THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BY
OVER 3,MO MARTIN COUNTY
FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK
THE ENTERPRISE
THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BY
OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNTY
FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK
VOLUME XLIX—NUMBER 71
ESTABLISHED 1899
William ston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, September 3, 1946
Annual Drive For
Members Started
For Farm Bureau
President And Assistant
Secretary Address
Friday Meeting
Plans for launching the Martin
County Farm Bureau’s annual
membership drive were formulat
ed at a meeting in the courthouse
last Friday night when Chas. L.
Daniel, president of the organiza
tion, and Joe Williams, assistant
state secretary, addressed a good
ly number of farmers.
Pointing out that Martin Coun
ty was being asked to sign up
2,080 members, or about 250 more
than the number joining the or
ganization last year, President
Daniel stated that the Farm Bu
reau was needed now more than
ever before with the possible ex
ception of that depression period
back in the thirties. “No body is
going to do the job for us, and if
it is done we will have to do it
ourselves,” Mr. Daniel said.
“Without some control, we are
doomed, fellow farmers. We must
have a strong Farm Bureau to
safeguard the just rights of agri
culture and those living in agri
cultural areas. We have a good
start and we have a good founda
tion and we must keep it up,” he
declared in urging the farmers
there to go out and help main
tain and build up the membership
in this county. "Labor is acting
to protect itself, and we must do
the same,” the president conclud
ed.
The assistant secretary explain
ed that a drive is being launched
throughout the State to get 60,
000 members to support the or
ganization this year as against
43,000 last year. “The Farm Bu
reau Federation last year spent
six million dollars in supporting
agricultural legislation and pro
grams. Illinois raised neary one
sixth of that fund, and, yet. North
Carolina possibly enjoyed more
benefits than did Illinois,” Wil
liams pointed out in support of his
plea for a large organization in
^^this and othM^Jtoth Carolina
counties.
Williams reviewerith^tobacco
stabilization
ing that Farm Bureau leaders had
woiked on the plan for three
years, that it has made plans to
continue operation for at least
a.-J
to
support tobacco prices this year,
and it will be prepared to extend
Its activities in the future in the
event the markets, for one reason
or another, break,” he said.
The speaker explained that the
plan is very simple, that the farm
er is asked to subscribe to a $5
membership which entitles him to
life membership. If he chooses
to place tobacco in the corpora
tion, he can do so without any
trouble, receive his money right
along with that due him from
other buyers. If the price ad
vances, he will share in the ad
vance, but if the price drops, he
loses nothing.
Williams also briefly mention
ed the peanut program Sttd de
clared that while prices have been
pegged this year at $170 a ton for
the type generally grown in this
county, quotas would have to be
restored sooner or later.
Twenty farm leaders and sev
eral others interested in the suc
cess of the organization agreed to
canvass the county for members.
The meeting stipulated that only
one delegate will be sent to the
national convention, that the high
two mor.eM
tion'Vnay borrow
(Continued on page sue)
Auto And Truck
Crash In Parmele
■ •
No one was badly hurt but con
siderable property damage re
sulted when a 1938 Ford and a
truck sideswiped in Parmele late
last Saturday night. Jake Brown,
colored of Pitt County, was driv
ing the car in the direction of the
railroad station from Highway 64
when the truck ripped off most of
one side and continued on its way
without stopping
One report stated that the
truck was later identified as be
longing to Alton Grimes of Rob
ersonville, but the driver was not
immediately identified.
Investigating the accident, Pa
trolman W. E. Saunders said that
damage to the car would amount
to approximately $300, .
«
Dawson Lilley Dies
Sunday In Hospital
TOBACCO
i,---/
Indications Monday and
early Tuesday pointed to a
break approaching a record
when the tobacco markets re
open Thursday following a
forced holiday of one week.
Tobacco started moving into
the market here Monday and
by early Tuesday some ob
servers predicted that ii
would be blocked lojng before
sale time.
A report based on the early
deliveries for the market's
second opening this season
stated that possibly the qual
ity was some better than that
of tyte leaf offered during the
few days before sales were
suspended for the holiday.
However, tips were being of
fered in fairly large volume.
As far as it could be learn
ed, no marked change in price
schedules is predicted when
sales are resumed Thursday
morning of this week at 9:00
o’clock.
