V' . A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED; TO TOE UPBtHLDING OF HERTFORD AND COtJNTY Volume. WI.Number 25. ft- Hertford, Perquimans County, North Carolina, Friday, June 21, 1940. $1.25 Per Year. :,,a4?oI:TI1MIAm weito y A -X1 A I: is- DOARD OF COMMISSIONERS LOWERS COUNTY TAX RATE FOR YEAR TO $150 Lower, Rate Made Po& rsible r By Refinancing r County's Bonded In . debtedness FROM $1.60 - Withdraws Support of National Youth Ad ministration W o r k ; Grammar School Re pairs Keep Rate From Being Lower Perquimans County's tax rate, fol lowing a special meeting of the Board of County Commissioners on Monday when the new budget was made up, has been reduced from $.160 to $1.50 for the next fiscal year. The reduction was made possible through the re-financing of the county's bonded indebtedness this year when a lower interest rate was secured. The tax rati could have been re duced to $1.40, but for the expense of repairs and modernization to the Hertford Grammar School, it was indicated. Another contributing factor to the 1 lowering of the tax rate . . . though a small one . . . was the withdrawing of the county's support by discon tinuing of funds for the county's contribution to NYA work. Just what effect this resolution will have on the NYA has' not been determined. If another sponsor can be found, the work will go on. If not, it is likely that the sewing and handicraft rooms will be discontinu ed, but that the clerical projects will U ma1!ije$ at .sisvf 1 the For Tomorrow Lone Fight Between Veterans JTor House Seat Excites No Show Of Interest The J. S. McNider- . J. T. Benton runoff is tomorrow (Saturday). By nine .o'clock or probably earlier to morrow night, : Perquimans County will know who will represent it in the lower house for the next two years. It is-the only Tace in the county and McNider and Benton were the high men in the hottest house race Perquimans County has ever seen. There were five , candidates in the first' primary; Benton Is the incumbent- but McNider, veteran legisla tor, le4 him for to by a 14-vote'margiiuj'v.- Political observers, when they work up enough interest in the runoff to voke an opinion, say . the second pri mary iriU be ecy close, ;And that's alt:they;y:V With; first primary interest at -such a high "pitch, the let-down is ghastly. WUhthe runoff " scheduled , for. to morrow therels still talkv of nothing but war; mention politics and ,th subjecf will endure : for less than - a fe1lWot3lifsDrifl0ln, 'capitu lations 'i:;ttiaeiajdseiitedt crowd mto the background. - The Idne election scramble is exr citinsr iot the -fainiest dearree of im terelt. .It" Pbablywould. in normal nr. mm .wttiuM hnt than M.nnf . tinnnnl 1 TM.it , .. :.tm ' juMrmtaul . :. ?&&M WkH bt 1jetween' veferans.1 i, Mrivia Rountwe. the healflu sfe "t)k priniayy-hadi nevef ;served' 1ft ilistet.teJe ;,CampbeHji'and ;.; rsrved two. terms'- each ' to' the lower housatt ands the ' Stat semte.: iMTi Benton Is Twandiiigi out -bti fcecond term in the house. :WorkiStartslOn ejrtforupd 'Ml; Tuesday morning on1 the. bulkhead Jrt -'.-.. the Ckveht'arden )JeMehdM-5r '.Enough money was left 'over from Federar. grants' f or, therecreaflott ;-vi "'V i'-i Y: BIRTH AN NdUNCKMKIN T ', ' " Mt and kr4Z& T. Keel wisK to i f announce the birth of twin tdaugh tets Jean and Jane, ''on Thursday, ,Juno 13, 1940. Mother and babies are doirg nicely. . . . " , Pastor From Burgaw Preaches Here Sunday The Rev. C. W. Duling, paator of the First Baptist ' Church of Burgaw, will preach at the Hert ford Baptist Church morning and evening services on Sunday, ac cording to an announcement from Charles Johnson, member of the Board of Deacons. Mrs. Giles Kornegay of Bur gaw, formerly Miss Ruth Wins ow of Hertford, says Mr. Dulling ippeals especially to the young eople, and that a Sunday even ng service seldom finds his :hurch but well-filled with young people. Crescent Company Amusements Here All Of riextVYeek Same Show That Came For Lions Fair Last Year; Sponsored Next Week By lions Club Entertainment for young and old will be offered on the town lot in Hertford all of next week when the Crescent Amusement Company of Gastonia will present what is termed "the world's cleanest midway." The