T'OWIl opics Alice Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Harris, of Roper, made the dean’s list for the fall quarter just ended at East Caro lina College, Greenville, her mo ther has been informed. Miss Har ris, a graduate of Roper High School, is a sophomore at the Greenville school. “Miss Grey” is dead. And a vacant spot which cannot be filled now exists in the C. E. Ayers household. Everyone who has visited the Ayers’ during the past 14 years knew “Miss Grey.” When Mr. and Mrs. Ayers and family moved to the house they now oc cupy in Country Club Village the former occupants, a Mr. and Mrs. Grey who now live in another state, willed to the Ayers family a cat and asked that it be given the best of treatment. It was. And now that “Miss. Grey” is no more, there is genuine sorrow in the Ayers household. J. C. and Maurice Smith ran into some good goose hunting in the Engelhard section near Lake Mattamuskeet early Monday morning. Maurice said they bagged their limit, of Canadian geese before eight o’clock. W. Willis Bowen, Washington County FHA supervisor, is in Washington today where he is at tending a meeting of supervisors from Hertford, Swan Quarter, Williamston, Trenton, New Bern, Washington and Plymouth. The meeting, being held in the Beau fort County FHA office, is in charge of Marion C. Holland, of Gelds boro, state FHA field repre sentative. James Hardison, who has been quite ill for some time and who was just recently released from the hospital here, stated this week that he is now able to sit up in • doors and is getting along nicely. It will be sometime before he will be able to be out and still longer before he regains his strength sufficiently to allow him to again take up the active management of his business here. Last Friday afternoon it was interesting to watch the various reactions of the small fry as they beheld St. Nick. One tiny miss, apparently frightened by Santa’s whiskers, wouldn’t get within six feet of him despite parental urg ing and the fact that she held a letter addressed to him. She fin ally tossed the epistle down at his feet and took refuge in her mo ther’s arms. -* Large Majority County Farmers Favor Controls - ■ 4 Controls Voted On Cotton And Peanut Crops by 8 To 1 and 25 to 1, Respect ively, Tuesday Washington County farmers voted overwhelmingly Tuesday along with the rest of the country for production and marketing controls to remain on peanuts for the next three years and to be invoked on the cotton crop next year. With a two-thirds majority vote necessary to carry the referendum on the two cash crops, the total returns from 201 of the 1,056 cot ton growing counties showed a solid 103,861 for controls as against 3,875 voting “no.” In the peanut referendum re turns from 41 of 563 couuties showed 6,317 for controls to 101 against. Farmers in some 20 states took part in separate cotton and pea nut referendums. The vote for control meant favoring limited production with a specific acreage allotment in dividually, by counties, states and country as a whole in return for high support prices, government supported at 90 per cent of parity. Farmers have never rejected controls in a referendum vote. The 90 per cent parity figure would amount to about 31 cents a pound for cotton and $237.60 a ton for peanuts, it was said. Stronger support was shown in this county for the continued con trols on the peanut crop than on imposition of controls on cotton. The total county vote for pea nut controls was 265, 255 for and only 10 against. For cotton it was 134 for and 17 against. There were three pollings places, in Plymouth at the Agri culture Building, in Roper at Knowles Grocery and in Creswell at Mike Davenport's garage. The vote, broken down to poll ing places, was given by the county ASC office as follows: Plymouth iCotton, 34 for, none against; Peanuts, 103 for, none against. Creswell: Cotton, 71 for, 14 against; Peanuts, 69 for, 8 against. Roper: Cotton, 29 for, three against; Peanuts. 83 for, 2 against. Very few votes were challeng ed anywhere in the county. The Roanoke Beacon ****** and Washington County News ****** A home newspaper dedicated to the service of Washington County and its 13,000 people. fes::=!