w I I 0w JBBppf I Volume VIII. —Number 29. mmm I "" 1— ■ 1 ■—■■■■ I I —i i if i ■ ■■Ml » ' I -»»*■ Chowan County Commissioners Slice Eleven Points Off Tax Rate, Bringing It Down To $1.02 For Next Fiscal Year - - - Increase In Valuation Principal Reason For Drop In Rate long~session Improvements Schedul ed at Colored High School Chowan County Commissioners, meeting Thursday of last week in stead of Monday, were obliged to wrestle most of the day with figures, but felt at the dose of the day that they were adequately compensated for their labor when the figures as boiled down showed that a slice of 11 points could be taken off the county tax rate for the present fis cal* year. The rate last year was $1.13 per hundred dollar property valuation, while the new rate for the ensuing year 'will be $1.02. The rate was figuered at sl.Ol on Thurs day, but later an error was discov ered in the school expense account which made it necessary to add another point. While county expenses are calculat ed to run about the same as last year, the decrease in the rate is' at tributed principally to the increased property valuation as the result of recent revaluation in “the county, when the property valuation was boosted about $700,000. The county’s valuation was boosted from $6,827,- 803- to about seven and a half mil lion dollars. The expenditures anticipated dur ing the year by the Commissioners are as follows,; School*, $20,464; General County, health and charity, $25,700; bonds and interest, $50,- 093.67; social security, $6,977.50. To raise these amounts the tax levy will be as fojlows: Bonds and Interest .66 General County .07 Social ;Security .09 Total $1.02 As compared with last year’s rate, bonds dropped from .76 to .66, while schools also dropped tfcro points, from .22 to .20. Social security re mained the same, while there was an increase of one point for general county, purposes. Practically the entire morning was consumed with the school budget when a trick in figures puzzled the Commissioners which was finally left for A. T. Allen, who will audit the books, to untangle. Both the county and Edenton administrative unit kept within their budgets and despite the fact that fines, forfeitures and poll taxes are distributed according I to ’the number of students in each (Continued on Page Five) 12 Chowan Young Men Leave July 23 For Military Duty i • —— Group Makes 38 Men Chowan Has Fur nished In Draft Twelve Chowan County young white men will leave Edenton next Wednesday, July 23, to be inducted into military service at Fort Bragg. At Fort Bragg this group of selec tees* will be given their final physi cal .examination and if it is passed satisfactorily, they will then be sent to various camps for training. The young men comprising thin group arS: Jack Pruden, Edenton; John Lin- Iwosd Bass, Edenton, Route I; Wil- Kenneth Hendren, Tyner, Route 2; Benjamin F. Evans, Edenton; Willis Hosie Bond, Edenton, Route 3; ’Barry V. Lassiter, Edenton 1 ; Leland Glenn Ward, Tyner; Wilbur F. Wheeler, Edenton; Graham P. Bass, Edenton; Charlie Perry Hughes, I, Edenton; Johnnie Paul Bunch, Eden ton; John Augustus Moore, Jr., Edenton. With the induction of this group of men Chowan County will have fur nished 38 young men for military service in the first draft. Os this number 20 were white and 18 colored. REVIVAL AT EVANS CHURCH Revival services are being held at Evans Methodist Church this week. The pastor, Rev. Mr. Stanford, is be l ing assisted by the Rev. Mr. Cran- ford, of Winfall. The public is cor- . .m mi - ■ • THE CHOWAN HERALD A HOME NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF CHOWAN COUNTY L IROY L McMILAN, STATE COMMANDER OF AMERICAN LEGION, NtAWMG CARD HR MEETING M EDENTON ON TIIESDAY NIGHT » a Officers For Ed Bond Post and Auxiliary Will Be Installed otherslnvited > i R. D. Dixons Plan Re | ceptionat Hotel Af i ter Meeting J While the boys of Europe, Asia, ’ Africa and Australia are fighting heroically right now to overthrow : the (world dominance desires of the German hordes, and the young men ’ of the United States are in training j preparatory to what seenis a certain 1 entrance into the same warfare, the middle-aged veterans of the Albe | marie who survived the other great : war of 1917-1918, will gather at the ! Court House next Tuesday night in a [ get-together and installation meet • ing, and will meet up with for the > first time since his election and for 1 (Continued on Page Five) i Geddes Potter Sub Chairman For New Orleans Lions Booth State Will Be Advertis ed at International Convention JULY2I - 25 Canvass Reveals Very Little Literature On Hand Geddes Potter, immediate past president of the Edenton Lions Club, ; has been appointed sub-chairman