Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Oct. 31, 1947, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BT OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNT* FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK THE ENTERPRISE THE ENTERPRISE IS READ B1 OVER 3.000 MARTIN COUNT! FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEES VOLUME L—NUMBER 87 William ston, Martin County, North Carolina, Friday, October 31, 1917 ESTABLISHED 1899 Makes Address At Memorial Service In Robersonville -■ • Program Wednesday Pays a Tribute To County's ■ ]}• bcafi-1 -u- 1 Highlighted by an address by ' Rev. James M. Perry, a memorial '■ service was held in the Roberson- i ■ ville High School Wednesday,' morning when fitting tributes 1 were paid to the memory of Mar- j ^ tin County's World War II dead i The program, hurriedly prepared | out of necessity, was sponsored by | the various veterans1 organiza- ! tions in the county, and Mr. Sher- I wood L. Roberson presided. Rev. Sidney Boone, Methodist minister of Robersonville, read briefly from the Scripture and of fered the invocation. Welcoming those in attendance upon the ser »^.vice, Commander George Me- j Rone of the Murray Cargile Post of the American Legion, said, “I welcome you here to this memorial service in the name of the Murray Cargile Post of the American Legion. I honor you, soldier and citizen patriots of Martin County who fought to save our soil from invasion, and | today I pay tribute to the fallen j fellow-soldiers who died on for- | eign fields and home shores that , we at home might live in peace.” j Mr. McRorie read an ■ appropriate prayer in concluding his address of welcome. The all-girl High School Glee Club under the direction of Mrs. | Wilkerson, and a ladies’ quartet | composed of Mrs. Mayo Little, Mrs. J. M. Perry, Mrs. Irving j Smith and Mrs. Vance Roberson, accompanied by Mrs. C. A. Rober son. sung two selections. Representatives of various or ganizations were recognized by Chairman Roberson after Rev. J. R. Everett read the honor roll. Tiie text of Rev. Mr. Perry's ad dress follows: In 480 B. C. King Leonidas and i *■ his 300 brave Spartans met Ihe Persian Army at Thermopylae and hurled back the teeming .. if.nf•1 hy -n>- if his own countrymen. They died 1 to a man and 700 Thespians chose to die with them. When Xerxes demanded they surrender their arms Leonidas replied: “Come and Take Them ” A monument was erected with this inscription: "Stranger, tel! the Lacedemon ians that we lie here in obedience to their orders.” At the battle of Marathon, slaves were turned into brave sol diers when promised their liberty, and Greece and Europe were sav ed largely by their valor in de fense of Freedom. On June 15, 1215 the barons of England met the forces of King John and defeated them at Run nymede on the banks of the River Thames, and forced the King to sign the famous “Magna Charta.” This charter of Human Liberty in spired the determination of free men everywhere to live, and, if nt cd - of I- i ce dom. The American Revolution and its Constitution, the world’s great est political document, drawn up in 1789, stirred the people of Eu rope profoundly. Its wise declara tions and bold assertions of self government influenced the French Revolution and resulted in the New French Constitution of 1791 with its like Declaration of Hu man Freedoms, of men, Concience and of Speech and the Press. This nation of ours not only cherishes and defends her liber ties at home, but lends generous aid to the weak peoples of the (Continued on page eight) t r MEETINGS Little business other than routine matters will claim the attention of the county and town foosMs ul .commission . ; vi::. i'.v x’. \tou-iii;-.. .-'fiws-st*wvt$ group, meeting that morning at 10:00 o’clock, is slated to draw a jury tor the December ^ term of the superior court, "There’s no special business slated for the town board at its regular meeting that eve ning at 8:00 o'clock, but there’s no telling what will present itself,” Mayor Robt. Cowan said yesterday. | Postal Revenue Gradually Declining In Local Office \ -*- I Stamp sales, once pushing the local post office toward a first class rating, are gradually declin ing... Jcte..'