( ONLY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN I CHOWAN COUNTY Volume XXX. —Number 15. Three Contests Develop For Edenton Municipal Election Tuesday, May7th; Board Public Works And Two Wards - ■ A. €. Hudson and the Rev. S. N. Griffith,; Both Negroes, Enter Race For Offices With Monday at noon of this week being the deadline for can- j didates to file for office in the forthcoming municipal election, three contests developed before the final . closing hour. The three contests will be for the Board of Public Works and a <1 Councilman from the First and Fourth Wards. Last week J. D. Elliott filed as First Ward Councilman, op posing incumbent Richard Dix ! on, Jr. Before the filing dead line Monday, A. C. Hudson filed for member of the Board Os pub lic Works and the Rev. S- N. Griffith filed for Councilman from the Fourth Ward. He will oppose incumbent Luther C. Parks. For the other offices there will be no contest with all present] officials seeking re-election. They' include John A- Mitchener for Mayor; James M. Bond for Treas-1 urer; J. Edwin Bufflap and, George A. Byrum for Council-; • men-at-large; A1 Phillips, Coun-i cilman from the Second Ward and Elton Forehand, Councilman from the Third Ward. According to the staggering terms of office inaugurated in this election, the three candi dates for the Board of Public Works receiving the highest Continued on Page 3—Section 1 Hector Lupton, Jr. In President’s Club . For Insurance Co. The Fidelity Mutual Life In surance of Philadelphia has just announced that R. Hector Lup ton, Jr., of Raleigh has qualified for membership in Fidelity Mu tual Presidents’ Club. The honor was conferred for outstanding work done for the company for the year 1962. Mr. Lupton is. the .son of Mr. and Mrs. Hector Lupton of Eden- 20 Years Ago j As Found la t-» FUm Os { Ths Chowan HoraM ! At a special wee tins o I thej trustees of Shepard-Pruden Me-| mortal Library, Mrs. Sidney Me-’ Mullan tendered her resignation as librarian, a position s)m held ' since the library was established in 1921. I Chowan County Commissioners appointed W. J. Taylor as a member of the Chowan County Board Os Public Welfare. He Succeeded W. J. Berryman who bad served the statutory term of six years. Chestnut! Cleaners increased the size of their building and added new machinery. Continued on Page 9. Section 1 Stores dosed Easter Monday Stores in downtown Eden ton will be closed Enter Monday, April 15. This an nouncement was mode early this week by Alton Elmore, Chairman of the Merchants Committee of the Edenton Chamber of Commerce. Local Trade Fair Is Termed Far More Successful Than Last Year The second annual Trade Fair sponsored by the Edentom Cham r bar of Commerce was from all points, even more successful than the one held previously, accord in* to Alton Elmore, general chairman. iff ‘‘From estimates of attendance ' thia year’s figures exceeded those dt Igst year,” Elmore said, ‘‘and to buy the Trade Fair came out fliffinVuimntplv mm in til* black M THE CHOWAN HERALD Teacher Honored Ik IMP ALEXANDER BLAINE Edenlon school trustees at a meeting held March 21 named the vocational agriculture build- { ing at D. F. Walker High School in honor of Alexander Blaine. He has served as vocational agri culture teacher for 31 years and plans to retire June 30. Group Os Ladies Publicizing Edenton Pilgrimage April 19-21 A group of Edenton ladies are busily engaged in providing pu blicity for the forthcoming Pil grimage of Colonial Edenton and Countryside April 19-21.' Already Mrs. Elton Forehand, Jr., Mrs. West Byrum, Jr., Mrs. George A. Byrum, Mrs. J. P. Ricks, Jr., Mrs. Elwood Nixon and Mrs. Wesley Chesson have been to Raleigh to promote the event. Thursday of last week Mrs. J. D. Barnhill, Mrs. Blair Gib son and Mrs. West Byrum, Jr., appeared on the‘television sta tion at Winston-Salem. Hubert A. Elliott Given High Post hi Salvation Army Edenton Native Is Ap pointed Director of Public Information In j > New York j Hubert A., Elliott has been,ap-1 pointed director of public rela- ( tion for The Salvation Army in i 1 New York, Major Andrew S.' ! Miller, director of public rela tions, has announced. ! Mr. Elliott was executive sec retary for public relations of The Protestant Couhcil of the City jof New York for the past five : years. Mr. Elliott is a native of Eden ton, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John M. Elliott. He is a former newspaperman, magazine editor, and advertising agency writer. He attended Mrs. Hill College and the University of Missouri j School of Journalism. Mr. Elliott lives in Manhattan .