:::::::::::::: < T'own If opics | Residents of Washington Coun W ty are pointing with pride to the fact that for the second succes sive year the quota alloted the county in the March of Dimes drive, conducted through the na tion each January, has been over subscribed to the point of almost twice the amount asked. In 1947, $813 was asked, $$2,085.41 was given; in 1948, $1,220 was asked and $2,148.76 has been given at the last count. J. Shepherd Brinkley of Plym outh has been appointed Wash ington County chairman for the annual American Red Cross drive which begins March 1 and ends March 10, it has been announced. Quota for Washington County in the 1948 campaign has not yet been determined and will be an nounced at a later date. Mayor of Plymouth A. J. Rid dle was unable to attend a meeting of the town council, held Monday night, for the first time since he assumed office in January of 1946 at which time he was called to fill the va cancy left by the resignation $ of Mayor E. F. Still. Mayor Pro Tern J. Shepherd Brinkley presided over the council meet ing in Mr. Riddle’s place. The mayor, whi was ill, has now recovered and is back at busi ness again. Matt White Norman, student at Emory College in Oxford. Ga., and son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Norman of Plymouth, has been placed on the school’s merit list for excellence of academic work done by his during the fall quarter, according to Registrar R. A. Thorne. Mr. Norman was one of 54 students at the school who were awarded recognition by the school during the fall period. Approximately $10,000 in cur rent Town of Plymouth taxes were collected by Police Chief P. W. Brown during the month of ^January, Mr. Brown has report ed. The chief said that the col lection for the month just past is the all-time high for any 30 day period since he took over the job some 25 years ago. Roy F. Lowry, superinten dent of the Washi*’' ton Countv Schools, has been appointed by State Superintendent Clyde A. Erwin to the membership of a committee to re-organize the school lunchroom system of records and reports, it has been announced. First meeting of the committee will be conduct ed in Raleigh on February 17 at 10:3d a. m. Colonel H. J. Hatcher, director of the North Carolina Highway Patrol and the State Safety Di vision, will be the featured speak er at tonight's meeting of the Plymouth Lions Club, it has been announced. Guests of the club at the meeting tonight will in clude all law enforcement of ficials in Washington County. L. J. Darby is program chairman for the club this month. In recognition of his two and |jne-half years service to the Plymouth Rotary Club, Former President J. Shepherd Brinkley was presented with a past-presi dent’s pin by the club members at the organization’s meeting this week. President Carl L. Bailey made the presentation. Bible Convention Slated by Church -• A convention of all Bible class es of the Christian churches lr Washington County will be helc in the Plymouth Christian Churcr Sunday, beginning at 2:30 p. m. H. H. Allen, lay officer in the local church, has announced. The convention, which is th< first in a series of such gather ings, will be held under the di rection of J. C. Gardner, instruc tor of the local adult Bible class Representatives of the six Chris tian churches in Washingtor County will attend the meeting Officials in all the churches wil take part in the program. -4 •Negro Woman Is Accident Victim -4 Mary Pettiford, 60-year-olc colored resident of Plymouth suffered a fractured back when i Carolina Trailways bus on whict she was a passenger skidded of: the highway and turned over ii a ditch about five miles fron . Tarboro Friday afternoon. Six other passengers wen slightly injured and another 1! badly shaken up by the accident The Plymouth woman was mos seriously hurt. All were take: to a Tarboro hospital for treat ment. The bus was en routi from Raleigh to Williamston a the time the accident occurred. The Roanoke Beacon ****** and Washington County News ****** A home newspaper dedicated to the service of Washinjjton jjj County and its 13,600 people. ;jj Plymouth, Washington County, North Carolina, Thursday, February 5, 1948 ESTABLISHED 1889 VOLUME LIX—NUMBER 6 Heavy Snowfall Climaxes Week End of Bad Weather One of the heaviest snowfalls occurring in tVashington County since a 6-inch fall fall in Dec. 1943 came Sunday, local residents stat ing that the first flakes began to come down around 6 a. m. with an approximate 4-inch precipi tation taking place within the next four hours. The snow was preceeded on Saturday by sleet and freezing rains which rendered both side walks and streets hazardous. The snowfall on Sunday dealt the final blow to the roads, insofar as the schools were concerned, and classes throughout the coun ty were ordered suspended until Wednesday. By noon Sunday, the mgnways in the county and the principal streets in Plymouth had been scraped and were in fairly good condition although most residents had trouble getting their cars out of garages. Coming in conjunction with a serious shortage of all kinds of fuel, the snow hit hard at a large number of farm’ ’s and business houses in Plyrn and the coun ty in general. .idren, though, were delightet th the event and spent the da. making snow men and having snowball fights while their elde hiving fuel or not, enjoyed a -ity