.eyoi'ls rel,':iseiil liy..Post master W. E. Dunn stating that the September revenue was the smallest for any month so tar this year. On the other hand, the money order business really boomed, the activities in that de paitment showing a gain of near $7,000 over those recorded in Sep tember of last year. Stamp sales at the local post of fice last quarter amounted to $7, 608.05. While that represents the transfer of quite a few of the little three-cent stickers, the amount is $485.15 below the $8,076.20 in come reported in the third quur ter of 1946. Mo.st of the decrease J was centered in the latter part of i the 1947 third quarter, the sales for last, month falli; * $700 below 1 those recorded in July of this year. September, 1946, sales were less than those recorded for the previous July, but the decrease was limited to about $200 com pared with the $700 drop this year. I The money order business for i the first three months of last year ] and for the comparable period this year was about the same, but in the second quarter of Mils year it topped that of a year ago by over | $ 12.000, and went on last quarter i to show a gain m over $15,000 j over that of July, August and j September, 1946, COMPLETED Costing approximately $8, VtSO, according to preliminary estimates, the street improve ment project launched here last Friday was completed to day and the contractors start ed moving their equipment to Carteret County. New sand-asphalt paving I was done on parts of School I Drive, Halifax and Park Streets and the drive to the grammar school, and resur facing was done on Grace, Sinithwick, Hassell, Elm, Washington, Ray and Warren Streets and Marshall Avenue. I Pupils Interview I Head Of County’s Schools Recently —*— Questions Briiiff Answrrs To Current Operation of Thirty-one Sehools Interviewing J. C. Manning, superintendent of Martin County eently. Misses Carolyn Taylor and Dorothy Dixon, Robersonville High School seniors, propounded quite a few appropriate questions and brought out some interesting facts about the schools in this county. The interview follow's in out line form: Carolyn: How many white and colored schools in the county? i Answer: There arc nine white schools. 9 Elementary and 6 High j Schools. There are twenty-two colored schools—22 Elementary, ! 2 High Schools. Dorothy: Give the approximate | number of students in the county? Answer: The census of white j children ages 6—21, 4256; for ne gro children. 4668. In member I ship, white children, there were '2,753 in the Elementary schools j and 677 in the high schools. There Vi'K. 3 463 in tary schools, and 344 in the Negro high schools. Carolyn: How many school bus es in the county? Answer: There are 44 school buses operating in the county.—39 white and 5 negro buses. Dorothy: What is the value of the school property? Answer: The value of the white school property is $624,000.00—the (Continued from page one) Sav Missing Man Has Been Seen Tile mystery surrounding the disappearance of Andrew Rober son. 40-year-o)d colored farmer, i from his home in Cross Roads ' Township more than two w'eeks . ago remains unsolved. | Roberson was reported seen i this week in the Poplar Point sec tion, b'iv;the repoicuuid be U- ified. A man was seen eating ! peanuts in a field there early in I the week, and the next morning a ! man was seen near a hog pen on the old Wildcat Road. Officers, ; placing littic credence in the re 1 ports, say the man’s disappearance ‘continues as a baffling puzzle. It ' is thought bye some that the man j is dead, that possibly he met with 'foul play around a iiquor still in ! the woods not far from his home. Funeral Friday In Robersonville For Louis T. Holliday —.*— Wav Hero's Body Firsl To Be Returned From T!ie Paeifie For Burial Funeral services will be con- j ducted Friday afternoon of this | week at 3:00 o’clock in the Rober sonville Christian Church for Machinist’s Mate 1/e Louis Thom as Holliday, U. S. Navy, who made the supreme sacrifice in the Pa cific Theater in World War II. His body is the first of a Martin Coun ty man to be returned from over seas to native soil for burial as a part of the huge price American youth paid in World War 11. Prepared for the long journey home last month, the young man’s body arrived in San Francisco the 10th of October on the Honda Knot along with the bodies of more than 3,000 other fallen he- j roes. The body was transferred to Charlotte where it was placed on a government motorcar at 6:00 o’clock last Thursday morning for the last )gn of^a long but noble journey. Scheduled to reach Rob ersonville at 5:00 o'clock Thurs day afternoon, it will be removed to the home of his sister, Mrs. Heber E. Baker, where it will lie j in state until it is removed to the church for the funeral. The pas tor Rev. James M. Perry, assist ed by Rev. Sidney Boone, Meth odist minister, and Rev. J. II. Ev j erett, Baptist pastor, will offici ate. Military graveside rites will I lie conducted