' "1 'AM WEEKLY . ft 11 ollL Jl lEjlbfc - - - , 71 fij- CI IV A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING OF HERTFORD AND PERQUIMANS COUNT Volume VII Number 27. Hertford, Perquimans County, North Carolina, Friday, July 5, 1940. $1.25 Per Year. QUIMMIS 4 AT PHESErlT RATE PERQUIMANS WILL BE A GHOST COUNTY IN NINETY MORE YEARS County's Population De creases Almost Ten Per Cent In Past Ten Years 9,765TODAY Number of Farms Also On Ondnnl FWliiiP VIl Urd.Ultl ICUIHC, Over Ten Year Period Since 1930 - . If there is any constructive good in worrying, it is well to worry a ! bout National Defense and the ef fects of the war ill, Europe on the Place of the America . . . and pros i perity. But it is also well to worry about an alarming decrease in the population of Perquimans County. The County, over a ten-year per ' iod, according to preliminary census (v figures, has lost almost ten percejjt of its population! ' In 1040 Perquimans County has " less than 10,000 people to compare vith 10,668 in 1930. Nine hundred " and three Perquimans County people have died of moved away since 1930, and no one has replaced them. The nose-counting today reveals that pre- ' cisely 9,765 souls reside within the ..boundaries of Perquimans County. . At this rate, Perquimans County in ninety or more years will be a - ghost county, entirely devoid of ' - humans. .These are preliminary figures of -f course and subject to correction, but are believed to be substantially cor rect, according to Denton W. Lup- ton, supervisor of the census. They have not moved away from ,th country to Hertford; these fig- ' fcres take into consideration the fact - that the town of Hertford shows an Intrease of 42 persons. Nine hundred is a lot of population - to lose in a ten-year period , it a ' "mounts to almost a hundred a year, about one person , every third; day. with nothing to offset the loss. over 'If,'''::" ." ' ' J iha him narwut? fmm 1 9.99. in ISanJ Vnr : ; , :"S M to 1,192 in ,1888, to 1,062 in 1940. This coraparision, also released by . the census supervisor, does not tend to indicate that the number of acres ' is less than in 1930, or that there r are fewer farmers or fewer people ' who live on farms than in 1930. It i simply means that the number of individual farms has decreased; though this is inconsistent with the fact that Hertford has gained 42 in .population while the county has lost, J903. This number MUST have been1 ' lost from the farms. Since few acres in the county are not under cultivation, the decrease in farms could be due to consolida ton of individual farms or to some ' other reason. Final Rites Held For J. C. Winslov Funeral Services were held Wed ,'V' nesday afternoon for Joshua C. ' .Winslow, who died at his home in jT'whiteston after an illness of six weens. , A native and lifelong resident of Perquimans County, Mr. Winslow J ' ' was the son of the late Sanuel and " fcMary Ann Winslow. -He was a mem e . i ber of the Up River Friends Church. His wife, Mrs.; Delphenia Winslow, ., two daughters, Mrs.;Addie Winslow, of. Pasquotank County, and Mrs. S. N. Riddick of Perquimans County; live bvub, otuu, ucmyBvy, uoiuj. ' Winslow of Perquimans t County, ti Ernest Winslow of Virginia, and Ir ; vin Winslow of Rocky Mount; two vV sisters, Mrs. W. P. Davis of Webster, ' Texas( and Mrs. C. E. Winslow of - 'Belvidere; one brother, Sergeant F. . T. Winslow of Elizabeth City, sur ., vive. Final rites were conducted at the TP River SYiends Church Wednes- uftrnftftn ft 'virlr nH h.,ri,l j , as uiaue in vie innuiy piui, E. Morris Takes Over "uties As District's few License Examiner J. E, Morris on Wednesday afterr noon replaced S. P. Burgin as li cense Examiner in this district. Mr. "urgin is transferred to the Rocky "ount district. '. Mr. Morris"; formerly connected h the Revenue Department iri ;lher capacity, will be in Hertford r " the courthouse pd Wednesday af i -ons for the purpose of examin. -i(.n.ts for driver's pwrraits. ' ' l;s in, t.!.:r counties i.i v j . ' ,l - .