The Enterprise Published Every Tuesday and Friday by the ILLJAMSTON, NORTjPCAROLINA. W. C. MANNING Editor ? 1908-1958 SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Strictly Cash in Advance) IN MARTIN COUNTY One year $1.75 Six" months 1.00 OUTSIDE MARTIN COUNTY One year $2 25 Six months 1.25 No Subscription Received Under 6 Months Advertising Rate Card Furnished Upon Request Entered at the post office in Williamston, N. C . as second-class matter under the act of Con gress of March 3, 1879 Address all communications to The Enterprise and not individual members of the firm. Friday.^iiif-nsl 1. l'JIl. Disciplinarians Aside from the merits of the case, it would appear that the CongresS is stepping out of its bounds when it goes in for disciplining the Army as a result of the General Lear case out in Tennessee It is approxirrfSting a farce when the Congress undertakes the role of disciplin arians. If the Army can't handle that problem, then it would be just as well for the Army to disband and go home. If the young men acted improperly, then the general was right 111 his action: If the general acted improperly then the general should he made to answer to the Army's code. But save the situa""" beep'"|| ? of the stinking political halls in Washington. From this distance it appears the trouble is traceable to lax morals in society. If the mothers had kept their daughters properly attired, the youthful soldiers would in all probability yoo hooed with reservations and saved an embar rassing situation. And personally it is a critical time for an old foggev general to . be playing around when there is so much work to be done, remembering that many of us would be ready to shoot a work er if he pulled off his overalls and donned a gold uniform The little incident, multiplied from a mole hill to a mountain in size, just goes to help show us what a mess we are in.?, "Democracy If orth D" "I'm mighty glad I'm living in a country where there is still freedom apd W'hpre I C3H pay taxes . . " "Everything considered, the proposed in creases are pretty low lower than I expected ihev'd be . . "Nobody likes to pay taxes, but in an emer gency such as this no one should complain "I can still leave my home without fear that 'luring niV absence ft will be bombed ami my family destroyed That's worth paying for ." From all parts of the country and from all walks of life, American citizens are voicing their willingness to pay the new inconfe tax schedules proposed by the House Ways and Means Committee. Most of the people, picked at random for questioning in a recent survey, made by the Philadelphia Record, are well sat isfied to foot the bill as the price of freedom and security in this land. The tax load is a tremendous one, but coun terbalancing are benefits which are many and substantial. A strong national defense, good government, schools and libraries, police and fire protection, fine streets and highways, parks and playgrounds?all these are the children of taxpayers. While it cannot be deniedTHat taxes have advanced in recent years, and are mount ing at a speedy rate now, neither may it be re futed that Americans today are receiving more for their tax dollar than ever before. The people of the United States of all the world should be the last to complain of taxes in this dark hour in history for a twinfold rea son. The first is because we receive more in re turn and enjoy a greater degree of liberty and security in this country from our tax dollar than do any other people under the sun. The other reason lies in the fact that while our taxes are high, they are small in comparison with the levies of foreign lands. In England and Germany, for example, taxes now exceed fifty per cent of all income. So, pay that tax bill cheerfully. Aid Uncle Sam in every way in the gigantic effort he is making to preserve the American way of life. Put your dollars to work building a strong and militant and impregnable nation. How much better it is to spend millions now than lose bil lions?or everything?later. Freedom and lib erty come cheap in America. Protect and main tain them. Pay your taxes with a smile. Let your slogan be: "Let's Go. U. S. A. Keep 'Em Flying." Democratic National Committee. Oil for I In- Shifts of Ja/Hin Christian Science Monitor. At the moment when the conflict of policy between the United States and Japan threat ens to become a conflict of forcfc-Americans are permitting the loading of Japanese tankers with hundreds of thousands of gallons of that essen tial of modern warfare?oil. Here ? the picture of