BOND CAMPAIGN IN COUNTY IS BEING PUSHED "Minute Men" At Work On Pledge Drive This Week Hundreds of modern ‘‘minute men” have been canvassing the county this week in an effort to get the signature of every wage earner in this section on a pledge card stating that they will turn over at least a part of their salary each week or month to the pur chase of Defense Bonds and Stamps. Under the direction of Heath E. Lee, Chairman of the Defense Bond and Stamp committee for the county, hundreds of names have been added to the already long list of investors who use the Savings Bonds and Stamps regularly as a method of investment and at the same time help the government in its struggle to arm and equip its rapidly expanding land, sea and air forces. Xjy J1UUU tuuaj mccc xuuucuj "minute men” had succeeded in geting more than enough names and pledges to assure the county of meeting its set quota in Bond and Stamp sales in the county for the month of May, but they are , going on and will strive to get the j signature of every wage earner, ■ white and colored, in Halifax coun- , ty on one of the pledge cards. Farmers are considered income earners and when asked to sign one of the pledge cards they are , asked to state just how much of | their income they will invest this ] fall in Stamps and Bonds, after ] their crops have been harvested 1 and marketed. ; v-ziiciii niciii jjcl aim 1110 iiuiiulc men” are planning to “sweep the ( county” in their pledge campaign. ( They made a great deal of progress - during the past few days, but a ! greater effort will be put forth in < the next week or so to get the re- i maining income earners in the 1 county to sign one of the pledge i cards. I Mill workers are being asked to i sign the pledge cards regardless 1 of whether they are already par-' l c ticipating in a pay-roll deduction plan or not. They are being asked to state on the cards just how much they are investing through the pay-roll deduction, but in most cases are not being asked to in crease their investment unless they feel they can do so. Chairman Lee appealed to resi dents of the county today to help put the campaign across in Halifax county by signing the pledge card when questioned by one of the "minute men’’ TRAIN WRECK (Continued from Page One) on the northbound freight. He is in a serious condition in the Roa noke Rapids Hospital. Hospital attaches said that he suffered a severe head injury and that he was in a semi-conscious condition. Ryland M. Wheeler of 558 E. Hargett Street, Raleigh, a crew member on the northbound train, suffered a chest injury and was still in the local hospital in what physicians said was a satisfactory condition. He too jumped from ;he train but was struck by an pverturning car or by falling de bris. J. A. Bailey of Apex, fireman on he southbound train, is still in he hospital suffering from severe >urns. He was scalded and oth irwise burned when he failed to ump before the crash. Others injured were William rones of Raleigh, who received :uts and abrasions and is still in he hospital, and C. I. Wright of taleigh, who received cuts and >ruises. He was dismissed from he hospital after receiving first .: ,1 The two freights, which were traveling at a high rate of speed, crashed on the one-way track which passes just west of Burton Street. The accident occurred during a heavy rain at 7:10 o’ clock Wednesday night when sig nals from a Raleigh dispatcher apparently became crossed. Both trains, one enroute from Ports mouth to Raleigh and the other enroute to Portsmouth from Ra leigh, were being routed by the Raleigh office of the Seaboard. A number of injured crew mem bers had either jumped from their trains about the time of the crash or had crawled from the wreck age when ambulances from the city arrived on the spot. Eye witnesses said that they saw sev eral crewmembers jump from the speeding trains just prior to the crash. It was known that more than half a dozen crewmen es caped injury by jumping when the crash seemed inevitable. Woodrow Humphries and Page Ross, residents of Burton street near the scene of the crash, said they saw the two trains hit and were the first to reach the scene. They stated that both trains were travelling at a high rate of speed. It was raining and visibility was poor, but Seaboard officials said that Lucy uuuiu uui oay wucuici played a major role in the cause of the accident. One official said the crash "was just one of those things that happen. We don’t know who was to blame”. The two trains vere running as extras, officials of the road said. The northbound train was routed from Norlina to Portsmouth and carried crushed stone for the ship building yards in the Virginia city. The other train was routed from Portsmouth to Raleigh, via Wel don and Roanoke Rapids, and carried a general freight cargo. The two locomotives and some 25 or 30 cars were left a tangled and twisted mass of steel by the force of the impact. Cars were derailed and piled up for hundreds of yards in both directions. Of ficials of the line, said that it was the worst accident in the his tory of the Seaboard. Damage was estimated by one official to run near three quarters of a mil lion dollars. The crash occurred about a mile from the Roanoke Rapids yards and there were sidings at a distance of about half a mile to both the north and south. Both Humphries and Ross said that the two trains apparently ap plied their brakes for some dis tance before the actual head-on collision occurred. They said that wheels and tracks near the scene of the crash showed white-hot in the early evening haze. The northbound train carried 35 cars, all but nine of which were either smashed to pieces or de railed, while the southbound car ried 33 cars, all but 16 of which were thrown from the tracks by force of the impact. Tracks were being cleared this afternoon and officials of the line said they expected to be routing traffic over the spot by 6 oclock, although it would be several days before the debris could be cleared from the right-of-way and the tracks put back into first class condition. Debris and wrecked cars were piled along the tracks I for a distance of several hundred ! yards. Within a few minutes of the crash hundreds of people were at the scene, and a huge crowd was on hand throughout the day Thursday watching the wreck crews clear the tracks. Rumors that two hoboes were seen on the southbound train be fore it reached Roanoke Rapids and were killed in the accident were unfounded. Investigators for the Seaboard came here from both Raleigh and Portsmouth to attempt to learn the cause of the accident. Results of their investigation had not been learned when the Herald went to press. Kiwanis Meeting j (Continued from Page One) | ute period each in which to make : a few remarks. Another feature of the program I will be a rendition of several numbers by the Roanoke Rapids High School choir under the di rection of Lee Williams, head of the music department in the local schools. Governor Norwood said that the ' annual meeting of the clubs in the sixth division was formerly held as a sort of ladies night meeting, but that ladies would not be in cluded in tonight’s meeting be cause of the transportation short age facing clubs who will send representatives here. • The committee on arrangements for the affair is composed of W. L. 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