PERv
, keiitfopj). n. c. f;.:da.
ROGER'
Dkd KMhMMi r You foundation
LET AMERICAN MANAGEMENT
HANDLE IT
When trie going gets rough;
when quick, accurate and coura
geous decisions are necessary, peo
ple forsake their popular idol:
and seek those quiet, unassuming
but confidence-
inspiring men
who are ad
mired not tor
their popular
ity, but for
their ability to
get things done.
This country is
ifort u n a t e to
have the great
est group of
managers in the
world. It only
Kyes
remains for the people to wak
up and help in their utilization.
America has been shaken bj
the course of events in Europe
-Pjplomats have rushed back anc
forth with a suitcase in one hanc
and a ..radio microphone in the
other. The drums of waa hav
been beaten in the pulpits
Learned academies have theorized
on democracy. Politicians have
fought and traded for the spoils
of the defense program. Business
men have groaned at the prospect
of profit and investment losses.
Through all of this the public
has maintained a stunned silence.
It has only been during the last
few weeks that this country has
begun to collect itself sufficients
to do some sound thinking. Oui
conclusions have been about the
same. We are about to "shoot the
rapids," as they say in the back
woods. Our canoe will be in con
stant danger. Next comes the
question of who is going to han
dle the paddle. We find ourselves
looking for cool-headed men whe
have bee,n forged in the fires ol
adversity and emergency.
America Is about to ?eaH on.
Charlie, John and Sam those!
great managers who have come
up through the ranks because they!
are natural leaders. Every day Is;
election day for them because
their men must love and respect
them as they work shoulder to
shoulder. Such managers have
the courage to make spot deci
sions and, yet, their vision enables
them to make a series of correct
decisions that lead to planned re
suits. They are accustomed to
handling management on one side
and labor on the other. They
must blend the interests of these
two successfully so they can pro
duce the goods.
America has the best managers
in the world. No matter what
turn the world emergency may
take, we have able managers to
handle the situation. There is
more ingenuity in American man
agement than in any other group
in the world. Our army and our
navy are both in the hands of
good managers. If we have an
economic war to fight, our man
agers are equal to the task. If it
is manufacturing, we can produce
it. If it's food, our farmers can
grow it.
Other countries have economic
resources, but it takes manage
ment to get the most out of these
resources. A natural leader, as
a result of his accomplishments
and ethics, can command the re
spect of his fellows where neither
law nor emergency can accom
plish that end.
Fear has defeated many nations,
even before they put a man on
the field of battle. A true man
ager knows no fear. He will try
anything because his life has been
filled with the successful com
pletion of so-called "impossible"
tasks. Management will not only
lead America to victory in any
endeavor, but will prove to be her
greatest symbols of democratic
inspiration.
Few people realize it but there
is a fundamental reason why de
mocracy cannot be destroyed.
Totalitarianism and communism
are failing because of lack of
proper management Socialism
has failed without management.
Why can't these ideologies inter
est management brains? The
answer is simple.
Managers are the most demo
cratic men in the world. They
are democratic in thought and ac
tion. Democracy is the only form
of government that appeals to
them, and they will not stand by
and see it destroyed.
Coyotes Good Mousers
According to naturalists of the na
tional park service, the coyote is a
better mouser than the cat. His
keen sense of hearing and sight,
quickness of movement and ability
to blend with the background of
grass and shrubs makes him an
excellent hunter of these rodents.
' ' Charles II Liked Music
Although Charles II could play no
musical instrument, he surrounded
himself with those who could fur
:'; nifih almost any kind of music. At
, his coronation anthems and rare
music, with lutes, viols, trumpets,
organs and voices were then heard.
. English Translations of Homer
', The best Jmown English transla-
Long, Chapman and Pope
EtOG'M IN COTTON GOODS SEEN
vsociou iarmers oi iNortn uarouna are expewea w stimulate a
boom in sales of cotton goods in stores when they start trading in
their cotton stamps for wearing apparel, such as is pictured above.
The Triple-A program, of which E. Y. Floyd of N. C. State College
is North Carolina executive officer, will distribute cotton stamps to
farmers who voluntarily red ice their cotton acreage below their
1941 AAA allotments. The stamps are redeemable at retail stores
for new articles, made entirely of cotton, grown and manufactured
in the United States.
