NEARLY 1000 MARTIN COUNTY SERVICE MEN NOW READING THE ENTEPRISE IN OF THE WORLD EA« HWEEK. JKEARLY 1009 MARTIN COUNTY SERVICE MEN NOW READING THE Er'TEPKISE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD JPACH WEEK. VOLUME XI.VII—NUMBER 90 Willkir.ston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, November 14, 1941. ESTABLISHED 1899 Memorial Service Tribute t>f Respect Paid To Memories of Asa Taylor And Bernice Rogerson -® Memorial services were held in the Rose of Sharon Free Will Bap tist Church near Bear Grass last Sunday morning for Asa J. Taylor and Bernice Rogerson, two neigh bors, who gave their lives for their country in Italy last spring. Conducted by the Rev. Charles Hamilton, young Taylor’s pastor, the service while marked for its simpli city was most impressive. Thp serv ice, believed to be the first double one ever held in this county, was well attended. With members of the two families occupying reserved seats, the Rev. Mr. Hamilton honored the memory of the two young men who had made the supreme sacrifice. “Were it not for their sacrifices and the sacrifices of others we would not be able to gather here minister reminded the congregation. “As we think of those two boys and the many others, we can’t help but recognize their supreme sacri fices and realize that we have to make sacrifices, too,” the minister explaining that the cost will not bo so great for us. “Some are willing to make sacrifices and forego even the necessities of life. Christ was willing to make the supreme sacri fice, even unto Cavalry, that we might live," Rev. Hamilton pointing out that the “two young men whose memory we honor today” made the supreme sacrifice that we might en joy freedom and hope. He pointed out that there are many sacrifices to be made before perma nent peace comes, and reminded the large congregation that peace will not come until a new day dawns. “Those who have come on before us are looking into the very bosom of Abraham. They have gone to a bet ter land, a land where agony of sin and sorrow are no more. Though death has come to them, victory is theirs; they have won the race.” Mr. Hamilton urged the families and friends not to worry, for their lives were not given without hope. As those two fine young men stood and faced the enemy they were clothed in the spirit of their God. They were willing to face the enemy and pay the price because they were fighting for their Christ. "And though our hearts are broken, Christ is nearer today, and let us pray to God to make us submissive to His will.” Ten boys have gone into the serv ice from the little church, nine of whom are still carrying on, accord ing to the minister. “Let us pay a tribute of respect to them and sup port them with our prayers, he pleaded. The names of the men were read by Mr. T. L. Roberson. The Bear Grass Trio sang and two United States flags were in troduced into the service. Born in Bear Grass on Apiil 12, 1923, Pfc. Asa J. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Robert Taylor of Bear Grass, was killed on last June 2 in Italy. By the direction of the President of the United States, the Silver Star has been posthumously •awarded him, but it has not yet been presented to the family. The award was based on action pointed out in the following citation: “For gallantry in action on 22 June 1944, in the vicinity of —-- Italy, When the platoon in which First riass Tavior was an automatic rifle man had forced the enemy to with draw from an area of high ground and was engaged in reorganization, the enemy force launched a vigorous counterattack. Without hesitation Private First Class Taylor moved forward in the face of the heavy machine gun and machine pistol fire to an exposed position which-afford ed an excellent field of fire and en abled him to protect the entire right flank of the positions against the on rushing enemy forces. He continued firing his automatic rifle accurate ly and calmly, undaunted by the fierce enemy opposition, until he (Continued on page six) -$-— Farm Bureau Group To Meet Tomorrow -® Working for 1,500 members, Farm Bureau membership canvassers will meet here tomorrow night to make a report on their work to date. Accord ing to the latest figures over 1,000 have joined the organization in this county, and it is believed when com plete reports are in, the count will approximate the desired goal. President Chas. L. Daniel contact ed a number of the membership can vassers yesterday but no report could be had immediately. He stated that farmers and business men, too, were convinced that a strong farm organ ization is necessary and that it would be costly for agriculture to go into the postwar period without strong representation in the strategic cen ters. Recognizing the value of the organization, quiie u lew kuiucis auo business men have voluntarily ad vanced the $3 membership fee. In County Church Farmers Will Hold Triple A Elections During Next Week w -in a- seri ! Martin County formers next week will elect their community commit teemen and name delegates and al ternates to the county agricultural meeting to be held later in the week. All the elections will be held at 7:30 o’clock and in school houses with two exceptions. The first group of elections will be held Monday eve ning, November 20, for Goose Nest at Oak City, for Griflins at Farm Life, and for Jamesville at James v'lle. The next meeting will be held in the high school at Robersonville for that township, for Williams at the county house, and for Hamilton Township at Hassell on Tuesday eve ning, November 21. The last in the series of meetings will be held in Giass for Bear Grass, for Cross [Hoads »i Everetts and lor 7F8&musm> von and Poplar Point, in the county agricultural building Ballots will be distributed at each meeting, and every fanner is en titled and urged to attend and vote. Members of the county agent’s staff, including the agent, will attend the meetings. * It is understood that the meetings will review the present status of the Agricultural Adjustment Adminis tration and discuss the proposed pro gram for next year and talk about other timely topics vita! to the na tion and war effort. The meeting will last for a verv short time, and every farmer in the county should attend the one in his respective township or district. NEW RECORD f "N An all-time record was estab lished by the local tobacco mar pounds and the income soared to 4,410.694.41. Slightly more than ten million pounds had been sold in a single season here In past years, but the figures now stand out above all others. Yesterday, the market sold 153,326 pounds for a price average right at 45 cents a pound, the total pound age to date climbing to 10,239, 826. Possibly 95 per cent of the crop has been sold in this terri tory, but no date has been defi nitely fixed for dosing the mar ket. Sales in the belt through last Friday total 328,220,544 pounds. The average for the sea son is $42.72 for the belt, or about 35 cents per hundred below the average for the Williamston mar ket. Local Boy Earns Second Citation —»— For the second time in fairly re cent weeks, the part Ensign Burras Allen Critcher, Jr., has played in the aerial war has attracted attention of his superiors. The young local boy earned his first citation when he ef fectively went to the aid of an Am erican submarine. The second cita tion, signed by M. A. Mitscher, Vice Admiral. U. S. Navy, is self explan atory, and reads as follows: ”in the name of the President of the United States, the Commander, First Carrier Task Force, United States Pacific Fleet, presents the Gold Star in lieu of the Second Air Medal to Ensign Burras Allen Critch c-r, Jr., United States Naval Reserve, for service as set forth in the follow ing citation: “ ‘For distinguishing himself by meritorious achievement while par ticipating in an aerial flight as pilot in a carrier based fighter aircraft as signed to sweep against enemy air craft on an island of the Philippine Group on 12 September, 1944. Dur ing the action, he shot down one en emy aircraft and so extensively dam aged another that it is believed to have crashed. His skill and courage were at all times in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.’ ” Peanuts Harvested By War Prisoners —*— While there were some few excep tions, German war prisoners from the local camp did a very good job in aiding the peanut harvest in the county this season, according to re ports and a review of the records. It was learned this week that the prisoners of war, working for 181 county farmers, stacked 71,245 stacks of peanuts. The job cost the farmers $8,193.17, or about 11.5 cents per stack on an average. More recently, quite a few prison ers were engaged in the sweet pota to harvest, and a small number is assisting in the com harvest while a few others are helping operate peanut pickers. Most of the prisoners returned tc industry following the completion of the peanut harvest, and very few are now available for general farm work, according to unofficial infor mation. f P-T. A. MEETING ; The local Parent-Teacher As sociation will hold Us regular monthly meeting in the gram mar school auditorium Wednes day afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, it was announced yesterday by Mrs. R. L. Coburn, president. A timely subject, “How Can Education Be Mxde More Effect ive?” will he discussed. Dr. John D. Biggs and a visiting speaker will address the meeting. A spec ial invitation is being extended parents and other patrons of the school to attend. Thomas E. Johnson Passes In Oak City Yesterday Mornia^ —®— Funeral Services For Well Known County Citizen Being Held Today - Thomas Ed Johnson, well-known Martin County citizen and retired farmer, died at his home in Oak City Monday morning at 9 o’clock fol lowing two years of declining health. About a month ago, Mr. Johnson suf fered a stroke of paralysis and was