in the Roberson ville Cemetery by members of the Murray R. Cargde Post 381, of the American Legion of Rober sonville. The body is being ac companied on the last of the long juorney by Chief Machinist’s Mate Paul C. Tolson. « The son of Mrs. Beulah White Holliday of Camp Butner Hospital, and the late W. H. Holliday, he was born in Everetts in 1907, and spent his early youth there. Com , elementary education in the Robersonville schools, he enlisted in the Navy on January 23, 1925, his service taking him to many parts of the world including two years spent in China. After his long service he was eligible for retirement on January 23, 1941. but war was rapidly eating its way around the world and he chose to remain at his post of duty. When the Japs attacked Pearl Harbor on that Day of Infamy j back ir. December, 1941. the young I navy man was in the Philippines. ! His ship, the U. 3. S. Finch, sunk, I he was transferred to Corregidor where he participated in the his toric defense of that far aw:ay out post. Taken prisoner on May 6, 1942, he W'as held by the Japs in (Continued on page eight) -* On Trial In Kinston Tor Killing Martin Man -fr... j.Frank Black. Kio-Um Negro } went on trial ir; the Lenoir Coun j ty Superior Couit this week for I the murder of William Lester j C-orcy. native of ih - ,.ounty, who was bludgeoned to death with a piece of iron pipe allegedly in the hands of Black near Kinston on October 4. Corey, leaving this county eight or ten years ago, was driving a taxi in Kinston when he was rob bed and murdered. List Of County's War Dead Read At Memorial Service — County ' Have ' ! Sacrificed Lives Fifty eight Martin-County-men, I including officers and enlistees. I are known to have made the su preme sacrifice in World War II. Several hundred persons, includ ing pupils, filed into the Rober sonville High School auditorium Wednesday morning to pay trib ute to the memory of those men in a memorial service sponsored by the various veterans' organiza tions and individuals. Last-min ute changes in the program were found necessary, and failure of technical equipment kept a por tion off the scheduled radio broadcast. Only a few of the next of kin of the 58 heroes could attend the service, and the general attend ance was comparatively small, but the program was very impressive and came- at a time when the bodies of the fallen heroes are be ing returned for interment in home soil. Fifty-eight Martin Men Siifnirc To Rev. J. R. Everett, Roberson ulle Baptist minister, read the list of those who paid in full meas ure that others might enjoy free dom and peace. After reading the list of the county's war dead, the minister said, "We thunk God for the lives and service of these men who made the supreme sacrifice for their country and for the cause of liberty and freedom in the world. We honor and cherish their mem ory. May the Lorn help us who have been spared, to be faithful to the noble principles and ideals for which these men gave their lives." The list of the county’s war dead is not official, and is subject to correction, but according to the best records available, fifty-eight Martin County men, natives or citizens by adoption, lost their lives in World War II. Their names and their old home ad d > t plTjt Vlf f Wes: Murray Cargile Parmele. John Goldie Leggett, Williams ton. Dennis Robert Coltrain, Wil liamston. Austin Randolph Jackson, Jamesville. William Freeman Haislip, II, Oak City. William Thomas Sullivan, Wil liamston. Donald Clark Godwin, Wil liamston. Roland Moore, Williamston. Louis Thomas Holliday, Rober sonville. Thomas J. Meeks, Roberson ville. Wilmer T. Glover, Oak City. Lemuel Daniel Roebuck, Jr., Oak City. John G. Stalls, Williamston. Alston Wesley Gui gunus, Jamesville. Rufus N. Mobley, 'Williamston (The body oi 1 't-comeal S*g*iVl'ob ley was the first to be returned home for burial.) William Ross, Robersonville. Leamon Edward Shaw, Rober sonville. Leo R. Wilson, Williamston. William Edward Ballard, Wil liamston. Bernice Iiogerson, Roberson ville. Asa J Taylor, Robersonville. Charles Wilson, Williamston. Cecil B. Bond, Williamston. Edward S. Brown, Jamesville. Verna Land, Williamston. Daniel Davis Holliday, James ville. Dennis H. Whichard, Williams ton. Levie Horace Davis, James ville. Colan Gray Perry, Williamston Oniley Shepard Cowan, Jr. Williamston. Arthur T. Brown, Williamston Joseph G. Stocks", Roberson viiie. James Willis Ward, Williams ton. Lloyd M. Hassell, Jamesville. Benjamin F’ Holland Williams ton. Onward L. Gardner, Jamesville Early Briley, Robersonville. James W. Watts, Jr., Williams