fill of snow cream. Let Contract :ror Part Road Project Groundhog SeesI Shadow Monday j AH Washington County resi dents who put faith in the an nual weather prediction made by the Groundhog each Febru ary 2, have announced that the next 40 days will be filled with bitter cold, for the Groundhog, who emerged from his burrow at noon on Monday, found the sun shining and most certainly saw his shadow. Legend has it that if the ro dent finds the sky cloudy so that no shadows are cast, spring is most certainly on its way, but if the sun is out, winter will reign for an additional 40 days. Skinn Leadin In Listing List Taker Reports 90-95 Per Cent Taxpayers Appeared; Scuppernong in Second Place According to County Tax Su pervisor Hubert L. Davenport, Skinnersville Township, with Walter W. White list taker, is leading the county in the per centage of taxpayers who have appeared before Mr. White to list taxes in the current period. The township, he said, has re corded a 90 to 95 per cent list ing as of Wednesday of this week. Scuppernong Township, Paul B. Belanga list taker, is running Skinnersville a close second, Davenport said, Mr. Belanga re cording an estimated 80 to 85 per cent of taxpayers, while Plym outh Township, Mrs. Hermine Ramsey list taker, is third with a recorded 75 per cent listing. Lees Mill Township occupies the bottom position in the coun ty with only about 65 per cent of taxpayers appearing before List Taker R. W. Lewis who is also covering the Wenona sec tion. In the lower end of the coun ty, Supervisor Davenport report ed, the majority of delinquents are colored people and young men and women who have just become old enough to be subject to poll tax. In the upper end of the county, he said, some of the most glaring examples of failing to appear on time for the list ings have been set by some of the section’s most prominent resi dents. Poll tax delinquency, how ever, the supervisor said, is gen erally outstanding throughout the county. Farmers are being quite cooperative about reporting for the farm census which is beine taken this year for the last time before 1953. Some delinquency in making out tax lists has been due tc bad weather so the county com missioners allowed an extensior of the listing period, until Feb ruary 14, to make up for the loss. State Highway Commis sion Grants Portion of Job to Durham Firm; No Bid on Rest The State Highway Commis sion awarded the contract for grading US Highway 64 from the Martin County line to the Roper city limits to the Nello L. Teer Company of Durham at a meeting of the commission in Raleigh on Thursday at which contracts were let in the total amount of $1, 909,521.28 for highway propects in North Carolina for 1948. The Washington County project bid was $109,417. The bid made by the Durham contractors was on the roadway alone. No bids were received on structures in the project. According to plans made by the highway commission, the road from the county line will be wid ened from six to 10 feet from a ioiat near the county .Jine,, the Plans afto call for the re-routing of the road which would cut di agonally across the dairy farm, run parallel to the Atlantic Coast line railroad tracks for some dis tance turn south and rejoin the present highway at a point near Juniper Lodge. Bids for Payment Sent by Triple-A -♦- \ The second 100-lot of applica tions for payment for practices completed in Washington Coun ty by farmers under the 1947 Triple-A program have been forwarded to Raleigh for approval by the State AAA committee, Miss Miriam Ausbon, county Triple-A secretary, has reported. The second application lot, amounting to an estimated $2, 500, are for payment for conser vation materials only, the sec retary said, pointing out that the first applications were for mini mum assistance checks. The first lot was approved by the State last week, Miss Ausbon said, add ing that the third batch of ap plications will be sent to the State committee as soon as pos sible. Icy Road Causes Wreck Saturday All persons involved escaped injury although some damage | was done to the automobile when a 1941 Chevrolet C^upe, driven by Jasper Brey Hardison, Roper white man, skidded off the road and turned over a few hundred yards east of the Juniper Lodge railroad crossing on Highway 64 Saturday around 1 a. m. State Highway Patrolman John S. Sanderson, who investigated the accident stated that the cause of the spill was due to ice on the highway at that particular point. He added that the accident was the only one reported to the Washington County division oi the highway patrol during the ice and snow storm which lashed the eastern part of the State last week-end. Councilmen Hold Regular Meeting Here on Monday -4 Discuss Alleged Misuse of Police Car; Defer Planned Buildings Sale Until 1949 -♦ The Plymouth town council, meeting in regular session at the Municipal Building Monday night, held much heated discussion con cerning the use, or some state ments have phrased it. the misuse of the town’s police car. One councilman reported that he had had numerous complaints from residents of the town that the car, while on night duty, had been seen at points beyond the city limits. He added that the average milage shown on the car, according to checks made, was 57 miles per night for eacli night during January. In order to clarify the situa tion, Police Chief P. W. Brown