of the Lions State Council which has engaged a booth at the International Lions Convention to be held at New Orleans for the purpose of advertis ing the State of North Carolina. The ■ convention will be in session from Monday, July 21, to Friday, July 25, and will attract Lions from all parts of the world. The booth will be nine feet square and will be located in the convention auditorium, where iwill be on display souvenir literature as well as munici pal and commercial material from every section of the State to be hand ed out to visitors. The booth will be I in charge of Arthur M. Strauss, a member of the Winston-TSalem Lions Club, who subsequently appointed Mr. Potter sub-chairman. Mr. Potter was on Saturday In formed of his appointment and imme diately set to work collecting all available literature pertaining to Edenton and. the Albemarle, which was on Monday shipped to Mr. Strauss. Mr. Potter was very much enthused over the idea of securing literature and information regarding Edenton to be placed in the booth, which he thought would result in much publicity for the town, but was somewhat disappointed because of the lack of .available material. In his shipment were included a bout half a dozen of the town book lets, the supply of which has just about been batch of the historical pamphlets recently pur chased by file Bank of Edenton and a number of cards and folders fur nished by Hotel Joseph Hewes. 38 4-H Club Boys And Girls Enroll For Summer Camp Up to Monday afternoon, 38 boys and girls, members of the County 4-H Clubs, had enrolled to attend the 4-H Camp to be hehi.at Jamestown, Va. The time, limit to enroll has been extended’ ip Saturday,' July 19, and any boy or girl mtetejrted in go ing to camp should see either Miss Rebecca Colwell or C. W. Overman at once. turn Saturday, July 26. -A ■: Edenton, Chowan County, North Carolina. Tnu sdav, July 17,1941. W 1 Missing ~~| Chowan County’s draft board has reported the disappearance of three registrants, to whom questionnaires have been sent and returned. The three are col ored youths and are Ivan Grit fin, who gave his address as Edenton, Route 2; James Mc (NeiH, Edqnton, Route 2, and James Edward White, Edenton, Route 1. The draft board will appre ciate learning the whereabouts of these three men so that the questionnaires can be sent, and unless they are located, their names Jlvill be turned over to the United States District Attorney as delinquents, after which they will be treated accordingly. Edward Smithwick Descendants Visitors In Edenton Sunday An interested group of Edenton visitors Sunday included Mrs. M. P. 1 Cooper, Mrs. F. E. Richfelt and Mrs. J. L. Minor, of Jackson, Miss., and Mrs. W. I. Allison, of Fort Wortn, i Texas. They are defendants of Ed | ward Smithwick, who gave the land upon which to build the first Episco pal Church in North Carolina on the , Hayes Farm in 1701. It was the first time any of the four ladies had visited in Edenton and they came especially to become more fully acquainted with the life of their ancestor. They attended ser vices at St. Paul’s Church and enjoy ed references read in the old vestry minute books as well as other infor mation about the church. Miss Emily Russell Wins Honors In State Junior Memory Test Miss Emily Russell, (who repre sented the Edenton Baptist Church at the State Training Union Assembly : at Ridgecrest July 5-11, returned home Friday. Miss Russell won State place in the junior memory work contest, attaining a perfect score with 29 contestants. The young lady is very enthusiastic about the meeting, the mountains • and, of course, her success. Adding to her joy was an inspirational tele gram received from her B. Y. P. U. leader, John M. Elliott, as she went on the stage. She was chaperoned by the Rev. and Mrs. Millard R. Brown, of Windsor. EXTENTOF MATTRESS AND COMFORTER PROIECT SORPMSE TO COMMISSIONERS 125 Bales of Cotton Consumed, 11,880 Yards of Ticking and 7,510 Yards of Percale —Sav- ing Amounts to Almost $13,000 Chowan’s so-called "Mattress Pro ject”, being operated by the State Agricultural Extension Service and conducted here under the supervision of Home Demonstration Agent Re becca Colwell and County Agent C. W. Overman has been so successful from the start, that it has been un able to keep up with the demand for mattresses and comforters. At the present moment there are 312 mat tresses yet to be made and 26 com forters. The same compilation shows that so far 876 mattresses have been made and 726 comforters, and that both yet to be made and already turned out have cost but $1,338.20, whereas had they been bought in a retail store the purchasers would have had to pay $14,113 for the same articles, which is one phase of the New Deal, anyhow, which has proven beneficent. ' rr But little has been explained of this service fbrldwincome families, pet some of the figures supplied by Miss Colwell to the County Commis sioners last Thursday are startling in extreme. Naturally, the fetSnwv ings in cost to those making and r f-L .'