ELKIN The Best Little Town in North Carolina Th e Elkin Tribune aavwiM AMERICA First, Last and Always VOL. No. XXXL No. 51 ELKIN, N. C„ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1942 PUBLISHED WEEKLY A LATE NEWS IN BRIEF From the State and Nation NATIONAL WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — The Japanese will have an in creasingly difficult time from now in reinforcing their troops on Guadalcanal island, Lt. Gen. Thomas Holcomb, marine corps commandant, predicted today upon his return from an inspection trip to that distant Pacific battleground. American army and marine forces de fending the Guadalcanal air field already outnumbered the enemy on the island, Holcomb said, but the Japs have been sending in reinforcements to taling about 900 men every other day. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — The war production board, it was learned authoritatively tonight, has decided on a fur ther drastic curtailment of fuel oil for the eastern states this winter. Although oil already is being rationed in the 17-state area on the basis of holding interior temperatures to 65 de grees in most cases, the board found that present transporta tion facilities could not deliver enough oil to fill the allow ances. Whether this basic 65 degree plan will be altered, however, has not been deter mined, officials said. The board came to the curtailment de cision easily but debated two hours without settling on the method. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — President Roosevelt, asserting that something must be done about the manpower situation in the next two or three weeks, disclosed today that the fight ing forces will number about 9,700,000 men by the end of 1943. Between now and that time, he said at a press confer ence, the nation must find four or five million more men — the best young manhood for — the services. Simultaneously, he added, it must find men to take care of the food problem and industrial production, which is still short of its peak. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — Backing up the war depart ment, the house overwhelming ly gave its final approval to day to ’teen-age draft legisla tion stripped of a ^. proposal that would have required at least a year of training be fore 18-and-19-year old draf tees could be sent into com bat. On a voice vote it ap proved and sent to the senate for expected acceptance on Thursday a compromise work ed out by a senate-house com mittee after the two branches had split on the training re quirement originally written into the legislation by the serr ate. The compromise, intended to break a deadlock of almost a month’s duration, left in the legislation provisions for the deferment of essential farm workers and high school stud ents and for the exemption from the draft of men who have passed their 45th birth day, provided they do not wish to be drafted. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. — Gasoline rationing in the 31 states not now under ration control will be postponed from November 22 to December 1, an OPA spokesman said to day, while Secretary of the In terior Ickes warned that a cut in the four-gallon value of ra tion coupons in the east may be necessary. The postpone ment of rationing in the west and midwest is necessary be cause of hitches in the distrib ution of coupon books and forms over the country, OPA said. Ickes issued an extraor dinary appeal to eastern mo torists, stating that unless civ ilian consumption.is cut volun tarily to the irreducible mini mum, he could “see no way in which we can supply enough gasoline to mantain the pres ent value of coupons.” AJ17W VIW A All C MTiri AT C Pictured below are the newly elected offi /VAIf i\I Yr Aluj Ur t lLlALj cials of the Elkin Kiwanis Club who will take office at the beginning of 1943. They are, left to right, Raymond W. Harris, presi dent, who succeeds D. G. Smith; Garland Johnson, vice-president, and Julius L. Hall, who was reelected as secretary-treasurer. COMMITTEE IS MAPPING DRIVE Scout Officials Perfect Plans For Annual Campaign to Raise Funds NECESSITY. IS STRESSED The Boy Scout Committee held a meeting at the Y. M. C. A. here Friday night to perfect the plans for the annual campaign to raise funds for the activities of the Old Hickory Division of the Boy Scouts of America. The meeting was addressed by W. E. Vaughn-Lloyd, director of Old Hickory