o IME XIX NO. 22 bUXTON MAN’S MURDERERS GET PRISON TERMS Slayers of Ross Midgett Tried in New Jersey Last Week The slayers of Ross E. Midgett, young Buxton man in New Jer sey on August 30, were tried last week in Morristown, and four of them drew prison sentences rang ing from ten years downward. Thirteen youths were involved in the slaying in “Lovers Lane - ’ in Denville. One got seven to ten years, four drew suspended sen tences in Superior court and were placed on probation. The other eight, all juveniles—were to be dealt with by juvenile au thorities. George Compo, 22, of Denville, whom police tabbed as the ring leader, drew the lone prison sentence imposed by Judge Don ald Waesche in the case. Compo was sentenced on a plea of no defense to second degree murder on Nov. 9. He could have received up to 30 years in prison. He will serve his jail term in Bor dentown Reformatory. Those receiving suspended sen tences were Richard* Mitchell, 16, Denville; Jerre Hinkle, 20, Morris Plains; Edward Dresh, 19, Den ville; and Phillip Kennybrook, 17, of Denville. Mitchell, Hinkle and Dresh had pleaded guilty to manslaughter. The first two were placed on pro bation for five years, Dresh, for four years. Kennybrook pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit atrocious assault and battery and was placed on probation for five years. The four—like Compo—origin ally entered mandatory pleas of innocent to first degree murder but were permitted to plead to lesser charges. Midgett, 32, member of a prom inent North Carolina family, was «•’ in the pre-dawn hours of joov l in a lover’s lane in near ville. He was beaten with bottle, police said, in a scueme that involved morals and robbery. SCOUT FUNDS TO REACH GOAL OF OVER $7,000 * Julian Oneto Raises $643.31 in Dare County; Campaign Closes End of This Week Roland T. Orr, Boy Scout fin ance chairman for the Albemarle District, announced following a report meeting this week (Mon day night, Nov. 23, that the Dis tricts goal of $7,000 is in sight. $6,300 has been turned in to the finance secretary, Mrs. Sanford P. Aydlett. There are several large pledges to be turned in this week which will push the drive over the top. The amounts contributed by the various counties and com munities are as follows: Camden County, Chairman H. Clay Fere bee, $188; Currituck County, Chairman Samuel Walker, $200; Dare County. Chairman Julian Oneto, $643.31; Pasquotank County, Chairman Charles Vann, $35; Elizabeth City, Chairman Holland Webster, $3,800; Chowan County, Chairman Charles Over man, SSO; Edenton, Chairman Gerald James, $940; Gates Coun ty, Chairman C. V. Cross, Jr., $130; Perquimans County, Archie Lane, S4B; and Hertford, Chair man John Biggers, S3OO. Mr. Orr stated that he hoped campaigners would turn in all contributions by the end of the week so that the campaign may be officially closed. All funds are being deposited in an Elizabeth City bank for 1954 operating expenses. DAVID MIDGETT OF WAVES ENLISTS IN COAST GUARD Cape May, N. J. David Mid j** 18, seaman recruit, USCG, ( .he son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil xidgett of Waves, North Caro <«ua is scheduled to complete the 12-week course of recruit train ing at the U. S. Coast Guard Re ceiving Center in Cape May, N.J., early next week. The course schedules the basic duties en countered as a member of the nation’s oldest seagoing force. Seaman Recruit Midgett grad uated fith the class of 1953 from Cape Hatteras high school, where he was active in basketball, soft ball and the 4-H Club. Midgett joined the Coast Guard on Aug ust 31, 1953, and is now under going training with Recruit com pany E-19. THE COASTLAND TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE INTEREST OF THE WALTER RALEIGH COASTLAND OF NORTH CAROLINA MAKING PANTEGO GREAT PORK CENTER Ml- Jr Hi W < ' '3l i 3 t ' bWI 31 / - i IF ■Wi i' J | iMB IO I -• k \ y tn ' wsf wowy §> ml™®; ' NOBODY EVER GOT AHEAD WORKING ONLY EIGHT HOURS A DAY. That’s a sign that Scott and Miriam Topping might well nail over the door of their Pantego pork plant. Read about them elsewhere in this paper. Maybe someday they will be as famous as Kingan’s in Kansas City. We hope so. (Daily News photo.) MILLION DOLLAR BUSINESS BUILT UP IN 15 YEARS The Toppings of Pantego Be gan Small But Worked Hard in Sausage Business Toppings Country Sausage! It’s a name that has gone a long way during the past 15 years. It has given the Beaufort County village of Pantego a million dollar industry, and it has be come a monument to an unbeat able man and wife team who didn’t stop work when they were tired, and the going was rough. Scott and Miriam Topping haven’t long been in their new quarters where they can now dress out as many as 300 hogs a day, if they want to. It’s a plant that you might not