- i". . Brings In First Cotton Bloom Third Consecutive Year For the third consecutive year, Claude Williams, who lives on Route Three, has brought into the office of The Perguimans Weekly the season's firt cotton bloom- As Mr- Williams gets a free subscription for one year to The Perquimans Weekly. Hi, .m 1 miiiiiMv iiuiru i hit. .1 111 v mi., im five or six days later than his first one last year. ' William T. Smith, of Belvidere, also brought a cotton bloom to Hert ford Monday afternoon, but not to the office of The Perquimans Weekly until after Mr. Williams had arrived. One of the blooms Mr. Smith brought was a red one, meaning that it had bloomed on Sunday, a day earlier than either of the other two, but not discovered until Monday. T. E. Madre brought in the third bloom later Monday afternoon. The men, prominent farmers in Perquimans County, said blooms were plentiful Monday morning. E. Lee Hurdle, of near Joppa, brought in the fourth cotton bloom on Tuesday morning. For War Refugees Is At NoM Wednesday Contributions Totaled Only One-sixth of the Minimum Quota To datejthe Bed Cross drive for funds for war refugees totals "about -hmipiiiy4tiK to silas M. Whedbeet chairman of the "7 rerquiman county unapter. -j. amoJLt ' K sixth of the figure set as Perquim- ans County's minimum quota, hundred dollars is the goal Six this county was asked to attain. Contributions are being received by Mr. Whedbee at the post office, by the Rev. E. T. Jillson, rector of Holy Trinity Church, and by the Rev. R. F. Munns, pastor of the Hertford Methodist Church. There is no active house-to-house canvass in Perquimans County and tne anve is apparently going into a decline. The total figure two weeks ago was $83.65, (The hundred dollar figure men tioned above was quoted at noon Wednesday. There were probably other contributions since then). Funeral Services Held For S. L. Jackson At New Hope Sunday Funeral services for S. L. Jackson, 71, who died at his home in New Hope early Saturday morning after a short illness, were held Sunday af-' i ternoon at four o'clock at the grave. The Rev. J. D. Cranford, pastor of the New Hope Methodist Church, of ficiated. Burial was in the Church cemetery. Mr, Jackson was a native of Pas quotank County, but had lived in Per quimans for the past 53 years. He was a member of the New Hope Methodist Church and a Woodman He is survived by three sons, Paul Jackson, of Elizabeth City; Philip Jackson, of Sunbury, and Jerry Jack son, of Philadelphia; three daugh ters, Mrs. J T. Hendricks of Eden- ton; Mrs. L. N. Elliott, of Wilming ton, and Mrs. D. E. True, of Rich mond, Va.; one brother, Calvin Jack son, of Norfolk, Va.; several grand- s number of neices and nephews. ."Jesus Saviour, Pilot Me" and f Haven of Rest" were sung1 by Mrs. T. B. Sumner, Mrs. B. G. Koonce, L. W. ! Anderson and C. P. Morris. Pallbearers were M. M. Spivey, I. C. Butt, S. D. Banks, S. T. Perry, R, L. Robbins and L. V. Umphlett. Boy Scouts Encamp This Week At Beach .Twenty-six members .vthe Hert ford Boy J3cout " Toop, accompanied ty. Jheir . Scbutijiiastaj?, W.( H Pitt, went into encampment at Nags Bead Sunday afternoon. Thei traveled by truck 'and pitched their tents in the vicinity of the T. J. Nixon cottage Red Cross Drive BoggingDoivn with, tl.a c.V.. ;.3 : jfts 'heaAqu&"UraTiaV-BospitaIt The "encampment is for .this . week,'. Rotarians See News-Gathering Agencies At Work Club Members Impress ed With Motion Pic tures of Sinking U. S. Gunboat "Panay" The members of the Hertford Ro tary Club in meeting Tuesday night thoroughly , enjoyed a presentation through the medium of talking pic tures1 the workings of news-gathering agencies and the speed and accuracy with which they perform. R. S. Monds, president of the local club, said that G. F. Ball, in charge of public relations for an oil com-; pany in North Carolina, brought to the Rotarians a magnificent picture of the titanic struggle of skilled news reporters, working night and day at every strategic point to bring to the world the latest news in the shortest possible time. Mr. Monds said the members were particularly impressed with the actu al pictures of the sinking of the United States gunboat, "Panay", near Shanghai. The motion picture outfit used by Mr. Ball contrived to show how a reporter aboard the gun boat had swum ashore and had the news of the grim disaster flashed to the Americas, across 7,000 miles of space, in just four minutes . . . even Deiore tne bombing had been com pleted. Mr. Ball wiW be presented to the Lions Club at their meeting in the dining