NEARLY 1090 MARTIN COUNTY service Men now reading THE ENTEPRISE IN ALL PARTS Or THE WORLD EACH WEEK. THE ENTERPRISE NEARLY 100® MARTIN COUNTY SERVICE MEN NOW READING THE ENTEPRISE A.**»>" or THE WORLD EACH WEEK. VOLUME XLVIII—NUMBER 26 Williamaton, Martin County, North Carolina, Friday, March 30, 1945. ESTABLISHED 1899 Need Is Urgent For More Nurses’ Aids In %my Hospitals Voting Women Urged to Join Company in the fc- £tate At Once Directing a special plea to Martir County young women 20 years o age or older and who have had as many as two years in high school representatives cf the U. S. Arm} said w'hile here this week: ‘The U. S. Army Medical Depart ment is calling for help—the help of women—to supplement the serv ^ ices of Army hospital staffs whose numbers are too few to cope with the increasing flow1 of sick and wounded soldiers from overseas These thousands of casualties are placing a heavy burden on the Army hospitals and it is imperative that the overworked doctors and nurses receive help—at once. Tire kind of help that they need is the kind of help that any intelligent, healthy, ^ and earnest woman can give. It is skilled help but does not require professtraining. It cons’ in the performance of general hospital duties of a nonprofessional nature which by saving the time of nurses and doctors will enable them to give their professional care to a greater number of patients. "WAC hospital units will, so far as practicable, be assigned for serv ice in Army genera! hospitals with in their own states. In many cases, ^ members of WAC hospital units may have the opportunity of taking care of sick and wounded soldiers from their own communities. “They will be given a brief course of basic military training at a WAC Training Center, and six weeks of special training at a Medical De partment Technician School. Then these units will be sent to the hos pitals for which they were recruited and consolidated into hospital com + panics of one hundred women each. “Members of WAC hospital units are paid the same as other soldiers of equivalent grades. They pay as technicians, fifth grade, is $66 a month with increase for each ad vance in grade, the highest grade receiving $138 a month. In addition, they are provided with food, cloth ing, quarters, and medical and den tal care. They are also entitled, in general, to the same benefits as are ^ other soldiers, including those pro ^ vidod by the G.I Bill of Rights. "The first and most important qualification is the earnest desire to render service to the sick and wounded soldiers in our Army hos pitals.” The Army recruiting representa tive also pointed out that at one time approximately 1,500 men were being wounded each day, that ^ around 30,000 wounded are being * returned to the Sates each month! There were 10,000 wounded on Iwo, and that’s enough men to fill six Army general hospitals and there are only sixty Army general hospi tals in Ihe country. The need is urgent for young wo men in hospital companies, and any Martin County young woman be tween the ages of 20 and 50 interest _ ed in meeting that need and for w further information is asked to write to U. S. Army Recruiting Sub-Sta tion, Box 789, Wilson, N. C. Several Nurses To Report For Service At least two Martin County young ^ women are leaving tomorrow and four others are waiting for their in structions to report for service as junior grade lieutenants in the U. S. Army Nurse Corps. Several young Martin County women are already in the Army’s Nurse Corps. Misses Elsie Gurganus, daughter of Mrs Mary Bonner Gurganus, and I Mary Louise Taylor, popular and ef ficient nurse in the county health! department for several years, are # leaving tomorrow for Camp Ruck er, Alabama. Miss Gurganus is the fourth member of her family to en ter the service, three brothers, John Hatton. Eli and Edgar, having been in duty for quite some time. Miss Mary Ruth Mallory, daugh ter of Mrs. Effie Taylor Mallory of near Oak City and the late Will Mal lory, has volunteered for service in ^ the Navy Nurse Corps. Miss Louise Cooke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Cooke, and Miss Susie Whitley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Whit ley, have volunteered for service in j the Army Nurse Corps. The proposal to draft young single j women for nurse duty in the Army j has not been enacted into law, Dur-1 ing the meantime appeals are being made to young women, urging them ^ to volunteer as regular nurses or as members of hospital companies. Ticenty Cases On Docket In The County's Court -- At least twenty eases are on the county recorder’s court for trial. Several of the cases will be called next Monday but most of them are i scheduled to be tried on April 9. The cases involve alleged crimes' of nearly every nature in the list of' minor infraction of the law Commercial Fishing Off To Good Start In The Roanoke Commercial fishing get underway j in the P.oar.oke on a big scale this week, reports from the fishery at Jsmesville stating that ‘h, fir?t ■hauls netted an average of about 800 herrings and quite a few rock. As many as 2,000 herrings were taker, at a time, it. was reported. Despite the early spring, the fish have not yet appeared in very large numbers, but with continued good weather, catches approaching