VOLUME XVI NO. 39 TENTATIVE LIST OF ISLAND PEOPLE TO BE CAST IN DRAMA RECEIVED HERE WEDNESDAY Final Castings To Be Made at Meeting Here June 8. A tentative list of people who “are being retained for first con sideration in connection with sev eral parts in The Lost Colony” was received in Manteo on Wed nesday by Aycock Brown, Lost Colony publicity director. Although more than 200 per sons turned up for the tryouts in the Manteo school auditorium last Friday, some who wish consider ation for casting were unable to appear on that night; Director Samuel Selden and General Man ager William Hardy, therefore, wish it clearly understood that some names may be added to the list later and others may be rear ranged on the tentative list. Final selection and assignment of Island actors will be made af ter a meeting of all candidates to be held in the courthouse on June 8. The list received by Mr. Brown from Chapel Hill on Wednesday is as follows (where more than one name is listed for a single part, it should be understood that final selection has not been made): PRINCIPALS: Manteo’s wife, Louise Wescott; Manteo’s son, Johnny Booth; First Soldier, Rob ert Midgett; John Cage and Car penter, Leigh Hassell, Jr.; Spin ner, Natalie Etheridge; Meal Grinder, Ruth Flowers; Margaret Lawrence, Marjalene Thomas; Courtier, Wade Nixon; Messen ger, Roy Gray, Jr.; George Howe, Edwin Midgett; George Howe, Jr., Robert Tugwell and Billy Brown; Thomas Archard, Woodrow Ful cher and Robert Sanderlin; Agona, Grace Davis; Artisan, Wally McCown. INDIAN MAIDENS: Annie' Laurie Kee, Louise Wescott, Sally Alford, Carolee O’Neal, Marie Etheridge, Pat Baum, Barbara Dowdy, Lois Sears and Grace Quidley. INDIAN YOUTHS: Danny ManN, Carlyle Davis, J. D. Simp son, Johnny Krider, D. A. Rogers, Bob Williams, Lloyd Walker, Har ry Johnson, Cliff Topping and Roy Gray. INDIAN MEN: Carroll Wes cott, Cliff Topping, D. A. Rogers, Bob Williams, Harry Johnson and Lloyd Walker. HERALDS (two to be select ed) : Sarah Alford, Donna Mann, Thelma Jean Williams, Janice Gibbs and Betsy Midgett. FLOWER GIRLS: Betty Ruth Flowers, Sylvia Cox, Susie War ren and Mary Sue Jones. PAGES: Jean Basnight and Helen Baum. LADIES-IN-WAITING, Doris Walker, Ruth Flowers, Carolee O’Neal, Janie Etheridge, Betty Sanderlin, Jane Midgett and Lois Pearce. MILKMAID DANCERS: Tracy Midgett, Betty Jo Love, Betty Skinner, Pat Baum, Marie Ether idge, Lois Sears, Betsy Midgett, Thelma Jean Williams, Barbara Dowdy, Grace Quidley, Sarah Al ford, Carolee O’Neal and Louise Wescott. COLONIST WOMEN: Ivadene Wilson, Edna Dowdy, Betty Rae Sanderlin, Jane Midgett, Grace White, Louise Knight, Mary Mann Evans, Bertha Hostvedt and Mag gie Mitchell. COLONIST MEN: J. D. Simp son, Carlyle Davis, Ray Jones, Danny Mann, Johnny Krider, Wade Nixon, Lloyd Walker, D. A. Rogers, Steve Basnight, George Wescott, John Wescott, Bob Wil liams, Harry Johnson and Wally McCown. COLONIST CHILDREN: Susie Warren, Mary C. Jones, Gwen Hill, Betty Ruth Flowers and Syl via Cox. STATE-WIDE DRAMA TRYOUTS MARCH 31 With the Roanoke Island cast ing completed for the 11th season presentation of Paul Green’s sym phonic drama, the next step in building up the personnel of The Lost Colony, America’s longest running outdoor production, will be the state-wide auditions. While here on the weekend con ducting tryouts for local actors, the drama’s veteran director, Samuel Selden, announced that state-wide auditions would be held in Chapel Hill on Saturday, March 31. The Chapel Hill tryouts will be for both The Lost Colony and Unto These Hills, the Kermit Hunter drama of Indian history under direction of Harry Davis. x... i. ... . . A-U ~ . ‘ ■}' -■ • 4-3 x >-50 THE COASTLAND TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE INTERESTS OF THE WALTER RALEIGH OOASTLAND Og NORTH CAROLINA MANTEO BOY HONORED BY HIS S.C. COLLEGE I 1 Si' H ■rai W J Charleston, S. C.