Town Board Will
Consider Budget
At Special Meet
•
Alleged Misuse of Depart"
nient Automobile Men
tioned at Meeting
In a regular meeting lasting
less than an hour last evening, the
local town commissioners took
very littie action on new business,
but were advised that the annual
audit is about completed and that
a special session would be called
possibly the early part of next
week for a discussion of the
1946-47 budget. Two of the com
missioners. V. D. Godwin and G.
11. Harrison, were not present and
little new business was advanced
for discussion at the meeting.
" Lasteiung to a pica made by 1.
S. Peel, attorney for the Carolina
Coach Company, the commission
ers petitioned the Corporation
Commission to grant the Coach
r 'in&ssauJSa^ >1*
bus service between here and
Greenville and Kinston, via Rob
ersonville and Stokes.
Treasurer N. C. Green would
make no definite statement about
the budget now in the making,
but it is fairly certain that no
material change will be made in
the tax rate for the new fiscal
year. However, it is evident that
the town is expanding its water
system and only recently added
two new deep wells to bolster the
water supply. Whether the pro
gram will call for an increase in
the present $2 rate could not be
learned. Increased costs and fu
ture expansion programs will
likely be discussed by the full
board in special session before the
rate- is definitely ado-ptc-d;— * - •
The commissioners briefly men
tioned reports of alleged misuse
(Continued on page six)
-*
Bus Companies
Seek Franchise
• - -
Representatives of the Caro
lina Coach Company and the
Norfolk Southern Bus Corpora
tion will carry their appeals to
the State Corporation Commis
sion in Raleigh on Thursday of
this week in support of claims to
a franchise for the operation of
a bus line from Williamston to
Greenville and from Williamston
to Kinston.
The local town board of com
missioners last evening recom
mended that the franchise be
awarded the Carolina Coach
Company, the town officials ex
pressing the opinion that the
Coach Company could offer a bet
ter service in the way of connec
tions.
The Carolina Coach Company,
it was pointed out by their local
attorney E. S. Peel, plans to oper
ate three trips from Williamston
yia Robersonvllle, Stokes end
Greenville to Kinston daily. The
Norfolk Southern Bus Corpora
tion proposes to run busses from
here over the same route to
Greenville and return.
Prominent County
Citizen Is Fatally
Hurt In Accident
—•—
Funeral Held Monday At
Home In Griffins
Township
Fatally injured in a logging ac
cident in (Jriffins Township about
5:00 o'clock last Friday afternoon.
Mr. John Dawson Lilley, promi
nent county citizen and well
known business man, died in a
Washington hospital Sunday
morning at 2:40 o’clock. His skull
fractured in five places, Mr. Lil
ley died without regaining con
sciousness.
Operating one of two tractors,
Mr. Lilley was pulling a log to a
loading ramp when two workers,
Russell Perry and Garfield Man
ning, felled a large pine. The
first tractor, driven by Mr. J. Eas
on Lilley, had gone ahead and
Mr. Dawson moved up just as the
tree fell, a limb striking him on
the head. The tractor choked
down and when workers reached
him he was still on the machine in
a slumped position. His brother
and workmen carried him'in their
arms out of the woods a distance
of about 200, yards, placed him in
an automobile and had him in the
hospital within a very short time.
One report stated that the two
workers heard he first tractor
pass near them and possibly
thought that both of the brothers
had moved on out and that the
path was clear. It was also report
ed that the length of the tree had
i been estimated and its location
I from the path checked, the work
jers thinking that the top would
not teach the path.
I Mr. Lilley was born in, Griffins
, Township 71 years ago the 21st
I of this month, the son of the late
Kader and Mary Griffin Lilley.
He lived on the farm all his life,
and few men worked harder or
/-•niore than he
i clid^^Hewa^^^oobusiiiess man
and attained success as a farmer,
timberman and mill operator. But
he did not find peace, refuge and
happiness in his successes alone;
•fnis' gfcv if
in his daily work, in living with
his fellowman and :n doing for
others. Although the end came
suddenly and as a great shock to
numerous friends throughout this
section, his humble and friendly
manner of living had enabled him
to enjoy the fullness of life. Only
a short time ago he had expressed
two wishes, one of which he had
already planned to put into effect.
A member of the Riddick’s Grove
Baptist Church for about twenty
years and one of its most loyal
supporters, he had planned to add
two Sunday school rooms to the
building. Interested in progres
sive moves, he had hoped to sec
the road by his home surfaced.
