I THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BY OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNTY FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK THE ENTERPRISE THE ENTERPRISE IS READ BY OVER 3,000 MARTIN COUNTY FAMILIES TWICE EACH WEEK VOLUME LIV—NUMBER 87 Williamtton, Martin County, North Carolina, Tuesday, October 30, 1951 ESTABLISHED 1899 Several Accidents Reported In Area During Week-End - One tiadly Injured: Prop-j erty Damage Estimated In Excess of 81.000 One person was badly hurt and property damage ran up to about $1,000 in another series of high way and street accidents in this area during the past week-end. Driving east on Highway 64 lust Wednesday afternoon, Bert Gorham started to make a left turn into George Bryant’s filling station, about three miles from Williams ton, when an Edenton Cadillac started to pass Gorham suffered a slight shoulder injury. Damage to Gorham’s old model pick-up truck was estimated at $25 and that to the Cadillac at $100. Only minor damage resulted when Elmer Parrisher’s 1947 Ford and a car driven by Wilmer Whitehurst crashed at the Rail road and Roberson Street inter section in Robersonville last Sat urday evening. One estimate plac ed the damage to the Parrisher car at about $35. No one was hurt Driving a Chevrolet truck on the River Road near the Everett Estate farm, Jasper Harrell start ed to make a left turn into a driveway just as Joe Whitfield was making ready to pass in his 1951 Oldsmobilc. No one was hurt but damage to the Olds was esti mated at $500 and that to the truck at $25 by Patrolman R. I1. NuiTon who made the investiga tion. Sunday morning about 11:00 o’clock, James Benjamin Howell lost control of his 1941 Plymouth nn the route from Corey’s Cross Roads to Smithwicks Creek and turned it over twice. Haywood Johnson, about, forty years old ■nd a tenant on the H. C. Green farm, was said io nave suffered j a neck injury, possibly a broken j neck, in the accident. Said to! have been under the influence ; of liquor, Johnson was lying on the ground when Patrolman R. P. i Narron reached the scene The officer was assured that Johnson ; was not hurt, Johnson’s wife and | others saying, “He’s just drunk”. j The patrolman investigated and. Johnson said he was all right ex eept he had a pain in his back. Johnson was placed in a car and then said he was all right. After clearing up the wreck, Patrol man Narron lechecked Johnson, asking him if he could walk. Johnson got out of the car and walked about fifty feet and buck (Continued on Page Six) Employ Forester In This District Martin County Forest Ranger M. H. Leggett announced today that the Department of Conserva tion & Development Division of Forestry has recently employed another forester, Mr. John Davis, for this District. Davis will be located at the district headquarters in Elizabeth City but will be available to heip woodland owners of this County with their forest problems. The greater part of his time will be spent on Forest Management work throughout the district, lie has had several years experience in tins work.,and. it. uufelt that he wiii be of a great assis tance to the people of this area. County Ranger Leggett urges the woodland owner." of Martin County to take advantage of this service. Any one desiring forest management assistance should contact him or write direct to the district forester in Elizabeth City. FOURTEEN HI NDUED I l - Canvassers have signed up 1,400 members for the farm llureau in this county, leav ing only six hundred to go be fore the current goal is reach ed, it was announced at a meeting of the committee held in the agriculture build ing last Friday evening. Another meeting of the committee will be held on November 9, and it is hoped the goal will have been reach ed by that time. Jamesville’s New Christian Chureli Built at a cost of approximately $20,000, Jamesvi lie’s new Christian church was used for the fust time Sunday with a full worship and fellowship program. Many former members of the church who had moved away down through the years, including several of its supporters of more than half a century ago, returned for the homecoming-day program anti participated in the wor ship services and enjoyed a bountiful picnic dinner. Advance Plans To Modernize Taylor Dairy Plant Here -<*• Manager In Roportin^j For Duly Friday ; Mach- j iiu* I'a|htIimI Soon Plans for modernizing Taylor's Dairy here are going forward rap idly and with the wholehearted support of the people, one of tin best plants in this section of northeastern North Carolina will | be in full operation by the latter i part of this year or early in 1952, according to information released by the owners today. J. W. Howard, a specialist in tile dail^v field who lias be-eli con nected with the industry fori eighteen years, is reporting here | on Friday of this week to take over the active management of the plant He is moving