Division, and by R. W. Harris, president of the Elkin Yadkin district. Both Mr. Vaughn-Lloyd and Mr. Harris stressed the necessity of keeping the Boy Scouts more intensely active than ever before, as their training and services are needed in many ways. C. J. Hys lup, Campaign Secretary, read the rules and instructions to the cap tains, and each captain was allot ted his territory. For Elkin the captains are, Abe Harris, Rev. O. V. Caudill, E. C. James, Alex Biggs, J. L. Lillard, H. C. Hatch and Fred C. Page, Jr.; Pleasant Hill, Odell Couch; Jonesville, W. E. Burcham and Robert G. Boles; Ronda, Dewey York; Boonville, Rev. Forsyth. Another meeting of the com mittees will be held on the morn ing of Nov. 17th for final instruc tions to the workers, and the campaign will run through the 17th and 18th. COPELAND GIRL IS 4H WINNER Miss Catherine Venable Takes First Place in State Vic tory Garden Contest WILL GO TO CHICAGO Miss Catherine Venable of Cope land, Surry county, 20-year old farm girl, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Venable, was ad judged winner of the first place in the state 4-H Club Victory gar den contest, Miss Frances Mc Gregor, assistant club leader at N. C. State College, Raleigh, has announced. Miss Venable is a member of the Copeland 4-H Club, which has won the State 4-H Club cham pionship or two successive years. She grew a two and one-half acre garden during the spring and summer from which she supplied her family with fresh vegetables. Her award will be a trip to the Na tional 4-H Club congress to be held in Chicago November 28 to Decem ber 3. Three Guilford county girls and one Nash county girl were award ed blue ribbons as runners-up in the state contest. All the canned boned chicken and turkey on the market have been bought'for U. S. hospital use. Jonesville Negro Is Taken In Assault Case Two Such Cases Occur In Wilkes On Same Day Two negroes, each held for criminal asault are in Wilkes county jail following assaults up on two Wilkes county women Wednesday morning of last week. One assault occurred at Ronda and the other just across the Wilkes county line west of Jones ville. Both women suffered from shock, and bruises about the body. Clemmons Fletcher, of Traphill, was arrested in the Ronda case, and lodged in jail at Wilkesboro the day of the alleged assault up on Mrs. C. C. Tharpe, the victim. Willie Martin, of Jonesville, was arrested the latter part of last week in the second case. He is al leged to have attempted to crim inally assault Mrs. -Josie Key, about 65, about 10 o’clock in the morning. A third negro, Tilton Foster, is also said to be under arrest in this case, but it is understood that Mrs. Key identified Martin as her attacker. Both Foster and Martin, it is understood, were arrested by Guy Scott, of the state bureau of in vestigation, and Corporal Lee Phillips, of the highway patrol. In the Key case, Mi’s. Key told a Tribune reporter Saturday morning that she was churning in the living room of her, home when she turned and saw the negro at the door leading into the hall. She said he threatened to kill her, and attempted to smoth er her with a pillow. Screaming and fighting him off, she said the negro failed to accomplish his purpose and fled after inflicting scratches and bruises upon her face and body. Neighbors stated that Willie Martin had been seen near Mrs. Key’s mail box earlier in the morning. The negro, Mrs. Key said, told her that he had a bud (Continued on last page) Safety Campaign Is In Full Swing The safety campaign, conducted jointly by the department of edu cation of the Elkin Woman’s Club and the Junior Chamber of Com merce, is now under way in local and nearby schools in observation of National Safety Week, which comes to a close November 14. Programs are being presented in the various schools. The object of the campaign is to make school children cautious in traffic and to recognize other safety measures. Prizes of $2.50 each will be awarded a student in the white schools and a student in the col ored schools for the best safety slogan submitted during the week. Yadkin Men Are Sentenced For Draft Dodging Three Yadkin county men were sentenced to prison by Judge Johnson J. Hayes in federal court in Winston-Sa . lem Wednesday of last week for violation of the selective service act. In passing the sen tence Judge Hayes vigorously denounced them for being re luctant to fight