Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / June 1, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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PAT ©AT WAS BOND DAT —un MU4K THE ENTERPRISE 'VE8 THE TOP FOR VICTORY with UNITED STATES WAH BOHDS*STAMPS VOLUME XLVI—NUMBER 44 IF illiamston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, June l, 1913. ESTABLISHED 1899 Considerable Loss In Loeal Laundry lion Week or Ten' FJlt)g, ~ One Report Ssys - Believed to have started near an exhaust fan, fire did considerable damage to Lilley’s Laundry on West Warren Street here last evening at 7 o’clock. No official estimate on the loss could be had immediately, but according to a preliminary survey made early today by Fire Chief G. P. Hall, the damage will approximate $4,000. It is estimated that the dam age of clothes will amount to $2,000 and that repairs and machine re placements will cost about $1,000. Damage to the building will run between $700 and $1,000. Operating the plant at a loss, Mr. J. Eason Lilley, the owner, in an ef fort to curtail expenses, cancelled much or all of the insurance on the machinery and clothing only about ten days ago. Insurance on the build ing was still in force, it is under stood, but the loss there was minor compared with the damage result ing to cmuiflfflfiS machines. Starting in the wall on the west side of the building, the fire char red only a small area there and burn ed into the attic, but the main struc tural work was not materially dam aged. Rollers on the pressing ma chines were burned, and it is believ ed that some of the machinery was warped. The plant had suspended operations about an hour earlier for the day. None of the records was lost and the management explained this morning that a complete inventory was possible, that very few clothes were burned completely and that it was possible to make fairly accur ate adjustments. Very little can be done until insurance representatives make a survey of the damage, but every effort will be made to re pair the damage and resume opera tions as soon as possible, according to a statement issued this morning by the management. Patrons are asked to be patient, the management assuring them that every effort will be made to adjust every loss as quickly and as fairly as possible, but it is fairly certain * that no clothes can be handled by the laundry before some time next week, if that early. When the alarm was sounded at seven o’clock, smoke was leaking through sides and top of the build ing in volume. Work of the volun teers was unusually effective, and while the loss was considerable, it could easily have been much great- | (Continued on page six) -* Twenty-Three Men From This County Accepted by Army Number Accepted by Navy Out of Recent Call Could Not Be Learned Out of approximately sixty Mar tin County men reporting to an Army induction center last Friday, twenty three were accepted outright by the Army. Two or three were detained and their status could not be learn ed here today. Quite a few of the men were accepted by the Navy, but no official "audit” has been releas ed and the number and their names could not be learned here immed iately. The percentage of men accepted out of the last group was the largest in recent months, the rejections run ning as high as 75 per cent in sorgo cases. It is believed that possibly fifty or sixty per cent of the last con tingent to report to the induction center was accepted either by the Army or Navy. None was accepted by the Coast Guard as far as it could be learned. Most of the group, or ra ther about 36 out of the approxi mately 60 men, were mere lads, or boys in their teens just out of high school in many cases, and most of ! them ‘ stuck." Several of the older i fellows stuck, too, one report stating ! that the induction officers gobbled I up Professor C. B. Martin and At torney Paul D. Roberson. The names of the men accepted by the Army, are, as follows: Paul D. Rc'berson, Charles W. Gurkin, Jr., William B. Dickerson, Horace A. Ray, Robert Cullen Whit ley, Bernard E. Spencer, Robert L. Etehriage, Maurice D. Brinson, Jesse W. Wood, Jr., William V. Ward, Ar thur Smith, Jr., David L. Newbern, Charles B. Martin, Arthur Wallace Lilley, William H. Peel, Thomas R. Griffin, Arthur D. Johnson, Thomas L. Speller, Roy S. Hardison, Earl T. Harrell, Charles W. Coltrain, William C. Hardison, William E. Rogers. The county’s June call is to be, answered the eaily ^>ait uf ucaI j week, according to induction notices j received by some registrants this ] week. It could not be learned how j many men the draft board will be \ able to send, but the number is be j lieved to be far below the quota. The young men accepted last Fri- i day are to report for active service i on Friday of this week in most cases. War Tough On Prosecuting Attorneys In County’s Court The. war is it ltyigh. t» [to Keep the v.teis of •jc.