his fam ily here from Chattanooga where he managed the United Dairies. Making a survey of this area a short time ago, Mr. Howard was impressed by the potentialities of a plant here, botli from the stand point of production and distribu tion. While tobacco income fig ures prominently in the economy of this section, he sees the dairy and beef cattle industry as hold- j ing great promise right hen- in Martin and adjoining counties. He stressed the value of having a plant available right here at home, declaring that its operation could and will mean a great deal to the community and section. Its operations interrupted for a while, the new owner! are mak ing every effort possible to re-es tablish it, and carry to completion the plans of the late V G. Tay lor who wanted to see this county come into its own in the dairy field. “W» have encountered many obstacles, but we are doing our best to meet them to the com- , (Continued on Page Five) Bountiful Feasts Served In County Bountiful feasts—spnitual and materia!—were enjoyed in vari ous sections of the county Sunday when religious groups got to gether for worship services and picnic dinners. At Smithwicks Creek, the church concluded a three-day as sociation, the event attracting mnisters from at least three states and a large crowd for the ser vice and fellowship Sunday. Other services and picnics were held in Hamilton. Everetts, James ville and Fairview, reports de flating tiiat the attendance as large and the preparations were ample to provide for crowds two and even three times the size of those present. I WOUNDED I \_✓ IM'c. Alfred Hollis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hardy lloliis of near Williams ton, was wounded in Korea on October 13, according to information reaching here a few days ago. A personnel letter to a rel ative stated that he was hurt in the leg and that he hoped to get out of the hospital sometime in early November. Answering a draft call, the young man went overseas soon after he finished his bas ic training and was in the thick of the fight a few days later. Alton L. Sheppard Stabbed To Death In County Sunday —•— . ! ('awlannit* Sutton, Admit* Attack ami Ulaiin* Self-Defense -—-4/ Alton Lee Sheppard, 20- 1 year-old Negro, was stabbed to death b> Castannie Sutton, 35 year-old colored woman, in the Sutton home near Parmele about 12:15 o’clock last Sunday morn ing. Using an ice pick, the woman drove the blade into a main ar terv near the victim’s heart and he walked a few feet before fall ing to the floor dead. The killer was arrested by Rob ersonville and county officers at j her home and placed in jail to ' await a preliminary hearing be- ! fore Justice Chas. R Mobley in the courthouse Wednesday eve- ! riing at 7:30 o’clock Sheriff M j W. Holloman said tin. woman ad mitted the attack, but claims she acted in self-defense. Act r:Hr.-g- to—the ’■;*•, -Sh.-p - j pard, a roomer in the Sutton home for the- past few months, j and the Sutton woman dined that j evening at. a piccolo joint operat- I ed by Thomas Clav on the Par mele Bethel Highway. Sheppard had some friends down from New York and he wanted the Sutton woman to accompany them to some other night spot. She refus ed to go with them and returned to her home with someone else Sheppard followed in another car. Upon reaching the house, he dragged her into a bedroom (Continued on Page Five) -$ Man Dangerously Cnl Here Saturday Slight - - A dangerous attack was made by Levi Jones on Warren Griffin, both colored, on Washington Street here last Saturday night. Few details of the attack could be had immediately, but officers | said that 35 stichcs were neces sary to close the knife wounds in Griffin’s body. County Boy Hero In Fight To Take Korean Hill 851 _—«— Son of !Vlr. mimI *!Y1 i*m. K. 4], Harrison I’assrs The Aniiiiiiniliou —♦—: By ( pi. Chuck Francisco Combat Correspondent With the 7{h Infantry Division U. S. Army, in Korea.- Hill 851 ii a burned and barren handmaid in the moun-taifis of central Nortl Korea. Unlike the mountain: which surround* it', Hill 851, has nc vegetation except for a few char red stumps of once lofty trees. Until recently, QI’s -of the* 17th Infantry (Buffalo! Regiment re ferred to the peak as “Old Biddy" Now 851 is called ‘Blood Hill” oi the ‘‘Million Dollar Hill.” This is the story of one battal ion’s gallant struggle on 8517 bloody slopes. This is a story ol death and unbelievable courage This is the story of the 17th's thirc battalion as told to me by five North Carolina men who surviv ed one of the bloodiest battlei of the Korean War to date. Corporal Odell H. Pugh, Ashe boro, knocked out two heavy Chi nese hunkers with direct hit: from his 57mm recoilless rifle Private Erse 11 Kearney, Hender son, kept his (idiom mortar tubf red hot, Private Eli D. Harrison Williamston, dodged death time and again bringing up the am munition, Corporal Clyde L. Wal ker, Roxboro, and Private