for their coun try. Ernest Wilson Angell, 27 of Jonesville, and Christopher Co lumbus Crews, 22, of Hampton ville, were each given three year terms. Byron Bilson Nicks, 22, of Cycle, was given a four year term. HARRIS NAMED TO HEAD CLUB Kiwanians Elect Officials Thursday to Head Group During 1943 JOHNSON IS VICE-PRES. Raymond Harris, vice-president of the Elkin Kiwanis Club during the current year, was elevated to the presidency for 1943 at the annual election of officers held by the club at Hotel Elkin last Thursday evening. Garland Johnson was elected l (Continued on Page Six) PAULP.GWYN PASSES AWAY EARLY MONDAY Death of Popular Elkin Man Blow to Community WAS IN ILL HEALTH Funeral Rites Are Held Wed nesday Afternoon From Elkin Methodist Church OF PROMINENT FAMILY Paul Perkins Gwyn, one of Elk in’s best known citizens, passed away at the local hospital Monday morning at 6 o’clock, following a critical illness of two weeks. He had been in ill health for several years. Mr. Gwyn was a member of one of the most prominent families of the state. He was a native of Sur ry county and a son of Charles Hunt Gwyn and Bessie Perkins Gwyn, and was a grandson of Richard R. Gwyn, pioneer Elkin citizen. He was educated in the local schools and attended Bingham Military Academy. He was a vet eran of the first World War, serv ing as a first lieutenant in the ordnance department in Wash ington, D. C. After the Armistice he was appointed chief auditor for settlements between the railroads, serving the eastern seaboard and the government. A certified public accountant, he had served for the past ten years as city treasurer and during this time the town’s bonded in debtedness had been substantial ly reduced through refunding. He had also served as secretary and treasurer of the Elkin-Jonesville Building and Loan Association for the past ten years and operated an insurance agency for a number of years. In the capacity of pub lic accountant his servicesawere in demand throughout this section. Mr. Gwyn was a valued member of the Elkin Methodist church and was a member of the board of stewards of the church. He was a member of the George Gray Post of the American Legion, a (Continued on last page) Chatham Guards Are Now Military Police Guards at the Chatham Manu facturing Company plant here have been sworn in as military po lice. Lieutenant Colonel D. C. France, of headquarters internal security, Fort Bragg, read the ar ticles of war to the local guards and had each sign a pledge which automatically made him a mem ber of the armed forces of the United States. At a later date members of the regular army will come here and instruct the guards in the various phases of plant protection. To Hold Banquet For Draftees Here Monday Large Number Of Boys From Draft Board No. 2 To Leave For Service The largest group of selective service men yet to be ordered to report to camp for induction into the army from Surry draft area No. 2, will be entertained at a banquet at the Y. M. C. A. here Monday at 7:00 p. m. A few days later the men will leave for the army. All draftees of area No. 2 are urged to attend this banquet, where after a good dinner, they will be entertained by a program which will feature a good speak er and plenty of fun. All men al ready in the armed services who are here on furlough the day of the banquet are also cordially in vited to attend. This banquet, like others which are staged each month, is made possible by the local post of the American Legion and other civic organizations, and merchants and interested citizens. Men who attend the banquet will be presented with an useful gift. Following is the list of men who will report to camp next week: Claud Blevins, Rt. 1, Dobson; Roger Jethro Welbom, State Road; Ovid Watson Wilcox, Rt. 1, State Road; John Edgar Ratledge, Elkin; Willie Junior Hauser, Rt. 2, Pinnacle; Foster Winfield Mc Coin, State Road; Newell Clifton Stewart, Elkin or Rt. 1, Rural Hall; Howard Spencer Jenkins, Rockford; Chester Wayne Nance, Dobson; Arvey Esther Davis, Rt. 2, Dobson; Edward Lowman Scott, (Continued on last page) Report Hun Troops Landed In Tunisia; Armistice Is Broken 4*. Passes Monday Paul Perkins Gwyn, one of Elkin’s most prominent citizens, passed away early Monday morning at the .hospital here following an illness of two weeks. Funeral rites for Mr. Gwyn were held Wednesday af ternoon at 2:00 o'clock. News of his death came