room of Hotel Hertford to night Friday). Lions Club Making Plans For Second Annual County Fair .1 -. i Definite Arrangements At Regular Meeting Of Club Tentative plans are being made by the Lions Club to hold another Per quimans County Fair, here, at a late date this fall. Details will probably be discussed at their meeting Friday night. The Lions Club realized approxi mately ?100 from the Crescent A- musement Company engagement here last week, and the same show much larger, of course will prob ably play a return engagement if the Club decides to hold the fair again this year. The Lions Club a year aeo in Sep tember, gave Perquimans County its first large scale county fair, with the cooperation of the County Agent and the Home Demonstration Agent. It was a highly successful celebra tion in every sense ancl the sponsors were well pleased with the good-will created through their efforts. The same plan probably will be followed this year. Last year, the county fair which ran for six days and nights, included special days set aside for 'children, when the rides were operated at half price; for farmers, when AEen J. Maxwell spoke from a grandstand on the courthouse green; and mer chants day. There was a large exhibit tent with exhibits from all home demonstration clubs and farm groups, together with commercial exhibits. Correction The Weekly's attention has been called to a discrepancy in the news story of last week concerning the resignation of R. N. Hines as town engineer. - The item mentioned the late J. R. Elliott, who, until seven years ago, held the position vacated by Mr. Hines and stated "The duties of the office at that time amounted to those of a town electrician, but under Mr. Hines they expanded to take in the streets, water and electric light de partments." It came to our attention that the duties of the late Mr. Elliott were the same as those performed by Mr. Hines. The Weekly is glad to cor rect this item. FRANKLIN VISITOR Bill Jones, of Franklm, Va., is visiting here, the. guest of Miss Lila Budd Stephens and her parents, Mr 'flnd MraV C. G. Stephens. ; IN NORFOLK FOR OPERATION v Carroll, little son of Mr. and Mr& B. C. B?rry, will enter" Leigh Memo-. ; (Friday) to undergo a tonsilectomy. Board Reverses Its Decision On NYA Work Suspension County Will Continue To Sponsor NYA; Call Amounts to Fifteen Dollars Month sixty women i the Board of Between fifty and who appeared before County Commissione,rs in meeting at the courthouse Monday prevailed upon that body to reconsider its de cision on suspension of support to the NYA. The board reconsidered took a vote and decided to again finance the National Youth Administration projects with a monthly contribution from the county treasury. Among those speaking to the commissioners in behalf of the NYA plea, were Mrs. J. J. Fleetwood,, head of the NYA in Hertford, Mrs. J. G. Roberson for the Woman's Club, and Mrs. C. P. Morris. The amount of the county's con tribution to the work is $15 a month. This sum is used to buy ma terial with which to keep the work sponsored. The salaries come from the Federal Government. The board, in reversing its deci sion, reminded of the original stipu lation that no applicant to the NYA should have more than six months of steady employment. In other I words, the board members want all eligible youths in the county to have equal opportunity for employment and training under the NYA. V.C. Hurdle Dies Of Injuries After 5 Days In Hospital Funeral Services Held Tuesday Fbt Victim Of Fatal Farm Acci dent William Carson Hurdle, New Hope farmer who was injured in a fanning accident last Tuesday, died in the Albemarle Hospital in Elizabeth City at 5:40 Sunday afternoon. Funeral services were held Tues day afternoon at the New Hope Methodist Church with the Rev. J. D. Cranford, pastor, officiating. Burial was in the Church cemetery. Mr. Hurdle, 65, suffered the fatal wounds wfeen a team of horses draw ing a hay rake ran away and threw him under the rake inflicting severe head injuries including lacerations p."H probably a fractured s!:ull r.s well as other injuries about the body. He was rushed by ambulance im mediately to the hospital. