Watch The Label On Your Paper, Aj It Carrie* The Date Your Subscription Expires THE ENTERPRIS Advertisers Will rind Ot^r Col- 1 umni A Latchkey To Over 1,600 Home* Of Martin County. 1 ' VOLUME XLIV?NUMBER 57 Williamtlon, Martin County, North Carolina, Friday, July 18, 1941. - ESTABLISHED 1899 Judge W.H. Coburn Calls Seven Cases In Recorders Court Most uf Cases Are Continued For Trial Next Monday And Following Week Calling seven cases and continuing most of them for trial next Monday and the week following, Judge W H. Coburn spent a greater part of the morning clearing the case charg ing Ben Rogers with an assault with a deadly weapon from the docket. RugtflS malntaihed he was innocent, and a long review of the assault was aired in detail before the court. Ad judged guilty, Rogers was sentenced to the roads for a ierm of four months, the court suspending judg ment upon payment of the costs and assured good behavior for the next two years. Rogers was said to have dangerously cut Walter Hester and Joe Henry Brown at Hollis' mill on the Williamston-Hamilton road the latter part of June. Brown under went hospital treatment for several days. tiru.i.. *u? ntt . i . mine me \n uet-cuuiga uiieicu nothing that could be classed as sen sational or spectacular, a fairly large crowd was present for the last Mon day session. FotTr of the seven new cases on the docket were continued. Charged with issuing a worthless check, J M Davidson was sentenc ed to the roads for a term of two months. It was about the first, if not the first bad check ease lo rnme he fore the court carrying a road sen tence. I if hearty every other case. and there have been many heard in the court during recent years, the court suspended judgment upon pay ment of the check and the costs of the court Apparently unable to do either, the defendant in this case drew a term on the roads. The check, it is understood, was written in the sum of about $80. The case charging Clarence Wil with cutting James "Preacher" Ruf fin and Ruffin with cutting Joe Fer rell and Ferrell with an assault with a deadly weapon were continued for trial on the 28th of this month. The case chraging Clarence Wil liams Lynch with drunken driving was continued for the defendant un til next Monday Pleading not guilty in the case charging him with an assault with a? deadly weapon, Ralph Langley was adjudged guilty of a simple as sault. He was sentenced to the coun ty jail for a term of thirty days to be consigned to the county home where he is to work under the direction of the superintendent during that time. Farm Labor Scarce In Most Sections Farm hands, potato harvest work ers, and truck crop workers, have been placed with approximately one hundred farmers this season by the Williamston office of the State Em ployment Service. An outpost office was maintained tills sfrison at AiiroiH to sttoolv in bor for the potato harvest of Beau fort County. Several thousand place ments were made during the 19.41 harvest-season, by the farm place ment interviewers, Curtis Gilliam and S D Smithwick. ' Much of the labor directed- and placed by the Employment" Service men was from Southern states, who follow harvest seasons up the Atlan tic coast Several hundred workers were recruited from nearby points of eastern Carolina. Manager C. W. Bazemore,, of the Williamston of fice, and C W E Pittman. Farm Placement Supervisor for N. C., stat ed this week that the farm place ment men have had their most suc cessful season, handling labor for the 1941 crop. Contacts are now being made with many of the larger tobacco growers of this section, in assisting them with their labor needs for this season's to bacco crop. Farm labor is "tight" in some sections, and not plentiful in any area, at the present time, Baze more said. To Organize Youth Fellowship Forum Carrying out a program adopted at the Young People's Conference at Montreat in June, there will gather in the Williamston Christian Church next Tuesday evening the young people from all over the Roanoke District to organize a Youth Fellow ship Forum. This organization pro - pr>?eg to carry On the work hegnn in conference and to make its teach ing more effective in the church and the lives of those who attended con ference. The young people from all of the fourteen Christian churches in Mar tin County are urged to be present to welcome those who come from adja cent counties. Miss Sibyl Spencer, of Columbia, is acting secretary, and is writing the churches and young peo ple of the district to be preseht at S o'clock, Tuesday, July 22nd. Miss Evelyn Griffin is president of the local young people's Christian Endeavor Society and will complete plans for welcoming the guests at the Sunday evening meeting of the local