; Volume XVI. —Number 13. PSeven Criminal Cases For April Term Superior Court Henry W. Ewing, Col ored, Faces Charge Os Murder mixeiTterm Judge Leo Carr of Bur . lington Scheduled To Preside Chowan County’s spring term of Superior Court will convene Monday morning with Judge Leo Carr of Burlington scheduled to preside. It will be a mixed term with Clerk of Court E. W. Spires listing seven criminal cases on the calendar up to Wednesday morning. Among the criminal cases calendar ed are the following: Morgan Hudson, charged with breaking, entering and larceny. Leonard Randolph Hollingsworth, colored, charged with larceny. James Lee Holley, colored, charged < with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Holley is charg ed with inflicting serious injury to Clarence Holley with a knife. iTattie Gilliam, colored, also charg ed with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. She is charged with assaulting Evelyn Perry, col ored, with an ice pick. Stancil Davenport, who faces a charge of reckless driving. Gordon Duncan Cummings, charg ed with drunken driving. Henry W. Ewing, colored, charged with first degree murder. He is charged, with killing Doris Lee Hodges with a rifle. Among the civil cases on the calendar are: Town of Edenton vs. J. T. Gibbs, a suit for damages growing out of the accident in which Henry Smith was killed while riding on the fire truck. Another case involves the purport ed will of the late Nellie E. Jones. The will was offered for probate, but was denied. J. Roy Winslow vs. G. B. and Brooks Morgan, a case growing out of an assault. Ralph Peele vs. J. C. Nixon, ad ministrator, and others, which in volves injuries in an automobile wreck. Willis Ray Peele vs. J. C. Nixon, also in connection with an automo bile wreck. George Holley vs. D. H. and T. A. Berryman, a suit growing out of a land boundary dispute. The possibilities are that none of the civil cases will be reached during the term. Edenton Girl Wins In Memory Contest Barbara Jean Spencer Wins Right To Enter Regional Contest Barbara Jean Spencer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Worth Spencer, won out in the Chowan Associational Elimina tion Contest at Corinth Baptist Church, Elizabeth City, on Monday night in the Junior Memory Work Drill for Training Union members of the age group 9 through 12 years. The Edenton girl is now eligible to compete in the regional contest in Murfreesboro on April 9. If she wins there, she will go to the State-wide contest at the State Baptist Seaside Assembly this summer. Barbara is the fourth consecutive winner in as many years to represent the Edenton ■church under the junior leader, Miss ■ Mildred Munden. Greensboro College . Glee Club Will Sing * At High School Today Members of the Greensboro College Glee Club will present a program this (Thursday) morning at 11 o’clock in the Edenton High School audi * torium. The appearance of this tal ented group of singers -was arranged by Principal Fenton Larson. The program will last about an , \ hour, stated Mr. Larson, and will in clude 19 numbers which will be of a ifi varied nature. Superintendent John A. Holmes will extend a few Welcom * ing remarks to the visiting singers. The public is invited to Mir the v Bpigwun, for which a free will offer . ing will be taken to help defray the THE CHOWAN HERALD New Rotary President GEORGE S. TWIDDY At last Thursday’s meeting of the Edenton Rotary Club, Georgfe S. Twiddy was elected president' of the club to succeed James E. Wood. Mr. Twiddy and other officers will be installed at the first meeting of the club in July. Collected In Chowan County’s Red Cross Drive Only Two More Reports Remain to Be Heard From Herbert Hollowell, who, together with West Byrum is co-chairman of Chowan County’s annual Red Cross fund raising drive, reported Tuesday that contributions in the drive have totaled $2,215, so that the county’s quota of $2,138 has been oversub scribed by $77, with all reports in except two. The co-chairmen are very much gratified over the result of the drive and desire to thank all the workers for their efforts and sacrifice of time ■in making solicitations, as well as those who made contributions, some of which were very generous. Mr. Hollowed is especially pleased with the cooperation of colored people, who had Prof. Alexander Blaine as gen eral chairman. Mr. Hollowed point ed out that the colored people’s con ■ tribution was double the amount col ' lected in last year’s drive. In commenting upon the success of the drive, Mr. Hollowed pointed out that $1,138 of the contributions will be sent to national Red Cross headquarters, while the remainder i will be retained in Chowan County " for local expenses. 