0 VOL 12 Plane Crashes In Forced Landing Yesterday Hear Town Of Warsaw Two Occupants Received Pain ful But Not Serious Injury; Given First Aid At Home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Costin. . BY MRS. STACY BRITT A "Douglas Dauntless", Naval torpedo bomber, from the Marine Base at Cherry Point was forced down about two miles south-east of Warsaw, on the farm of George Bennett, about 8:30 Thursday mor ning, with only painful injuries to the- crew of the badly '". damaged plane. The plane, piloted by. Captain R. W. Zabal, USMCR, of Milwau kee, Wisconsin and Sgt. J. H. Pai sley, of St Louis, Mo., was on a routine training flight from Cherry Point to Knoxvllle, TennT, when a leaking oil pressure valve caused a forced landing. In the process of landing the plane struck a fence and turned up-side-down, burying the two cockpits deep into the ground. Joe Lee and- Nathan Costin, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Costin, and 'James H. Gillespi, colored who were working in a field near by, rushed to the scene of tha ac- " cident and finding the two menJ " alive began digging them out with shovels and spades amid the run ning oil. When unearthed both i Marines were found to be badly shaken up and suffering slight bruises and shock. Immediately they were taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Costin where first aid was rendered and by telephone contacted their home base. Marine Officials immediately dispatched a plane to Clinton in which to re turn Captain Zabel and Sgt. Pai sley to Cherry Point. NEW SHOE STAMP IS GOOD MAY 1st.- Another ration stamp will be made good for one pair of shoes beginning May 1, the Raleigh Dis- , Irict Office of Price Adminlstra ; - "Mutton announced today. The previous coupon, "Airplane VHK amp I in War Ration Book k "' iree, will overlap the new stamp K. . win continue 10 oe gooa in ;S " definitely. However, stamp 18 in Book One will be terminated on ? AprU 30. No announcement was made as to which new stamp will be used, .but rationing officials said that OPA will designate the valid cou pon shortly before May 1. As . t surance that there will be, a new ; stamp on that date is being in ad " ( vance so that the public and the shoe trade can plan accordingly. ine date 01 May 1 tor a new shoe stamp - - the fourth since rationing started a little more than a year ago - - was forecast when at -plane stamp came into use in November. However, OPA said that no estimate can be made now as to how long it will be be - fore another stamp can be vali - uHieu luuowing me one wmcn De- comes good May 1. Sweet Breath Of Spring There is a presence in the house, ;The , influence of some' blessed thing - Which can a silent joy diffuse A sprig of Breath of Spring. By Betty Churchill Jones, Faison. THE LADY ELEANOR (With Apollgies to Foe's Raven") "TtlaV From the White House of the Na tion - - - " ' Speaking without hesitation, Come the voice or proiouna Know ' .ledge, - v;-. y , , I . From the Lady Eleanor; In the limelight, basking gaily,-;. Speaks the Lady nightly, daily, ; Like the brook that gushes pn ward, ever onward . . eer ; . more. . . . , Speaks the expert on great prob T: - lems: :--.v ; " ' Home and children, love and war; Race and liquor, sex . . and more, Speaks the Lady Eleanor. And this expert ever flitting, Never sitting, never quitting, -Never tending to her knitting, ' Doles her pills of fancied know ledge, . Wisdom from her bursting store. And there cornea a painful sigh- ' tag ' From a people slowly dying, Of a secret lust fair gore; rom a hopeless Nation crying , ir a surcease and a stilling k the sound of Eelanor, Of the wordy Eleanor, , Of the boresome Eleanor, , Of the quenchless Eleanor. For, despite her global milling, ' Of the voice there is no stilling, With Its platitudes galore; As it gushes on, advising, , . Criticizing and chastising, Moralizing, patronizing, paraty zing, ever more ADVERTISING ELEANOR. (Urgently Recommended: - I Timothy t: 11-12) 1 "RECITAL" v .Miss Fannie K. Lewis