forced to his bed. His condition be came critical on Sunday, November 5th, when he suffered a second stroke, the end coming gradually. The son of the late James H. John son and wife, Jane Hobbs Johnson, he was born in Goose Nest Town ship on November 11, 1880. In early manhood he was married to Miss Mary Casper of this county, and they made their home in Oak City for a goodly number of years. In addition to his farming activities, Mr. John son engaged in the livestock business for several years, but retired from j virtually all activities about two I years ago on account of failing health. Besides his widow he is survived by five children, four daughters, Miss Selma Johnson of Oak City, Mrs. James Winstead of Tabor City, Mrs. Cullen Hatch and Miss Helen John son of Fayetteville, and J. C. John son of Oak City; one brother, Hor ace Johnson of Oak City, and three sisters, Mrs. Clara Everett cf Hamil ton, Mrs. J. S. Ayers of Everetts, and Mrs. T. H. Johnson of Oak City. Mr. Johnson was a member of the Baptist Church in Oak City for a number of years, and his pastor is conducting the funeral services at the home there this afternoon. In terment will follow in the Oak City Cemetery. Wounded Soldier Returns to States —®— Wounded in the battle for Peleliu Island, Cpl. George Norman White just recently returned to the States. Writing from a west coast hospital, the young Martin County man told his mother, Mrs. W. A. White, RFD 1, Oak City, that he hoped to be transferred to the east coast. His letter, written under date of November 5, read, in part: “I guess you will be surprised to hear from me after so long a time, but the good news Is that I am back in the United States. “I had the Red Cross send you a telegram when I was in New Cale donia. I was wounded in our last campaign. It was one of the tough est fights I was ever in. I was wounded on Peleliu Island which was probably the hardest fought bat tle of any in this war. "Hope you didn’t worry too much about me because I did not write. It was due to the fact that I was aboard a hospital ship. We came such a round-about way it took us a month to get here. It was worth the trip because I had the best of care that any man could ever be given. They have some of the best doctors I have ever seen.” The corporal explained that he was getting along fine, that he would write more in detail later. He asked for an address, explaining that he lost it when he was shot and lost his personal “gear.” Late Diagnosis Shows Child Hasn't Poliomyelitis -* Reported to have fallen victim of poliomyelitis, Joan Copeland, six months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Copeland of Williamston, is now believed to be suffering with some other ailment. A later diagnos is reveals that the case is not polio, that possibly the infant is troubled with rickets. When the first diagnosis was made the symptoms pointed to polio, but the Durham hospital where the child was entered for treatment, ex plained that in a later study of the case it was learned that the child was not a victim of polio Series Of Highway Accidents Reported j In County Recently! Colored Man Almost On East Main Street Here Friday Morning Two persons were hurt, one ser iously, in a series of motor vehicle accidents on the highways in this section during the past few days. It was unofficially estimated that the property loss will exceed $1,000. Governor Cason, 44-year-old col ored man, was critically hurt when he staggered into the path of Fenner Respass' taxi on East Main Street near George Harris’ filling station last Friday morning. The bumper of the car struck the man and threw his head against the windshield. He suffered a compound fracture of the right leg and hand and a hole was knocked in his head. Removed to the local hospital, Cason, jokingly known as the governor of Conoho, responded to treatment and he is ex pected to recover. Witnesses stated that Respass was driving verv slowlv and stopped iNiTi,ip the man. One repeat stated that a friend had warned Cason of the ap proaching danger, that he was intox icated and did not heed the warn ing. Raymond Carney, young colored man who was reported to have come here from Georgia less than two nonths ago, “borrowed” OUei Gay lor’s second-hand Mercury, drove it 1 few hundred yards and tore it all to pieces when he wrecked it. Ban daged about the head, Carney was able- to attend court yesterday morn ing. Gaynor, the colored man who had iust bought the car a short time ago for $800, had started to his home in Poplar Point with Carney, Robert Coburn and Cornelius Baker. Gay nor, Coburn, a colored neighbor, and Cornelius Baker got out of the car about 10 o'clock last Friday night to buy some groceries from a store on North Haughton Street. Carney, said to have been drinking, got under the wheel and drove off. He had hard ly reached the curve at the Whitley home before he lost control and (Continued on page six) Americans Driving