THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BI * OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNT! FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK THE ENTERPRISE VOLUME L—NUMBER 42 Williamston, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, May 27, 14J47 THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BI OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNTI FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK ESTABLISHED 1899 as^-s* * mi ItfhH.Qy Safety Crusade Gaining Support — • Extensive Program Being Planned for the Next Five-Year Period North Carolina's Traffic Safety Crusade, a comprehensive five year plan designed to reduce traf fic fatalities and accidents, was materially aided this week by two significant events. Many news papers, cooperating to ine fuilco! wit.. . ,e C mmittto for Traffic Safety, Inc., are pub lishing a full page account of Gov ernor R. Gregg Cherry's personal safety letter to the people of North Carolina. In addition, cer tificates designating each motor vehicle owner or driver as a traf fic Safety Crusader have been mailed from Raleigh. This desig nation of every automobile owner as a safety crusader, over the sig ▼ nature of the Governor of the State is intended to impress our citizens with the importance of joining in this program to meke North Carolina highways safer. Realizing that the State is fac ed with a serious condition—traf fic tragedies happening hourly, Governor Cherry called a State Traffic Conference to consider this vital subject. On the recom mendation of this conference he named the State Committee for Traffic Sc*"':’ T-e fc f :v:.I and means of enlisting the sup port of the public and to prepare a comprehensive traffic aaici^ program. This Committee, with Coleman W Roberts, president of fa*— Jina Motor Club as chairman ana j H. Galt Braxton, publisher o. m,, , sten Daily Free Press as Vice j Chairman, is made up of a group ; of far thinking and deeply inter- ; ested State leaders. These men j have designed a five year plan which should help North Carolina lose its unenviable position as third high State in regard to traf fic accidents. Under leadership of the officers and board of governors of the State Committee for Traftic Safe ty, Inc., the five year plan was evolved. This program contem plates: a mobilization for traffic safety, teaching adults and stud ents how to drive, conducting safe driving courses in schools, driver testing with accurate devices, pro viding technical service to com munities, the renewal of drivers' licenses after examination, the in spection of all motor vehicles, the building of safety into highways, the certainty of punishment for traffic violators, improvement of state and local traffic laws, in creased state highway patrol anti local traffic forces and recogni tion for the best traffic safety re cords. The General Assembly, acting in concurrence with the Gover nor’s recommendations, enacted motor vehicle legislation this year which is far-reaching and a pro gressive move in fighting traffic fatalities and accidents. To make this legislation effective, however, it is necessary to have the full co operation of the people. Now, with Governor Cherry's letter reaching the people through the cooperation of the State press and individual sponsors, a person al challenge is issued to every citi zen of North Carolina. How can 1 aid.this Traffic Safety Crusade? You can aid this program by be ing careful yourself, by boosting safety to others, by cooperating with county and town officials in working out local traffic safety" programs and by donating to this | campaign. (Continued on page sue) MEETING i IT U< I W Meeting: in the law offices of Critcher and Gurganus here Thursday evening of this week at 8:15 o'clock members of the executive committee of the Martin County Tuber culosis Association will out line a program for the furth erance of the fight against tuberculosis in the county. Members of the committee include, Mrs. P. B. Cone, Miss Mary Taylor, Mrs. Eva Grimes, Chas. H. and J. C. Manning, Philip Keel, John W Williams and Edgar Gur gauus. w . St tl \v is P ld< lit P1 U ntiim f % Advertising Drive Planned Meeting in the law offices of Peel and Manning last week-end, a special committee headed by Elbert S. Peel, chairman; A. J. Manning, vice cahirman; R. Ed win Peel, secretary: and Leman Barnhill, treasurer, advanced ten tative plans for an extensive to bacco market advertising cam paign for the 1947 season. Much interest was expressed in the plans which call for a $5,000 cash l