—Cadet Alvah Haff Ward, Jr., of Manteo, was recently elected secretary-treas urer of the Calliopean Literary Society at the Citadel, the Mili tary College of South Carolina. The oldest organization on The Citadel campus, and one of the oldest college societies in Amer ica, the Calliopean Literary So ciety has had a long and distin guished past. It was founded in 1845, just three years after The Citadel itself, and has flourished for over one hundred years. The society has as its purpose the preservation and extension of the art of public speaking and debat ing. One of the largest groups at the college, the Calliopean Literary Society has an important part in the cultural life of the students. With a long, active, and distin guished past ,the organization continues to function for the ben efit of interested students, and to uphold the highest traditions of The Citadel. Cadet Ward, who is majoring in business administration, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvah H. Ward. He holds the rank of cadet first lieutenant on the third bat talion staff. Cadet Ward graduated from the Riverside Military Academy, Gainsville, Ga., in June 1947. LIONS SET BROOM SALE FOR APRIL The Manteo Lions agreed at their meeting in the Hotel Ft. Ra leigh Monday evening to under write the transportation cost for a visit to and from Duke Hospital in Durham for a county welfare pa tient who must make the trip to secure cancer treatments. It was determined that the three days, April 19, 20 and 21, should be designated as the time for the Broom Sale the Club will sponsor for the benefit of the Guilford Industries for* the Blind. Aid to the blind is a special project of Lions Clubs, and it is felt that conducting a Broom Sale, like that sponsored last year, is one of the best and most practical ways to as sist the sightless. President Ralph Davis brought to the attention of the member ship that next month is the tinw for the nomination of club officers to be elected at a meeting in May The club’s next meeting, Anri' 2, was set as the date for ladies night. • Two new members were receiv ed into the Manteo chapter at Monday’s meeting, Gordon Rid dick and Walter De Loatche. El mer V. Midgett, Sr., who was the guest of his son, and Irvin Nixon, president of the Elizabeth City Lions Club, were also present. District Legion Auxiliaries Meet At Mattamuskeet Lodge on Friday, March 30 Mrs. E. P. Rhyne, Sr., State President of American Legion Auxiliary to ba Guest Speaker. Hyde County Unit No. 211, American Legion Auxiliary, will be hostess to First and Second District meeting of American Le gion Auxiliaries at Mattamuskeet Lodge, New Holland, March 30 at 10:30 a.m. The morning session will be followed by a Dutch Lun cheon in the lodge at 1:00 p.m. Mrs. M. L. Windley, Second Dis trict Committee Woman of Bel haven, has planned an interesting program for the day. Mrs. Paul Holleman, First District commit- INLET PAVING AND FERRY SLIP UP FOR BIDDING Highway Commission to Re ceive Bids Mardh 29, Re view Low Bids April 3 Among projects to be bid upon at the State Highway Commis sion’s letting next Thursday, March 29, are two Dare County projects. The first calls for the grading of 0.36 mile for the construction of a ferry basin slip on the north side of Oregon Inlet. The second involves the grading and paving of the 8.41 miles of sand road be tween the north shore of Oregon Inlet and its intersection with U.S. 158. The Commission will review the low bids received at the letting at its next regular meeting on April 3. Both developments have long been considered vital by Dare county residents. Their completion would be welcomed almost as heartily by tourists as local peo ple, however; for many and many tourist parties have gone as far in the direction of the Lower Banks as the discouraging high way sign which warns them to deflate their tires (and implies that a pause for prayer would be appropriate) before tackling the sand road. In this non-pioneering age, when our visitors frequently arrive in shiny, chromium-trim med, expensive vehicles, the usual practice has been to read the sign, turn the auto around and abandon plans for visiting the Banks—to the great loss of the tourists and of the Banks