Highway Patrolmen
Ambassadors Good
WiUToJravelers
Corporal George Dail
Says Principle Is to
Help Motorists
WELL TRAINED
Officers Properly Repre
sent State In Contact
. i With Visitors
6'
While stem measures may some
times become necessary where high
way violations are obviously appar
ent, Corporal George I. Dail, in giv
ing strong endorsement today to the
Governor’s Hospitality Program, de
clared “we can see to it that when
we have parted with every visitor
that we contact that he has received
personal good will from us and that
he has had extended to him our ex
pression of Nbrth Carolina hospital
ity.”
Corporal Dail, who has had very
close relations with out-of-state
guests coming into North Carolina
for the first time, and who is con
tacting more of them this summer
through his week-end headquarters at
Fort Raleigh, has been a warm
enthusiast for the Governor’s pro
gram. While he does not say so it
can be taken as meaning that his
endorsement today voices the senti
ment of the entire State Highway
Patrol.
The Corporal expresses himself in
this manner:
“Members of the State Highway
patrol have been carefully trained
in their duties as highway police offi
cers. One of the principles upon
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THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENITON, N, C., THURSDAY JULY 14, 1938
which our activity is based is to be
helpful to motorists in the use of the
State highways.
“We, have found that tourists are
most responsive and appreciative of
friendliness and helpfulness of the
patrolmen. There is no doubt but
that we are in a position to add much
to the pleasuwTof the visitors to our
section. We can do this by being
especially courteous to out-of-state
tourists and that courtesy can be
shown most effectively by our feeling
and expressing a real interest in
these as we come in contact
with them and have numerous oppor
tunities to assist them; thereby,
giving these strangers concrete evi
dence that* they are welcome and
make them realize that this is a
wonderful section and people, which
will prolong their stay and cause
them to return year after ? year.
“While our main job is to see that
the highways are properly used;
that the dangers of automobile travel
are lessened as much as possible, we
have a further duty as uniformed
representatives of the State of North
Carolina, to properly represent the
State in our cci tacts with guests
from outside the borders of North
Carolina. We cannot be true to the
obligation unless we create a desire
for other visits by them and visits by
their friends and express to every
visitor something of the welcome that
North Carolina feels toward them.
“We can express that welcome and
hospitality in many ways. By doing
unusual, and at times, very insignifi
cant things for tourists we can be of
service at times of distress. We can
cheerfully give information about
roads and the trips to be taken in
this section. We can see to it that
whel we have parted from every
visitor that we contact, unless our
duty has required stem measures
against them, that he has received
personal good will from us and that
he has had extended to him our ex
pression of North Carolina hospital
ity.”
OVER MILLION DOLLARS TO • ,
. FIGHT INFANTILE PARALYSIS
■ ' ■ ■ ■ i ■ »■ ■
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HYDE PARK, N. Y.—President Roosevelt receives check of'
$1,010,000 from Keith Morgan, chairman of the committee for the
celebration of the President’s Birthday as proceeds of record
breaking campaign in which over 8,000 communities participated.
The President in turn gave the check to Basil O’Connor, president
of the new National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis which be
gins at once a national fight against the disease. President Roose- I
velt in receiving the check thanked the thousands of chairmen and
committee members and all ' ho dii tncir part in making the cam
paign a success.
In the picture are, left to right: George E. Allen, Nicholas M.
Schenck, Basil O’Connor, Averell Harriman, Dr. Leroy Hubbard,
Clay Williams, Keith Morgan, chairman of the Birthday Celebration
Committee. President Roosevelt, seated in center of group, is ac
cepting the check from Mr. Morgan.
Explains Marketing
Quotas For Tobacco
Tobacco growers’ marketing quotas
for 1938 will be determined in part
from information that AAA commit
teemen have been gathering for the
past two weeks or more.
The methods to be followed in cal
culating tobacco marketing quotas!
for individual growers have been es- j
tablished by Congress in the crop;
control program for this year, said j
E. Y. Floyd, AAA executive officer at
State College.
The committeemen have been asked
to determine what is considered the!
normal marketings of farms which
have been producing tobacco in the
past. These normal marketings will
be subject to adjustment if necessary
to keep the total for all individual
growers from exceeding the state
and national quotas.
The national quota for flue-cured
tobacco is 705,000,000 pounds of
which three per cent has been set
aside for new growers. The state
quotas will be determined on a basis
of the normal marketings of the
growers in each state producing flue
cured leaf. A four per cent addition
to state quotas will be allowed for in
creasing the poundage of farms
whose quotas are inadequate in view
of past marketings.