appropriation, personal solicita ! i-- u” kening in the I market a id its possibilities. The | meeting was well attended by business and professional men. in cluding representatives from each of the warehouse firms. The committee, working in close cooperation with the mar ket operators, "oposes to go on the air over at least two radio stations, support a newspaper campaign, advance indirect adver tising and back it all up with a personal interest in behalf of the GOOD SEASON * | V. _ f Experiencing unusually hot and dry weather for several weeks, this county, with the exception of one or two small r •~>nviile, had a fine season Sunday V'hon rain fell and conditions turned more favorable for to bacco transplanting and the - » -«1 ll.n »■-"- — -r Tobacco transplanting, de layed the greater part of A,- _V.J ,„in high gear yesterday with Ihe 1 , -ssibility that the crop will be transplanted in its entire ty before the end of this week, leaving possibly a little resetting to be handled in early junt. Two Minor Road ! Wrecks Saturday One person whs hurt and an ( lutomobile was badly damaged in i wo highway accidents, both in s he Jamesville section, last Satur iay. Will Roberson, 88-year-old coi ned handyman around the yard if Mr, and Mrs, Leslie Hardison, ell out of a horse-drawn cart a ew miles out from Jamesville on he Farm Life Road and broke me or more ribs. Roberson, said o have been imbibing a bit too reely, went to the Hardison lot rhere he had worked for years, litched up a young horse to a cart nd started to the country to get hair cut. When he fell out of ic cart he was a mile or more cyond the home of his friend here he was to have his hair cut. [e was treated in a doctor’s office t Plymouth. No one was hurt but damage, stimated by Patrolman W. E. aunders resulted when a 1941 ontiac club coupe, driven by Jeff avis McNair, colored, of Roper, ad a Ford truck, driven by Arth r Godard Shepard, white, of Wil amston, sideswiped each other aout one and one-half miles this de of Jamesville at 4:00 o’clock st Saturday morning. The truck jlongcd to the Moore Ice Com iny of Windsor. chool Closing Tomorrow Night st ec hi or he re w th hi m -o Williamston’s school closing ogram, following the com encement sermon in the high hool auditorium ■Sunday night, ill center around the senior class cercises tonight at 8:00 o’clock ith the big event—graduation— heduled for Wednesday night at e same hour. Hugh G. Horton, local attorney, ill address the seniors and spec 1 awards will be announced and esented along with diplomas. --■ ■ ■ o-— finor Robbery Reported .It Lunch Counter Here Tearing a panel out of the back tor, a thief entered Jernigan's nch room on Washington Street Me Sunday and stole about a >und of barbecue and possibly a w pints of wine. of tii co tic on hi si: tic nc Ja m Be L. Ih Hi Jo he es rc to he market. Known as “Williamston Tobacco Market Boosters,” the newly formed organization is out to get every local citizen" to talk tobacco, think tobacco and invite the sale of tobacco in Williams ton.” Arrangements were made to place the market on the air each day between 12:20 and 12:25, and A. J. Mantling wras directed to ex pand the program. W. C. Manning was named to head the newspaper advertising program, and Thad Harrison was instructed to ad vance an indirect advertising movement calling for special wmrds to be stamped on direct mail letters ana other media. J. Rossell Rogers and Urbin Rogers, recently joining the market's op erating personnel, were named to prepare the radio advertising pro grams, and they are to contact other advertisers in an effort to have them include a "plug” for the local market. Funeral Service Held Friday For Soldier’s Widow Mrs. Kffie Harrison Win* berry Died In Sanatorium T' - '.v Morning Funeral services were conduct ed in the Rosp of Sharon Free Will Raniist Ch.ireh L,. 7, ;d„y afternoon for Mrs Ff,;- ,T—:— ~;.loerry „„„ „,.v. **->rtin County Sanatorium the ■norning before. Her pastor, the Rev. D. W. Alexander of near Bethel, conducted the last riles ind interment was in the church yard. Her death was the second epc.rted in the sanatorium last week, and the third tuberculosis ieath in her family; a grandfather ind a sister having preceded her n death. The daughter of Mrs. Lillie Pol ard Harrison and the late Alonzo larrison of the Bear Grass sec ion, she wt^s born on June 3, 1922. Vhen about sixteen years of age he fell victim of tuberculosis and uceessfully underwent treatment a a state sanatorium. Following er discharge from the institution he was married to Earl L. Allcox