people, too. EASTER DANCE SAT. NIGHT AT N. H. CASINO Dare County dance fans have a treat in store for them tomorrow night at the Nags Head Casino when Bill Gravely and his 11- piece ensemble will appear for the first big dance of the season. This announcement comes from the Ca sino’s genial proprietor, G. T. Westcott. Gravely had been booked for the opening night planned for March 10, but the weather turned un expectedly cold and opening was postponed for a week. About 50 persons were in attendance for last Saturday night’s juke-box opening. From all indications a large turn out is expected for the Easter-eve affair, Westcott states. The Casino Bingo is also shap ing things up for the season. Many more of those hams and bacons which have proved so popular as bingo prizes have been stocked, in addition to new electrical ap pliances, aluminum, and other new items. DARE BILL PASSED Rep. R. Bruce Etheridge’s bill to revise the present system for nominating members of the Dare County Boards of Commissioners and Education passed House last week. No opposition was offered to the bill in the lower chamber. If it is acted upon favorably by the Senate, the bill will become law. It had not been introduced in the Senate through Wednesday of this week. This would mean that no Dare county citizen in the future would have opportunity to vote for more than one member of the county boards, a district election system being substituted for the present county-wide voting. LAST WEEK’S WEATHER Figures provided by U. S. Govt. Meteorologist A. W. Drinkwater High Low Rain March 15 55 34 ' March 16 55 38 March 17 56 37 March 18 49 38 March 19 60 48 1.28 March 20 63 40 .38 March 21 49 40 .18 tee woman of Edenton, will pre side at the meeting. Mrs. E. P. Rhyne, Sr., North Carolina De partment President of the Amer ican Legion Auxiliary of Hickory will be guest speaker. She will be introduced by Mrs. E. Pugh, Area Chairman from Windsor. Miss Arelia Adams, N. C. Department Secretary of Raleigh will bring greetings from State Department of American Legion Auxiliary. Nine units in the eastern section of the state will be represented at the meeting. MANTEO, N. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1951 RICHARD C. BELL WINS AWARD TO ROME ACADEMY Raleigh, March 21.—Richard C. Bell of Manteo, a 1950 graduate of the School of Design at North Carolina State College, has been awarded the Prix de Rome Fel lowship in Landscape Architec ture for 1951-52 by the American Academy in Rome. Notification of this award to Bell has been received by Dean Henry L. Kamphoefner of the School of Design at State College and Prof. Morley J. Williams, head of the College’s Department of Landscape Architecture. The fellowship, valued in ex cess of $3,000, will provide one year of study beginning on Octo ber 1, 1951. It is regarded as the top-ranking award open to stu dents in landscape architecture. It entitles Bell to a studio and living quarters at the American Academy in Rome in association with academy fellows in architec ture, painting, sculpture, music, drama, and Roman classical stu dies. In addition there is travel allowance and stipend for study in other European countries. Officials of the academy said the fellowship is renewable for a second year if the scholar’s pro gram of independent study is ac ceptable to the institution. Bell, a native of Elizabeth City, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Q. Bell of Manteo. His father, in collaboration with Playwright Paul Green, designed The Lost Colony Theatre at Manteo. The 22-year-old Bell is current ly employed by John and Philip Simonds, landscape architects of Pittsburgh, Pa. He is the second State College graduate to win the coveted honor within the past few years. George E. Patton of Franklin, a 1948 graduate of N. C. State, won the fellowship for 1949-50 and has been awarded the fellowship for a second year of study abroad. County Council of Home Demonstration Chibs To Be Formed Here Next Friday M. E. Church to Be Scene of Meeting. State and Dis trict