-'diee •turning, [the tribunal reporting yesterday that lit was jshart-a. solicitor again. -Aster I ney Paul I). Roberson, who has been ] ably handling the job during most of the time since Prosecutor Don E. Johnson entered the service, is to report for active duty in the Army on Friday of this week. It was known some time ago that Attorney Roberson was subject to call, but no action was taken pend ing the outcome of the young man's final physical examination at the induction center. He was accepted last Friday. Yesterday, the attorney performed the regular duties of the office, bid members of the bar good bye and expressed the keen hope The an acting .soh'eit'dTyviii likely be the first bus iness birthe calendar for ifre county commissioners when they meet next Monday morning in regular session shortly after nine o'clock to handle the appointment before the court convenes. Just what action the board will take is not known, but it is gen erally believed that the position will be offered to Attorney Wheeler Mar tin. Approached yesterday after noon for a statement, Attorney Mar tin said he had not thought about the appointment, that he enjoyed the work when he was pinch-hitting for Solicitor Don E. Johnson and that he would consider the appointment if it was offered him. Youth Fatally Hurt In Auto-Bicycle Accident Ask Volunteers To Fill In Forms For No. 3 Ration Rook Finding that many people in the county are improperly filling in their applications for Ration Book No. 3, the Martin County War Price and Rationing Board this week is appealing to a num ber of citizens in the several communities to assist the appli cants in preparing the forms. The task is quite simple, but so many of the cards are being im properly prepared, that it was deemed necessary to name a group of persons to help han dle the task. However, it is per fectly all right for the individ ual to prepare the application or get some one who knows how to do it for him. The following persons are be ing called upon to help handle the work: J. Rossell Rogers, Bear Grass; Dick Smith, Woo lard Hardware Co,, Wiliiamston; Mrs. Katherine Harrell, Hamilton; J. W. Eubanks, Hassell; II. M. Ainsley, Oak City; David Grimes, Robersonville, and Mrs. Clyde Brown, Jamesville. j Fatal Accident Is Fifth Reported in The County In 1943 -e—L_ liimral Services Held Mon day Afternoon for Homer Lee Raynor, Eleven -- Homer Lee Raynor, eleven years old, died in a local doctor’s office early last Saturday evening, a few minutes after he had run his bi cycle head on into a car on N. C. Highway 125 in Poplar Point Town ship. His neck broken, the youth died without regaining conscious ness. The accident was the fifth fatal one reported in the county so far this year, the highway death toll exceeding the county’s war casual ties in the corresponding period. Returning from an errand to u filling station, the child was riding his wheel behind a cart. Failing to hear or unmindful of a warning from "Buf” Gurganus, who was riding in the cart, the boy turned out to pass and went into the path of a car driv I en by Merlin Hollis toward Hamil i ton. Hollis, about 90 or 100 feet away when he saw the boy turn from be I hind the cart, started applying brakes ' and turned to the side of the road, j the car and bicycle crashing on the edge of the hard surface Knocked from his wheel the boy is believed to have suffered the broken neck when he fell to the pavement. The car traveled only nine or ten feet across a ditch after str.king the boy. Hollis, a tenant on the Everett farm near Palmyra, stands charged with involuntary manslaughter and will be given a hearing before Justice Hassell in Williamston on June 9th. Damage, estimated at about $25, was done to his old 1933 model car The bike was badly bent. The accident the third involv ing a car and bicycle on the high ways of the county during the week. Funeral services for the youth were conducted at the Vernon Meth odist Church on the old Williams ton-Everetts road Monday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock by Rev. Thomas L. House, the family’s pastor. Interment was in the family cemetery near the church. Besides his parents, Mr. Sylvester (Pete) Raynor and Mrs. Dailie Wil liams Raynor, he is survived by the fdllowing brothers and sisters, Julia, Jerry, Frances and Margaret. His brother, Jerry, is in the serv ice and was called home by the trag edy. The young service man. home on a visit a few weeks ago, discov (Conlinued on page six) Boy Painfully Hurt When Struck By Car j —«— Gurney Howard, young delivery buy for a locaJ grocery, was painful ly but not seriously hurt when he was truck and knocked off his bi cycle in front of