the developing conflict as reported from Washington: ?1 At his pryi? ' ""flili'lll l1 lodnrlTr did not hesitate to predict a new Japanese move nor to add. in answer to a question, that the United States Navy was ready to back up Am erica'sTar Eastern policy . . . Under German pressure for action to restore the momentum of world Axis advance, the Island Empire is believed on the verge of new adventures. Mr. Knox's reference to a new Japanese move takes cognizance of threats to Russian terri tory and the apparently more immediate men ace to Indo-China. Any such Japanese move would imperil American interests in the Far East Yet it is possible for the Associated Press to report from San Pedro, Calif.: The Japanese tanker Tonan Maru II arrived yesterday, tenth such vessel within 11 days to -obtain oil cargoes for the Island Empire. American anti-Axis efforts already include broad-scale economic warfare, as implement ed by the blacklist of Axis-favored firms- in South America. If the United States is so close to possible naval collision with Japan, it is ri diculous and dangerous to let American com panies continue fueling her ships. i Slur In lis Crown The critics can start slowing up in their de nunciation and condemnation of the WPA, for the "undisputed facts clearly offer in bold,relief a star shining in the organization's crown. Word comes from Massachusetts stating that the hew and big airport at Kort Devens was completed by the WPA far ahead of schedule. Maybe the WPA is not so bad after all, and certainly not as bad as the critics have led us to believe lh' who reforms himself, has done more toward reforming the public, than a crowd of noisy, impotent patriots.?Lavater. This Is Your Invitation Hi*. Havuf Stoma* Greif Factory Representative ff ill Be With I t fHotidoif - Tufsdoy ond fVidncsdoy AugiiHi -f-ili. Slli ami 6th It'ith hit Fall tUt/tlay of Suit* and Overcoatt. (Rather hot to talk (Vcoati.) In face of the riting market, our advice to our cuilomert who prefer a cutlom-tailored suit, it to drop in and let Mr. Sloman take care of your requiremenlt. tkoHfotis Btotkeii* The Source Of Power.... By REV. JOHN HARDY Church Of The Advent THE CHCRCH S MISSION IS CHRIST'S MISSION "There are two familiar ways in which the sense of mission comes to ordinary people. It may come from finding something very good that we wartt to share. When we see a fine movie or read a good book or see a lovely view or meet a charming per son we want to share them with our neighbors. Or the sense of mission may come to us from being faced with an urgent need. There are few who would not run to help a hurt child or give a cup of water to a thirsty man. The sense of mission is most up-us-when these two ways meet, when we know something very | good that meets a need vividly seen. "Nothing is more marked in the life of our Lord than His sense of a mission. His whole life was shaped and energized by the constraint to bring the good He possessed to the need He saw with unclouded vision. His communion with His Father and the perfection of the Divine Charity constrained Him. The citizenship of the kingdom was a pearl of great price that men must not be allowed to miss. In a father welcoming a prodigal son, in a shepherd searching for a lost sheep, in the lilies of the field He saw truth that must be told. And equally in the tragedy of unfor given and unforgiving lives, in lives too busy for adoration, in the empty [folly of self-righteousness, in the. aimless 'Justness' of shepherdless men He saw need that must be met. The Father guided and energized the Son by the good He revealed to Him and by the need He disclosed to Him. "Christ communicated His own sense of a mission to His friends. If He had not done so we should not be in the company of those who hear again His words_anjLseek coftunun iftb With lllsSpirii and the fuller penetration of our live? by His life. Tht torn simply Christ's Mission carried on through the lives He draws into His service. "The Mission of the Church arose and gains its renewal from man's grateful discovery of the goodness of Christ and the need of men every where for what Christ has to teach and to give. As long as Christ opens men's eyes to all that He saw and loved and revealed; as long as He kindles love for Himself and for His brethren in the hearts of men; as long as the needs of men cry out to us, that Mission will go on. The Mis sion of the Church is the Mission of Christ. What we call 'missions' are simply the farthest outreach, the most heroic and daring and 'foolish' expression of