V 1 v ' V , 'f i ' 1 ' ,,r ' '.,11 - iu 'I i - ' . , n v A VEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING OF Hi&TFORIXAND PERQUIMANS COUNTY Volume VII. Number 24. Hertford, Perquimans Oounty North Carolina, Friday, June 14, 1940. $1.25 Per Year. 4 fr; charter has 1mised $48,15 on six iiu;:dhed doiiar war relief quota Perquimans County Far i Short of Minimum ' Asked "By Red, Cross In' Drive For Funds DIRE NEED vv Appeal For War Relief Funds Now In Fifth Week; Twenty Mil Uon Dollar Goal Red Cross contributions to Wed nesday morning totaled 46.15, ac cording to Silas M. Whedbee, local chapter chairman. Funds are be ginning' to come in more rapidly, he said. The county's quota is $600. ; Contributions may be made to Mr. jWhedbee at the Post Office, to the Rev, Edmund T. Jillson or to the Rev. B. F. Munns. From September, J939, with the invasion of Poland, through. June 7th, it. is said, American Bed Cross made vaUaWe a total or pisfm unre iief supplies to the stricken people of Europe. This include! K95,OO0 in supplies purchased and cash con! trioutions to other Bed Cross Socie ties and relief ' ; agencies. The re mainder, or 1479,000 is the estimated value of the material in chapter-produced garments and surgical dress ings which have already been ship ped abroad. But much mora is needed, to the extent that ail chapters have been asked to regard their doubled and re doubled quotas simply as a minimum goal. Hertford is far snort of its minimum quota. The two ministers named above voiced vigorous pleas from their pulpits Sunday la behalf v uie an. ycyawt" The coairibuSona. from. Sartford and the county w0i ga into the fund that by fat. Wark the largest sums of money aad. grc v,t Quantities of supplies, that. h"5" . Itn eainrkd for Fran ' ThU light of the iacttbAt relief require ments in that nation arise hot- only from the .plight of French citizens but also from that of millions of Dutch and Belgian refugees seeking a haven within the French borders. The U. S. S. McCl'eesport, charter ed from the United States Maritime Commission, is sailing Sunday from New York with a million dollar cargo of food, soap, clothing, surgical dressings and miscellaneous supplies; The Bed Cross national appeal for war-relief funds now enters its fifth week. More than eight million of the twenty mfluon dollar goal was raised in the. first four weeks. The original plea asked the-publk for ten millions, but on May 28th it became obvious that, twice -that amount i would be required, if only, the most urgent needs are to be met. The funds received during this drive are to be used wholly and ex clusively for war 'relief and no part of them will be applied toward .the normal program and expenditures -of the' Red Crossfe'K Ksf01dSeed Store Opnlng its Doors Saturday 4 A new specialty business will es ; .J.:tab)ih itself in Hertford' when the -1 J doors of the ; Perquimans Feed and . .". , 'Seed Store 'Open Saturday morning. K , "' f'StoiioSm and operated by John Broughton, Jr., is f situated' in attractive and convenient quarters' in me arougnton mulcting t with frontage: on Church -Street. '&. s Mr .- Broughton? who at '(rcpsnt u , busy ; with; remodet&tg $ -and am?' "ng " ; 1- alterations ' ''ln'the;r!ie.atdre,'.:kas '1 been" awarded the'Purina franchise for this eontJ''aWBj3ex r clusively in ' :'toii-Vxti'tVfai.ift6- r 'r tionally-advertised erantfsj manufac- tured by the Kalaton-Purina Mills in " i St Lodfc'S-S'lS?? ' EbcperienceA;has;;-e : ' , Broughton forl v th0'usmes " he " is undertaking. " Fot some-time past, he was in .the employ ! of the Berjdey Feed Corporation ; in .- Norfolk ' He has several seed lines in mind, but .has not made a definite selection yet.1; The new store :ls a; specialty business in every sense of the word; handling only : feeds and seeds. ; It may expand i'ater.tbut ; Saturday . its will be dealing i only in $hm two products. s " ' i ' 1 - f'"' Um-ANrrCUNCEMENTvtiv ilr. , and Mrs. Clinton Morgan, of VinfJI."are " Ireceiving ! congratule,' f Vn the V cf a son on Sun-r Marie Anderson Potato Festival Queen Marie Anderson, winner in the beauty contest to select Perquim ans County's queen at the Potato Fesival in Elizabeth City last Thursday, was also chosen Queen of the Festival from a field of beauties representing most of the counties of the Albemarle. The daughter of County Agent L. F. Anderson, Miss