* - II B _1 B_ II 11" New* H,rt" ~?' Hertford County Herald s: ^ - A PAPER WORTH WHILE ?/ Volume XIV. Eight Pages Ahoskie, North Carolina, Friday, June 15, 1923 One Section No. 7 .L . I I , . ? ? LOCATION OF ROAD I LEFT TO VIRGINIA North Carolina Will Meet At Somerton, Provided High way Is Brought There BRIDGE PLANS DELAYED | Virginia will settle this ques tion of highway connecting the two states, whether it be at Corapeake or at Somerton. Frank Page, Chairman of the North ttarolina State Highway Commission, told a delegation of citizens who called on him at Raleigh last Thursday that North Carolina would meet the Virginia road wherever it was brought to the line. Attorney Thad A. Eure, of Winton, Mr- Parker, of Gates, and E. A. Brothers, of Nanse mond County, Virginia, were in conference with Chairman Page last week. They went there in interest *of the direct route to Somerton, and carried with them petitions signed by more than a thousand qualified voters of Gates, Hertford, Ber tie and Martin counties. A large percentage of the signers wore citizens of Gates county, though which the State High way will be built, no matter which refute is taken in this State. The original purpose of North Car olina was to meet Virginia at Cora peake, and the highway engineers who laid out the State system in cluded that section, which leaves the county seat to county seat highway at Sun bury. It was thought at that time that Virginia had settled on the location of its road?that it would be built to Corapeake. Since that time citizens of Virginia and North Caro lina, have become dissatisfied with the Corapeake route and turnabout# have been taken at prevailing upon the two highway commissions to change the route to go via Somerton and Whaley ville. Sentiment is sharply divided in Virginia over the location of the road. However, a large majority in this State prefer the route by way of Somerton. Mr. Page's direct state ment to the three men who carried up - the petition was that North Carolina would meet Virginia wherever she located the foad. Thus, the burden of deciding the location is left with Virginia authorities. Attorney Eure and Mr. Brothers, both of whom have been working for the Somerton route, will now shift the scene of their operations to Vir ginia. Require Act Of Congress Further delay in the approval of - plans for the draw bridge to be con structed at Winton is now certain, ainee the State Highway Commission has recently learned that it will re quire an act of Congress to approve the bridge plans. Chairman Page says he only a" few days ago recalled the fact that the bridge was to cross a stream that was navigable in two States, and that to secure approval of plans it was necesary for Congress to act The draw will be located at the identical spot shown on the blue print, Mr. Page said. The opposition to' liocation of the draw is not of suf ficient weight to cause any change, Mr. Page thinks. Approval has al ready been given by the War Depart , mf nt and it wilk recommend to Con gress that the plans be okehed with the draw as shown oq the blue print . Barge owners, and towers are mak ing a kick on the location of the draw, but, whether their fight will make any dent in the plans i* very uiilikely, ac cording to word brought back from Raleigh. AHOSKIE GOES TO BEACH * ______ Qhowan pleasure Beach at Cole* rain is drawing heavily upon the Sun day crowds at Ahoskie. On each of the last two Sundays large numbers of persont^jrom here have driven to Celerain, some to spend the day and others the afternoons on the beach. The Pleasure Beach is growing in popular favor ea$h year, and has been Substituted for Norfolk beaches to a extent. , % Vic., fBHf ? r feaehlls.?-sn*iiiln i.i ti I i'i Mi'fci.iilAlilAiilSifi AULANDER TO STAGE BIG DAY ON FOURTH Aulander, June 3?The 4th of July will be a big day in Aulander. There will be stag ed two ball games and speak ing by Judge John H. Kerr, of Warren ton. There will also be free lemonade and barbecue. Mr. W. C. Hardy, of Kelford, the famous "barbecue king" has been engaged to furnish the "cue" and hot corn bread for the thousand or more people who are expected to at tend. This will be the first celebra ' tion of the kind Aulander has had for the past several years, and the citizeiA" and business men of the town are entering into the spirit of the thing with real enthusiasm. The entire town will be in a holiday mood and a tremendous crowd is ex pected. Everything will be free except admission to the ball park, where two ball games between Aulander and a champion Norfolk team may be seen and plenty of barbecue may be had for the price of ad mission. GOOD REPORT OF WORK DONE BY MISS SWINDELL Booklet Showing Balanced Meal* And Other Informa tion"* Distributed In the reports of home demonstra tion agents within the district sup ervised by Miss Pauline Smith of Washington, Hertford County for the month of May makes one of the best ratings of all and stands well to the front in the work accomplished. The following is a copy of the report sub mitted by the District Agent to the State Department Miss Myrtle Swindell of Hertford county has continued the work in millinery. Miss Swindell's club exhibits at the Hertford County commencement were interesting fea tures of the occasion. Sport hats were shown in one room; booklets showing balanced menus and'food posters