Mr. Lilley was a great friend
of his fellowman, ar 1 he seemed
to get great satisfaction in help
ing others. Despite his advanced
years, he worked in his fields, not
so much for the prices he would
receive for his crops, but for the
satisfaction of knowing that a
row of sweet potatoes chopped
by his worn weeding hoe would
help ward off hunger for some
one somewhere. And there is lit
tle or no doubt but what he was
working in’the logwoods last Fri
day mainly to help produce lum
her for those who were without
homes.
Mis warn inrougn me, uuwcvci
humble it may have been, char
acterized him as a benefactor of
mankind, and a friend to all.
Mr. Lilley was a lover of sports
and while he seldom engaged in
them he did operate with his
brother for several years the Wil
liamston franchise in the Coastal
Plain League before it was reor
ganized.
When a young man he was
married to Miss Charlie Anne
Hopkins who died about nine
years ago.
Surviving are two sons, Kader
and Benjamin Lilley of the home;
six daughters, Mrs. Gilbert Peel
of Greenville, Mrs. James Crab
tree, Mrs. Paul Harrington, Mrs.
Jessup Harrison, all of Williams
ton; Mrs. Clayton Revels of Nor
folk, and Miss Ola Lee Lilley of
(Continued on page gig)
Short Session Of
County Board Is
Held On Monday
—
Recommend More Roads
For Improvement; Re
ports Are Received
-•
Members of the Martin County
Board of Commissioners—Joshua
L. Coltrain, Robt. Lee Perry, John
H. Edwards, C. Abram Roberson
and R. A. Haislip—held a short
and uneventful session on Mon
day. The group made a few rec
ommendations for road improve
ments, handled routine business,
including reviews of various de
partmental reports, and adjourn
ed before noon.
W. Clarence Wallace. James
ville Township constable for a
long number of terms, tendered
his resignation to the board, ex
plaining that ill health made it
impossible for him to carry on the
work. J. Paul Holliday, Navy
veteran, was appointed to com
plete the unexpired term. Action
on a permanent appointment is
expected before next December.
Williamston’s Lions Club and
Robersonville's Rotary Club were
exempted of county taxes on car
nivals sponsored by the two or
ganizations in the two towns this
month.
The board recommended that
the roads near the W. C. Wallace
farm and the one leading from
Poplar Chapel to L. P. Holliday’s
farm in Jamesville Township be
drained. It was also pointed out
that the old Williamston-Everetts
Road needed bushing and re
pairs.
It was also recommended that
the old Mill Neck Road from the
old Keyes school house at Tar
Landing to M. T. Gardner's, a dis
tance of three-quarters of a mile,
be worked as a community road.
In his report to the commis
sioners, Tax Collector M. Luther
Peel staled that all hut $5,810.37
of the $189,051.80 tax levy for 1945
had Been collected.
Fines, forfeitures and costs
turned over to the county treas
urer from the recorder’s court
.v/nrrtjntrd to $1,705.81} for the
month of August, Clerk of Court
L. B. Wynne reported. Of the
•amount, $ 1,0G5.o\l Was collected in
fines. The superior court report
ed $132.45 collected during the
period.
Father (jrrrit'iit—
Resident Passes
-«
Mr E. L. Gatling, father of Mrs.
W. G. Peel of Williamston and a
prominent citizen of Windsor,
died suddenly at his home there
last Thursday evening shortly
after 8:00 o’clock, fie was 76
years of age.
Mr. Gatling, formerly a cooper
age manufacturer and merchant,
lately had devoted his time to
farming, timber and real estate,
fie had served two terms as may
or of Windsor and also had been
a member of the Bertie County
Board of Commissioners. He was
a deacon -in. the .Cashie Baptist
Church and for 42 years had been
teacher of the Women’s Bible
Class in the church Sunday
school. He was born in Hertford
County December 25, 1869, and
moved to Windsor in 1897.
Funeral services were conduct
ed in the Cashie Baptist Church
Sunday afternoon at 2:00 o’clock
and burial was in the family plot
in Windsor’s Edgewood Ceme
tery.
Besides his daughter here he is
survived by his widow, Mrs. Ella
Maurice Gatling: three sons, J.
