A Newspaper Devoted To the Progress of the Albemarle Area V / Volume XXXl—Number 11)7" Edenton Sewage Disposal Plant Is Now Completed And Undergoing Testing Expected to Be Ac-! cepted By Town of Edenton About May 15 to April 1 Edenton’s sewage disposal plant has been completed with sewage now going through in or der to test the operation of the plant prior to acceptance by the Town of Edenton. R. N. Hines, superintendent of the Electric & Water Department, expresses the belief that all of the kinks will be worked out, so that it may be accepted between May 15 and April 1. Mr. Hines says that due to weather conditions the area of the plant is very muddy so that it is not advisable for people to drive around the new plant and that the area will be graded and seeded as weather permits. . Testing of the nearly $700,000 system began last week when it was connected with existing sewer lines. The plant will provide primary and secondary treatment of sew age. It is located at the former Naval Air Station on 22 acres acquired by the town from the ' government. The. town was first ordered to cease pollution of local waters in ■ 1955 by the State Stream Sani- Cuntinuad on Page s~ Section 1 j 14 Poster Contest At Chowan High Winners Will Compete I For District Honors > 1 wSsf The, first and second place county winners in the 1964 Al bemarle Poster Contest will be selected in each of the/ three grades participating Wednesday, March 4atl P. M., at‘the Cho-j wan Hjgh School. . The 'students in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades have been studying conservation for the past several weeks. At the end of their study they prepare a Continued on Page 7. Section 1 Any Complaints?] Chowan County Commission-1 ers will meet as a Board of Equalization and Review Mon-1 day, March 16. The meeting will be held in the tax super visor's office in the rear of the Hotel Joseph Hewes building, j At their meeting the Com missioners will hear complaints regarding property valuation. It is the only time the Commission ers can legally charge property valuations, so that any com -1 plaints should be registered at this meeting. 20 Years Ago As Found In The Files Os The Chowan Herald P. Badham, Chairman of lhe Chowan County ABC Board, was notified that the value of coupons to purchase liquor had been cut in half. Chief of Police J. R. Tanner announced that he had ordered and sent a check: for an inha lator for the Police Department. The purchase was made possible from a successful police ball. Continued on Page 7, Section 1 ___ & . _ .m mmm ■ ■■ > —-- —•- |- Dr. McKay Guest Preacher For 1 Eden ton Baptist Church Revival; I Dr. M. Ray McKay, of the | Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, N. C., will be the guest preacher for the annual spring revival at the L Bdenton Baptist Church next The revival opens with a spe cial service on Sunday morning, March 8, at 10 o’clock, during the period usually devoted to the THE CHOWAN HERALD ,• Scholarship Finalist *, m W . Jhß| mk I A I I r " ■■■' ’ £ "‘ P MISS JEAN GOODWIN Among 24 young women final- 1 , ists in the Katharine Smith j scholarship competition at t 1 Greensboro this week is Miss 1 Jean Goodwin of Edenton, 1 < ’ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Goodwin. C 50 Jurymen Drawn To Serve At March Term Os Superior Court Chowan County Commissioners at their meeting Monday morn ing drew the names of 50 Cho- Iwan County men from the jury box, who will be summoned to serve as jurymen at the March . term of Chowan Superior Court. I The term of court will begin l Tuesday, Ma.ch 31, due to the ; observance of Easter Monday as I' a holiday. It will be a mixed term with Judge Albert W. Cow per of Kinston presiding. Those drawn for jury duty in- the fallowing; W. -T. Elliott, Jr., William L. Owens, W. L. Hardison, Jr., M. • S. Bass, D. H. Berryman, J. R. Dail, J. Earl Jones, C. D. Sawyer, D. G- Welch, Johnnie E. Owens, Robert S. Hollowell, James E. Ward, Guy Percy Williams, Rob Dr. Lake To Speak In Edenton Monday Night March 9th Guest of Lions Club ■ And Will Speak In ! Court House Follow l ing Meeting 1 Dr. I. Beverly Lake of Ra , leigh, one of the Democratic , candidates for Governor, will speak to the citizens of Chowan ; County Monday night, March 9. Dr. Lake will he a • guest of the Edenton Lions Club at its ■ meeting at the Edenton Restau i rant at 7 o’clock. Following ; this meeting ,Dr. Lake will go : |to the Court House to speak at 8 o’clock. i The meeting is open to the public and supporters of Dr. : Lake are hopeful that many i local people will hear what he : has to say about his candidacy. 