the Sinclair Serv ice Station, cornet Main and Smith -} wick Streets here last Saturday night about 8:45 o’clock. Slightly cut on the nose, the boy was skinned in several places on his face and one leg, but no bones were broken. Af ter receiving treatment in a doctor’s office he was able to continue to his home. Riding down the main street, the boy crashed into the side of a car driven by E. J. Eatrnan. The car, traveling down the main street 1 started to make a left turn into the filling station, suddenly blocking the path of the boy on the bike. No charges have been brought in the case n was reported by tr.e po lice department. Earlier in the week, a young col ored grocery delivery boy was thrown from his wheel when a car backed suddenly out of its parking place on the main street. The boy, slightly bruised and his wheel bad ly damaged, was “balled out” for running into the back of the car. Heavy Explosion Is Felt Over Big Area Early This Morning -—— Nil inherit of People Frighten* e<i Out of Their Homes In This County -• Two heavy explosions, coming close together, rallied windows and jarred homes over a large area in this section of the State at 4:30 o’ clock this morning, waking hun dreds of people from their sleep and causing concern among many. Early this afternoon the origin of the blasts had not been traced, leav ing everyone to guess what happen ed. At first it was thought the ex plosion was more or less local, but later in the day reports indicated that the jar was fairly general throughout this section of the State. Citizens in and around Jainesviile called in to inquire about, the ex plosion. A short time later it was .learned that the explosion was heard and felt as far away as Scotland Neck, Tarboro, Greenville and other centers still farther removed. Some windows in and around Scotland Neck were jarred out, one report stated, but it ould not be verified immediately. In this county, many people got up and started the day earlier than usual as a result of the explosion. Fanner Chester Taylor out in Bear Grass hopped up and ran out ex pecting to see a tornado sweeping down in his direction. A frightened I colored tenant ran to Mr. Taylor’s home, anxious over t.he explosion and what might follow. While the source of the noise could not be learned, many believe it was a sizable blast, that possibly something blew up on or near the (Continued on page six) -« County Represented At East Carolina Finals -• Martin County is well represented in the list of young men and women graduating from the East Carolina Teachers College, Greenville, this year. Five county young men and wo men, Misses Blanche Crisp, Eliza beth Haislip, Virgil Ward and Reid White and Mr. Evan Griffin receiv ed their bachelor of arts degree there yesterday. Degrees were presented to 174 young men and women. Quite a few people from the coun ty were present for the commence ment exercises. j TOWN - FARM IN WARTIME —♦— i (A weekly news digest from ?¥vx~yr. RATION REMINDER Blue Stamps (For canned, frozen and certain de hydrated foods): Blue stamps G. H. J remain good through June 7. Blue stamps K, L, M are good un til July 7. Coffee Stamp No. 24 in War Ration Book One, good for one pound of coffee, became valid May 31 and is good through June. Gasoline “A” book coupons No. 5 good for three gallons each and must last till July 21. Red Stamps (For meat products, canned fish, most edible oils ar.d cheese): i Red Stamps ‘ J" and ' K” good I through June. Shoes No. 17 stamp in War Ration Book One good for one pair until June Sugar j Stamp No. 13, good for 5 pounds, j became valid June 1 and is good through August 15. Stamps Nos. 15 and lti in War Ra tion Book One now are valid for 5 pounds of sugar each, for use in home canning. They are good through October 31. Housewives may apply at local boards for supplemen tary sugar rations for home canning, (Continued on page six) -® Arrested On Meat Stealing Charge r p —$— Dennis Smallwood, colored man, was arrested here Sunday night for ihe alleged theft of five hams from Farmer Williford Hardison over in Williams Township two nights be fore. The hams, weighing about 52 pounds, were sold to Brown’s Wash ington Road grocery, the owner iden tifying and recovering it there Sat urday. Two shoulders and a smoked piece of side meat, alleged to have been stolen along with the hams, were not recovered. Investigating the theft and sale of the meat, officers declared that as far as they could learn no ration stamps were used in the tr ansaction, i that possibly Smallwood had been j supplying retailers with meat and chickens on previous occasions. Smallwood, well hidden under blankets and pillows, was found in a local colored home by officers Sunday night after his brother had been to the grocerman and offered to refund Ihe