Leaf Prices Hit New High With Official Average of $44.63 Reported For Monday s Sale Prices for a daily average reached a new high marie here this week when Supervisor of Sales R. A. Fields reported 572,626 pounds of leaf tobacco sold on Monday for am average of $44.63. Sales including those of last Friday through Thursday of this week boosted the week's total to 1,773,594 pounds, which sold for $778,267.39 at an average of $43J$ These figures bring the current season's totals to 16,822,762 pounds, receipts to *6,149,228.71 and the average $37.62. Sales for the entire 1941 season totaled 15,783,142 pounds which sold at an average of $30.97 per hundredweight. Sales this morning; Friday, are heavy and bidding continues spirited with one of the best days of the,season anticipated. Farmers appear well pleased with their sales and at the stable trend of the market? Every day is a good day on the Farmville market and warehousemen urge growers to bring their offerings here, where a sale is assured Pftrons every day. Growing Interest Manifested At Christian Series Meetings Rev.* John H. Goff, pastor of the' Williamston Christian Church, who is holding a series of meetings here, is reported to be delivering excellent Gospel sermonsI each evening at the Christian Church, and interest is growing rapidly, as attested by the attendance, which has increased notably at each service. Hie meeting will close with the Sunday night service. There will be no service Saturday evening. Rev. Mr. Goff will preach at both the morning and evening services Sunday, when the local pastor, Rev. Mr. Mashburn will fill his pulpit in Williamston. Members of the cmgregBr tion are urged to attend the remainder of the services and the entire community is extended a cordial invitation to be present Superintendent J. O. Pollard and all of the Sunday School teachers are striving to have a full attendance at Sunday School Sunday morning. The -visiting minister will teach the men's class at that time. This Is Naticm-Wide Eye Clinic To Be Held In Greenville >, On October 20th-21st Greenville, Oct. 8.—Mr. K. T. Puetrell, Pitt County Superintendent of Public Welfare, announced today that one hundred examinations for eye glasses will be nuiifc in a two day clinic to be held for indigent adults and children of Pitt County on October 20th and 21st. All those who wish to avail themselves of this service must make application in writing to the Welfare Department Before October 12th in order to be approved and have an appointment made. Applications f6r indigent school children should be made directly to the schools. Other applications should be made to the Welfare Department. Kafrh application most include the name, address, age and race of the person applying for an appointment. In the case of children the application must also show the name and address of the parents. Mr. Futrell urges the school .teachers in the coonty to get their application in promptly for the children they wish to have attend the- clinic. Bach applicant will be investigated as to ability to pay examination fee und actual cost of glasses. The. clinic is being sponsored by the State Commission for The Blind through the service of the Welfare Department and in cooperation with the Lion's dab, the schools, and the Health Department. Mr. J. H. Hose, Superintendent of City Schools and i committee from the Lion's Club ire in charge of arrangements. The Lin's Club committee is. composed of Paul Scott, Clarence Coburn, sod Withers Harvey with Mr. Scott as chairman. The State Commission ia arrangng this clinic because of the shortage of specialists in Greenville now. Up until this time the local spetalist gave been holding the clinics for inligent citizens. Being, aware of the great need of this type of clinic, the Welfare Department made local arrangements. Dr. Thomas Schooner of [hike Hospital will be sent here for ;he two 'days. It is obvious that getting glasses for the indigent will be more difficult since outside' specialists must be jrought in $o those interested in attending the clinic or in having some jhild examined are urged to get the applications in promptly. The Welfare Department mast have time to i^ect the cases to be seen and infcsttgate each so the examination md fitting can be completed while he specialist is in the county. Washington, Oct. 7.