PAGE FOUR Published every Thursday by Buffs Printing House, 100 East King Street, Edenton, N. C. J. Edwin Bufflap Editor Hector Lupton Advertising Mgr. SUBSCRIPTION One Year 11- 26 Six Months 75c Entered as second-class matter August 30, 1934, at the post office at Edenton, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Advertising rates furnished by re quest. Cards of thanks, obituaries, reso lutions of respect, etc., will be charged for at regular advertising rates. THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1936. THIS WEEK’S BIBLE THOUGHT FOR THE FEARFUL: Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dis mayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.- Isaiah 41:10. WHAT IS THE VALUE OF HUMAN LIFE? Undoubtedly when God determines that life should end and that His children should return to Him in Heaven, all the man-made efforts to effect contradiction and keep life in tact will prove futile. But that, of course, is no reason why these ef forts should not be engaged in. We have no way of knowing God’s will, which is why we ,have doctors and surgeons' and various types of resuS citative devices which we employ where death seems imminent or doubtful* Here in this delightful little town along the water this condition has been twice pitiful and sad this sum mer. Tiro of our young folks, imma ture and seeking careless pleasure in the bay, have succumbed to drowning. All that could be done to bring them back to their loved ones was done, and no doubt nothing dif ferent could be done. But something else was worth the try. Even a child’s life far exceeds in value the trivial cost of any sort of an inhalating apparatus that might reopen the respiratory organs and give breath a new chance. Every community that reckons itself mod em and up-to-date, has such pulmot ing apparatuses. Probably in these two cases its use might not have been effective but that is no excuse for the town to assume one such de vice is not worth having on hand. It is not alone drowning, but suffo cation by smoke from fires or any other cause, that makes the use of such a device desirable. This is not the first time that The Herald has urged an inhalator for the town, but to date the town fath ers have failed to act. A new automobile was purchased just this week and The Herald would not say it was not necessary. How ever, if ways can be found to pay for a new automobile, surely an appara tus that may save a life, and costing much less than a new car, may be paid for. Members of Town Council may well ponder over their feeling in the matter if perchance a child of theirs should be so unfortunate as to lose his or her life by drowning when there might be a possibility or even remote chance of saving the life by a machine that costs a paltry sum of a few- hundred dollars. For a town so situated as is Eden ton lack of an inhalator is short of criminal negligence. An inhalator is needed and should be purchased de spite the cry of no money and fear of a raise in the tax rate. WHY NOT BE TRUTHFUL? It will soon be six months since the high school at Small’s Cross Roads was destroyed by fire, and the County is no nearer a decision as to how a new school can be built than it was the morning after the conflagration. This is not right. A new school is required by the laws of the State, and a new school should be built. The law makes the re quirement obligatory upon the county. Os course it is natural Chowan should seek what help it can get from outside sources, these sources being the Federal government through its much publicized PWA and WPA programs, programs which at the outset were going to be ex tensively liberal to this section—we all remember that meeting in Feb ruary, 1935, when Chowan worked out a plan of getting $2,000,000 for a score of projects here. The reason now advanced for fail ure to secure Federal aid for the Cross Roads school .is because Chowan cannot provide the requisite amount of skilled labor. This is far fetched. It is a fairer assumption that North Carolina is not reckoned a doubtful state this election year. Money is spent, as a gratuity or otherwise, where it will do the most good just before election, and it iB downright cruel that North Carolina, Chowan County and Small’s Cross Roads should be one of the victims of this commonly understood pro- cedure. . A committee was scheduled to go again to Chapel Hill today on a hunt for this money, but a telegram was