PAGE SIX The Chowan Herald Published every Thursday by The Chowan Herald, a partnership consisting of J. Edwin Bufflap ana Hector LuDton, at 428-426 South Broad Street, Eden ton, N. C. • ■ "MM, I Carolina vJs /_P»ISS ASSOCIATKgp) J. EDWIN BUFFLAP Editor HECTOR LUPTON Advertising Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year I*oo Six Months —..— ■ ...<L26 "Entered as second-class matter August 80, 1934, at the Post Office at Edenton, North Caro lina, under the act of March 8,1879. Cards of thanks, obituaries, resolutions of respect, etc., will be charged for at regular advertising rates. - THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1950. Recreation Important Monday night the Varsity Club will stage their first sports banquet, honoring some 60 athletes of Edenton High School. The purpose of this - banquet is to ac knowledge the accomplishments of these athletes and to encourage more students to participate in athletics. Three A!'.-Americans, Dick Dickey of State; Charlie Teague of Wake Forest, and Darrell Royal of the Uni versity of Oklahoma are to attend the banquet as repre sentatives of the sports in which they have excelled in college. Bill Cox, sports editor of the Norfolk Virginian- Pilot, will deliver the principal address. Several awards and presentations will be made during the night. The program lined up by the Varsity Club is one that should prove interesting to all persons interested in ath letics. It is the desire of the Varsity Club to help Eden ton’s school and the town as a whole get a first class recreational program lined up. Most towns the size of Edenton have good recreational programs. Programs of this sort are becoming increasingly popular and the reason for this must be that more and more towns are realizing the tremendous amount of good it is doing. Over at Elizabeth City the Boys Club is of untold value for it is using recreation to help mold the minds and bodies of the youth into fine clearrthinking, sportsman like citizens. Edenton should have something of the same. As George Thompson, high school coach, told the Var sity Club at a recent meeting, “The importance of health and physical education is being realized more and more each day in the modem trends of our educational pro gram. If we are to gear our educational program with the modem programs, we must place more emphasis on this part of our curriculum.” The seven cardinal objectives of education which are accepted by thousands and thousands of teachers and school administrators are headed by health. Yet, until recent years, very little attention was given to this ob jective, although it heads the list. “None of you have ever seen a mind enter a classroom seeking an education,” said Mr. Thompson. “This mind is always transported by a body. An individual must be educated mentally, physically and socially. We can not afford to deny him these opportunities. Each of these phases has equal importance. If an individual gains his share of knowledge and loses his health, he is unable to derive much benefit from that knowledge. Adequate facilities and equipment are necessary to con duct a program in physical education which wall he mentally stimulating, socially sound and physically wholesome. The general public needs a better under standing of the importance of physical education in the development of youth. Physical education provides more opportunities to display cooperation, leadership and sportsmanship than any other phases of the curri culum.” The sentiments of Coach Thompson are likewise the sentiments of the Varsity Club, in their movement for a recreational program in the county. V^^^VVV^^^WWSA^A^WVVVVVVVVVVN^/WVWVWVSAA/VVWWV^A/VWVS^VVWVVVVV' VWV>A^WWS^WWW\^VS^WVWWS/WW^^V*^VWWWVW\A^WWVWVW*/VW^^ «We of America’s Leading Dealer Organization invite you to Drive home the handles better.. fc th fti Chevrolet rides better! FIRST .. . and Finest... for c ome jni Sit in the driver’s seat of Chevrolet for ’SO THRILLS AND THRIFT and drive home r/te facts of its greater value in your ~ own way and at your own pace! Convince yourself ' that this sensational new Chevrolet leads in all-round n action as it leads in all-round appearance! Drive it—and experience a Valyo- m it America’s best buy for performance! Drive it—and Drive home this factl reV el in handling ease and riding ease that make it FIRST ... and Finest... for America’s best buy for comfort! Drive it—and enjoy j ALL-ROUND SAFETY ~ five-fold motoring protection that makes it America's AT LOWEST COST fT best buy for safety! Again this year, more people are buying Chevrolets j RtlW/Jj* yjL Dr,ve bome ,aetl value. Come, test this car; drive home the facts for { FIRST ... and Finest... for yourself; and you’ll drive home in a new Chevrolet! ; | STYLING AND COMFORT DRIVING AND RIDING EASE AT LOWEST COST Come ht ... drive a Chevrolet ... and you II know why Irs ' AMERICA’S BEST SELLER ... AMERICA’S BEST BUYI , " *•■.■%•■'. VjuJ, -i" . r . ' ' B. B. H. MOTOR COMPANY ' S * v- ' “YOUR FRIENDLY CHEVROLET DEALER? 