Horn# Agents to be Featured Speakers of Pro gram. A meeting of all home demon stration clubs in Dare county is to be held next Friday, March 30, at Mt. Olivet Methodist Church in Manteo between the hours of 11:15 a.m. and 2:3C p.m. for the purpose of organizing a Dare County Council of Federated Home Demonstration Clubs. Present for the organization meeting will be Miss Ruth Cur rant of Raleigh, state home agent, and Mrs. Verona Lee Langford of Greenville, district home agent. Miss Currant will address the group at the morn ing session on the aims and pur poses of county council organi zation. Mrs. Langford will be the principal speaker at the aft- SUMMER RECREATION FOR YOUNG PEOPLE On Tuesday evening, March 27 at 8:00 p.m. at the community building, a meeting will be held to discuss the advisibility of set ting up a summer recreational program for the benefit of the youth of our community. This meeting is under the aus pices of the Dare County Council for the Betterment of Youth. Representatives of all the civic clubs and organizations have been invited to attend and discuss this problem. The public is cordially invited to join in this discussion of improvement of facilities for our young people. HUSBAND GETS 120 DAYS FOR BEATING HIS WIFE James Bryant, Manteo Negro, i was sentenced to 60 days on the roads on each of two charges of assaulting his wife, Nora Bryant, and threatening to kill her if she turned him over to the authorities in court here Tuesday. Judge W. F. Baum ruled that the sentences should run consecutively. Bryant pleaded not guilty to beating his wife of less than a year on March 10 and again on March 17 and pleaded not guilty, also, to the charge of threatening her life. Mrs. Bryant was the only wit ness in the case; she testified that he had struck her several times on' the first occasion and had knocked her down; upon the sec ond occasion he had struck her on the street in Manteo and she had run away to escape further beat ing. Bryant offered no counter tes timony and did not take the stand I in his own defense. | EASTER SEALS SOLD FALL FAR BELOW 1950 Mrs. Theodore S. Meekins, Jr., Dare county chairman of the Eas ter Seal campaign for the benefit of North Carolina’s handicapped children, said on Thursday that unless patrons rally to the cause in the very short time that is left before Easter, the Dare campaign will net far less than the cam paign conducted here last year. She urged all who have not yet made contributions to the cause to do so at once, in order to save the campaign from failure here. Mrs. M. A. Daniels, treasurer of the Easter Seal Society, re ports that, thus far, only $139.49 has been turned in to the treasury. This amount is little more than half the sum that was raised in Dare for crippled children last year, $251.45. Fifty-five per cent of the funds raised stay in the county, forty five per cent is sent to the state Easter Seal organization for the maintenance of the services to crippled children in hospitals and other facilities for statewide ser vice. Mrs. Meekins said some of the uses of the local funds last year were: the purchase of an artific ial leg for one child; money has been set aside for the purchase of a n artificial for another; an artificial eye has been purchased for still another Dare county child. Numerous other services have been rendered for the aid of the handicapped in this county by the use of the Easter Seal funds, Mrs. Meekins said. Unreported as yet is the amount of money raised by the drive in the Manteo school and the Roa noke Island school. When these drives are completed, a report will be made of the results and the funds raised turned over to the county treasurer. ernoon session, at which time she will assist the Dare home makers with the actual forma tion of the county council. Officers for the new all-county council will be elected at the March 30 meeting. Miss Mary E. Kirby, Dare home agent, has asked that as many club members as possible attend the meeting, and she urges that officers of the county’s clubs should make