money paid for the muf t. The UFA stepped into the case yesterday and it is understood that possible irregularities in the trans action will be checked. Smallwood, questioned yesterday, stated that he had said something to Brown about! ration stamp*, but declared that: Brown told him they were not neces sary, just to say nothing about the deal. No indictment has been made as far as it could be learned here early today. Oak City Plans For School Lunch Room i Even though the WFA has been liquidated and temporarily out of business, the patrons of the Oak City school in a food canning demonstra tion last Friday decided to promote a lunch room in that school next fall. Miss Hattie Everett was elected chairman of the lunch room commit tee and she will be assisted by Mes dames R. A. Haislip, Hugh Bennett, Jim Rawls, H. A. Early, Alice Ty son and Helen Smith. This committee, assisted by the public spirited women and men of the community, will do its own can ning and sponsor the lunch room, although no heip will be realized through the WPA. M.. Ainsley was indirectly the in stigator ot ihe lunch room :n the Oak City school for he realized the nan organization. DELAYED FURLOUGH ___ One wonders what the Gov ernor of North Carolina would have said to the Governor of South Carolina if the time be tween drinks had been as long as the time spent in the service by Corporal Robert Biggs with out a visit home. In the service three years and nine months, the young man made his first visit home last week-end. He was at Pearl Har bor when the attack was made there, and while he has travel ed in many distant places, all’s been quiet on the war front for him exceot during the Decem ber 7, 1941, sneak attack. Hr will return to his station follow ing a fifteen-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B, B Biggs, in Everetts. Dates A nd Places A re Set For Listing Land Measurements Martin County farmers art- being luiked n, in- rt*~ port their measurements to their respective community committee men on certain days at specified places. The committees will sit in the following places on the specified days to receive the information, and farmers are urged to cooperate: June 11 it Mobley’s Store in Cross Roads, and June 12, Hardy.., "Store in Everetts. June 11 and 12: Bear Grass j School, Manning’s Store in Griffins, Perkins Garage in Hamilton, Ed mondson's Store m Hassell, Edwards’ I Filling Station in Poplar Point, Gold Point School, County House in Wil liams, and Williamston agricultural j building. U> and 19—Ltufc CiU~ St iluuT iviiie Masonic Hall. According to_tho _]_atost instruc iturns, tlie fanners will measure ac ' | curately their lands planted to to-j I baeco, cotton and Irish potatoes, where the potato plantings are in I excess of 2.7 acres. The farmers will j estimate as accurately as possible the acreages planted to peanuts, soy beans, sweet potatoes, rye, oats, I vetch, winter peas and gardens. , It is permissible for the farmer to j have some or e measure his crops, ! but the name of tin* “surveyor” must> i be submitted to the committee. The farmers are also asked to make j sketches of their fields and present | them along with the measurements ■ and estimates to the committee in j their respective communities on the dates specified. Aerial War Against I'lie Axis Is Now In Its Fourteenth Dav, (Jiiiiesr, ViiJed by \iiHTicim Air Forces, Check Jap Drive on (Jiiiii<;kiii<' While invasion talk continues to gain momentum but with no plans revealed oi action taken outwardly, the Allies are still going ahead with their aerial warfare against the Ax is on a big scale. Aside from the devastating blows struck at indus trial Germany during recent nights, the Americans are still softening up Ihe vulnerable spot to the south with heavy blows being directed against Sardinia and Sicily and the Italian mainland. The aerial warfare is now in its fourteenth straight day w ith out material let-up Allied planes were seen going over the English Channel this morning, but their destinations and targets were not disclosed. British and Canadian planes early Sunday dropped more than 1,500 Ions of bombs on Wuppertal, home of the I. G. Farbinindustrie Chemical Works. Resulting fires “merged in to one conflagration covering most of the city,” it was reported. One by one, IJ. S. and British air men are flattening out gigantic in dustriai properties which represent not only wai power and tremendous j capital investments but which o1 bear names which have been top liners m international finance arid m intrigue aimed a* the cartelization of European and world commerce Some of the more important of such plants which have received doses of airborne TNT many of them several times—include: The Krupp armament works at Essen. The Heinkei airplane factory at Rostcok. The