ton. Clifton B Moore, Jamesville. Floyd Congleton, Parm.ele. • C-nunUiiU on pcgt! Fifteen Husbands Wanted In County For Abandonment » One Defendant Arrested And [>e!ai»u;<r^Vinle Oil Second Honeymoon Leaving forty-two dependents 1 upon the mercy of the world, fif-! teen husbands and fathers are! now facing non-support or aban donment charges in the courts of this county. And the list includes only those defendants who left the county and State. The de fendants. made subject to a round up by the serious proportions bandonment has reached in recent months, are scattered from New York to Florida, and so far the whereabouts of quite a few are un known, according to^ a report coming out of the clerk of court's office a few days ago. Those who find it convenient to desert their families without go ing to distant points are being dragged into the county courts at the rate of about two each week. In most cases road sentences are imposed and about as quickly sus pended on certain conditions. The requirements in so many cases are not fully complied with, and the disturbing business continues to drag on and on, worsening as it drags. The business of leaving little children at the mercy of others was climaxed a short time ago when a warrant was sent out for Junius Rappold. The young World War II vet is charged with not supporting his two children. The law got on his trail last April when a warrant for his arrest was \sent o* Tampa, Florida. Officers I there stated that the man was away on a golf tour at the time, that action could be expected up on his return. Correspondence was exchanged by the sheriffs of fice in this county and Tampa authorities, but no tangible re sults were obtained until after it was learned just a short time ago that the young man had obtained one of those speedy Florida di vorces, married again and was away on his ticiTflffWKTn." Officers anticipated 11i-s honeymoon course and directed a warrant to New pbrt News, Va„ officers. In due time, the young man crossed the charted path, and he was taken into custody in the Virginia city about 1:()() o’clock last Tuesday morning. Rappold declared he would fight extradition, and Soli citor Paul 1J. Roberson was noti fied to prepare requisition papers. Until a hearing can be held, Rap pold was released under bond in the sum of $500. Charged with abandoning his wife and two children, Edward Fisher was indicted by the Sep tember grand jury and returned to the county a few days ago for trial in the superior court. Booker T Hardison is'charged with abandoning his child back in 1940. His whereabouts are not exactly known. Johnnie Teel his.pi.e.sen,^. y.<i dress unknown, is wanted for the non-support of his wi'e and child. Thought to be in Brooklyn, Floyd Scott is wanted for alleged ly abandoning his wife and three children in 1940. William Turnei Smith, charged with non-support, is believed to (Continued on page seven) THE RECORD SPEAKS . . . Motorists on Martin County highways wrecked property and battered human limb dur ing the 43rd week of the cur rent year, but managed to travel through the period without taking a human life. Property damage gained al most $1,000 during the week and the number of wrecks went 11 beyond the compara tive figure for 1940 The following tabulations offer a comparison of the ac cident trend: fust, by corres ponding weeks in this year and last at id for each year to the present time. iSrd Week Accidents Inj’d Killed Dam’ge 1947 4 3 0 $ 2,000 1946 3 2 0 325 Comparison*-: To Date j 1947 114 56 3 $25,690 ' 1 1 o.l 60 3 24,626 Plan To Reopen Lea l Markets On Monday Sale?) Here Total 11096,510 Pounds At Close Tuesday Defnite Action To Kml the! Holiday Is Expected This Week-end While- no definite action has boon taken and none is expected | until this week-end, plans are go- j ing forward for the reopening of | the tobacco markets on Monday, November 3, according to reliable reports reaching here. It was said that arrangements had been just about completed to finance pur chases of flue-cured tobacco for the export trade to the tune of twenty-five million dollars. Anticipating the reopening of j the markets next Monday, farm- ! ers in this county who have tobac- | co still on hand have gone ahead with their grading work. Closing for the emergency last Tuesday, the market sold 132.888 pounds for a price slightly below the general average, but observers declared that the sale contained some damaged leaf and much in ferior quality tobacco. At the close of sales Tuesday foi the holiday, the local market had sold 11,096.510 pounds during the seas