amusement concern is no stranger to Hertford, having appeared here at least four times as well as in nearby towns. Included in the entertainment are modern riding. , devices, merry-go-rounds, Ferris wheel, chair-o-plane, and other clean amusement gadgets. The amusement company comes to Hertford through arrangement with the Hertford -lions Club which brought tfieIama Show here last year for the highly successful first1 county fairl; The show comes to Hertford from Edenton. It will fill the engagement here and then go to Bethaven for the Fourth of July celebration there. The amusement company is al ways welcomed in Hertford. Being probably the cleanest show of its type, a number of those connected with it have many friends here in Hertford. Mr. McHenry, the owner, was ill when the show was here be f6re, but it is understood his condi tion has improved since then. Mrs. McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Husted will probably also spend the week here. The Lions Club expects to realize a substantial' sum from the engage ment in Hertford and with the affair widely advertised, it is expected that large crowds will attend. All shows and riding devices will be in operation Monday night until Saturday night. . Sara L Elliott Health Contest Sar$ Elizabeth Elliott, the health est 4-fl piub girl in Perquimans County, won first place in the dis rict 4-II Club contest , in-Tarboro on Tuesday, ' '' .' , : Last year Sara Elizabeth won see end place in the same district con test.'' The district ,. V the North- HClufc -heft miW: k&faa&Xtvi $etertioja: & ter.:Mr.-and!:tSA:KWi'K8.fiBotti' wilt enter the State 4JH Health Contest- at ' State Cjotlere duTini the 4 a Short Coursaln July.4' ' Examinations In ' the Mfcouhly; con-iestsl-were i handled by vDr,;T. P; Georgia Man Manager At Rose's 10-25-Cent Store! ?wh6?; cam' here Severing weeks Jigo' Waeplace j'VC.' Loveiand; :,who was transfen4 S to Galax, Virginia, to jkeove man agership: ftoMtmumitf home at Mrs. Ellie White's hoarding house, came to Hertford from Nor folk after going there from Burling- .ton. His native state is Georgia.- Wins In District belated Virlfcra. nOT , manaire'r- of Rose'a! vB- Hertford. Grammar School Almost A New Structure No Ground Floor Audi torium, However; Old Building Gutted and Entirely Renovated Hertford's new Grammar School it is new, practically will be com pleted in the latter part of August or maybe around the middle of that month, W. E. Coleson, superintendent in charge of construction, said Mon day morning. The Grammar School, built in 1905, is new throughout with the exception of the brick walls and some floor and ceiling timbers. It was gutted and rebuilt from the ground up to the roof, but disappointing to many peo ple will be the news that not enough money is available to build the lower floor auditorium addition that had been hoped for. The fire escapes on either end of the building, one leading directly in to the second floor auditorium and the other into the corridor, are brick towers bonded to the outside of the building. They are called "smoke towers" or "stair towers." Steel gates, of the elevator tele-scoping-style will give entrance to the stair towers from the outside, and the second floor windows in the towers will be covered with wire mesh, according to Mr. Coleson. The stair towers will have concrete roofs, probably the only concrete roofs in Hertford. The auditorium, though on the second floor, can be entered or left directly from the out side without entering the building though entrance can be gained to the ground floor through the same stair tower. The arrangement is similar to the one at the high school. New at the Hertford Grammar School will be floors, plaster ceiling, plumbing equipment, heating equip ment, electric wiring and fixtures. The toilets have concrete floors and will have tile floors over that with four-foot tile walls; Only some parts of the present furnace will be used in the new heatyig system. The furnace room was fire-proofed, a year ago by the same contractor, F. N Thompson of Charlotte. It is interesting to note that the 35-year-old building has seen three methods of heating. First, there was the hot-air duct system, later coal stoves in