Christ's Mission. To ask whether missions should go on is to ask whether the Mission of Christ should go on; whether the Church should go on. It is like asking whether good will should go on. How far should good will reach? It is the glory of Christ that He has stretch- i ed the imaginations of His people to 1 look beyond-the-reach of Hheir own families, their own race and nation,! to the needs of outcastes in India and of Chinese farmers in remote vil lages and of brown men in the hills of the Philippines. It is the glory of the Church that with all its tawdri ness and failures it has had the vi tality to be a light to the Gentiles and to those who sit in darkness. In magnifying tTie ChurchV Mis sion and in calling men to share in it we must not lose our perspective and falsify the balance of God's truth. That we are tempted to do just because we are Churchmen and our own success is bound up with the Church's success. We are even tempt ed to press those who are not really believers at all to give to our parish | or to the msision we have founded iso that we may make a good show ing. To do that is to try to build God's house on sand. To speak as though the one or even the chief way to give to God is to give to the Church or missions or as if the chief service is to do some church work is to endanger the sanctity of the com mon life and to. narrow the largeness . of God's purpose Our membership in the Church is our highest member-1 BAPTIST Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Daylight Saving Time. Morning worship, 11 a. m. D.S.T. B. T. U., 7 p. m., D.S.T. Sermon Sunday morning: "Jesus at the Table with His Disciples." Evening worship in union service at Methodist Church, 8 p. m. D.S.T. Mr. Claude Roebuck, a graduate o( Wake Forest College and student last year at the Southern Seminary in Louisville, Ky. will have charge of the prayer service next Wednesday night and all of the services of wor ship until the pastor returns. Mr. Roebuck was a member of the Gold en Bough at Wake Forest. This is one of the highest honors that is bestow ed on a student there. Membership is given on the basis of scholarship, character and college activities. For three years Mr. Roebuck has been a member of the Summer Workers' Group, a group of young people do ing state missionary work. In Louis ville last year he dedicated himself for foreign missionary work and will return to Wake Forest this fall to study medicine. His presence in Wil liamston will be a blessing. He is staying at the Baptist Parsonage on Church Street. 4> CKDAH BRANCH Regular services at Cedar Branch Baptist Church Sunday. Subject for1 11 o'clock service, "Are We Really Christians?" Let's all be at church Sunday, and study the scriptures! along with our lives and see how wp measure up. The public is invited. ship, but we are members, too, of family ahd nation and the commun ity of common labor. The Church's Mission and the mission of all its members is to be a reconciling, heal-1 ing leaven in the life of every hu- [ man lutgl.buj IumuI. The Church is! summoned to bo in its own life that fellowship which binds men togeth er in their common dependence on God and overleaps all barriers of social status and race and national ity. ' The doom of conflict which threat ens to destroy the whole world will not be conquered by the idea of love or the notion of brotherhood. It is only as the Church is truly the school and home of living faith and worship and charity that it can serve God's saving purpose for mankind. Only those who have known Christ's pow er to humble and reconcile and set us free from the service of ourselves know how much He has to give to China and India and Germany and England. There can be no reality in missions without reality in the sending Church, though God may well cast away the sending Churches for their unreality and raise up a new ihsirumeni lor His puipose among black men or yellow men or brown men. ? The best that fhe church-receives from God and offers t^he world is not something external to its own life. The best that the Church re ceives is the restored fellowship of men with God and of men with men in Him. The Church can only be the salt of the earth and the light of the world if her own life is indeed a fel lowship. That is why we may well fearfully expect that God will shake the Church as we know it to its foundations if .we do not passionate ly seek that unity among Christ's people which is His will. TKe Church is not required to be" successful, but to be faithful. God's people of old had to learn in