4" St r " , r f -iVohame VII, Number PERQUIMANS GAVE MAXWELL MAJORITY BROUGHTON AND HOflTON HIGH IN STATE Revenue Commissioner Had 36 Votes Above . Six Other Candidates For Governor 1,433 BAIXOTS CAST JCounty Gave Eure the " Largest Vote: Pou flopped Miller; Harris High For lieutenant Governor Just as The Perquimans Weekly f had indicated from the time he an l nounced his candidacy until the day ' before the primary, the Allen J. Maxwell campaign for governor r swept through Perquimans County on a surge of ballots that carried him high above the closest contest ant and piled up a majority of 39 votes over all six other candidates. Maxwell, however, was third man in the State voting. Broughton , came out on top of the heap with a clearance of 40,000 votes over Wil kins P. Horton, who is already lay ing plans for his second primary campaign, while Commissioner Max well is urging no second primary. In Perquimans County Saturday night as the tallying got under way, it was clear early in the counting that Maxwell was taking the lead. Only in Nicanor Precinct did Mai s' well fail to hold his lead. There the ;.? vote went to Horton, with Broughton second and Maxwell in third place. Of 1,433 ballots cast for Governor, Maxwell gathered more than fifty per cent; 783 votes against 472 for Broughton, 167 for Horton, 29 for " Cooge H f or Gravely, 6 for Grady, u- an&.l$pr.Shiumns. j ! Ift--lf or4 Township alone, the Reven&e jpbnraissioner was accorded 839 ballots?; against, 237 for Brough ton. and 67 or. Horton. JSure was? grve(r cHeTseavaest wjjorr "J - for Secretary 6f State 1,091 votes 'v;,v against 137 for Pete Murphy. Ross Pou topped Miller for State ,!" ' Auditpr by the skin of his teeth, col ) lecting 470 votes against 428 for v Miller. Dan Boney for Insurance 5 ' Commissioner, took an easy 2-to-l victory over Oliver with one vote to spare, 689 against 343. .7 Oliver lead only in Parkville ! 'i Township, where he topped Boney by ;.; 17 votes. : Though Kerr Scott lead Wayland ' Spruill for Commissioner of Agri ;i -y culture in Hertford Township, the county vote went to Spruill and gave him the lead here; 616 to 570. Bel videre gave Scott a four-vote major s: ity, and Nicanor voted two-to-one J I.' r tt l a a .. . . i . 0 1 1 . i .:rj- ior ocon, out me rest oi me coumy went for Uie Bertie County eandi date. In the race for Lieutenant Gover ; , nor, Harris placed high over Erskine p Smith who easily lead Martin and .. - - Tompkins for second place. Harris ' ',:. garnered 486 votes, Smith 319, Mar tin 148 and Tompkins 76. The high man drew a blank in Parkville Town ship, Jut took a heavy lead in Hert--" ford1 Smith's best support came , , from Bethel Township where he led . with 119 votes over Harris with 52, ' r Martin with 15 and Tompkins with 9. ; Nicanor Precinct this time, as ' , with Eure and Boney, was in Sine - with the rest of the county. Usually " ,. , it isn't - v r The lone vote in the county for Simmons. ' gubernatorial candidate, L. --,. ame from Bethel Township. Gravely '"V - -J.- drew blanks in. Parkville, Belvldere, i". ' Bethel and Nicanor. Grady had no ' 'f ., support in New Hope, Bethel and Ni- ' ; canor; - and. Cooper - nonfc ii( New Jt - Hope. . rffc ' . 1 ' M 0t mm . ' ,v Hera is the schedule of home dem ' onstraticn cV.b meeting in Perquim ans-County- for ' the first 'week la ; nf?nV ' Maness, emonstraUoa agentf . '-Tiinsdavi- Chananoke Club meeUI Tuesday -i- Chapanoke Club meets ;f:.wlth Miss Juanita White,-" , ; ;' -. Wednesday Winfaffl CWb . meets "'- with Mrs. Joel Holloweil. -p. i -(Thursday -Whiteston Club . meets with Misa, Pearl White.'' ? ' -, v , Friday Home and Garden vClub r meets with Mrs, H. G. Bardift.', p i mM'JIm Tamer ' .Balph E. White of the D. Pender Crocrry Coirrr;', new membor of the Li;rs Clul, v's elected Lion T;-r cf t!ie L"l (" b at a meetinsr t j r " J rr?, I J of Ralph R. i. j mi w- i VsIsaT j A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DjcJVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING OF HERTFORD AND PERQUIMANS COUNTY 22. Hertford, Hertford Gains 42 In Population Over Ten Years; Total Now 1,956 A preliminary census announce ment from the office of Denton W. Lupton, supervisor, in Washington, N. C, shows that Hertford has gain ed an increase of 42 persons over the census count in 1930. The census report today, subject to correction, gives