received Tuesday to the effect that to secure a grant the County must have available on its relief roll FACTS YOU ••» W'Tf&iv fs a 6ersot which sfours J) | it re A übsome, uke Pj pgfl OB gFAK>„>» < the skilled labor necessary. Chowan is in a sad plight so far as the school situation is concerned, but cannot produce the skilled labor for building a school, which in plain Eng lish means that the county might just as well get busy and build a school and the taxpayers get ready to pay for it. A PROBLEM WHICH MUST BE SOLVED The necessity for increasing wel fare aid under the New Deal can be traceable to many odd ends, one, of which has to do with the disappear ance of migratory fish from the wa ters of North Carolina. Which means, of course, if there are no fish to catch, commercial fishermen are out of luck, have no income and must go on the relief rolls. Some thing must be done to relieve the situation. At the last meeting of the Board of Conservation and Development the seriousness of this situation was made apparent. It was explained that in 1897 the shad fishing in this State was up to nearly 9,000,000 pounds and that in 1932 it had drop ped to 927,000 pounds, which is a real drop as can be readily seen. With rock and otser types of fish the toll is believed to be the same, with a consequent drop in necessary man labor. The Board feels this constitutes a challenge to every right thinking citizen, and that drastic measures are going to be required if the situa tion is to be saved. Hardships will have to be undergone and some folks restrained from doing some of the things heretofore permitted. Men making their living with nets ■will have to practice self-restraint and let the fishing industry return to the basis of prosperity upon which it was once fashioned. North Carolina has ever been reck oned one of the greatest of fishing states. Certainly its fishermen have profited by this reputation, but if there is no fish to catch, due to greed or some other cause, some new meth ods will have to be put into force. Just what they will be need not be worried about as the matter is in the hands of a Board that has the inter ests of everyone at heart. COLORED FOLKS DO A GOOD JOB Hats off to the Colored Parents- Teachers Association which helps out in the guidance of the colored high school! They are the sort of which their race can well be proud. For a year or more now the colored schools have endeavored to secure adequate busses for the transport of outlying pupils. Each time they have asked for such aid they have met with re buffs. So the colored folks, aided by some white friends, took up a propo sition to raise enough money for a new bus which would be matched with a bus by the County School Board. The colored folks raised $136 in Edenton and S7OO in the County,, practically covering the cost of a bus. Their efforts were crown ed with success and by the time school starts they will feel gratified in realizing that colored high school students will have the opportunity to travel to and from school in up to-date busses which take the place of two pieces of junk on wheels or at their own expense. ! WHAT OTHER EDITORS SAY BEAUTY IN ALBEMARLE All true lovers of North Carolina will hope for the success of the pro posal of. Rev. Charles Aylett Ashby of Edenton that a Federal park be created in that section of the Albe marle. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park in the West will pre serve for the delectation of all time a portion of the beautiful North Car olina mountain country. But there is a beauty in the East wholly dif ferent but in no sense inferior which ought to be preserved. Indeed, the Federal government has acquired considerable lands along our coast both as park and as gone sanctuary. And every extension of park area there will serve to enrich the life of the people and to preserve a coastal beauty nowhere excelled.—The News and Observer. THE CHOWAN HERALD. EDENTON, N. C,. THURSDAY,JULY 30. 