THE HYDE COUNTY HERALD NEWS OF THE RICHEST AGRICULTURAL COUNTY IN THE FOREMOST HISTORICAL AND RECREATIONAL AREA OF NORTH CAROLINA D; No. 50 SWAN QUARTER. N. C.. Thursday, August 16, 1945 Single Copy 5 Cent: TELLS OF TRIP TO PACIFIC BASES “'ates Retaining Islands ^aken By American Figljting Men returned from a 35,- af Representatives xMaval ' ® Committee, Congressman through the member of vast the Bonner last week issued advocating that the ■v ^ retain the island bases the 3 forces have taken at great v human lives. Said Mr. Bon_ S ''T u * nave come to the conclu- ^aat it wild be necessary for 'to ^afain many of these Pacific 1 ® guarantee o-f the safety Rnj.® United ,States against po- aggressors in the Pacific.” ll^^Sressman Bonner and his agues witnessed the great !||J^^ion wrought by tlie fury ^Odern warfare as they visited Midway, Emajalehi, Ma- ’ ^tniwetak, Sa'pan, Guam, % Manila, Samar, Okin- ^nadalcanal and i ti/ Cannot visit ti viVt Jihle ^4'^aafare hS; other bases, these areas being deprcs.sed by the destructiveness of mod- he said, continuing, anila, for example, I saw modern city pounded to ® by our artillery and Jap- ,7 demo'Mtionis. Just visualize of one-half million people hardly a single modern edi- ffit for habitation or other ?«1 Vparticular notice of the ^ hies of the Coast Guard in aciific^ Mr. Bonner, who is ijj^an of the Coast Guard suib- ‘^'’hittee said, "Their work in iy has been greatly praised ® high ranking officers with ^ spoke corucerning it. Our 1,. ^andpounders’ have also been ® great job in handling our barges. Some of these are ifjj *hy own district.” ® 'Cbtigressrneri' averaged i(i)^ -"s 1,000 miles a day. They W® at d^wn each morning and a long schedule. Said Bonner, "While it ^aifficult, I feel that I and the ^e' ?^®'^hers who took this trip ' derived great benefits from • Which should do much to ijj , in our consiJeratioa of *e htiportant legislation which hsit soon consider and which i „ ®rgeiy d’etermine the peace '-oine.” / ‘^TEFIELD new Master of lodge ^ Williams Elected Senior arden at Meeting Thurs day Evening % E. Whitfield, highway pa- at Swan Quarter was and installed as master of ‘>!t Quarter Masonic Lodge liju ®rirsday evening. Mr. Whit- ij j ^'^’Oceeds Bonner R. Lee who serving in the Navy, ^’^stallation was made at an ^ ceremony in the iiodge 0 \ Williams, past Master of li,j^°dge, a 32nd degree Mason, !!i51 a veteran member of id was elected and install- J Senior Warden. ®stallation was made by itid c'\. of New HolCiand .'-berry Point. I. Mason members accepted into the and received their degrees are Leslie Charlie 'J. Cahoon and Swindell ■t,' Pearl Harbor Avenged-Power Wins Wi #1 1 Si- th it NAVY’S SHIPS OF WAR I BEAR NAMES HONORING i COASTAL N. CAROLINA ( i SCOUTS SPEND i WEEKEND AT i KILL DEVIL HILL ravii from FATEFUL DECEMBER 7, 1941 From the ashes of the Japs’ treacherous attack on Pearl • arose the great U. S. battle fleets, the mightiest ■wer in the world, that completely swept Jap fleet vne seas. (Soundphoto) TURNING POINT i Boys Enjoy One of Best ' Canilporees Ever Held in District; Many Visitors Spectacular photographic record of the Battle of Midway in which the U. S. fleet struck a crippling blow at the Japan ese fleet. Picture shows unsuccessful Jap torpedo plane at tack on U. S. Aircraft Carrier. r AMERICAN INDUSTRY / ★ REVEALED iScouts of the East Albemarle District returned to their homes Sunday night after spending two days at Kill Devil Hill in Dare County where they attended one of the mo.dt successful camporees ever held in the district. Troops at Elizabeth City, Currituck, Shi_ loh, Wanchese and Manteo were Among the 61,045 ships