stated that since the city limits were extended last June, the car must travel much farther in its nightly check-up rounds which extend now from Little Richwood Village to Stillacres. Six rounds per night are made, he said. The chief added, however, that the car should not be taken outside the city limits at any time, but that he knew of no instance in which this had occurred. Considering the problem ot re advertising the Municipal Build ing and fire house for sale at public auction, the council voted to let things remain as they are until the State General Assembly meets in 1949 and have the prop erty disposed of by authority of a special legislative act. Luther Gurkin appeared be fore the board and requested that he be allowed to continue in oc cupancy of a warehouse owned by the town and located behind (See COUNCIL, Page Ten) empty Resident red by Fall Mrs. David Cutler, Washing ton County resident, sustained two broken wrists incurred in a fall at her home on Highway 32 last Wednesday, it has been re ported. Dr. T. L. Bray, of Plym outh, who treated the injuries, stated that a simultaneous frac turing of both wrists in the same accident is one of the most unusual accidents he has ever seen. He added that in his 32 years of practicing medicine, he has seen such a case but three times. Mrs. Cutler was standing in a chair painting when she fell and was hurt. Dr. Bray said that her condition this week is very satis factory. Potato Acreages Sent Out by AAA This Week -♦ Allotments for potato acreages in Washington County have now been mailed out to producers, Miss Miriam Ausbon, county AAA I secretary, has announced. A total I of 172.4 acres were distributed, !she said, adding that all farm operators who want new potato grower allotments should make application at the local Triple-A office before February 15. j Farm Bureau I Heels Friday A meeting of the Washing ton County Farm Bureau will be conducted in the Agricul ture Building in Plymouth on Friday at 7:30 p. m., according to announcements from W. T. Freeman of Plymouth, presi dent of the county farm organi zation. Featured event of the even ing’s program, he said, will be the showing of a motion pic ture, “First in the Hearts of the ; Farmers,” which will depict I soil conservation practices from i the time of George Washing ton to the present. All mem | bers of the Farm Bureau have I been requested to be present. County Schools Resume Classes Classes in the Washington County Schools were resumed at the regular hours on Wednes day morning following a two day closure necessitated by heavy snows which blanketed this section on Sunday. School officials in announc ing the suspension of classes in the county on Monday point ed out that while the paved highways in this section had been scraped and were fairly safe, dirt roads were covered with four to six inches of snow and slush making travel, par ticularly of loaded school buses, extremely hazardous. Light Agenda Is Presented County Board on Monday Groundwork Laid to Se cure Rights of Way for Completion of County Road Project -♦ The Washington County Board of Commissioners, meeting in regular session in the courthousa on Monday, was presented with a light, though varied, agenda. Notice was given the tax-paying residents of the county that the period for listing taxes will be extended from February 8, next Sunday, through February 14, the following Saturday, due to ad iverse weather conditions in Janu ary which kept many taxpayers away from the listing places. The clerk of theboard was in structed to notify Mrs. J. H. Gay lord, jr., of Roper, that she is to secure from landowners who have property bordering on the un finished Horton Town Road to the effect that they will sign right-of way agreements with the State Highway Department sc that the road project can be completed The work being done on the road was halted some time ago because the State lacked rights of way from several property owners in that section and could not legal ly proceed with the work on the road. The clerk was also instruct ed to forward a copy of his letter to Mrs. Gaylord to J. J. Gilbert, district highway engineer. Arrangements were made tc have a special meeting of the county board relative to the pro posed $50,000 hospital bond issue as soon as certain papers from New York bonding attorneys are received by the board. reports wore nearcl irom Mrs. Frances M. Darden, county home demonstration agent, and from E. J. Spruill, county auditor and tax collector. Jim Hamilton was employed as custodian of the county courthouse and the Agri culture Building for the month of February. Frank L. Brink ley. chairman of the county borad, presiding at the Monday meet ing. None Injured in Thursday Wreck -♦ All persons involved escaped injury although considerable damage was done to the 1946 Oldsmobile sedan driven by Plymouth Attorney Carl L. Bail jey when it collided with a 1941 Ford sedan, driven by John Cole train. of Jamesville, and a Mar tin County school bus, several miles west of Jamesville last Thursday around 4 p. m. Coletrain, followed by Bailey, was meeting the school bus when the bus driver dropped the ve hicle's “stop” sign. Coletrain im mediately applied his brakes and Bailey, unable to stop his car at such abrupt notice, struck the rear of Coletrain’s car and the front of the bus. Both fenders and the radiator