in another and meals cooked and arranged by each club in the county in another section. These meals were as follows: Breakfast for an adult and for a child; dinner for an adult and for a child; supper for an adult and a child; attractive Sun day night supper; attractive lunch eon; club party refreshments and liquid dishes for convalescents. These were arranged on separate tables, the name of the club prepar ing the dishes above the respective tables. It was a most popular room all during the day. Miss Swindell opened her curb market on May 11th. Turnip greens, cabbage, onions, chickens, eggs, meat, doughnuts, fruit cake, potato chips, sweet potatoes, strawberries and can ned fruits were sold. The sales have amounted to more than $30.00 each day. / Field days 12; office 12; clubs visi ted 10; attendance 85; schools visited 2; attendance 108; meetings held and attended 16; attendance 2116; con ferences 73; letters written 114; miles by auto 430; demonstrations 8. Bertie County Miss Addle Sue Harry of Bertie county has spent the month in organ izing clubs. Sewing is the project being presented. Field days 16; office 8; clubs visi ted 7; attendance 116; schools vjsited 7; attendance 314; nUmber meetings held and attended 17; attendance 572; conferences 344; articles for publication 10; homes visited 23; let ters 62; circular letters 46; bulletins 07; number of miles by auto 638. DILDAY-BRADY Suffolk, June 11. ? Dallas Lee Dilday, of the U. S. Navy, son of W. J. Dilday, of Ahoskie, N. C., and Miss Celestine Anne Brady, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Brady, of Winton, N. C., were married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tinkham in Kingsboro Heights last night at 7 o'clock by the Rev. H. H. Butler. The bride wore a dress of dark blue with hat and gloves that harmonised. The groom. Is a chief petty officer in the navy. The couple will reside In Portsmouth.?Virginian-Pilot r.. ; v;. ?: ? ELECTRIC CURRENT SERVICE EXTENDED Council Votes To Run Plant Seventeen Hours Per Day, Beginning June IS CITY TAGS FOR AUTOS Whatever fears had been en tertained about Ahoskie's n?w town council curtailing the ser vice given by the municipal electric light plant were com pletely dissipated last Monday night, when by a. unanimous vote Messrs. Basnight, Hayes, and Myers ordered the plant run seventeen hours out of every twenty-four. Beginning Friday, June 15th, the plant will be operated each day from 12 o'clock, noon, until 5 o'clock a. m. This action is but the fore runner, possibly, of a twenty four hour service which is in prospect from two sources. The council is still seeking to make agreeable contracts with other nearby towns-for the fur nishing of current, and at the same time are considering the installation of a smaller unit at the plant for continuous opera tion at a decreased cost of ap eration. It is known that at least one of the councilman, H. S. Basinght, is in favor of such an investment, and he believes it will pay the town handsome ly. The other two members are also favorable to the full service and are in line to make whatever extension of service humanly possible to do. I Messrs. Burke and Caddell, con tract engineers of Norfolk, hagfijfefien in Ahoskie this week seeking! to ef fect a contract with PoweDsville; and also familiarising the new council with the terms of the contract Ahos kie has with' their company. They have been conferring with the board at Ahoskie, and also at Powellayille. All automobiles owned and oper ated in Ahoskie will be required to carry "city licenses after July 1. An ordinance requiring the tags was passed Monday night, and a fee of one dollar per tag was set. L. C. Williams, clerk, was ordered to pur chase the" tags and have them ready for distribution within a few days. All cars in the town will have to be equipped with these licenses by July 1st. The council has been in session every night this week, and by its ap plication to the work at hand has shown a determination to "sweep the carpet clean." Taxes and bond pay ments have engaged it*- attention. Another payment on municipal bonds is due this week, June 15th, and ar rangements have been made to meet the demand promptly and without de lay to the bond holders. * WILL REMOVE ALL * * INDIGENT OFFICERS * * ?_ * With a view of prosecution * and dismissal from Government * service where the offender is a * Federal employee, investigation * is being made by the Bureau of * Internal Revenue of reports that * persons authorized to administer * oaths are not, in all cases, per * forming such duty properly and * in accordance with the law. f Section 100 of the United * States Penal Code provides a * penalty of $S00 fink or inkprison * ment for one year, or bqth, for * "whoever\being a public officer * or other person authorised by * any law of the United States to * make or give a certificate or * other writing, shall knowingly * make and deliver as true such a * certificate or writing containing * any statement which he knows * to be false." * Such misconduct, it is declar * ed by the Commissioner of Inter * nal Revenue, D. H. Blair, in ad * dition to the penalties prescribed * by law, will i>e deemed sufficient * reason for requesting the cancel * lation of the oath-administering * authority for any officer guilty * of the offense, and in the case * of Bureau officers, for