of war belonging to Uncle Sam’s Navy is a large number bearing names ho noring North Carolina. Among them are those named for counties and points in our coastland section. Honoring tidewater North Car olina are the escort carriers Core, Bogue and Croatan, and the sea plane tenders Albemarle,Currituck and Onslow, all of them named after bays or sounds; also the fuel carrier Posquotank, named for a river; the ferry Colington, named for an island in Albemarle Sound, and the aircraft supply ship Kitty Hawk, named for the place where the Wright brothers made their pioneering flight. Add to these the attactk-cargo ship Tyrrell, and the attact-trans- poured endless supplies to the Pacific. Trucktractor shown here, powered by fa mous Continental Red Seal engine, speeded movement of equipment on the invasion beaches. After war, same modern equipment will go to work to rebuild the world. '>1 The powerful CyclorOn (atom smashing) machine used by American scientists in development of our great est weapon, the atomic bomb. (Soundphoto) ★ — represented. Outstanding feature of the pro- Carteret and Hyde, all three gram was the Council Fire held for tidewater counties. Saturday evening. Mayor Robert _ other places in North Midgett of Manteo made a brief Carolina are the cruiser Raleigh, talk an died the group in sing- Ashevill^ Charlotte, T i. s, • and Greensboro* named for cities: mg There were also talks oy Nantahala, Wautauga District Commissmner Norman K. Hiwassee, named for rivers, Shannonhou'se, field Scout exe-; following vessels named I cutive Peter Carlton and Solid- ^ after inland counties of the Old tor Chester Morris. I North State: A Scoutmasters -and Scouters pre_ The attactk-cargo ships Alam- l|i|ir it sented by Mr. Cannady were: ance, Caswell Chatham, Duplin. Fred Harward, Chairman of Ad- Lenour, New Hanover, Stokes, vancemenit Committee, East Al- Union and Yancey, and the attactk- bemarle District; Chester Morris, transports Bladen, Clay, Edgecomb Solicitor of the First Judicial Dis- Granville, Guilford, Harrett.Iredell trict, Henry LeRoy, attorney from Mecklenburg, Pitt, Rockingham, , Elizaibeth City; Dick Baer, Chair- Warren and Wayne. ; man West Albemarle District; the Of course heading shins bearing I Rev. Vance Lewis of Wanchese North Carolina names is the mig- I and the Rev. D. W. Charlton of hty battleship North Carolina, j Manteo; John Ferabee, president commissioned in 1941. of Manteo Rotary Club; Scout- named for places in the I masters Dick Owney, Raymond Naval :District_ made un of MERCILESS POUNDING OF JAPAN by intrepid carrier planes (shown here), as well as by fleets of mighty super-forts and naval bombardment, was greatest •oncentration of air and sea power in the world. (Soundphoto) Collier, Joe Tucker, : Brown, Dan Cannady; Assistant ’ Scoutrhasters Adrian Mathias, i Melvin Jackson; Mate H. C. Win der of Sea Scout Ship 164, Eliza beth City; Committeemen John ' Sanderlin, Troop 153, City. Vernon Virginia, West Virginia.Maryland and North Carolina total more than 100, a small part of our present day Navy but a strong fo'>’ce by the scale of what stood between us and the .Tans after Pear! Harbor. By the end of 1944, the total of Elizabeth ghihs in the Navy had climbed to 61,046, including 54,026 landing MIRACULOUS AMERICAN POWER transformed Marine-won jungles and captured Japanese islands into efficient air bases in breath-taking time. Con tinental,'Who built engirie for machine shown here, is ready with peace-time power for farms and industry; air, land and sea transportation. i The Sunday meeting included craft. In July 1945 a listing that religious services conducted by did not include landing craft, fhe Rev. Charlton of the Manteo district i^aft Methodist church. ’ and small boats showed the following figures: 22 battleships, 22 heavy cruisers, 50 other cruisers, 20 carriers, 8 light carriers and 70 escort carriers 373 destroyers. 