grill of the Bailey car were demolished. NY damage was sustained by eithe: of the other two vehicles. Cole train admitted being at fault anc damage payments will be arrang ed out of court. Martin Countj Highway Patrolman Whit Saun ders investigated the accident. Extend Tax Listing Period To Include All Next Week Only One Car Halted for Not Having New Licenses So far only one - automobile driver attempting to travel the highways in this section without a 1948 license plate has been ap prehended, according to repoi ts from Highway Patrolman John Sanderson, who made the arrest on Monday afternoon. Sanderson reported that Con nie Ray Askew, white resident of Pinetown, was arrested by him on Highway 32 for not display ing the new license plates. Dead line for driving with a 1947 li cense, Sanderson pointed out, was last Saturday, January 31. From now on, he stated, all driv ers must display the new plates and, if Plymouth residents, city tags as well, or suffer the con sequences. Askew, the patrolman added, will be given a hearing in Wash ington County Recorder's Court shortly. As far as the rest of the county's drivers are concern ed, he said, everyone seems to have secured the 1948 plates from the stations in Williamston. Eden ton, or Washington. Near Twice Quota In Polio Campaign Contribution Now $928.76 Over Amount Asked; Final Count Expected to Reveal More By Wednesday of this week a total contribution of $2,148.76 had been collected in Washington County for the annual March of Dimes campaign, and one or tw5 sections f the county were y to be he from, according ' report from Mrs. Athalia Gard ner Tyree, county chairman for the drive. Quota assigned to the county, she said, was $1,220, with all in dications that the final count of donations made in this section will double the amount alloted Ufashington County. At present ’*,928.76 more than the requested amount has been turned in. An itemized list of contribu tions from Washington County, by sections, reads as follows: Plymouth, $1,413.31, with $290.79 given by business firms; $95 by unions; $100 by clubs and church es; $200 by white high school; $126.11 by white primary school; | $141.12 from collection boxes: ! $183.24 from theatre collections; and $276.55 from house-to-house solicitations; Roper, $149.44, with $58.31 given by the white schools; $46.66 from J. J. Clemmons School; $13.50 from Macedonia School; $24.64 from collection boxes; $6.33 from theatre collec tions; Creswell, $442.32, with $23.28 given by the churches; $5 by the Woman’s Club; $44 from theatre (See POLIO, Page Ten) Local VFW to Conduct Meeting Here Tonight ♦ — The Plymouth post of the Ve terans of Foreign Wars will con duct a regularly scheduled meet ing in the courtroom of the coun |ty courthouse tonight at 8 o’clock. ; according to an announcement i from Post Commander W. S. Dav ;enport. All members of the or ' ganization have been requested to attend. Income Tax Man To Be Here Soon A deputy collector of internal revenue will be located in Plym outh at the post office from Wednesday, February 8, through Friday, February 20, to aid tax payers in making out forms for the filing of 1947 federal income tax returns, it has been announc ed. Hours to be maintained by the deputy are 9:30 a. m. to a p. m. All persons who earned $500 or more during the calendar year of 1947 are required to file a re turn, it was pointed out. The taxpayer may use his withhold ings statements given him by his employer for this purpose, or he may use form 1040 which can be secured at the post office. Re turns must be filed by March 15 with the regional collector of in ternal revenue at Greensboro. Polio Strikes Child at Roper Robert Lee Simpson, two year-old Roper Negro child, was stricken with infantile para lysis last Wednesday and has been removed to St. Agnes hos pital in Raleigh for treatment of the disease, officials in the Washington - Tyrrell District Health Department have re ported. The polio case, the health de partment stated, was the first reported to them this year. The child, they said, is the son of Cornel' as and Carrie Lee Simp son. Three other children, they added, live in the same house, but have so far not been in fected with the disease. Severe Shortage Of Fuel Is Still Evident in Town -< Local Dealers Receive New Monthly Allot ments but Supply Is Still Insufficient Although additional supplies of oil have been allocated to Plym outh from nearby towns aiding greatly in giving some measure of relief and local oil companies have begun receiving their Feb ruary fuel quotas, the oil short age is still severe in Plymouth. One local oil dealer has re ceived his first February ship ment of kerosene and fuel oil for the period, totalling 4,500 gallons of each in the initial delivery. It has been pointed out, however, that this is not sufficient to meet demands made by all oil consum ers in this area. Shortages are also very much evident in coal and wood fuels, although they are perhaps not quite so severe as in the oil di vision. Plymouth retailers of fuels of all types have continued their request that local residents maintain as close watch over fuel supplies as possible and to utilize the supplies as economi cally as possible since there is still no immediate prospect of the situation easing. -♦ Oil Stove Causes Fire At Outten’s Store Here ■-4 Flames originating from a flooded