.?"3f,.. TOW MSW ii JUL7 il ii X WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE UPB1 JNG OF HERTFORD AND PERQUIMANS COUNTY Volume V.Number 15. Hertford, Perquimans County, North Carolina, Friday, April 15, 1938. $1.25 Per Year. EEKLY fl I 1 X '.v mi.- - E 1 a T II :ili21J 111 VII Ipril Term OF Perquimans Judge C E. Thompson Makes First Official Appearance mixSTterm Ten Cases Each listed On Criminal and Civil Dockets Hon. C. E. Thompson, of Elizabeth City, will make his first official ap pearance in Hertford on Monday, when he presides at the April Term of Perquimans Superior Court. Judge Thompson, well known and very popular in Perquimans, where he has practiced in the courts over a period of many years, was appointed Judge of the First Judicial District by Governor Clyde R. Hoey, to suc ceed Hon. Walter L. Small, in January- This is a mixed term, for the trial of both criminal and civil actions, and despite the fact that it is the first term of court since November for the trial of criminal actions, only ten state cases appear on the docket, with a like number appearing on the civil calendar. Of the state cases six are appeals from Recorders Court, four being transferred from the Recorder's Court to the Superior Court by Judge James S. McNider when he was appointed to the office of Judge of the Recorder's Court because of the fact that he had represented the parties in the lower court, all involving min or offenses. The first case appearing on the criminal calendar ia that - against M. T. Gregory, convicted la Record er's Court of driving while drunk, and sentenced to Jail for a period of three months, and appealed. Addie Webb, "Negro woman, con victed of illegal possession of liquor in Recorder's Court and sentenced to six months in jail and' fined $60.00, is also appealed. The case of Alec Long, Negro, con victed of larceny and receiving, is also up on appeal. The case against Floyd Sutton, Negro, charged with assault . with a deadly weapon, was transferred. The case against C. D. Burrows, charged with forgery,. ' was transferred, as was also' that against Elmer Chalk. charged with non-support, Adelee Foster, Negro, charged with., larceny, and Lester Hurdle, - Negro, charged with assault with a deadly weapon.' Tbe ease against Dillard Simpson, convicted, in Recorder's Court of as sault with a deadly weapon and sen traced ta Jail ST days,; was appealed. , . 'The case against M. G. Owens, charged with non-support, waa re- manded front Pasquotank.' . ,' The civil actions -on the calendar Ms as follows: ?iXK-? Wednesday, AprU 2f R. E. Chappell .-. vs Jordan Nixon .-.fetal. Y;ii-:.;tU'. V J. T. Brinn vs Whita & Co Ida. Sallie J. Kirby vs ; S. P. Jessup, 4 i administrator. V: C White vs L. P. Charoell, vt Hbllowell Chevrolet Co. vs. Joseph ' 1 8. Small et al ' "J, K. Miller, Ad'm' vs. Benjamin ' Thach. n ' v T. 0. Lamb vs Hettie Lamb. '.Louise W. Howapi vsP. F. Reed . et als. :'f&Zf?i - t Hobert Hurdle vs Bert Willts et at Caveaf-to Wilr ..of .TAiiCfc &, 4 .' Minnie Li, Fettori vtf l KStV - iircnie Lane is mv -m Arla'; f i. lXrane,; prominent Pr 4 quhjhans County i. farmer, has an nounced hia candidacy for nomination Q to the office of county commissioner. ... Mr! Lane, jwho is 88 yean old. is a native of the county and la a very ' successful farmer of the Ballahack . community. . .. He is pulllc spirited "V and civic minded and is interested in the progress of the eounty. Jewish Holiday Y''z: ,7t : PesinsOnFn7 T-e" JewlrH Feist of the PassoT r I 'i ( " "-y of thia w t Nya. ThLi L i c the JewLh 1)1 riod e 1 tr?i, M FIRST TRIP 4 JUDGE C E. THOMPSON Many friends will welcome Judge C. E. Thompson when he presides over Perquimans Super ior Court next week. It is Judge Thompson's first appearance in Court since he was appointed to fulfill the unexpired term of Judge Walter SmalL Ban On Fishing Is Lifted For Two Days Permission Is Given to Fish.Easter Sunday And Monday Anglers who have suppressed their I desires for an excursion to their fav- orite fishing grounds during the cur-1 rent closed season will have the op-, portunity of indulging in this sport with the temporary lifting of the