le Home Sphere Edited by I MISS FLORENCE COX |ome Demonstration Agent *jjss Estelle M. Edwards jtaiit Home Dem. Agent Landing \Vork Si.iiiig Hill Home Demon on C Inb has done an out piece of work for the i ,during February. The l a i.nly 11 active members I three associate members and ■thev made and turned in the leva . garments and articles; hided scarfs, 3 pair of hos hcdroam mules, 15 kit bags, wives for placing in the lias and 2(! hospital bed pun I,.. In addition to the work |nll Miner of the club is acting tha :■ nan of the Red Cross ell 1 VC now under way for Hill sect1 n. Mrs. .1. r +*."« • b. an pring n.,1 club. I. i,. liarnhill is president, W. r. Locke is vice-president, M Fleming, Secretary |M. K. E. Edmonds is Treas |] , lubs doing excellent f the Red Cross are Daw au i Roseneath. The Dawson Ip .corks under two chapters, Enfield and Scotland Neck, have made 24 kit bags and (busewives for one chapter and |f each for the other. Mrs. Hands is chairman for the lelH Chapter and Mrs. L. J. lhill for the Scotland Neck jiti r Officers are Mrs. C. N. Ell. President; Mrs. O. C. Jk . Viee-prtesident and Mrs. Barnhill. Secretary and R ,,-eneath Club turned in bags, G bed pan covers, l d, for wheel chair patients S2.hu as donation to the Red s Fund drive. In addition distributed material for ing other Red Cross articles are busy raising Red Cross s in the community. Mrs. . Lovegrove is looking alter work. Officers are President J. i. Pittman; Vice-president T I!. Whitehead; Secretary Treas, Mrs. J. E. Condrey. pr-Hath Canners: e War Production Board the water bath canners will (n.ule available for home can this year They will be on market beginning probably [pril These canners are to be in canning tomatoes, fruits other acid foods They will standard size, holding seven [t jars jr Prospects S' U. i. Department of A gri pe says sugar prospects are not for the regular ration ■!> le sugar, but sugar for otii purposes will be limited. There those who expect to can s this year should start now icon rve and plan ahead. A mgar saved here and a lit [there will add up to a stock for use in canning and pre hir. The sugar that the fam p e.- irom the regular allow th. family is sure of hav j and besides it may be used [pro erves, jelly or pickles as a- for canning. Ig Lasting Cloth — pent tests made by the Bu of Home Economics show for work clothes gabardine, Ringbone twill or Whipcord longer lasting qualities. The le yarns used per square inch Is more wear, and there should pbout the same number runn ln>th ways. lit Now -- Pant in your vegetable gard during March the following gs. Asaparagus crowns for year, snap beans, beets, cab le plants, carrots, chard, Sweet corn, kale, kolil-rabi, leek, lettuce, mustard, onion seeds son, parsley, parsnips, gard |]>eas, irish potatoes, radish, .-alsify, new Zealand spin spinach and turnips. For J>> of these second and third ptu.f ■ should lie made GIVE TO THE |l||p RED CROSS NOTICE !l a Bed Cross War Fund J^'citor lias not called on you ■use be sure your contri iut*°n gets in to the local hapter. ‘CHINERY Repairing farm machinery and it in good running con ln immediately will save much e ar>d labor when it is vitally ded in sowing spiring crops, Extension specialists at State lege. THE ROANOKE NEWS ESTABLISHED IN 186fi — SERVING HALIFAX AND NORTN AMPTON COUNTIES KEEP ON with WAR BONDS Seventy-Sixth Year i ' Published Every Thursday — Weldon, North Carolina THURSDAY, MARCH 9th, 1941 Drive Started To Get Musical Instruments Instruments May Be Left At Any Place That Handles Bottled Coca-Cola. Wanted - musical instillments for our fighting men: In respon j se to a request from the Army, a !fv wide campaign to round up e banjos, saxaphones, and other musical instruments that are lying forogtten in closets and attics will begin here on March 13th. It will run for two weeks The Variety of instruments wanted is unlmited, except that pianos and bull fiddles are ex cluded because of their size, and phonographs because of a lack of facilities for keeping them in re pair at the front. Instruments collected in this nation wide drive will enable the soldiers in all parts of the world to form orchestras to entertain themselves and their camp bud dies. It will also enable them to engage in less formal musical recreation like gathering around in the evening and singing to the accompaniment of a banjo, har monica, or other