- TK3 TEItQUIMAN1 WEKtiT,HlZAPF&W0r!Vt4S. TRIP AY, JUNE 28, 1M0 PAGE TSRE3 1 Federal Bureau Investi gation Wants No Help ;Frdm :Loca1 John 1 : Laws or Organiza tiohs; Information? Yes, But -Investiga ; tions ' To the end that the task may be carried out with as little confusion as possible, the President has re quested all police officers, sheriffs, and all other law enforcement offi cers in the United States promptly to turn over to the nearest represen tative of the Federal Bureau of In vestigation any Information obtained by them relating to espionage, counter-espionage, subversive activities, and violations of , the neutrality laws. The proceedure to be followed in handling complaints and prosecutions of violations of Federal laws relating to these activities is outlined in a statement made by the president . . . "The Attorney General has been requested by me to instruct the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation of the department of Justice to take charge of investigative work in matters re lating to espionage, sabotage, .and violations of the neutrality regula tions.. ' "This task must be conducted in a comprehensive manner on a national basis, and all information must be carefully sifted out and correlated in order to avoid confusion and irre sponsibility." -. . - Noting that in connection with the existing international . situation, all officers WiU doubtless receive con siderable information from groups and individuals concerning;" seeming subversive activities and kindred of fenses, this .is Uncle Sam's . polite ' way of telling the local enforcement units to keep "hands eff and leave such matters to those who know how U'Jubtotjrr; ; While the cooperation jot every citizen in turning over usefut, infor mation to-the Federal Bureau of In vestigation is, of course, welcomed, Federal UlPreenientT"agencjBS . are instructed-to discourage as far as possible ; Individual! or - groups : from engaging' In Abater-espionage oractititiesof an investigative na- tan. .S-X;9rriYK-': to MtiTta ' Bureau wf Investigation, it seemsydoerfcoTlrishf 1 Jo X plated i TOiitait 6rapn i proving, tncooiraging - or sponsoring t activity of an Investigative nature on the part of any Individual or group or organization. . ."The unauthorised assumption of any taveetigttive func tions by any such grottpa i-jwould be discouraged," the Attorney General -aid.- ' -'VV Private citizens- and country cops are left the righ$ to' meddle however, ' since The duty and function of the citizen is to report f to "local" repre sentatives of the Federal Bureau of " Investigation all information relating to violations of this character and not to engage In Investigative activ ity thereto.". ' :....- . . f CCC Youths May Get Non-Combat Work In Case Of Draft One Stumbling Block Removed Front Path On Enrollment; ; Fain ily's Need of Relief ; ; T. L. Grierj-' Stated' election j supervisor, this week quoted Senator r James F. Byrnes ; as- saying" ' that in Enough To Make Us SeeHed r America is, leaning over backward to insure protection for an organiza tion whose members have, potential ly obligated themselves even to over throw: our: governmeotVby force and violence, while the party still, under existing law, may function as a poli tical party. Reds! Communists! And a Justice of the Newi York State Supreme Court rules that it is not libellous to call an American a Communist. As the Industrial Press Service re cently stated "It may not be libelous at the present time to call a person in the United Sates a Communist but it strikes us as being about the most insulting non-libelous remark that could possibly be addressed to an American Citizen!" The decision of the New York Justice on the question shows how extremely eyeful Americans are to presedve the democratic rights which individuals and minority groups in this country enjoy, but in the case of the Communists it seems like en couraging a forest fire to afford protection for an organization actu ally rooted in foreign lands that has no respect for and no understanding of the very principles which make its continued existence here possible. are local selecting agencies operating in conjunction with the State Board of Charities and Public Welfare, State selection agency. This bit of news released from A. Laurence Aydlett's Information Ser vice, SBCPW in Raleigh, is doubly interesting in that it throws new light on two developments in the Civilian Conservation Corps. First. That the CCC is anxious to enlist more youngsters and is leav ing out the stipulation that the fam ily should be In need of the funds paid to the accepted CCC boy. This stipulation excluded a large number of youths from OOC, ranks when the plan wm first getting underway. . Second. That a vague' promise of non-combat dutief in case national emergency calls for a draft is being held out as an inducement to possible enrwieeB..4S.J..J OOC operating and maintaining.' , the largest group of mechanised equipment in the country, 68 central -repair, shops , will be In dperatlott by the fall in which anenK ployed youths - can learn to repair trucks, power shovels, pumps, grad ers, generators and compressors un der a full-time instructor. Each of the fifteen hundred camps lit. the country conducts a cooking and baking , school in which 22,000 boys have been trained in kitchen activities since 1933. "Tf" ZGifxMomMo i E. City And Vicinity Salvation Army Prepar ing to Take In Twenty-five Little British ers A worker under Envoy Cook, head, of the Salvation Army in Elizabeth ICity, on a periodic, visit to Hertford Monday said that the Salvation Army in the Pasquotank metropolis is pre paring to receive twenty-five British child refugees. Those who have followed interna tional events in the daily newspapers have no doubt learned that Great Britain is preparing to evacuate (or has already evacuated) something like two million children between the ages of two and fifteen years. The worker was not making a plea for hopes for the British children; twenty-five is the number the Salva tion Army alone can care for. How ever, he said, others can be placed in private homes and help take care of the situation in that manner. Moving of England child popula tion is not intended to be a perma nent thing; it is only to get them out of harm's way for the duration of the present war. When it is over they will be returned to their pa rents. One other town, in North Carolina which has made definite arrange ments for care of child refugees is Wake Forest, where another twenty five will be taken into private homes. Those in this country who wish to take in British child refugees for an indefinite visit, should get in touch with Envoy Cook. Plans for the evacuation were be gun several weeks ago in preparation for Adolf Hitler's promise of unre lenting mass assault on the British Isles. "It is our duty to care for these unfortunate little, .refugees,'4'- the worker quoted Envoy Cook as saying. V 4) i V? 2 -it Byrum. ' 1 J ; : Mrss Willie Byrum and daughter, Siurleyi Mrs. Edward Byrum .and daughter, Doris Jean, were dinner guests of Mrs. J. S. Turner Thurs day. Mr and Mrs. J. P. Byrum visited Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Jordan Sunday afternoon. ih event of national emergency. Jnecessl- ; tattng a general-aralti;. .youtns witn 1 1 mechanical and ; cooking experience in the OOC mjghUsJr the result of s - such training ; be assigned to" non ; combatant activities rather .than to , r combat Work in uniform, n ff -lJr t ; The Three .Cs will broaden r. the third quarter Civilian Conseifvatiori . Corps acceptance operations in North r H varouna : from July x to zo, when ' -2,405 enroHees will be taken" in. A family's need fpr relief funds ' will have less bearing on acceptance ; y. than unemployment and .the need of the training available in the CCC ' ' Mr. Grier 'was quoting -a lot of 1 : people; .He. quoted J. J, McEntree, - national corps director, to the effect , -that the; greatest field of service for the CCC lies in training large num- bers of skilled and semi-skilled me ; chanics with elementary . engineering experience. " ' . . " ' , ! , Interesting to boys interested in ; the Three Cs and training for non- ' combatant activities in case of draft, ' Is the news that "enrollment is open to all young men not employed and in need of work who are between the ages of 18 and 25" and that "no ap plicant will now be excluded from se lection fcecause hia family" is not in 1 c! Cs f"-'- 1 to be "Bent ! ( 'i rior.i." C : wt'.:r9 srrerintendents CENTER HUX NEWS "-Miss Camilla Clarke, of Columbia, is the guest of Miss Nellie Blanche (Stanford. Beverend Frank Gale is at Crozet, Va., conducting a revival meeting. Mrs. Emmett Parker and daughter, Jymy, of Sunbury, have returned home after spending last week with Mrs. Parker's parents, Mr. and Mrs, J. N. Boyce. They were accompa nied home by Mrs. Parker's sister, Miss Hilda Boyce, who is. spending the week with them. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hollowell and daughters, Bernice and Elizabeth, of Sunbury, spent Tuesday; with Mrs Hollowell's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J, P. Byrum. Clifton Dail, of New York, spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Nearest Jordan. Mr, and . Mrs. '"Willie Byrum and daughter, ' Shirley, spent the week end with Mrs. : Byrum's parents, Mr. and Mrs'. C. H. Hollowell. Mrs. J. S. Turner - and daughter, Peggy,-,, visited Mrs. Theodore Boyce and Mrs. N. Bunch Friday evening. Mra; J.Tr Stanford and: daughter, Miss Nellie Blanche, visited, Mrs, J. M. Turner and Miss1' Lillian Turner Thursday afternoon.