easily dupli cate for less than SBO,OOO. And its a long way from the sausage business Scott Topping started on a kitchen stove, back in 1939 when folks hereabout hadn’t quite recovered from the depres sion. Those were the days when Scott had to really worry about where he could find SIOO to ex pand his business. The other day he counted up and found out where he was pay ing out a thousand dollars a week for labor, and that he will pay this year to the farmers of the area, better than a million, one hundred thousand dollars for hogs. The fame’ of Topping’s country sausage has spread across the nation. Letters come from many distant places, demanding Top ping’s sausage meat by mail. Re cently a long distance phone call came from Washington, D. C. “I want you to send me some of your sausage meat”, the caller said. “I went down to Hyde County, and Mrs. Watson served me some of it at Engelhard Hotel. She told me where she got it from.” Now there are always folks who sit and wish for a business of their own. Many of them will never have one, and some of them will believe to the end of their days they never had a chance in life. Os course there are people who wish for something full blown, turned over into their hands. And there are folks who look with disfavor on those who have succeeded. Doubtless Scott Topping would tell you, when he got in the sau sage business, he had no idea of anything except trying to figure out away for the time being to feed himself and wife, and the babies that were coming along. Anyway, he used to buy two hogs a week, and make them up into sausage in his sister’s kitchen, and he had the good luck to get hold of a super-saleswoman, Mrs. Louise Ricks, to introduce Top ping’s country sausage from [ house to house in Belhaven and Pantego. That’s how Topping’s country sausage got started on its way, until it is now sold in vol ume everywhere in eastern North Carolina and four salesmen on See TOPPING, Page Eight MANTEO BANK ISSUES SIB,OOO FOR CHRISTMAS i Christmas Club Members Deposit $2,000 More in Past Year Than Previous One The Bank of Manteo last week paid out around SIB,OOO to de positor’s in the Christmas savings club. The club seems to grow , each year, as year before last ; only $14,000 was on deposit at ’ payout time. Last year’s, club paid out $16,000. 1 Money received through the club seems to come in handy ! for everyone this time of year, ' not only for gift buying, but for such other purposes as paying taxes. One important point of the club is not being able to with- I draw the money, ..therefore it is | left until around the middle of ’ November, when all the checks are sent out. The bank’s 1954 club will be gin Monday, December 7. FORMER HATTERAS MAN IN ACCOUNTING FIRM Corlett W. Burrus, son of E. E. Burrus, well-known Hatteras man, and formerly associated in business with his father in Hat teras, is now associatedin the new certified public accounting firm of COOTES and BURRUS of 431 Granby St. Norfolk. Mr. i Burrus has resided in Norfolk for several years. He is one of the most highly regarded young men from Dare County. WILLIAM HOWARD BARNES BURIED AT SALVO TUESDAY Funeral services for William Howard Barnes, 81, who died Monday morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Charlie Whid bee of Manteo, were conducted I at 10:30 o’clock Tuesday morning at the Twiford Funeral Home chapel by the Rev. H? R. Ash more, pastor of Mt. Olivet Meth odist Church, and the Rev. P. M. Porter, pastor of Salvo Methodist Church. Burial was in the fam ily plot at Salvo. Mr. Barnes was a native of Salvo, Dare County, the son of Mr .and Mrs. John Barnes, a member of Salvo Meth odist Church and a retired car penter. Surviving besides Mrs. Whidbee, his daughter at Manteo, are five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Mrs. Naomi Wescott sang “Safe in the Arms of Jesus” ac companied on the organ by Mrs. Rennie Williamson, at Manteo. The casket was covered With a'Y’all of red roses. At Salvo the church choir sang “Nearer My God To Thee.” Myron V. Midgett, William J. Duchanan, William J. Batts, Jimmie A. Gratton, James A. Jacobson and Curtis E. Scarbor ough served as pallbearers. Some years ago, he cooked for the boys at Gull' Shoal Coast Guard Station. He was always a popular figure in the community, and he has lived in Manteo for several years and made many new friends. The old homeplace he had at Salvo he sold' to Capt. SteVe Basnight of Manteo. MANTEO, N. C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1953 PAVED HIGHWAY, SEASHORE PARK “BANKS” BOOMING New Motel and Cottage Fa cilities Under Construc tion on Hatteras Island By AYCOCK BROWN Buxton. A building boom, i the likes of which have been vis ■ ualized by only a few people, . for Hatteras Island along the i Outer Banks is now