Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Aug. 18, 1938, edition 1 / Page 54
Part of The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE SIX Albemarle Closely Linked By Buses NORFOLK SOUTHERN BUS LINES SERVE ENTIRE ALBEMARLE SECTNW OF STATE i New Schedules Inaugu rated; Will Operate] m Special Buses To Big Bridge Celebration The Norfolk Southern Bus Corpora tion has recently increased the num ber of- schedules on its North Caro lina Division to meet the wishes of the traveling public. Increased pa tronage was due to the satisfactory type of service rendered by this Com pany, such as the attractive, modern, and roomy coaches, the inauguration of free porter service on main sche dules, and the improving and enlarg ing of station and waiting room fa cilities to take care of both white and colored passengers. Its bus terminal in Norfolk is one of the finest in the country, and it has recently completed an entirely new and up-to-date term inal in Williamston, N. C., which per mits the instantaneous transfer of passengers and baggage, at this, one of the most important junction points on the line. This Company has so arranged its departing and arrival times to make, in many cases, direct connections with rail, steamer and other bus lines. It has through connections at Raleigh and New Bern and Norfolk for all points South, North and West. It is operating the very latest type of streamlined equipment and its re cord for safety has earned it an en viable reputation. Three trips a day are now given from Norfolk to Ral eigh and four trips from Raleigh to Norfolk. Four trips a day are af forded from Norfolk to Washington, N. C., and five from Washington to Norfolk. Two round trips are oper ated each day between Williamston and Columbia, and on Saturdays and Sundays, three round trips are oper ated between these points. These trips make direct connections with schedules North and South at Wil liamston. The Company also operates hourly service between Norfolk and Virginia Beach on the hour, delivering passen gers and baggage to hotel or cottage door at the Beach, and on the return from Virginia Beach, schedules de- ' r o • THE NORFOLK SOUTHERN BUS CORPORATION OFFERS SAFE - COMFORTABLE - DEPENDABLE SERVICE MAKING FREQUENT CONNECTIONS NORTH, SOUTH, EAST AND WEST Travel the Easy Way » By Motor Coach Deluxe Coaches... Frequent Schedules... Courteous Drivers... Up-to-date Stations... . Free Porter Service... Low Rates... j LET THE AGENT IN YOUR TERRITORY HELP YOU PLAN YOUR VACATION TRIP VIA THE VARIOUS SCENIC ROUTES PUN TO SEE “THE LOST COUNT PAGEANT AT FORT RALEIGH, N. C. - „ ; | - j ■' > ' '. ’ f r , 11 Through Schedules to Fort Raleigh II From: Washington, N. C. - 6:15 A. M. 10:30 A. M. 2:15 P. M. Columbia, N. C 9:15 A. M. 1:10 P. M. (x) ;|| Plymouth, N. C - ....10:20 A. M. 2:05 P. M. (x) || Williamston, N. C 6:50 A. M. —11:15 A. M. 2:50 P. M. Hi Windsor, N. C 7:10 A. M. 11:40 A. M. 3:10 P. M. 1 H Edenton, N. C. 7:40 A. M. —12:10 P. M. 3:40 P. M. m Hertford, N. C 8:00 A. M. —* 12:25 P.M- 3:55 P. M. 1} Elizabeth City, N. C. - 8:35 A.M.— 1:00 P. M. — 4:40 P. M. Il x Saturday and Sunday Only. 1 ; \ :■# ; ill II I liver passengers and baggage either 1 to the terminal in the heart of Nor i folk, or to the Washington steamer, I New York steamer, Baltimore boat ' or the C. & O. R. R. The Norfolk Southern Bus Corpora tion also operates a daily sightseeing tour leaving Virginia Beach and Nor folk, visiting historic Jamestown, Williamsburg and Yorktown. The tour is an all expense one, the fare including luncheon, admission fees to the buildings in Williamsburg, ad mission to Jamestown, transportation, tolls, and the services of their trained lecturer-guides. Company also renders charter coach service, handling parties to any destination at any time at minimum rates. Hofheimer’s One Os Finest Shoe Stores Store Air Conditioned And One of the Best In South Starting as one small store in 1885, Hofheimer’s has grown to one of the most well-known and respected shoe organizations in the country, em bracing eight stores and eight de partments in Virginia and North Carolina. Their Norfolk store at 325 Granby Street, most recently completed, stands as a modern monument to shoe store programs. It covers a floor space of 60 by 185 ijpet, divided into separate de partments for men and boys, women, children, girls and women’s less ex pensive shoes and accessories. Com pletely air-conditioned, modern and luxuriously appointed, it is recognized by the shoe industry as one of the finest in the country. You will find shopping in Hof heimer’s a wise as well as a pleasant experience, because for 53 years Hofheimer’s has built his reputation • 6n value and ever-improving service. « I THE CASE FOR MONOGAMY 11 : i tf QHALL l, having given myself to 1 J one man or one woman, abide • by the till-death-do-us-part vow, or , shall l be free to change partners at i willt n This is the thesis of the article in i “• » • If we put off examining the case for monogamy until we had ' : personal questions about it, most of us would never get around to { studying it. For most people no more doubt that monogamy is thej best possible program than that good health is better than bad.j To argue such a matter seems strange. ' But there is much loose talk# ■ 1— »i about on the other side of the case, crying up the non-monog amous program practiced by a few and publicized by more. The adherents of this group are so vocal that their ideas are con stantly being aired. Knowing themselves a small minority, with the burden of proof against them, they excitedly attack the existing order. Before we have occasion to doubt it, therefore, those of us who take monogamy as a matter of course should understand why we do, and what its significance is to us. Then, if ever the occa sion does arise, we shall be bet ter able to let