will pre sent her Music Pupils in a Recital here on next Friday afternoon, March 17, 1944, at 2:15 in the Ke nansville High School Auditorium. The Public is cordially invited. Nephew Local Man Killed in War Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Spivey of Windsor, sister of C. B. Sitterson, of Kenansville, received notice Saturday that their son, Ensign James Theaddous Spivey, had lost his life in a sham battle off the coast of California on Friday. Ensign Spivey, piloting a plane, went into a nose dive. The plane never lighted itself and sank in the sea. His body had not been re covered when the message was forwarded. Ensign Spivey is the second son of Mr. and Mrs. Spivey's to give his life for his country in this va The older brother, TlSgt. Joseph Bryan Spivey, went down in the Sumanian oil fields raid. HERE IS OPA SUGAR PICTURE RALEIGH, March 6th. -Sugar rations for consumers, botli for direct household and for home canning, and allotments to the trade for the next quarterly per iod, starting April 1, were an nounced today by the ltaleitfh District Office of P ice Aln.inist ration. Allotments are based on the April through June civilian allo cations just announced by the 1 War Food Administration, OPA said, and have necessitated sever al changes in the rationing pro gram during the coming quarter. Rations announced today arc: 1. Industrial allotments. For the quarterly period from April 1 through June 30, 1944, industrial users will receive 70 percent of their 1941 sugar base - - compar ed with the 80 percent they have been getting since the increases allowed last August. Excluded from this cut are ba kers and manufacturers of cerial products, registered in classes 1, 2, and 3, who will continue to get 80 per cent of their base use, and manufacturers of drugs and medi cines will continue to get 100 per cent of the amount used in com parable months of 1941. Applications for .these allot ments will be made between Mar. 15 nnd Anril 15 na usual 2. The consumer ration. Sugar , stamp 30 in War Ration Book 4, previously announced to expire on ' March 31, will continue to be good for an indefinite peiiod. Stamp 31, ; the next sugar stamp will become ' valid as scheduled on April 1 for nve pounds of sugar No expira. tion date is announced for this stamp. OPA cannot say definitely at this time whether any change will be necessary in the consumer ra tion in the next few months. OPA explained details of all programs are now being worked out, and will be completed and announced shortly. Hallsville Presbyterian A I at A ' ' M latJIlA fltJl A a LMlilaialMtf Circles number one and two. of the Hallsville Woman's Auxiliary will hold a joint meeting Saturday afternoon, March 11th at 3:00 o'cock in the home of Mrs. L. C. Miller. Topic of" the program will be: "My Stewardship", . Y , , '..: View Point He rolls, a lunging bear . Through forest of the grasses; The smaller, creatures quail And scuttle as he passes. : To startled ants, no doubt He's wild as western thriller; To me he's Just a big Brown fuzzy caterpillar. ' By Betty Churchill Jones, Faison ' , r.. ; , ,i 1 ' . . . Prominent Pink Hill . Woman Dies - Funeral services for Mrs. Katie Denny Tyndall of Pink Hill, who died at her home early Saturday were held from the residence Sun day, with burial in a family ceme tery near Old Pink Hill. Method ist and Presbyterian ministers of ficiated. Surviving are her husband; four sons, PfC. Jasper, U. S. Army over seas, Joe ' Franklin, Knoxvllle, Tenn., Horace and Alton, of Pink Hill; five daughters, Lula Tyndall, Mrs.' H. B. Maxwell, Mrs. Thad Kornegay, Mrs. Earle Smith, and Mrs. Alvin Kornegay, all of Kins- ton; and nine grand children. Mrs. Tyndall was a daughter of the late Dr. W. W. Denny, proml nent physician of Pink Hill. KENANSVlLLE, ! MTLTOX tt BDWABDI. ' son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Edwards of Beulaville is with the Army in New Guinea. He was inducted in August, 1942. GIVE TO THE RED CROSS . 