Anderson was crowned Queen of the Festi val by Orchestra Leader Little lack Little and was awarded the first prize, $25. Masons Wed Deputy Grand 3SI Masons of first District Hear Reports and Re view Workings of Last Grand Lodge Approximately (0 Masons of the First Masonic District were present at the quarterly district meeting held here Tuesday night in the Per quimans Lodge 106 A. F. k A. M. hall in the courthouse building, as B. C Berry, Past Master of Per quimans: Lodge representing the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of North CaroUna, installed the District Deputy Grand ; liter, Boscoe M. Wynn, of Elliabeth City. The district is Composed of Per quimans, Pasquotank, Camden, Dare Gates and (Currituck counties. S. B. Seymosfr, Widows Sons Lodge of Camden, Sjitedas marshall. Dputy GaV Master, included reports from the different lodges, a raviewal .of the workings of the last session , of the Grand Lodge, and then the perfection of arrangements for the next Quarterly District meet ing, which will be held at Hall Lodge Nd; 57 at Indiantown in Camden County on September 4th. , Members of the Order of Eastern "Star, Hertford Chapter , served re freshments. New Fire Engine Here Hertford's new I equipment will be delivered within the next 60 days, Mayor Vivian N. Darden said Wednesday. The order was placed with the La France Company Tuesday. The cost for the outfit complete, is approxi mately $3,300. The truck, mounted on a Ford chassis, is equipped with booster tank, auxiliary motor pump, intake hose lines, ladders and other units. . 1 The truck can pump water from any available water supply . . . from the river, from a ditch, from a tank, a reservoir or from the town's Water mains. ,The company reserves the right to deliver the truck equipment in as much as ninety days after the order is olaced. but the engine, is . looked for sometime in July.- . Funeral Services Held At Bagley Swamp For Esther Louisa Eluott 'Mrs. Esther Louisa Elliotf; of ?Win fall; who died at her home, last Fri day follow three years? of ; falling health, wa a menrf the-Bagfley Swamp'Pilgrinv Holiness .Church and ever manifested .W 'jgra$ jmterest i;in" its work, v,. Funeral services'-were" conducted from i the : BajrleJ" JSwamp iChttrclr on Saturday afternoon, tne Kev. W; J. Smithf of SUeS Cil;y,fficlattag;'asi slated by the RevJ, M. Smith, of Bagley:Swantp.;i-t;l;i,,f-I Pallbearers' wereH Julian Chappell, Joe Chappell, ; IHenry and t-i Addison Cartwright Jodie 7 Lane and . E. DeanBurial " wa$ iiad.eBJn. :Lrb Griffin Cemetery 4I4 hA&.izti- 'mm ratotts sotiberi of twelve children of whom the follow ing survive ; W, H. Elliott, o phapfr nokeS IST-f of Winfall: .2 E.s i EUiotti f Ports moutht Va.;?-Mrs. Pearl Stalling and MrlVEnidee':iiOweW:''Winfa!lt' Jftlr- tr-five 'grandchildren and five great grandchildren also survive. -Mrs. Elliott was 79 years old and had spent" her entire life in Per q-I --3 County, lav In Sixty Days fire truck and Work Going Ahead odd arw mon 42-inch Pipe Lines to Replace Sewer Ditch Under Connecting Roadway The work of connecting the new cemetery addition with CedarrGcd Cemetery has been making rapid strides of late. The new addition five acres on the Cox Farm across the swamp from Cedarwood and behind the high school will be connected with the cemetery proper by a wide roadway which is already approaching the secondary stages. WPA workmen Wednesday were setting into place two huge 42-inch pipe lines to take care of the sewer ditch where it will flow under the driveway. It was necessary in this phase of the work to .divert the stream of water around the Bite of the work and to build dams at either end. - The pipes, six five-foot concrete sections in each of the two lines laid side by side, are sunk to just above ground level and to a depth much lower than the bottom of the ditch at either end. Workmen were also clearing away underbrush in the swamp and cutting down the smaller trees in prepara tion for future beautification pro jects. The roadway across the swamp is already filled in to a width of ap proximately 18 feet wider as it ap proaches the culvert and has set tled hard enough to permit the driv ing of trucks on it. It is understood that the driveway will be treated with a gravel or tar surface. The new addition, as one ap proaches it through Cedarwood and crosses the swamp drive, is on the right