f Pitt County, in August, 1942. le was killed on the Western ront in France on February 3, 945, a daughter, Alice Virginia, ten 18 months old, surviving. Mrs. Allcox suffered a relapse nd after that was married to El icr Winberry of this county. She .'entered the State Sanatorium id while there in lath October of st year her husband, acting jainst the advice of her attend g physicians, took her out of the stitution. Her disappearance lused much concern for possibly n or fifteen days or until she as found critically ill in a Tar no hotel where her case was } lied to the attention of the Red oss. She was removed imme- 1 ately to the Martin County San- j orium where her condition re- I ained virtually unchanged until 8 st a short time before the end v 3t Thursday morning. Reports ' ite that. Winberry had not visit her in about two months, that r generally visited her about F ce a month or about the time r allotment or pension checks J ached her. Winberry’s recent lcrcabouts is not known to au- 1 orities, but letters written by 1 n a short time ago were post irked at Otcen. me case had teen m the hands welfare authorities for some ne, but they were unable to pe with all the existing condi ns which apparently kept her t of a regular sanatorium. Besides her small daughter and sband, she leaves her mother; : sisters, Lillian, Nellie and hlir Mae Harrison of the home ar Gold Point, Mrs. James G. ckson of Plymouth, Mrs. Jim e Lee and Mrs. King E. Cratt of ar Grass; and four brothers, A. Harrison of Tarboro, Albert irrison of Greenville, Thomas irrison of Newport News, and soph Mayo Harrison of the me. Mrs. Winberry was held in high eem by all who knew her, and Dorts from the county sana 'ium stated that she accepted r -ufi .ring with great patieii/vw Victim of Attack Late Last Sunday -o Eighty Small Shot Counted In William Ruffin's Foot Following Attack — » William Ruffin. 28-year-old col ored man, was painfully and pos sibly seriously hurt late last Sun day night when he was attacked by an unknown assailant on a lit tle used street in Jamesvillc. Of ficers were working on the case late Monday but a report on their investigation was not revealed immediately. Brought to a Williamston doc tor's office for treatment, Ruffin carried eighty small shot in one foot, a report stating that a few had found their way into the other foot, most of them piercing the shoes and lodging at or near the bones. A report coming from the doctor's office stated that no bones were broken, that after re ceiving treatment, Ruffin was re turned to his home in Jamesville. Walking along the little used street or path, Ruffin was accost ed by a man believed by some to have been white with a shot gun. “He told me to turn around and run back where I came from,” Ruffin was quoted as saying. A preliminary report on the attack stated that Ruffin did as he was told, that he had hardly started running before he was fired upon at fairly close range. The man's assailant, believed to have been drinking, left the scene, and neighbors, hoaiintr the shot founH ... mm.. hi,,, to the I doctor’s office. I It was reported that the assail-1 ant had talked with another man | at or near the same spot where! Ruffin was shot, a short time lat er, but details of the conversa tion held by the two could not be learned. Following an investigation last night, Sheriff C. B. Roebuck said this morning that an arrest could be expected shortly. Ruffin has been making his home for the past six or eight ■ months in Jamesville where he • was employed by Contractor Les- I lie Hardison. He told officers thut i is far as he knew he had made t 10 one mad, that he had no ene- < nies. I Rare Stamp Has Value of $50,000 - ■ • An inch-square piece of paper had special cops and the Centen ary International Philatelic Exhi bition in a very rare tizzy recent ly in New York. It was the British Guiana one cent magenta postage stamp, val ued at $50,000, and worth that much to well-heeled collectors because so far as is known it is the only one of its color ever made. The stamp, which King George V once vainly tried to buy, is on display at the exhibition in an ex pensive mounting in a blue velvet I box in a glass case, guarded by a special cop. All of a sudden it vanished. After frantic search it was found—under the mounting. The heat from the spotlights had melted the glue which held it in place. Meanwhile, the Postoffice re ported that the Centenary was being observed by philatelists and others who bought 7,586.267 three cent stamps with a value of $227 - 588.01. The previous record, 80, 000 less stamps, was set last Feb ruary with the Edison stamps. —u Minor Accident Last Thursday Property damage, estimated at $275 by Cpl. W. T. Simpson of the highway patrol, resulted when a taxi driven by Lloyd H. Viek and a jeep; driven by Leslie Rober son, crashed on the Slaugthcr House Road last Thursday morn ing at 7:22 o’clock. No one was hurt, the patrol officer said. Roberson, according to the re port, was getting ready to make a turn in front of the slaughter house, and Vick, was traveling toward the railroad when the ve hicles crashed, doing $175 dam age to the Tari, a Dodge couch, and $100 to U:c jeep. it j: .'