PAGE 6—THE HERALD, Ahoskie. N. C.—MILESTONE YEAR 1959 eu)ck im Selling Era Snorted Early; Pioneer Hertford Auto Merchants ■ -Motk'! ■&'••• V-Oi W! .’i" p»oduc9ti tjr 50 eisi- pwye.', fvjmo'.'S sioij'i/*:' 'Whtn. faa!>^r «« built Suick vi(i bviit/ ■ Lcr,e,i in i905. ’^ucleii^ Cl- Gftnftic! Motcci Cp’f/;,- foetnad m , SepseoiOKs, WOS- First jix-syiindef,- 1«!5; vt-Gigti! o'.gh!, 1P3(. Alt motsoi; ■/,'•,ti} tiUY« bKO'! aighfi. r>«( V.8. !9i3. AHOSKIE — Roanoke-Chowan merchants beat the “good roads" movement in 1915 to the punch. Several of them were in the van guard, selling automobiles in the days when there was a fine for frightening horses on the streets. One of the earliest was young Charlie Jenkins of Aulander, who spun into town in a “motor” the same year that the Hertford County HERALD started its career. Ear ly issues of The Herald carry stor ies about young Jenkins, demon strating the latest of the General Motors line of cars. By November, 1914, Tlie Herald carried a weekly ad from E. 0. Hines, local agent for the Hupp Motor Company of Detroit. The HupmobOe was featured a' one of the first of the large cars, complete with self-starter. Th(- were priced at a staggering $1,20. (f.o.b. Detroit) in 1915. ^ Perd T903 F'rsl cor, !?0a Mexisi J/OSi Ufoducssi, tis* pfks ri/nobocjf w!th^ ionr.eou, $-930. ‘ B" and "’C",' 1904; M/xJyt "f, l^CS; ' U ' H" ond ''5'’. f907- !«! Model) "T". I'KiS. Torgot ol SeteJen palenf? inftlagemeni tu/f, !903; coled cgoinjl, ; 1909. fo'd aopeaicd, won i/i 1911 'Model "A", 1927; V-8 o.nd Model.”8' kiawc-cylinden 1932.. . . iSfedal Weaposioe »6-ai Ho»we-i>ow«r $im) -jn—aa Jtoreir-powBr S2SOfi 34—30 Mcij^c-power (3800 40—30 (350W Herstr-pewBr The A«e.ssible WIMTQN Chevrolet 1912 ' loul.t Che-i'roi«T faegan wo-rk an a >U-cyflnd«r engine in 1909 tn his sbep on Ocand River Ave., Delrolf; pfoduced, expe/iraenkti cars in 19(1. First zar}, . I9!2 Clottic Si* touring; 2,999 toEd; to ricolorv; liif price. $2,1^. Secorn* o division at GM on «jy 2, 1918. Also rornnMtnced monutactwre of trucks i» the same yewr. Predated itt first Y-S, 19!/. - •k Pontiec 1926 ! Roniiot Soggy Co., tormed IS^. • entered ovto field with sofajEdiory^ i Ooklond Motor Co. oj 4id*lin«, GM i • occHiired Oakland fn 1909, Rrslf Ponlioc was 1926 ii*-.yrinder, listed at, $825 5895, cjs conspentao r.or to Qok- iaad,' production, 77.134, Dropped Or:*-- 'iand, brought out PoBtiac V-S, 1932;' ichanged to sfraighl eight, 1933; SilYBir .Slreok introduced, 1934. CARS DON'T GIVE MILK—Back in hard times of 1933, auto mobile dealers took anything they could get in trade for new cars. On the preferred list were this handsome milk-producer, held at bay by Cecil McCoy, and the diamond ring wh^h “Way- land Jenkins is sporting. In return for the cow and ring, Charles H. Jenkins and Company traded the car shown. Visit Our Stores in SUFFOLK ELIZABETH CITY FRANKLIN NORFOLK VIRGINIA BEACH. RICHMOND You Are Always WELCOME at Styles May Change ... but not friends Styles in Footwear change every year but good old friends ore always right in style. We value our friendship with the good people in the Roanoke - Chowan area and we ap preciate their patronage over the years. We Salute the Citizens of Hertford County On Your 200tli Anniversary Russell & Hoi mes I WHERE SHOPRINO IS A PLEASURE' “Suffolk's Leading Shoe Store" Nationally Advertised Brands for Men, Women and Children Winton Meet Pushed for Good Roods (Continued from Page 1) layers of different-sized rock, they were aptly suited to the piedmont and western sections of North Carolina. In 1899, the “Good Roads Association of Asheville and Bun combe County” was formed, and raised money to build macadam roads from Asheville to Biltmore. With the turn of the 20th cen tury, a new era dawned in North Carolina road building. The North Carolina Good Roads Association was formed in Raleigh in 1902. At the same time, the Federal De partment of Agriculture establish ed the Office of Public Road In quiries, the forerunner of the Fed eral Bureau of Roads. Its pri mary purpose was to assist the extension of mail service, since the Rural Free Delivery system :iad been set up in 1896. Gov. Locke Craig, who shovel- 'ad part of the road from Asheville to Biltmore himself, was called the “good roads governor.” He set up what might be term ed the third highway commission n 1915, with Col. Joseph Hyde Pratt as chairman. A previous commission, appointed in 1901, in- , eluded the commissioner of agri- ’ culture, the state geologist, and a third person to be named by them. This group served for two years as advisers to counties who want ed advice on road building, but had no part in a statewide system of roads. It took the federal government to give this state, and others, the impetus needed to go into the road-building business. President Woodrow Wilson signed the first federal aid bill providing road monies in July, 1916, setting up the U S, Bureau of Roads as ad ministrative body. From that bill, North Carolina was to receive up to $6 million, on a matching-funds basis. Big Bailie The big battle over how to spend money on roads came in North Carolina in 1921. Head of one faction was Miss Hattie M. Berry of Chapel