to mn|| llllimiq||ll Vernon Edgar Whitley, Marvin William Scott, William H. Camp, Jr. Robert E -May- R. H. McCnmmnns Jam— w, Wb“frrT I 4 II k 4 Grover Woodruff, Winfield Hasty, Daniel E. Faison, Robert Lee Moore, Curtis E. West, Edgar H. King, Robert Lee ing—, A I It "'ll lilt Thomas A. Cooper, Marvin F. Matkins, James G. Whitby, Thos. H. Cook, Jr, Elmer E. Chambliss, Randall White, Robert L. ill lllllll iiiiifliillmi _Harris, Joseph A. Crouch, Davie L. Harper, Brutas W. Rook, Robt. R. Northingtn, Eugene BasU Glover, William O Moody, Frank W. Harris, Wayne C. Green, Rufus S. Finch, Lawrence W. My rick, Walter G. Cooley, Charlie L. Whitby, Melbourne Barry Jones. Robert A Rogers, Rnfas J. T Wood ruff, Clinton P. Deberry, Herbert S. Edwards, H. Charles Leatherwood, Jr, John Wayne Thomas, Alex Bullock, Jr., Frank P. Hunter, Cecil Coburn, Wilbur Anderton. ft VOLUME XXXI_ROANOKE RAPIDS, N. C.,THURSDAY, APRIL 4th, 1946 NUMBER 27 *Negro Shot Dead After Stealing Car After stealing an automobile on March 18 belonging to Mrs. Katie B. Cooke, Hamilton street, Eddie .Tones, negro, was shot to death ff last week by Princess Ann County (Virginia) officers. Jones, according to Police Chief H. E. Dobbins, after stealing the car took it to Richmond, accom panied by several other negroes. After “hanging around” there for a few days, the negroes went to Norfolk. Officers there noting sus picious actions of the negroes started to close in on the car and 0 Jones, it is said, jumped from the vehicle .with a gun in his hand and attempted a get-away. Officers opened fire on him killing him in stantly. The other negroes were rounded up. Willie Lashley, one of the negroes involved, was arrested here last Saturday by Chief Dob bins and FBI Agent Stewart. Two others arrested in connection with the theft were Wilson Lashley, Pfy 17, and Eddie Louis Arrington, 17. Ministerial Association Holds Meet The Roanoke Ministerial Asso ciation met in Weldon Metehodist -'Church last Monday at 10:30 a. m„ with the president, Rev. D. L. Fouts, presiding. The program con sisted Of an address by Mrs. W. R. Stevens of Roanoke Rapids on the subject, “The Pastor’s Ministry to the Children.” Mrs. Stevens dis cussed different ways in which the pastor might make his Ministry to the children more effective. Immediately following the ses ’ sion a meeting of the Roanoke rPRapids Ministers was called by the president, Rev. B. Marshall White Hurst. The following program and plans were made with the co-op eration of all the churches of the city: Pre-Easter services are to be conducted the week preceeding Easter from Monday to Friday from 12:15 to 12:40 noon in Rose mary Baptist Church and the ^First Methodist Church. The pub is invriea ro aitena ana is urged to come dressed as you are for work. s The Easter Sunday Sunrise ser vice is being planned by a com mittee composed of Rev. L. A. Til ley, Rev. Edmund Berkeley and Rev. Peter Dinges with Rev. W. R. Stevens as preacher for the ser vice. Simultaneous Vacation Church Schools are being planned to be IJfconducted in all the churches from June 17th tb June 28th. The time of evening services in all the churches is being changed next Sunder to 8 o’clock p. m. The public is asked' to make a note of the change. Playgrounds Equipment Is Ordered For City Schools The annual Kiwanis Minstrel for 1946 has been staged, and the club thanks all those who parti cipated in the show, ticket pur chasers, and advertisers for their cooperation in making the show a success. . As previously announced, the Kiwanis Club promised to use the entire proceeds cleared from the minstrel to buy and equip the city schools with playgrund equipment. The project gained unanimous ap proval from the various Parent Teacher Associations of Rosemary, Central, Clara Hearn Vance Street, and John Armstrong Chaloner School, and the P. T. A. of each school offered to increase the amount given by the Kiwanis Club thus providing each school with even more equipment than origin ally anticipated. This week an order amounting to $1,930 was placed for the equip ment, approximately two-thirds of which will be given by the Kiwan is Club. The club will be respon sible for installing and putting up all the equipment when the ship ment arrives. Typhoid Vaccine Given at Clinic Typhoid vaccine will be given at Rosemary Clinic every Tuesday and Thursday, it was announced today. The hours for giving the vaccine will be from 11 to 12 a. ei., and 7 to S p. m. This treat ment for the prevention of typhoid began last Tuesday and will con tinue until May 16. Army Day Will Be Celebrated by Wildcat Veterans Veterans of the historic 81st cr Wildcat Division will meet Fri day night at 8:00 o'clock at the Hotel Weldon to celebrate “Army Day.” James E. Cahall of Washington, D. C., national adjutant of the Wildcat Veterans will aettend and address the vets. Plans for the great National Homecoming Re union, jointly of the new and old Wildcats will be discussed, and refreshments will ba served. i Will Launch Emergency , Conservation Of Food Plan C. L. Kelly, chairman of Halifax County A. C. A., has been appoint ed manager of Halifax County Emergency Food Program. Mr. Kelly is calling a meeting of all school superintendents, school principals, vocational teachers, ru ral preachers, civic club leaders and any other interested persons to meet in the auditorium of the Helafix County Office Building in Halifax on Tuesday, April 9th, at 2:30 p. m., for the purpose of ^i.QfUfigino1 nlono for a mi/ln emergency food conservation pro gram as requested by President Truman and Secretary of Agricul ture Anderson. The purpose of this meeting is to develop a county pro gram to reach every individual in Halifax County, both white and colored with the need for the con servation of wheat, fats and oils and the increased