■ if. .*•> r 1 -- - Draft Board Gives Serial Numbers To New Registrants County Furnishes 53 Young- Men Recent ly Turned 21 LOTTERY Order to Enter Service Will Be Decided In Washington Chowan County’s Draft Board has completed assignment of serial num bers to the 53 young men who be came 21 years of age from October 17, 1940, to July 1, 1941, and who registered in the second selective service draft on July 1. Cards of these registrants were shuffled in a box and drawn out to determine the serial number of each. As in the first draft, a national lottery in Washington will determine the order number of the young men to be inducted into military service. The full list of Chowan’s new registrants and the serial numbers follow: B-l Johnnie Henderson Horton. S-2, Lee Roy Phelps. S-3 James Thomas Brabble. S-4 Willis Critten Hurdle. S-5 Earl Sutton Pierce. S-6 James Edward Hare. S-7 Robert Enoch Ward. S-8 Caley Jasper Rountree. S-9 Lloyd Edmund Overton. S-10 Stanley Ervin Spruill. IS-11 Wendell Hope Copeland. TS-12 Troy Elvin Toppin. S-13 Carlton Lee Littlejohn. S-14 Embery William Perry. S-15 Johnny Christopher Tread i well. • S-16 Walter Vance Wright. • S-17 Linwood Roscoe Bunch. I S-18 Rodney Lester Bunch. , S-19 Charles Manuel Asbell. S-20 Robert Lee Rick. I S-21 Joe Edward Cornelious. S-22 Henry Drew, s S-2UJ Thomas GillmVii. iS-24 McKinley Franklin Wright. > 6-25 Golden Aero Frinks. i S-26 George Allen Spruill. > S-27 Anderson Darwin Ward, Jr. . S-28 Harry Lester Jordan. S-29 Ernest Nixon. S-30 Brady Lee Granby. ■ S-31 Milton Donold.son Welch. S-32 John Ervin Copeland. S-33 Edward Exsom Eyerett. S-34 John Hudgins Bond. S-35 Anthony Cleophy Coston. S-36 Joseph Beasley. S-37 Marion Lee Coston. IS-38 James Edward Byrum. S-39 Hiller Fahey Byrum. S-40 Lester Joseph Copeland. S-41 Army Riddick. S-42 James Reuben Blanchard. S-43 Edmund Conger Forehand. S-44 Clifton Odell Eason. S-45 Richard Edgar Jackson. S-46 Herman Lee Jernigan. S-47 Joseph Eugene Perry. S-48 James Lee Wilson. IS-49 Thomas Edison Reid. IS-50 Carroll Dewey Chappell. S-51 George Alfred Roberts. S-52 John Ralph Brabble. S-53 William Thomas Owens. The latter three were registered outside of the county, but gave Chowan as their home and were therefore classified here. buying the mattresses and comfort ers, is a main item, but the amount of materials put into them is of as much importance and interest. The direct purpose of the service is to provide an opportunity for fam ilies unable to make such purchases at stores. Such families visit the work rooms in the unused Forehand mill on upper Oakum Street, and make their own articles under pro per direction and supervision. All the materials are supplied to them free, and upon the completion of their job they are privileged to walk off with a finished mattress upon payment of $1 and a comforter upon payment of 20 cents, as against a ready-made mattress cost of $lO and comforter cost of $4.90.' Which cer tainly is something. Os course, all the money paid by the recipients for these finished mat tresses and comforters goee for the actual cost of the materials supplied. No one makes a cent of profit, and the Whole venture is an altruistic bit of public welfare work intended to benefit the mere indigent of the Continued on Plage Five) Whirlwind Drive Friday To Raise Quota For Purchase Mercy Plane For England - —_— « | State Commander j JBJr aBBB§B - jgfigwj H| ~ji Ib,. . R. L. (ROY) McMILLAN In his only scheduled visit to the Albemarle section this year State Commander McMillan (will install officers of Ed Bond Post in the Court House next Tuesday night. Legionnaires from every Post in the Albemarle have been invited to meet their popular commander on this occasion. Chamber Commerce Now Interested In Compiling Directory Canvass For Informa tion Will Get Under Way at Once WHITE Every Citizen Urged to Answer Simple Ques tions Listed That Edenton will have a city di rectory seems almost a certainty. C. L. McCullers, secretary of the Edenton-Chowan Chamber of Com merce has already put into motion preliminary plans to compile the di rectory and will in a day or two be gin a canvass of the town to secure the necessary information. Already cards have been printed on which statistics will be listed and includes the name of the person can vassed, whether married or single, street and house number, how long a resident here, place of employment, type of work, wife’s