VOLUME XXI NO. 40 APPROVE VOTE ON '’i $250,000 SCHOOL ISSUE IN MANTEO Board of Education Acts on Pe tition of 223 Qualified Voters Tuesday The Dare County Board of Edu cation Tuesday gave its approval to an election to vote on whether to issue $250,000 in bonds to erect a high school building in Manteo. A petition was presented the Board signed by 282 persons of whom 223 are qualified voters. The territory to be included in the bond issue as now constituted consists of all of Roanoke Island, the Dare County mainlairii, the beach area south of the Nags Head Soundside road extending to Oregon Inlet. Further consideration on the question of taking in the addition al territory to the northward on the beach in Nags Head township will be given at a public hearing to be held in Manteo on May Bth. The Board agreed for another year to continue the cooperative school supervisor program with Hyde County, completing a two year term, after which Dare Coun ty will have the supervisor for two years. Miss Bettie Swindell of Hyde is the Supervisor at this time. W. M. Meekins and J. O. Bas night of Manteo were named mem bers of the Manteo School Com mittee replacing Mrs. Estelle Til lett and C. D. Biggs, resigned. The Board gave time to discussing of the budget for the forthcoming year, and this will come up later for consideration. Tentative approval was given re election of practically all teachers in the schools, excepting those in the Manteo school, which awaits action of the new committees. Three bids were received for transportation of coal to the schools of the county this summer. This did not include the Hatteras school which burns oil, nor the Stumpy Point School which re quires stove coal. Bids submitted were as follows: O. Burrus, $768; Rudolph Peele, $850; and Willie Rogers, $1,152. Mr. Burrus was al so low bidder on supplying the coal and hauling it to the Stumpy Point school in the amount of $168.00. MRS. JULIAN D. BROTHERS PASSES AT WANCHESE A faithful resident of the Wan chese community for the past 42 years was laid to rest in Cudworth Cemetery following services Sun day at 2 p.m. conducted by Rev. C. W. Guthrie, her pastor. Mrs. Sarah Esther Davis Brothers, 66, wife of Julian D. Brothel's, Sr. died Friday afternoon in a Norfolk hos pital, following an illness of 17 days. She was a native of South Mills, daughter of the late Charles and Jane Eason Davis. Beside her husband, she is sur vived by two sons. J. D., Jr. of Wanchese and John M. of Norfolk; a daughter, Mrs. Lucille Ross of Virginia Beach; two brothers, Harry Davis of South Mills and D. D. Davis of Portsmouth; a sis ter, Mrs. Bessie Grainger of South Mills. The funeral services were large ly attended and there were many flowers. Hymns sung were “Beautiful Isle of“ Somewhere,” and “Whisper ing Hope,” by the church choir. Mrs. Rena Tillett, organist. The pall was of Easter lilies, pink car nation and fern. Pall bearers were Earl Willis, Steve Tillett, Geo. A. Daniels, Bo Tillett, Herbert Til lett, and Geo. H. Quidley. MANTEO BAPTISTS PLAN SPRING REVIVAL APRIL 15 The annual spring revival of the Manteo Baptist Church will begin Sunday, April 15 and run through Friday night, April 20, says Henry V. Napier, pastor. Visiting evan gelist will be the former pastor of Mr. Napier, the Rev. J. C. Meigs of Pageland, S. C., and who for many years was pastor of the Polkton Baptist Church. He comes well qualified as an evangelist, hav ing preached in an average of four to six revivals each year during the past several years. He is a gradu ate of Wingate Junior College and Wake Forest College. He was for merly on the board of trustees of Wingate Junior College, Wingate, N. C. and has served on the general board of the Baptist State Con vention. The public is given »a cordial invitation to all services, to be held each evening at 8:00 preceded by a period of prayer beginning at 7:80. Services of Sunday, April 15 will be held at 11:00 in the morning and 8:00 in the evening. THE COASTLAND TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE INTEREST OF THE WALTER RALEIGH COASTLAND OF NORTH CAROLINA FREEBOOTER'S PART IS EASILY SIMULATED r W nIMM THE USUALLY benign countenance of Lawrence Swain, County Com missioner of Dare, Choir member in the Methodist Church, and civic and club booster would not be expected to lend itself to this malevolent pose. It all goes to show that most anybody’s face with the right make up, can be made to express most any sort of character. This pose of course was captured by Dan Morrill’s camera in Manteo last week, as part of the plan to draw attention to the forthcoming Pirate Jamboree, beginning at Hatteras with an all day and night program on April 27th, at which time the