Daimler-Benz automobile and tank plant, the Bosch electrical com pany, and the Birth aero engine plant at Stuttgart. The Skoda arms works at Ptisan, Czechoslovakia. The Telefunken factory, makers of radio instruments; the Illaupnkt Week, manufacturers of radio sets; and the Auto-union, A. G., wor shops, Berlin. The Zeiss Optical company at Jena The Focke-Wulf airplane factory, Bremen. The Potez fighter aircraft works at Mayadlt, France. The Renault auto works, turning out motorized military equipment for Germany; and the Gnome-Rhone airplane engine works in the Paris area. The Schneider-Creusot steel plant at Le Creusol The St. Joseph locomotive works (Continued on page six) -® Former Local Man Ordained Minister At a special service in the local Baptist church last Sunday evening, Cyrus W. Bazemore, funner local' citizen, was ordained fm the minis-1 try. The service was the first of its kind held in the church since 1871, Dr. W. R. Burrell, pastor, said. Following an oral examination lasting the greater part of three hours Sunday afternoon, Rev. Hart well Campbell, pastor of the Eman uel Baptist Church, Greenville, was chosen to preach the ordination ser mon. Rev. A. R. Stewart, Bertie County Baptist minister, delivered the charge. Rev. W. B. Harrington, county Baptist minister, and eleven of the church deacons also partici pated in the service which was large ly attended by the church member ship, friends and special visitors. Following the service, Ihe newly ordained minister, accompanied by Mrs. Bazemore and their two chil dren, 1-ena and Cyrus, Jr., and Mrs. Buzeinore’s mother, Mrs. Ma dry, left for Scotland Neck for a short stay beiore entering upon his new7 duties as pastor of the Saluda and Urbana churches in Virginia. They will make (heir home in Salu da. THE RECORD ! SPEAKS . . . not attract the atten turn that war does, but danger on the highways in this county I is proving about as great, if not greater to date than that in war itself. A fifth accident victim surrendered Ins life last Satur day afternoon, and the life of another was threatened during the same day. War and peace hold the spotlight now, but when they are settled it will be high time to get around to the task of doing something to cur tail slaughter on the highways of our land. It just seems that accidents will happen, and that's all the more reason that more time and thought should be gtv en to their prevention. The following tabulations of fer a comparison of the accident trend: first, by corresponding weeks in tins year and last and for each year to the present time. 22ml Week Comparison Accidents lnj’d Killed Dant’ge 1943 2 1 1 $ 60 1942 211 75 Comparison To Date 1943 20 9 5 $2800 1942 38 21 1 4435 Marriage Licenses Continue To Hold U|> Well in Comity -—— iV!an*k<*d Decrease in f\nm Licenses Issued In While (ionpies Last Monlli -w Sixteen marriage licenses were is sued in this county last month to maintain a fairly even business at the license bureau, but there was a marked drop in the number issued to white couples. According to the records, the licenses issuance was the smallest for the whites since May, 1931, when only two licenses were issued. So far this year the number ol licenses issued to colored people is about twice as great as the num ber issued to wtiite couples. Up un til May, Cupid had been handling very effectively Ills work among the white population, but he apparently spent more time recently getting the colored couples “hitched.” Licenses were issued to the two white and fourteen colored couples last month by Register of Deeds J. Sam Getsinger as follows: White Maurice E, Roberson and Elsie Bennett l.illey, both of Williamston. Dalton Edward Carrawav «yjd Ola Mae White, both of Williamston. Colored Rosco Lock, Jr., and Helen Sher rod, both of Oak City. Amos Jones and Mattie Brown, both of Wiliiamston. Jim Junior Corey and Carrie Jones, ! both of Everetts. LeRoy Perkins and Emma Sim mons, both of Oak City. William Blount Baker and Mary Lee Manson, both of Williamstun. Willie B Garris, of Fort Bragg, and Lillie Mae Rogers, of Williams ton. Matthew Council and Doris Mitch ell, both of Oak City. Marshall Wallace and Viola Spruill, both of Palmyra. Roosevelt Wrisby and Selma Brown, both of Williamston, Albert Worthy and Mary Bunch, both of Williamston. Jonah J. Bryant and Dora West, (Continued on page six) (pi. Johnnie H. Harrell Home After A Long Tour -$ Corporal Johnnie B. Harrell, who has toured the Panama Canal 7nne for over two years, is here visiting his mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Lee, for two weeks. He was entertained Sunday at Scotland Neck at a picnic dinner by a number of relatives and friends. He says the j Red Cross is doing a wonderful work for the servicemen, and also , were so nice to