-; thV ?i i v Mrs. Edward Byrum and daughter, Doris Jeah,' spent Tuesday with Mrs. Btrum's parents, Mr and Mrs; J. T. Byrum.. of near Cannons Ferrv. ' i mra. is. v. k ut rjf aim jars; vune roh: Boyce visited Mrs. Cora Winslow in Hertford Thursday afternoon. Mrs, Winsloy .continues very ill. frtmm A Mr and Mn. George T White and daughter, rot f Edenton, ff and- Mrs. , R. J. Privott were guests ; . of Mr. and Mrs. R. Oj Furry Sunday afternoon, Miss ;r Eizabeth fjWhite wenti to Greensboro Tuesday to attend :. the wedding? of afrlerid;? ' . Mrs Oacar Boyce iand daus-hter. Rutli,Fvisited her,pitfehtsi'Mr; and Mrs; Jesse Lane, Tuesday ?:i . Mrs. Cotter B, White and- two chilr dren spent Friday and Saturday in Norfolk, Va., with her brother, Den nis Wiggins, and Mrs. Wiggins. - Mr.- and Mrs.. George Ellis and two ehildren, Edmund1 and 'Margaret, spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Chappetl. E. C. Perry and Miss Louise Perry awenaeatna, wedding of HaUett Perry.and Miss Thelma Stallings in Virginia oa Saturday. . Mrs. J. 8. Turner and daughter, Pgy, Mrs. Joseph Hollowell and daughters, Bernice and Elizabeth, visited Mrs. J. M. Turner Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Rosser Bunch and Aft Rah. f. . - i i Saturday with Mrs. Nowell, at Bel- viuero. mrs. XNOwell is ffll. Willie Monds, of Norfolk, Va, spent Saturday night and Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Farmers Organized In Defense Program Farmers of North Carolina are organized for any emergency, says Dr. I. O. Schaub, director of the State College Extension Service They are ready to meet any call for contribu tions to National defense in the form of food, feed and the materials for clothing. They have been preparing for such a call in recent years. They have experienced leadership to do the job, he declared. Dr. Schaub said that the National Farm Program has enabled farmers to become better organized and more ready to work together than at any time in history. He also pointed out that, through the Agricultural Con servation Program, the fertility of the soil has been built up to where the necessities of war could be pro duced in greater quantities, with less time and expense. "Our Extension organization was only three years old when the United States entered the first World War in 1917," Dr. Schaub continued. "Yet, with limited personnel and ex perience, the farm and home agents and subject matter specialists provid ed efficient leadership in that great crisis. Farm and home demonstra tion work is now 26 years old, and we have an organization of trained a gents, specialists and administrators. Every county in the State is organi zed for Extension work. "Many of the farm and home a gents, canning and clothing specil ists, and others who directed emer gency activities of rural people in 1917 and 1918, and again during the depression years, are still with the organization.' " Thejf did their jobs ef ficiently-then; - they .have the .confi- rdence of the. farm people, and are ready to lead again. . r "It will not be necessary to set up new services, or new organizations of farmers to carry on agriculture's part of the National defense program." CUPID SEPARATES QUADS Oklahoma City, Okla. Cupid has divided the famous Texas Keys quad ruplets. Browneyed MbnsTKeys was the first of the four sisters to suc cumb to his darts. She was recently married to Robert W. Fowler, oil company accountant, with her simul taneous sisters as her attendants. The Latest "And has your baby learned to talk yet?" "Oh, yes. We're teaching him to keep quiet now." For Summer Comfort COOEt DITI) OIL ! FOR BIGGER PROFITS USE Purina Feeds We Carry a Full line ofFfoiFdaltiy And Livestock PerquimaisFeed And Seed Store Located on Church Street in the Broughton Building Next to Gulf Service Station JOHN BROUGHTON, JR, Owner Use A Florence Or Savoil Stove Beat the heat this summer by using an Oil Range or Cook Stove. It's the economical way. Easy to operate and very efficient. Come in today and let us explain the many features of our Florence and Savoil Cook Stoves and Ranges, " Ybul ehjoy keeping cool durng hot weath er by using one of our Oil Stoves. We have a size for every home. Priced From $4.95 to $1C3 I Hertford Hardware & Supply Co. Trade Here and Bank the Difference" HERTFORD, N. C. s SDdDimtt (IDveirlldDdDEs unir Juaime Salle JJnastt 2. MGDIEUE I32)A M . Wtofldh To Save On Your Purchase ol Dew Merchandise JUST A FEW OF OUR ITEMS LISTED BELOW . . . MANY MORE BARGAINS IN STORE FOR YOU! ,t TirniH BREAM OF UTOPIA . BECOMES NIGHTMARE ? How. hopeful; settlers,:- visloned ? on Island as a promised land with little work,? no worries and easy wealth only to become completely; disillu sioned. A. feature story in .fhe July 7rt l?aue f, X U The American Weekly the lit t?? jaifee d:stril;uted with the Cn Sale at A!l Newsstands, S Pure Silk 3-Tnread Full Fashioned Hose ALL NEW SHADES Ladies' " Silk Dresses ALL SIZES i Men's Wash Pants v i ALL SIZES 09e1.79 PAIR 3 Just Received New ; Shipment '.Sheer and Voile : . Dresses 9Se -1.98 Men's and Boys' Shirts and Shorts ALL SIZES 5L2c EACH 3 One Lot of Men's 1 Straw Hats $1. MOSTLY LARGE SIZES EACH 2 CLOSE-OUT $1.00 Ladies' Tennis Oxfords Small Sizes 3 to 6 Only PAIR Men's Tropical Suits MOSTLY SMALLER - SIZES 7MQ . Visit" r - Our Store ,4 1 Saturday ; STORE OF VALUES;. ' All of Our Bathing Suits (jfreatly Reduced J ti