instrument. j Because of their distribution1 facilities, the Army has asked the' “Coca-Cola” Bottlers all over the country to act as collecting a. j gents for this drive. Any person who has any idle musical instru ments is asked to take them to any grocery store, filling station, drug store, or other place that sells bottled “Coca-Cola”. The Bottling Company’s trucks will pick them up there and ship them immediately to the Army for dis tribution at Army camps all over the world. “There are hundreds, if not thousands of these instruments hidden away and forgotten in the closets and attics of homes in this city” said Mr. D. W. Seifert, Man ager of the Weldon Coca-Cola Bottling Works, Inc., Tli£ jkuieri-! can soldier loves his music, but he particularly likes to make his own. Through this campaign, we shall be able to help his life in camp and at the fronts a happier one.” RECORDERS COURTJEWS Allison Allsbrook, charged with being drunk and disorderly nol pros with leave. Donald Stanley Douvall, white of Laurel Md., charged with speeding nol pros with leave. Exum Wade, colored of Enfield was found guilty of illegal pos session of liquor and was given six months on the roads, suspend ed on payment of the costs and on condition he appear the first Tuesday of each month for two years and show good behavior. William Thomas Brown, white of Oak City charged with reckless driving was found not guilty. Carlton Gregory, charged with speeding nol pros with leave. Joseph C. Tant, white of En field was found guilty of speed ing and prayer for judgment con tinoed on payment of the costs and on condition he does not vio late any motor vehicle law for two years. John Smith, white of Roanoke Rapids, plead guilty to assault and was given five months on the roads, suspended on payment of the costs and on condition he re mains of good behavior for two years during which time he is not to visit (the home of William Thompson and on further condi tion he does not use any alcoholic beverage. Quincy Fox, colored of Enfield was found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon and was given three months on the roads. William Bryant, colored of En field wag found gjlilljy of feck less driving and hit and run and the prayer for judgment contin ued on payment of the costs and on condition he does not violate any criminal or motor vehicle law for two years. Frank Cole Writes His Mother From India * To: Mrs. Frank Cole, Weldon, N. C. U. S. A. From: S Sgt. F. A. Cole, Jr., 13032639 436th Bomber Sqdn (H) U. S. Army A.P.O. No. 886, Cr. Postmaster New York City. India Feb. 17th., 1944. Dearest Mom: Though, I really haven’t any news of interest about which to write, I'm writing as this is the first opportunity I have had to do so in several days. I realize you are primarily interested in my welfare and not in what I have to say. You will note in my address, I’m in another unit, and although I haven’t been in it long enough to pass judgment, I think I’ll get along just swell. I am sure of one thing about it, the food ;s 100 per cent better and to help things we do not use mess kits but eat family style, Perhaps you can’t appreciate that ditference, but let me assure you that it is quite a favorable change. I shall be happy to get out of the army, but I shall not be able to deny that it has taught mo much that should benefit me greatly. I have seen things, done tnings and gone places that would have been impossible other wise. MoS'o important, it has taught me that I’m proud and happy to be an American. In my last letter I wrote you that 1 had just spent a pleasant day with a Canadian family, but 1 dont think I gave you any par ticulars, Their names are Mr. and Mrs. Q. J. M'altby and they are in their middle fifties. They are excel ingly nice and hospitable and ap parently enjoyed having us almost as much as we enjoyed visiting them. They are from Mountroal and have been in India since 1938. I was invited to come back and certainly intend taking them up I on it, if, and when the opportu nity presents itself. They have a little colony com posed mostly of English families and each of them feels slighted un less we drop by to speak to them regardless of whose invitation we have accepted for the day. Each call entails a cup of tea and bis cuits. A biscuit to them is a cake to me. Although the English don’t have heavy meals they certainly eat often enough. Their