M. Gatling of Washington, D. C-,
and E. J. Gatling and E. L. Gat
ling, Jr., of W’indsor; two daugh
ters, Mrs. R. W. Shepherd of Col
umbus, Ohio, and Mrs. H. W. Ly
on of Windsor; and 13 grandchil
dren and one great-grandchild.
«
I\o Reduction In Fine
For Drunken Driving
■ *
In the drunken driving case
against Haywood Johnson in the
county court last week it was
stated that the defendant was
fined $>10 and taxed with the cost.
The report was in error and Judge
J. C- Smith explained in open
court this week that the fine for
drunken driving had not been re
duced, that Johnson, in court a
second time for alleged drunken
driving, was fined $100, taxed
with the cost and had his license
revoked for another year.
1
Enrollment Figures Are Back
To Normal In County Schools
Schools Pick Up
263 Pupils Over
Last-Year Count
-9
Most of Cain Traceable To
Hold-Over lltli Grade
In High Schools
--» ■ ■
For the first time since before
the war, enrollment figures in the
nine Martin County white schools
are about normal, according to
late reports reaching the office of
the county superintendent this
week. Reports for the colored
schools are far from complete,
but according to the best informa
tion now available a marked in
crease has followed in most of
those schools.
Conditions were said to be
crowded in most of the schools,
but the twelfth grade is absorb
ing the gain in the high schools
and teacher loads, as a rule, have
not been increased materially.
Adjustments have been effected
in most cases and the superin
tendent’s office announced that
the term was progressing smooth
ly Monday. However, a few posi
tions have not been filled perma
nently, but substitutes are carry
ing on the work in those grades.
After reaching a low point of
2,984 last year, the total enroll
ment in the nine white schools
last week bounced up to 3,24T. a
gain of 283 pupils. Most of the in
crease is traceable to the six
white schools where the eleventh
grade was held over to start the
twelfth grade for the first time
on a rc ;uiar schedule. The high
school enrollment jumped from
505 last fall' to 663. It was unof
ficially reported that eighteen
pupils from the Robgood district
are included in the latest figures.
Arrangements were made to send
the pupils to Scotland Neck, but
the patrons furnished transporta
tion for their children and serif
them to Oak City.
Enrollment by ^j^^^dual
schools varies in
department, but maintains a
steady gain in the high school.
Jumcsville’s elementary school
lost 24, but the high school gain
W* JiuCTiow to • ail increase*
j of one.
f arm L.ne lost one in me lower
grades but gained thirteen in the
higli school for an over-all gain of
an even dozen.
Bear Grass gained 42 in the ele
mentary and 18 in the high school
to boost its total enrollment in
crease to 60.
Williamston reported an in
crease of 32 in its elementary
grades and 31 in the high school,
making for the largest enrollment
ever reported.
Absorbing the Gold Point
School after the term began last
fall, Robersonville came up with
a healthy increase this year. Gold
Point, it is estimated, turned 43
pupils to the school, but without
that number there was an in
crease of 35 pupils in the elemen
tary department, and the high
school figures jumped from 152 to
180, a gain of 28 pupils in that
department and an overall in
crease of-106.
Hassell, with 65 pupils, was
short three of its last year total.
Hamilton, with 166 enrolled,
gained eleven pupils.
Oak City more than held its
own in the elementary school, but
led the county with the largest
high school enrollment gain.
Fourteen pupils were added in the
lower grades and in the high
school the figure jumped from 98
to 141.
Few details could be had about
the opening day sessions, but
more than one principal was tug
ging at his hair trying to locate
those pupils who had been away
attending school in a goodly num
ber of states during the war years.
Books shortages were fairly gen
eral, indicating that the free dis
tribution of texts is not proving
very satisfactory or that conser
vatism in Raleigh is proving cost
ly to the pupU.
It lias been announced that at
tendance records will be closely
checked in the schools this year,
that the enfoiceiueni of the Com
pulsory attendance law is to be
expected In the county, especially
in the three districts where sup
(Contlnued on paf e cix).
Enrollment Comparison
A comparison of enrollment for the first days of the 1945-46
and 1946-47 terms in the nine white schools follows:
Jamesville
Farm Life
Bear Grass
Williamston
Everetts
Robersonville
Gold Point
Hassell
Hamilton
Oak City
1945
Ele. H.S. Total
349 60 409
32
38
1946
Ele. ll.S. Total
152
240
665 125
221
342 152
43
68
155
244
98
184
278
790
221
494
43
68
155
342
325
151
282
85
45
56
697 156
220
420 180
65
166
258 14!