14 “DM” mine- I Dan Cannady of Troop 162 at Manteo was in change of the camp and won high praise for the way in which it was conducted^ Dis- “DMS” minesweepers, 37 trict Scout Commissioner Norman ports, 6 “AVD” tenders, 365 des- SWAN QUARTER BOY ON IHATTERAS ISLAND BATLE-SCARRED SHIP ^gg^RED POWER first David H. Gibbs, seaman, class, of Swan Quarter, served a- board the 2200-ton destroyer USS SEED SMALL GRAIN | NEGRO HOTEL EMPLOYEE CROP AT RIGHT TIME KILLED BY HIT-RUN DRIVER AND LIGHT PLANT Plan to plant small grain on time or prepare to accept much woman, emipioyed at the Wilbur lower yields per acre because of Wright Hotel at Nags Head, was K. Shannonhouse declared it was the best Camporee ever held in tj-oyer-escorts, 240 submarines, 592 the district during his tenure of jjlinecraft in addition to the DM office. and DMS grouus, 1,262 patrol craft I ; —“ and 1,555 auxiliaries plus the AG, Mattie Pair, 20-year-olid Negro DARE SCHOOL OPENING APD and AVD types. And from NOW SET FOR SEPT. 13 through 1945 more than 100, OOO planes were produced for the Tnwr^Kam which survived the fury i Donner Announces $142,000 the delay in planting, say Exten- killed on the beach highway Mon- Opening of Dare County .Navy. „ , ^ ^ • • - - ‘ ' - • , _ 1 T.17. i> giQjj agronomists at State College, day night by a hit and run driver. Schools is now planed for Thurs- coHosal cost of They point to the three-year The Enrjporia, Va.,-woman was re- day, September 13th, it was an- this arma .a may be g.eaned from a Appropriated for REA Project JAbix berry at hEMERTON, WASHINGTON h 'hg-) Jabin G. Berry, USN, ^ ’'^gelhard, has reported for duty in the Industrial Sa^‘'^®ent of the Puget Sound *5*0 Bremerton, Wash- Where the mightiest war- ))if" ^ the Pacific Fleet are re- }j.^ and overhauled. -itg'’ “'Other, Mrs. Martha Berry, (' and children, Dorinda, ^an, 12; and Luther, 9. live f Selhard. 1/ Berry has spent the last aiboard a repair ship in ^ific. He has been in the ' since 1922. ''^Txixg strikes home SWAN QUARTER MAN struck the home of near Swan Quarter (August 16) during a \ ® ^’tectricall storm that struck )ijj.“®dtion. A. bed and curtains W ®®t afire, but the blaze was y extinguished. of a Kamikaze suicide plane at- j tack off Okinawa and came back ; to the States battered and charred j but under her own power. | in a telegram to the editor of he Ingraham was hit broadside newspaper Wednesdy, Con- by one of seven Japs which pealed gj.gsg„j,an Herbert -Bonner said off from a group of 70 to 80 that $142,000 had been approved and roared into finish her on. In beA project on Hatteras two minutes she had knocked six This assures the citizens of the attackers into the sea, but -Buxton, Waves and Ro- the seventh ramimed into the ship, - ^j^nthe of eleotri-c power. kil’Jing 15 and wounding 30 of the Bonner’s telegram read: ship’s crew. The plane’s , >k,eA has today allotted to Hat- exploded in a -generator room. , island Electric Membership | ^ I Cooperative Avon Dare County MUSEUM GIVEN NEW $82,000 for distribution line and R.4TTLESNAKt ^qq^oOO for construction of gen-' ,, ' erating facilities project NC-64.” A canebrake rattlesnake— three Hatteras Island power line X lit. T vv w4..