as a severe blow to the entire community. CERTIFICATES ARE NECESSARY Motorists Must Have Them Before Applying for Mile age Rations INFORMATION IS GIVEN Operators of trucks, buses and taxis must have their Certificates of War Necessity before applying to the local War Price and Ra tioning Board for their mileage rations, Cone Cox, chairman of the local board, has announced. Each war necessity certificate states the number of miles the ve hicle it covers will be allowed to travel during a three-months per iod, and the number of gallons of gas needed to cover this mileage. The rationing board will deter mine the amount of transport rations to be issued for the the ve hicle on the basis of the mileage allowed on the certificate. In order to retain their right to use mileage ration books already issued them, passenger car and motorcycle owners in Elkin must file with the board the new ap plication form and tire inspection record, Mr. Cox said. These forms are now available at service sta tions, garages, etc. Applications should be filled out and mailed at once. Those who fail to turn in the new form will be subject to a call from the board after Nov. 22 to explain why he hasn’t done so, (Continued on Page Six) Local Man Injured When Hit With Axe Walker W. Byrd, West Elkin merchant, received a painful gash on the left side of his head Mon day evening when Everett Rob erts, Wilkes county man, alleged ly hurled an axe at him following an argument about a business transaction. Mr. Byrd was carried to the lo cal hospital but was dismissed following treatment of his wound. Roberts was arrested a short while after the assault by Police men Gilmer Corder and Tom Lew is. He was released under $300 bond to await hearing before Magistrate J. L. Hall Monday morning. RESISTANCE IN NORTH AFRICA ABOUT BROKEN. - \ Cassablanca Leaders Ask for s An Armistice ALGIERS SURRENDERED Germans Said to Have Land ed Air Borne Troops in Buffer State U. S. FORCES ON WAY London, Nov. 11. — German troops moved across unoccupied Prance today over the protest of Marshal Petain and German air-borne forces were reported landed in Tunisia in a double-bar reled effort to counter the threat of a British-American invasion from North African footholds. Nazi combat planes and air borne soldiers have been moved for “some little time” into Tuni sia, buffer territory between Al giers and Libya through which President Roosevelt has sought passage for American troops, an allied spokesman said. He said he did not know the strength of these forces and also did not know whether any British or American troops were yet in Tunisia. The terms of the Compiegne Forest armistice were violated by Adolf Hitler’s order for a sweep by Nazi troops through unoccup ied Prance and Marshal Petain protested quickly to German Field Marshal Karl Rudolf Gerd von Rundstedt. A Vichy radio broad cast appealed to the French peo ple to rally behind the aged Pe tain. Quick collapse of all remaining resistance in French North Afri ca and re-entry of a reborn France into the war against the Axis were regarded in London as possible results. Hitler declared “we have known for 24 hours” that landing oper ations against Corsica and South ern France were planned by the Allies, who have won Algiers and Oran and are hammering at Cas ablanca in a multi-headed occup ational coup. Fighting French quarters ex pressed belief that not only the entire colonial army but the French fleet and a great array of political leaders as well might come into the allied fold as the culmination of swift - moving events of the past 72 hours. London, Nov. li._The allied occupation of French Northwest Africa was near completion to day with the request of the (Continued on last page) Annual Christmas Shoppers Edition Coming Next Week At an open meeting' of the Elkin Merchants association, held Tuesday morning at the City Hall, Thursday, November 19, was set as the date for the formal Christmas opening here. As a result of this decision and in cooperation with the merchants, The Tribune will publish its annual Christmas Shoppers edition next Thurs day. However, in order to get the edition to press on time, it will be necessary for The Tribune to secure Christmas advertising copy at the earliest possible moment. All mer chants planning advertising are asked to release their copy just as soon as possible. Such cooperation will be sin cerely appreciated.