special efforts to at tend. A gavel will be presented to the presiding officer of the dem onstration club which has the most members in attendance at the county meeting. Lunch will be served in the Educational Building by the la dies of the Manteo club. MARCH OF DIMES NETS $855 IN DARE DRIVE Mrs. Balfour Baum, County Chairman of the March of Dimes, said this week that total contri butions to the anti-polio campaign in Dare were $865.41. When the federal tax on dance tickets sold is deducted, the chairman said, the net amount will be about $855. Mrs. Baum reported for the first time that the amount raised for the fund in Manteo was $480.33. WHAT’S IN A NAME? Rep. Etheridge of Dare County introduced a bill in the House last week to change the title of the state foresters from “forest war dens” to “forest rangers.” Asked for his reason for wishing to change the foresters’ titles, Rep. Etheridge said, “It’s a Depart ment of Conservation bill. They want to call ’em that. There isn’t any particular reason.” Rep. Russell Swindell of Hyde remarked that he supposed the department considered that “ran ger” sounded “a little more aris tocratic.” First District Masonic Lodges To Meet At Wanchese Lodge Next Friday at 7 P.M. State Grand Master William Caldwell of Chapel Hill Will Be Featured Speaker. Host Lodge Will Serve Shad Dinner. A meeting of First District Ma sonic Lodges will convene at Wan chese Lodge. No 521 next Friday evening, March 30, at 7 p.m., at which time a shad dinner will be served to those attending from the nine member lodges in the dis trict. Secy. H. L. Bridges is in charge of dinner plans, and the dinner will be prepared by Mr. and PROBABLE CAUSE NOT FOUND IN MANSLAUGHTER HEARING HERE TUESDAY AFTERNOON Judge Dismisses Charge Against Jack Gil bert Tillett and State Takes Nol Pros On Two Other Counts. ENGELHARD MAN GETS 2nd LIEUT. RATING ■ 7 i I ff V SGT. WILLIAM A. BERRY of I Engelhard who has recently been sworn in as a reserve second Lieu , tenant. He is now serving with the 1 96th Engineer Depot Company on I Guam and has been in the army ' about five years. His wife is now I on Guam with him. He is the son I of Mrs. Elizabeth Berry of Engel hard. i ENGLISH FOUGHT ' SPANIARDS OFF HATTERAS, 1557 Pupils Consider Building : Model of Historic Encoun ! ter Four Centuries Ago j i By BEN DIXON MacNEILL Pupils of Hatteras Island gram ! mar and high schools have reached back four centuries into their own local history for material upon which to base their sketch to be contributed to the County School Fair slated to be held in Manteo early in May and they will tell briefly the story of the first bat tle staged in the western hemi sphere. It happened within plain view jof Cape Hatteras, this battle be ■ tween an English war ship and ! a Spanish galleon and the scene i designed for the local school will I present the native Hattorask In , dians gathered on the highest hill I above the Cape watching the pro -1 ceedings, which end with the burn ing of the English ship. I Mention of the encounter was re-discovered recently in a frag ment of the Spanish Archives, photostat copies of which were bought more than a quarter of a century ago when University Chancellor R. B. House was se cretary to the then North Caro lina Historical Commission. The material has never been more than fragmentarily translated but e nough of it was presented to the Board at that time in English to indicate its value in North Caro lina history. Spanish chronicles of the time, back in 1557, in addition to des cribing the victory over the hated Englishmen found with his sails down while h® took on fresh wa ter here, mentioned also that dur ing the battle native Indians were observed watching the fight from the hills back of the Cape. Their charts, as well as English charts of the period, called the hills the Kindricker Mountains. Because of the limited time al lotted to the local school by the county authorities, the sketch has been kept simple, with only three speaking parts. Jackie Rollinson will speak the lines of the Indian