■V _ >-^ Economy Directed Against Tlie Farm Would Also Lop About Thirty Million from School Lunch Fund The House Appropriations Com mittee, seeking ways to slash ex | penses in order to reduce taxes, proposes to save $383,000,000 at the expense of the nation's farm ■ ers and school children. It slashed this amount (or 32 per cent) from the Agriculture Department’s $1,190,000,000 bud get, cutting deepest into funds re quested for the school lunch pro gram, for soil conservation, crop insurance and loans to tenant far mers. To justify cutting the school lunch budget from $75,000,000 to $45,000,000, the Committee assert ed that ‘only one child out of nine receives a free meal." Then: “It does not seem too much to suggest that the cost of school lunches for the children of Ameri ca, most of whom are able to pay for them, might well be borne by the States." To the farmers of the U. S. A., the Committee offered a New Deal, asserting that the time has come for agriculture to solve more of its problems through individ ual and community action rather than through “paternalistic Fed eral grants and subsidies.” Informed of the Committee ac tion, Secretary of Agriculture T. Anderson repeated wluit hf, had said in testimony,: that the nronnsed cut would cri^ pie the farm program; that it would eliminate functions "which are mandatory under laws." The cuts, if upheld by the House after debate, will boost to slightly more than $2 .billion the total re ductions made Dy the House in its drive to lop $6 billion from the President's 37 1-2 billion budget. Here are the major cuts that hit the farmer: Soil conservation: Cut from $267,620,754 to $150,000,000, the amount which may go in direct payments to farmers for follow ing practices intended to conserve the soil and promote more pro duction over a long period of time, practices which have proved themselves in the light against erosion. Farm Tenant Loans: The entire $35,000,000 budget request was denied because, the committee said, present farm values are in flated and arc “certain to collapse 1 and farmers saddled with loans at current inflated values will surely come to grief.” Loans for ■ production and subsistence were cut $90,000,000 to $60,000,000 be cause “bunk credit is available in abundance.” Crop Insurance: Cut from $9,- ' 330,000 to $2,000,000 and put on an ( “experimental basis until a sound | and actural approach is develop- , cd." t Frit' Altrndiiiii Typhoid 1 in in u n izati on Clinic a — • Very few persons acted to pro tect themselves against typhoid fever when the first in a number of immunization clinics were held in the lower part of the county yesterday, according to a prelim inary report coming from the county health office. A schedule of the clinics ap pears on page two in this paper, and the attention of the public is directed to it with the expressed hope that thousands will act in their own protection. Two cases of the fever were reported lust year, and one of them has proved to be a carrier. APPLICANTS k. ,i__ No official information lias been released, but it was re liably learned this week that several persons had filed ap plications for the position of local police chief. Some of the commissioners, it was learned, had been contacted personally by some of the present officers and several outside the department. They were instructed to file their applications in writing: for consideration possibly at the regular meeting next Monday of tilt lull board. For jNew Proprietor Chas. J. Brady To Take Charge Here On June The First —•— New Owners Planning 15 Room Addition to Pres ent Hotel Building -<* Purchasing the George Reyn olds Hotel property from the Cun ninghams several weeks ago, Messrs. Sid A. Mobley and Robert L. Coburn announced this week that the hotel had been leased to Chas. J. Brady and that the new operator would take over the management on June 1. The K. A. Whites, operators of the hotel for the past several