each room, and then steam heat. I - As his crew began '.tearing down the chimneys in the different rooms, Mr. Coleson said it was the first time he had ever seen chimneys not bonded to the walls. That is, the chimneys 'were installed separately from 'the building on the inside, not fastened to the brick walls, but using the walls as the fourth side of the chimneys, The walls between the rooms are fire-proofed with rock laths, perfor ated so that the plaster will hold, and the insides of the brick shell are water-proofed so that moisture will not seep in and crack the plaster. All windows on both ends of the Grammar School are -bricked in with the exception of those in the stair towers. It appears that the building will be entirely ready for occupancy be fore the next term is scheduled to open for business. Ilertfor 1090. N. C District fiertf rd, fiotaxy Club has been k Tidewater District ft&SiSSnliS&f interna- tinhAT fnr th transfer Alan' Involved Edenton," jSUzabeth Jity and Manteo, aU of whom, have wanted for some time tjHteava the 3 Tidewater, Vir ginia, district. The transfer back to the 189th District of; North Carolina is effec iive'Juy lsi 1 Tie new district jgpvernorelect: to preside over Eli .sabeWCityMantep, Edenton and 'j?eirwiji &t30 Clubs, is Carter parrow.'of Tarboro,'' fe;":5.;";".;: $C Aftehds .Convention ?rC.: F. -HI orris,-general manager of the Southern Cottolii Oil Company, attended - th4-.pilyhtion of Cotton Seed Crushers at ..Myrtle-Beach, S. C -early thia: wee ' :-:'; The convention Is aid to have gone on srecord opposing state s trade barriers. ' ,V t i' . d Rotary - , i.'. W Club lie Red Cross Drive For War Refugees Gaining Momentum Contributions at Noon Tuesday Were Push ing Hundred Dollar Mark; Donors listed Kd Cross contributions for war refugees took a substantial gain over the figures printed in this news paper a week ago, information re leased by Chairman Eilas M. Whed bee at noon Tuesday disclosed. The total at that time was $83.65. The minimum quota asked by the National Red Cross from Perquimans County is still $600 ... the amount to be used wholly and exclusively for war relief. No part of it is to be applied toward the normal program and expenditures of the Red Cross. This newspaper was in error last week when the reporter stated that the Rev. R. F. Munns, pastor of the Hertford Methodist Church, had scor ed the lack of activity on the part of the local chapter in a plea from his pulpit last Sunday. Mr. Munns' position is set forth in a letter from him on another page of this issue. However, Red Cross do nations may be handed to Mr. Munns or to the Rev. E. T. Jillson, rector of Holy Trinity Church, or to Mr. Whedbee at the Post Office. Here is a list of those who had made contributions to noon Tuesday: Mt. Sinai Church, W. H. Hard castle, Mrs. B. F. Bray, Mrs. R. T. Clarke, E. T. Jillson, Mrs. Kate Crawford, Mrs. C. W. Morgan, Miss Pattie Whedbee, Mrs. G. . Newby, Mrs. T. S. White, Miss Helene Nixon, Claude White, Mrs. Stella Fowler, Order of the Eastern Star, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Wilson, Mrs. W. H. Pitt. fMrs. Isa Tucker, Mrs. F. T. Wins- low, Miss Mae Wood Winslow, Mrs. Will Mardre, Mrs. R. D. Elliott, Mrs. W. E. White, Granberry Tucker, Mrs. T. J. Nixon, Hollowell Chevrolet Company, Mrs. Helene Newby, Miss Mildred Reed, Mrs. Joe Campbell, Zach White, Miss . Agnes Tttcker, Reginald Tucker, Miss Jocelyn .Whed bee, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Morris, Mrs. J. P. Hill, Manola Jolliff, Carlton Davenport, Jr., Mrs. W. G. Gather, Miss Helen Gaither, Corbin Dozier, Mrs. R. H. Willis, Miss Kate Blanch ard, Mrs. R. L. Knowles and Mrs. H. C. Stokes. Among those listed here are pro bably many who will resent having their names published in connection with contributions, but it has been1 suggested that a listing of those who have donated will have a tendency to hurry along other contributions which are sorely needed to bring Perquimans County's total to any where near the minimum quota. The need is much too pressing to quibble over printing the names of those who have contributed, and it may possibly bring out other dona tions. There is no house-to-house canvass in Hertford for the