group. Plans Being Formulated For Scrap Aluminum Collection With defense officials pointing out the seriousness of an aluminum shortage in the nation, public-spir ited citizens are rapidly formulating plans for a complete round-up of the "precious" metal in this county next week. Detailed plans will be an nounced next" week, but during the meantime, every householder is earnestly urged to start searching the corners and out-of-the-way places for a discarded pot or pan. It has been conservatively estimated that the aluminum shortage will approx lmate 500 million pounds in 1941 and national defense authorities declare that every pound of the metal that can be retrieved will be of value in defending the nation and our own hides along with it. Named Martin County Chairman of the North Carolina Council of Defense this week. Attorney Hugh G Horton has called upon Clerk'of Court L. B. Wynne to head the aluminum collection for the county, as a whole, but the voluntary coop- ] eration of everyone is necessary if the canvass is to produce results. Mr. Wynne is now mapping his plans of procedure. Collection places will be designated, while in Wil liamston the Boy Scouts are making ready to make a direct canvass of homes and places of business for aluminum. The day for the canvass will be-announced the early part of next week. The campaign is not limited to towns, Mr Wynne explaining that an aluminum pot or pan that can be found any place is wanted by the government. While no one is being asked to surrender those pots and pans now in use, it is a fact that some people are giving their aluminum ware away and replacing it with oth er types of pots and pans. Issue Last Warning To Non-Tax Listers -COTTON STAMPS Received here yesterday, ap nroximatelv S8.0<>? ?nHh ..f cot, tun surplus marketina stamps will be distributed to eooperat ina farmers in this county be ainnina about the middle of next week. T. B. Slade, assist ant to the county aaent, an nounced today. Farmers will be notified by direct mail when to call for the stamps with in structions to report to the office where they will sian for their purrhasina stamps. Additional cotton stamps will be made ready for distribution just as soon as compliance with the proaram is determined. Daylight Saving Time Is Virtually Certain In State VtilinilHry ( m?rs t?i havu th^ doors swung wide open. The last prisoner, a white woman charged with drunken driving, was released Wednesday afternoon, and Jailer Peel has been literally holding his breath for fear another wayward; soul will be housed before he ran en-1 joy a few more days' "vacation " Wihle the jailer is hopeful for a respite during the remainder of to- j day and early tomorrow, he doesn't even have the slightest hope the I week end will pass without ;i drunk en visitor or two before the week end is spent. It is encouraging to society when j an empty jail is reported, but the jail record in this county, and it is fairly, certain that conditions are no worse here than in others, is really ditihourtciung. During recent yeurs. per capita arrests have more than doubled with the exception of short, periods, and the age of the prisoners . is going lower and lower to include I fairly large numbers of boys and a , few women and girls. Draw Order Numbers For New Registrants Eddie Smith's Name Is the First Called In County Last Night J Nth Order Number** To Be* ~ FiltereilTnto Obi Lint, Be ginning w itli No. S-567 ? One hundred and forty-four young Martin County men were given their respective places in the national de fense program under the Selective Service Act last night when order numbers for all new registrants were drawn m the second national lottery held in Washington. Eddie Lee Smith's name was the first one called in this county. He is a colored man and gives his address as H F I). 1. Oak City. When filter ed into the old list of order numbers, Smith's number will be S-587 which means that^fu? will be subject to call in the very near future Richard Haywood Reed, colored of Williams ton R. F. D. 3, was the next* man whose name was called. His order number is S-586. Julius Edward Gur ganus, of R. F. D. 1, Williamston, was the first young white man in the county whose number was called. His order number is S-605 If the order numbers in the second letter last night had been drawn in dependently of the first, Eddie Lee Spnth would have No. 1. Richard j Haywood l^ee would have No. 2, and Julius Edward Gurganus would have No. 3 and so on. On June 30, 548 order numbers drawn in the first lottery had been exhausted. In the second registration, 144 men regis tered in this county, and they are be ing filtered into the old list, taking their turn one out of every nine teen All those men