world’s biggest fish fry of ocean fish will be held, for countless visitors expected for the three day event which will continue on the Dare Coast, its entire length of 85 miles. Some dozens of men in Dare County have gone to great lengths, even risking domes tic strife, that they might grow beards to take part in this celebra tion. Next week we will show you another prominent citizen, as seen by Mr. Morrill’s camera. MOTORIST KNOCKS DWELLING AWRY AT MANNS HARBOR Vigilant Children on Easter Egg Hunt Cause Capture of Car Thief at Wanchese David Gerald Newby of Norfolk submitted and paid $25 and costs in Recorder’s Court in Manteo Tuesday, as result of the collision of the car he was driving, into the home of John Tom Ambrose on March 29th at Manns Harbor. Coming up U. S. 264 the car didn’t make the turn at the right angle intersection at Manns Harbor, and the Ambrose home was damaged to the extent of some S6OO and the Newby car demolished. The vigilance of a group of chil dren on an Easter Egg hunt Mon day at Wanchese, resulted in the capture of an ex-convict wanted for theft of a car. Phillip Murray of Fayetteville had worked on Roanoke Island while a member of Maple prison camp, and he brought the stolen car into the woods at Wanchese. The children suspected something wrong, they notified Deputy Sheriff Darrell Daniels. He notified Sheriff Ca hoon in Manteo, who with Patrol man Fields went to the scene and caught the man. He will have to go back home for trial, but Judge Baum gave him a 30-day road sen tence for good measure. Amos Carter Brown, worker on the Croatan Sound bridge project, paid $5 and costs for driving a truck with no license. James T. Mattahews of Wanchese paid $25 and costs for driving without oper ator’s license. Shelton D. Midgett paid $lO and costs for speeding at 65 mph. Elbert H. Kizer of Nags Head paid $25 And costs for driv ing with an old expired plate of another state, after having lived See COURT, Page Five BEARDED CONTESTANTS TO BE HONORED BY DINNER Dare’s Pirate men will hold a pre-Jamboree dinner on Tuesday evening April 17th. The Carolin ian Hotel will be host to all beard ed contestants in the Jamboree Beard Growing contest, including contestants from Roanoke Island, Dare Beaches and Hatteras Is land. Julian Oneto, Dare Beach Chairman of Jamboree activities announced that Orville Baum and Pat Bayne, in charge of the beard growing contest will welcome con testants and size up the competi tion * for this year beginning at 6:00 in the evening of April 17th, at the Pine Room of the hotel. Dinner is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. Wallace McCown, Jamboree Chair man requested all persons plan ning to attend this event notify him so that the approximate num ber in attendance can be deter mined prior to April 17th. YOUNGEST TALENT HESS® -2 n MM SUSAN KRIDER, five-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Krider of Manteo, was the young est entrant in the recent talent show put on by the*Manteo school. Susan and Frankie Williams rep resented . the pre-school group. Susan gave a recitation. In last week’s account of the talent show, it was inadvertently omitted that Henry Parker and Elizabeth Crees were crowned king and queen of the primary school. FIRST PLANTINGS BEGIN IN ELIZABETHAN GARDENS Manteo.—Albert Q. Bell, owner of Roanoke Gardens here, this week began planting in the Garden Clubs of N. C.-sponsored Eliza bethan Gardens. Already the proj ect, sponsored by several thousand North Carolina garden club mem bers, has been dedicated and al ready too, much rare and historical statuary has been erected at the site which is adjacent to Fort Ra leigh and in the immediate vicinity of the site where first attempts to establish an English Colony in the New World was made during the late 16th Century. Bell, who recently completed the reconstruction of America’s first glass works at Jamestown in Vir ginia, has played an important role in the bringing the unusual Elizabethan Garden to its present status. i RE-ENTERS HOSPITAL Capt. W. H. Lewark of Kill Dev il Hills, who was recently dismiss ed from the Marine Hospital, Nor folk, Va., returned Thursday for further treatment.. • I MANTEO, N. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1956 GOVERNOR HODGES PUTS IN A BUSY DAY AT HATTERAS Greeted By Many Coast Guards of Pact and Present on Sat urday Visit. Engineman First Class Preston Quidley’s eyes widened and he took a second look at the man he was detailed to instruct in the rudiments of surf-casting. This was no amateur and to the defer ence that is proper for any man to have for the Governor of North Carolina Qiudley added the respect that one sound fisherman has for another. Fisherman Luther Hodges’ first cast from the Point of Cape Hatteras landed far and true. Although the most disagreeable month in the Island’s book was taking its leave with lamb-like gentleness it was no day fishing and the Governor and his teacher tumed-pupil returned, a little late, to the U. S. Coast Guard Station and the Island’s only disappoint ment in Fisherman Luther Hodges’ informal visit was in that he didn’t get the first fish to be taken this season. There has been keen rival ry about that since surf-casting, See GOVERNOR, Page Four DARE SANITARY DISTRICT WILL BE EXPANDED Old Nags Head and Avalon Beach Included; Other Areas May Petition For Entry Later The Dare Beaches Sanitary Dis trict has been expanded to include, in addition to the sections original ly in the district, Avalon Beach, back to Kitty Hawk Bay; and Old Nags Head on the Sound. Begin ning at Anderson’s curve at Kitty Hawk and continuing to the point where Highway 158 curves toward Manteo, everything on the east side of the highway and every thing 700 feet on the west side, was included in the original plan. Additional areas may petition to be included later. On next Monday night the com missioners of the Sanitary District will meet to decide whether or not an election will be called for a vote on a bond issue of $972,000 for the establishment of a water and sewer system. Last Friday night an informa tion forum was held in the Kill Devil Hills town hall, with ap proximately 60 interested people in attendance. At that time ques tions of all sorts were answered by the commissioners, R. E. Jor dan, C. A. York and Orville Baum; and by Martin Kellogg, Jr., attor ney for the commission; M. O. Ca ton, W. C. Lackey and Robert K. Gunn of the Public Health Serv ice; and R. D. Stout and J. A. Tay lor, consulting engineers. The proposed water system, ac cording to the engineers, will be sufficient to take care of all needs of the beach area for the next 20 or 30 years. In addition to provid ing health protection, the proposed system will also provide fire pro tection and the insurance rates will automatically drop to a lower bracket. Property owners were told that if the low bid on the project was higher than the specified amount to be expended, all bids would be rejected. Pre-Pirate Jamboree Events Shaping Up On Dare Coastland * " ■■ Street Dance, Barber Shop Quartet Competion, Baqquet for Beard Growers and TV-Shows Many pre-Pirate Jamboree events are being planned here on the Dare Coast and some of them will take place in cities away from the coast, such as motorcades, musical TV-programs and dances. Announced this week to take place on Saturday evening, April 14, will be the Nags Head Barber Shop Song Shop. Manteo Rotary Club’s bearded Pirate Quartet will challenge all comers in competition at that time, and already six singing groups have accepted the challenge, one being an all-girl quartette from Elizabeth City. The competition will be staged in the Cypress Room of the Carolinian Hotel beginning at 8 o’clock. Three Virginia groups, the South Chords of Danville, the Tag Tones of Petersburg and the Newport News Hunt Club quartet have been invited and accepted invitations to be present. In addition to the Ro tary bearded quartet of the Dare Coast and the Girl’s Quartette of Elizabeth City, a male group of singers from Elizabeth City and Brack Dawson’s singers from Washington will also be present. COMMISSIONERS TO PROCEED ON THE COURTHOUSE JOB "Now You See It and Now You Don't" Job For Office and Jail Favored This Week The Dare County Board of Com missioners Tuesday followed the plan in which they had been led by their boss and decided to pro ceed with the $85,000 job of re modeling the courthouse and build ing a new jail on top. Lawrence Swain, member from Manteo said the decision was made, the only absent member being W. H. Lew ark of Kill Devil Hills. The archi tect, Ed Pugh Jr., of Elizabeth City, a Wanchese native who had been selected by an old neighbor for this work, met with the Board and took all the blame for pro ceeding to ask for bids some three weeks ago, and said he had acted on what he thought was the wishes of the Board. No record of Tuesday’s action will be put in the minutes, Mr. Swain said, so it will be easy for the Board to change its mind again. A little review of the proj ect may be in order at this time. Ever since the county got a gift of $50,000 in cash about two years ago, there have been numerous schemes for spending it. Finally, the Board was told to spend it for some plush offices for the county officers, and for badly needed vaults, and the least used thing in the county, a new jail. The promoters went ahead and hired Mr. Pugh, and drew plans, although