—By an overwhelming vote, the Senate today approved a 40 per cent tax 011 corporation incomes above mfiOO, after resecting, 75 to 9, a proposal by Senator LaFollette (P.-Wia.) to iner««w that rate to 60 per cent Then, in a day of rapid action* it wted to reduce the credit for dependent children and others from WOO to $800 and turned to a discission of the problem of taxing in:eme from state and municipal Be Colin P. Kelly, flying * bombing plane off Luzon on December 9,1941; made three direct hit* on a Japanese battleship, destroying it Th*» his plane was attacked by two enemy fighters and set afire—bat everybody knows the story of Captain Kelly. - f. Everything, perhaps, save Oat as a boy he was a Scout in Troop 801 it Madison, Fin. ' * Edward CHara graduated in 1987 from Annapolis. He was present on n recent active occasion in the Pacific to such effect that five Japanese'bombers were shot down by him in a single-handed fight The President of the United States has called this "one of the moat daring, If not the moat daring, single action in the history of combat aviation." "Butch" Create, late of Scout Troop 214, St Louis, Ho., bears the rank of lieutwant commander now. After Pearl Harbor came news ot the Army Sergeant who, on voluntary duty, listened at the air detector station, heard the enemy coming on their treacherous surprise attack and reported what he heard. With more Joseph Lockards there, Pearl Harbor would be a defferent tale. This: boy of 20 with the distinguished service medal was a Willi amsport, t Pennsylvania, Boy Scout Are only ex-Boy Scouts fighting this war? There will be lists of men gone forth from them, by towns' and counties, states and churches, lodges, schools and factories to shed glory on their country, ttyeir associates, their homes, themselves. The Scouts were early among those heaping up heroes in th$ war. Their list if long: Dean Wood, Boyd Wagner, Randall Keator, George Welch, pari Geis, George Schaetzel, and too, many more to mention here. Do es~Boy Scouts shin* specially among men fighting in their country's cause? , The life we call civilized leads to ease. It turns away from rough nature to cities vfith "modern conveniences." It seeks automatic heat in winter, in summer cooling drafts. It rides to and at its work. We wear white collars to mark our freedom from the hard and dusty earth. , A war comes and tests our quality. If we are soft selfish, inefficient down we go. Democracy stands or falls according as it-builds men strong or lets men decay. Men of faith, too, to see that the demoratj^ public duty is < done. Hie —CBWn P. Kelleys are • signs that Boy Scouting builds the men we need. < Ttie boys ia the Scout Troop had ; their grapple with hard nature, its labors and discomforts and its joys. < They had their woodcraft, their arts ; at simple self-rapport, their work 1 together, their strengthening hikes, i Army men find ex-Boy Scouts trainee < aasy to make good soldiers of. ] lis H just chance that so many of the Colin P. KaUy kind have a- Boy Scout JjJatory? i?.; ; ,i > Then these home tasks the Sceut does pro bono publico! He collects the-old papers, rubber, the wrap of i every kind. He helps in the fire j drills. He is the universal errand boy. He works as a clerk for the Selective Service board. He-helps in > the aaldier book campaign. The mil- ; lion and a half of him stands ready i it- his country's call for any service : a disciplined boy can do. Here we i foresee not only the toughened sol- i diw, but the man of public spirit i without whose labors democracy, 1 however strong of body its citizens, cannot live. < When the list of heroes of the war : is all made up, the hero who was a i Boy Scout and the hero who is a Boy i Scout will clearly both be there. .] —Walter Locke, < 4>Wa -J ,|| I. I I >1 I |Vnnt vile occonc price coniroi eci, xtcsi* dent Roosevelt ordered ceilings placed wv«r wages, salaries, profit#, farm prices and rente, and appointed supreme court Justice James F. Byrnes as Director of Economic stabilization with the job of developing a National Economic Policy. •^Justice. Byrnes resigned from the Court to accept the new ration. He will have authority over all goventment agencies to the economic field and will be assisted by a fourteenman economic stabilization board composed of eight agency heads and six private citizens. " Maximum Prices and Rents. Immediately following the President's executive order, Price Administrator Henderson imposed