production and use of substitute foods. < Secretary of Agriculture Ander son says, “Millions of our fellow human beings in other lands face prospects of starvation in spite of help given so far and look to this country for immediate aid.” President Truman’s Famine Em ergency Committee has called on America to cut consumption of wheat by 40 percent and of fats and oils by 20 percent to pro vide export shipments to starva tion areas abroad. This will be an open meeting and all interested persons who are willing to help with this pro gram are invited to attend. Oliver D. Fitts Given Discharge Coxswain Oliver D. Fitts, Jr., has received his honorable dis charge from the Naw. Fitts, son jt Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Fitts, 1917 Roanoke Avenue, enlisted in the service July 22, 1943, and served 20 months overseas. He was award ed the ETO ribbon, Asiatic-Pacific and American defense ribbons, Philippine Liberation and Victory medals., John West Dies At Maurice Home John L. West, 73, died last Thursday evening at 6:10 o’clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Maurice on Hamilton street. Funeral services were conducted last Saturday afternoon from the Rural Hall Methodist Church. Mr. West, a long-time resident of this city, was postmaster of Rosemary from 1922 to 1934 when he retired from active business. f-' ’• •' -t-lf Convicted of Double Murder In Northampton County This Week; Death Date May 24th Oakes Made Chairman Of Cancer Drive For County Albert W. Oakes, Jr., of Weldon, has been appointed Halifax Coun ty chairman of the campaign for funds during i-his month for the American Cancer Society. Mr. Oakes has accepted this respon sible chairmanship and is now en gaged in perfecting a county or ganization to make every effort to raise this county’s quota of' the $12,000,000 national goal. In asking the cooperation of the people of Halifax County Mr. Oakes gave out the following in formation on the work of prevent ing cancer: At present three people die every 10 minutes of cancer. Did you know that one of these three can be saved? When detected early enough, and treated effectively, at least 30 to 50 percent of cancer cases can be cured. That is a wonderful message of hope. To save those who now die need lessly, and to increase the num ber who can be saved, we must do these three vital things: 1. Spread knowledge everywhere of the danger signals of cancer and urge people to consult a doc tor in time to be saved. 2. Provide far more and much better hospital facilities for pre vention, diagnosis and treatment of cancer. 3. Expand widely the scientific research attack which will lead to more effective treatment and pos sibly even the elimination of can cer. We must organize to do these three things as thoroughly and ef fectively as scientists were organ ized to solve the problem of the atomic bomb. The American Can cer Society has developed a pro gram to do this. Last year it raised $4,000,000 to establish a beachhead for such action. This year it is asking $12,000,000 for an All-Out attack! Funeral Services For Whitley Held Funeral services for Aubrey Whitley, 39, and Harvey Lane, both of whom were drowned in the Chowan river last Sunday after noon, were held last Sunday after noon from the Baptist Church in Woodland. Whitley, a resident of Rich Square, was the brother of Mrs. H. I. Pepper, of Roanoke Rapids. He was married and the father of two children. Edward Floyd, 39-year-old white man, was this week found giulty of the murder of his father-in-law, Wade Cook, 62, and his sister-in law, Miss Rosa Cook, by a North ampton County jury. Presiding Judge John J. Burney sentenced Floyd to die ?in the gas chamber at State’s Prison on Fri day, May 24. The crime for which Floyd was given the death sentence was committed on Saturday night, Nov ember 10, at the home of his father-in-law, about three miles from Roanoke Rapids in North ampton County. Floyd, it was said at that time, had been hunting and after coming home late in the afternoon was asked by Rosa Cook to get in some wood. Floyd re plied, according to testimony, that he had gotten in “all the wood I'm going to get in today.” A short while later the family sat down at the supper table to eat the evening meal. Floyd was called for supper and pulled his chair out to sit down and then said: “I’ve got ro wasn my nanus. Going out on the back porch for this purpose he came back through the dining room, went to his bed room and appeared within a few moments in the door of the hall with a .22-calibre rifle in his hand and began shooting. He killed Miss Rosa Cook first and then shot Wade Cook to death. In a struggle with his wife and another sister in-law, Clyde Cook, and his moth er-in-law, Mrs. Wade Cook, for possession of the rifle, Mrs. Floyd Cook was shot through the thumb, Miss Clyde Cook was shot through the jaw and his mother in-law was kicked over two chairs. Floyd's attorneys, Gay & Mid yette, of Jackson, entered a plea of insanity, based on the fact that two of Floyd’s uncles committed suicide and a brother died in the State Hospital for the Insane. No motive for the crime was estab lished. Solicitor Ernest Tyler handled the case for the state, assisted by Crew & Crew of Roanoke Rapids as private prosecutors. James W. Cannon Gets Discharge James W. Cannon, MAM3/C, 1016 Henry Street, Roanoke Rap ids, has been given his honorable discharge from the Navy at the naval personnel separation center, Shoemaker, Cal., it was announced today. Conduct Medal Is Awarded Graham Word has been received by Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Graham that their oon T/Sgt. William C; Graham has been awarded the Good Cnduct Medal. Sgt. Graham entered ser vice on July 1, 1842, and is now stationed in Peiping, China, with the Marine Air Corp.