underway. Responsible for it all, as any of the builders might tell you. has been a new all-paved state high way between Nags Head and Hatteras, and the fact that Cape Hatteras National Seashore Re creational area, is being esta blished in the area, and has given the region additional publicity. At Buxton, cottage court own ers who experienced business far above expectations during the 1953 season are expanding their facilities to take care of antici pated business in 1954. George Fuller and associates are enlarg ing an eight unit e- “age court filled to capacity d’ ; the past six months. Three-apartment units, and four efficiency apart ments are being added to Cape Hatteras Cottage Court. Edgar Hooper is building four addition al units. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. White plan a four unit motor. court shortly on the ocean beach | near Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. R. D. Owens of Nags Head is constructing a 10-unit modem motor court between Rodanthe and Waves, where local interests have built several smaller tourist places during the current year. The court Mr. Owens expects to complete by March 1954, will also have restaurant facilities. The ex pected cost of his court will be approximately $50,000. Other new places constructed during the past year include Orange Blossom Inn, and Light house View, Cape Hatteras Cot tage Court and Cape Point Res» 1 taurant. Several local homes have been converted into guest houses. National Park Service officials have announced that the former residence of Cape Lighthouse keepers’ quarters is being con verted into a building that will house a maritime museum of the area. It will be under the super vision of Park Service rangers, several of whom have already been transferred to the area. New building at Hatteras is also planned for the 1954 season. “Scotty” Gibson of Atlantic View Hotel has added additional rooms and a modern restaurant to his facilities during the past year. Andrew Austin owner of Durants Motor Court and apartments has also increased his facilities. A new large building serving as an appliance store with several apartments on the second floor, is owned by Shanklin Austin. A modern storage, tackle and bait shop catering to anglers and vacationists has been completed and operated by Willie Newsome during the current year. The Outer Banks region has experienced its best travel year and the season is still underway here with just about all accomo dations taken by anglers coming to the area to fish for channel bass and other species. So great has been the tourist travel to the area this year that plans are already under way to have additional ferry service at Oregon Inlet during the season of 1954, it was stated by high way officials. WILLIS E. LEIGH OF KRAMER BROS. DIES Well known throughout the Coastland was Willis E. Leigh, an official of the Millwork firm of Kramer Bros Co., who died Sunday at 6 p. m at his home in Elizabeth City. He was buried Tuesday in Hollywood cemetery. Mr. Leigh was a native of Tyr rell County, the son of the late Samuel E. and Ellen Brickhouse Leigh, and the husband of Mrs. Marguriete Leßoy Leigh. He had one brother and two sisters and was a member of the First Bap tist Church. AMIRICAN LEGION TO MEET MQNDAY NIGHT The Fort Raleigh Post of the American Legion wil meet Mon day night, November 30, in the Waiichese school building at seven o’clock, according to an nouncement by Post Commander James W. Davis, who urges that all members attend. , WANCHESE MAN DIST. GOVERNOR RURITAN CLUBS James W. Davis Advanced to Head of Albemarle District For his vigorous work in be half of Ruritan while Lieutenant) Governor last year, James W. ' Davis of Wanchese was advanced i to the Prseidency of Albemarle Ruritan District in Hertford Fri day night at the district conven tion. Mr. Davis, a retired Coast Guard officer, was active during j his term in the organization of clubs at Hatteras and Avon, and i in re-activating the Poplar Branch Club. He is a charter member and former Secretary- Treasurer of the Wanchese Club. Mr. Davis spoke briefly at the Hertford meeting, pledging his best efforts in the new office dur ing the coming year. PTA WILL SPONSOR GRASS ROOTS OPERA Bonnybel Evans Picture to Be Hung in Primary Building The November meeting of the Manteo Parent Teacher Associa tion was held Monday night in the school auditorium, Mrs. Law- I rence Swain presiding. Mrs. G. G. Bonner led the devotional, using a Thanksgiving theme. A report from the treasurer showed a net of $270.70 from the Hallowe’en carnival. It was voted to sponsor again this year the appearance of the Grass Roots Opera Company, the opera “Carmen” being preferred ' at this time. Two pictures have been ac quired for the school, one for grades 1-4, the other for