dismissal * from the service. * / 4 4 ' ROAD BOARD GIVES BRI0GE CONTRACTS After delaying the awarding of contracts for bridges on three different occasions, the Hertford County Road Board voted last Monday to give W. B. Barrow, of Roanoke Rapids, contract for construction of four bridges in the county. The approximate cost of the four bridges will be $12,000 half of that amount being allocated to the bridge across Stoney Creek, Ahoskie Township. Two bridges, Vinson's and Vaughans, will be built in Mur freesboro Township, and one wilkbe constructed in St. Johns Township, on the Aulender-St. Johns highway. The board spent two hours considering the three bids made, and al most deadlocked on a final de cision. Messrs. J. R. Garrett and H- G. Snipes were the only members voting on the motion to award contracts. Besides the regular routine business of approving bills, this was tlie only action taken at Monday's meeting of the board. AIHMIE YOUNG MAN TO WED CATESV1LLE LADY Shower Given In Honor Of Bride-Elect Of Charles M. Earley Gatesville, June 7.?The home of Mrs. Emmet L. Riddick was beautiful in its profusion of sweet peas and Dorothy Perkins rose Wednesday evening when she entertained a num ber of friends at a beautiful party to i announce the approaching marriage of Bliss May E41a Sarith and Charles Marf(m"Earl e y which will take place this month^ The rooms were tastefully decora ted with potted plants and cut flow ers, the color scheme of pink and white being carried out in both deco rations and refreshments. The man tels were banked in magnolias and the stairway was festooned in trailing vines. As the guests arrived they were in vited to the dining room where de licious punch and sweet sandwiches were served by Misses Evelyn Rid dick and Eliza Cowper. After several games of progress ive bride were played a love letter contest, in which the missing words were filled with the names of flow ers. In the midst of the contest lit tle Miss Elizabeth Greenleaf of Me bane, N. C., and Penelope Cowper brought in baskets of leghorn hats filled with sweet peas and presented the bride-elect with a shower boquet of sweet peas and roses and each guest with a minature corsage to which was attached dainty cards bearing the inscription Early-Smith, June 30, 1923. A shower of rice and congratulations immediately fol lowed and a toast was given to the bride. The hostess then presented Miss Smith with a "Bride Book." The guests were served an Ice course, mints and nuts with favors of pink baskets. The out of town guests were Mrs. J. Frank Weeks, Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Martin Kellogg, Sunbury, Mrs. Louis E. Greenleaf, Mebane, and Mrs. B. L. Banks, Elizabeth City. ANOTHER AHOSKIE BOY IS MARRIED Th? following announcement ap peared in last Saturdays's issue of the Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch. The groom, Stewart Holoman, is well known in Ahoskie and vicinity. For two years he was salesman for J. T. Williams A Bro., of this town, leaving here for Norfolk to accept a position there. HoIloaMii-Brashear The marriage of Miss Ruth Made line Braahear, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Brashest, of this city and Albert Stuart Holloman, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Holloman of Ahoskie, N. C., will take place this afternoon at 5:30 o'clock at the parsonage of Knox Presbyterian church. Rev. W. H. T. Squires, pastor of the church officiating. Mr. Holloman and his bride will leave for a northern wedding trip and upon their return will reside with the bride's parents in the Wentwerth . .2 . . NEGROES DIVIDED ON TURNING WATERS NORMAL INSTITUTE OVER TO EDUCATION BOARD Dr. C. S. Brown, President, Makes Offer To Board of Education, And Arguments Advanced For And Against Proposition. Ahoskie Negroes Fight Hard To Retain Appropriation For Training School. Lawyers Employed To Disturbing elements threatened to disrupt the even keel which has so long been kept by the good ship Board of Educa tion of Hertford County, last Monday. The members of the board, however, remained comparatively calm during the temp est, and emerged without a scratch, simply passing a motion that was recommended by Profesor N. C. Newbold, of the State De partment of Education. A contest of heated argument and ill feeling engendered by sporadic attempts to discredit both sides waged from eleven o'clock in the morning until four o'clock, with an hour for intermission. It was over the proposition whether the county board of education should accept the Waters Normal Institue as a gift, and make it an accredited high school for negroes and a'trainingschool for negro teachers. The motion passed was to accept the property, provided all legal tangles to the transfer were ironed out and eliminated altogether- G. C. Picot of Como made the motion, seconded by B. G. Williams of Cofield. Jno. E. Vann, third member of the board, did not votl. He did, however, make a speech in which he called upon the ne groes to refrgin from such tactics as shown at the hearing, and emphasized the fact-that he was willing to do all that he could, as a board member, for the negroes of the county. He also took a whack at Ahoskie for its repeated attempts to take everything in sight, and by way of emphasis told those who were repre senting the interests of Ahoskie negroes that the negro school here