bandurin the atii holiday period J J. D. Chalk, commissioner, Division of Game and Inland Fisheries, Depart ment of Conservation and Develop ment, has announced. The lifting of the closed season re struction will apply to all sections of North Carolina and to all species of fish found in inland waters of North Carolina, beginning Saturday, April 16, at midnight and extending to Monday, April 18, at midnight. The privilege applies only to) legal meth- ods of fishing in the fliland waters. Commissioner ' Chalk - announced that the exception this year follows the custom of the 'past several years during which the sportsmen .have ex hibited a whblesome spirit of coop eration in' the observance of the fish ing and hunting laws; :y Fishermen who land, any uns pawn ed female fish during the period, of grace are urged to release such fish carefully: after ' dampening their ' 1 M.. 1 a m i ... nanas. ine, caning oi one nsn wnicn crazy, wimui eiz months." has not spawned, according to the, That afternoon the Gypsy return commissioner, would result Li the d. "You have something, new here, destruction of possibly 'several thous- j something in bright colors, like a ands of eggs, and many mature fish; in future: years. if We sincerely hope," said ' Commis sioner Chalk, "that the sportsmen of North Carolina will enjoy themselves during the period of grace. The peo ple have shown ani increased amount of interest In our game and fish laws and the Department has never in its entire history been 'given such fine cooperation. -vWe believe this excep tion will reflect an ven better coop erative attitude and that the, fisher men will not , abase this privilege by taldng unspawried i female fish . and that they will observe strictly the re mainder of the ; closed season -and other, inland fiBhing "regulations." Easter" Daiice Qh mr-" j i xtT n J MOnaay At TVaiKeirS The Easter dance at Walker's on Monday night promises to be a very enjoyable affair, with an - orchestra which 'local dancers say is the best appearing here,, yet, furnishing the music ; Joe Davis and his ten music r - kers, of . Washington, N. C, are scheduled to make their first appear anre on this occasion in Hertford.; "'a dance is scheduled to begin at 13 o'vlock and to continue until 2. v:::rr- 3 AT BELVIDERE of Winston-Salem, ' " of Biseoe, were " -'r father,- F. C. i Gypsy Trial Draws Bis Crowd Tuesday To Recorder Court Nomads Give Mrs. T. C. Lane the Scare of Her Life GET MONEY Sentence Provides Op portunity to Take to Highways The glamour which surrounds the name of Gypsy probably was respon sible for the crowd which filled thejSound on Saturday afternoon during court room on Tuesday morning toija high gale, will be salvaged by its hear the trial involving three mem-1 bers of the band of these roving lint Hertford, or whether only the ma folks which have camped in this vi-ichinery will be removed from the cinity recently, one of whom not only i sunken tug, has not yet been decided gave Mrs. T. C. Lane, of Hertford, by the Company, according to of- a most terrible fright, but took f rom the elderly woman all the money she had in the house as well as a couple of new blankets, returning for more money only to fall into the hands of the law. "If a colored woman did a thing like this we would send her to the roads," stated Judge James S. Mc Nider, in sentencing the woman fountf ' guilty of larceny. "If a white person, tog pumped out on Wednesday, pre did such a thing he wouldn't stop paratory to bringing it with its load outside the penetentiary," he con- of logs to Herttord. tinued. "But these people expect us It was the tearing loose of one of to overlook this sort of thing." , the barges which resulted in the sink- T,.rlr twxt:j .'A Ii ' . - - ... --use miHiud, u seems, wasni inclined to entirely overlook the mat ter. Even P. G. Sawyer, of Elizabeth City, who represented the three Gypsies, told the Court that "The Gypsy probably overstepped the bounds of the law." Judge McNider called attention to the fact that good roads and automo biles had drawn people so much closer together, and stated that the 'fmMfo ' unite. W 4- piuiotrai iran muse who would prey upon others. The Gypsies, two women and a man all apparently very youthful, traveling in a good looking automo-1 neer, James Latham, and the cook, ! stopped near the home of Mrs. Everett Holmes, all live in Elizabeth Lane, on Grubb Street on Thursday City. morning. Only one of the trio left The first news heard here came the car. Diana Pmzas, a not un- from a fisherman from Harveys fn who wore, in-!Neck, immediately opposite Durants sieaa oi tne colorful and picturesque, Neck where the men went nahnro. costume often affected by the Gypsy, who that he had 8een the Ln ! 