those of record size, are predicted for next week. Very few people visited the fishery during the first few days of the current season, but large crowds are expected there next Monday and during the remainder of the season. Most of the catches so far have been packed, but sales right off the bat tery are almost certain to increase and hold up in the future. | At the best, the outlook for the {season is not very vncournging. La |bor shortages will, no douot, limit •flBfcNMHHfe-i' n't likely that the fishermen can meet the diSY.ur.d which is almost certain to be great er now' that the supply of other meats has been reduced. Fishermen operating on a small scale at various points along the stream are reporting only fair luck. Water in the river is at a fairly low point and the current is hardly strong enough to turn the machines. Very few perch are being caught and shad continues a rare item. Reports from operations along oth er rivers in this section of the State nlaintain that the fish are running in large numbers, and the indications are that increased catches in the Roanoke will follow shortly. Board To Name Local School Committeemen WOUNDED Wounded in the shoulder by shrapnel in Germany on March 10, Pfc. Leonard Holliday is re covering in a hospital in France, according to a letter dated March 15 and just received by his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Peril W, Hol liday of near Jamesville. The young man has a brother, T/3 Jim Brown Holliday, who is now stationed on Guadalcanal. Robbers Steal Gas j And Tires in County Breaking into the J. W. Eubanks repair shop in Hassell some time during Wednesday night. robbers stole about ten gallons of gasoline from a truck, leaving other articles untouched. An entrance was gained | by removing a bar from over a win dow. Some time during early yesterday morning, robbers entered the Texaco filling station on Main Street in Rnbersonville and stole fifteen or sixteen automobile tires. The own er, W B. Rogerson, told local and county officers and state patrolmen who investigated the robbery, that a few gasoline ration coupons were also missing. The robbers gained ari entrance by breaking a small glass in the front door and unfastening the lock. Officers revealed no clues, but it was intimated that possibly a lead had been established in one and pos sibly both of the robberies. Library To Observe Easter Monday As Holiday Here The local public library will ob serve next Monday, Easter Monday, as a holiday. The library also announced that the following books had been re cently added to its shelves: Trudy and the Tree House, Then There Were Five, Magical Melons, Magic Michael, The Sky Bed, The Bountiful Cow, Behind the Micro phone, The New Wizard of Oz, Anna and the King of Siam, Pastoral, Doc tor Ellen, A Bell for Adano, The Green Years, The Land of the Rus sian People, I Never Left Home NO GENERAL HOLIDAY No general holiday will be observed by business in this sec tion Easter Monday, according to incomplete reports received to day. The banks, public library, liquor store, health and welfare departments will observe the day as a holiday, but the post office ard basstK in general will con tinue operations as usual. Beginning next week, local business houses and offices will observe each Wednesday after noon during the months of April, May, June, July and August as a holiday. The closing time is one o'clock for the half holidays. -£ New Members To Be Sworn In For Duty On Education Board —_<* Ferd W. Holliday Will Begin His First Term Next Monday Morning Meeting in regular session here next Monday morning, members of the Martin County Board of Educa tion will fill the places on the sever al district school committees, the county superintendent, J. C, Man ning .announcing that very little other business is scheduled for con sideration at that time. Two members of the county board are starting new terms, Leslie Har dison his second, and Ferd W. Holli day his first. The two men, both of Jamesville Township, wore appoint ed by the State Legislature after they had filed in the primary election almost a year ago. John W. Eubanks, after serving ably as a member of the board for several terms, is re tiring. He did not enter the primary and is being succeeded by Mr. Holli day. A copy of the omnibus bill has not been received in the county and the length of the term the members were appointed for could not be learned immediately. One report said they were appointed for four years and another said their terms would be limited to two years. They will ; be sworn in by Clerk of Court L. B. \ | Wynne Monday morning at 10:00 | o’clock. Other members of the county board whose terms do not expire this year are, Geo. C. Griffin, of Griffins; J. D. Woolard, chairman, of William ston, arid H. C. Norman, of Rober sonville. As far as it could be learned the board members have received no recommendations for appointments to the positions on the several local district committees. Once elected by public convention vote, the local committee members are now ap pointed by the board of education, usually upon the recommendation of the member representing the schools in his area. Since two of the board members are from the same district, one area is left without direct rep