1936 JUST HUMANS **<«**<*** V a MM I * V Mrw * • g||~ jm l •Qj that So! Wen,,Mr. Jones, If Your Brains Was Silk, You Wouldn’t Have 'Enough to Makt*a Stockin’ for a Anif* ■. f iBARD AND SEEN Cl By “BUFF” f.,-r .in, Several parents of Boy Scouts went to Atlantic Beach Sunday to see the boys who are in camp there. The boys are having a big time and enjoying their outing. And by the way, some parents of the boys have received cards with' the following message: “Having a good time — please send some money.” Just like a boy, isn’t it? o- Willie Crummey isn’t exactly an inventor, but he nas rigged up a scheme to keep the pop stand coun ter at the ball park from being used as a grand stand seat. This counter heretofore has been a favorite seat for fans thereby keeping waiters from seeing the game as well as hurting the business of selling pop. However, this season nobody cares to sit on the thing for Willie every minute or so douses a bucket. of water on the board, keeping it wet all the time. o Women nowadays can do just about everything a man does, but Mrs. Shelton Moore struck a snag last week. She has often observed her husband hold a piece of wood with one hand, and with a hatchet split the wood with the other hand. Mr. Moore was obliged to leave home too early for breakfast one day, and as Mrs. Moore proceeded to cut wood ala Mr. Moore, she walloped the hand that was holding the .Wood. The cut was painful, but not serious, however. And I reckon from now on Shelton will have the job regular. Folks who get mail at the post office during the past few days pro bably saw their letters check-marked with a colored pencil. I’ve asked Cal Kramer what the idea was, but he wouldn’t let me in on the So far my mail has been checked in red. blue and yellow colors. How about yours? However, those marks don’t worry me as bad as the black printed card saying: “Box Rent Due.” o What’s in a name anyway? All I know is that some are too confound ed long. Take for instance a name like Emminizer. It’s too long and too hard to spell. So someone tells me that a certain person now callß Roy Emminizer just plain Roymiser, which isn’t so bad. * ■■■ 'O The only hitch to the Rotary meet ing at Cross Roads last Thursday night was Major Rowell’s refusal to sing. However, Parson Ashby spied him laying down on the job, fined him two-bits and turned the quarter over to the ladies. Major sang the next song. _ The meeting with the country folks also brought to light a big eater. Bob Hollowell got rid of just about everything in his section of the dining hall and never refused " mm ‘ *" Li ... we PC»MS or S*o» BBCAM* 90 LOfie. T rrvu-S vogo JTish«H»;|| -■ _ • a helping as it came along. Minton Warren commented on the amount of food put away by Mr. Hollowell and almost swooned when Bob said he wasn’t taking any chances on the meal and had eaten a supper con sisting of red ham and black-eye peas before coming to the meeting. ,> And then Jim Holmes made him self uncomfortable by eating too much and said he couldn’t eat ai I th er mouthful. However, when the ladies passed around half a canta loupe filled with ice cream and Earl Goodwin started to pull it over to his side of the table, Friend Jim imme diately pulled it back in double quick time and ate every bit of it. Fact of the matter is that the ladies served such a good meal that the majority of the Rotarians are in favor of meeting at Cross Roads every week. Now what Major Row ell would like to know is what grouj) of ladies in the County will under take to feed the Rotarians one night during August. What say Rocky Hock, Yeopim or any other section of the County? u Parson Briggs again is raving about inoculating dogs. But for the life of me I don’t see what all his raving amounts to. The law was passed by the Legislature and if he doesn’t like it why in the name ofj common sense doesn’t he hop on the guys who made the law? Without a doubt none of us are in full accord with every man-made law, but it fs no reason why we should not obey the law. The parson makes me laugh when he riles about the “de plorable” state of folks under the present administration. He makes a laughing stock of himself when he says folks cannot pay to have dogs inoculated. If he will wise up a bit he will discover that of all those who have been tried for not inoculat ing dogs and “who coudn’t pay to have the work done” were able to in some way fork up enough to pay the court costs to keep from going to jail. Fact of the matter is it. doesn’t take much to make the par son object to anything done while the Democrats are in power for he is a Republican and according to his own statement is “sick and tired of this Southern democracy.” I have no crow to pick with him for being a Republican, but if he is sick and tired of this Southern democracy it might be well to remind him of what he told Harvey Thomas about living in the swamps of Chowan—good roads in