Hertford a popu lation oi l,yob. m the 193U nose- counting the population was 1,914. This is the 16th census. Belgian Surrender Outstanding War ottie uountry u o e s Through One of the Strangest Hours Belgian History In Continuing the service which it hopes will prove enlightening to some of its readers, The Perquimans Weekly again today gives a brief condensation of censored news as it emerges by press and radio from war-ravaged Europe: Probably the greatest development during the current week came on Tuesday when Belgium surrendered its army to increasing pressure from Nazi forces. The Belgian govern ment set up in France disowned King Leopold who surrendered to Hitler 18 days after the invasion of his lit tle country began, Resources of Belgium, however, it seems, in muddled leports, are to re main at disposal,, f tie Allies . . . though just hwrfftis jfcto be done uerman nanus isnot quite ciear. Apparently, the Belgian surrender effects only the army. It was one of the Strangest hours in all Bel gian history the World War not excluded The country is divided in two parts; the cabinet legislature and thousands of refugees in France and England still at war with Ger many, a&i millions of Belgians and soldiers Remaining with their dis owned king under German occupa tion. And then, in a "pocket" as wide as from Hertford to the mouth of the river and as long as from here to Virginia Beach are "trapped" 400, 000 British and French soldiers sur rounded or encircled by Germans and deserted by their Belgian Allies on the red fields of Flanders. Germany is daily promising anni hilation of' these trapped forces as 30 Allied divisions of some 500,000 men poise for a supreme attack in Flanders. Another desperate offen sive from the south to relieve the trapped forces is being readied. Upon the outcome of this gigantic struggle, due any day now, depends the result of the desperately-contested battle of Flanders. Belgium is the sixth country to fall under Herr Hitler's blitzkrieg blows in less than nine months. Lon (Continued On Page Eight) Final Rites Friday For Prominent Bethel Farmer J,- Maynard Fleetwood V-Claimed By, Death on 3Wdneda3r $ Widow And Children survive v'j, Maynard, Fleetwood, 53,; died at 10. o'clock Wednesday ' night at us I norae near oewwi, ww,iaaw w W ua '? Ufnveuoy ma wife,' Mm. Gertrude .Long Fleetwood, - and the following daughters and sons, Misses France Gertrude and Kathryne Fleetwood, J; - Maynard Fleetwood, Jxt, and Thomas Fleetwood; ' three sister. Mrs,, A. F.? Proctor, .Mrs. J. P. Ward and Mrs. M. T. Griffin and 6n6-,brother,. C, "J, Fleetwood, of Aiempms. - xenn. .' o'uji Funeral service OiwiH be ,; held -,t 2:30 o'clock "Triday t afternoons, at Bethel Church and burial will be in Eethel Cemotery. r , - llr. Hdetwood .was a . prominent urmer of Perquimans1 County, and v- i active in the civic and religious a rs cf hie county. - , UMANS WEEKLY Perquimans Qbunty, North Carolina, Friday, May McNider - Benton In Second Primary For Lower House Mattie Lister White Edged Out In Heated Contest Between Vet eran Representatives J. 1. Benton, incumbent county representative, is already at work in order to retain his seat in the Vioukp for a third term following Saturday's primary in which he was topped by Attorney J. S. McNider, who drew a 14-vote plurality. Benton was second man in the five pointed race for representative. He was pushed closely by Mattie Lister White, who was trailed by Joe Camp bell and Walter Edwards in order. It is indicated that incumbent Benton will ask for the second pri mary; the only run-off scheduled in Perquimans County. Mr. Benton has not been reached for a statement, but it is said that he is already ac tively campaigning'. The Hertford Township vote fav ored Mrs. White with 188, McNider with 179, and Campbell with 104. Benton placed fourth in Hertford with 103, and Edwards drew 60 votes. McNider and Benton have each served two terms in the lower house. In the total county tally the count was: McNider 407, Benton 393, White 366, Campbell 165. and Ed wards 88. It was McNider's second place strength in Hertford that gave him the nod over Benton who drew the highest vote in the other precincts with the exception of Nicanor which joined with Hertford in giving Mrs. White a lead. Mrs. White bozsred down in Park ville, New Hope and Belvidere, where Benton and