resentation on the body. The board, as a whole, will hear recommenda tions from patrons in that district as well as from any one in the five re maining districts. Three local com mitteemen are named for Jamesville, Farm Life, Bear Grass and William ston, and five each for Robersonville and Oak City, the last two districts to also have sub-committees com posed of at least three members each—at Gold Point, Hassell and Hamilton. I Sunrise Services To Be Held Sunday At least two sunrise services will be held in this county Easter Sunday, according to announcements coming from religious leaders. All religious groups in the Rober sonville community will meet in the Robersonvilie cemetery at 6:15 Sun day morning. Rev. T. H. House, Methodist minister, will have charge of the program. He will be assisted by the other ministers and readers in the town. The service in the Woodlawn cem etery in Wiiliamston will be held at 6:49 o clock Sunday morning. These services have attracted large crowds in past years, and with favorable weather a new attendance record will likely be established this year.- - The series of pre-Easter services in the local theater each morning and the several participating churches each evening are attracting unusually large crowds. The last in the pre-Easter series will be held in the Presbyterian Church tonight at the usual hour. MISSING ) S/Sgt. William James Burn ette, Jamesville young man, has been missing over Italy since February 28, his fostor parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer J. Holli day, were advised recently. The young man was a gunner on a bomher. Wounded Soldier Is Back In The Fight Wounded in the foot and hand while in action on the Western Front a few days ago, Sgt. James E. Tay lor has returned to active combat, his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Luther Taylor, of near Williamston, were advised this week. Writing on March 12, the young man said he was en joying the best of health, and asked them not to worry. “It has been pretty tough at times, but the boys are taking it fairly easy now,” Sgt. Taylor said in his letter. The young man has been award ed several medals since leaving the States the early part of last year. He asked his family to keep pray ing for him, and that with the help of the Lord he hoped to be home soon. Storage House And Contents Destroyed By Fire Last Night —«— Loss al Parka"** Maim factor ing (lompany Plan! Ksli inalcil al alioul $10,000 Fire of undetermined origin de stroyed a large storage house and a large supply of basket wire, twine, machinery and other equipment at the plant of the Williamston Pack age Manufacturing Company near the river early last evening. The main plant was threatened and caught fire once, but no great dam age was done to the big building and its contents. When discovered and the alarm was sounded, the fire had gained considerable headway, and by the time volunteer firemen reached the scene and employees of the plant had brought out company-owned fire fighting equipment, little could be done other than hold the fire to the one building. Two barrels of oil in the storage house burned and sent up a cloud of black smoke and it wasn’t until the structure had almost burned down that fire was discovered in one corner of the main building. It was quickly brought under control, but water was pour ed on the original fire for several hours before it was finally extin guished The day shift had been away from the factory for some time and it was about fifteen minutes before the night shift was to report at 7 for du ty. However, several employees of the plant were handling special tasks during the meantime and they did not discover the fire until it had gained much headway. An estimate on the loss could not be had officially but one report stat rd that the damage would approxi mate $10,000 or more. The com pany had just unloaded a carload of wire and a truck load of twine and placed them in the house along with Iwo big electric motors, two barrels of oil, machinery and other mater ial and equipment. Plant Manager Ernest Etheridge said last night that the fire would not materially delay normal opera tions immediately, but that it was possible the stock of wire could not be replaced in time to prevent an interruption later on. t SPEAKER Dr. Ellen Winston, State Com missioner of Public Welfare, will address a joint meeting of the lo cal women’s ami I,ions and Ki wanis clubs in the Woman’s Club hall here next Wednesday eve ning at 8:30 o’clock. Mrs. Winston will have for her address topic, “Public Welfare in North Carolina.” The meeting is open to the general public. Recommending Local Young Man for the Legion of Merit Public Relations Office, Ft Ben !ning, Ga. (Special to Tic Enter |prise).