Hard on Metz Fort —*>——■ The American Third Army, be lieved to be marking the renewal d an all-out drive to crush Germany, is driving hard on the almost im oregnable fort of Metz, about twenty five miles from the German border. The Germans are said to have va cated quite a few of the strong points, apparently well convinced that opposition to Patton’s tanks and infantry divisions is futile. How ever, it is possible that the German vehicles seen moving out of the areu are carrying civilians and ma terial looted by the enemy. It is known that the German front be tween Metz and Nancy is crumbling n the fact of thrusts by Patton’s 'ighters. No late developments have been reported in other sectors of the Western Front, but a timed and pow erful blow by all the Allied Armies on all sides is still expected. A sidelight in the main fight was reported yesterday after British bombers attacked and finally sent Germany’s mighty battleship, the Tirpitz to the bottom in the Nor wegian Tromso fjord Sunday. It was the eighth try to sink the old battlewagon and free planes for service elsewhere. The British had used many gallons of gasoline and planes to keep an eye on the ship, the last powerful unit in Germany’s seapower. The outlook in the Philippines is not very encouraging at this time. The Japs have landed an estimated 35,000 men, and possibly more, in recent days on Leyte and the battle there is raging, one report stating that it was proving costly. Remnants or the greater part of five enemy Jap divisions are battling the Ameri cans, but their effort to counterat tack has been broken up for the ‘.ime being, at least. THE RECORD SPEAKS . . . Motorists and pedestrians barely missed entering another one in the death column of the accident record, but the motor ists went on to add to the oth er columns. During the past two weeks, they, added four to the wreck co , two to the list of injured ai._ $1,500 to the damage total. The following tabulations of fer a comparison of the accident trend: first, by corresponding weeks in this year and last and for each year to the present time. 45th Week Comparison Accidents InJ’d Killed Dam'se 1044 4 2 0 $1500 1943 3 3 0 950 Comparison To Date 1944 63 38 fl 12,000 1943 »0 31 S 9,425 To Make Plans for War Bond Drive at Meeting. Thursday $709,000.00 J^rJLoan Drive in this county wiii be formulated at a meeting of ihe county and township chairmen in the Branch Banking and Trust Com pany building here Thursday eve ning of this week at 8 o’clock, it was announced today by Herman A. Bow en, the chairman for the county. Dis trict chairmen and other volunteer workers who have not faltered and failed in past drives are again being called upon to attend the meeting and help put the Sixth Drive over the top. Possibly at no other time in the history of the county, certainly not within recent years, have there been so many idle dollars in bank ac counts, in pockets and risky hiding places, and it is the opinion of the Kind drive officials that the Sixth Loan can be subscribed and more in record time. The drive, just as the five puswas oiiesTn®"* ;wi?-/oTd purpose. Ouo if. to help, f ipanpe the •e.ii- a«d prove to-the boys at • the front that the people back home are answering a challenge, and the oth er is to prepare for the proverbial rainy day. It is easy to throw away money for questionable goods oi to speculate now, but it is doggone cer tain that a dollar invested in war bonds now will be worth far more at some time in the future. The people of Martin County are being asked to invest $700,000.00 in bonds, $245,000 in the “E" series and $455,000 in negotiable bonds. Last June, Martin County people invest ed approximately $263,000 in “E” bonds and $854,580 in negotiable bonds. The “E” bond quota was not met at that time, but it is believed that the county will subscribe the full amount this time and enough extra to offset the shortage reported last June. Contributions To TlflfocJ Uar Fund In Martin County —■$>— Williams Township Reports Total of $114.12 In War Fund Drive -® Assigned a quota of $150, Williams Township raised and reported a 'otal of $114.12 in the United War ^und Drive. Contributions arc ac knowledged, as follows: Frank Hopkins, 50c; Floyd Moore, tl; L. D. Hardison, $1; Chas. L. Daniel, $5.00; Jasper Jones, $1; Mrs. Ethel Jones, $1; S. J. Tetterton, $1; Herbert Moore, $!; Robert Parrisher, 11; Arthur Williams, $1; James Tyre, 50c; Mrs. Annie Hell Tyre, 50c; Na thaniel Coltrain, $1; Mrs. Estelle Gardner, $1; Mrs. Callie Hardison, $1; W. I. Beddard, $1; Lawrence Lil ley, $1; Arthur Lilley, $1; Mrs. Ar thur Lilley, $1; Ed Lilley, 50e; W. A. Hardison, $1; Mrs. W. A. Hardison, $1; Mrs. J. S. Andrews, $1; Mrs. Grady Thomas, $1; Hardy Gardner, $1.25; A Friend, $112; J. S. An drews, $1; Charlie Pate, 50c; Mrs. Neal Godard, $1; Billie Gurganus, $1;; L. J. Taylor, $1; L. J. Hardison, $2; J. T. Heath, 50c; Bennie Heath, 50c; W. F. Barber, $1. Major Barber, 