schedule runs something like this: Break fast, tiffin (tea in the morning about ten) dinner at eight, and linally coffee. Possibly the coffee is for our benefit since they don’t seem to enjoy it too much, and frankly neither do I, as it is a far cry from American coflee. Usually I go with two other G. I’s. One of whom was a Penn sylvanian coal miner in civilian life, and to put it mildly, he ia quite forthright. The Maltbys get a great kick out of him and so do 1. They sfcryed pudding for dessert the other day and he was eating his with the soup spoon. He remarked it was just as good eaten with a spoon as with a fork and Mr. Maltby got a big laugh out of that. The other boy is a U of Arizona alumnus and form er Arizona state golf champion. I played with him and thoroughly enjoyed it, A few days ago I rap into a boy from Garysburg, Wthom you probably don’t know personally, but very likely know of, lie is Bill Collier and was owner of The Sinclair pltajtion across from Bounds Motor Company. He did not know any home news, but I was very happy to see him and to talk about old friends and mutual acquiantances who naturally were many, | I am quite well and send my love and best wishes to all of you, Your- devoted son, FRANK. Red Cross Field Men Tackle Yanks’ Problems Overseas One of the very important functions of the American Red Cross Is the direct communication it affords between the fighting man and his people back home. Here Red Cross Field Director John L. Barnes (left), of | White Plains, N. Y., gives a message to Sgt. William J. McDonald, Jr„ of Mamaroneck, N. Y. Picture was made In Sicily outside a straw Italian hutch with the rear headquarters of the 1st Division near Mt. Etna. On Masera Island, up In the Per sian Gulf, where there Is not a single tree standing and the wind blows across the Island ceaselessly. Red Cross field men brought fishing tackle, books and writing paper to service men. Most welcome gift from the Red Cross was clippers for hair cutting—the boys had been without a barber for months. In Persia, a Red Cross Field Di rector w-as able to locate a soldier’s mother whom he hadn't seen for 25 years. jn "— field men <■ :h-hiked In supply i.— ; Jeeps over bombed convoy iJL. s. through blinding sand storms and glaring sun to help men with personal problems and emergency commu nications, and to deliver magazines and books, cigarettes and chocolate to isolated posts and bjgses. In Italy, Red Cross j(eld men ac companied Cue uoo^t? .n on the in vasion barges. In India, a sergeant was sen tenced to tlie guard house for dis orderly conduct. His officer couldn’t understand the boy’s behaviour. He was a nice kid—he’d never gone to pieces before. The officer asked the Red Cross Field Director to see him. The Red Cross man discovered a very wor ried boy. His wife had not been re ceiving his allotments, she wasn’t well and needed an operation. She thought the soldier must have can celled his allotments and a misun derstanding had arisen between them so that she was no longer writing him. The field man got in touch with the Red Cross chapter in the boy’s home town Immediately. It took care of her. financed her operation | and saw that she had adequate funds to provide for herself until the allotment again came through. When the Red Cross man ex plained what had happened to the soldier’s Commanding Officer, the latter promptly released the boy from the guard house. From then on the boy was all right. His wor ries were over, and the Army had gained a good fighting man. All over the world, In every the atre of war and active battle front go the American Red Cross field men—helping soldiers with major and minor personal problems, bring ing them recreational items such as magazines, books, comfort articles, athletic equipment and re-establish ing their contact with home. These men share the conditions and haz ards under which the soldiers fight. They also share their lives. They are on call day and night whenever they are needed. G.l.’s overseas have many prob lems. Often home seems very, very far away. With the Red Cross there at hand wherever he may be, the soldier knows he can always get In | touch with home — that he need j never feel alone with problems he doesn’t know how to solve himself. More than 3,000,000 service men , passed through Red Cross field men’s otiices last year. On the mud clogged roads of Italy, through the tar jungles of New Guinea, on lonely desert posts, Red Cross field men take your place beside your boy. In order to con tinue this service, the Red Cross urgently needs contributions from the American people to its $200. 