emergency 60-day price ceilings on virtually all exempt food items, bringing 90 percent of the family food budget under rigid control. Previously only 60 percent was controlled. Under 'control for the first time are butter, cheese, evaporated and condensed milk, eggs, poultry, flour, dry onions, potatoes, fresh and canned fruits and juices, dry edible beans, cornmeal and mutton. Food retailers, wholesalers, manufacturers and processors are affected. Each dealer's price is frozen at the highest level be charged in the five days September 28 to Oct 2, inclusive, the permanent ceilings later may entail some price reductions, Mr. Hendeno* said. Administrator Henderson alao completed new orders freezing all uncontrolled urban and rural rents at levels mt last March 1. He announosd the Office of Price Administration would amend existing regulations to prevent eviction of tenants resulting from sales of rental property, a practice which he said in many caa^srhas jecome a device to avoid the effect rf rent control. Previously rent xmtrol was limited to approximately 100 designated defense rental, .areas. Stabilization of Wages. The President's order Had the effect of freezing all wage rates for Ae time being until the National War Uabor Board has a chance to act in ndividual cases. Wage rates may lot be changed—up or down—with>ut the approval of the NWLB. The 3oard may adjust wages "to correct naladjustmants or inequalities, to eliminate substandards of Jiving, to wrrect gross'inequities, or to aid in he effective prosecution of the war." Salaries in excess of f5,000 a year nay liot -he increased without the ipproval of the stabilization Director Syrnes unless an individual has been tssigned to more difficult or more responsible work. Director Byrnes vas given power to place a 126,000 , knit on salaries after taxes but with iue allowance tor life insurance jreimums and fixed obligations pre- : rtously incurred. , Mr. Roosevelt ordwrec prices of , aw and processed agricultural commodities "stabilized, so far as pracj cable," at September 15 levels and ; n conformity with the standards i aid down in the new law. The new , trice control law provides farm price . idlings cannot "he set below parity , >r below the highest market level >etween January- 1 and September 5, 1942, whichever is higher. if!■ meh ceilings are too low to r«flect ncreases in farm labor and other sorts since January 1, 1941, the Pres- 1 dent is directed to ndse than. Js J The Legislation calls-for a 90 per- 1 :ent parity "floor" under cotton, 1 ■orn, wheat, rice, tobacco and pea- 1 mts, the floor to be established by < neams of loans. The loans may be »U down to 86 percent, however, 1 >n corn and wheat used for feeding 1 [« said farm production 1 • . , * Washington, Oct 7.—Japan's hold on America's Western Aleutian islands appeared tonight to be weakening rapidly. N : 0^. ... £1 The Navy announced that there ■was no trace of the enemy on either Attn, the westernmost island and first seized by the Japanese, or on nearby Agtfttu, where the enemy also had placed email forces. The Japanese still were in pocassion of Kiaka Island, their most important base of operations in the area, but so far as was known that was the only island they held, and it has been under repeated and heavy attack by air. This information was given out in a Navy communique which cautiously refrained from claiming that the enemy actually had withdrawn from Attn and Agattu. From the announced fact that considerate aerial reconaissance had failed to produce any sign of occupancy "for several weeks," it Beemed clear, however, that a withdrawal had been effected. Moreover, American bombers now have destroyed most of the buildings on Attn. Regarding Kiska, the communique said that "attacks by out aircraft continue" and reported specifically that on Monday Army liberator bombers, with fight*r escorts, dropped 'many demolition and incendiary bombs On the camp area, and scored hits on the seaplane hangar. mnemy times uowneo. Six enemy seaplane fighters which pose to the counter-kttack were shot iown at this time. The Japanese also put up lighT anti-aircraft opposition, but all the American aircraft returned Irf their base. The communique did not mention the: situation in the South Pacific where at last reports, yesterday, the Japanese were reinforcing their troops cm Guadalcanal Island in the Solomons in preparation for a