(London Terrace, 435 'West 23rd Street) and is a member of St. Bartholomew’s Protestant Epis copal Church where he is active in lay work of the church. LIBRARIES CLOSE Both the Shepard-Pruden Me nyjrial and Brown-Carver librar ies will be closed April 15, Easter •Monday. ' man and who served as master ■ of ceremonies. 1 John Sicks did an outstanding i 1 job as chairman of -the staging committee and assisted Johnny Goodwin, chairman of the re freshments committee. Henry : Quinn, who did an outstanding • job as finance chairman last year, again filled the breach for tide Star’s Fair and not only t soto the original spaces for the various merchants exhibits but i jhas already collected fee rentals, j Elmore said that thank* go to jJim-Earnhardt for his time and Edenton, van County, North Carolina, Thursday, April 11,1963. laycees Sponsoring Picture For Benefit HospitalLoanCloset Story of the Count of Monte Cristo Will Be Shown Friday, April 12 at Taylor Theater —— A special showing will be pre sented at the Tayfor Theatre Fri day, April 12, lor: one day only. The picture, “The' Story of the Count of Monte Cristo’’ is spon sored by the Edenton Junior Chamber of Commerce with pro i tits going for the benefit'of the . hospital loan closet. The price |of admission will be 75 cents . for adults, 50 cents for students , and 25 cents for children under 12 years of age. 1 Louis Jourdan, romantic French Oontinneo on Page 4— Section * Tuesday of this week Mrs. Frances Shore, Mrs. Tom Bass and Mrs. F. A. Jordan were on a program on the Greenville television station. Today (Thursday) Mrs. Roy Spruill, Mrs. Jack Douglas and Mrs. Charlie Small, Jr., will be on the Portsmouth television sta tion at 1 P. M., and 2:30 P. M- Today, also, 1 Mrs. Warren Twiddy, Mrs. Ed Bond, Mrs. W- J. P. Earnhardt, Mrs. Zech Bond, Mrs. Bruce F. Jones, Mrs. Leo Katkaveck, JVfrs. Thomas Byrum, Mrs. Cecil Fryf MKt J. M. Thor- Continued on Page 4. Section , Oiiow Receives 9 To 12 Year Term For Manslaughter Judge Elbert Peele of Williamston Termin | ates Superior Court | Friday at Noon I Judge Elbert Peele adjourned ! a term of Chowan Superior | Court Friday and before he did |he passed judgment on a num ber of cases he had heard pre viously. Lee Dunlow, Jr., was found guilty of manslaughter and. was sentenced to not less than nine years nor more than 12 years in state prison. John Lee Cobb Wa6 sentenced to 14 months each on three charges of assault with a dead ly weapon. Calvin Howard was sentenced to four to six for assault on a female with .kvtgnt to com mit rape. Arthur Lee Carter was given three to five years for breaking and entering the P&Q Super Market. / M'J Robert Vann, Jr., and David Howard, Jr., were sentenced to three years in connection with the P&Q breakih, but sentence was suspended upon being placed on parole for three years. Edward Joseph Chapman was sentenced to three- to five years for stealing diamonds from Cam pen’s Jewelers. William Kelly Jordan, Frank-' lin Lawrence and Bernard Moye, -charged with picketing without securing a permit, were found not guilty. Drive Lagging ] V Information reaching The Herald Wednesday morning was to the effect that the sale of Easter Seals is badly lagging. The gp*l this year b SI,OOO. but at the present sate it will be far abort of realisation. Anybody who wttl make a contribution is urged to send it to Haywood tench is soon as BUZZIN’—If you have ever seen ants swarming, then this picture may look familiar to you. However, what