years, are planning to make their home at Ocean View, it was learned. Mr. Brady, although a young man, has had 28 years experience in the hotel business, having op erated the Vance for several years in Henderson where he made many friends. Mr. Brady, coming here highly recommended as a hotel manager, will be accompani ed by his wife and 15-year-old son. The new owners announced plans for a renovation prog>',’>" costing several thousand dollars. I for the hotel, including new fur nishings and equipment. Leasing me properly ior nve years wun| the new manager will operate a modern dining room. Commenting on the renovation program, one of the new owners stated that they planned to make •he hotel a good, clean and com fortable one. The hotel will be : aperated only partially during the month of June when the owners plan to complete the renovation work, including painting and pap- ' -'ring. 1 It was pointed out that no ex- |1 ensive modernization program ! ' would be attempted just now, the lwners explaining that they are j1 till considering plans for the con- * (ruction of a 45-room addition to ' he present property. "We have * uid blueprints prepared, and we ; tope to build the addition at some 1 uture time,” Co-owner R. L. Co- J1 >urn said, explaining that no at- i1 erupt to build the annex would!1 'C made until construction costs ■1 noderate to some extent. i1 Man Attacked And Leit On Highway —*— Karl Cooper Hollowcll, young World War II veteran, was beat-) en and left on the Slaughter House Itoad lute last Thursday night. Picked up by Deputy Sheriff Buck Holloman and local officers, Hollowed, a roof work-1 or, was placed in the hospital here ; for treatment. Said to have been drinking, Hollowcll was not badly hurt and was able to leave the hospital the next day. The young man went to the Slaughter House Cafe and tried to get a check cashed. While there he was reported to have insulted j patrons, several of whom were ( from Windsor. He was ordered from the cafe and he was found in a semi-conscious condition stretched out on the highway. He told officers that a white man, weighing about 200-pounds, wearing a sport shirt and driving a one-seated black car, beat him. No arrests have been made in the case. --o- ... Firemen Called Out Last Night —♦ Fire, believed by Fire Chief G. 1*. Hall to have started from u cig arette on the floor of the dark room, wrecked the Bcddard Photo Shop on Huilroud Street here at 10:50 last night. Smould ering apparently for several hours, the fire smoked up the ap proximately 12x12 room and wrecked all the equipment. Fire men brought the fire under con trol with a small hose line. No estimate on the loss could be had immediately. SLICK THEFT Approximately $.100 in 10 and 20-dollar bills were stol en from Bruce Holloman, op erator of the Centi a' 'irrv' a Station, here aoout 9:00 o’clock last SunUa.r Preparing La close his busi ness for the night, Mr Hollo man packed the bills into a money sack. He laid the sack down to wait on a late cus tomer and someone, using a sharp knife, cut a small hole in the bag and slipped the money out. The owner did not detect the theft until about 2:00 o'clock Monday morning when he got up to answer an emergency call and looked into the bag for change and found the money gone. Hold Funeral For Mack Henry Scott J In County Monday Retired Farmer Died at Mis Home [Near ttak liilv j fairly Sunday Funeral services were conduct ed at the home near Oak City J i Tvlutidav afternoon ... ... for Mack Henry Scott, retired farmer, who died there at 5.CG I o’clock Sunday morning. His pa: J tor Elder Thurman Phelps of the 'Tarboro Mormon Church con ducted the last rites. He was as sisted by Elder J. R Bass of Rocky Mount, and Elder Lee 11 Hendrickson, who recently came to eastern North Carolina from Jerome, Idaho, to do mission work for the Mormon church, inter ment was in Williamston's Wood lawn Cemetery. The son of the late John and I Bettie Scott, he was born near j Robersonville on September 1, 1892, and lived and worked on a | farm all his life, or until he was , [forced into virtual retirement by a heart ailment about three years | ago. His condition, while serious ; for some time, was not considered critical until about three days hi-- ■ fore the end when he was forced | \ to his bed. I Mr. Scott was first married to , Miss Dora Pollard of the Parmele Community and following her i death he was married to Miss | Sadie Squires of Pamlico County. He and his family had made their \ home in the Hamilton-Ha.