his crew returning to the States, Bo,.; cl Of Inquiry Handle's Few Minor Cases liast Ni^ht S-rvicc i\I«-ii Homo On Fur — k*uff}i* -..Vlk fivsl U> Il» |1k> Worst Ration Violators Asked for the dofin ' ,utl of the word “furlough,” a young school boy, having seen in the dictionary a pic ture of a soldier riding a donkey with the inscription, “Soldier rid ing home on a furlough," told his teacher that a furlough was a don key. The donkey has been lost in the wake of progress, and the dictionary could well carry a picture of the soldier in a car with the inscription, “Soldier riding out a furlough on unrationed gas.” At a meeting of the Martin County Rationing Board’s tire and gas panels sitting as a board | of inquiry, it was claimed by several | defendants that their sons or broth ers home from the service had help ed run up excess mileage on tneir i ears, and trial thi-v did not know , where the extra gas came from. Ac | cording to more than one defend ant's testimony offered before the hoard- u> p-weent . . man is either playing the old Army | game or else he is taking the rap I for someone else. More than half the cases charging irregularities in mile age and rations have been laid to | service men home on furlough. One j of these days, the old Army game , isn't going to work, and somebody I is subject to find himself on his feet walking out the hundreds of miles (charged against the service man. Eli Wilson, following a round in j the county court, had all his rations | suspended for sixty days when he admitted that he was running around fifty miles an hour. Quite honest with lus answers, Wilson explained that he was trying to make it to town in time to get a pint at the ABC store, that he did not realize how fast he was driving. Wilson added that he forgot his ABC ration book, did not get his liquor but landed in the middle of trouble. Possessing on ly an A book and allowed six gal lons of extra gas for an emergency, Wilson had driven the car 570 miles in excess of the allotment. “My boy was home from the Army for a few days and he used the car. 1 don’t know where he got the gas, but that’s where the difference comes in,” Wilson explained. laving sevo.o.miles from town, Wil . .... Iiain Rhodes Jones, it was found by the board had driven about 1,660 miles in excess of his allotment. He had a brother home on a furlough (Continued on page six) -® Young Man Ends His Life At Home Near Oak City Yesterday Francis Tyson, 17, Blows Top of Head Away with Shot (inn Depressed over ill health result ing from an accident some few years ago, Francis Tyson, 17 years old, ended his life at the Tyson home near Oak City yesterday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock by blowing the top of his head off with a shot gun. Seat ing himself on the front porch and facing the door, the young man put the barn i or the gun to his eye and pushed the trigger with his toe. One eye was shot out and part of the skull was blown across the road, a distance of about sixty feet or more. Some years ago Tyson was acci dentally struck with a baseball bat while playing at school. He was left partially paralyzed and was sub ject to attacks, llis condition became aggravated, and it is understood that he had threatened to end his life on previous occasions. He had been in bed most of the time during the past two weeks, and was scantiiy at tired when he got up yesterday af ternoon, took the gun and went out side. A small sister, Sybil, and aged colored woman were at home but Mrs. Tyson was visiting a daugh ter m Koseboro at the time. The sis ter saw him with the gun and told the washerwoman, but both of them we,i afraid to try to take, the: gun a way from hint. He shot- tjii #11%- -i. apparently into the air, and five minutes later he shot it again, the last load killing him ins^ntly. Investigating the death, Coroner S. R. Biggs found that no informal inquest was necessary. He was the son of the late John R. Tyson and Mrs. Alice Tyson and had lived in the Oak City section most of his life. Besides his mother he is survived by four brothers, A. B. and R. A. Tyson, of the home; Phil lip R. Tyson, of the U. S. Marines, and John R. Tyson, Jr., of the U. S. Navy, and seven sisters, Mrs. Lurlyn Tyson Hand, of Brooklyn; Mrs. Vi vian Tyson Whitley, of Roseboro; Miss Ward Tyson, of New York; Miss Hazel Tyson, lieutenant nurse in the Army; Mrs. Olive Hefferman, of Brooklyn, and Misses Gretchen and Sybil Tyson, of the home. Funeral services will be conducted at the home Wednesday afternoon by Rev. J. M. Perry. Interment will fol low in tiie family plot in the Green ville cemetery.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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June 1, 1943, edition 1
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