410
196
338
853
220
600
65
166
399
2479 505 2984
2584 664 3247
•Consolidated with Robersonville after the opening of the
1945-46 term.
Number Marriage
Licenses Increase
In Martin County
—♦—
Issuance Sets Recoril Last
Month unri Exceeds Total
For All 1945
-*
The number of marriage li
censes issued in this county con
tinues to climb steadily, the issu
| ancc reported by J. Sam Getsing
j er last month exceeding the count
on record for August. In the
eight months of this year, the
number of licenses is greater than
the total issued during all of 194V
Up until the first of this month,
218 licenses had been issued in |
this county as compared with 209
. in the twelve months oi 1945, 190
in 1944, and 203 in 1943.
Twenty-three licences were is
' sued last month, eleven to while
and twelve to colored couples, as !
| follows: I
White
i Dr. William Foster of Ashee/?^
| and Verlu P. J. Narron of Wil
liamston and Kcnly.
Grover Lee Terry and Doris
Donaldson, both of Williamston.
^CVrady^T^Davds^d Windsor^and^
ton.
John Rossell Rogers and Daisy
Lena Whitley, both of Williams
ton.
Earl Taylor of RFD 1, Rober
sonville, and Nellie M. Roberson,
of RFD 1, Williamston.
Jesse Taylor and Christine Tay
lor, both of RFD 1, Robcrsonville.
John. Wiiliani Purvis, Jr., of
Rocky Mount and Mary Ward
Slade, of Hamilton.
Andrew House of RFD 1, Hob
good, and Nellie P. Cooper of
Scotland Neck.
Jarhes Stalls and Dorothy Scott,
both of RFD, Robcrsonville.
Kenneth Buckley and Jean
Buckland, both of Columbia, S.
C.
D. C. Young, Tr., of Salisbury,
N. C., and Lois Rogerson of Rob
ersonville.
Colored
Benjamin Little of Newark, N.
J., and Carrie Taylor of Roberson
ville.
Dallas R. Briley and Bernice
Roberson, both of Robei sonville.
John H. Davis and data Jones,
both of Williamston.
Oscar Lorenzo Roberson of
Robcrsonville and Oi len Bynum
(Continued on page six)
Badly Hurt When
Run Down By Car
—♦_—
Leon Blown, slaughter house
worker, was painfully but not
seriously hurt when he was run
down by a cai in front of Brown’s
grocery on Washington Street
here last Saturday night about 10
o’colck. The victim suffered an
eight-stitch gash in one leg and
was painfully bruised on the
shoulder and face. One report
stated that the car knocked
Brown down and that the wheels
ran over him, but no bones were
broken as far as it could be learn
ed.
James Clark, driving out Wash
ing Street, was quoted as saying
tliat Brown stepped into .the
street, that he coujd not mi*. S&u.
f
ROUND-UP
Fourteen persons were ar
rested and temporarily de
tained in the county jail dur
ing the week-end. For the
first time in months the
drunks were in a minority.
Three were charged with
flim-flamming', four with
drunkenness, one with oper
ating a motor vehicle without
a driver's license, two with
disorderly conduct, two.with
assault, and one was booked
on an old charge.
Four of the fourteen were
white, and the ages of the
group ranged from ‘i'i to 4!)
years.
Mrs* M. H. Ayers
Fatally Stricken
Dirt* While Ih iiitf Removed
■». To u Ho-pita! lit
Terboro
Fatally stricken, apparently by
a heart attack while walking !'■ nm
distance away early last Saturday
evening, Mrs. Mill 11. Ayers died
while being removed to a Tar
boro hospital. Found unconsci
ous on the street, Mrs. Ayers was
first believed to have been struck
by a motor vehicle. Highway pa
trolmen were called and it was
later learned that she had suffer
ed some kind of an attack. Few
details of her sudden and untime
ly passing could be learned im
mediately.