'X (SANGE SYSTEM. .' Michel Morgan, glamor co-ilar with iira and Jack Haley In "Higher and Higher," uliowa how ahe pfp bar neighborhood grocer when the new Ration Token plan lata atfaat. Ae the RKO Radio beauty demonatratea, tier tokena JMt aaatarale outalda eompartmenli of a apecial purse one for bio token, Uu HOW SOCIAL SECURITY ACCOUNT NUMBERS RELATE TO BENEFITS More than 1,742,900 men and women in the State of North Carolina now have social security! account cards. In the years to come, many of these workers will I reach the age of 65, retire fromj their jobs and claim payments of, old-age insurance. Others will die, leaving dependents who are entitled to benefits under the So cial Security Act. Every wor ker wants to be sure that he will get the right insurance checks when he grows old, or that his family will receive the right checks in the right amount, if he dies.1 N. A. Avera, Manager of the Wilmington office said today that care and attention to this matter of keeping the records straieht. now, might very well mean the' difference between the right pay- ments and the wrong payments 1 S , t tm-.M-.- n..i I HE0 CHOSS WITH PARATROOPS--Many R-d Croa field director arrre wlib llie dangrou. - paralroop batlaliom. and aonie have jumped with llirm. Here Auiatanl Field Director William Rcb - etfcoo (third from left) oe aloft with lort Brag; p'oratroopera on a traiuiua HUi. t NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY MARCH 10th 1944 BQBgBT T. BLACKBURN. son of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Black bum of Warsaw is in Northern Ireland. He entered service in Mar. 1941 and went overseas last Dec ember. He is a brother SSgt. Woodrow Blackburn, who is in Italy. , 'f - ,.4. other lor req. of benefits, later on. He explained that an individual account is kept for each worker whose name appears On the books of the Social Security Board. The worker's name and a number that is assigned to him by the Board are printed at the top of his led ger sheet and also written on re co:d cards that are kept on file. Mr.' Avera -stressed the fact that wage data must be accurate, because .the amount of benefits to be paid to each qualified claimant is based on a wage record. That is why the Social Security Board takes extra precaution to safe guard Jhe social security account of every wage earner listed on its books. It is also the reason why every employer subject to the law must Include in his social security quartely tax reported to the Gov ernment the name, the social se curity account number, and the wage earnings of each worker he employs. But before the employ er can include this data in his re port, he must have the informa tion himself. Therefore the em ployee must make sure that his -mm- " 4','v ,..,.iim ii,4 f. wiiifiaiiijiitnii'i...iifvt'UiHtf4tiiifi- -ak I Jm WW GEORGE M. TURNER, JR. son of Mrs. Winnie H. Turner and the late Mr. lurner 01 recently graduated from the Army Air Force Training School at George Field. 111. JURORS, APRIL 17th Abner Phillips, Claudie Baker, J. C. Surratt, I. C. Ennis. R. M. Winders, Wm. R. Teachey, J. D. Band, J. R. Lanier, Wlater J. Stroud, G. H. Blanton, W. H. U Pickett, L. C. Jackson, S. F. Wil son, C. C. Carter, I. W. Jones, B. P. Summerlin, J. B. Bachelor, R. C. Teachey, Eneas Lanier, Wm. F. Dail. Hez Dobson, Luby Vinson, N. B. Smith, H. Lanier, W. G. Blanchard, and F. H. Johnson. J. M. Wells, Floyd Summerlin, t n Ponnv E. B. Carr. W. D. Quinn, J. H. Currie, L. T. Sander son, G. A. Pope, a. J. ianieuv Tobie Mercer, Albert Jones, Levi Sumner, H. M. West, L. E. Pope,! W. G.Xlones, and H. A. uavis. C H. Swinson, Perry Hancney, G. B. Herring, J. J. Barden, Jr., M R Odom. E. F. Sutton. D. B. Hamilton. W. G. Dixon, Walter Rhodes, Ernest Dixon, W. I. car ter, Ed D. Smith, J. J. Britt, W. D. Grady, J. W. Pridgen, Sam Sum ner, Ira Bland, Luther Outlaw, Adolphus Hardy, R. L. Flowers, David J. Brock, F. R. Carr and Exavery Houston. JURORS, APRIL 24th RalDh Dixon. K. C. Carter. A. P. Williams, J. A. Stokes, J. D. Carr, Sr., Edgar English, W. L. Byrd, Leslie