Clar ence 11 Hill, Raleigh, fought with bayonets when their ammunition supply gave out This is their story! For 78 days in succession, the jagged heights of 851 had been hit with artillery, napalm, and 500 pound bombs, but the Reds were fiof.r.YSQ hUi'd in.their heavy for tifications. Another Americar Army regiment had sufferer heavy casualties m an earlier at tempt to wrest the peak from thi fanatical Chinese And now i1 was a must! The '‘Buffaloes” hac to take that fortress it the UF forces were to control the region It was a cool, rainy fall morn (Continued on Page Five) Lonesome Soldier Asking For Hail — Farmers ami Feed Purchas ers, Including: Youths, Fligildc To Vote -* North Carolina farm people will 40 to the polls Saturday, Novem ber 3, to vote on the "Nickels for Snow-How” plan for financing nore agricultural research and ■duration in the State. Polls will ac open from (i:30 a m. to 6:30 p. 11. Regular PMA polling places will be used. All persons who use feed or for tilizer, including women as well as 4 11, FFA, and NFA members with crop or livestock projects, are eligible to vote. No special registration is required. Each per son may vote at the polling place which is most convenient for him, regardless of whether it is in his own township. Two-thirds approval is requir ed to make the plan effective. The referendum covers a period af three years. To be continued beyond that time, the plan would have to be renewed by referen dum in 1954. Agricultural leaders have been urging for the past several weeks that every eligible person vote. The size of the vote east, they say, will indicate how much interest farm people have in solving their production and marketing prob lems. The "Nickels for Know-How” plan, worked out by l Wililamston’s tobacco market, breaking all records for both pounds and money, passed the twelve million-pound mark last Friday and pushed on up to 12, 161,018 pounds at the does of sales yesterday. Prices, while not up to the re cord figures maintained for near ly a solid month, continue to hold firm A report released late yes terday stated that 78,486 pounds were sold for $45,543.17, a result ing average of $58 03. The 12,161,018 pounds sold so far this season on the local mar ket averaged right at $55.30 per hundred pounds. Light sales are certain during the remainder of the season. While no dosing date has been mentioned, it is .'.ell understood that very little tobacco remains in the growers' hands in this sec tion, and that the season’s end can't be far away. A report released f r the east ern belt by the departments of agriculture, follows: Prices by grades for Eastern North Carolina flue cured tobac co held fairly steady during the tenth week of sales. Quality of the offerings was slightly lower as many farmers in the belt com pleted marketing their crops. Vo umc of sales was fairly heavy for the week as a whole The Federal-State Market News Service reports gross sales for the week ending October 28 totaled 40,895,682 pounds and av eraged $57.91 per hundred. The general average dropped to the lowest point in four weeks of sales and was $2.01 below the pre vious week Season gross sales were brought to 474,097,895 pounds for an average of $55.21. Last year for the full season gross sales totaled 448,247.035 pounds at an average of $56.47. Aveiage prices by grades as compared with the previous week showed a few scattered losses of $1 00 and $2.00 among some of (Continued on Page Five) Find Missing Man Drowned In Creek Missing since the early morn in." nf October 20, Ransom White hurst, 40-veai old local colored man, was found drowned iit Sweet Water Creek between the old Watts landing and the bridge on U. S. Highway t>4 last Friday morning. A search was started Monday when Whitehurst did not return home from the hunt the previous Saturday. Monday night his gun, leaning against a tree, ins clothes neatly piled and two empty gun shells on the ground were found on the creek bank. The creek bot tom was dragged for hours, but the search was handicapped by sumerged logs and tree.limbs. Fri day morning the body surfaced and was said to have been in fair condition. Investigating the death, Coro ner W W Biggs found no sign of foul pi iv and ruled an inquest was unnecessary. It is (airly certain that White burst shot a squirrel and that ho removed his clothes to recover his game which apparently fell on tin other side of the creek or possibly in the water. The body surfaced on the far side of the. stream. His death was the second un timely one reported in the swamps in this section during a period of about one week. ROUND-UP I s___ Six persons, three of them women, were arrested and placed in the county jail last week-end. One each was book ed for murder, public drunk enness, disorderly conduct, assault, liquor and health law violations. All six were colored and the ages of the group mem bers ranged from 20 to 49 years.