—Major General Fred C. Wal ker. former Is commanding the Thir ty-fourth Division in Italy, new Post Commandant today recom mended Tech. Sgt. Joseph H. Thig pen, of Williamston, N. C , for the Legion of Merit. The award, one of the nation's highest, is given for performance of outstanding meritorious service Sergeant Thigpen, serving as tin instructor in the Second Parachute Training Regiment, is crediting the Army of the United States with lead ership in military parachuting, ac cording to General Walker. "Thigpen current holds the follow-1 mg record of jumps performed to further expertm mt:djnj*. -5 “mriem* conditions concerning parachuting: low altitude free jumps', 3B.tX!0 and 285 feet respectively; greatest num ber of free and state’ lino jumps, and others almost too numerous to men tion. He has employed as many as three chutes in a single fall, former ly considered impossible. Modest and amazingly young con sidering the effect of the dangerous tasks he has undertaken, T/Sgt. Thigpen is awaiting assignment ov erseas. Entering the Army in October, 1943, Thigpen volunteered for army sky-troops, qualifying in February, 1944. The young man is the youngest son of Dr. and Mrs. John F. Thigpen of Williamston. Dozen Men Report for Pre - Induction Exams Larger Calls Are To Be Expected During The Month Of April Ki^lil of Group Graving Coun ty Last Wednesday Were In Non-Farm Group Twelve young Martin County white men reported Wednesday for their pre-induction examinations at Fort Bragg. The original call was for only ten men, but two were transferred to this county from oth er hoards, it was explained. Eight of the group come from non-farm occupations or vocations, three of them being students either in high school or college and one from a filling station lunch counter. Seven of the group are in their late teens and three are in their early twenties. As far as it could be learned only one in the group is married and he is leaving behind three children. Two are making a return trip to the pre-induction station for their second or third time. It could not be learned officially, but it is possible that the young men reporting last Wednesday for their pre-induction tests will be called for final induction the latter part of April. It is understood that the size of both the pre-induction and final induction calls will be much larger than they have been during recent months, meaning that just about all current reserves wdl be depleted during the period. Notices instructing more white men to report for pre-induction ex aminations have already been re ceived in this county, it was learn ed today. According to the instruc tions the call is to be answered on April 4th. Names and registration and last given addresses of the white men leaving last Wednesday for their pre-induction exams follow: Dennis Clayton Moldey, RFD 3, Williarnston. Joseph Hubert Daniels, Williams ton. Joe has volunteered for just about every branch in the service, including the Merchant Marine, and was turned down. Leonard Tilton Harney, Paris, Kentucky, and Robersonville. Carlton L Edmondson, Annapolis, Md , and RFD 1, Oak City. Lionel Long Etheridge, RFD 1, Oak City. Hugh Burroughs Bennett, RFD 1, Palmyra. Richard Myron Margolis, Wil liamston. Wilbur Eugene Cannon, RFD 1, Hobgood. Oliver Harrison, Jr., RFD 2, Wil liamshiri. Louis Franklin Barber, RFD 1, Williarnston. Howell Warren, Jr., Williarnston. Calvin Lafayette Warren, RFD 2, Robersonville. Harney was transferred from Par is, Kentucky, and Edmondson was transferred from Annapolis, Mary land. Wreck Four Liquor Plants In Two Days Illicit liquor manufacturing in two townships in this county receiv ed a heavy blow this week when Of ficers J. H. Roebuck and Roy Peel wrecked four distilleries and poured out a quantity of beer. All of the plants were crudely equipped and had very little manorial c.n hand when the raids were made. Working aiong the Edgecombe boundary in Hamilton Township, the officers blew up a fifty-gallon ca pacity oil drum kettle and two fer menters. A day later, the officers invaded the Stingy Point section of Robersonville Township and wreck ed three plants, all equipped with oil drums for stills. They poured out five hundred gallons of molasses beer. f -\ | KILLED IN ACTION v-J Sgt. J. It. Minton, formerly of this county, was killed in ac tion in the battle for Manila on February 8. The son of Mrs. (Jus sie Minton and the late John It. Minton, the young man was born in Nash County and moved when he was ten years old with his parents to the Itohersonville community where lie was grad uated from high school, licsides his mother, he is survived by two brothers and three sisters. ! Costly Woods Fire Cheeked In County Believed to have been of incen diary origin, fire, starting in the low er corner of Martin whi re the boun daries of this, Washington and Beau fort Counties join, swept over an estimated 7,000 acres of woodsland before it was brought under control, late Tuesday, Marvin Leggett of the county forest fire service, said yesterday. It was estimated that 5,000 acres of woodsland was burned over in Jamesville Township. Special fire-fighting equipment, including tractors and plows, were used in checking the fire and about seventy men worked at various times during the more than two days the fire swept through that area. No official estimate on the damage has been released, Mr. Leggett stating that a representative of the Nation al Forestry Service was to make a survey of the acreage burned and the resulting loss. Forest fires raged in other coun ties also. Craven reported several including the destruction of a rural home not far from New Bern. Justice Hears Ttvo (loses In llis (.ourl This Week Justice J. L. Hassell had only two cases in his court this week Hoy Boston, drunk