the pic ture shows is literally thousands of skiers in Salan, Sweden, swarming up a hill path to participate in the annual tra ditional “Vasa Race,” held in memory of the late King of Sweden, Gustaf Eriksson Vasa. Albemarle Schoolmasters Club Elect Hiram J. Mayo President For New Year Group of Officers For Year 1963-64 Chosen At Plymouth Meeting ! Monday Night The Albemarle Schoolmasters’ Club held its monthly .meeting at the Plymouth High School Monday night and elected offi cers for the 1963-1964 school year. Those elected were: President, Hiram J. Mayo, superintendent of the Edenton City Schools; vice president, W. F- Landing, principal of the Knapp High School. Currituck; secretary, Mrs. Mildred Pate, supervisor of Gates County Schools; treasurer, W. J. Taylor, Jr., principal of the Co lumbia High School. The Albemarle Schoolmasters’ Club consists of the school offi cials from the counties of Cam den, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hyde, Pasquotank, Per quimans, Tyrrell, Washington, and the city administrative units of Edenton and Elizabeth City. The speaker for the evening was J. E. Miller, Assistant State Superintendent of the Depart ment of Public Instruction in Raleigh. He spoke on the topic “Your Financial Report Ca r d.” Facts and figures were g: ,'fn concerning each of the adrr.ml - on Page 6—Section 1 Better Pay Up Delinquent 1962 taxpayers in Chowan County and Edenton will be advertised, according to action taken by the County Com missioners and Town Council men. County delinquent taxes will be advertised the first Monday in May and the property sold the first Monday in June. Town of Edenton delinquents will be advertised the second Monday in May and will take place the second Monday in June. * Appeal Made To List Rooms For Visitors To Pilgrimage With the Pilgrimage of Co lonial Edenton and Countryside scheduled .to be held April 19, 20 and 21, it already appears that there will be a serious : shortage of sleeping quarters for visitors who to spend a night or more in Edenton. Ac cording to information early this week, all motels are practically completely booked up for the tour. Town CouncHmen Asked To Provide More Parking Area Problem Presented By Traffic Committee of Edenton Chamber of Commerce Though few iti»ns appeared on the agenda for Town Councilmen Tuesday night, the group was held in session until after 11 o'clock. Present at the meeting was a group of merchants who are in terested in providing more park ing facilities in the downtown area. The group represented the Traffic Committee of the Cham ber of Commerce with Jesse Harrell as spokesman. Mr. Har rell pointed out various phases of the parking problem and ad- Cor.tinueU on Page 3—Section 1 Local Jaycees Elect New Officers Tonight Edenton’s Junior Chamber of Commerce will meet tonight (Thursday) at 7 o’clock at the Edenton Restaurant. An import ant item of business will be the election of new officers, so that President Carlton Jackson urges every Jaycee to make a special effort to be present. Special Service At Methodist Church A Maundy Thursday service will be held at the Methodist Church tonight (Thursday) at 8 o’clock. This service commemorates the institution of the service of Holy Communion. The public is cor dially invited to participate in this special service. In order to provide quarters for some of the many visitors expected, an appeal is being made for homeowners to rent as many rooms as possible in order to cope with fee situation. Anybody who will rent one or more rooms during fee tour is requested to contact, as soon as ppssible, Mrs. R. J. Boyce, phone 482-2624, or. Mrs. West By.nm, Jr., phone 462-4066. 