inn own I ( topics Miss Ida Roberts, home mana gement supervisor with the Washington-Tyrrell district of the Farmers Home Administration, will terminate her duties with the organization on Friday, June 27, it has been announced. Miss Roberts has been with the Ad ministration for seven years and has been connected with the local office since September 1946. " State Highway Patrolman Leo nard N. Walters, located in Wash ington County since December of last year, has been transferred to Tyrrell County with headquarters in Columbia. Patrolman Waters wps assigned to practical duty with Patrolman R. W. Young in Washington County after his graduation from the State High way School in Chapel Hill last winter. B. L. Jessup of Raleigh. State milk sanitarian, visited the Wash ingfbn-Tyrrell Health department headquarters on Tuesday and made an inspection tour of ail commercial dairies in the two counties. He was accompanied on the tour by District Sanitarian Delbert D. Allen. Smallpox vaccine, ordered by the Washington-Tyrrell Health Department, has arrived and vaccinations against the disease are being given in the depart ment’s headquarters in Plym outh, health officials have an nounced. They stated that the vaccinations are given on Thursdays from one to four 4£p. m. Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Liverman and daughter, Kay, left Tuesday afternoon for New Orleans, La., where they will spend several days visiting Mrs. Liverman’s parents. The Livermans didn’t say exactly how long they will be gone, but it would be long enough to visit around and see the sights. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Clark and daughter, Kathryn, of Lexington, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. H. White here Wednesday. Mr. Clark was manager of the U. S. Employment office here for about a year and a half before moving to Lexing ton in Decemh^, 1945. Mrs. Sabrie Reid. Plymouth rent control clerk, was called to Plymouth was closed on that day. Mrs. Reid stated that a shortage of personnel and an excess of work in the Elizabeth City sta tion necessitated her absence from the Plymouth ofice which was re opened on Thursday. About 759 Homes Sprayed in Town the Elizabeth Office on Wi . iWi viid tra work. The rent office m Approximately 759 homes in Plymouth have now been given DDT spraying treatments in the Washington-Tyrrell District Heal th department's annual mosquito control program now being con ducted. department officials have announced. They pointed out that the crewmen have now sprayed a total of about 2,815 homes in Washington County. The Tyrrell County program was ended on May 15 with a total of about 748 houses treated. Sprayers are now at work on Washington Street in Plymouth moving toward the river end of the street. After completing work there, they will spray homes on Main, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Jefferson Streets. The health department has stated that they expect the pro gram to have been completed by next Thursday. So far, they said, several refusals have been had by the crewmen, who also found a few homes locked, but that no vacant homes had been encount ered in the Plymouth area. --- Hold Graveside Service For Jones Child Monday ureswell — r unerai services were held at the graveside in the Spruill Cemetery in Creswell on Monday at 3 p. m. for Margaret Louise Jones, one-year-old daugh ter of Mrs. Mittie Jones. The Rev. B. Gaither, Rector of the Cres well Episcopal Church officiated. The child died in a Columbia hospital on Sunday afternoon and is survived by her mother and a sister, Selby Jean Jones. Mackeys Girl Graduated From Fassifern School -♦ Miss Elsie Davenport, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Daven port of Mackeys, was graduated from Fassifern School in Hender sonville in the commencement ex ercises held there last week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Davenport attended the exercises and have returned home, accompanied by their daughter. The Roanoke Beacon ****** and Washington County News ****** VOLUME LVIII—NUMBER 24 Plymouth, Washington County, North Carolina, Thursday, June 12, 1947 ESTABLISHED 1889 Estimated $1,500 Needed for Repair Of Gymnasium at Local High School __ _ _-4- -♦ The Lions Club committee on the repair of the Plymouth High School gymnasium have estimat ed that the cost, exclusive of labor, of repairing the gymnai sum would be around $1,500, Harold Whitley, chairman of the group has stated. Present