WHO KNOWS?
1. Who was known as the "Blood
and Iron" Chancellor?
2. Ic Japan under agreement to
go to war with the United States if
Germany declares war upon us .'
3. What was H. R. 1776?
4. Has the Red Sea area been
open to American ships since the
war in Europe began?
6. How do American armament
expenditures compare with Ger
many's ?
6. Which cost the larger amount,
a battleship or an aircraft carrier?
7. Hbw many trained glider pilots
do the Germans claim?
8. In what body of water did the
German battleship Bismarck sink the
British battle cruiser Hood?
9. Can you name the five nations
that lie between Mexico and
Panama ?
10. Who was Nathan Bedford
Forrest?
THE ANSWERS
1. Otto Eduard Leopold, Prince
von Bismarck, of Germany.
2. No; only if we go to war
against Germany.
3. Congressional designation of
the Lease-Lend bill.
4. It was a belligerent area from
June 12, 1940, until opened to them
on April 11, 1941.
5. Most estimates: as one to five.
6. Battleships, $70,000,000; air
craft carrier, $50,000,000.
7. 100,000.
8. Denmark (Strait, between
Greenland and Iceland.
9. Guatemala, Salvador, Hondu
ras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
10. Confederate General, noted
cavalry leader.
Broughton Endorses
June As 'Dairy Month
Governor J. M. Broughton has
given his whole-hearted endorsement
to the National June Dairy Month
campaign, says John A. Arey, Exten
sion dairy specialist of N. C. State
College and iState chairman of the
campaign. The Governor went fur
ther, Arey said, by advocating that
1941' be marked by a decided increase
in the number of dairy cows on
North Carolina farms.
The Governor pointed out that the
average dailp consumption of milk in
North Carolina is four-tenths of one
pint per person; the average daily
consumption per person in the United
States-as-a-whole is one pint. "This
is a serious situation," Governor
Broughton declared, "when we con
sider that milk is Nature's most per
fect human food."
The fact that 98,000 farm families
in North Carolina were without milk
cows at the time of the last census
was termed "appalling" by the Gov
ernor. He urged that livestock be
kept as a supplement to row crop en
terprises, such as tobacco and cotton.
The June Dairy Month campaign
is of f to a good start, Arey declared.
Stores throughout North Carolina
have arranged attractive displays of
dairy products. Drug stores, safes,
restaurants and other places where
food is served are featuring milk
drinks, ice cream, butter and cheese.
Queen Bee Egg-Layer
The queen bee is nothing but a
very efficient egg-laying machine.
The queen bee cannot make wax,
carry pollen, or do many of the
things of which the common worker
bees are capable.
Invented Gasoline Engine
... In 1880 Lawson of England invent
ed an engine driven by gasoline
explosions.
1 r '
CLASSIFIED AND
LEGALS
SALESMEN WANTED AVAIL
able at once nearby Rawleigh
Route. Good opportunity for man
over 25 with car. Trade well es
tablished. Route experience help
ful but not necessary to start.
Write at once. Rawleigh's, Dept.
NCF 100-102, Richmond, Va.
C OMING
IHI IE TT
mjl smnr week
Crescent Amusement
Company
PRESENTS
Riedermi Momig Devices
erry-6o-iiound, Ferris
OTHER CLEAN
HER!
tome
WARD'S SHOE SHOPv.CARRIES A
complete line . of polish for all
tcolo.s and types of shoes., .
FOR SALK OL1 NEWSPAPERS.
oc per oundle. Call at Tiie Per
quunans V eekly uifwe. f '!j
WANTED HUSTLING MAN TO
work Industrial Insurance in and
around Hertford on Salary and
commission basis. Address all re
plies to P. 0. Box No. 507, Eden
ton, N. C.
SHOES RE-BUILT. ALL REPAIR
work given skilled attention at
Ward's Shoe Shop, Edenton.