11 Jm nH,g the d0Or Carolina near the mouth of Perquim .fini ra- "e Wemd ans River, and that he had looked in SteDDed lllfllrifV Mm Tana vrtia mm. ' . -. . .. .... v . r ..Ar IrrJT V 7' 7 7 lne 'oan r ah ",u,le5c"," f.re- ne rection where he had seen the f M M nlnan 8 iandkerchlef' 8hrand it was not there. tOld the RVTMV- Tho man ho1 nrx.U , ed and the Gypsy had learned there' was no nun In fh. i After that it was- a Bimnl to bulldoze Mrs. Lane into turning! Meantime, the crew who had escap over to her four dollars and ten i ed from 1,16 sunken tuK nad 'aned cente, all the money she had in the i on the 011181148 Neck side and had house. It wasn't all she had, insist-' walked 8 mile to the hom of ed the Gypsy -"I can see it in your ' stallinSB- It was Mr. Stallings who eves." Sh mm '"m-o I brought them to Hertford. The hundred and five devils' and a witch following you day and night, and if jrou dont get your money, every cent of it, and put it Wween your oed and mattress and lie on it, you will go blind, or else you , V f . . will go table cloth and I've got to have it," she said. She insisted , on going up stairs to look, and un fViAm aha found two beautiful new blankets in pretty Dnght colors, and she took them away, in spite of Mrs. Lane's protests. ' You have three days in which to ges mat money, every penny you have, .and, put it between your bed and mattress' said the Gypsy be fore leaving this time. I will be back ; hewi Monday irfMO o'clock." Thert; waaBomethinr sinister in ie admonitiotf; whicH followed, And let that glass of water stay in that dark earner." ! that i glass r of . . water, from which the" Gypsy woman had drunk she had dropped a strand of hair plucked from Mrs. Lane's head. i, - ..' TO leeuiymg ac tne trial, iulv L said she was so frightened she didn't' most delightful of women, and young Mrs. Lane, testifying at the trial, know what to do, scared almost to death. -; But the said aha-poured that, glass ox water out. . nevertheless. Next day she reported the matter to Sheriff Wlnslow, who began a search for the Gypsy ' ' ' When Monday morning came' Mrs. Lane, dreading the return of the Gypsy, had kef daughter with her when aha arrived. A-telephone call brought the Sheriff post haste and the Woman and her. two companions were taken into custody and placed injeJL ' When all the testimony was In for the prosecution Judge XlcNidef al- lowed the motion as to to" suit for . - (C.zi:s;4 oa I.-) Steamer Carolina ) Lost Saturday In ! Albemarle Sound High Gale Plays Havoc ' With Major & Loomis Bargres i CREWSCAPES Doubtf ullf Owners Will Salvage Sunken Tug Boat ' I7T tV. l il. . . wueuici ux iiul uie SLemu lug 'Carolina, which sank in Albemarle owners, Major & Loomis Company,! ,'jpcisls. The three barges and all the logs which were being towed by the tug at the time of the accident which re sulted in tne loss of the tug, were saved. fvo oi the barges broke !oose in the gale. These were lo oted and were towed to the mill on Sunday. Later in the week the third sarge was found. This one was be- mar oi tne tuir. The atter bits were torn out of the tug by the wrench, leaving holes so big that it was im possible to prevent the tug filling with water. It sank in half an hour after this occurred, according to Tommy Miller, one of the crew. When word reached Hertford on Saturday afternoon that the tug had sunK near tne mouth or the river, there was fear expressed for the lives rl - . . . .. . . ... 