- sell i Communities for a number of ] years before locating on the Hois- * lip farm near Oak City a few i months ago. He joined the Mor- , mon church in Tarboro about a j h month ago. , Surviving are his widow and I twelve children, James Henry, i Cleman, Raelu-l, Frank, Clyde, e Lillian, Muck Henry, Jr., Fred J , Johnnie, Bessie Mae and Huddie 1 Scott; three brothers, Samuel Scott of Pitt County, Stephen . Scott of Plymouth, and Bert | Scott of Oak City; one sister, Mrs. Emma Page of Oak City; fifteen grandchildren and one great grandchild, |c -o-— Decision Expands Authority of Law The United States Supreme ‘ Court recently handed down a 5 j to 4 decision holding that law of- ! ficfcrs arresting a man at his home on a wurrunt may search the pre mises and use against him any evidence they find of law-break ing. The four who disagreed said the court was striking down the constitution’s protection against unreasonable search and seizure. Chief Justice Virson delivered the court's majority decision. Dis sents were entered by Justices) Frankfurter, Murphy, Jackson \ and Itutlcdge. The decision up-) held the conviction of an Okla homa resident who was tried for i draft law violation on evidence! accidentally uncovered by F. B. I. agents during a search of his1 home in connection with another mutter. * « f.4«fcU ') Mumper Ham i! i ;ur Of UNRRA Relief “Steal Food From Starv« iiifl, Self It and Pocket The Money -s>-' Robert St. John, author and new- —-mmentator who has just arri" in v" -nsi,,- ,, at — -«.»ncj. big some time in Greece, reports th ‘ Gre'-' officials are v.ithhcld >ne UNRRA food from thousands of villages. In a letter to American Relief for Greek Democracy St. John declares: “The EAM (coalition of left parties) has just sent proof to the government that 3500 villages in Greece have received no UNR RA food for an average of six months. An UNRRA official in Athens and another at Salonika state that 'many of the villages have received no food for 11 or 12 months.’ The EAM is being conservative.” One reason Greek villages get no food, St. John discovered, was that “under the law, the Nomar ch ia (head of the county) can is sue the village's food ration only to the president (of the village). So the president posts a notice on a telephone pole that unless the people,of the village call for their rations within five days, he will v..opuse of tile food. “Then, when they don't appear because they already have been warned to stay where they are, — r .. .u« nt sells die peoples food and pockets the money, after spinung with various other Greek oi'i icials,” St. John reports. ht. John describes his visit to the village of A vestario, with a population of (172. He vwrit.es: I he children all have sores on laces arms and bodies. I held one in my arms. Its belly was like that ol a Tammany alderman.” "Have you any food in town rug the children?” St. John asked. "No.” “What are you living on?” “Roots from the forest.” (St, John comments that doctors told 'ini that the roots have no real lourishment and merely fill and )loat the belly). Three women stepped forward, me with live children, one with our, one with three. The three lusbands were serving long sen ences in exile. One of the women said, "We wuld give our children away if re could be sure someone would eed them. And we love them, but ve cannot see them starve.” 1 here are no medical supplies n the village, a doctor has never -ceil there, and there is no school. In the general store, St. John eports, "the shelves are empty xeept for 13 boxes of the finest rejich face powder 1 have ever ecu (probably imported and meed on the shop owner by one f the ‘admirable’ characters nuwn as a Greek 'unporter-in- »• ustrialist’), one string of rotten gs, five pounds of white beans, iree one-pound boxes of mouldy hocnlates, one bottle of aspirin.’’ American women of today, ac cording to a survey made by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Com pany, have an average life span "f sixty-nine and one-half years, as compared to sixty-four and one-half years for men. The fig ures show a gain of sixteen and two-thirds years life expectancy since the turn of the century. KOI MM I* v. J There were several figIlls and a guu attack, hut only lour persons were arrested ami plaeed in the county jail here over the week-end. No arrest hail been made late Monday in the shot gun at tack. One person was jailed for public drunkenness, one for an assault, oue for being drunk and disorderly and one for operating a motor vehicle without a driver's license. The ages of the group, in cluding one white, ranged from 13 to 1. years.