and disorderly again, was fined $1.50 and taxed with $8.50 costs. Charged with operating a mo tor vehicle with improper brakes, Patrick Henry Coleman was fined $10 and required to pay $6.00 costs. TOWN BOARD V. Meeting in regular session next Monday evening at eight o’clock, the local town commis sioners will,-in addition to han dling routine business, call a town convention for the nomi nation of mayor and five mem bers of the hoard and feame a registrar and judges for the elec tion to be held the first Tues day in May.... . . . ... Very little other business is scheduled for consideration at the meeting, Mayor J. L. Hassell said yesterday, other than a dis cussion of plans for a general clean-up week beginning April 9th. Hodges First Army Encircles The Ruhr And Turns Eastward-.. * ■■{% h \ti~~ j Iriatt Frontier and British j Flrct Artivo against Japs In a sixty-mile sweep, General Courtney Hodges’ First Army has virtually outflanked Germany s great industrial Ruhr, and apparent ly has taken its place in the race toward Berlin. Tin' First Army's paralyzing blow, delivered in less than 24 hours, has had its repercus sions throughout Germany, adding to the confusion of the enemy and aggravating chaotic conditions now existing among the super race. Just how far the Allied Armies have ad vanced could not be learned, the ‘Stars and Stripes," American Army newspaper, stating yesterday that its front 1 ino map was being omit ted again because the spearheads had driven right off it, and the map maker was a fit subject for a mental institution. More than .1 million prisoners have been taken since D-Day last June, but uncoufii med reports beard early ...dicaied that the bag today would be the largest in all history. Towns and cities are surrendering by telephone and others are search ing for Allied soldiers to whom they could extend the white flag of sur render The Hour of Success” is be lieved near, but it is possible that the enemy is withdrawing all the power hi' can for a last stand before Berlin. During the meantime, Hitler and many of bis murderous gang have withdrawn to Germany’s south ern provinces to further defy his fate in the Bavarian Alps. While the northern defenders of Berlin’s approaches reeled under these tremendous blows, the United States Third Army slashed almost halfway across Germany’s waist with a 20-mile eastward surge that netted a total of 14,000 prisoners, a record for one day. All Germany’s great western cit ic'S, her last reliance in any long drawn struggle, were toppling into Allied hands. Already the Third Army had Frankfurt, the Reich’s ninth largest city with a population of 546,000, tin' United Stales Ninth Army had Duis burg, population 431,000, and Eu rope’s biggest, liver port, almost in the bag, and the United States 7th Army captured Mannheim, popula tion 283,000. The Germans, realizing the enor mity of the disasters in the west, wrote off as lost the entire Ruhr, with such manufacturing cities as Essen—greatest munitions maker of all Europe Hamm, Dortmund, Dues seldorf and Muchlheim. The First Army cut one'of the most important railways from Es sen to Berlin as well as a superhigh way, leaving only two railways still open out of the Ruhr to the capital. (Luxembourg Radio said the Brit ish had entered the Westphalian capital of Muenster, cutting one of these railways. There was no con firmation, but hard-riding British tanks were only 17 miles away when the news blackout was clamped on.) The United States First Army reeled off the longest gain ever made in a single day on the Westi rn Front sweeping around the headwaters of the Ruhr River and completely out flanking the vital production area. As the Allied di ive pushes east ward, there is unofficial but recog nized rumor of a new German secret weapon, one "so powerfully'destruc live it is almost inconceivable.” Said not to involve poison gas, the report 'd wi upon is a tiny gadget which ?ouId he placed in a rocket bomb and which could be launched with com pete effectiveness against the Unit 'd States. It is declared that the Hermans are saving it for a last, stand, and they are confident that heir secret weapon will wipe out (Continued on page six) Youth Loses Life hi English Channel In a personal letter received this week from Captain Willard C. Mer riam, U. S. Army, Mrs. I.ucy Moore Perry was advised that her son, Cpl. Clifton B. Moore was killed in action in the English Channel on last De cember 25. Mrs. Perry had been no tified previously of her son’s un timely death, but the letter from his commanding officer was the first to definitely reveal the approximate scene of the action where the young man made the supreme sacrifice. The letter reads, in part, as fol lows: . . Your son died in the service of his country, a sacrifice which makes those who knew him deeply humble. We, who were closely asso ciated with him, share your intense soi row in the loss of a friend and a comrade. “I regret, that, inasmuch as a com plete and thorough search has failed to recover ki-a body , no burial serv ice could be held. ‘T realize that there is little any one can say or do to alleviate your great sorrow. However, on behalf of the members of your son’s unit, I want to extend to you our most sincere and heartfelt sympathy .