Hill, secretary of the N. C. Good Roads Association, who advocated a five-cent ad valorem tax and issuance of $5 million in bonds yearly by the state to finance construction. On the other side were Frank Page, chairman of the State Highway Commission from Aberdeen, and Gov. Cameron Morrison. After heated debate, the Gen eral Assembly followed the Gov ernor’s lead by authorizing a state bond issue of $50 million. In ad dition, they placed a one-cent tax on each gallon of gasoline, and raised inotor license prices sharp ly. Out of the 55,000 miles of roads in North Carolina, the state as sumed responsibility for build ing 5,500 miles of primary roads with the 1921 funds. Locals Against Among those hard in opposition to the “good roads bill” were Sen. Samuel Winborne and Rep. David Collins Barnes of Hertford Coun- ly, and Sen. W. H. S. Burgwyn of Northampton County. Like many others, they felt that :t was foolhardy for a state which iiad been conservative in its bor rowing to take the plunge into debt, just for better roads. On the other hand, there were those who cited the statement of A. T. Byrne: “If the community is stagnant, the condition of the roads will indicate the fact; if I See WINTON, Page 7 Compared to this was the self-as sured favorite, the Ford automobile sold by George J. Nembern of Vhoskie. The Ford was within “everyone’s e a c h,” according to a message •om Henry himself. The Ford runabout cost $440, and for $50 more you could have a Ford tour ing car. With a self-starter, the Ford’s total cost was $510. Ahoskie’s automobile salesmen quickly expanded in the decade from 1910 to 1920. By 1918, The HERALD carried ads for Overland, sold by C. Greene: the Patterson 6-46, sold by Hobbs Motor Com pany; and Dodge Brothers busi ness cars, sold by H. M. Burden and Co. of Aulander. In 1922, according to the “Auto mobile News," there were 67,697 new cars registered in the United States. The automobile buyer had a wide choice in that pbstw'ar era. He could choose from 60 makes'of cars—rernember thern? The list included:'Apperson, Au burn, Buick, Cadillac, Case, Chaim ers,' Chandler, Chevrolet, Cleve land, Cole; Columbia, Dodge, Dort Durant, Earl, Elgin, Essex, Ford Franklin, Gardner, Grant, Haynes Hudson, Huprriobtle, Jewett, Jor dan. King, lOssel, LaFayette, Leix ington, Liberty, Lincoln, Marmon MaxweU, Mercer, Mitchell, Moon, Nash, National, Oakland, Oldsmo- bile, Overland, Packard, Paige, Peerless, Pierce-Arrow, Reo, Ric- kenbacker, Saxon, Stearns-IOiight, Stephens, Studebaker, Stutz, “Valie Westcott, West Sainte Claire, Wii- lis-Knight, Winton, electrics and gas. Sales of new automobiles since 1922-makes a good record of the prosperity of the times. From 1922 to 1931, a steady flow of about one and a half million cars were sold yearly. This rose to a peak of three and a half million by 1941. War production cut sales of non- service automobiles and trucks »P’ UP TO DATE—Both the building and the cars were the latest thing in Au-ander, back in the late 1920’?.. Charles H. Jenkins and Company was already one of the oldest automobile dealers in the area, featuring Buicks, as the sign says. This building later burned and was replaced with the present structure. AHOSKIE'S FIRST AUTO DEALER—This big Newbern Ford agency in Ahoskie. The first auto began selling the popu’ar Tin Lizzie autos in 19 noke-Chowan roads in the days when mud and hardtop roads opened a new era in transportation, and Rhue streets. The building is still occupied business of auto-selling in 1937, after 23 years as utomobile agency was the heme of the George dealer in the booming town of Ahoskie, Newbern 14. Hundreds of Newbem-sold Fords traveled Roa- dust were the rule, and in the latter days when The Newbern agency stood in the comer of Main by several businesses. Newbern retired from the a pioneer in the business. down to an unbelievable 139 in 943, and 610 in 1944. By postwar 946, however, the figure jumped ack to one and a half million. Peak sales in this decade were in 935, when seven and a half million new cars were sold. This simmered lown to five and a half million with he “recession” of 1956. The output of 1956, also, was limited to 18 makes of cars, as con trasted to 1922’s 60 makes. The 956 buyer chose from Hudson, Nash, Chrysler, DeSoto, Dodge, Plymouth, Imperial, Ford, Lin coln, Mercury, Continental, Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Oldsmobie, Pontiac, Packard, or Studebaker. The automobile looks like it’s here to stay, unless replaced by space transportation. In 1956, the latest year for, which figures have been compiled ,at this time, there were 52 million cars in the United States. Even British Somaliland had 100 automobiles! Your Safety Is Our Chief Concern... We take a great deal of interest in the condition of your Tiies . . . We hope you share our interest . . . Sometime your very life may depend on the condition of your tires. Our Brand New Treads will give your car a firm grip on the road in all kinds of driving conditions. Thank You... For Your Confidence and Patron age During the Past? Years. We Appreciate the Business and We Enjoy the Friendship. AHOSKIE TIRE SERVICE Roanoke-Chowan's Largest Tire Market