01 uie memDers oi me crew, wnicn included two Hertford men, Carl Perry and Tommy Miller. The skiD- per, Capt. Earl Davenport, the enjri- another airectlon and within a very flhort time he looked again in the di- tug t Sarchers J inu both directions, to Harveys Neck, where nothing was visible- and to Durants Neck- searching party en route to Durants Meek met Mr. Stallings' car but were unaware that the boat crew were in the car and continued on down to the sound. Gatesville Students Banquet In Hertford A group of very charming visitors were in Hertford on Monday night. They were the boys and girls, repre- i senting the juniors and seniors of the I uaiesviue nign ocnooi, scnooi au- 1 thorities i banquet and others, who enjoyed a served by the Hertford, Woman's Cliib at the Community House, after which they attended the show at the State Theatre. Mrs. K. R. Newbold Observes Birthday Mrs. K. Rj, Newbold 'observed her 79th birthday on Tuesday. Many friends called to congratulate the be loved woman, and there were many letters and cards In her mail that J.. - T.kl4 1- fVA And old alike are numbered among ber many friends. SUNDAY AT BELVIDERE Mr. and Mnv Ralph White, of Belvidere, had as their guests on Sunday Mrs. White' parents, Mr. and Mrs. E, F. Banks, and their small grandson, Don Rly, and Miss Geraldine Farrar, of .Virginia Beach. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT -Mr. and Mrs.' .Mason Sawyer, of Old Neck, announce the birth of a on on April 8. Mother and baby lare getting on nicely. Mrs. Sawyer waa- formerly Miss Rubjr ! Cart. ' wrijt, of Snow HJ'J, r; Filling Station Operators Little Impressed Oith Idea Of Keeping Open Sundays A Dream Mrs. Tommy Miller, of Hert ford, relates that on Wednesday night of last week she dreamed that she was walking and that she picked up from the ground her husband's watch. In her dream she continued to walk and came abruptly to the shore of a stream where she saw the steam tug Carolina. She says that there appeared to be nobody on the boat, but that as she watched it slowly sank below the surface of the water. The Carolina did sink in Albe marle Sound on Saturday after noon, and Mr. Miller, with the rest of the crew, escaped in a life boat. His watch, which Mrs. Miller gave him last Christmas, was left on the tug. Elizabeth City Host To District Rotary Conference May 2-4 Entertainment Includes Jaunts to Neighbor ing Towns FEATURES Host Club Challenges Other Rotary Soft Ball Teams "Carolina's calling you to Eliza beth City, is the message sent out this week to every Rotarian in the 187th District in a folder issued by the Elizabeth City Rotary Club, host to the 1938 District Conference on May 2, 3, 4. Aside from Elizabeth City, Edenton, Hertford and Manteo, the District comprises Rotary clubs in Virginia. informal get-together party, foUowed by a dance, the program is ideally timed for those who may wish to do a bit of fishing at Oregon Inlet, where the blues are usually biting in early May, before or after the conference Other entertainment features in clude visits to historic spots such as Fort Raleigh on Roanoke Island, where in 1687 Virginia Dare was born; to the Wright Memorial on Kill Devil Hill under the shadow of , which the first successful airplane flight was made in 1903; to Hertford, where reposes in the Perquimans ITLTT l0 ' deed that ever went on record in the State, and to Edenton, one time seat, of government in colonial North Car olina. ! Local entertainment in the form of bridge luncheons, teas, theatre par- ties and golf have been provided, the Elizabeth City Country Club having been thrown open to all Rotarians ' and Rotarvannes for the duration , 0f the conference free of charge. Tnesdav afternoon a boat trin on the' Pasquotank River has been arranged ; for the Rotaryannes. Also the Elizabeth City Rotary Club has a soft ball team which is eager to cross bats with any club in the district. Entertainment features of the pro gram have been worked out under the direction of Dr. J. W. Selig, en tertainment chairman, in collabora tion with Mrs. Fred Lowe, ladies' en tertainment chairman. Pageant Friday At Methodist Church A sacred pageant, "The Seven SavlnM of Christ on the Cross." -will be Kiven at the Hertford Methodist Church on Good