Old Age Assistance Fund 6,900.00 Aid To Dependent Children Fund . 3,420.00 Administration 5,075.00 EIGHT MONTHS SCHOOL TERM: Current Expense Fund 37,778.00 Capital Outlay Fund 7,850.00 Debt Service Fund 44,500.00 TOTALS $246,077.00 1,675.00 1.656.00 5,740.00 21,550.00 $75,790.00 3 10,549.00 19,625.(H) 7,790.00 54,090.00 6,900.00 5,420.00 1,555.00 16,225.00 7,850.00 44,500.00 g 172,287.00 980.00 890.00 2,700.00 845.00 171.00 66.00 811.00 892.00 2,250.00 $8,682.00 8 11,076.00 20,605.00 8,180.00 56,790.00 7,245.00 8,591.00 1,401.00 17,039.00 8,212.00 46,750.00 $180,919.00 #I4,(MMMMM)~ 14,0(K),(MM) 14,000,(MM) 14,(MM),(MM) 14,(MM),(MM) 14,000,000 14,(MM),(MM) 14,000,(MM) 14,000,000 14,000,000 #14,000, (MM) .1475 .06 .41 .0525 .025 .01 .1225 .0575 .335 1.30 .U> .14 .065 .40 .05 .0.1 .01 .085 .095 .36 1.35 INDEBTEDNESS OF COUNTY: imi General County Bonds $503,000 County School Bonds 210,000 State Loans to Schools 56,150 TOTALS $769,150 Added During Yr. ?5,(MM) $5,(MM) Reduced 1941-42 #19,000 34,000 13,400 #66,400 Total X94Z 8484,000 176,000 47,750 8707,?50 I hereby rertify the foregoing to be a true statement of the budget estimates for the various funds and activities of Martin County for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1943, as tentatively ap proved by the Board of County Commissioners June 29, 1942. This July 2, 1942. J. SAM GETSINGER, County Accountant