In determining normal marketings,
allowance will be made for abnormal
weather, plant diseases, and other
factors affecting production. The
committeemen will consider the total
crop land on the farm, the land in
cash crops other than tobacco, the
available curing bam space, and the
number of families on the farm.
Also taken into consideration will
be marketings during the past three
years, with the highest of the fol
lowing three items being used: (1)
the three-year average; (2) 40 per
cent of the sum of the highest two
years in the three-year period; (3)
60 per cent of the highest year.
MERRYHILL f
i> <s>
Miss Louise Smithwick and Hob
son Taylor, of Edenton, spent Sun
day at Atlantic Beach, Morehead
City.
Mrs. Tommie Cobb, of North Eden
ton, spent Friday with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. E. White.
Miss Ethel Bowen spent Wednes
day in Colerain attending a library
meeting.
Mrs. George Oliver went to Chapel
Hill Saturday to spend some time
with her husband, who is attending
summer school at the University.
Miss Louise Baker returned home
Friday from Franklin, Va., where she
visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rhea.
Miss Hazel Keeter, of Windsor,
spent a few days last week with her
grandmother, Mrs. T. E. Bowen.
Misses Christine Perry and Cecelia
Cobb and Raleigh Phelps and Edmund
Pruden, Jr., attended the 4-H Camp
at White Lake.
Work on the two new class rooms
which are to be added to Merry Hill
school was started last week. The
rooms are supposed to be finished by
the time school starts in September.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Foxwell vjsit
ed Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Jordan and
Mrs. Mary Thomas, in Windsor, on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Baines and
daughters, of Newport News, Va.,
visited relatives here last week.
Mrs. Vernon Harden and Miss
Dorothy Harden, of Windsor, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wright
Williford and Mrs. Pattie Williford.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Matthews and
chiiren and Miss Daisy Langdale, of
PojUmouth, Va., spent Sunday with
GUILTY OF DRUNKENNESS i
J. J. Rawls, appealing from aj
justice of the peace trial upon con
viction of being drunk, was tried in
Recorder’s Court Tuesday morning, i
The action of the lower court was!
upheld and Rawls taxed with court i
costs for simple drunkenness.
FOUR THINGS
Four things a man must learn to do,
If he would make his record true:
To think without confusion clearly, !
To love his fellow men sincerely, j
To act from honest motives purely,
To trust in God and heaven securely, j
—Henry Van Dyke. ■
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1 MACEDONIA f
Q,
Mr. and Mrs. John William White
spent Sunday in Newport News, Va.,
with her parents.
Miss Merle Emminizer is visiting
her sister, Mrs, Sanford Bass.
Miss Mabel Morgan, from near
Harrellsville, has returned to her
home after visiting her aunt, Mrs.
Lloyd Perry.
Elton and Johnnie Dail have re
turned to Portsmouth, Va., after
visiting relatives here.
Miss Mary Elizabeth Long, of
South Norfolk, Va., is visiting her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Long.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Pearce, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Wilder visited friends
near Winfall on Sunday afternoon.
Miss Sadie White was the guest
of Miss Christine Hassell at dinner
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Bunch and
son, Edgar, of New York City; Mrs.
Don Francis and little daughter,
Anne, of Brooklyn, N. Y.. Were visit
ing friends in the community on
Thursday afternoon.
PRESCRIPTION
WHEN YOU GET SICK YOU CALL THE
DOCTOR OF YOUR CHOICE
.. . The Prescription that he gives you is
yours . . . take it to the Druggist of your
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I
! SUTTON’S DRUG STORE
Two (2) Licensed Druggists
J. LIXWOOD SUTTON F. O. GARREN
Licensed Druggist Licensed Druggist
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New Furniture Styles
At High Point Show
The latest trends in furniture and
kindred home furnishings will be on
display, for local furniture retailers
who plan to make the trip at the
mid-summer show held in the South
ern Furniture Exposition Building,
High Point, Nbrth Carolina, for two
weeks beginning July 30th.
More than 200 manufacturers will
display merchandise of every type
and description that will be bought
by furniture retailers for their fall
offerings to homemakers everywhere.
Keynoting the showing will be period
reproductions in living room, bed
room and dining room furniture fea
turing such popular styles as Colonial,
Eighteenth Century and Modem with
a liberal sprinkling of the new Swed
ish Modern type of furniture that is
taking the country by storm just at
present.
The local firm that sent representa
tives to this market in January is
the Quinn Furniture Company.
For quick results try a Want Ad
£SVSS?-S .*&»»»«•
ICECUBES IN S MINUTES
Pure, Tute-Free, Cry»tal
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FAMIIdY SIZE
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PAGE SEVEN