=:= VOLUME LXIV—NUMBER 51 Plymouth, Washington County, North Carolina, Thursday, December 17, 1953 ESTABLISHED 1889 HAPPY IN THE FACE OF SERIOUS HANDICAPS | That one can be happy with little in the way of material possessions is amply proved in the case of Johnny Harris, 21, and his grandmother, 78-year-old Mrs. Georgie Annie Belch, pictured here in their humble rented home on the Mackeys Road near Albemarle Beach. The two were visited recently by a Beacon re porter and photographer who found the young man—deformed from birth—bright and cheerful and his grandmother who reared him from infancy content in the knowledge that she has done a good job in bringing him up and teaching him to read, write and figure. He plays the guitar and harmonica, sings and composes ballads as a hobby. Mrs. Belch has been ailing lately and needs money with which to pay bills.—Polaroid 1-Minute staff photo. Handicapped Youth Has Plenty of Pluck {Holiday Closing! ! For Draii Board! Registrants and other persons who might have business at the local selective service board no. 95, located in the basement of the courthouse here, are asked to please note that the office will be closed after Thursday of this week and will remain closed throughout the week of December 20. The announcement was made by Mrs. Lorraine Hunter, board clerk, who stated that the of fice would reopen on Monday, December 28, at the usual hour. No Bookmobile Schedule During Christmas Week -♦ The Washington County Book mobile will not make its regular run next week because of the Christmas holidays, Mrs. C. E. Ayers, county librarian, announc ed this week. The following week the book mobile will make the same run which was postponed in obser vance of the Christmas holidays, it was said. This schedule will be published in the next issue of The Beacon. Despile Deformity, Lack ol Formal Schooling, John ny Harris Presents Cheer ful Personality Bv JAMES I,. BOND Probably one of the most re markable persons in Washington County is a 21-year-old boy whose physical stature must be less than four feet and who looks to weigh hardly 75 pounds. He is Johnny Harris and he lives with his 78-year-old grandmother in a small, drab rented house on the Mackeys Road within sight of the turn-off leading to Albemarle Beach. The grandmother, Mrs. Georgie Annie Belch, has really been a mother to the boy all his life as well as the only schoolteacher he has ever known. Johnny's mother, who now lives in Chowan County, gave the boy to her mother to rear and the latter has had him from tiny infancy. Deformed from birth, the boy has never gone to school, but to talk to him you’d never guess it. One reason, perhaps, is a natural ly alert mind; another is the ex cellent care and training he has received over the years from his doting grandmother. She taught him to read, to write and to figure. His love of reading and See HARRIS, Page 8 Tax Supervisor, Listers To Meet With Board Here Oaths To Be Administered At Monday Night Meet ing; Uniform Listing Prices To Be Set The county tax supervisor, town tax listers and members of the board of county commission ers are scheduled to meet at the courthouse Monday night of next week, Clerk to the Board J. Rob ert Campbell has announced. Purpose of the meeting will be to administer the oath of office to the supervisor and list takers and to establish uniform prices for listing livestock and other items of property in the annual proper ty listing which begins in Jan uary, Mr. Campbell said. Hubert L. Davenport, of Skin nersville, was reappointed coun ty tax supervisor by the board of commissioner at the December 1st session. The commissioners met here Monday night of this week and appointed list takers. Named as list takers for the var ious township were: Paul B. Belanga, Scuppernong Township; W. W. White, Skin nersville Township; R. W. Lewis, Lees Mill Township; and Clar ence L. Blount, Plymouth Town ship. At the meeting this week the commissioners also decided to ad vertise the sale of certain coun ty-owned lands in the Wenona section. The land will be sold at public auction at the courthouse January 18 at 11 a. m. ,it was said. A total of 988 acres will be placed on the block. The board asked Tax foreclos ure attorneys Norman and Rod man to foreclose on two tracts in Lees Mill Township on which taxes are unpaid for several years. The meeting next Monday night is slated to begin at 7:30. Local Negro Boy To Face Charges Willie Lee Barron, 18-year-old Plymouth Negro, is in jail here awaiting trial next Tuesday in Washington County Recorder’s Court on a shoplifting charge. Barron was arrested at 7 a. m. Wednesday at the home of Willie Lee Moore, on Adams Street, by Police Chief P. W. Brown and