refugee call, but funds may be handed, to any of the three persons named above. From September, 1939, with the invasion of Poland, through June 7th, it is said, the American Red Cross made available a total of more than five million in relief supplies to the stricken people of Europe. .... but demands have grown and much more is needed. Murder Victim At One Time Operated Restaurant Here Widow of Theodore j&nidas Is Daughter if Qg$&&$. P. Jordan Bagley Swamp Theodore W. Sanidas, 40, who was murdered by pistol-fire in Norfolk, Virginia, early Sunday morning, once operated a restaurant here In Hert ford in a building located where the store of M. J. Gregory now stands. ' Mrs. Sanidas and their four chil dren were visiting relatives in Bag ley Swamp when the shooting occur ed. Mrs. Sanidas was formerly Miss Melvina Jordan, daughter of Mrs. B. F. Jordan and the late Mr. Jordan, of Bagley Swamp. Funeral services were held in Nor folk Tuesday afternoon at the chapel of the H. D. Oliver Funeral Apart ments with the Rev. George T. Ter rell, pastor of the Trinity Baptist Church, and Msgr. Nicadros Pinatsis, pastor i of the "Hellenic Orthodox Church, officiating.' a r The body was sent to Hertford via (Continued on Tage Wve) ; AXIS PARTNERS EXTEND HARSH PEACE TERMS; WHO GETS THE FRENCH NAVY? Shelton Tucker Leaves Hospital; Wife Still Confined With Injuries It is reported here that Shelton Tucker, former Hertford boy, who was injured in the automobile acci dent two weeks ago in which his brother, Joe Tucker, was killed near Danville, Virginia, is able to leave the hospital. A cousin, Beverly Tucker, of Hertford, said he probably left the hospital several days ago and that his injuries consisted of broken teeth, bruises and lacterations and shock. Mr. Tucker's wife, who was also injured in the fatal accident, is still confined to the hospital with a brok en ankle and other injuries. Legionnaires To Help Rid State Of Subversive Group Berry Says Absence of Local Post No Reason Why Veterans Here Shouldn't Help The American Legion in North Carolina has been asked by Governor Clyde R. Hoey to cooperate in the eradication of subversive elements within the State. "The Legion ac cepts the job fearlessly and grimily," promises June H. Rose, department commander. There is no American Igion Post in Perquimans County, though ac- tion was started almost a year ago to establish one here. "Our job," said Mr. Rose, "is to listen and say very little publicly. If we, members of the Legion, know anything it should be reported im mediately to the following organiza lions: "First, to the Sheriff of the coun ty; Second, to Inspeeto Fred Handy State Bureau of Investigations, Ita-1 leigh; Third, to Ed Scheidt, Federal Bureau of Investigations, Charlotte; Fourth, to Department Commandei of American Legion, OreenT..e, i North Carolina." B. C. Berry, veteran, was instru mental in compiling a list of veter ans in Perquimans County a year ago when the movement for a Legion Post was started. He sees little rea- son why the absence of a local post should exempt the veterans in this county from also "accepting the job fearlessly and grimly." "The worthwhileness of this un dertaking can be made negligible if one single Legioiyiaire should at tempt any act not in accordance with the law of the State and the Nation," Commander Rose stated while impressing the membership with the idea that under no circum stances will the Legion through any member or any committee attempt to take the law into its own hands. The State and Federal Bureaus of Investigations will have trained men at the State Convention in High Point who will help plan a sane and sensible procedure for this crisis. "In the meantime," said Command er Rose, "I urge that there be no political, commercial or social ostra cism of individuals or businesses simply because an individual or bus iness happens to have a foreign name or because there is some un proved rumor flying around about that individual or business. We must act on facts alone." RIVER BOTTOM IN VICINITY OF MUNICIPAL BEACH NOW GETTING NEW COAT OF SAND Workmen under the Works Pro-, gress IProgram; on . Wednesday were busily WUnft targe after barge-lload of sand-clay from points up the river