50c; William Bog gard, 50c; Sylvester Moore, $1; Woodrow Holliday, $5.00; A Friend, $1; Wendeil Griffin, $1; John Bog gard, $1; M. M. Hardison, $1; Colum bus Reason, 25c; Willie Gurkin, $1; Toe L. Coltrain, $1; Irvin Roberson, 1; Fannie Myrt Williams, $1; Dewey Hardison, $1; Mrs. Stewart Tetter on, 25c; Mrs. Lucy Smithwick, 75c; sf. P. Roberson, $1; Joe Hopkins, $1; (Continued on page six) | Local Eleven Turns Back Ahoskie 12-7 —<*>— The Williamston High School foot ball team annexed its third victory of the current season last Friday af ternoon when the Ahoskie Indians were turned back by a 12-to-7 score on a muddy field here. Only once this season has the the Green Wave tasted defeat and that was at the the hands of Columbia two weeks before. The locals scored their first touch lo'vn lust Friday afternoon when Charles Siceloff tossed a pass to Bil ly Myers for a 13-yard gain. In the second period, Jesse Rogers tore through right guard to score. On a lateral that netted 35 yards, the vis itors scored in the third quarter and made their try for an extra point good. Coach Less Straub, volunteering his services while off regular duty, says the boys are in excellent con dition and are ready for the three remaining games on the schedule. On Friday afternoon of this week, the boys will try to even the count with Columbia when the Tyrrell boys come here for their second en gagement of the season. The game will start at 3 o'clock. The line-up for the last Friday game: Le, Bowen; It, Cowan; lg, An drews; c, Horton; rg, Hines; rt, Knight; re, W. Rogers; rh, Siceloff; lh, Brandon; qb, Myers; fb, J. Rog ers. Substitutes were, Waters, rh; Wheeler, lg; Taylor, qb. -- Sheriff Roebuck Expected Home Within A Few Days -® Although he is still having trou ble with his right eye, Sheriff C. B. Roebuck, well into his sixth week as a patient in a Washington hospital, is improving rapidly and it is be lieved he will be able to return home within the next few days. A second ulcer haa appeared on his right eye, but it is being removed today, it was stated. Messrs. Will Rhodes, Kader Koger son and Connie B. Clark, other pa tients in the hospital from this coun ty, are improving, late report* from the institution stated. COTTON GINNINGS | Cotton ginning from the cur rent crop in this county are run ning far behind those for the corresponding period, a year ago, according to information just released by the Bureau of the Census through its special agent, Mrs. Strelsu Griffin. The report states that 1,724 bales of the lint had been gin ned from the current crop up un til the first of this month as com pared with 2,767 hales ginned from the 1943 crop up to Novem ber 1, the current ginnings run ning slightly more than 1,000 bales behind those of last year. Lt. Z. Hardy Rose Is Awarded Air Medal -<3> A U. S. Troop Carrier Base, Eu ropean Theater of Operations—First Lieutenant Zeno II. Rose, William ston young man and son of Mrs. R. B.Tynes, 130 Chestnut St., Suffolk, Va., who is now serving as naviga tor of a U. S. troop carrier forces C-47, in this theater, was one of the many navigators of the huge C-47 armada that flew in the first para troops and towed the first gliders on the recent invasion of Holland. He holds the Air Medal and Presidential Citation, awarded to him for D-Day "meritorious achievement" over F ranee. Commenting on his recent "D-Day” mission into Holland, Lieutenant Rose said, "I wonder if a fellow can get a mental purple heart. That was one of the roughest trips I ever had.” Lieutenant Rose’s pant leg was creas ed by a bullet that came up through the cabin floor. "This trip is indeli bly imprinted in my memory,” he said. Formerly a part of the Ninth Troop Carrier Command, Rose’s unit is now part of the U. S. Troop Carrier Forces, headed by Major General Paul L. Williams, and is a compon ent of the First Allied Airborne Army. Commanded by Colonel Frank J. MacNees of St. Paul, Minn., Rose’s group also played important roles in spearheading the attack on Hitler’s “West Wall’’ and Southern France. Farmer Beaten And Robbed In County —«— L. C. Jackson, 55-year-old county farmer, was brutally beaten and rob bed while sitting on the porch at Ins home between Everetts and Rob ersonville last Sunday evening about 0 o’clock. The victim said his at tacker was a colored man unknown to him. Officers, headed by Deputy J. H. Roebuck, are working on the case, but as far as it could be learned yesterday afternoon no clue bad been established. No other members of the family were at home when he was attacked and robbed. Beaten over the head with an iron swingle tree, the farmer was appar ently left for dead. The attacker took a $100 bill and some small change from the farmer’s pocket and drove away in his (Jackson's) 1935 model Ford. The attack and robbery were reported to Robersonville police early yesterday morning and they notified county officers. ROUND-UP For the first time in many weeks, officers