renewed attempt to capture the American defense positions and airfield. • The base fttmr which the American drcraft made their latek attack on the Japanese in the Aieutains unloubtedly is "the newly-developed >peratiane" center in the Andreanof [elands, which at one point lie only L25 anutical miles from Kiska. Its jccupation. by Army troops and air forces was announced by thr Navjr mly last Saturday, although it had Men effected several weeks earlier, this .westward advance, putting American forces more th«j) -260 miles lorthwest of their original base at Dutch Harbor, and within easy x>mbing range of Kiska, has made he Japanese position on Kiska high1 precarious, if not actually untenible. 1 Thus, it appeared that the advep:ure which the Japanese undertook n th$ North Atlantic last June limultemeoualy with their--disastrous ittack of the Hawaiian area at Midvay might be approaching a costly J°se. On the French Frontier, Oct. 7/— )fficial letters announcing that "you lave been designated to work % Jermany" have been sent to several lundred thousand unmarried male vorken in both occupied and unocupied Prance, it was learned today. lilizatkm of labor for the Oeamp Russians Continue Against German Flank Northwest of Stalingrad and Hold fp Positions Firmly Inside City .. Oct. 8.—The Red Army continued its drive against the German loft flank northwest of Stalingrad yesterday and held all the hug* mass of Germans have thrown facto tie, the Soviet midnight said today, -j Earlier report® said ahwdco's relief offensive of Stalingrad had tipped line of hundreds of Nail and evwrrqn „ out. 1^00 Rumanian troops. lite communique's this action said simply that west of Stalingrad oar tfpops have ' been conducting operations for the improvement of their Inside the rubble strewn city, the battle raged on fiercely, hot the Soviet communique the Red any had at any«point. "All attacks of enemy tanks and infantry have been repulsed with heavy losses," R sale "Our troops are hokisg their positions." F* During the fighting, R wu stated officially, the Russians ldlM about 600 Germane and destroyed 19 tanks. 11 of action ;he G^rjj^iilMWW nforcement into the c rhe battlefield i» 40 mik nt ateppe, all the w*y Son to the Volga. itection Of 105,000 Pounds Reported By Ciiairmaiilippwis; The Drive Still Going On 5 Citizens of Farmville have responded well to the Notion's call for scrap during the past'two weeks of th scrap campaign which is being waged locally, and Chairman John B. Lewis expressed himself today as pleased with the collection to date, which has already gone past the 100,000 pound mark. Both the Rotarians and' Legionnaires are concentrating our scrap collection, with the Rotarians canvassing the town and the Legiannaires the rural school district. There are doubtless many people who were out when the canvassers called at their homes. In that case a telephone call may be made to Charimaa Lewis, who will direct yop to the committee, in whose area you are residing, and arrangements wffl be made to lyud your collection from your home to the scrap depot, or you can take it to the scrap pile at the school yard or to Ellis' depot iad turn it over to dbefmae industrries for the regular price paid for scrap materials. The manner in which your collection gets to the scrap heap matters little. Bat what does matter is that the scrap is collected and put to work in the defease of this country. lite United States government wants sad needs ail the scrap available to build ships and tanks and planes and guns and bullets and it wants it now. ENOCH LUDFORD PASSES j ■ y at klizXbcth ottt News was. received here by relatives Thursday' at tile death, of Enoch Ludford, of Elizabeth City, who died at soon following' as illness of Mrend months .duration. Funeral services will be held Sunday. ;' -y ; Surviving1 are his widow, formerly Miss Blanche Can-, and two sons, Enoch, Jr., of the Naval BvK4*es,' stationed at Norfolk, Va., and Frank Ludford, of Eglin Field, Fla. "Ai . _> Much of that loudly acclaimed par triotism gets its noSfcs from the p^t motive. P . if . V^bst London, Oct. 7^—The. British radio today carried an American warning tb tiie French people po vacate areas producing for Germany or be bombad, while the potency of the American Plying Fortresses was hailed in an exemplary way in the House of Commons and with forthfiffcr fear In Tokyo, ? The Tokyo fear, as heard I# Brit