1 (Continued on Page Four) Expert Marksman In Demonstration For Skeet Club Wilbur CwTWill Give Demonstration Wed -1 nesday, April 6 1 J. R. Byrum, president of the new -Ily reorganized Chowan Skeet Club, ! announced early this week that Wil ! bur Cox, one of the world’s greatest ’ marksmen, will give a demonstration 1 Wednesday, April 6. Mr. Cox will ; start his performance at 3:30 o’clock at the club’s new skeet range on Jim Morgan’s land, about a mile from the U. S. Fish Hatchery on the Eden ton-Windsor highway. The demon stration will include trick shooting, r as well as instructions relative to the . proper handling of a gun and shoot i ing technique. Mr. Byrum was delighted to make . the announcement due to the fact . that he has been trying for several | months to secure Mr. Cox, who is in great demand. The marksman is i presented through the courtesy of . Remington Arms Company and ! Peters Cartridge Division, i The demonstration is not only for . members of the Skeet Club, but both Mr.: Byrons ' and Percy Perry, man i ager, extend a. cordial, invitation to . the general public to attend, there \ will be no charge, so'tfcei d" large crowd is anticipated. Edenton, Chowan County, North Carolina/Thursday, March 31,1949. Mayor LH. Haskett i Urges Cooperation In Easter Seal Sale Funds Will Enable Con- ] tinued Work Among Crippled Children Mayor Leroy H. Haskett this week urges the people of Edenton and Cho- c wan County to cooperate in the 16th a annual Easter Seal drive, which is c sponsored by the Edenton Lions Club t and will enable the work among £ crippled children to continue. \ “During the past year, more than r 20 physically handicapped children t and adults benefited by the program s of the Chowan County League For Crippled Children,” said Mayor Has- i kett. “Indirectly, the disabled bene fited by your Easter Seal contribu- t tions. j “Easter Seals mean new life and hope to crippled children through the special services they provide, as or thopedic appliances, special education and vocational guidance. The so- 5 ciety’s work enhances our com munity’s welfare.” ( ne work of the society, an affiliate of the North Carolina League For ] Crippled Children and the National Society for Crippled Children and t Adults, includes a great deal of work i done in Chowan County. 1 The local campaign is part of a 1 nationwide drive which opened March 17 and will close Easter Sunday, I April 17. G. B. Potter is county chairman, I having on the committee with him 1 Kermit Layton and Earl Harrell, the latter serving as treasurer. Mr. Potter pointed out that last * year the N. C. League For Crippled Children assisted more than 5,000 boys and girls but that this number represents only a very small portion . of the 62,000 handicapped children in ' North Carolina. More than 85 per : cent of these 62,000 children can look . only to the League for part or all of the services they need. The League’s program includes medical care, special : education and guidance, but does not s duplicate any services available from - any other agencies. , North Carolina’s goal in this year’s drive is $150,000, which wil help bring closer the day when no child 1 will needlessly drag a brace or live i in a wheel chair. : Jaycees To Resume : Scrap Paper Drive Sunday Afternoon ! Citizens Urged to Coop erate In Effort to \ Raise Funds Edenton’s Junior Chamber of r Commerce will on Sunday, April 3, f resume their scrap paper drive and ’ will collect paper between the hours of 1 and 3 o’clock. The committee in charge of the collection is compos ed of Tom Francis, chairman, Ray Blanchard, Maynard Fleetwood, Luth er Parks, John Mitchener and Em mett Wiggins. The previous paper drive, which was abandoned during the winter months, was very successful and the I Jaycees are hopeful that they will receive the same cooperation on the part of Edenton citizens. It is requested that those who have i any kind of scrap paper which they wish to contribute please have it in bundles and place on front porches or at some place where it can easily be seen by the canvassers when they ■ make their rounds Sunday afternoon. MAYOR HASKETT PLEASED WITH INITIAL RESPONSETO EDENTOirSCLEANUP WEEK Urges Citizens on Route of Forthcoming Garden Club Tour to Be Particular About Remov ing Trash Cans Promptly Mayor Leroy Haskett early this > week stated that he was very well : pleased with what he had already ob -1 served in connection with clean-up i week, which is being observed in i Edenton this week. ’ “Shortly after the announcement [ came out in The Herald,” said Mayor Haskett, “I saw no little activity all • over town by people cleaning up their i premises, and as a result I am firmly convinced that the observance of > clean-up week will result in a cleaner i i and neater town.” Mr. Haskett espe- - i daily urgee-all citizen* to have their ; premises tidied up during the Gar- ! Closing Days In Edenton Approved By Most Merchants Recent Poll Meets With Acceptance of Recom mendations In a special bulletin issued Tues day of this week, Peter Carlton, man ager of the Chowan County Chamber of Commerce and Merchants Associa tion, reported that as the result of a poll, practically unanimous approval was given by merchants to the recom mendations of the Merchants Commit tee relative to closing dates to be ob served during the year. The committee recommended the following: 1. Half day holiday Wednesdays to begin April 27 and continue through August. 