plans, Chairman Whit ley said, include the hiring of a trained supervisor for the job while actual labor will be pro vided by members of the Lions Club and other Plymouth resi dents interested in seeing the gymansium improved. The com mittee, Mr. Whitley stated, is planning to request that all Plymouth resident who can do nate one day's labor on the pro ject or its cash equivalent. Plans include the repair of floor and roof, the construction of concrete-block dressing rooms, complete with showers, for boys and girls, and improvement of the lighting and heating systems. Members of the committee are Mr. Whitley, chairman; C. W. Dinkins, Earl G. Bowen, Jack Bradley, and Roy Manning, jr. Board of Education Holding Meet Today j Too Few White j j Teachers Apply j The Washington County Schools system has encounted an irritating difficulty in ob taining sufficient teachers to fill all vacancies left in white school faculties by resignations this spring while applications for the very few vacancies in the colored faculties are piling up. So far only three white ap plications for the considerable number of vacancies in white schools have been received in the county superintendent's of fice. The latest application was. received on Monday. Stale Recreation Official Makes Inspection Tour -4 Requests Lions Club to Spearhead Effort to Ob tain Better Youth Fa cilities for Town L -♦ fcsfttiss Rennie Sheffield, assist (Hr 'fixate director of the North |Cfirolina Recreation Commission, meeting with representatives of the various civic, educational, and religious groups in Plymouth last Thursday and held a discussion of the possibility of setting up a local recreation commission in Plym outh. Miss Sheffield, accompanied by Mayor Archie J. Riddle and J. S. Fleming, principal of the Plym outh Schools, had made a tour! of the Plymouth community ear-j lier in the afternoon, inspecting1 recreational facilities in this area. Speaking at the meeting of the Lions Club last Thursday night. Miss Sheffield pointed out the tour had revealed a distressing lack of adequate recreational ad vantages for young people in the town and suggested that the Lions spearhead a movement toward setting up a commission for that purpose. Immediately after the regular meeting of the Lions, members of the civic improvement and child welfare committees met with Miss Sheffield and held further discussion of the matter. A steering committee, chairman ned by Lion Harold Whitley, was appointed to make further in vestigation of the subject. -♦ Requirements Are Listed for Spuds Grade requirements for govern ment purchase of Irish potatoes have been received at the Wash ington County AAA office, Miss Miriam Ausbon, secretary of the local Triple-A organization, has stated. These requirements, she said, are as follows: potatoes must be U. S. Number 1, U. S. Number 1 B, or U. S. Number 2. The county secretary also said that vendors must furnish their expense of ficial inspection certificates, is sued by the Federal-State Inspec tion Service. Prices offered for the potatoes, Miss Ausborn stated, will be $2.60 per hundredweight through June and July for the U. S. Number 1 grade; and $2.40 for the same amount of the same grade potato during August. For the other two grades, she said, prices are $1.30 per hundred weight in June and July, and $1.20 during August. Potatoes sold must be packages in 100-pound bags or in bulk out let. Offers to sell from Washing ton County growers must be made to Luther H. Bryant, gov ernment purchaser in Elizabeth City, serving this area. Will Consider Plans for Creswell Colored High School; Also to Draw up New Budget A special session of the coun ty board of education will be held in the office of Schools Superin tendent W. F. Veasey in the coun ty courthouse today at 10 a. m., at which time the board will con sider business carried over from the regular session held last week. Among other things to be con sidered will be plans for the new colored high school at Creswell. Board members have expressed the hope that all red tape con cerning specifications for the construction can be cleared up in this week’s meeting so that bids for the construction of the building may be solicited. Minor changes in the blue-prints neces sitated the delay in bid advertise ment. The school group will also de vise a budget for the 1947-48 fis cal year which begins July 1, and will discuss plans for the county school-bus garage. -♦ Rites Held Here For Mrs. Rogers Burial services were held at the