Friday night, with Mrs. B. G. Koonce directing. Miss Elizabeth Knowles will be the reader; Rev. D. M. Sharpe, historian; R. S. Monds, Jr., soloist, with Mrs. R. M. Riddick, pianist. Others tak ing part will be Jeannette Feilds, Lila Budd Stephens, Ruth Wilson) Florence. Darden, Polly Tucker, Alice Robersin,'Mary,Thad Chappell, Mary Wood , ""once, ' Katharine Jessup, Anna 'j Felton, and Ruth H6llo- Town Council Grants 30 Day Trial Period as Experiment WAOTREST Gulf Station Only One To Be Open Next Sunday There appears to be a very defin-' ite sentiment among the service sta tion operators of Hertford against keeping their stations open on Sun day, with one exception. And, al though the Town Council at their meeting on Monday night decided to permit the service stations of the town to remain open on Sundays for the next thirty days, at the expira tion of which time it will be decided from the sentiment of the people what regular course to pursue, only one service station will be open for business next Sunday, the Gulf Sta tion operated by Hudson Butler and Roy Bass. Mr. Butler appeared before the Town Council on Monday night, stat ing that he had been requested to do so by his employers, the Gulf Refin ing Company, and requested that he be allowed to keep his station open on Sunday. After considerable discussion of the matter, it was decided that by allow ing all stations to sell gas and oil on Sunday for a thirty-day period the sentiment of the town could be defin itely determined, end it was so or dered. The stations will be requested to be closed during the church hour in the day, and to discourage Sunday night loafing it was decided that all the stations must close promptly at 7 o'clock in the evening. While the drug stores of Hertford have for the past two years been al lowed to remain open on Sundays, except during the hours for the regular church services, there was enacted about four years ago an ordi nance prohibiting the sale of gas and oil on Sundays, practically the only commodity handled by the service stations not permitted to be sold. For, even during the period when j 2 ""fj0 ? 11. ed by laws more or less of the blue . . 1' lt legal to sell tobaccoes on Sunday, specificially so set out in the ordinance which pro scribed that no "goods, wares, soft drinks, whether bootled or loose, or merchandise of any kind shall be traded or sold in the Town on Sun day, except in cases of sickness or death, under a penalty of two dollars for each offense; provided this sec tion does not apply to milk or ice dealers, or newsboys, or drug stores which confine their Sunday sales to drugs, tobaccoes, newspapers and .a'aJ;..1.. A t U 1 . hotels be permitted to sell tobacco to their guests." When the law was repealed with respect to selling soft drinks, etc., some four years ago, the proprietors of the only two drug stores in the town were desirous of opening on Sunday, considering this preferable to being requested at all hours of the day on Sunday to open up for special sales of drugs and other commodities. With four of the five service sta tions of the town opposing the sale of gas and oil on Sunday, it remains to be seen what will be the outcome of this effort on the part of the Gulf people to keep open for business. Mark Hathaway, manager of the One Stop, the Shell station, states that he will not open next Sunday. Vivian Mathews, of Bill & Viv's Standard Station, stated that his sta tion would not be open during the thirty-day period and that by the ex piration of the period he would an nounce definitely what would be done. Heywood Butler, manager of the Texaco Station, states that he will not be open on Sunday. Joe & Bill's Sinclair Station will not be open on Sunday, said Bill I White, one of the managers, in re- sponse to a query from this news- paper. MISS FEILD IMPROVING Miss Mary Feild, the young daugh ter of Mrs. D. M. Feild, is convales cing satisfactorily at the ; Norfolk General Hospital following an opera tion for appendicitis last Saturday. The young girl was carried to the hospital on last v Friday. She will probably be able to return home on Saturday or Sunday. .'t if i i V r