Bradshaw Julius Lambert, Lewis Keathley, C. C. West, J. G. Langston, W. T. Brock, and B. K. Bradshaw. G .L. Summerlin, Ned Roberts, Henry W. Hunter, N. B. Watkins, Marshall Kennedy, A. L. Mathis, M. C. Sholair, Chancey Carlton, Jno. B. Wells, and W. J. Fussell. L. J. Jones, Owen Whaley, Ar thur Dempsey, Chancy Kennedy, Dulan E. Cavenaugh, Luther James, J. R. McGowen, W. F. Brice, W. F. Thlgpen, H. J. Swin son, and L. B. Fussell. employer has the necessary infor mation. SOCIAL SECURITY ACCOUNT NUMBERS ASSIGNED (estimate) Virginia, 1,344,000; West Virg inia, 1,000,000; North Carolina, 1.742,900; District of Columbia, 508,700; and Maryland, 1,005,400. REMEMBER WHEN THIS 6REAT. LOVABLE KLLOW USED TO My 1 ttl3 YftTW& f V J 441 Club Qoys And Girls Are Called To Aid "Food For Freedom Fight" Home On Furlough Pfc. John C. Bostic, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Bostic has returned to Fort Bragg, after spending a furlough with his wife and parents Labor Board Meets In Special Session At the call of the Chairman the Kenansville resident members of the Duplin Labor Moblization Board met in special session Mon day night Mar. 6th, at 8:30 in the Court House for investigating a number of employee's of the Wells-Oates Lumber Company, at Kenansville. who have been laying off their jobs part of the time. The following persons were re ported to the Boa'.-d as laying off there part of the time recently: Bernice Carlton, Joe Middleton, Lonnie Moore, Herman Phillips, Sam Cox, Curtis Hall, Will Swan, LaFayette Fredrick, Paul Faison, B. W. Bell, Mason Dobson, and William James Dobson. The Chairman and other mem bers of the Board present ex plained to the men who had been summoned to appear before the Board by Deputy Gurman Powell, the provisions of Gove, nor Broughton's Emergency War Powers Proclamation, in Section IV as the War Powers deal with the Labor situation. They also ex plained the seriousness of the sit uation confronting us now in the war efforts, of the great losses in men and property we are now having and will until this war has been won; he necessity for full time work on the part of eve.y abledfbodied person to help win the war quicker and bring our men back home from the battle fronts. The men appearing before the Hoard acknowledged they have been laying off their jobs part of the time but unanimously agreed to go oack on the 10b on a full time basis and promised to use their influence in getting oiner employees to work on a full time schedule. The Labor Mobilization Board again calls upon all citizens in the County both white and colored to do their best in working on a full time schedule to the end that we may back our men on the battle ironts. we must do our part on the Home Front as it is just as neccessary as it is for the men on the battle fronts in doing their best - - and thev ATA doint7 thoir best. C. E. Quinn, Chairman. Capt A. D. Benton is Honored; Home First Time in 2 Vi Years A very joyous and happy occa-' surance within six months of re sion was the dinner given in the lease from the armed forces, home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lan-' The Unemployment Compensa gston Sunday March 5; honoring tion Law of North Carolina in Capt A. D. Benton, nephew of eludes a special provision for wor Mrs. Langston and son of Mr. M.lkers who enter and return from C. Benton. Sr.. and tt late Mrs 'military service. Ww rrpdits h. Rpntnn nf Porlrnrahiin, M : I mother died while he was over seas. Those enjoying Mr. and Mrs. Langston's hospitality other than Capt Benton were Mr. M. C. Benton, Sr, and daughters, Mrs. Vann A. Neoleans of BL-minirham Ala., Misses Dot and Lou Carol ' two years following return to civi Benton, also Alvin Earl and Bob-!lian life; but only if each veteran by Benton, Mr. Jack Grady of files a claim within six months of newDern, uncie or capt. Benton; Mr. D. A. Howard, of Mt. Olive. I Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Langston, Mrs. J. H. Lewis and children including wusses uiaays ana .cuth