fbetweea jthe- line of the drive and the high " school ball park. Tfie ground on that side is as high as it is on this side. Negotiations for the purchase of the land culminated several months ago, and while the swamp will con tinue to be a distinct physical divi sion between the two sections of land, it is viewed more as a place in which floral beauty can be developed than as a disadvantage. The pressing need for an expan sion of Cedarwood Cemetery has long been recognized since all avail able plots were bought several years ago. Local People Hear Band Practice A large number of local people dropped in on a routine rehearsal of the Perquimans County Band at the courthouse Monday night, as Direc tor Robert Rhodes drove his young charges through an evening of notes and scales, and rendered several complete numbers. Some of those present were hear ing the local band for the first time and were high in their praise of the progress made. Hearty applause greeted several practice renditions. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT , Mr. and Mrs. Julian Matthews nave announced the birth of a daughter, Mabel Bay, on Saturday, June 8, 490. Mother and baby are getting alorig nicely. 'Long' noted for its marked ten dencies toward the progressive even i if.-' sometimes the unusual Hertfolrd'i!' largest .merchandising firnj IS nOWngmg to the front door of ever; farmhouse in the coun ty a selection of' approximately 760 to 800 different Items of merchan- disev .- -.-;- . , A BOHMs Store, a trading post on wheelsThis is the latest innova tion -fron the initiative firm of J.TZl Blanches and Company. The unique enterprise has probably been ri.ed somewhere, else; but cer tainlir: not in this vicinity. 1. CftBlanchard himself, the head of the establishment designed tne vehicle'aiU had it built to his own specifications; ''Not an inch of space is wasfed) v; There is a concealed tank wit an outside ' pump to dispense kerosene ji there's vti i ice : bo or re frigerator behind the driver's seat. Numbered H among S the 1 800 - items, stocked from :i the t store's separate departments are everything from iftHnt hut.ton to nlbw noints. :f !it ' r Selling is part of the scheme of service, but the age-old" practice ,ef trading also holds a prominent place. uemeieryAQO ROLLING ALONG WITH PROGRESS sjHiiM m m m wm wmmam mm wm h mm smm Hcd Cross Appeal Sounded Sunday From Two Pulpits Ministers Score Local Chapter's Lack of Ac tivity; Will Take Con tributions Appeals from the pulpit in two churches Sunday morning in the name of the Red Cross were made with the promise that the two clergy men in Hertford, the Rev. R. F. Munns, pastor of the Methodist Church, and the Rev. EJdmund T. Jillson, rector of Holy Trinity Church, will assume the leadership Of the Red Cross drive here, "after waiting," they said to the congrega tions, "for the Red Cross Chapter of Perquimans County to speak to its people." "I. have never," said Mr. Jillson, "since my ordination in 1912, stood before my people with a heavier heart than I stand before you with this morning." After pointing to the fact that he has lived in Perquimans County longer than he has ever lived in any other county, and after asserting that he is not afraid to mention the shortcomings of his fellow citizens nor afraid to mention their virtues and sterling qualities, the Rector went on to say . . . "For the first time, since 1912, I have seen a county, I have seen my people, fail to rise to an emergency, and in sorrow and in suffering and in pain, I have seen them fail to rise to the call of that great international institution, the Red Cross of Amer ica. And in all my life that dis grace I have never seen come upon any other county." Tyrrell County was mentioned in Mr. Jillson'a appeal, the county a- ; cross the Albemarle Sound which has raised and sent its first quota of $200 and is now raising a second similar quota. "This morning in New Yerk Har- bbfT hsatd, "--the MtClees1'ort, a freighter, stands loaded with a cargo worth a million dollars. From one masthead floats Old Glory and from another the flag of the Red Cross." "Have you and I," he Questioned. "as citizens of Perquimans County, as members of the Perquimans Chap ter of the Red Cross, one nickel's worth of interest in that cargo? So far as you and I are concerned, she is an empty hulk when she rides the waves in the morning