they had an adequate set already made and paid for, but which only called for spending $25,000 or less, and this wouldn’t give them a chance to spend all the money. When they got through with the new plans, which their confreres had led them into, they found the job would cost $85,000, including a jail at Buxton. Os course it has always been the cus tom to spend a lot more in Dare than any plans call for, but they agreed to go ahead and undertake the job, provided the people of Dare County would approve it and the issuance of bonds to the tune of $35,000 more in a special elec tion July 9. The voters didn’t ap prove it however, and turned it down by two to one, and the Board then said they would build it any way. Now this project had as one of its first promoters the Register of Deeds and County Manager, Mel vin R. Daniels, supported by Sher riff Cahoon, and Commissioner Swain. Once having gotten into it, the rest of the Board went along with them. Commissioner White of Buxton was a new man on the Board and had nothing to do with cooking up the project, although he wanted to get along on the Board and get support for his own See COURTHOUSE, Page Four PRE-SCHOOL CLINICS Pre-school clinics will be held for Dare County as follows: Manteo School at Health De partment, Manteo, Wednesday, April 11,10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Manteo-Colored Schocrt at Health Department, Manteo, Friday, April 13, 2 p.m. All parents with chil dren starting school next year please bring them to the clinic for their check-up, according to W. W. Johnston, health officer. Street Dance Carnival On invitation of Mayor L. S. Blades and the Elizabeth City Town Board, the Jamboree spon sors will present a street dance and carnival in the Pasquotank capital on Friday night, April 13. Highly amplified Hill Billy Music and the music of Elizabeth City’s famous High School “Pirate” Band will be featured. Junian Oneto, chairman of the Nags Head Committee on Dare Beaches events has announced that several pre-Jamboree TV programs with Dare Coast participants have been arranged. These appearances are scheduled for Petersburg, Va., Norfolk, Washington and Green ville, N. C. and probably other cities. On days that TV programs are planned there will be motor cades with costumed pirates tak ing part traveling through numer ous North Carolina and Virginia towns and cities. All persons growing beards for the Pirate King competition to be held at the Dare County Shrine Club on April 21, will he entertain ed at a banquet by the Carolinian Hotel on Tuesday, April 17, with Mrs. Lucille S. Purser as hostess. LOST COLONY DRAMA TO BE PRESENTED IN METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE ON MAY 7TH Will Be Feature of 14th Oratory Finals; Jim Mor ton, Part Time Dare Resident, Helpful in Mak ing Arrangements. FRISCO BOY IN AIR FORCE AT LACKLAND, TEXAS ssi in i i J fl LEE WAYNE TANDY, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Tandy of Frisco, Dare County who is now at Lack ’and Air Force Base, Texas. He is 18 years old. With him in Texas is Conrad Burrus of Buxton, son of Mrs. Calvin and the late Mr. Burrus. BIDS SOUGHT FOR $42,785 DISASTER JOBS IN DARE CO. Commissioners to Open Bids April I Oth For Roanoke Is land, Mainland, Banks _______ e Work is expected to begin soon on the diking and drainage proj ects authorized for Dare County by State and Federal Disaster re lief agencies to the amount of about $42,785, and bids will be opened on April 10th, next Tues day, by the Dare County Commis sioners.. ' This money will be spent under the supervision of the Government agents, but representing the Coun ty Board is Lawrence Swain, Com missioner in Manteo. Funds approved for this work for spending somewhere near the following sums of money: Stumpy Point $9,425; Manns Harbor, $13,- 500; Roanoke Island Colored area, $10,700; Avon, $1,460; Frisco, $2,700; Kitty Hawk, $5,000. JAMBOREE COMMITTEES TO MEET SUNDAY 3 P.M. AT CAROLINIAN HOTEL All ’Dare Coast Pirate Jamboree committee members from Kitty Hawk to Hatteras, including Ro anoke Island, Nags Head, Kill Devil Hills and Buxton, are urged to attend a meeting at The Caro linian Hotel on Sunday afternoon, April 8, and all are urged to wear their costumes, it was announced today by Julian Oneto, chairman of the committees in charge of events scheduled for the Dare Beaches. “It is very necessary that all committees be represented as prog ress on plans for all phases o£ the Jamboree must be known and dis cussed,” said Oneto. “At least one TV station repre sentative (WTAR-TV will be present at the meeting under present plans and they plan to make a 15 minute program for transmission over the Norfolk TV station,” said