^w v.k.i.j.ww ^ x:jii-i,/t»i 10, V a., 'wuiiiaii W'da ic- j ' _ j. j* i it , records of the Agricultural Ex- turning from the Croatan Hotel nounced this week^ by Supt. R. I. ^ periment Station at the Piedmont where she had attended a party iss^u^ tbe fleef’-stated unoffically but with following statement: » | will o nthe avera-se bring The badly mangled body was Dare County Schools will open planting will o nthe average bring vFillie Midgett, ™ Tbiirsdav Sentember 13th. ^elided were in y.nW varying from ^.11 D.vll mili oL SS on November 15 O-ara Station, .1 1:30 Tuee. oro.r.m adooled for North Car Test Farm, Statesville, to show at Ithe servants quarters, that delay of 30 to 45 days in yielded 26.4 bushels per acre for the three-year period as compar ed with 61.2 bushels when plant ed October 1. There was a gain of 34.8 bushels per acre for 45 days difference in planting. When the same test was made for barley, the difference was 13.6 bu-hels per acre. Late planting cut the yield 33 per cent. feet long—has -been presented to i gg r. ^ „ v,... 1 the State Museum by Dr. John E. is understood that no location' ° under-iaker. The Highway aPtrol Foster of the Animal Husbandrj planting produced . " , " J. was-also no’tified. Department at State College, it jrisrry, program adopted for day morning. She is reported to olina schools, our schools will par- h-ave left the Croatan shortly be- ticinate. in so far as possible. We fore midnight. shall endevor to meet the require- There were no definite clues as ments of the State Department of to the identity of the vehicle, Public Instruction, which is reported to have carried or thrown the body 20 feet. Coroner Marvin Rogers of Man teo examined the body and or dered it removed to the Kill Dev. il Hi-li- CG Station to await an some d-^geree of accuracy. -As for personnel, the totals as the Navv. 3,388.6.56; Marine Corns, 478 000; Coast Guard. 171.076. The Naw’s tofol cons’stod of 2.862, 971 reservists 378.263 regular navy,and 147,322 inductees. In the Navy there were 311,030 male officers. 2.984.655 enlisted -A very definite and detailed 8.415 Wave officers,73.000 course of study will be placed in enlisted Waves, and 11,000 nurses, announced by Director of the plant. j. MerrJbers of the REA Corpora- Davis. I tion are -Ho-mer Gray, Curtis Gray, According to Davis, she may be- Luther Hooper, C. P. Gray, E. P. come the "war bride of To]o,, Midgett and Acy Gray. the large canebrake who has been : ; a ibatchelor for 10 years. ! Dr Foster also presenlted to the CEILING STOLEN FROM museum a dead canebrake, five , AVALLS OF CLUB PROPERTIES feet long. The snake now is be ing mounted for exhibitio nin the poisonous snake display. Dr. Foster got the snakes aare for the October 15 planting. ! The agronomists call special at tention to the need for observing Hessian fly-ifree dates in planting j wheat, as determined -by the Ex- I tension entomolobist, J. Myron ' Maxwell. For the Mountains, these dates are October 1 to 15; I Piedmont, October 5 to 24; and MANTEO welcomes NEWS THAT WAR each school. Any deviation from the course of study will cause mis understanding and failure to com- nlete the P-escribed Course of study in four years. North Carolina,, as increased salaries of teachers, Princinals and j other school employees. However, 'the salaries naid to sueb emnloyees are not sufficient to meet the com petition of higher salaries paid by Annroximately two thirds of the Navy’s personnel, or 2,232.400, ■'•er° ■'•of.pntly reported to be serv ing afloat. FUNERAL FOR MRS. TILLETT TO BE FRID.AY Funeral services for Mrs. Coi- inda Alice 'j7',llett, 72, will be held HAS COME TO END some Government agencies and by today (Friday, August 17th) at private enterprise. Therefore, the Wanchese Mbthodist chmch about one fourth of the 225,000 teachers in the United State,® have in America, w’e-lcomed the news (,p teaching profession. at fhat the war had ended with mix- -^yg need the sunnort of all the A reward of $100 is being offer- f^j. yi0 Coastal Plain October 20 to I ed emotions. Some yelled; some people in the crisis facing the ed for information leading to the, 27. 