did not make a single scratch In their week-end round-up of alleged law viola tors. Several persons were ar rested Friday and a serious crime was reported in the county, but the jail entry book showed a clean record. Last Saturday was a holiday for the liquor stores and it is pos sible Oiui the supply of liquor I held by individuals was not suf i ficient to last until Saturday night when most arrests are us I ualiy made. Pvt. Bruce Whitley Relates Experiences In War-Cato Franc^ \oi a Single BuiliUng Is Ufi Untouched in Fight For St. Lo -9 Pvt. Bruce Whitley has been do ing quite a bit of hurried traveling trying to keep up with the Ameri •an Armies, and just a short time tgo only found time to give a re jort on his travels since landing in France. A former employee of The Enterprise, Fvt. Whitley’s letter fol lows, in part: “Now that I have a little time. I’ll ry and give you a little description f our travels from the last time I vrote and on up to now. “After finishing the first airfield vhich was the best one we have built ince we arrived in France we had the best break then that we have had before or since, for we had about a three-weeks’ rest. But things soon began to break and our armies start 'd moving forward, and we had to begin iwmh1; tour that hasn’t stoppedyc^^^n this f i <' our trip we passed through St. Lo and I have never seen anything so completely destroyed as that city. I don’t believe a building was left standing or one that wasn't hit. Beat any destruction that any movie scene ever attempted to show. It must have been a tough place to take. We were moving up so soon that the dead cattle hadn’t been moved and you could see and smell them all along the way. “We arrived at one place late in the night and spent the rest of it in and around hedgerows, pushing on a few hours later to a location where we were to set up camp for two days. Then we had to pull out and move to another place about two miles away. While at this place I had a nice bath in a small river or creek. It was the first one I had had in over a week and I certainly did enjoy it. “We were close to a pretty good sized town here, but it, as most of the others, was off limits to us, so I had to limit my social activities to the camp area with the farmers and their families. We were about the first soldiers in this section and the people around were very nice to us. We got plenty of fresh eggs, wine cider and cognac, but I managed to hold my own in that line and didn’t get into any trouble like some of the hoys did. One afternoon a friend and I took a little stroll over to a farm house and found an old lady, her son and daughter at home. They were planning or get ting ready to go to work in their field ns we came up. They invited us in and gave us plenty to drink and olenty of eggs Since we don’t gi t anything hut powdered eggs in our rcgular rations, they were really a reat, although we had to cook them 'urselves. I really enjoyed the hour .pent there trying to carry on a onversations with them using a French phrase book and signs. We 'id very well. “We didn’t complete that field, ind the only work I did was a few minor details. We were there about two weeks and then had to move on. But I enjoyed that place more than any other we have visited so far. When we left there my vacation ended and it was a 16- to 18-hour day until the next place was finished. “When we left the second place, we were moved near a very large city which I had an opportunity to ride through several times while I was on detail. It had one of the larg est and prettiest cathedrals in it that I have seen either here or in Eng land and I think the buildings here are just as old as those in England. On one of these details I had to go quite a distance from camp and had to spend the night. That was the prettiest country I have seen over here. I passed through a few hills and mountains and although it was used as a battlefield it still retained its natural beauty and reminded me of the country in the States. In fact, France, as a whole, is just like the States with its plains, hills and mountains, and the climate here is similar to that in the States. “The French really believed in (Continued on page six) Hunting Reserve Case Is Postponed A hearing on the restraining order enjoining members of the Conine or Broad Creek Hunting Club from hunting and fishing In the swamps along the lower reaches of the Roan oke has been delayed until tomorrow morning when it will be aired in the Bertie County Superior Court. The case was to have been heard in Windsor yesterday afternoon, but was postponed at the last minute to avoid a conflict with a criminal case ir. process of trial at the time. Local citizens in numbers were making ready to go to Windsor yes terday when the case was postponed. It is likely that a goodly number will go tomorrow morning. The action was brought by J. G. Staton who had leased the land from a Plymouth concern.