The daughter of the late John
W. House and wife, Mrs. Ayers
was born in Halifax County 55
^mHVfijbng stat ion tore
Home a short
(Continued on page six)
Youth Dies In
Hospital Here
——— $ ■■
Thomas Hardison, ten yea i s old
and a most promising little fel
low, died suddenly in the local
hospital this morning al 12:10
o’clock, the victim of a stomach
ailment. He had not enjoyed the
best of health for possibly a
month or more, and it was first
thought he had malaria. Monday
morning his blood count increased
rapidly and he was operated on
for appendicitis and the other ail
ment was discovered. Special
doctors were called in but the
trouble had advanced too fat to
be juccesslully combatted.
The son of Jack and Lala Grif
fin Hardison, Thomas was born on
March 2, 1936. at the home of his
grandparents, Mr and Mrs. T. C.
Griffin in Griffins Township. He
moved with his parents lo Wil
liamston six years ago and was
living on Park Street. A bright
and cheery little fellow, he was an
apt pupil in the local schools and
was to have entered the fifth
grade this term.
Surviving besides his parents
are two brothers, Janies and Sam
uel.
Funeral arrangements had not
been completed early this morn
ing, but the services are tenta
tively scheduled for Wednesday
afternoon..
Thousands of Bills
Were Introduced
In 79th Congress
--
R»*vi«*w «»f Most Important
Legislation Enacted
Into Law
Since January of last year,
nineteen thousand bills were in
troduced in the 79th United States
Congress- 3,000 in the Senate and
10.000 in the House. It was in
deed a weary session that ended
last month.
A review of the principal legis
lation enacted into law follows:
1. Appropriated $600,000,000 for
an emergency housing program,
designed particularly to meet
needs of returned servicemen and
their families.
2. Liberalized the GI Bill of
Rights to encourage greater use of
the schooling provisions.
3. Broadened the provisions of
the GT insurance legislation.
4. Appropriated about $95,000,
000,000 for the federal establish
ment. (Later, however, about
$64,000,000,000 of this was retract
ed, when the war ended.)
5. Cut the national debt limit
from $300,000,000,000 to $275,000,
000,000.
6. Extended the life of the Re
renst met inn Finance Corporation
until next January, instead of for
five years, as asked by the Presi
dent.
7. Increased pay of
members of
Congress from $10,000 to $12,500
yearly plus a $2,500 tax-free ex
pense allowance (Mr. Truman
recommended a $20,000 salary);
increased the pay of federal
judges from $10,000 to $15,000 and
of federal workers 14 percent.
Also made members of Congress
eligible i'nr contributory pensions.
H. Set up a three-member Eco
nomic Council to recommend
ways to maintain maximum em
ploy nit nt and avoid depressions.
9. Cut income taxes and repeal
ed the excess profits tax.
liy Made the federal-aid school
lunch program permanent.
11. Established a
federal aid to eneu
wide development at
merit of airport.-:.
12. Authorized exp(|
$7%
men
hospitals and improve
13. Gave the Presidenl
power to reorganize federal
u s. alt lioiieli not as
14. Accepted two reorganization
proposals the President submit
ted. One was to centralize wel
fare activities in the Federal Se
: curity Agency as a preliminary
i step to making it a new cabinet
post. The other involved trans
fer of more than a score of func
tions between various agencies.
15. Provided for reorganization
and streamlining of Congress.
16. Called for return of the
United States Employment Serv
ices to the States next November,
instead of delaying it until next
June, as asked by the President.
17 Extended the “anti-rack
eteering" laws to cover labor un
ions, in a measure known as the
Hobbs bill It w.oijh^m.;jk,o it. a
felony to interfere by "robbery or
extortion" or by threats of vio
lence with movement of goods in
interstate commerce.
In the closing hours of the Con
gress action was taken “freezing’’
the Social Security tax at one per
cent for another year from Jan
uary 1. 1947 (had this action not
been taken the tax would auto
matically have increased on Janu
ary 1 to 2 5 percent from both the
employe and the employer). The
(Continued
from page one)
. t
Flim - Flammers
Out Under Bond
John Doyle and Smith Wilson,
colored men charged with an at
tempt to "pull" the old pocket*
book game here last week, were
released Sunday under cash bonds
in the sum of $200 each.
Raymond Williams, a third de»
fondant in the case who main*
tains that he was driving the
other two around under contract^
has not been able to raise bond
and continues in the county jail.
No complete report on the re
cords has oeen received from th#
Fedeial Bureau of Investigation,
but ihc two making bond are §1
leged to have practiced the tUtifr
flam business for a goodly mint*
her of years. »
*