carburator in an oil stove in the John Outten store on Washington Street ignited the store building around 1:15 p. m. Friday, but Plymouth firemen, summoned to the scene, quickly put the blaze out. Fire Chief Miller Warren reported that no estimate as to the extent of damage could be made at present, but that if a great deal had oc curred, the major portion would I be due to smoke rather than the I fire itself. County Board Grants Listers Extra Time Be cause of Bad Weather in Month of January -♦ The period for the listing of tax es in Washington County has been extended to Saturday. February 14. according to action taken by the county board of commission ers, meeting in the county court house on Monday. The commissioners, reviewing reports on the scantiness of the number of taxpayers appearing before the list takes during the regular period of January 1 through January 31, decided that adverse weather conditions were responsible in keeping a large part of persons away from the list takers’ post, hence the ex tension of the listing period. The county board in notifying the public of tjMjdjxtra time al lowed for the IMfgs, pointed out that failure <»"»*port to the list takers on, orJfatffcre Febru ary 14 will subjew':S|y person, firm, or corporatia|| all pen alties according to Tjjb* State tax laws and that such''deltaquerts will also be liable toKBM^culion in the courts. ,'t «L List takers tor townships in are as follows: ship, Mrs. Hermine Mill Township, R. Skinnersville Township, White; Scuppernong Paul E. enport The list the same regular listing period. -» John Darden Said To Be Improving -*—- >... The Hon. John W. Darden, Washington County representa tive to the State General Assem bly, who suffered a stroke of paralysis last Friday morning is reported by relatives to be rest ing comfortably at present al though his condition is still re garded as serious. Some improvement has been noted since Friday, they stated, and Mr. Darden has regained powers of both sight and speech to some extent. Mr. Darden has been in ill health for some time and had suffered a series of strokes last year. In the fall, he entered a hospital in Durham for treat ment and while there underwent several serious operations. Extra School Bus Is Requested for Clemmons School -+ Education Board Also Holds Conference on Proposed Changes in Local Heating Plant -♦ Appearing before the county board of education, meeting in regular session here on Monday, two representatives of the J. J. Clemmons School at Roper. Wil liam Johnston and Charlie Bas night. requested the members of the board to investigate all pos sible means of securing an ad ditional school bus to serve the school. The Clemmons School represen tatives pointed out that the one bus which now services the school is not able to give suffici ent service in transporting ade quately all rural students to and from classes each school day. Members of the board took no final action on the matter, but promised to investigate it as soon as possible. I he education group also con ducted a conference with heat [ ing unit contractors on recom ; mended changes for the heating I unit of the new section of the 'Plymouth High School. Recom mended changes include com pletion of all convector enclosur es and pipe coverings and the lowering of the water level of the boiler. The recommendation was made by the contractors be , cause of the loss of heat in the steam mains not yet covered and because too much water is being carried into the boiler by the '■ feed pipes. The board agreed to i have the changes made and the contractors agreed to do the work this week-end. Leave of absence was granted “ for the remainder of the year to . Margaret H. Berry, colored teach - er at the Brooks School, for rea sons of health. Over 1,500 Pounds Clothing Collected in Drive A total of 1,534 pounds of new i and used clothing were collected by canvassers in Plymouth for ; the local overseas clothing re ! lief drive and have now been . sent to New Windsor, Md., for ■ shipment to European victims of : the recent, war, Mrs. Woodrow R. Collins, chairman of the cam paign, has announced. The relief drive, which was sponsored by the Wesleyan Guild of the Plym outh Methodist Church, was more than satisfactory, Mrs. Collins said, adding that all contributions made by local stores and private citizens were of very good quali ty. Several merchants, local civic organizations and the Atlas Ply wood Corporation donated a total sum of $40 to pay shipping costs of sending the packages to Mary land, the chairman pointed out. The donations were packed on Sunday and sent to the European distribution center on the fol lowing day, she said. A total of 65 cartons of cloth ing, shoes, toys, soaps, and sew ing materials were contributed by Plymouth residents, Mrs. Col lins reported. Large quantities of new articles of clothing, she said, were given by the merchants of the town and one hardware store donated three pitchforks. The chairman added that a great number of games and toys were also included in the donation made by the townspeople. Collection centers were main tained at the Municipal Buildini and at Mrs. Collins’ home ii Coitntry Club Village. Twenty four townswomen served as can vassers for the drive. The cam paign was conducted for on week, beginning on Monday January' 26. and ending on Sat urday, January 31.