Oneto. Committee members include those in charge of the surf fishing contest, fish fry, beauty show and costume contest, banker pony events, beach buggy races and the waterfront carnival and dance on Hatteras Island; the model plane contest, children’s treasure hunt, blue marlin unveiling,,pirate land ing party, jeep obstacle race, ja lopy races and grand pirates ball on the Dare Beaches; and, the re ligious services and speedboat classics scheduled for Roanoke Is land. Oneto stated that committee members who would find it im possible to be present, should make every effort to be represented by some one in order to give a prog ress report to date. Other commit tee officials urged to attend in clude those in charge of costumes, souvenirs, and finances. Other in terested persons are also invited to attend and all who can do so are urged to wear their costumes for the TV-filming, Oneto stated. Single Copy 70 Manteo, April 5. America’s foremost symphonic drama, “The Lost Colony,” enacted every sum mer here at the site of the first English settlement in the New World, will be presented in part, at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City on May 7 as a feature of the N. Y. Journal-Amer ican’s 14th Oratory Finals. Announcement of Paul Green’s famous play making its first ap pearance on a New York or any stage, other than Waterside Thea tre at Fort Raleigh here, was made this week by Jim Morton, editorial promotion editor of the New York newspaper which has the largest afternoon circulation in America. Morton who commutes between New York between that city and his summer honje on Nags Head spent the Easter Holidays on the Dare Coast with his family and while here completed plans with Lost Colony Manager Dick Jordan for presenting America’s longest lived outdoor production, or sever al scenes from the show, in New York. Jordan stated that Roanoke Is land Historical Association, spon sors of the drama which begins its 16th season on June 30 this year, had given full sanction to ,plans for staging important scenes from the show in New York. “We believe it will be one of the greatest promotional moves in the history of the drama which has attracted more than 750,000 paid customers to Roanoke Island and the actual site of the original happenings of the story it tells. Roanoke Island Historical Asso ciation agreed to the New York presentation of The Lost Colony “in view of the statue of the Ora tory Finals, a youth event spon sored by the Journal-American, and its patriotic and cultural ben efits to young people. Green, the Pulitzer Prize-win ning North Carolinian, who creat ed the symphonic drama as a new concept of theatre art, has written qtn abbreviated version of The Lost Colony expressly for the Met pa geant. It includes a primitive Indian dance to the Corn God by Uppo woc, a medicine man of the Roa noke tribe, acted by Marvin Gor don, currently in the smash stage hit cast of “Damyankees.” Next comes a scene in which Sir Walter Raleigh presented two Roanoke Indians at the court of Queen Eliabeth, and introduces to her strange wonders of the New Work—tobacco and an edible root called the potato. There follows the baptismal scene of Virginia Dare, first child of English parentage bom in the land that became America, and fi nally the powerfully dramatic in cident in England that doomed the colony to eternal oblivion. No trace was ever found of the 150 settlers at Fort Raleigh, and the incidents beginning in 1584 and ending three years later in 1587, has become one of the world’s greatest history-mysteries. It will be this drama, lifted in authentic detail from history, that New York will see for the first time at the 14th Oratory Finals in the Metropolitan Opera House on May 7. A cast of up to 60 persons, in authentic costumes of the Eliza bethan period, will be in the per formance, many of the principals being Lost Colony actors, now liv ing in the New York and New Jer sey area. Many North Carolinians and Honorary Tar Heels will be special guests at the event. GROCERY STORE SALE IS NOT NEGOTIATED Last week The COASTLAND TIMES carried a news story to the effect that Archie Burrus of Manteo had sold his grocery store to Andrew and Margaret Tillett and their son Jack, also of Manteo. That story has been found to be erroneous, as the sale, which was in process of being negotiated, did not go through. Mr. Burrus is still operating his store. ON GOLD STAR DRILL TEAM Montague Pennystone, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Pennystone of Manteo, is a member of the Gold Star Drill Team of Oak Ridge Military Institute, Greensboro, and will go with the team to Wilming ton this week end to participate in the azalea festival. . ..