from America and from the American Red Cross carrying hospital supplies, medicines, food, articles that have been bought by the Surplus Commodities Admin istration which has paid us for our surplus crops that we might not starve." Both ministers scored the lack of activity on the part of the local Red Cross Chapter. "I appeal to you, by every Chris tian impluse that is yours," Mr. Jill son continued from the Holy Trinity pulpit, "I appeal to you by your own sense of right and wrong, your own sense of justice, your own sense of pride in the symbol against which today the mightiest force in all the world is aimed. Rise above your local leadership," he urged. "Do not be mere sheen huddled in a corner and doing nothing because your ap pointed leaders are doing nothing. "Men. women and children not foreigners. They are the children of the living God, like you, with bodies and hearts and souls like yours, that can quiver with pain, (Continued On Page Eight) Concealed under the floor of the Rolling Store just ahead of the rear dual wheels are two chicken coops fof bringing back to headquarters the live products' of farmers who traded them-probably for sacks of flour or woti'jpli'irtsin scrim. The Rolling Store has a designated route of. travel . . . paying a ;yisit oi&e each week to every section of .the . county. JIexe,ia .the daily tfche- duleri? .:: . . . -Monday, Harveys Neck; Tuesday, the-Beech Springs section; ; VTednes day, New Hope; Thursday, around Woodvilje;. Friday, Winfall and the Chapanoke- section ; Saturday, Belvi dre and Nicanor. Inside', the Rolling Store is equip ped with 'shelves and drawers, de signed so as to keep the stock from falMnsr off or falling out, and still tftere seems to be plenty of .room I even amid 800 individual items '. , so compactly is the mobile trading post arranged. '"v Zf'" I The : Red and Yellow trncle is be- cominar a familiar sight on the high ways and in the back roads ef Per quimans County. " y ; -v DISPOSAL SEWER BEING MOVED FROM VICINITY OF NEW RECREATION PIER Gets Two Trophies At Lions Convention Norman N. Trueblood, the Hert ford Lions Club lone delegate to the State Convention of Lions Clubs in Durham, returned Tues day night and said that the local club was awarded two trophies at the Convention. Hertford was one of four clubs in the State that re ceived two trophies. One is for membership gains, he said, and the other is for third place Honor Roll. Mrs. Trueblood accompanied him to the Convention and was recorded as a duly accredited member. Benton And McNider Alone In Second Primary For House Little Interest Manifest In Democratic Run off on June 22 Pitted against each other in the Democratic run-off, the names of J. S. McNider, local attorney, and J. T. Benton, incumbent member of the House of Representatives, will be the only names on the county ticket. McNider, in the first primary, top ped the incumbent representative by a 14-vote margin, who in turn led the nearest competition, Mrs. Mattie Lister White, but 33 votes. Benton's campaign, it is said, be gan on the Monday following the pri mary on May 25th. It is signal that the two high men in the representative race are both veterans in the General Assembly; Mr. McNider has served two terms each in the lower house jgd in the State Senate, while Mr. Benton has served twice in the House of Repre sentatives. The remaining three candidates in the first primary had never served. They were Mrs. Mattie Lister White, Joe Campbell and Walter Edwards. The lone scramble between the run off men is exciting not even the faintest degree of interest. It is the only contest here and the war in Europe and the bogging down of the gubernatorial race, will only serve to make it less exciting. The second primary is on next Saturday, June 21st. Windsor Youth To Preach Here Sunday Harrell White, ministerial student at Chowan College, Murfreesboro, will preach at the Hertford Baptist Church Sunday at both the morning and evening services, according to an announcement from a member of the Board of Deacons. Mr. White, whose home is in Wind sor, has been heard at the Baptist Church in Hertford before and was well received on that occasion. He will go to Wake Forest Col lege next vear to continue his studies. Scouts Performing Public Service The Hertford Boy Scout Troop 155 is performing a public service in preparing five signs fox the Town