1 Dr. ft. D. Higgins New Director Os I Health Department Mayor V. N. Darden Os Hertford Resigns As Chairman; Sue-, ceeded By Pete Reid Announcement was made Mon day by Dr. R. D. Higgins of Ra leigh, director of local health services for the North Carolina Board of Health, that Dr. James K. Gray will become director of tlie District Health Department on May 1. Dr. Gray is 55 anti will retire this month from the Air Force medical service after serving 30 years. Dr. Gray is a native of Wis consin and is now a surgeon at Hancock Field at Syracuse, New York. He is married and the father of five children. Dr. Higgins also reported that Mayor V. N. Darden "of Hertford had resigned as Chrirman of the District Health Board. H. A. Reid, Chairman of the Pasquo tank County Commissioners, has been named to succeed Mr. Dar den. Rocky Hock And Macedonia Churches Plan Sunrise Service The annual Easter sunrise ser vice held jointly by the Mace-! donia and Rocky Hock Baptist Churches, is feeing scheduled at l the Rocky Hock Church Sunday ' morning, April 14, at 6 o’clock. J The Rev. Robert S- Harrell,! promotional secretary for the Chowan Baptist Association, will! bring the traditional Easter mes-- Sunrise Service At Center Hill Church Four Churches Join In Service at 6 O’clock Easter Morning Easter sunrise services will be held at the Center Hill Metho dist Church at 6 o'clock Easter Sunday morning, April 14. The Rev. C. T. Wilson, host pastor, invites everyone in the community to participate in this worship service. The Rev. Henry Napier, pas tor of Center Hill Baptist Church, will bring the Easter message and special music will be rendered by Mrs. J. C. Boyce of Center Hill Baptist Church and tne men’s choir of Anderson Methodist Church. , Churches participating in this service will be Center Hill and Great Hope Baptist Churches and Center Hill and Anderson’s Methodist Churches. | Third Graders And , Kindergarten Class Play On April 23rd Mrs. John F. White’s thifd grade and Mrs. J. J. Ross’ kin dergarten class will present a play “The Toy Shop”, on Tues day night. April 23, at 8 o’clock j in the Elementary School audi-, torium. This will include about 45 chil-1 dren in costume. These two rooms present such a play each year and'it is looked forward to by all the townspeople. This is the night of the last PTA meeting for the year. Elec ion of officers for the new year will be held during the short business session. The play will follow this session. New Regulations For Commercial Fishing ■ I ’V Attention is called to regula tions end amended regulations as they apply to commercial fishing regulations which were recently adopted by the Board of Con servation ai)d Development. The regulations have to do with seasons, use of nets in Albe marle Sound and the. Chowan River, and any violation of tba new regulations tinder the pro visions of law constitutes a mis demeanor. Full text of (he regulations appear in this issue of The Herald. $3.00 Per Year In North Carolina Carolina Charter Stamp First Day Sale Attracts Large Crowd To Edenton Elected President i . ' 7 p-, ■ n HIRAM'J. MAYO The Albemarle Schoolmasters' | Club, at a meeting held in Ply mouth Monday night, elected Hiram J. Mayo, superintendent of Fdenton schools, as president I for the year 1963-1964. sage. Special music will be fur nished by the Youth Choir of the Macedonia Baptist Church and the Church Choir of the Rocky Hock Baptist Church. The Rocky Hock pastor, the Rev. Thurman W. Allred, on be half of the participating church es, extends an invitation to the public to attend this special ser vice. Fishing Contest Brings Whoppers Russell Chappell and L. VV. Stallings So Far In Lead The annual Spring Fishing i Contest sponsored by the Recre ation Committee of the Edenton Chamber of Commerce has al ready resulted in straining a 4- pound test monafilament line, the very first week as a 22-inch, j 5 pound, 9 ounce largemouthj bass blasted oft its lily pad bed | propelled by an artificial lure, j according to Bunch’s Gulf Sta-] tion where the big fellow was Continued on i-age fi—Section I j Baptist Fish Fry To Be Held Friday Night The Men’s Class of the Eden ton Baptist Church will hold its annual fish fry at the American I Legion building Friday night, April 12, at 6 30 o’clock, i All members of the class, a? well as officers and teachers of the entire Sunday School are cordially invited to attend. I Extensive