McNider gained their strength; each doing better than 3-to-1 over the woman candidate in Parkvillei The representative race was one of .the mp$..excjtinjr. Jn y manyan election year. The fiMt three plafceB were close and the whole outcome was in doubt until the final returns were in. It was this race, probably more than any of the others, that helped to get the ..vote to the polls. The State ticket alone would hardly have attracted enough enthusiasm. Fourteen hundred and nineteen ballots were cast in sthe five-pointed representative race. Use Of Dealer Tags Bring Judgment To Pay Court Costs Pasquotank County Man Uses Plates on Newly Bought Car Without Ordering New Ones A car bought from a dealer may be used 10 days with a dealer's li cense plate provided the buyer has a receipt to show that the dealer is getting private license plates for the new owner, it was shown in Record er's Court Tuesday. Raymond Eason of Pasquotank County, was found guilty in county court of allowing his automobile to be operated with improper license plates. Joe James Key, also of Pas quotank County, was driving when Patrolman Louis Lane stopped the car. .Prayer for judgment as to Key was continued. .Eason had bought the car from an Elizabeth :.CSty dealer on the Satur toy before: the driver' was arrested on- Wednesday;- but Eason bad no re feeipMjC show that be bad .deposited monej with "the dealer, td 'buy new license plates' Witta -' ' i ' Cost of the 5car, a 1936 model, now has mounted by the addad cost of coart $215, and by the loss of time on the day of the trial by Ea son and Key and by loss of the use of the cat since last Wednesday when Patrolman. Lane took up the dealer plates.- ;- Lane, 'testifying, said that dealer plates could be used otherwise, for a period of 24 hours if the operator was : actually demonstrating the car. Office Closes June 3 " The Town .Clerks'' office, it has been announced, wffll W closed on June third. , Tdwn." Clerk W. G. New bv and .Mrs. Newby ' will attend graduation exercises in Greenville, where their-, daughter, Miss Prue Collins Newly, will graduate at East Carolina Teacher . Colleget y .v,it Leary And Evans Nominated; Three flew Commissioners Holmes, Defeated, Gets Good Support From Home County; High In Hertford Precinct Voting here Saturday gave the District two new State Senators and the county three new members of the board ' of commissioners. Merrill Evans, Hertford County man, and Herbert Leary, former irst Judicial District Solicitor, top ped the voting for senators. J. J Hughes, incumbent senator, has the right to ask a second primary. In Perquimans County voting, Leary with 721 votes, was the high man. C. R. Holmes, local candidate, ran next with 644 votes. Gatling, of Gates County, was third with 332, Evans fourth with 295, and Hughes in the bottom spot with 283. Hertford Township gave Holmes heavy support; 368 votes to Leary's 274, but Leary led strongly in Park ville and Bethel Townships. Evans, one of the two winners, was the low man in Hertford Township voting with 108. In the county commissioners race, two newcomers nudged aside a cou ple of veterans with the results that Charles (Stalk) White will repre sent Bethel Township after Roy Chappell's present term has ended, and. Linford L. Winslow will replace J. C. Baker as the commissioner from Belvidere Township. Winalow, former deputy sheriff and world war veteran, edged out over Baker in a hot contest with a 22-vote margin; Baker gathering 719, and Winslow 741. White's victory over Chappell was more decisive, 787 to 671. Incumbent E. M. Perry, uncontest ed from New Hope Township, was accorded the highest vote in the commissioners' race ... an even one thousand. First Termer Archie T, sWfi;:ikriSw In Parkville Township, where three men were seeking to represent the heretofore neglected precinct, E. U. Morgan was able to squeeze out a4 slim 51-vote advantage over young Irvin Nixon who polled 550 votes. Nathan Hurdle, the third candi date, ran a poor third with 197 votes. The new board, when the commissioners-elect take office, will be E. M. Perry, Charles White, Archie T. Lane, L. L. Winsllow and E. U. Morgan. Beauty Queen To Be Selected At State Theatre Monday Mayor Invites County's Fairest (Overl6) to Enter Contest For Potato Ball Queen If you're female, anywhere over sixteen years of age, have a figure pleasing to the