of Winfall. The signs, when finished, will read, "Winfall, City Limits and will be installed at the five roads leading into Winfall. The troop flag and an American Banner arrived here Monday. When all the members are uniformed a parade will' he staged, probably in about three weeks 4t is said. The troop flag is a huge banner topped with the Boy Scout Emblem in shining brass. On it is lettered, "Troop 155, Hertford, N. C, Tide water Council." - The American Banner as well, is topped with the Scout Emblem. Both are regulation: parade size flags and may be seen in; the office of the Clerk of Superior Court. : MEETING SUNDAY :k A Children's Day program wilf 1e presented - at- - Epworth , Methodist Vfuurcikin v.MwiH.wu ounuay even - ing, June 23, at 8 o'clock 4fThe pub - lie is cordially invited to attend. Municipal Beach to Get Brand New Coat of Clean Sand RUSHINGWORK Funds Left Over From River Projects to Build Bulkhead at Covent Garden The principal objection to the new bathing pier is in the process of re moval, Mayor Vivian N. Darden im plied Wednesday morning as he told The Weekly reporter that work has already begun on piping the sewer line away from the vicinity of the pavilion. The sewer main, he said, will be piped, from its present location under the shore-end house to a point up the creek and at least to the channel. Additional lengths of pipe were or dered Tuesday after work with the pipe now available had already be gun. He said this work would be pushed as rapidly as possible. The removal of the sewer disposal pipe from the vicinity of the bathing pavilion removes the principal ob jection that parents had held to the new recreation center. Their qual'ma were well-grounded in the belief that the water there was poluted. When this work is finished the water will probably be cleaner at that location than anywhere else oo the river front. Mayor Darden also said that work is to begin within the next week at giving the municipal beach a new coat of sand. Patrolman-Fisherman Bob White's barge has been se cured to haul the new sand from across the river and from sand beds further down the river. Other work is reaching completion at the recreation center . . . interior painting and final decorating. Mayor Darden said that a bulk head will be built at the Covent Garden Deadend. Enough money was left over from the Federal grant for the bathing pier and other bulk heads to undertake this job. Drunken Driving Case Transferred To Superior Court Deputy Owens and At torney Phil Sawyer Almost Tangle In Court Room The case of John C. Butler, charg ed with driving drunk and destroy ing Perquimans County jail property, was transferred to the next term of Perquimans County Superior Court by Judge Granberry Tucker when Butler's attorney, P. G. Sawyer, of Elizabeth City, asked for a jury trial. The property destruction count was lodged against Butler after he is alleged to have broken window lights and the staircase rail in the county jail after he was arrested on the drunk driving charge. Deputy Owens and Attorney Saw yer appeared almost on the verge of I blows in the courtroom when Owens informed Sawyer that his client was in custody and had left the court room. Bond was set at $150. Miss Mae Sawyer, of Columbia, was found guilty of driving on the left side of the road, and paid the costs of court. A motion on the part of her lawyer for a nol prosse as to a reckless driving count was granted. Both charges were brought by C. O. Fowler, local truck operator, fol lowing an accident near Winfall af ter which his truck, .loaded - with Maypeas, turned over. f Edmunds Jacobs, of Rich Square, forfeited his bond when he failed to appear to answer charges of giving bad checks to W M. Divers. Sidney Parsons, Jr., Negro, was fined $7.50 for driving with improper Dratces. As the result of an accident near Nicanor Sunday night, Willie Rid dick, Negro, , and Clifton Stallings, were both charred with reckless driving. .wRiddick was found guilty and ordered to pay a fine of $25.00 and the costs of court or take a 30 day suspended sentence. Riddick was driving a truck and though testimony was contradicted st; to whether or not he held out his hand as he started to make the" tunr that resulted in the accident, ' 1 Judge Tucker ruled that even that 1 precaution under flangerous cireunv 1 stance' was not tho extent of ia 1 liability. V A : i