first name, the names and ages of children, as well as names, relationship and place of employment of other persons living in the house canvassed. This canvass will be made among both the white and colored races and the information is calculated to be of considerable value to the Chamber of Commerce. Every citizen in Edenton is asked to cooperate in giving all the infor mation desired to the end that the directory will be complete and accu rate. Millard F. Bond Elected President Os ABC Association Annual Meeting Held At Wrightsville Beach Chowan County was signally hon ored on Saturday when Millard F. Bond was unanimously elected presi dent of the North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Boards Associa tion. Mr. Bond’s selection was made at the annual convention of the As sociation held at Wrightsville Beach. He succeeds R. S. Corbitt of Maccles field. Mr. Bond has been very active in affairs of the ABC boards and has served as secretary-treasurer of the Chowan County ABC Board since it (was established in 1937. Chowan’s full board attended, the convention including, besides Mr. Bond, Chairman R. P. Badham and Hector Lupton. TUi nmnpaSm k kki k lit Iviwm wmmt AovwnHft pi good muk*. $1.25 Per Year Chowan County Asked To Raise SIOO For Purpose neeiTgreat Lions and Rotary Clubs . Send Out Canvassing Committees At a meeting Monday night of Chowan County’s Old North State Fund’s Campaign Committee, held at the home of Judge and Mrs. Rich ard. D. Dixon, plans were effected to conduct a whirwind canvass in an ef fort to raise the county’s quota of SIOO in one day. The day designated to reach this goal is tomorrow (Fri day) when every business and pro fessional man in Edenton fcvill be solicited for a contribution. To conduct this canvass the com mittee called into service the Lions and Rotary Clubs, and President Ralph Parrish of the Lions Club and C. L. McCullers, president of the Rotary Club, have appointed a com mittee from their respective groups to make the canvass. The purpose of the Old North State Fund is to raise $75,000 with which to purchase and deliver an am bulance airplane as a gift to the people of England from citizens of North Carolina. The campaign to raise this amount was officially started throughout the State last Friday, so that Richard Dixon, chair man for Chowan County, is very anxious for Chowan to raise its quota at once and send it to head quarters. , The plight of England at the pres ent moment makes it 'essential that everything possible be done to bring relief to the civilian population and i armed forces quickly and it is stated by members of the executive com mittee of the Fund that British offi cials have urgently requested that all possible haste be made in the pre sentation of the mercy ship by North Carolinians, who are the first to be asked to make such a gift on behalf 1 of a commonwealth. “In starting the campaign to pre sent a mercy ship to the people of England, we feel certain of the full support of the rank and file of citi zens of the Old. North State,” de dared Judge F. O. Bowman, State ! chairman of the Fund, “and it seems evident that each county in the State will do its part towards mak ing the gift a speedy reality. We have an excellent organization in each of the 100 counties of North Carolina, headed by prominent busi ness and civic leaders who are put ting forth every effort to promptly reach the quotas assigned their re , (Continued on Page Five) Group Appointed To Plan Changes At Court House County Commissioners, However, Jealous of Responsibility Comment has of late been going the rounds that Chowan’s ancient Court House, espedally the panel room on the second floor, is to be restored, and efforts along this line were discussed by the County Com missioners at their meeting held on Thursday. At that time a suggested committee was appointed by the Commissioners to make recommenda tions as to improvements, but this committee will have no authority to undertake any changes without the approval of the County governing body. Chairman D. M. Warren, speaking on behalf of the Commissioners, said that such a committee could make recommendations or suggestions and have charge of the work, but that the authority to proceed must first come from the Commissioners. The County Commissioners, he said, are charged with the care of the Court House, and that they (would not re linquish their right and responsibility to any group. The committee, as appointed on Thursday, is composed of Judge Richard D. Dixon, Mrs. S. M. Mc- Mullan, Mrs. W. D. Pruden, Mrs. R. P. Badham, Mrs. C. P. Wales, Mrs. G. H. Harding, Mrs. Geddes Potter, Mrs. George C. Wood, Mrs. E. N. Elliott, Mrs. J. N. Pruden and D. M. Warren, Jr.