'sang; others were quiet. 1 'school system. arrest and conviction of the partyy Maxwell points out that these | A few -minutes a-fter President Y^our bov oi^ girl is Ameriea’s I W nona during a trip to inspect! or p-arties who have been looting; apply from west to east, and | Truman made the announcement most \>nluable asset. I ome livestock experiments. He I the Buxton and Kinnekeet clubs, north to south. For exam-'’””""''"" +v,q c.,,.qv, r,r, rVia Lid that the high water in the , The thieves not only have taken' wheat should not ,be planted ■fixture!, ibut the ceiling from the , +he northwestern section of the walils of one entire room. It is piedmont bdfore October 5; and , said that twamps, caused toy recent rams, drove the rattle snake population to the drainage canal banks in search of dry grounds. The rat tlesnakes were so -plentifulu, he said, that two were caught alive and three large ones were kiLed within a short distance and with M-ttle effort. Alalbam-a suggests 1,500 bream and 100 ibasS in stocking an acre of .fertilized pond; 400 bfe^m and 30 bass, if not fertilized. believed they came in boats and took the loot away. in the southeastern section before October 24. THREE WTIITE MEN LEAVE FOR INDUCTIO-N UESDAY 1 had Thursday for a- holiday. JOHN GORDON RECENTLY PROMOTED TO 1ST LIEUT. John G .Gordon of Manteo has j been promoted from 2nid to lst| Three Dare County white men lieutenant in his 155th Infantry j left Tuesday for induction into the Regiment of the Slst Division, j armde forces. They were Thurs- Prpmotion for -the former con-, ton Midgett of Stumpy Point, Wil- stniction foreman came', on July , liam- Austin of Hatteras and Char- 29. ' (les Allen HoweJl' of Buxton. Tuesday evening, the siren on the fire 'truck was sounded. Motorists DARE SHERIFF INJURF-D blew their horns. Many were out IN AVREC KTHURSDAY on the streets shouting. But by , Sheriff-Editor D. Victor Meek- nine o’clock the town was quiet. 1 ins of Manteo was painfully in- Most business houses and pub'- jured Thursday afternoon when lie offices were closed Wednesday, the Chevrolet truck he was driv. and the Federal departments also ^ ing overturned on the highway near Manteo. First aid was ad ministered at the Naval Air Sta- iSome 7 million workers in man- ' tion, and on Friday Mr. Meekins ufacturing industries are now be- was removed to Leigh Memorial ing served food in the plants Hospital in Norfolk, where he is where they work. In some plants ^-ffering from concussion, shock albsehfeSisrti and accidents ’ have and bruises. -He suffered no been materially reduced. broken bones. wHh Rev. V. A. Lev/:s, pastor, of ficiating. Interment will be in the Ti-ilett cemetery. Mrs. Tillett, a life long resident of Wanchese, passed away at her home AVedne,s-dia-y night at 11 o’clock following a lingering ill ness. ■ ,She was the daughter of the late Peter and Caroline Dan iels Gallop of Wanchese and wid ow of the late Willitt M. Tillett. She was a memlber of the Wan chese Methodist church. iS'urviving are five sons, Dallas, Sigsbee, Peter, Billie and Regi nald Tillett, al of Wanchese; five sisters, Mrs. Dora Davis, Mrs. -Car rie Green, Mrs. Martha Etheridge, Mrs. Lillie Daniels and Mrs. Eliza Tillett, al of Wanchese; and two .brolthers Ezekiel and Leslie Gal lop, botti of Wanchese; several grandchildren, nieces and neph ews. . I r V’ I - \ ■L/ U'