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. SaFlie Hurdle; three sons, Quenton R. Hur dle, of Norfolk, Va., T. A. Hurdle, of New Hope, and J. Q. Hurdle, of New Hope; four daughters, Mrs. H. C. Hoskins, Mrs. E. A. Turner, Mrs. S. W. Baker and Miss Willie Hurdle, al! of New Hope; three sisters, Mrs. Milton Koyce, of Portsmouth, Va., Mrs. R. B. Hayman, of Newport News, Va., and Mrs. James Copeland, of Cleveland, Ohio; three brothers, ivarl A. Hurdle, of Elizabeth City; Hubert Hurdle, of Winfall, and Je rome Hurdle, of Belvidere; and sev eral nieces and nephews. Stations Available For Army Service From Virginia To Hawaii There are eight stations available for men who wish to enlist in the United States Army from nearby Fortress Monroe to far-away Hawaii according to an announcement by Corporal John J. Moore, who is lo cated in the Elizabeth City Post Of fice building and is accepting appli cations. Men accepted for air corps or sig nal corps must be high school grad uates or its equivalent, he said. ' Stations open now are: Coast ar tillery, , Fortress .Monroe, Virginia, Medical Department and 8th Signal Company at Fort Meade, Maryland, 31st Engineers at Fort Belvoir, Vir ginia, 12th Infantry at Fort Howard, Maryland, C. W. S. Edgewood Arse nal, Maryland, Air Corps and Signal Corps, Hawaii. . Front Being Painted The front ' of Morgan's Modern Grocery on Church Street is getting p. turn. VA '. 0U,B( ' jpauai hanoe its attractiveness. Irvia, Bar- clift has been doing the Wjorju SMOKES, DRINKS, GASOLINE GOING UP; DEFENSE TAXES HAVE BECOME EFFECTIVE Fourth Falls On Regular Holiday The Fourth of July came at an in- convenient time for most employees: the personnel of Hertfords largest business houses were already enjoy ing a regular naii-noiiaay on murs days. The event was observed here by the bank, post office and business houses. No special programs had been planned, and beaches were ex pected t'o see most of the holiday motoring. The 164th birthday of the Ameri can Declaration of Independence this year finds Uncle Sam sharpening his sword to ward off the most serious threat to the American Ideal of Free dom since the declaration in 177C. Coming during the most chaotic time since the last World War days, Independence Day (Thursday) was observed here in peace and quiet that clashes violently with the re ports of war and suffering from overseas. Hitler Stymied For The Moment By Red Army In Powder Keg Easing Balkan Situa tion Again Leaves Stage Clear For "Bat tie For Britain" Dramatically-voiced radio com mentators were filling the air Wed nesday night with news of German bombers raining incendiary bombs over England and strafing ground troops. With the Balkan crisis easing, the news flashes eating that this renewed the west is probably the of the "great battle for apparently were indi activity in first stage Britain." Herr Hitler some time ago said his blitzkreig would blast the Island Kingdom off the map in less than six weeks. If Hitler has given the signal, the six-week deadline began Wednesday. Nazi planes struck twice at Eng land Wednesday in broad daylight; the abanflonment of night-masked bombing is apparently an attempt to spread terror and destruction among England's densely populated cities before launching the long-awaited projected invasion. The death-dealing blitzkreig ex pected by the British Isles over the week-end, accordin., to Hitler's pro mises, did not materialize because Russia's Red. Army s.ep. .ed into Rumania and shifted the haul. -rents j in a , and for a temporary period at least Activities in Europe : :t greater muddle than before, while the full meaning of the sian invasion is not known, Km,- ' i ; heralded as a valuable aid to l land just now. It indicates aiso lnai Hitler and Mussolini are greatly i worried over the developments of the past few days. Russia has already moved far enough into Rumania to disturb th:. flow of supplies into Germany from Rumania and that alone is regarded as the greatest gain in months for Britain 'in her drive to establish a blockade around Hitler. Back on the western side of Eu rope, German submarines inactive these past several weeks are being heard from more often, and it is be lieved that this type of warfare will 1 constitute one i f the first phases of the blitzkrieg attack on the last out post of civilization between America and the German barbarians. I The Balkan