eye and a winning smile, the State, Theatre stage Mon day night is the place for you to be. For it is there at nine o'clock that a group of disinterested judges (or as disinterested as they can be under the circumstances) will select a beauty queen to represent Perquim' ans Couqty at the Potato Festival in Elizabeth City on June 6th. As an inducement to have Per quimans" County's fairest don even ing dresses and parade across the stage before the critical eyes of the judge, Mb winner will get a free ride, oaltbe?; float with half, a dozen beauties .from other counties: sne win be fetren a ticket to the Potato Ball Dance for herself and escort and a hoted room in which to change her clothes, ber face, her hair or what have you. Any girl of passing fair appear ance may be entered in the contest simply by getting in touch with' Mayor Vivian N. Darden or State Theatre Manager B. L. Gibba. A motorcade, with the Elizabeth City High School band, and. Dr. H. E.' Nuton of "Festivals, Inc.," and Mayor Jerome B. Flora of Elizabeth City, were in Hertford at an early hour Wednesday morning ballyhoo ins1 the festival, and it was then that arrangements were made with Mayor Darden and Mr. Gibba to work out a nlan tot selecting the oueen. " ...It Is, Understood that. this is the only 6art '. Ferouimanir-' County will have' in the ' ' Potato" Festival. ' No floftt,ls : entered; . for Perquimans County-or Hertford, v 31, 1940. HIGHWAY COMMITTEE TURNS DEAF ON TO "GIVE WINFALL NEW LEASE ON LIFE" -4 Scout Leaders Held Meeting Wednesday Scout Masters and men interested in Scouting, of Elizabeth City, Edenton and Hertford met here at the Hotel Hertford Wednesday even ing to hear Lewis R. Lester, Boy Scout executive of Norfolk, Va., ex plain the work of executive Scouting committees. Purpose of the meeting was to formulate plans for organization of an Albemarle Council. Presiding at the meeting was Hoi land Webster of Elizabeth City . Constant Offender Guilty Of Vagrancy Gets Road Sentence Will Dennis Harrell, Languid Goose Hol low Negro, Not Guilty Non-Support Will Dennis Harrell, consistent Goose Hollow offender, who tangles regularly with the Daw on charges ranging from fighting and gambling to vagrancy and non-support, has un til tomorrow (Saturday) to scrape together approximately $40 and turn it over to the Clerk of Court, or go to the .roads for four months. Harrell, charged with failing to support a four-year-old child sup posedly his and Addie Webb Har rell's, his wife, was found not guilty on this charge but was found guilty on a vagrancy count which Judge Cranberry Tucker ordered written in on the warrant at Tuesday's session of county court. Judge Tucker started to suspend a dU-aay road sentence on condition "tthart Harrell naid the cost of court and made every effort to'flndwork and support the child and his wife when he learned that Harrell already has a three months suspended sen tence hanging over him and back costs amounting to $38.50 charged against him. "I didn't know nothing about that sentence," Harrell said. "You didn't think you had. served it, did you?" His Honor asked. Harrell, light in color and con stantly in need of a shave, replied that he just "didn't know nothing about it." He asked the court to give him a few days in which to gather together funds to pay the costs with. It will be interesting to know how the de fendant, a vagrant, will get the $40. Addie, his wife, told a pitiful story. So did Will Dennis. Addie said she and her husband live in the same house, but that he never speaks to her and squanders his money in "skin games", a card game of wide popularity among the unemployed Negroes. "She goes to Norfolk or some where every time I give her money to buy something for the child and comes back drunk," Will Dennis said. He opened his testimony by saying he had no child to support. The baby was a year old, he said, when he and Addie were married. "And she gambles more than I do," he stated, Harrell, a gangling darky of doubtful age, appears beset by eter nal lassitude. It seemed, almost, that his lanky frame would fall apart in the short journey between his chair in the bar and the witness stand where he testified languidly to the trials of married life as they come to him and Addie. Charges against Will Dennis usu ally, concern chicken stealing and trouble with bootleg liquor and Addie