Improvement To Be Made At Edentoifs Post Offirc Announcement was made last week that an extension and mod ernization project for the Eden ton Post Office had been ap proved at an estimated construc tion cost of $240,000. Later, The Herald was informed by con gressman Herbert Bonner that the past Office Department plans the following improve Agriculture Building Is Named In Honor Os Alexander Blaine The Board of Education of the Edenton City Schools at its reg ular monthly meeting on the evening of March 21, named the , vocational agriculture building at 1 the D. F. Walker High School in I honor of the agriculture teacher, Alexander Blaine. The official I name of the vocational agricul ture building is Alexander Blaine Vocational Agriculture Building and became effective on the evening of March 21, 1363. Mr. Blaine was bom in Ring gold, Virginia, on May IT, 1896. He attended the public schools j in Pittssylvania County, Virginia, PIGHT CANCER WITH ’A CHECKUP AND CHECK Included Many Na tional and State Dig nitaries; Celebration * Carried Without Any Hitch Bedecked with national, colors, many beautiful flowers ; n bloom, , favorable weather conditions and a large group of friendly and hospitable Edenton people greet ed a large crowd of visitors Sat urday for the first day sale of the Carolina Charter commem orative stamp. The visitors in cluded national and state digni taries as well as prominent visit ors from North Carolina, as well as other states. The ceremony began shortly after to o’clock after Postmaste- General J. Edward Day and oth er dignitaries arrived by plane from Washington at the Edenton airport. A coffee hour was held at the Iredell house, where visit ors were greeted by a large wel coming committee and iadies at tired in colonial costumes. The next phase of the celebra tion took place in the auditor ium of the Edenton Elementary School, where a very interesting program had been arranged. Prior to the program splendid music was provided by the John A. Holmes High School Band, j Mayor John Mitchener, general [chairman for the first dav stamp | sale celebration, was master of | ceremonies and called upon the ! Rev. George Holmes for prayer. Mayor Mitchener, who greet ed the distinguished guests, also j extended a cordial greeting to j the crowd which just about fill- ■ed the spacious auditorium. [ In the absence of Covernor | Terry Sanford, who was pre -1 vented from attending due to a 'previous engagement, Gilliam | Wood extended greetings on be half of the state of North cai’o , lina. "While we pause to re- Conlinued on Page J— Section 1 | BANK CLOSED MONDAY | Peoples Bank & Trust Com pany and the Consumer Credit Branch will be closed all day next Monday, April 15. Tne , closing is in order to observe Easier Monday as a holiday. j (civic calendar] An election will be held Tues day, May 7, to elect officials for ; the Town of Edenton. The Pilgrimage of Colonial ; Edenton and Countryside will be held April 19-21. Anyone who will rent one or i more rooms to accommodate ; visitors for the Pilgrimage of Colonial Edenton and Country side April 19-21 is requested to j contact either Mrs. R. J. Boyce | or Mrs. West Byrum, Jr. "The Story of the Count of j Monte Cristo" will be shown ai Continued from Page 6—Section < ments: To extend the present building, extend the present driveways and parking area, ! build a new platform, air con dition the building, install new ; lights, paint the building inside J and out, add new lock boxes and ; other miscellaneous renovations j to the interior of the present post office building. the St. Augustine High School in Raleigh and the Agricultural and Technical College in Greens boro, North Carolina. He re ceived the Bachelor of Science degree in Agriculture at A- & T- College and has done further study at A. & T- College during the summers. Mr. Blaine came to Edenton in 1924, upon the recommendation cf his college supervisor, and ser ved under the administration of R. H. Bachman, Chowan County School superintendent He ser ved as principal of the White