FOR SALE HOUSEHOLD FUR
nishings. Linens, Cutlery," Dishes,
Comforts and many other items
Miss Mamie Stallings, Hertford
N. C. may30,june6pd
NOTICE
By virtue of a deed of trust exe
cuted to me by J. H. Baker and wife,
for certain purposes therein men
tioned, which bears date February
6th, 1930, and is registered in the
office of the Register of Deeds of
Perquimans County in M. D. Book 16,
page 548, default having been made
in the payment of the notes therein
secured, I shall, at the request of the
holder of the notes secured therein,
offer for sale at public auction, for
cash, at the Court House Door in
Hertford, Perquimans Comity, N. C,
on Monday, June 23rd, 1941, at 11
A. M., three of the tracts of land con
veyed in said deed of trust, to-wit:
Second Tract: That certain tract of
land in Winfall, Perquimans County,
North Carolina, Beginning on the
east side of Katherine .Street at the
southwest corner of J. W. Ward's
lot, being South 11 deg. West 15
feet from the southwest corner of
the "Lodge" and running N. 80 deg.
30 feet, east 174 feet to Desert Road,
then along said road south 20 deg.
30 feet, west 260 feet, 6 inches to
Main Street, thence along Main
Street south 80 deg. 30 feet west 41
feet to Katherine Street, then along
Katherine Street north 11 west 227
feet and 9 inches to the beginning,
being the same lot "conveyed to J. H.
SPONSORED BY
RDUQWS
and Bring The. Whole
Baker by S. F. Stallings by deed re
corded in Book 16, page 570. .
Third Tract: That flat iron tract
of land in Winfall, Perquimans Coun
ty, Beginning at & the. confluence of
Boswell Fork Road and- Blight's
Mill Road (now State' Highway 842)
and running northerly along .Boswell
Fork road 76 and 2-8 yards to Canal
ditch, then southerly at right angles
and following said Canal ditch 56
yards to Bright's Mill Road (now
State Highway 342) then along
Bright's Mill road or State Highway
about 73 yards to the place of begin
ning. Being the same lot conveyed
to J. H. Baker by R. T. White and
wife by deed recorded in Book 11,
page 506.
Fourth Tract: A certain tract of
land in Parkville Township, Perquim
ans County, North Carolina, Begin
ning at the northwest corner of Cordy
Crawford's land on the north side of
Main road leading from Winfall to
Bright's Mill (being State Highway
No. 342), then along said road 60
feet, then north 26 east 234 feet to
Lizzie Jordan's land, then 50 feet to
Cordy Crawford's line, then along
her line to the first station, being
the land conveyed to J. H. Baker by
Gerige Whitehurst and wife by deeo.
recorded in Book 1, page 262.
CHAS. WHEDBEE,
Trustee.
This May 23rd, 1941.
may30,june6,13,20
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Name
Address
SAMPLE COPY
o o o o
IF (Q) HI
Ubeel, Gliir-O-Plane
AMiSEMENTS
;;,jVi .".jpn;
"korth Carolina, )''&.
Perquimans County. ' "
J. R. Stokes and D. J. Prftchard,
Administrators of A'; W. Roughton,
Deceased. , ':
h': . a; Vs. Is 'I , .. ' 4-
Ella' Roughton Scott, - and her hus
. band, Calvin Scott; Lena Reughton
.Corey and her husband, N. : A.
Corey, and Mrs. A. W. RoughtohV
Widow. 3 '
NOTICE
The defendants, Ella Roughton
Scott, and her husband, Calvin Scott?
Lena Roughton Corey and her hus
band, N. A. Corey, and Mrs. A. W, "
Roughton, will take notice that an
L-action entitled as above has been
commenced in the Superior Court of
Perquimans County, North Carolina, 1 .
to sell real estate belonging to the
estate of said A. W. Roughton, to i
make assets to pay indebtedness ot ,
said esate; and the said defendants
will further take notice that they are
required to appear at the office of
the Clerk of the Superior Ceurt of
said County in the courthouse in ;
Hertford, N. C, on the 23rd day orj" '
June, 1941, and answer or demur tec
the complaint in said action, or the .
plaintiffs will apply to the court for
the relief demanded in said coujjv
plaint.
W. H. PITT,
Clerk Superior Court.
may23,30,june6,13
ON REQUEST
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