son for an average right at $42.00 per hundred pounds. A review of the activities on the (markets in the entire belt fol lows: Sales on the Eastern North Car olina flue-cured tobacco market? for the two day period preceding the miaketing holiday were mark ed by lower prices for the ma jority of grades. The United States and North Carolina Depart ments of Agriculture report aver ages ranging from $1.00 to $5.00 per hundred under the week end ing ,rWnhpr 24. The losses were i more severe for leaf and smokine,1 leaf which make up the greater j part of the export grades. These j offerings were down in most cases $3.00 and $4.00 per hundred. Low to fine grades were hit hardest with common quality holding steady to $1.50 lower. Cutters and better lugs were off $1.00 and $2.00 with the low side lugs un- J changed. Sales volume was fairly heavy Monday but lightened consider ably on Tuv-day. Gloss sales for the two days amounted to 15, 398,010 pounds and averaged $44.59 per hundred. The decline in average from last week was held to the minimum of $1.37 by the larger proportion of better quality tobacco sold. Season gross sales were brought to 407,151,950 pounds averaging $43.19. It is es (Continued from Page Six) o TvurJiTfpTr ^ Held In Young Man’s Death Warner A. Bailey’s untimely death late last Monday night was due to a self-inflicted bullet wound, Coroner S. R. Biggs an nounced following an investiga tion made the following day. The coroner said no inquest was neces sary. According to reports, the young i man went to his home late that afternoon and told his haby good bye in the kitchen, lie then went to the living room, sat down in a chair, removed one of the shoes and placed the end of a bullet rifle to his forehead and fired the weapon. The bullet plowed through his head and tore a hole in the ceiling. His wife, hearing the sliot, found him lying on the floor. She ran out of the house and rang the farm bell for help. The young man’s mother war across the road at the time and she hurried into the house, find ing her son unconscious and the i d h' under him Bailey had been ••-.-i ried over some thing foi some months and acted a bit strangely at times, it was reported. Funeral services were conduct ed in the Bear Grass Presbyterian Church Wednesday afternoon and burial was in the Bailey family cemetery in Bear Grass Town ship. PK VNf rs' ^ ■■■ ..- -- N I Threshing that— por-thwi u?' , their crops grown in sandy land and on ridges, farmers in the upper part of the county have started marketing the first of the current peanut crop. A few sales have been reported at $10.7t) per hun dred in that section. Rain falling the middle of the week has delaved the threshing work, and no ac tivity has been reported on the market here. Company representatives are being held off the market until the crop is in good shape for the threshers. Farm Organization Moves To Relieve Tobacco Problems —•— Drive For Member Support Is Mubins' Progress In Martin (bounty -- "Britain’s ban on American to bacco imports "rocked every ele ment of tin’ flue-cured industry, j but for the farmer himself the | crisis proved beyond doubt that j unless farmers are fully organized i they can never hope to overcome ! such emergencies when they j arise," C. L Daniel, Martin Coun ty Farm Bureau president, declar ed today. "As soon as the ban was an nounced," he pointed out, "the North Carolina Farm Bureau and j the American Farm Bureau mov- ! ed quickly to pave the way for re- 1 sumption of British buying. Carl i T. Hicks, Walstonburg, North Cai olina Farm Bureau Tobacco Com- I mittee Chairman went to Wash- | > i.-'- a {mmcdiaU t ■■■.. .*, >:U , United States and British govern men officials in an effort to pro tect the interests of the many far mers who still had huge amounts of tobacco unsold. "R. Flake Shaw, Executive Vice-President of the NCFB, eon- I ferred with Washington and State officials by phone and kept in touch with the American Farm Bureau headquarters constantly. In short, the entire machinery of the State and National Farm. P" reuu was geared to action to help I flue-cured growers to avert a ca-' tastrophe." President Daniel said that the all-out efforts of the Farm Bu reau to restore British tobacco buying through the Commodity Credit Corporation or a similar agency emphasize the seriousness of the situation. The suddenness | of the British action makes more I clear than ever the need for or jganized .