our minds, not our passions, decide the issue for our greater happiness. The natural mood of most men and women entering marriage is deeply monogamous. The one thing husband and wife crave is to depend only on each other for ever. Y e t later on some of them will suddenly desert the standards of monogamy without giving themselves time to think, and others will pass through a period of turmoil before making up their minds to go or to stay. What has happened in the marriage experi ence to change these individuals who were strong for monogamy into men and women either dead set against it or yery doubtful about it? What are the parts of the mar riage experience that bring out this disposition of wanting to run 1 away in order to try again? In time, the first-flush of en thusiasm wears off, and the hus band and wife gradually get to see each other more nearly as other people see them. The wife who seemed the most beautiful or most gracious woman imaginable, the husband who was looked upon as the strongest or cleverest man in the world, slowly loses this impossible glamour and shrinks to the life-size proportions of a real man or woman. At first this descent from the clouds of fanciful exaggeration of the loved one to the lesser statu? of everyday life seems more or' • • -v-jr-*., 'r S,. Sfiv THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTTON, N, C. the August Good Housekeeping td which the authors point out the sanity of monogamy and give a bibliography of books that help clarify thinking m this vital matter. i less tragic, as both fear that the, supreme quality ot their marriage is vanishing. The more a couple have been lifted up by their ro«i mantle attachment for each otheivj the more they can be hurt when the wearing out of its unreal ele ment drops them to earth again. The ones who are stouthearted enough to count their own hurt a small matter, if they can still help the partner to have something to look forward to beyond the pres ent difficulties, are matured by i this part of their marriage ex-! perience, and later come to look : back on what went before as a dreamlike time when they lived on, nothing more substantial than hopes. This is the testing period of the marriage. Each partner must con tinually get used to the new out line of the other’s personality as it is showing itself, without losing sight ot the value of the essential quality that persists. Os one thing both can be sure: each still has! need of the other. The drop from the temporary; bliss of the beginning of love to the lasting burden-sharing of the rest of life offers many a chance for hurt feelings. Those who lose confidence in their own or their partner’s ability to keep on trying; to live together on a reality basis are generally the ones who want to keep one foot in the dreamland of immaturity. If he drinks and she sulks, both would rather think themselves martyrs and talk over their troubles with sympathetic friends than get down to business and do something about their problems. Monogamy is not a fettering of human impulse, but a registratiou of the deepest yearnings of men and women. The one-man-one-woman crav-, ing is so deeply laid in the struc-: ture of all erf us that any other way of mating and establishing a home Is alien to desire; the thought never arises except when the one-time expectations have been lost through personality); . failure. —Courtesy Good Housekeeping UogatUte. Through Schedules from Fort Raleigh I To: Washington, N. C 7:00 A. M. 11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. MM I Columbia, N. C 7:00 A. M. —11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M. 1 Plymouth, N. C..„ 7:00 A. M. 11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M.l | Williamston, N. C 7:00 A. M.-I11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M. II Windsor, N. C 7:00 A. M. MipA. M. 3:30 P. M. fl Edenton, N. C... *. 7:00 A. M. —11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M. ||( Hertford, N. C..J .7:00 A. M. —11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M. 11 Elizabeth City, N. C. ......„.7:00 A. M. —11:00 A. M. 3:30 P. M. . ..ftfrfc- r & 4ttj f tff ■ ua» ' bbb •>•'*. # '/-■ • mwm LARGE AMOUNT OF FOOD ! DISTRIBUTED BY N. C. S. C. C. Raleigh.—More than one million pounds of food was distributed in North Carolina by the Surplus Com modity Corporation in June, A. E. Langston, state directeor, reports. For July and August beans, rice, canned peas, prunes, raisins, cheese, flour, potatoes and dried milk will be available for the needy in the four j North Carolina surplus commodity districts. The 1,090,977 pounds of foodstuffs | , SHOP IN | HOFHEIMER’S THE SOUTH’S LARGEST AND MOST MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED SHOE STORE <| Hofheimer’s welcomes the people of Albemarle counties to Norfolk .. . we hope you will make our store your headquarters for appointments, phone calls, etc., during your shopping visits ] ... we have the most complete stocks of shoes and accessories in the coun try—for men, women and children— all prices. Take advantage of our sen sational sales now in progress. 325 GRANBY ST., NORFOLK, YA. Branches in Portsmouth and Richmond •_ ■ - • ** PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY doled out from the eight warehouses in the State was in eight commodi ties and pounds listed as follows: Fresh apples, 20,022; dried lima beans, 152,246; dried pea beans, 72,- 684; fresh cabbage, 472,901; dried skim milk, 62,326; fresh oranges, 182,132; dried prunes, 27,358; milled rice, 101,358. The surplus foods are distributed from warehouses in Windsor, New Bern, Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Char lotte,, Fayetteville, Asheville and North Wilkesboro.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 18, 1938, edition 1
54
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75