family plot in Windley Ceme tery in Plymouth on Tuesday afternoon for Mrs. Mattie I. Rog ers. 48, of Elizabeth City who died in a hospital there on Mon day of an infection resulting from * squirrel bite received several weeks ago. Mrs. Rogers was sister-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rogers, of Plymouth. She was a member of the Memorial Free Will Baptist Church in Elizabeth City. Surviving are her husband, Thomas W. Rogers; six daughters, Mrs. Lee Holliday of Jamesville, Myrtle, Louise, Faye, Flora, and Loretta Rogers, all of Elizabeth City; five sons, T. W„ jr., H. S.. Conway, Hugh, and James Rogers of Elizabeth City; one sister, Mrs. Addie Williams, of Jamesville; two brothers, Lonnie C. Gardner and L. L. Gardner, both of James- 1 ville, and three grandchildren, j -4 Funeral at Roper For Mrs. Leary -■* Funeral services will be held at 4:30 p. m. this afternoon from Saint Luke’s Episcopal Church in Roper for Mrs. Jennie A. Leary, 35, who died at her home there an Wednesday at 1 p. m. after a lingering illness. The Rev. Ed ward M. Spruill, Rector of the :hurch, will officiate. Interment will be made in Saint Luke’s Cemetery, near Roper. Mrs. Leary, the wife of the late Joseph S. Leary, was born in Plymouth, Pa., and came to Roper n 1903 where she has lived since. Prior to her residence in Roper, Mrs. Leary lived in Franklin, Va. She was a member of the Roper Baptist Church for many years. She is survived by two sons, ilernon G. Leary and James F. L.eary, both of Roper; ohe broth ;r, W. L. Frederic of Palmyra, N. F.; one sister, Mrs. Grace Dickens >f Harrisonburg, Va.; five grand ;hildren; and three great-grand :hildren. -« Legionnaires to Meet Here on Friday Night -* The James E. Jethro post of the American Legion will hold a neeting this Friday night in the jegion Hall in Plymouth at 8 i. m., Post Commander W. Ron ild Gaylord has announced. Com nander Gaylord said that dele gates to the meeting of North Carolina Department of the Le ;ion will be chosen at that time. \11 members of the local post lave been urged to attend the neeting here on Friday. Big Crowd Visits Opening of Local Garage on Friday Howard Duzan Wins Chance to Get Auto for Immediate Delivery: Guests Number 2,000 -♦ Around 2,000 persons, includ ing Ford motors district official: from Norfolk, attended the "Oper House” celebration held by Man ning Motor Company, Ford deal ers in Plymouth, last Friday night, making the affair one o: the largest openings of its kinc ever held here. Doors were opened to the pub lie at 7 p. m. with entertainmen in the form of dancing and re freshments being offered unti midnight. Music was furnishec by a popular 9-piece orehestr; from Washington. Featured event of the eveninf was the drawing of a lucky tick et, the holder of which was giver the opportunity to purchase fo: immediate delivery a 1947 Supe; DeLuxe Ford tudor sedan, wit! How'ard Duzan. of Plymouth holding the lucky ticket. Hug! Modlin. also of Plymouth hac been given the ticket, one of the opproximately 700 which ,wer< handed out that night, but hac sold it to Mr. Duzan. The draw ing was held at 9:30. Guests w'ere invited by Host J R. Manning to inspect every paw of the garage and all the moderr machinery recently installed making the establishment one cr the most complete and up-to-date garages in Eastern Carolina. Mr Manning also expressed his ap preciation to the public for the cooperation shown which helpec make the celebration a success. Among the guests attending the function were Assistant Distric Manager H. E. Shelley and Mrs Shelley, Parts Supervisor Steve Sallinger, and Road Service Sup ervisor F. H. Moore, all of Nor folk, Va.: “Honey” Walker em ployee of Universal Credit In vestment Trust, also of Norfolk and Ford dealers from many sur rounding towns. ■-> Report Given on VFW Blood Bank Dr. Ernest Furgurson addressee the local post of Veterans of For eign Wars at their meeting Iasi Wednesday night on the possi bilities of setting up a blood bank for the Plymouth area. Dr. Fur gurson cited the advantages ol such an institution, but pointed out that VFW members, who would act as donors, would have to be classified according to blood type, while veterans who had served in the Pacific area and who had contracted malaria would necessarily have to be ex cluded from the donor list since malarial blood cannot be trans mitted. VFW members voted to pur chase national and post colors at a cost of $200. It was also de cided to order caps and armbands for the