-.tienglu ^Tmoug FaiTTffff* at all times, he said, adding that the current campaign for 100,000 Farm Bureau members in North Carolina provides the means for (Continued on page five) -3 Destroy Several Stills This Week In raids conducted the early part ot the week, ABC Officer J. H, Koebuck and Deputy Roy Peel working with Beaufort County of ficers wrecked several distilleries, including two large ones just across the line in the neighboring county, The first of the plants, a rather crude one with a 50-gallon oil drum kettle and 150 gallons of sugar beer, was wrecked in the Cross Roads section on Monday. ! Jaut Tuesday the officers raid < ■; al ng th< M'a tin-B f ' . land wrecked a 400 gallon capacity still of tin: submarine type and poured out 800 gallons of sugar beer. The plant was equipped with an oil buniei, a iifi>-gallon capacity doubler, two coolers and seventeen fermenters. The second plant had a 100-gallon capacity still and a super heater of 100-gal lon capacity. The officers poured out 1,000 gallons of sugar mash and J14 gallons of raw liquor and wrecked seventeen fermenters. judge J. C. Smith Has Fifteen Cases In County’s Cour —^— Defendant \djudged Not I'l X'-ri'M il'34 Out of lliij Accident Handling only fifteen cases, Judge J. C. Smith and Solicitor Paul D. Roberson completed their work in the Mai tin County Re corder's Court and adjourned the tribunal at 12:30 last Monday af ternoon. A $50 bond was forfeit ed in an assault' case and fines were imposed in the sum of $200, not to mention several road terms meted out by the jurist. Charlie Lee Haddock, driver of the lumber truck that side-swiped George Mobley's car and then plowed into W. II Harrison's new Dodge on the Williamston-Hamil ton Highway at Chimney Corner the middle of last week, was ad judged not guilty by the court in the case charging him with reck less driving. The State called several witnesses, but it could not prove that the defendant was speeding, and Judge Smith upon motion of defense counsel'dismiss led the action when all evidence ahd been offered, had been offered. Judgement was declared abso lute on the $50 cash bond posted by the Atlantic Bunding Com pany for Oliver Purvis who was charged with an assault with a 'deadly weapon. Charlie Rhodes was sentenced to the roads for sixty days for as saulting a female. The case charging William R. [Osteen with reckless driving was ! nol pressed or dismissed when it was explained to the court that the defendant had been returned to Williams Field, Arizona, to an swer to the Army for “going over ■ the hill.” I Maintaining his innocence, j James Horton Hunter was adjudg ed guilty of an assault with a ! deadly weapon and appealed to j the higher court when he was sen j tenced to the roads for six months, '..•v-M" !1 bond >■• is fired&U&uwti&t... of $200. Pleading guilty of being drunk and disorderly and trespassing, George Barber (colored) was fin ed $25 and taxed with the cost in the first count, and drew a 30 ; day sentence on the second count. The road sentence was suspended on condition that the defendant stay away from the house occupi ed by Pearl Smith for one year. I,. H Leggett, pleading guilty of speeding, was fined $25 and taxed IW till tile CW.at. Pleading guilty in the case charging him with failing to stop and identify himself after an ac cident, Charlie Whitaker was tax ed with the trial costs after it was pointed out that the defend ant had made satisfactory settle ment of damages done to Zeb Rol lings’ car. Neal Davis was sentenced to the roads for four months for opevat ...'.opt' ’8*^ driver’s license. The road term was suspended upon the payment of a $25 fine and the costs, and the defendant is to be issued no driver's license for one year. Charged with operating a motor vehicle without a driver's license, Willie James Purvis pleaded guilty and was sentenced to the roads for sixty days. The sen tence was lifted upon the payment of a $25 fine and the trial costs. No license is to be issued the de fendant for six months. Pleading guilty of violating the game laws, Lewis Etheridge was taxed with the court costs, and the court recommended that his hunt I er’s license be revoked for one year. Adjudged guilt> over his plea (Continued on page eight) SKLLCT CM) i v, ] In a recent election work ers in the Standard Fertilizer Company plant here selected the CIO as their bargaining i agency. According in an un official report workers fav ored the CIO and one voted to have the AF of L to repre sent the group. No official mention has been made of the election and details of a contract, if any, | have not been disclosed.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 31, 1947, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75