had been bleeding the board of education'for money from time immemorial. Mr. Vann said he was willing to help Ahos kie, however, and would give them equal consideration with other towns, notably Winton in this instance.' Dr. C. S. Brown, negro educator of note, and president of Waters Normal Institute for 37 years, made the key note speech of the day and set the torches ablaze. After presenting his school plant he sat down to listen to Professor C. S. Yeates, of the Hert ford County Training School at Ahoskie, Attorney L- C. Wiliams of Ahoskie, Attorney Stanley Winborne, of Murfreesboro, also representing Ahoskie negroes, and Dr. C. G. Pow ell, of Ahoskie, urge the board to continue the county appropriation for a training school, at Ahoskie. Each of these men urged the appropriation at Ahoskie, on account of the larger number of patrons at Ahoskie, and the better facilities oifered at Ahos kie. Not a note of bitterness prevailed until Doctor Brown arose for a sec ond time to advance his claims. He was bitter in his denunciation of some members of his race who had opposed the move to turn the prop erty over to the county. He reviewed the work he had done for negro edu cation, and impressed it upon the board and all listeners that he was the leader; that he knew what the ne groes wanted; that they wanted to come to Winton, the acknowledged headquarters of the colored race in Hertford County; and that all of his1 transactions in the many years he had been "the leader were honestly per formed and were free from any sus picion of personal gain. He condemned in strong terms Ahoskie colored people for failing to do anything for the education of their youth. He told of repeated efforts to arouse Ahoskie negroes to action, and turned upon them all the strength of his brilliant oratory for utter fail ure to act except to make a kick when he was trying to make a move that would benefit the whole county. Hia speech was a signafTor further bitterness iq speech. Rev. J. S. Sills, Ahoskie Baptist preacher, and his wife both made talks, in which they made a general denial of the willing ness of the colored race to turn the Waters Normal over to the county, and strongly intimated that Doctor Brown had used deceptive tactics in securing their consent to the trans fer. "He was president, secretary, and the whole show" in a rrfcent meeting of negroes to vote on the proposition, these Ahoskie persons said. Attorney Williams made a plea for the school'at Ahoskie, and presented some census figures to show that there was a much larger negro popu lation in Ahoskie, and urged a con tinuation of county suppopt to the school on these grounds. He also ad vanced further reasons for the re tention of a training school at Ahos kie?the heroic work done by the Ahoskie negroes to promote a school. their transfer of property to the county for that purpose, and the rail road facilities offered. Mr. Winborne spoke for the Ahos kie school and against Waters Normal Institute, advancing the be lief that legally the board could not accept the gift tendered by Doctor Brown. The property could not be given away without consent of all stockholders, he said, and it was his contention that much of the stock was not favorable to the transaction. Certificates, either as receipts for money paid as donations or as legal stocks carrying with them part owner ship, had been distributed among the churches and Sunday schools in the negro Baptist association, and many of the holders of these were opposed to the donation. He did not believe the board could accept the tender. In the midst of the wrangle ad journment was taken for pinner. It was then two o'clock. One hour lat er, the board re-convened, caucused in the superintendent's office, listened further to pleas for Ahoskie, and vot ed with the result noted in a former paragraph. N. C. Newbold, super wsPP^yphegro education in the State, attended the meeting upon the inva tion of the board and county super intendent and advised them to accept the gift, provided there were no con ditions attached. It was the general policy of the state authorities, he said, to take over private institutions whenever offered, provided there were no legal difficulties and no strings attached. The gist of the proposition resolves itself into a situation like this: If the county takes over the Waters Normal Institute and makes it a county train ing school, the appropriation, which is small, will be withdrawn from the Hertford County Training School at Ahoskie. The Ahoakie colored people are working to retain the appropria tion and went to Winton determined, if possible, to carry their point On the other hand, the county will come into possession of a valuable piece of school property by taking over the Winton school, although there are some conditions yet to be met by the owners before the gift can be accept ed. The proposition offered by Doctor Brown was to give the property to the county, provided negro trustees were appointed to conduct the school affairs, it to be forever used as an accredited negro high school and teacher training school, a debt of $4,000 be assumed by the county, and Brown be retained in charge of the institution. It is these conditions that must be removed, together with a deed in fee simple for the pA)party, before the county can entertain the transfer in Its favor. Lm. 'V j> -jfci