jailed. A watchband allegedly taken from Western Auto Store here Tuesday before noon was re covered, it was said. Gene Armentrout, operator of the Western Auto store, was told by clerks shortly before noon Tuesday that a colored boy just leaving the store had taken a watchband. Armentrout hurried out and accosted the youth on the ridewalk and asked that he return the band. The Negro de nied having the band whereupon Armentrout took him by the arm and said they would go to the police station. But the boy pulled free, started to run, stumbled and fell, with Armentrout tripping over him. The boy fled, reported ly at a high rate of speed, but Armentrout had struck the con crete face first and was tempora rily stunned. He suffered a broken tooth and a badly bruised lip. GROUP AT OPENING OF NEW BANK THURSDAY OF LAST WEEK I -- '■ ■ ■■■■- ■■ 1 Despite a drizzling rain, more than 50 persons were on hand at 9 o’clock last Thursday morning, when the Plymouth unit of the Planter! National Bank & Trust Company opened for business. This photo shows a portion of the cro-vd, headed by Mayor A. J. Riddle (extreme right), who cut the ribbon in front of the doors and wa; given the honor of becoming the first depositor of the new bank. Archie W. McLean, president of the Rocky Mount institution, is back of Mayor Riddle. D. Marvin Weaver, manager of the local branch, is third from the right and just in front of him is Wiley W. Meares, executive vice president and cashier of the Planters National.—Pola roid 1-Minute staff photo. County Churches Outline Christmas Program Plans Special Services Include Sermon Topics, Appro priate Christmas Music Programs -♦ Special Christmas programs have been announced for many of the Plymouth and county churches during the holiday sea son, including special music, fitt ing sermon topics, cantatas, spec ial children’s programs, and so forth. The choir of the First Christian Church, Plymouth, presented a cantata, “King of Kings,” last Sunday evening before an ap preciative audience. Soloists were Mrs. Frances Lucas, Misses Myrtle and Betty Jean Jackson and Charles Hutchins. Mrs. Harry Newland served as organist and director. Sunday morning at the 11 o’clock worship hour at Ludford Memorial Baptist Church here the pastor, the Rev. P. B. Nickens, will use the subject, “The Manger in Your Heart.” The senior choir will render an anthem and Mrs. Darrell Cahoon, of Columbia, will be guest soloist. At the evening hour service, the annual program of Christmas music will be presented by the choir. A brief Christmas program will follow the Christian Endeavor meeting Sunday night at Saints Delight Church of Christ, accord ing to an announcement issued by the pastor, Walker Perry. Grace Episcopal Church here will hold Christmas Midnight celebration of the Holy Commun ion Thursday of next week at 11:30 p. m., the rector, the Rev. E. M. Spruill, has announced. The public is cordially invited to at ten this service. At Zion’s Chapel Church of Christ the children will have the: ■ Christmas program during the pening of Bible School Sun day. v.c is 9 *5.a. m. Ric ard Ga^^er, t'tnwtert the vi noiv.ijKgp0«j * ■ Sunday morning at 11 o'clock at Plymouth Methodist Church the cantata, “The Christmas Story,” by Matthews, will be ren-l dered by the choir, with Shepherd Brinkley at the organ. Soloists have been announced as Myrtle Gray Jackson, Betty Jean Jack son, Mrs. E. W. Furgurson and Zcb Norman, jr. A special Christmas worship service will be held at the Roper See CHURCHES, Page~5 -* Mackeys Men in Fatal Shooting -♦ Sheriff J. K. Reid and State Highway Patrolman Carl Gil christ, of Plymouth, arrested Ver non Lucas, young Mackeys color ed man, at his home Saturday night shortly after he allegedly shot another Negro to death. The shooting happened at 9 o’clock and the victim was Henry Joe Louis Wilkins, jr., 18, also of Mackeys. He reportedly was shot as he walked the highway op posite the Lucas home. Vernon Lucas is said to have fired on him from the front porch. Officers stated that Lucas, when arrested, readily admitted the shooting. The affair is thought to have been the result of a grudge of three-month’s standing. The Lucas house is near the Jack Pierce place of business. A preliminary hearing was held here Tuesday before Judge W. Ronald Gaylord and after six witnesses, including both the sheriff and Patrolman Gilchrist, had testified, Gaylord found probable cause and ordered that Lucas be held in jail