Lewis, also Mrs. DeWitt Lewis and son, all of Warsaw. Capt Benton is with the Army Air Forces and will probably be assigned to duty in the states af ter a period of rost; training other flyers. , An older brother, M. C. Jr., is a Lt in the Air Corps and a younger brother, James Ray is a rarairooper now overseas. We heartily welcome Cant. Ben ton as well as others who returned at the same time. ANNUAL BASKET BALL TOURNEY BE HELD MAGNOLIA MAR. 15-18 A high school basketball invi tational tournament will be held In the Magnolia High School gym nasium on March 15, 16, 17, and 18. All games will be played in the afternoon and night. Schools from Duplin, Sampson, Onslow, Wayne, and Pender coun ties will be represented in the tournament, and it is expected that many spectacular games will be played. Appropriate awards will be giv en to the winners In the bovs and girls bracket There will also be an all-tournament team selected from the various teams engaged m ine contesxa, ,,..; , . No. 10 MARCH IS MOBILIZATION MONTH; BOYS AND GIRLS BETWEEN 10 AND 20 YEARS OLD; LISTS AM OUNT FOOD REQUIRED TO FEED SERVICEMAN ONE YEAR; SCHEDULE OF MEETINGS GIVEN During the month of March a special effort is being made thru out the nation to mobilize boys and girls between 10 and 20 years of age in the "Food for Freedon Fight" program. Last year 1,700, 000 joined during the 4-H mobo lization drive. These boys and girls have been highly congratu lated by the Quartet- Master Gen eral of the United States Army for their contribution to the war ef fort. One thousand of these were Duplin County Club members. Again the youth of the land is being called upon to help keep the food flowing to the battle fronts and to their home tables, by each producing or conserving enough food to feed a fighter. Any one of the following is the equivalent of the total amount of food required to feed a man in the armed ser vices for one yeair Feed 2 baby beef animals. Feed 6 pigs. Grow 300 b. oilers to 2 1-2 lbs. or a total of 750 lbs. Care for 500 hens that will produce 470 dozen eggs. Feed and handle one milk cow which will produce 5500 lbs. of milk. Grow 113 bushels of corn. Grow 110 bushels of tomatoes Grow 135 bushels of sweet po tatoes. Grow 135 bushels of irish po tatoes. Produce 270 gallons of cane syrup. Grow one acre of mixed ve- 5. vegetables. 12. Can 500 quarts of vegetables. Thirteen 4-H club meetings will be held in March for boys and girls of Duplin County to inlist in the "Youth's Food Production Army for 1944". These meetings are as follows: Wallace, Monday Mar. 13th; War saw, Tuseday, Mar. 14th; Beula ville, Wednesday, Mar. 15t.h; B. F. Grady, Thursday, Mar. 16th; Fai son, Friday, Mr. 17th; Kenansville, Monday, Mar. 20th; Calypso, Tues day, Mar. 21st; and Chinquapin, Wednesday, Mar. 22nd. VETERANS URGED TO APPLY FOR JOBLESS INSURANCE W. R. Curtis, Acting Chairman of the Unemployment Compensa tion Commission, today issued a notice to all veterans who are re turning after a discharge from military service that in order to establish their benefit rights they must apply for unemployment in- tablished in their unemployment insurance accounts while they were working during the two years before entrance into the armed forces may be brought iorward ana made available to them as veterans during at least his military discharge. Not all returning veterans will nave wage credits available for unemployment insurance. The on ly way a veteran may determine the status of his account is by fil ing a claim with the Unemploy ment Compensation Commission. MS 'WTO ' The cold neutrality of an irtlpartioi judge tsurkt .HA; . -11 Create bureau ol Indian alfaira.11 11 Curtis aeroplane males cucceratul mat inp in New Yprk, 1908. 1? Supreme Court affirms corporation tax, iu. , ,4 Eli Mhitney receives pat- ent tor cotton am, un 15 American Lealon coik celved in Pant, mv. . ' l-Open flrei direct cable ftwtwwii mw um Rome, 1925. - m& 'J?&t. PaWk's tJav-lTour 'PfmsLmi army planea etaii raund the-world ulght, l"?4. r -Jit . mi 4- r.11