members. Post Com mander Bill Davenport presided ever the meeting. Typhoid Clinics Will Begin on June 23rd Officials of the Washington ryrrell District Health Depart- < nent have announced that the 1 iepartment’s 1947 typhoid vacci lation clinics will begin in this ] area on Monday, June 23, and « vill continue through July 16. , Department officials have stat- l sd that persons who received : three doses against typhoid fever i last year or the year before are : advised to take another single dose this year in order to avoid < the inconvience of taking another i three doses. They also requested all persons desiring to take ad vantage of the clinic to appear at < the designated places on time. Smallpox, whooping cough, and liphtheria vaccinations will also >e given at that time, they point 'd out. The typhoid vaccinations will >e held at the pulp mill first aid tation each day at 9 until 11 a. n. and 3 to 4:30 p. m. from June 13 through July 16. Vaccinations or Plymouth citizens will be giv m at the health department of ices there each Thursday during he period from 2 to 4 p. m. and >n Saturdays from 9 a. m. to 12 loon. Complete schedule for Plym >uth and the county will be found m an inside page of this week’s ssue of the Roanoke Beacon. County Triple-A Completes Plans For Measurement -1 Two More Tobacco Acre age Reporters Named; Will Make Only One Call to Each Farmer -♦ Two more tobacco reporters for Washington County were appoint ed by Triple-A County Commit teemen at their meeting in Plym outh last Friday, the new men named being T. R. Spruill of Roper and W. D. Phelps of Cres well, making a total of five to bacco acreage reporters for this area. Acreage measurements will be gin on Monday. June 16 and. ac cording to present plans, will be concluded by July 16. It was re vealed at the Friday meeting that $450 had been allowed Washing ton County by the State AAA of fice for the reporting work and that the pay rate would be $6 per day. Mr. Spruill was assigned work in the Roper area and Mr. Phelps will work in the Creswell Cherry-Mount Pleasant district. Other reporters are R. C. Jack son, Long Acre: H. G. Simpson. Plymouth: W. C. Spruill. Pleas ant Grove. The county committeemen re quested each farmer to cooperate with the reporters as no second calls can be made. They further advised operators to plow under excess acreage at the time the reporter makes his call. Failure 1 to comply, they said, would re sult in a 19-cent-per-pound pen | alty for the excess amount of to bacco. -♦ Funeral Held for Ashby Tarkenion Last Rites were conducted from the Tarkenton home in Creswell last Thursday at 3 p. m. for 'Ashby Clinton Tarkenton, 70, of Creswell, who died there on attSft&NBvr t B. Gaither, Rector of the Cres well Episcopal Church, officiated at the funeral services. Inter ment was made in the family cemetery. Mr. Tarkenton. a well-known farmer in the Creswell section, was a native of Washington Coun ty, where he had lived all his life, and was a member of the Creswell Episcopal Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ida White Tarkenton, of Cres well; four sons, Earl Tarkenton, of Elizabeth City, Robert Tarken ton of Portsmouth. Va.; and two daughters, Mrs. Jessie Noonev and Mrs. Stewart Costin, both of Creswell. Pallbearers were Wilton Spear, j Lewis Spear, William Spear, Thomas Nooney, Marshall White, i and Leone White. I Price Support I Cards Issued Twenty-two certificates of eligibility for commercial Irish potato price support, under the AAA program, were issued in Washington County by the I county Triple-A committee at its meeting here last Friday, Miss Miriam Ausbon, secretary for the organization, has stat ed. Marketing cards for the 22 farmers applying for price sup port were also made out and have been mailed out to the growers, the secretary added. Plans for tobacco acreages were also discussed by the group on Friday. Other business was of a routine nature. Council Asked To Set Up Commission for Planning Recreation Program Here Contract Let for Wiring School Buildings Here Contracts have been let to R. J. Boyce of Edenton for the com plete electrical wiring of the Plymouth High School at cost of $5,698, W. F. Veasey, superinten dent of schools, has stated. Mr. Boyce will supply all materials except fixtures. The contract, Mr. Veasey said includes the wir ing of both the old and new parts of the building. The superintendent pointed out that the school has some ma terials now on hand, valued at $2498.21, the cost of