2. Easter Monday, April 18. 3. July 4th. 4. September 5, Labor Day. 5. Thanksgiving Day, November 24. 6. Monday and Tuesday following Christmas. 7. To remain open on January 2, 1950. Members of the Merchants Commit tee who made the recommendations are Miss Sadie Day, M. A. Hughes, Paul Wallace, Frank Elliott, Wilmer Malone and Henry Cuthrell. Bill Introduced To Widen Authority As To Pay For Officials Will Give Commission ers Authority to Reg ulate Salaries Representative J. H. McMullan last week introduced a bill in the General Assejeblv which will give the Chowan County Commissioners the authority to govern the salaries of County of ficials. The bill, entitled an act relating to compensation of the Sheriff, Treasurer, Judge, Prosecuting At torney and Clerk of the Chowan County Recorder,’s Court, reads as follows: “Section 1. The Board of County Commissioners of Chowan County is hereby authorized, in its discretion, to increase the salary of any or all of the following officials: the Sheriff and Treasurer of Chowan County, and the Judge, Prosecuting Attorney and Clerk of the Chowan County Record er’s Court, but the overall amount of any such increase, shall not exceed fifty dollars ($50.00) per month for any one official. “Section 2. All laws and clauses of laws in conflict with this Act are hereby repealed. Section 3. This Act shall become effective April 1, 1949.” Varsity Club To Stage Womanless Wedding Edenton’s Varsity Club, at its meet ing last week, agreed to stage a Wo nianless Wedding, with Friday night, April 22, set as a tentative date for the show. Bill Cozart was appointed as chairman of a committee to stage the entertainment, with George Thompson, Edward Wozelka and Joe Conger, Jr., also on the committee, The club also voted to order an other section of portable bleachers similar to the section already secured. den Club tour, which from all indi cations, with favorable weather, will attract many visitors. Mr. Haskett especially urges people living on the route of the tour to ob serve the schedule of the town’s trash trucks and to remove trash cans as soon as possible after they have been emptied. The following streets are pointed out by Mayor Haskett: East and West Church Street, East ; and West Queen Street, West Eden Street, Blount Street, East and West t King Street, South Oakum Street and ; East .and West Water Street. •V • * Lions ClulfeSLirel And Jubilee Will Be Staged Friday Night |_ Dangerous J Edenton police report that a dangerous practice is developing in Edenton due to children riding bicycles on the town’s sidewalks. Not only is there a possibility of pedestrians and the children themselves being injured if the practice is continued, but there is a Town ordinance prohibiting riding bicycles on sidewalks. The police urge children to re frain from riding on the side walks and appeal to parents to instruct children to abandon the practice. President Os Chowan College Speaker At Convention Os BTU B. D. Bunn Will Speak April 9; Other Not able Speakers One of the feature addresses for the well balanced program of the Re gional Training Union Convention in Murfreesboro April 8-9 will be brought by Chowan College Presi dent, B. D. Bunn. President Bunn will speak during the Saturday morn ing session, April 9, on the subject “Faithful to our Mission”. He will be received with much interest be cause of his interest in the youth and educational program of the State as well as his recent appointment to the presidency of Chowan College. Other speakers on the program of the convention of three sessions are Dr. John W. Kincheloe, Jr., pastor of Hayes-Barton Baptist Church in Raleigh, and Harvey T. Gibson, sec retary of the State Training Union Department of Raleigh. Dr. Kinch , eloe will bring the inspirational ad dress for the Friday night session on i the subject “God’s Call to Christian i Laymen”. Secretary Gibson will ad dress the convention, in his official . capacity, during the Saturday morn . ing session on the subject “Faithful to our Training Task”. Bennie Pled- I ger, student of Wake Forest College, ' will speak Friday night on “Faithful I to the Call”. 