having new or dcr numbers ranging below 1,010 ure subject to call to the service with a short time, because all of the old draft numbers from 548 up to l,(r49j have been virtually exhausted in filling the July quotas, meaning that about 28 of the new registrants are in line for immediate service, possi bly beginning with the colored in late August and the white in Sep tember. Those new registrants with order numbers above 1,049 will get their calls along with "the old regis trants at the ratio of about 1 to 18 Official order numbers have not been certified to the draft board in his countyr^but based on a prelim inary report on the lottery last night, the new registrants in this county will have the order numbers listed below An order number~for William Arthur Goeen, Williamston colored man, was lost in the published report and as a result a variation of one is to be expected in the numbers of the other registrants. For the most part, (Continued on page six) Eleven Selectees Leave This County j county yesterday for Fort Jackson, South Carolina, where they will be inducted into the Army providing the meet physical requirements. For the first time there were no volunteers included in a group of colored young men to, leave this county. Fifteen were scheduled to leave for the fort, Two, John J Joe Cherry, now of Portsmouth, will enter the service at the call of the draft boards in those' two towns. Council Cornelius Smith was defer red pending the examination of an appeal for reclassification, and Ar mand Lee Ward, who is said to be in Chester, Pa., failed to report. The names of the draftees leaving yesterday; Rhoden Purvis, Johnnie Peel, Curtis Roberta, Rufus Jones Jones, William Henry Wiggins, Goerge Spencer Jones, Henry Thom as Peel, Abram Fonville, James Jas per Neal and James Arthur Grimes. Twenty-seven youn#> white men are scheduled to leave the county next Wednesday. DKAFI' QUOTAS Martin County is being called upon to furnish twenty-nine men?fourteen white and fifteen colored?for the nation's arm ed forces during the month of August. The fourteen white men are to be inducted on August 6. and the fifteen colored selectees are to leave on August 22, the county draft board was notified today. While it is possible that a few of the new colored registrants will be included in the next quo ta, it is certain that none of the new white registrants will be called next month because there isnt' sufficient time for the draft machinery to complete its oper ations. Postal Receipts \t The Local Office Show Small Lain -s>~ Money Order llii?iiiew< Kr [lertH llrallliy Inerease During l'a?l Quarter On the outer fringe of defense ac ! tivities to the north and to the south. Williamston is feeling no direct and very little- indirect stimuli from the defense program However,?Post- | mast or I.eslie T. Fowdft \ reports " slight gain in his postal receipts from the quarter ending June 30, indicat ing that as far as normal business is concerned, the office is doing a lit tle more than holding its own. The gain would also indicate that gen eral business is maintaining a for ward advance.. ??? During the three months ending ill June, stamp sales at the local office totaled $5,263.72 compared with $5, 228.74 in the corresponding quarter a year ago. The postmaster still maintains that the receipts represent a large sale of one , two- and three cent stamps. Receipts were reported by months for the second quarter of this year, as follows April, $1,834.78; -j May, $1,732 39, and June, $1,696.55, j compared with the same period of last year, April, $1,821 34, May, $1, 705.75, and June, $1,701 65 Announcing the receipts for the period, Postmaster Fowden pointed out that franked mail, (mail requir ing no postage) is still beyig handled in large quantities The money order business for the period reflects a spurt, especially for the last two months in the qiiarteif. After falling below the April figured a year ago, the business regained the loss and went on to show a sub stantial increase in May. The.June business increase was proportionate ly larger, the total for the recent quarter amounting tu $23,410.01 as compared with $17,886.76 in the cor responding quarter of 1940 The gain for the last quarter over that report ed in the same months of last year was placed at $5,523 25. # Named Member Of Attorney's Croup Wheeler Martin, secretary of the Martin County Building and Ixian Association, received word today of States Savings and Loan League for 1941. Paul Endicott, Pomona, Calif.' president of the league made the ap pointment aad the appointee said that he will accdph ThcV;ommitt>e includes twenty five savfTTgiKtfnd loan association at torneys and executives who sponsor the activities of the