1 .town Council meeting POSTPONED TO MARCH 17 [ i [ The meeting of Town Coun cil, scheduled to be held Tues . day night, March 10, has been l postponed until Tuesday nighty , March 17. Reason for the post ; ponement is due to Mayor John ,A. Mitchener being out of town on the regular meeting might. vice at 7:30. The 11 o’clock ser vice is scheduled to be broad cast over the local radio station for the special benefit of shut ins and others who are unable to attend. Services will continue through out the week, Monday through Friday nights, at f:3O. No ser vice is scheduled for Saturday night and the series of services win close with the 7:30 evening service on Sunday, March 15. Dr. McKay is Professor of P4enton, Chowan County, North Carolina, Thursday, March 5,1964. History tyiim Be I On Exhtbi llays Display of Outstand-! ing - Paintings Willi Be on Broad Street March 6 to 9 Os interest to people in this i area will be the appearance of the Mobile Museum of History, North Carolina’s only traveling museum. The museum is sched uled to be stationed in front of The Bettv Shoppe on Broad Street Friday, March 6 through Monday, March 9. It will be open to the public from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., each day and there will be no charge to visit and inspect the exhibits. Exhibits in the museum will feature an exhibition of life in North Caro lina during the first 100 years of the colony and is part of the program of the State Department of Archives and History’s Mu seum Division. The exhibit is a tribute to Ja cob Marling, a painter who worked in the state during the early days of the last century, but will also include paintings Continued on Page 3, Section l i ert Ashley, Herbert Elton Har rell, Jimmy C. Keeter, David Lee Hollowell, John William Brabble, Jepty Boyce, George M. Jordan, i Woodrow Lowe, William Van clease Clark, George W. Bunch. Jr., William Edward Barrow, : Haywood Blount, Hallett Elmo : Chesson, Clyde B. Blanchard, C. : H. Davis, Jr., Hershall Stallings, Willis H. Bono, Rhy Boyce, No lan B. Toppin, James E. Byrum, Thomas Humphlett, Raymond C- Bunch, Billy Duncan, Jack D. , -Ee;jry, I*, Rhea AcLaihs, Theodore Harris, W ; R. West, Robert D. Waller, J, L. Winslow, L. B. Tay lor, Hunter Hoggard, Watson Earl White, Joseph Williams Paul R. Perry, Frank P. Bunch. Robert Lee Nixon and J. N. Jor dan. Sheriff Goodwin Resigns As Court House Custodian Mrs. Bertha Bunch, Register of Deeds, Is Appointed to Post By Commissioners Sheriff Earl Goodwin on Mon day resigned from his duties as custodian of the Chowan County Court House. Mr. Goodwin was charged with this responsibility following the death of E. W Spires, who for many years ser ved in that capacity. Mr. Goodwin’s reason for re signing is the fact that some times for a day or more he does not go to the Court House and that he feels the custodian should be a person whose office is in the Court House to better supervise the work necessary to be done. Mrs. Bertha Bunch, Register of Deeds was, therefore, appoint ed to succeed Mr. Goodwin as Court House custodian. Another Herring Breakfast March 7 Sponsored by the Methodist Men’s Club, another pickled her ring breakfast will be served at the Methodist Church Saturday morning, March 7. Breakfast will be served from 7 to 9 o’clock and those in charge say they also expect to be able to serve herring roe. Quite a few Eden ton people have patronized these breakfasts in the past and another large turnout is expected Saturday morning. ROTARIANS MEET TODAY Edenton Rotarians will hold their weekly meeting this Parish Rev Edenton’s New Sewage Disposal Plant » ’ I I pißOl "J .'.gig $■ I 1 < lit Pictured above is an aerial view of Edenlon's new almost $700,000 sewage disposal plant at the former Edenton Naval Air Station. Sewage is now being pumped through the plant for testing prior to being accepted by the Town of Edenton. The picture was taken in the air by J. P. Ricks, Jr. Pollock Swamp Watershed Is Expected To Be Done By July The main problem in the Pol lock Swamp Watershed is too much water too long. This has jesuljjed from the accumulation of debris and silt in the main channels for the past century. Flood water cannot run off nearly fast enough and causes for extended periods. The result has been drowned crops, damag ed roads and property. The landowners in the water shed organized the Chowan County Drainage District No. 1. The Drainage District, along Gloomy Prospect