all directions lead from Edenton and this section. Besides the weather must have had some ef fect on him when he wrote his ar ticle in this issue for if the last sen tence of his story sounds preacher like, my idea of a preacher’s mission is all out of, gear. That neon signs add to the ap- f> THE VIIDRiO » WORM ttt >RE*.WWERf •mmm*• sense* •* , "* ,T * pea ranee of places of businessman be seen when one gives lioyd Bob ton’s filling station the once over. Sometime ago The Herald comment ed on more neon signs in town and what are now here improve consid erably the business section. Let ’em roll! I’ve always thought that about the last thing a lady would tell was her age. But one of ’em this week told me she would a heap rather tell her age than her weight. But, maybe, that depends on whether she is fat or skinny. Anyway, I’m play ing safe and will not ask either question if I can help it. The “Casey at the Bat" poems which have appeared in this column recent!? has reminded Maj. John C. Bond of a game in which Graham Bond, whom many will remember, re sembled Casey in his come-back. Mr. Bond, claiming to be a poor hand at poetry, has very generously given me an account of the game in rhyme as well as he can remember. Here goes: EDENTON’S BASEBALL CLASSIC Years ago when baseball was young And old men now—were then in prime Edenton was practicing to form a team To play E. City’s and Hertford’s nine. A field was cleared and diamond layed out Everything ready for the great day, When Edenton would cross bats with, and clout E. City’s selected and best at the play. Graham Bond, a stout husky boy, came, Saying he would like to join in the p!ay And asked that he might try for the game— “ That he could hit the ball any day.” So we gave him a bat, he took his place at plate Several balls were pitched—he’d swing and miss. The boys were much amused at his unlucky fate— Continued pitching balls —Graham continued to miss. “Dod-blast it!” Throw me one that I can hit, And the next ball came about waist high! Graham swung—whack!—and such a hit! The ball flew on, on and on, was lost to sight. Now “Dod-blast you—go get it”— across the ground Across a street—into the next square, it lit We searched for hours—but no one ever found The ball that Graham on that day hit. - Will Rogers’ Humorous Story i By WILL ROGERS "THERE was a museum in Paris x or somewhere* where there is a lot of skeletons of animals. A Frenchman was showing some Am k erlcan friends through this here museum, and he was trying to im ! prOss the visitors with Napoleon. Every once in a while he would : claim that something he was show ing them was connected with Na- I So become horse’ll ous Napoleonl That is, in factf the Skeleton of Pet when he was a colt, brave and tm»P EARUV ECypTIAWX Q- THE \ J6P AM* CfiMTURtitS viCRC i N.TROUSERS MAOS' FWOM THE Ai , of thfw ' ■ wi 1 "*" Edenton Experiencing • Part Os Heat Wave Laying no claims to equatorial originality, Edenton joined with the; rest of the nation this week by en joying the hottest spell, so old timers say, it has had for the past eleven years. Like telescopes, ther mometers are more or less of a rarity hereabouts but a quiet tip went the rounds on Monday that the mercury was up beyond the 100' mark, and on Tuesday there was no let up. The County Commissioners and their compatriots on the County Board of Education wilted Monday afternoon while they wrestled with the forthcoming tax budget Some one asked what the temperature reg istered and, with good Baptist sim plicity, two chimed in to say, “What difference does it make —it’s hot as Hades,” which was so, and which iw enough to say. Dr J. W. Sells OPTOMETRIST yjjjjjnll Will be in his office _________ on the third floor of IsUaUmUllthe Citizens Bank QQQQQQ Building, Edenton— FRIDAY, JULY 31 8 A. M. to IP.M. —- ' - STOP AT BURTON’S Opposite Post Office FOR ALL FLAVORS OF ICE CREAM and Toasted Sandwiches —* We Lead Again ■ Our new made-to-measure lines for men are here, featuring the International Tailoring Company and . English-American Tailoring Company LINES ■ Absolutely guaranteed to fit and priced right. ■ Pick your pattern out early and we will have suit delivered to you at later delivery, thus assuring you of the pattern you want. ■ Come in look these lines over early and let us show you the latest styles for Fall and Win ter for 1936-37. , PRICES $21.50 UP , S. Ganderson & Sons “The Men’s and Boys’ Store” EDENTON, N. C.