without privilege of bond to await trial at the January term of Washing ton County Superior Court. The court term will open here on Monday, January 4 and is sche duled for two weeks duration. -* Local Lions Sponsoring Turkey Shoot This Week The Plymouth Lions Club is sponsoring a turkey shoot Friday and Saturday of this week, it is announced. The site is near the Atlantic Coast Line freight station and the hours will be from 2 p. m. on Friday and from 0 a. m. on Sat urday until patrons have had their fill. Those shooting will have chances on a number of live tur keys, weighing about 20 pounds each. Ammunition will be fur nished and there will be guns for use of those who do not bring their own. A nominal per-shot charge will be made. C °py for Next llcaeoit Mu§( lie In Saturday In order to give employees a longer holiday The Beacon’s Christmas issue will be printed Monday of next week. The of fice will then be closed until the following Tuesday morn ing, December 29. Since the paper is to be print ed three days early, it will he necessary for all copy to be in the office not later than Sat urday. The cooperation of all advertisers and correspondents is requested. Church notices and related items should be in the office just as early as pos sible, and no copy can be ac cepted for publication in the next issue later than Saturday. The Christmas issue, as usual, will carry the greetings of our advertisers to their patrons. For a cheery message that will mean more than just a couple of days off from work, read these greetings ads. Although members of the Beacon staff will not come back to work after the holidays until Tuesday morning, December 29, every effort will be made to get the issue of that week on time. However, there is a pos sibility that it may be a bit late. Fail To Reach Quota On Bloodmobile Visit Total 106 Pints on 13th Visit of Red Cross Unit; 30 Many - Time Donors Respond On its 13th visit to Washington County, tho bloodmobile from the Tidewater Regional Blood Center, Norfolk, Va., secured 106 pints of blood. The one-day setup was at the Veterans Building here last Friday, sponsored jointly by the American Legion and VFW posts here. There were nine rejects during the day, it was said. The quota had been established at 150 pints. Refreshments were furnished for blood donors by the auxiliary of Bosie Bateman Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars. H°!ping as nur ses were M-T W. Tarkenton. of k * ove, amt i*-.*. W. -Men. * Other volunteer workers in cluded Mesdames Lillian Shugar, W. R. Klass, jr„ Joe Arps, W. D. Walker, Perry Turner, John L. Lilly, J. S. Fleming and W. D. Collins. There were 30 persons — 29 white and one colored—who gave blood for the eighth time or more. These were listed by Mrs. Collins as follows: Eleven-time donors — Clayton Ragland, Robert Johnson, Ralph Hunter, Dick Mallory and Irving Hassell; Ten-time donors — W. T. Hop kins, H. B. Gaylord, Merritt Browning, Cleveland Cratch and Jack Pierce; Nine-time donors — E. E. Har rell, Rankin Ambrose, Thurlow Spruill, Thomas Gardner, Bill Booth. Aubrey Dixon, Bill Dav enport, Gary Campbell, Thomas Carter and W. J. Weaver; Eight-time donors—C. S. Gard ner, Charles T. Sawyer, L. J. Darby, Stuart West, Marvin Hardison, Lawrence Jones, W. E. ] Waters, Thomas Cunningham and Clarence Bond. One Nan Sent By Board, Induction One registrant from Selective Service Board No. 95 here was sent for induction Wednesday of last week, the board clerk, Mrs. Lorraine Hunter, reports. Another registrant failed to re port for the reason that he was at sea with the merchant marine, the clerk stated. There will be no regular calls on the local board during the month of January, Mrs. Hunter said, but any delinquents who arc located will '-e forwarded for induction. Christ* tat gftce Beauty I CaiwiPrtx tor Chany ’Wednesday night of next week the Lake Phelps Post No. 391 of the American Legion is sponsor ing a combination Christmas dance and beauty contest, it is announced. There are already entered 26 contestants in the beauty contest which is attracting considerable interest. There will be several door prizes given. Music for the dance will be furnished by Earl Zirkle and his orchestra of Rocky Mount. The dance will be held at the Legion building at Cherry and will begin at 9 o’clock. -1 Prayer Meeting at Roper Community Building Set The “People’s Prayer Meeting” will be held Thursday night of this week at the Roper Community