grades I 5-12, these to be used as parent : attendance prizes. Mrs. Swain re- • ported that the picture of Miss • Bonnybel Evans has arrived and > will be bung in the Bonnybel > Evans primary school building t' as soon as it is framed. j A microscope for the science II laboratory and a duplicating ■ I machine for the commercial de . | partment are to be bought for I the school, this' being voted on [ after hearing from Mrs. W. S. j Meekins of the science depart , ment and Mrs. James of the commercial department of the pressing need for these items. Mrs. John Earle, chairman of the program on “Better Homes Make Better Schools”, presented Mrs. D. E. Evans, county super intendent, who made an interest ing talk on “An Ideal School”; and Mrs. Van Ness Harwood, who spoke on “Reading to Broad en One’s Knowledge”. Mrs. Har wood urged everyone to take ad vantage of the wide selection of books available in the Dare County library. During the social hour the hostesses, Mrs. Charles Marshall and Mrs. Vernon Davis, served refreshments. A 61-POUND BASS CAUGHT AT OCRACOKE Ocracoke. A sixty-one pound channel bass was caught in Ocra- j coke Inlet on Thursday, Novem- j ber 12th, by Ernest M. Jordan of Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Mr. Jordan was fishing from the Boat Greg with Capt. Stacy Howard and Capt. Maltbyißragg. He used a Penn Squidder Reel, Montaque Glass Rod, 48 lb. test Weston Hotstretch line. This is Mr. Jordan’s fifth year offall 1 fishing at Ocracoke. He and Mrs. Jordan stayed for a week at the Wahab Village Hotel and it was during his last day of fishing that he made the prize catch. He planned to enter it in the Field & Stream contest. He took sev eral pictures of the drum before he and Mrs. Jordan left on Fri day for New York. MANNS HARBOR CLUB PLANS PRIZE NIGHT Ways and Means Chairman, Mary Agnes Haywood of the Manns Harbor Youth Club, states that plans are under way for a i “Grand Prize Night” to be staged at the Community Building, Tuesday, December 15. Prizes are to be solicited from the local business places and tickets will be on sale by the club members within a few days. The winner of the turkey on “Guess the Pumpkin Seed” contest will be announced the same night. Pro ceeds of this event will go to ward completion of the Com munity Building Project, which the club has undertaken for the current year; PROGRESS RAPID NOW ON 50TH FLIGHT CELEBRATION IN DARE, DECEMBER 14-17 Replicas of Buildings Used by Wright Broth ers in 1903 Under Construction at Kill Devil Hills; Scene Will Look Like The Memorable Day 50 Years Ago. By AYCOCK BROWN With four sponsoring groups co-operating to make it the big- i gest celebration of its kind ever held anywhere, the plans for the golden anniversary of powered flight here at Kill Devil Hills and Kitty Hawk on December 14-17 are well underway. The sponsor ing agencies and their leaders in clude Kill Devil Hills Memorial ' Society of which General Frank , P. Lahm is president and Miles L. Clark chairman of board of directors; the Air Force Associa tion, headed by George C. Ken nedy with Ralph V. Whitener as ' program director; National Park , Service, directed by Conrad L. Wirth with Horace Dough as local superintendent of the Wright Memorial area here and the North Carolina 50th Anni versary Commission headed by Governor William B. Umstead with Carl Goerch as chairman. “The four day celebration at Kill Devil Hills will salute all phases of aviation,” said General ■Lahm. “Monday, December 14, ! will be private flyers and pioneer | day. On Tuesday we will honor I the aviation industry, the manu facturers, suppliers and the air lines. Wednesday will be defense day and Thursday, December 17, will be Golden Anniversary ) Da y” General Lahm, (U. S. Army re-{ tired brigadier general) was a 1 close friend of the Wright Bro-I thers and was taught to fly by i them. Whitener for the Air Force i Association has announced that there will be aerial demonstra tions and ground exhibits on each ' of the four days. “We will reenact the first I flight on December 17, at the same hour and over the same course as it was done in 1903. ’ jsaid Whitener. > Governor William B. Umstead j assured representatives cf the i sponsoring celebration agencies that North Carolina would give every support possible to make the observance the most out standing of its kind held any where. Carl Goerch, chairman of the Governors 50th Anniversary Flight Commission announced that top-ranking state and ‘na tional officials would be present for the celebration. Julian Oneto, ot the Nags Head Chamber of Commerce has announced that his organization will be responsible for housing visitors to the celebration. Mrs. Lucille Purser and Oneto of The Carolinian are chairmen of the dinners, while local in vitations to same will be handled by committees headed by Mayor Martin Kellogg, Jr., of Manteo ■ and C of C Manager Forrest Jones of Elizabeth City. Lunch eons are planned for each of the four days with Notable speakers on the program. Co-Chairman of the publicity and press facilities are Aycock Brown of Dare County Tourist Bureau and A. W. Drinkwater of Manteo, the retired telegrapher who in 1908 handled more than . 