national organi zation specially designed for law yers in the savings and loan institu tions. They sponsor a monthly pub lication for savings and loan attor neys and a sectional meeting of the lawyers at the annual convention of the United States League, to be held this year in Miami, Fla., December 1-5. Farmers To Discuss V ital Problems At Meeting Next Week \lal>amu Farm Kurruii Pre? To Sp?'uk in (?reen \ill?' \i-xl Friilav ? . Concerned with vital questions facing North Carolina agriculture us a result of the present unstabiliz ed conditions, Fariii Bureau leaders in this State are calling a meeting for a discussion of those problems to be held in Greenville next Friday. The -meeting y our nf fnnr tn he htdij? in the State during next week, and Martin County Farm Bureau-mem bers and others are invited to at tend The meeting is to get underway piomptly at 3 o'clock. The discussions will be under the supervision of Walter 1. Randolph, president of the Alabama Farm Bur eau Federation, and an expert on the cotton problems of the south. Mr. Randolph was one of the leaders in the congressional fight for 85 per cent parity In addition to Mr Ran dolph, J B. But son, president of the Commodity Credit Corporation and perhaps the best informed mail in the United States on flue-cured to bacco, will address the Greenville meeting, and Don Kilguie, executive secretary of the Kentucky Farm Bur eau and James ThTgpen of the Agri cultural Adjustment Administration will address the Ashe_ville_ and f;if"iKkii-ii . Hiiwnvpr Mr Shaw states that I. W Duggan, di -icotor of?the?Southern?Region, has been invited to discuss the cotton sit uation. President w ins low and Secretary Shaw state that these meetings are being called for the following pur poses: To explain Farm Bureau Parity Loan Legislation recently passed by Congress and the benefits each in dividual farmer will receive front this new legislation To plan organized movement throughout the State to get this temporary parity legislation made permanent To inaugurate a campaign for par ity loan heiii lib, to producers of nouiJaasic crop., like truck- crops, vegetables, etc. The North Carolina Farm Bureau, says Secretary Shaw, is very proud of its record in cooperation with the American Farmjlureau in sponsor ing the recent parity loan legislation in Congress which will mean $25, 000.,000 additional "money to our growers of tobacco, cotton, peanuts, and vvtiont :u?l WI- :u.i __an vimiiw In explain all details of this new legis lation to the larmers of the State, particularly just how each individ ual farmer will benefit therefrom. Wr -hope, therefore; itrat we WTtt" from every county at the district (Continued on pa&j six) Father Of Local Man Dies In Pitt F.unerul services weie held Wed nesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the home near Pqctotus in Pitt County for Mr George Gilbert Ward, prom inent farint r and respected citizen, who died Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock following u brief illness. Rev. 1) W Arnold conducted the funeral. Interment was in the family ceme tery, near the home, members of the Grimesland Masonic Lodge, of which he was a member for over forty years, conducting the last rites at the grave. Mr. Ward, 70 years old, was unus ually active for his advanced age, and was busily and contently occu pied with the duties on his farm on Wednesday of last week. Late that night he suffered a stroke of paralys is. The stroke was followed by a second one last Saturday, after which little hope was held for his recovery. Fifty-one years ago Mr. Ward married Miss Sally Rodgers, of Beaufort County, and she survives with the following children, John A. Ward, m-uI WilUamston; Aldolphus Ward and Mrs Archie Bullock, of Eaetolus; Asa Ward, of Gates Goun ty, Mrs Hoyt Leggett, of Stokes; Mrs. W. L. Edwards, of Newport News; Roy Ward, of Greenville, and Paul Ward, of Chester, Pa He also leaves several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. ; ? , ~ Start Paving River Fill In Two Weeks ?'"CM I'H m g to an official report re LClVL'd lll'll' 111 IS uftl'l'llUOII fl'OHl Cuu tractor B. H. Martin, of Easley, S. C., paving work on the Roanoke River fill at this point will be start ed in two weeks, weather permit ting. The contractor also said that the project would be completed In sixty <}ays. The dirt fill has been finished, the contractors. Kiker and Yount, haul ing the last load of dirt on the cause way last Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock Recent rains, making the route almost impassable, have washed the sides to some extent and more dirt had to be hauled to fill In the washouts, but as far as the fill itself is concerned work on it was completed Wednesday.