which will be deducted from the estimate, leaving a total outlay of $3,199.79 for the work done. Two other bids were received for the job, one from an electrical firm in Washington and another from Elizabeth City. Work on the wir ing job will begin shortly. Creswell Gym Fund Now at $5,000 Mark ■4 Musical Comedy Nets Memorial Building Pro ject Over $400; Over seas Donation Received -♦ Over $400 was realized from the presentation of a musical comedy in Creswell last week for the benefit of the Creswell Memorial Gymnasium, swelling the fund to approximately $5,000. according to reports from steering commit tee officials. The musical drama. “Way Down South in Dixie.” was writ ten by Mrs. A. H. Tucker of Cres well and starred Jerry Flood, noted actor with the Little Thea ter group in Raleigh. Gymnasium fund leaders state that a large portion of the $5,000 amount is made up of donations from citizens of the Creswell community where, they said, ade quate athletic facilities for high School students and other young ,.ave long been needed. The Creswell Woman's Club, who is directing the fund drive in co-operation with the Cres well Parent-Teacrers Association, also pointed out that contribu tions have been made to the cause from Creswell citizens who are now living in distant parts of the world, the most recent one being from Lieut. J. C. Gatlin, jr., who is stationed with the American army of occupation in Bad Kissinger, Germany. In a letter accompanying his donation Lieutenant Gatlin stated that while he was in the Cres well High School, one of the prime objects of the student body was to secure a gymnasium for the school. He pointed out the value of athletics in the education of the average student and stated that the construction of a gymna sium in Creswell would go far toward improving the quality of school athletics and sportsman ship. Lieutenant Gatlin is the son of Mrs. Alice Gatlin, of Creswell. Last Rites Held For H. E. Clifton -♦ Funeral services were held from the Piney Grove Baptist Church last Sunday at 3 p. m. for Hubert E. Clifton, 55, of Roper, oute one, the Pea Ridge section, who died of a heart attack on rhursday of last week at 8 p. m., following a brief illness. Mr. Clifton was a patient in a Rich nond hospital at time of his death, rhe Rev. Herman Wooten of jarner officiated at the last rites. 3urial was made in the Piney Urove Cemetery. Mr. Clifton, who was a native )f Washington County and a orominent farmer in the Pea Ridge section, was unmarried. He was a member of the Piney Grove Church. Survivors include one sister, Mrs. Lela E. Ayers, of Roper, -oute one; and one brother, Carl Clifton of Hampton, Va. Mr. Clif ton was a veteran of World War I. -4 Group Will Represent Parish at Conference -♦ Attending the Episcopal Lay men's Conference being held at Camp Leach on the Pamlico River this week-end will be the Rev. Edward M. Spruill, Rector of Grace Church and pi iest-in charge of St. Luke’s Church in Roper; R. A. Duvall, P. B. Bate man, Lloyd Gilbert and C. E. Ayers. They will represent the Plymouth-Roper Parish. I Rationing oi | I Sugar Is OH j Rationing of sugar for house holds, hotels, restaurants, boarding houses became effec tive Wednesday of this week at midnight, according to govern j ment order from Washington, D. C. Price control on sugar does remain however and will continue until October 31, un less Congress rules otherwise. The announcement came from the Secretary of Agriculture whose action ended all ration ing of articles for ultimate con I sumers for the first time since April 1942. Sugar was the first food to be rationed in the Unit ed States, and the last to be re- j moved from that measure. Red Hill Sewers Are Finished on TuesdayMorning Delay Caused by Difficul ty in Digging Trench; Will Begin on Still acres Wednesday -* Coinciding with the break down of the Washington Street sewer operations in laying the sewer pipes in the Red Hill sec tion of Plymouth were completed eraly this week, the last of the re maining 378 feet of pipe being put in place on Tuesday morn ing. Scheduled to be finished sever al days earlier, workers were delayed in the city-improvement project by the necessity of bring ing in a new digging machine since the one used at first prov ed inadequate for excavating a trench through the hill in that portion of town. Crewmen began laying sewers in a part of Stillacres on Wed nesday afternoon, begining about 700 feet from the river and work ing inland to Highway 64. After this section of the