For Library Site No Place In Sight In! Face of Vacating ! Cupola House | I Tom Shepard and Mrs. E. N. I Elliott appeared before the Cho wan County Commissioners at their meeting Monday morning an behalf of the Shepard-Pru :len Memorial Library. The Commissioners were informed that the library, now located in the Cupola House, will be oblig- Contir.ued on Page 4—Section 1 Typing Contest Held At Chowan i Teams and Teachers j Enjoy Luncheon As- i ter Contest Tuesday morning, March 3, the Chowan County Typewriting Contest was held in the Chowan High School Commercial Depart ment. Miss Velma Lowe, a member of the School of Busi- Continued on Page 7, Section 1 Ticket Sale Begins For Hospital Auxiliary Play March 20 And 21 At the time of the suicide ofj Ivar Kreuger, Swedish match [ king and financial juggler, re-j ! vealing the complicated failure of his international interests, it was rumored that he had only faked his death, and really had departed to South America, to Uve incognito and in luxury on a fortune that he had establish ed there. This story is the basis of the play selected for presentation by the Chowan Hospital Auxiliary «• . ■•■j* a.t. 'V * ■ with the County Commissioners i and the supervisors of the Albe ; marie Soil and Water Conser i vaticuv District, made applica i tion to the Secretary of Agri culture for assistance in solving : this problem. This application ; was made under the authority : of the Watershed Protection and ■ Flood Prevention Act, a program of the U. S. Department of Agri . culture. i The objective is to reduce . flooding of low-lying crop and ; Continued on Page 6, Section 1 Leary Bros. Host To Many Farmers | Large Group Enjoys ! Barbecue Chicken | In Armory j In the neighborhood of 200 ' Chowan County farmers and . others gathered in the Edenton ; armory Tuesday night when Leary Bros. Storage Company : was host for a Smith-Douglass barbecue chicken dinner. The chickens were barbecued by the Center Hill-Cress Roads firemen ''''nlinired on Pac-«>. 3, Section 1 Mayo Is Chairman For ECC Campaign : Dollars For Develop -1 ment Launched In Eastern Counties Letters to 857 former East ; Carolina College students in an eight-county area of Northeast ern North Carolina have been ; mailed as the ECC Alumni As sociation launched its 1964 ‘ Dol- Conlinued on Page 4. Section 1 ias their next fund raising pro j ject. ) The subject of the play is a murder trial, and an unusual feature of it is the recruiting of 12 members of the audience to serve as jury. These members will not be ‘ planted” in the audience, but chosen by lot. Jurors selected will be on a pro fessional basis, for they will be paws a refund amounting to the price of their ticket to the show, j High School Fair Scheduled To Be Held March 5-6 Exhibits From Vari ous Departments In School Will Be on Display The John A. Holmes High School Fair, held annually at the school, has been set for Thurs day and Friday, March 5 and 6 in the school gymnasium. There will be on display ex hibits from the Science Depart ment, Art Department, Industrial Arts and Home Economics De partments. The Fair is open to the public, and the hours will be from 7 P. M., to 9 P. M., on, Thursday, March 5 and from 9 [ A. M., to 3 P. M., and 7 P. M., to 9 P. M., on Friday, March 6 Everyone is invited to come to the school gymnasium on these dates and observe these; exhibits by the students from j the 7th grades through the 12th' grades. 29 JAILED IN FEBRUARY j Jailer Bertram Byrum reports that 29 persons were placed in the Chowan County Jail during February. Confinements ranged from one to 15 days with the | expense including jail and turn-| key fees, being $197,37. Lions Club Begins Campaign For Sale Os 1964 Easter Seals With Easter observed Sunday,, March 29, this year, Edenton’s, Lions Club has begun plans for j the Easter Seal campaign. Hector Lupton is chairman of this year’s campaign, and Hay wood Bunch will be treasurer. Mr. Lupton stated early this week that a goal of SI,OOO has been set and 4iat letters contain ing Easter Seals have been mail ed throughout the county. It is j hoped to close out the campaign ! by Easter Sunday, so that all j who receive the Easter Seals are i Preyer Speaks To i Large Group Of 1 Chowan Citizens j Strongly Endorses 4- Laning of U. S. 17 From South Carolina To Virginia Lines Richardson Preyer, Democratic! candidate for Governor of North I Carolina, spoke to an enthusias tic group which practically fill-1 ed the Chowan County Court' House Wednesday morning. Prior to his address