1 Besides conferences, demonstrations . and inspiring talks the program in • eludes both vocal and instrumental I (Continued on Page Four) Negro Is Charged With Murder Os His Common-law Wife Henry W. Ewing Held For Trial In Chowan Superior Court A murder occurred in Chowan County Friday morning about 10 o’clock, • when Dorothy Hodges; 26- year-old Negro woman, was killed at the home of her common-law husband, Henry W. Ewing, 24, along the Pem broke Creek, a few miles from Eden ton. Ewing is charged with killing the woman with a .22 calibre rifle. He is charged with murder and in a preliminary hearing held in Re corder’s Court Tuesday he was or dered held by Judge Marvin Wilson to be tried in next week’s term of Superior Court. According tq. officers, the shooting allegedly grew out of an argument over the dead woman’s relations with another man. The couple were re ported to have lived together as com mon-law husband and wife for about a year and have a four-months-old child. Sheriff J. A. Bunch and State Pa trolman Paul Whitley reported that Ewing was waiting by the side of the road when they went to the scene of the crime, and that he led them into the house to view the dead woman. PEANUT MEN MEET AT HOTEL Peanut shelters and cleaners of Vir ginia and North Carolina representing the Virginda-Carolina Peanut Associ ation held their monthly meeting in Hotel Joseph Hewes Wednesday. W. W, Byruin is president $2.00 Per Year. t Show Now Expected to Eclipse All Previous Performances STARTS~AT 8 P. M. Proceeds Go For Blind Work and Edenton Band Edenton’s Lions Club is all set for the presentation of its annual min strel and jubilee on Friday night, April 1, in the Edenton High School auditorium. The show is scheduled to begin at 8 o’clock. With Oscar Duncan acting as director, members of the cast have been practicing I faithfully, so that this year’s show I is said to be even bigger and better than any previous performance. The minstrel is expected to at i tract a capacity house Friday night, . with the proceeds going toward work | among the blind of the county, one I of the Lions Club’s major projects, and the Edenton Band. Featured as end men in the 1 minstrel are John Mitchener, Sidney Campen, George Thompson, Bill Co zart, Dr. W. S. Griffin and Jimmy Partin. Soloists include Haywood Bunch, - Ernest Ward, Jr., J. C. Leary, Jimmy - Partin, Earl Harrell, J. E. Coffey, i Bill Cozart, West Leary, Bruce ; Jones, George Thompson and Jesse - Harrell. 1 William Privott will be the inter - locutor and Earl Harrell will be at the t piaano. 1 Director Duncan says a special - feature of the show will be the 1 “world famous” Wesquire Calendar 5 Girls, who, he said, “will be seen for ■> the first time and probably the last time in this community.” | Mrs. Guy C. Hobbs : Chairman Chowan i 1949 Cancer Drive - Chowan County’s Quota | $1,050 Says Mrs. Hobbs i — j- Mrs. Guy C. Hobbs, chairman of s the Chowan County Chapter of the - American Cancer Society fund-drive, •1 which opens April 1, announced Wed nesday morning that ,Chowan Coun ty’s quota is $1,050. “Fixing of this goal,” said Mrs. Hobbs, “will provide us with a general objective, a sort of target that should be struck not once but as many times over as possible.” Mrs. Hobbs explained that the goal was assigned by the division head | quarters of the American Cancer So > ciety and is an approximate .share of what the community should raise in • proportion to other towns and cities. I “There is very little relationship,” stated Mrs. Hobbs, “between this fig ure and the actual money needed. The national headquarters of the Ameri can Cancer Society has informed us i that they will need at least $3,500,000 ) to continue the research projects now - under way. They could use millions t more if all of the research applica , tions were to be tilled. “The society must select only the - most promising among the hundreds j. of possible avenues which may eventu ally lead to a cancer cure. It seems v a pity that some scientist who may - hold a clue that could lead to the con . quest of cancer will be unable to de i velop his research for lack of funds. ’ “I know that the people of Chowan County are going to accept this goal ■ as a springboard. From there we can : carry the 1949 drive along that extra i mile that comes really from the heart.” Last year the American Cancer So ciety received a total of $1,296.13 dn Chowan County. The quota was SBOO.OO. Chowan JP’s Included In 1949 Omnibus Bill i Four Chowan County justices of the peace were included in the omnibus bill which was introduced in the Gen eral Assembly Thursday of last week. . The bill calls for a two-year term, be ; ginning April 1. The Chowan justices of the peace i listed in the bill are F. W. Hobbs, W. S. Summer*!!, J. L. Wiggins and T. L. Wfcrd.