the bit terness of exile that it was not chos en for its own sake only, but that through suffering and death it was to have its part in the world's re demption. If it ijjust be, in the days ahead, that the witness to mankind's unity in God can be preserved only by a faithful remnant and that His people as of old are called to be His Suffering Servant, then, too, be cause the Church's mission is Christ's Mission, our prayer must be, "Thy will be done." That is no prayer of defeatist resignation." CHRISTIAN Bible school, 9 45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Young People's meeting, 7 p. m. Union Service, Methodist Church, 8 p. m Rev. James Smith, speaker. At the morning hour. Rev. R. V Hope, of Washington, N. C, will be guest speaker. Woman's Council meets at the church on Monday afternoon at four o'clock. Prayer service will be on Thurs day evening at 8 o'clock. The Senior Philathea class of the Christian Church will meet with Mrs. G. G. Woolard at her home on Hassell Street, this evening at eight o'clock. -t CHURCII OF THE ADVfeN'I 8th Sunday after Trinity. Church school, 9:45 a. m. Celebration of the Holy Commun ion and sermon, 11 a. m. St. Elizabeth's Auxiliary will meet Monday afternoon at 4 p. m. ST. MARTIN'S, Hamilton Evening prayer and sermon, 8 p. J METHODIST Church school, 9:45 a. m. Epworth League, 7 p. m. Union evening service, 8 p. m. Rev. James H. Smith, pastor of the Baptist Church, will preach. This is | a fine opportunity to manifest the i spirit of Christian fellowship by i worshipping together. The commun- : ity is cordially invited to be with us. I There will be no morning service on account of the pastor being out of town for a few days. The Woman's Circle will meet with Mrs. Jack Daniels at her home Monday afternoon at 5 o'clock. The above schedules are according to Daylight Saving Time. H HOLLY SPRINGS METHODIST There will be no preaching service at Holly Springs Sunday afternoon on account of the pastor being away on a short vacation. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the author ity contained in that certain Deed of Trust recorded in the Public Regis try of Martin County in Book H-3 at page 327, said Deed of Trust hav ing been given to secure a certain note of even date and tenor there with, and the stipulations therein contained not having been complied with, at the request of the parties in terested. the undersigned Trustee will, on Monday, the 18th day of Au gust, 1941, at 12:00 o'clock M., in front of the Court House door in the Town of Williamston, N. C., offer for sale at Public Auction to the high est bidder for cash, the following de scribed real estate: A house and lot in the Town of Williamston, N. C? on the West side of Haughton Street, adjoining the lands of H. D. and G. A. Peele, on the North. Haughton Street on the East, and the lands of W. J. Hodges on the South and West and being the same premises now occupied by H. D. Peele and family, and being the land conveyed to H. D. Peele by C. H. Godwin, said Deed recorded in Book OOO, at Page 249 of the Mar tin County Public Registry. This the 16th day of July, 1941, WHEELER MARTIN. jlyl8_4t NOTICE! 1)iio to tho inereusetl cost of ('.leaning Supplier, we are forced to raise the prices of DRY CLEANING EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1st. Suits and Plain Dresses 65c LILLEY'S LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS PITTMAN'S CLEANERS ALPHA CLEANERS Ileita Theatre?Washington Sunday-Monday August 3-4 "ROOKIES ON PARADE" ir/l/i Hob i.ronby and Ruth Terry Tuesday DOl'BLE FEATURE August 5 "Tiie Richest Man in Town," F. Craven, E. O'Hearn "Redhead" Willi JtitkeTaiu# and Johnny Downs Wednesday-Thursday August 6-7 "THAT GANG OF MINE" irilh Hobby Jordan and Lee Horcey Friday-Saturday August 8-9 "THE SINGING HIELS" ?il/i Gene Autry PEriDER Quality Joad State Drink Healthful Juices! (^idonial him onx Pineapple 22 27c 1 J. ran Colonial Itrand Tomatoji?? 6 25c Neie Treat Salatl Dressing qt. 21c Roil Mill Delieiout PeanutButterib. 15c Southern Manor Shoe Peg CORN, No. 2 can .... 10c Cam pbell't TOMATO SOUP, 3 cans 25c Aunt Betty ^ . Black Eye PEAS, 2 No. 2 cans . 23c Dry Sal! FAT BACKS, 2 lbs. .. 23c l.and o' lAiket J BUTTER, roll lb. 43c cube lb. 45c I High Mark Flour 12-lh. bag 2 Mb. bag ttt-lh. bag | 42 c 83c $1.62 Triple Freth Sandirich BREAD, 2 loaves 15c Double Freth Golden Blend COFFEE, 2 pounds 31c IN OUR MARKET ROUND STEAK lb.. 30c NECK BONES . 2 lbs,. 15c Home Killed FRYERS ... each.. 60c SM1THFIELD SAUSAGE . lb.. 29c Lean PICNIC HAMS lb.. 23c