coffee and doughnuts were served. Tom Shepard presided over the meeting and called upon Mrs. Ed Bond for a few remarks, j Mrs. Bond reported upon the activities of ‘ Women For Prey er” in the county and said Mr. Preyer was the answer to the needs of Chowan and this sec tion of the state. Mr. Preyer was introduced by Mayor Jonn Mitchener. In his opening remarks Mr. Preyer said it was an honor to be in Edenton, the beginning of the nation, and said he was I glad to see so many women Cont’d. on Pag* 4—Section 1 Mrs. Bertha Bunch Is Candidate For Register Os Deeds Another candidate filed for re-election in the forthcoming Democratic primary election scheduled to be held in May. Mrs. Bertha Bunch filed with the Board of Elections Monday afternoon to succeed herself as Register of Deeds for Chowan County. Mrs. Bunch for many years was deputy Register of Deeds while her husband held the I position and has been re-elected E every succeeding election since! her husband’s death. Mrs. Bunch says that if she is re-elected, she will continue Ito strive to perform the duties of the office with courtesy and efficiency. $3.00 Per Year In North Carolina Southern Properties Offer Historic Parson Earle School To DAR «> Speaks In Edenton 1 * • I 'i ! Jl , >«<# Jf * /Ml m i DR. I. EHVERLY LAKE | Sponsored by lhe Edenton j Lions Club, Dr. I. Beverlv Lake |of Raleigh, one of the Demo cratic gubernatorial candidates,! will be a guest of lhe club on’ Monday night, March 9. Fol lowing lhe meeting Dr. Lake I will speak at the Court House |at 8 o'clock. The public is in vited to hear him. .requested to send in their con-i : tributions just as soon as possi ■ | ble. Last year’s Easter Seal cam 'jpaign was the most successful | ever held in North Carolina, it . is pointed out, however, that the ; North Carolina Society for ; Crippled Children must look to ■ j the .future, if it is to be success j ful in its efforts to improve ser ;j vices to the handicapped, it j must have a very real increase! Jin funds for 1964. Plans fori | Continued on Page s—Section 1 i I Frank Wood, Jr., Is I Awarded MIT Degree | Frank Wood, Jr., of Edenton, has received the master of sci ence degree in chemical engi- j neering from the Massachusetts! Institute of Technology. | Mr. Wood is among 263 grad-1 |uate and undergraduate students] who received degrees fromj M.I.T. in January. t Watershed Work Progressing ■m , ijyk ,& i||lsk * -.ggjfc Main channel of Pollock Swamp just above N. C. 32 after con struction. Sixty-five ton dragline in background performing the work. Construction will include 21.5 miles of main and lateral ditch construction in the 14.475-acre watershed. MtjaL 'Vp tvJw. JgHf School bus traveling flooded road in Ihe Green Hall section In the Watershed. For Quick Results . . . Try a Classified Ad I In The Herald Tea Party Chapter Is Faced With Raising Funds to Move House To Iredell Property The Edenton Chamber of Com merce was in receipt of a letter Tuesday from Southern Proper ties, Inc., developers of Arrow head Beach and Boat Club on the Chowan River. The letter, | according to West W. Byrum, president of the Chamber, was in answer to one written by the j Chamber asking if Southern Properties would donate the Parson Earle building on the for mer Bandon Plantation, which I Southern Properties recently pur- I chased from Mrs. Inglis Fletch er. The Southern Properties people were pleased to offer the historic Parson Earle schooihouse 'building to the community with , i out cost. However, the moving i expense of the building would Continued on Page 6 —Section 1 Leary Is Candidate For Commissioner J. Clarence Leary late last week announced that he will seek re-election as County Com missioner in the May Democratic primary election. Mr. Leary was appointed to fill the unexpired term of Gil , Ham Wood when Mr. Wood was appointed as a member of the State Highway Commission. He also Was elected to serve a full term at the expiration of Mr. Wood’s term. In announcing his candidacy, Mr. Leary said he would devote his best efforts and judgment relative to the .affairs of Cho wan County as a,whole in the interest of progressive but eco nomical government. if CIVIC calendar] John A. Holmes High School Fair will be held Thursday and Friday, March 5 and 6 in lhe school gymnasium. Ladies' Day will be observed | today (Thursday) at the Chowan | Golf and Country Club. I Tickets are now on sale for the Chowan Hospital Auxiliary | play, "Night of Januarv 16th , ito he presented in the Court 1 Continued from Page B—Section I