000,000 War Fund drive this month Weeks Will Run For House Seat Blind Judge of Tarboro Enters Democratic Race; Post Held fcy Kep. Kerr Cameron C. Weeks of Tarboro, (Edgecombe County judge and former State legislator has an nounced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for U nited States representative for the Second Congressional Dis trict. In an interview on January 22, Weeks stated that he probably, would be a candidate in the May primary. Blind since the age of 20. he is a graduate of the Uni-1 versify of North Carolina Law School and has practiced law in Edgecombe County for several years. Weeks served in the General Assembly in 1941 and was noted for his efforts in bringing about the passage of a number of bills beneficial to agriculture in that session. Weeks’ Statement Mr, Weeks formally announced his candidacy with this statement: “For many months I have ser iously considered the question of becoming a candidate for U. S. representative in the second con gressional district. After serious thought, encouragement from a j reasonable amount of forces andj because I personally want to be: a United States representative, I1 have decided to become a candi date for the Democratic nomina tion for United States represen tative in the second district. "From now until the primary, May 27, I will do everything hon Don Ward Trains At Florida Base Miami Beach, Fla.,—Donald C. Ward, son of Mrs. W. J. Ward of Weldon, N. C., has begun studies at Army Air Forces Officer Can didate School here, which, when success.'ully lomplrted, will qua lify him for commission as a sec ond lieutenant in the Air Fore Ga. He came to Miami Bench from Tinker Field, Oklahoma , itv, Okl., where he held the rank of ^ Staff Sergeant. Before entering the army, he attended University of North Ca rolina in Chapel Hill, N. C. Officers trained here direct vi-' tal administrative and supply op erations of the AAF. oruble that I can to win the elec tion. "If elected, I will to the best of my ability help win the war and restore to our country and dis trict the kind of life to whch we are entitled. Living in the great est agricultural district, certainly in the United States, if not in the world, every farmer expects me to be his friend, and actively so, I will to the best of my ability represent all fairly, honestly and without fear whatsoever. The lit tle man, the wage earner, the un organized public—they are the people who make up our district and I will represent them and their views. /“As for (the serviS^man and his family, they can put me down as forever being indebted to them, remembering that while I cannot fight with them, there is nothing that can prevent nay fighting for them.” Two Soldiers Killed In Collision Car-Motorcycle ) - i iTarboro Man Bein^ Held 1 For Manslaughter The Chaplain’s Corps BY RUTH TAYLOR H. I. Phillips, that typical A merican columnist, who can turn a quip with the best of them, and make you laugh with his home style humor, can with equal skill touch your heartstrings with his sincere devotion to the ideals that are American. I ,Recently Mr. Phillips wrote a fine tribute to the Chaplains Corps - that unselfish, whole souled body of men, who, owning allegiance to the spirit of the Working democracy that is the United States, own a still higher, allegiance to that God in our na tion trusts. They may be Catho lic, Protestant or Jew - they may differ in creed - but they are a like in their devoton, and in their faith that to God all things are possible. Theirs is a fine tradi tion, to which they are adding1 greater laurls on battle fronts all ^ over the w'orld. “The priest who puts the water on dry lips, The rector leading tired men in prayer - The rabbi with the word of Abra ham, Each doing quietly his holy share., j These are the men who ease the weary path, e Who touch the heart and heal the harassed soul. Who kep the vision of the boy hood day, i Preserving things learned at a 1 mothers knee.” Anyone with a man at the front - and what family today hasn’t a man there ? - feels better be- j cause of these men. They are the unarmed soldiers, going without weapons into the battle. They face, unafraid because of their