40.000 words of press copy for, newsmen covering the Wrights’ experimental flights at Kill Devil Hills that year. Arrangements for concessions at the site of the celebration at Kill Devil Hills are to be under the supervision of Horace Dough superintendent of the National Memorial area. The Civil Aeronautics Admin istration will install an operations set-up at nearby Manteo airport to handle the great number of visitors who will come to the area by air and already arrange ments have been made for trans porting these visitors from the airport to the site of the celebra tion here, at Kitty Hawk and in Nags Head. Battlefield equipment herved a peaceful purpose this week at i Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, birth place of powered flight. Dr. J. C. Harrington and Frank , Barnes, Regional Archaeologist and Regional Historian, respec tively, of the Department of In terior’s National Park Service, < used a mine detector to locate the exact spot on which Orville and i Wilbur Wright had built two i See CELEBRATION, Page Four i Single Copy 7? CURRITUCK MAN LOST OVERBOARD ON THANKSGIVING Robert Cahoon, Harbinger Contractor, Disappears While Out Hunting Robert Cahoon, 35, of Harbing er, apparently drowned in Curri tuck Sound shortly after 1 o’clock Thursday afternoon and the body had not been recovered late Friday morning. Cahoon, Bobby Cahoon, 14, his son, and Melvin Matthews, his brother-in-law, started out early Thursday morning to hunt ducks. Cohoon left the others at the blind and went out in his out board motor boat. Thursday afternoon, Wallace O’Neal of Aydlett saw a motor boat with the engine still run ning. The boat was turning round and round in the water. O’Neal and his son went to the empty boat and managed to take it in tow. The boat was later identi- I fied as that Cahoon had been using. A search for the body in the seven-foot water was begun im mediately. Dragging operations and a helicopter search failed to produce the body at sundown. The search was resumed Friday morning. Cahoon, a native of Virginia, had spent the past 20 years in i Currituck. He spent his early life lin Tyrrell County. He was the son of R. Vance and Mae Spencer ;Cohoon of Currituck County. He i was the husband of Mrs. Erma | Cahoon, a member of Gum Neck i Christian Church and Coinjock I Masonic Lodge. He was a mem ber of the firm of R. V. Cahoon and Son, building contractors at Harbinger. Surviving besides his wife, par ents and Bobby is another son, Johnny one brother, Dennis in See CAHOON. Page Four SPECIAL AIR MAIL FLIGHTS DEC. 14-17 •let Planes To Fly Mail to Kitty Hawk and Kill Devil Hills from Dayton Jet planes will fly special air mail cachets to Kitty Hawk on each of the four-aays of the Golden Anniversary of Powered Flight celebration at Kitty Hawk and Kill Devil Hills on December 14-17, it is announced in Wash ington by Ralph Whitener of the Aid Force Association and nation al coordinator of the event com memorating the achievement of Wilbur and Orville Wright, 50 years ago. The American Air Mail Society is sponsoring the cachets as col lectors’ items. An Air Force jet fighter plane will carry the cachets on opening day of the celebration, Monday, December 14, from Dayton Ohio, home of the Wrights to Kitty Hawk, the birthplace of powered flight. The flight will be made in little more than one hour as com pared to the four days it took I the Wright Brothers to travel the same distance from Dayton to j Kitty Hawk in 1900, the first j year they arrived on this coast to begin experiments which led to powered flight in their rugged built plane the “Kitty Hawk,” in 1903. The Dayton-Kitty Hawk cach ets will be put on board the jet plane at 8 A. M., during a spe cial ceremony arranged by the Wilbur and Orville Wright Mem orial Squadron of the Air Force Association. Norman Miller, Ohio Wing Commander of the Associa tion, at 11 West Monument Street, Dayton 2, Ohio, will handle all cachets mailed to him by philatelists who want to have their own cachets included in the flight The air forces of Canada and Great Britain have been invited to fly cachets to Kitty Hawk on two of the four days of the celebration. Helen M. Ross, P. O. Box 149, Milburn, New Jersey, will es tablish the rules for collecting the cachets, and will receive and dis tribute the cachets at Kitty Hawk. Inquiries on cachets should be addressed to Miss Ross, it was stated.