line is laid, the remaining 700 feet will be in stalled. Reason for the delay, it was explained, is that the 10-inch terracotta pipe needed to provide the river outlet has not arrived here as yet although it is expected shortly. Town officials expect the last lap of the current improvements program to be completed by Fri day of next week. -- Another Teacher Resigns Position -4 Mrs. Ina K. Summervall, in structor in English in the Plym outh High School, has resigned her position on the local school faculty, creating the sixth va cancy in that body for next year, W. F. Veascy, county school sup erintendent, has announced. So far, the school official stat ed, only three applications for teaching positions have been re ceived by the county’s school sys tem. Other teachers resigning from the Plymouth faculty are the in structors in mathematics, science, and commercial course, in the iugh school and teachers in the eighth and sixth grades in gram mar school. Leaders in Civic. Reli gious Organizations Re quest Special Session of Town Council Following suggestions made bv Miss Ronnie Sheffield, assistant State director of the North Caro lina Recreation Commission, rep resentatives of civic, education, and religious organizations in Plymouth met in the Legion Hall here Monday night and requested that the town council call a special session for the appoint ment of a recreation commission for Plymouth. Provision is made under State law for the setting up of a 9-man commission, four members of which are to be drawn from the towm council, the county board of education, the health department, and the welfare department, and the other five at large. Civic leaders, after discussion of the matter decided that an 11-man commission would be more ef fective and have made a request that that number be apointed by fhe council. No definite date was set for the special meeting, al though Mayor Archie J Riddle, who was present, promised that the session would be called Thurs day night of this week. If the commission is appointed, it would have legal power to maintain and supervise all public playgrounds, athletic fields, and recreation centers in the commu nity and would be empowered to accept gifts, grants and do nations from private individuals for public use. Of the nine mem bers required in the State law, two would serve a one-vear term, two a two-year term, two a three vear term, two a four-year term, and one a five-year term. The commission would also be re quired to make regular reoorts to the town council on recreational activities in the community. No salaries would be settled on the commission. Its appointment would merely give it legal au thority to act. Those attending the Monday night meeting were Mrs. Sabrie Reid, Woman’s Club: Mrs. W. V. Hays, Girl Scouts; Mrs. Bill Waters. Legion Auxiliary: Mrs. K. S. Trowbridge: the Rev. Ed ward M. Spruill and the Rev. T. R. Jenkins, churches: W. F. Vea soy and J. S. Fleming, education groups; John Williams, labor groups; H. G. Harris. Buy Scouts; Bob Bowen, Nyal Womble, Har old Whitley, Durant Keel, J. J. Segerman, and E. M. Leavitt, Lions Club. -4 Street Is Closed After Line Break -♦ One block of Plymouth's busi ness section on Washington Street was closed to through traffic fol lowing a cave-in of about six square feet of concrete in front of the Plymouth Theatre around noon last Sunday. Town officials have stated that a break in a sewer line near the base of a man-hole at that point had apparently softened the earth under the concrete which was broken by some heavy vehicle passing over the weakened area. The sewer is located .about 14 feet below the street level. Crewmen have been at work excavating’ and repairing the break since Sunday and hope to get the job finished the early part of next week if no complications develop. A. L. Alexander to Move Office This Week-End -♦ A. L. Alexander, Plymouth in surance agent, will move his of fices from the Harney Building this week-end to his new’ location in the office formerly occupied by Attorney Sidney A. Ward on Washington Street. Mr. Alex ander says that he hopes to be open for business at his new lo cation on Monday. His offices have been in the Harney Build ing since 1940. — ♦ Fifteen Uniforms Given To Town Baseball Team Fifteen uniforms have been do nated to the Plymouth Town Baseball team by local business men, team officials announced. Leading the list, they stated, was Leder Brothers department store who gave a total of nine uniforms to the organization.