Building, it is announced. Non denominational, the meeting is open to all and will begin promptly at 7:30 o’clock. A cor dial invitation is extended. | HAPPY DAY! CHRISTMAS PARADE, SANTA CLAUS \ ■ ■■ . - ■■ ■■■.. No one has to tell you that these children were happy when the picture was taken. It shows plainly enough on their faces. Santa Claus looks rather pleased with the whole thing, as well. The photo was snapped on Water Street last Friday afternoon as a flock of merry youngsters gathered around the distinguished visitor from the North Pole. The event drew to Plymouth the largest crowd seen here in many years. Well over 2,000 bags of Christmas candy were given out to the hundreds of children in the huge throng.—Polaroid 1-Minute staff photo. Stocking Fund Is Short by $300 as Parcel Time Nears Many Volunteer Workers Said Needed When Pack ing Work Begins Friday Night; 220 Cases Reported About $300 in cash is needed to meet the needs of the Empty Stocking Fund for 1953, Chairman James Boyce reported late yester day. So far, donations of toys, food and clothing is coming along well, it was said, and the drive for cash with which to augment other do nations was said to be “fair.” Meanwhile, Mrs. Ursula Spruill, head of the county welfare de partment, stated that to date there are reported 220 needy families including an approximate 550 people. Twenty-five names or more have been added since Mon day, and there is a strong possi bility that many more will be re ported before the delivery date for Christmas parcels through the annual Empty Stocking pro ject sponsored by the Plymouth Rotary Club. Last year in the most success ful campaign ever conducted here for Christmas cheer to the reedy, 250 families were reported as needy cases, Mrs. Spruill said. Two county schools, Plymouth High School and the Creswell Colored School, have turned in donations of clothing and shoes. These items are being received at the welfare office in the court house here. Mrs. Spruill said the articles received thus far have been in remarkably good condit ion. Many toys have also come in, as well as canned foods, both of the home-canned variety and “store-bought.” More is needed, however. Some things are being stored at the Agriculture Building and in the FIIA office in the courthouse, aiso. Packaging will begin Friday night, Chairman Boyce stated1, and many volunteer workers are needed for the huge task. Boyce said it would take “about $300 more than what we now have in hand to purchase the 350 cases of merchandise which will be distributed at Christmastime throughout the county to the needy families. All leaders of the project are optimistic of the success again this year of Washington County’s own “Operation Christmas.” Largest Crowd in Years Gathers at Christmas Parade Nearly 2,500 Bags of Candy Passed Out To Youngsters During Annual Visit of Santa Young and old saw Santa here last Friday afternoon, the young er ones got free gifts of Christ mas candy personally delivered by the merry gentleman in the red coat and white whiskers, and everyone enjoyed the cavortings of the majorettes and the carol playing bands. From the standpoint of num bers certainly it was the most successful Christmas parade ever staged here. Estimates of the huge throngs ranged up to 3.000 or more persons. The queue of youngsters standing about ten abreast to pass by Santa for the Candy and to deposit letters ad dressed to him reached all the way to Belk-Tyler’s. And nearly 2,500 bags of candy were given out to eager, outstretched hands during the short interval of an hour from the time the jeep bear ing Santa was sighted heading rorth up Washington Street until the large crowd dispersed, Thos. F. Hopkins acted as mas ter of ceremonies and a number of volunteers aided police officers in holding back the crowd to al low an orderly procession by the platform to see Santa. The Plymuth High School band and the Washington County Union School band, of Roper, played such well-known carols as ‘‘Noel. ’ “Hark the Herald Angels Sing,” “Jingle Bells,” etc. Santa was chauffercd and es corted into town by the Bavnor twins. A happy shout went up from the hundreds and hundreds of children present when the jeep bearing the honored guest of the town was first sighted. Many persons were heard to observe that the crowd was easily the largest seen here in many years. One wag remarked after it was all over that the street level was noticeably lower by at least half an inch.