crisis, however, after partly claiming the Fuehrer's atten tion for a short w'nile, is eased, as late reports state that tension les sens there since Hungary has been virtually forced to refrain from at tacking Rumania. And so again, an anxious worla tures its full attention to the coming "Battle For Britain," while observers see the stage being set for an ex panding war front that will possibly see the Balkan powder keg explode with renewed fury and with greatei human suffering. In Washington in the meantime, while Europe simmers and steams and boils over, the National Defense Commission announced, that the Packard Motor Company has tenta tively agreed to build nine thpusand aircraft engines three thousand for the United States and six thousand for Britain. r To this we an only add "Watch out. for sabotage' . V". National Levy Boosts Price of Theatre Ad mission to Thirty eight Cents BEER HARD HIT No More Two-for-25c Cigarettes; Ten - cent Packages On Way Out Fifteen-cent cigarettes are fifteen cents straight no more at two for a quarter. Ten-cent beer is on the way out. So are ten-cent packages of cigar ettes. Theatre tickets are now twenty five and three cents tax added. Gasoline is a halfcent higher than it was last Sunday night. The new National Defense Tax made itself felt in Hertford early Monday morning, July 1st, at about the same time the bill collectors be gan to arrive. Bewildered distribu tors and dealers, already bemoaning North Carolina's Sales Tax, now have new cause to wring their hands with only a vague idea on what to and what not to charge the new tax. This levy for National Defense as it struck Hertford early Monday morning is only the beginning . . . the first phase . . . and these sources from which the first returns are coming classed as "luxuries" went up immediately. Many other articles will follow; as soon as present stocks are sold or as soon as clear instruc tions are received from internal re- I venue officers. No one knows at present on what other articles the levies will be plac ed, but drug stores are aware that an increase is in the offing on toilet ar ticles. These taxes will not be ap plied however, until present stocks are exhausted, and retail stores will not "feel the rise until manufacturers and distributors raise their prices. Back to cigarettes again, and what the tax on them will mean to smok ers in Hertford and Perquimans County, the reporter talked with several merchants and dealers Mon day and learned that . . . Some stores are selling the popular 15-cent brands for as low as two for 27 cents. You can't buy them cheap er than that in Hertford. Others who retailed them at two for a quar ter Sunday night were selling only at 15 cents straight Monday morn ing. Few dealers will be handling the 10-cent brands after their present stocks are gone. The margin of pro fit, they say, is too small. Where the 10-cent brands are available, (Continued on Page Three) Three Perquin ans Soys Charged With fnious Offenses I Chap With Deadly pells ('Car e:. Assault W:t i eapons The hearing of a case involving three young Perquimans County men and charges of assault wi.h a dead ly weapon scheduled for trial at Tuesday's session of county court was postponed until the next term, on July 9th. The young men or rather, boys all in their middle 'teens, are John nie Elliott, Louis Norman ChappeU and Gaither Chappell, all of the ChappeU Hill section. They are charged by Joseph Le of Bertie County, with cutting him with a knife and beating him with brass knuckles. The affair is said to have taken place at a service sta tion on the Edenton Highway after midnight Saturday. Lee, a young man of medium sta ture, was cut in the abdomen and re quired medical treatment which was administered at the Hertford Clinic. Lee's condition, as he appeared in tie courtroom Tuesday,' showed the results of a terrific beating. Both eyes were badly bruised and swollen and his right hand was cut. The Elliott. boy was picked up at another - filling station near Hertford by Deputy Sheriff M. G. Owens and Patrolman Jack Gaskill Sunday. The ChappeU boys were found at their homes.-' , The hearing was postponed he cause of the prosecuting witness' Condition, The three are under $500 bonds each pending the hearing.- 4,1 ' -v It (.1 A if 8 ti 1