laith, the same dangers that con 1 front the wen who turn to them 1 for comfort. Never faltering in their duty, they are, at all times, ministers unto men, teachers of the truth, preachers of the way, consolers of the dying. “The Catholic, the Protestant, the Jew - As one they give the all sustain ing grace To those who die to keep our way of life Without regard to color, faith or race: Their’s is the symbol ol a nation strong, The force that makes a country's shield so bright; The Chaplain’s Corps of gallant Godlike men, Who blaze the way with the Eter nal Light.” All honor unto 'the chaplains of our armed forces! They, too, are heroes, of whom the whole na tion is proud and to whom we each owe a debt of gratitude. Money spent for War Bonds goes to the front. Sometimes it provides spectacular equipment like planes, oft times it buys a runty donkey like this American soldier Is taking ashore in Italy. The quicker your dollars go into action, the sooner it will be over. Buy More War Bonds. V. S. Treasury Department Two soldiers were reported killed in a mo.or ve i -le accident about eight miles i >rth of Kn field on route 301 M nd . ... at 8:45. Richard Stefano of Camp Rit chie, Md., and Wilmington was killed instantly, highway patrol men reported, when the motorcy cle on which he was riding was hit by a car driven by Garland Tuck of Tarbo>'0. Tuck, going south on route 301 was going * make a le t turn into route. 12o when he collided with the motor cycle, going north on route SOI, highway patrolmen said. Tuck left the scene of the ac cident but was apprehended at his home in Tarboro, patrolmen reported. Tuck’s sister, Bessie Tusk of Tarboro and a friend, James Wade of Conway, were rid ing with Tuck at the time of the accident and remained there, pa trolmen said. No one in the Tuck car was injured. J Pvt. Charles L. Parker of Washington, N. C., riding with Stefano on the motorcycle, died in a Rocky Mount hospital at 7 o’clock Tuesday morning. Parker was admitted to the hospital at 10:10 Monday night suffering from a broken neck and compound comminuted fracture of both legs, hospital authorities slated. Park er, unconscious at time of his ad mittance, failed to regain con-, sciousness, it was disclosed. Damage to the Tuck car w-as estimated at $350. The motorcy cle was burned when it collided with the Tuck auto, it was report ed. Tuck Is Held - - For Manslaughter Halifax—Garland Tuck of Tar boro is being' held here under $8, 000 bond on the pharge of man slaughter for trial Iday 1 in the Halifax county Superior court. The bond and the charge were fixed at a coroner’s inquest in Enfield Tuesday afternoon. Tuck was charged with driving the au tomobile which hit and killed Richard Stefano of Camp Ritchie, Md„ and Wilmington and p”*\ Charles L. Parker of Washing ton, N. C. The accident in which the two soldiers were killed occurred on Monday night at 8:45 on route 301 about eight miles north of Enfield, according to the report. The two soldiers were on a mo torcycle going north on route 301 when they were hit by the Tuck car going south on the highway and attempting to make a left turn into route 125, it was stag ed. Tuck left the scene of the acci dent but was apprehended in his home in Tarboro, highway patrol men reported. Stefano was killed instantly, patrolmen disclosed. Parker died in a Rocky Mount hospital Tuesday morning from a broken neck and compound com minuted fracture of both lego su'.fered in the accident, hospital authorities stated. Waves Enlist 30 Women For State Raleigh, March 7—The two weeks intensive drive for WAVES has been completed with considerable success, Lt. Lodwick Hartley, of ficer in charge of naval officer procurement for North Carolina announced today. Thirty North Carolina young women have enlisted and scores more have indicated their inten tions of serving in Navy blue in response to the urgent call for j all available womanpower. ! According to the figures releas ! ed by the Office of Naval Officer | Procurement today, the thirty ' enlistments are in themselves no j indication of the widespread in terest that the campaign has pro voked. One hundred and forty five applications have been re ceived from the Recruiting Ser 1 vice and its substations scattered I throughout the State. Many of these girls were unable to get to Raleigh during the two weeks of the campaign, but will be enlisted in the ensuing week.