chief, Gates Austin those of one of his men and a small Indian boy’s excited wonder will likely be spoken by lan Hornstein, son See HATTERAS, Page Eight Mrs. Marshall Collins, well-known kitchen experts of this commun ity. The State Grand Master Wil liam Caldwell es Chapel Hill will be the featured speaker of the evening’s program. Worshipful Master Frank Ca hoon of the Wanchese Lodge urg es all local Masons to attend the district meeting and dinner. Single Copy 7« A two-hour court session was concluded in a few moments Tues day after Judge Baum said, “On the evidence presented, I fail to find probable cause and dismiss the case.” The judge thereby quashed the possibility of Jack Gilbert Tillett’s being indicted for manslaughter as a result of the accident near Kitty Hawk on February 28 in which Leslie Roscoe Tillett suffer ed fatal injuries. Nol Pros Two Charges Solicitor Martin Kellogg said that all the evidence the state had to present against Tillett, who was arraigned on three counts, manslaughter, drunken driving and driving without a driver’s li cense, had been presented; there fore, he said, “I am convinced and so are Officers Riddick and San derson (prosecuting witnesses in the case) that you cannot consis tently find probable cause on the other counts, and we, therefore, take a nol pros.” I This meant that Jack Gilbert Tillett will not, unless new evi dence should come to light, be tried upon any of the three counts. The state charged young Tillett with manslaughter, contending that he was driving the vehicle in which his cousin, Leslie Roscoe Tillett, suffered fatal injuries, in a reckless manner, at excessive speed and under the influence of alcohol. The state sought to show that there was probable cause for bringing separate bills of indict ment against Tillett for man slaughter, drunken driving and driving a vehicle without a driv er’s license. After testimony had been offer ed by state witnesses, Dr. John F. Weeks of Elizabeth City, O. C. Sanderlin of Kitty Hawk,. and; Highway Patrolmen John S. San derson and W. B. Riddick. Wal lace H. McCown, counsel for the defense, asked for dismissal of the case on the grounds that the See CAUSE, Page Eight TWO BITS FOR A BED 40 YRS. AGO ON ROANOKE ID. One Could Get a Hotel Room For as Little as $1.50 A Week By AYCOCK BROWN Back in 1907 the European Plan rates of the Roanoke Hotel here ranged from 25 cents to SI.OO per day per person. By the week it cost a person either $1.50-$3.00- $6.00 for stopping at the “Magni ficent” and then comparatively new hostelry. The Roanoke Hotel went out of business as such many years ago, •* but the structure which housed it still stands and today it is divid ed into apartments—except for a downstairs area which houses Manteo Supply Company, operat ed by the son of R. C. Evans, the owner-proprietor who back in 1907 had printed up several thou sand advertising folders for dis tribution at the Jamestown Ex- See BITS, Page Eight FIVE COMMUNITIES IN DARE COMPLETE RED CROSS DRIVE On March 21 five communities of the county sent the county chairman final reports on their Red Cross drive. Mrs. Nellie Far row of Waves reported S2O or 70% of her quota. Mrs. M. L. Burrus of Hatteras reported $43.55 or 87% of her quota. Mrs. Hattie Mann of Mashoes raised $8 or 80% of her quota. Mrs. Lewis Meekins of Colington reported $10.75, 72% of the quota . Mrs. Charles Gregory of Rodanthe stated $22, 73% of her quota, had been raised. On the basis of these reports the county should achieve its goal if the re maining communities are able to raise their entire quotas. Wallace H. McCown, county chairman, urges that the chair men in Kitty Hawk, Wanchese, Stumpy Point, Frisco-Buxton, East Lake, Avon, Manns Harbor, Duck, Salvo, Manteo Colored, and Manteo residential, and the beach area, completed their work as soon as possible and report to the Fund Chairman. Dare County can reach its goal if these ar»as not report ed as yet, will make every effort to raise the amount asked of them. Governor's Appeal See RED CROSS, Page Eight t- < ’