\lntkm columns will be I found a fair presentation I of had and county news I of general interest. Volume IV.—Number 31. 26 Beneficiaries Given Awards By Security Beard First Session of Local Bo i Shows 51 Relief Applicants mostlynegroes Allotments Range From $3 to sll Per Month; Checks Soon Chowan County’s first, participants under the social security program were approved Tuesday morning at a meeting of the County Welfare Board. - Fifty-one applicants for aid were reviewed by the Board which result* ed in only 26 cases being approved, these being 21 for old age benefits, four dependent children and one, a blind case. Os the 51 applications for aid, 44 were colored people and seven were white. The amounts recommended for payment varied depending upon cir cumstances surrounding the individ ual cases. The average old age pay ment will be $6 pet month, while an average of 08 per month will be paid to dependent children. Payments range from $3 to fll per month. W. M. Perkins, superintendent of public welfare, said that at the meeting Tuesday, first consideration was given to those who had been getting county aid, which was cut off July 1. Twenty-five of the 26 who qualified for payments had been on the county relief roll. Mr. Per kins was also very emphatic in dis cussing the welfare situation that payments would be recommended only from a need standpoint, the general impression, it seems, espec ially among colored sjtUens, is that the qqty reqvfeefem.jto qualify df ’dttgh made in each case sad, as Mr. Perkins said, there must be absolute need before pay ments will be approved, i There hate been » number of in stances whert 66-year-old people who have other means of subsistence sought payments, one even appearing in the welfare office claiming to be in good standing and entitled to his old age payment. He informed Mr. Perkins that he had paid his dues, 25 cents, a year ago and now was ready for his check. Mr. Perkins -says a number, of letters have been received in the county by old people purporting to get them on the list by payment of 2Q cents, which of course is the work of some slicker plying his fradulet tactics upon un suspecting old folks, mostly Negroes. There is no cost attached to any “ application for aid under any phase of the social security program, but thorough investigations are made and only those approved who have no other way of securing the bare neces sities of life. i Checks will be made out at Ra leigh and sent to the chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, who in turn will have them sent to the proper person. Floyd White Made District Commander v * Floyd I. White was honored this week at the State Legion Convention held at Durham, when he was named listrict .commander of the First Dis trict. Mr. White succeeds C. E. Kramer, and will begin his term 20 for a period of two years. Ike Dwb, of Manteo, succeeds him self asvice commander for the dis trict. • '• SrjM Sheriff J. A. Bunch and Robert L. Pratt, acting as delegates from .the Ed Bond Post, and Oscar H. Brown and ISrnest White attended the con vention, returning home Tuesday night. The quartet report a very pleasant trip and an interesting con vention. Auditor’s Report Os Town Books Received . —. _ ,A. T. Allen &'Company, certified public accountants of Raleigh, have . completed the audit of town books and have sent their report to Mayor J. H. McMullan. Receipt of the re .a 11. niiri mrrtiTttr on TU6B* 1 THE CHOWAN HERALD A HOME NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF CHOWAN COUNTY HURRICANE data SOUGHT BY AID OF SMALL BALLOONS E. R. Conger Urges Residents To Be On Lookout For Tiny Gadgets Released at Raleigh E. R. Conger, displayman for the U. S. Weather Bureau Storm Warn ing Station at Edenton, has recently received a letter from John J. Mur phy, meteorologist in charge of the weather bureau at Norfolk, inform ing him that residents in this sec tion may have an opportunity to as sist in a project for investigating the upper-air conditions in a hurricane if any occurs this season, which will be undertaken, as a co-operative effort of the United States Weather Bureau and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and which is expected to give, valuable informatiion regarding the structure of hurricanes. The project calls for the release during a hurricane, at Raleigh, of 57 sounding balloons to each of which will be attached a tiny meteorograph weighing but one and one-half ounces. The meteorograph will automati cally record temperature, pressure and humidity values on a smoked glass plate, only slightly larger than a postage stamp, during the bal loons ascent. The balloons, which are filled with hydrogen gas, burst at maximum heights of about 10 to 20 miles re leasing the meteorograph, which is suspended beneath the halloon by a 40-foot length or rubber cord. In order to proven: serious dam age te the instrument when it strikes the ground, the meteorograph is at tached to a light framework formed of throe thin bamboo sticks .about four' fbet long, fixed at thajr ean- Ws «o1»ato be fifutually pwrpmdta* d§r.. i ■ ~ s.V . » . Attention to the meteorograph will be attracted by five little red colored flags, fastened to the frame work, and anyone finding any of the instruments is urged to preserve it carefully, refraining from tampering with the delicate apparatus, and re turn it by parcel post to the U. S. Weather Bureau, Washington, D. C. Upon its receipt, payment for its return will be made to the finder. ROTARY ENTERS SOFT BALL CLUB IN LOCALLEAGUE New Schedule Calls For Four Regular Games Each Week MORE INTEREST ; Season Will Conclude With Series For City Championship Rotarians this week entered a club in Edenton’s soft ball league, thus making a four-club circuit. As a re sult of this entry a new schedule has been drawn up and though the Red Men far out-distanced the Lions and Masons who have been playing since June 2, the standing of the clubs will begin all over again. It is the pur pose of league officials to play a schedule of games terminating on Friday September 3, after which the ; teams occupying first and last place, as well as the two middle teams will play a series of games, the winners of the two series to play a series for the leagqe championship. The new schedule calls for four games a week, Tuesday night, Wed nesday afternoon and Thursday and Friday nights, thus calling each team in the league into action twice a week. , The Rotary Club decided to enter the league last Thursday when it was agreed to" allow them several substi tutes due to their limited member ship and inability to place ten men on the field for egch game. It is ex pected that the Rotarians’ entrance in the league will simulate interest attendance'' pmes which to ! date has been far below expectations. Included In the Rotary lineup will be Edenton, Chowan County, North Carolina. Thursday, July 29,1937. UNC ALUMNI DAY! ATMANTEOEVENT; SATURDAY, AUG.7 - ▼ T ~• r • • j Four Edenton Alumni I Named On Special Committee 47 IN COUNTY Julien Wood Selected as Honorary Chairman For Occasion Alumni of America’s first state university will gather August 7 on Roanoke Island—site of America’s first English Colony—for an alumni reunion sponsored by the Dare Coun ty Alumni-Alumnae Club of the Uni versity of North Carolina. The day has been officially designated as Uni versity of North Carolina by D. B. Fearing, director of the celebration being held this summer commemorat ing the 350th anniversary of English civilization in America. Dr. Frank P. Graham, President of the University, is scheduled as the principal speaker at a “dutch” lunch eon-reunion at the Nags Head Beach Club as a feature of the day’s pro gram. Paul Green’s “The Lost Colony” will be presented in the huge amphitheatre near Manteo at 8:15 o’clock in the evening, the per-] formance being dedicated to the Uni-: versity. Professor Green and Fred erick H. Koch, head of the Carolina Playmakers, have been largely re sponsible for the historic pageant that is the core of the summer’s celebration. Designation of August 7 as Uni versity of North Carolina Day is in recognition of the part played by the University in the celebration being held. here. In addition to the aid furnished by Professors Green and Jtoch, the Pt*yuwk«*