and-using ft to .gwe-thev river bottom iavhf imnfediate cutity of the new recreation pier a new coat of clean earth. Authorities said, in answer to a question, that there is not sufficient tidal action in the Perquimans River to disturb the sand in its new sur roundings. Work of moving the sewer disposal main at the foot of Grubb Street, where it emptied into the river under the pavilion boardwalk has also be gun. Only the sewer pipe originally placed there has been moved as yet, but the direction of the lengths al - ready moved indicate that the line takes a decided turn under the shore end of the pier and shies off abruptly from the vicinity of the pier in the direction of Skinner's Creek. , ..When additional pipe lengths ar rive they-were ordered last Tues day y the sewer' main : -will her piped up the creek and out to channel Paris Sorry Sight to Frenchmen as Swas tika Waves From Fa mous Eiffel Tower TALK PEACE World Waits Breath lessly For Answer to French Navy Riddle; Trouble Brews In South America as France Fights on The Axis partners' offers of peace must be accepted or rejected as they stand. This means that the price of an Armistice so far as France is concerned is not open to negotiation and means complete and uncondition al surrender. This was a picture of conditions abroad at a late hour Wednesday night ... a picture subject to dras tic changes in the course of even a few hours. Since this newspaper last gave it3 weekly report on happenings in the great European struggle, the Nazi War Machine has marched through Paris and to points much further south . . . but without damaging the French capital though the Swastika flies from the Eiffel Tower and many Parisian public buildings. It is a sad sight to Frenchmen refugees and thirty per cent of the population that stayed in Paris to await the expected arrival of the conquering dictator and the Ger man march of slaughter continues even as Hitler and. Mussolini talk of peace plans in answer to the French surrender. The richest industrial centers of France, principal scene of the last World War, are in the handa of the invaders. Even after the surrender and the resignation of the French cabinet, France fights on. It appears that Hitler's peace terms are so harsh that French people and French lead ers prefer to nht on to the death rather than suhnit tiVtewns bondV age proposed by the jackal, Adolf Hitler. The outstanding question before the Allied Cause and consequently before world, centers today revolves around the French navy. Will Hitler get it? Or will French seamen re volt and join the British sea forces? Will England capture it and maintain a small hope for victory by keeping the fleet out of German hands? These are the questions being ask ed .. . and all of them may be ans wered before you read this. It is ap parent that Hitler is demanding the fleet. The Mad Fuerher's revenge on the French people may be a ter rible thing to behold if he is unsuc cessful in his plans as they relate to the French navy. The world waits breathlessly in the meantime While the Mass Mur derer ponders peace gestures to the French. Invasion of England is expected minutely, and while the British pre pare for a seige of unprecedented proportions, the fall of France and the possible surrender of its fleet will renew the stark realization that a sea blockade might bring starva tion to England and that no inva sion will be necessary. The Italian role as Hitler's axis partner to date has been of small moment, but Fascists in Rome said Wednesday that French rejection of the Munich terms would unleash a (Continued On Page Eight) Norfolk Southern '4 The Norfolk Southern Railroad Company, the county's largest tax payer . . with; a total valuation of $325,339 , . . has turned into the county treasury $5,091.64 advance taxes for. 1940. The. Norfolk Southern has 24.838 miles of rjight-of-way in Perquimans County valued at $13,098,436 per mile 1 and other property, stations, etc. Major and Loomis Lumber Com-. pany is the second (largest taxpayer, .' the Virginia Electric and Power . Company, third, and the Southern ' Cotton Oil Company, fourth. ' The regular dinner meeting of the ing at Hotel Hertford. 'y ' Counrs lir st laxpayin MHirce 1 0,,