Webb, New Una Is Added To Rural Network Into Perquimans County's tighten ing network of rural electric power lines has been woven another strand . . , an extension approximately two and a half miles long from Vernon Lane's Garage just west of Belvi dere to Louis Winslow's home. . The Virginia Electric and fower Company today: is completing install' ation to serve W. A. Cartwright, J. P. Cartwright, J. EL Hunter, George W. Chappell, William C Chappell, Clarence Chappell, J.. P. Chappell, P. SL Chappell, ' & G; Chappell, lu P, $1.25 Per Year. Highway Group Reaches Decision After Two Minutes In Confer ence CAN APPEAL Hearing at Courthouse Wednesday Leaves Matter Just Where It Stood After County Registered Protest The Board of County Commission ers will decide at their regular meet ing Monday whether or not to lodge another protest with the State High way Commission in regard to the projected new location of United States Highway No. 17. The hearing in the courthouse here Wednesday resulted in the fol lowing statement from T. B. Ward, of Wilson, chairman of the commit tee that came to Hertford to con duct the hearing: "The committee has been looking at this thing all d.ay. It has been over the ground and decided that the best thing for the most people con cerned is to construct the road, in principal, as it is laid out. That will be our recommendation to the full State Highway Commission." It was a noisy hearing, a large number of people were in attend ance, but the decision was not pop ular with those present. Charles Whedbee, J. S. McNider, N. N. Trueblood, E. M. Perry, the Rev. J. D. Cranford, B. B. Dawson, had their say on the matter, but the committee was not impressed, though sympathetic. Chairman Ward explained to the gathering after a question concern ing the expenditure was brought up, that the money to make the improve ment on U. S. 17 at Winfall is Fed eral money and can not be spent for any other purpose. Said Mr. Ward, this H an inter state road from the Virginia line to the South Carolina line and this is a standardization program and. the elimination of the dangerous curves at Winfall is a very small part of a State-wide program. "If such projects as this are not put through," he said, "it won't be long before through traffic deserts the bad curves and takes to the standard roads." "Heavy trucks passing by your school at Winfall are a constant hazard to the safety of your chil dren," he continued, "and when things like this are stopped here, they will be stopped everywhere." Mr. Ward explained, however, that the commissioners have the right to appeal from the committee's decision. The county commissioners, four of whom were present, did not indicate what their next action would be. "Changes like this will continue to be made," the chairman said. "The public is demanding it. We must be shown a feasible route that will be accepted by the Federal government before we can reeommend a change in the plan as it is." "Then what is the purpose of this hearing?" B. B. Dawson rose to ask. "Because the law demands it," Mr. Ward answered. "Whenever a for mal protest is lodged, a hearing must be held." "Then it is just a formality," Mr. Dawson concluded. The committee, composed, of Mr. Ward and two Highway Commis sioners from other districts, E. V. (Continued On Page Eight) Anderson Layden To Buy 84-Acre Tract With Farm Security Loan Anderson . Layden, tenant farm er of the Beech Springs Section, re ceiver notice early this week that his application for a loan to buy a farm has been approved by the Farm Security Administration, subject to satisfactory title. Houston Edwards, Perquimans V County supervisor of the PSA with t: offices in Hertford, has feMtrmrted ,v. Mr. Layden to exercise the ontion he holds on the 84-acre farm he pW-V K poses to buy and to have the seller prepare the necesaarv naners. A cheek will be passed in payment for uie. property, when satisfactory title , has been furnished by the present The loan to buy this farm, made possible by the Bankhead-Jones ; Farm Tenant Act, also includes .mon-', ; ey for improvements, repairing exist ins; buildings, erecting a 'new house, -barn and other out-buldings', and fencing for pasture. - . V Terms of the loan provide for at-. .fcu&l repayments , over a period of ;, Ai . . ... . . ..... ii ... . ; a. & aaiac .; years at wee par cent xnterwh A'