'V ■ N. Broad and Oakum Streets 4 fidenton, N. C »■ I ■■■ ■■■■■ I ■■'■'— ■■ ■ ' ■ in li —I I I ' M .1 . • "Hill. I I,mill THE CHOWAN HERALD MUHTOiC. ,M. C. THURSDAY, MAT 11, 1960 Heard & Seen By “Buff” j— — Game Warden R. E. Evans played havoc wSth the plea sure of four Erwin fishermen Saturday. Herman West, Thurman Dorman, Hayward Hollingsworth and W, S. Parker were having a wonderful time at Bennett’s Mill Pond, but it cost mem 63 bucks and, worse than that, they went home without any fish. The quarbet,. accord ing to the game warden, had almost caught the linjit at noon when they came ashore to eat. They iced up the fish and went out again after’eating. The fish appar ently were biting good, so that again they had almost the limit. But upon their return about dusk they met up with a very unwelcome visitor —Game Warden Evans. As the result of the meeting, the fishermen were obliged to turn over everyone of the fish—l 47 of ’dm, which were in turn given to the local Welfare Department. The four men were- arrested and tried before Justice <Jf the Peace J. L. Wiggins, with the fine and costs amounting to $63. It wasn't the cash so much that the fishermen regretted to fork out, but the fact that they were unable to take the fish back home to- prove the sport they had. Moral of this paragraph is: Be diarn sure you have a license when hunting and fishing, and comply with the game laws. CJame wardens get about, you know. o Mrs. Bill Privott is in trouble, for again she lost her cat. Once before the cat was found after mention of its lose was made in this column, and here’s hoping Mr. or Mrs. Cat is found this tune. The cat is black, with green eyes and has no tail—poor thing! I must be a regular Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde. On Sunday I was talking to a-certain lady and the conver sation resulted in the lady saying: “Bufflap, sometimes I think you’re running over with religion and then some times I believe you don’t have a darn drop of religion.” Oh, me! And I wasn’t telling a convention joke either. Captain L. A. Patterson and family will spend the summer at Nags Head. Os course, the Captain doesn’t care so much about fishing, so if any friends visit him for a .meal and expect to eat fish, they’ll eat roast beef or sumpin’. o Two fellows were arguing the other day about bottled and fountain Coca Cola. In his argument that fountain drinks are better, one of ’em said the Coca Cola even smells better from the fountain. The other fell coy claim ed that was no argument at all. He said, “Shucks, va nilla smells better than beer, but I still would rather drink beer.” o John L. Goodwin is a very good natured fellow, no doubt. At the Masonic meeting the other night Johnny Curran happened to step on Friend Goodwin’s foot, and Curran proceeded at onoe to be pardoned. “Oh, that’s all right,” said Goodwin, “I’ve been walking on ’em all day.” Well, maybe that’s what you call Masonic broth erly love, for there’s plenty of guys who would have something different to say if anyone stepped on their feet. o~_ My family “is pretty well broken up now, for with a new house not yet completed and an old one being torn down, my daughter is -living at the hotel and I’m living in the country—yep, out at Ernest Lee’s cabins, where my neighbors on one side are a group of bullfrogs. There’s some good bass voices in that bunch of frogs, but we’re getting along all right. I want to get inti mate enough in order to get a mess of frog legs for a square meal. ■- o Edenton’s band will play at the baseball game tonight sponsored by the local VFW Post for the benefit of the Daisy Alice Ward Fund. * Local people have been re sponding splendidly to the appeal for help, so how about going to the game tonight, and thus give another little boost to the fund ? \A^A^CWWWWWVVN/'VVVVWVWVVVVVV\e^V>A^^VVVVVVVVS/VV\^ Miss Carolyn Elliott In Recital Monday Miss Carolyn Elliott, soprano, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joaiah El liott was presented in a graduation recital Monday night by the Conserva tory of Music at Fiona MacDonald College, Red Springß, N. C. Attending the recital were her fath er and the Rev. Harold W. Gilmer, rector of St. Paul’s Church. The lat ter was high in praise of the recital, saying Miss Elliott’s performance was wonderful. The numbers sang by Miss Elliott were: “My Heart Ever Faithful” by Bach; “She Never Told Her Love” by Haydn; Aria; Batti from “Don Gio vanni” by Mozart; “iPer la Gloria d’ Adorarvi” by Bononcini; “Der Muss baum” by Schumann; by Strauss; “Rioumelle” by Chaminade; “Niemand Hat’s Geseh’n” by Loeme; Aria; Je Suis Titania from “Mignon” by Thomas; “A Birthday” by R. Hunt ington Woodman; “If No One Ever Marries Me” by Liza Lemann; “Black bird’s Song” by Cyril Scott; “The Nightingale Has a Lyre of Gold” by Benjamin Whelpley. Miss Ann Briitt of Harrelsville was one of the mashals at the recital, af ter which a reception was held in the college parlors. PLAN SOUTHERN TRIP Mayor and Mrs. Leroy Haskett plan to leave Friday for Biloxi, Miss., REDUCE^ without dieting ff All you do is eat de licious AYDS (aids) Vitamin and Min eral Candy before meals as directed. Your appetite is curbed; you eat less i and lose weight automatically. Yet you eat plenty— never go hungry. Users report weight losses up io 10 pounds or more with their very first box. You too must lose weight with |tj your first box or /syJi money is refunded /J) ($2.89). (<// FREE Scientific l ft j Weight Chart. Call jiff for yours. Or sent free with mail or phone orders. AYDS g# VITAMIN CANDY 'Vt REDUCING PLAN *2.89 Sold In Edenton By Mitchener’s Pharmacy '^A^VWWWWWWWWWVWWWVW^^* to visit their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Haskett Before returning home Mayor and Mrs. Has kett will go to New Orleans and upon their return to Biloxi will bring their eon, daughter-in-law and grandchild back to Edenton, where they will make their home, due to young Has kett’s enlistment in the army expir ing. The group expects to return to Edenton on May 20. W HEAR— ; HMRS. GLADYS TIIETT OF CHARLOTIEj: SPEAK IN BEHALF OF THE CANDIDACY \ \ ij; —of— j; ;i Frank P. Graham ii ' < ► .< ► !• —For— :: UNITED STATES SENATE I PERQUIMANS COUNTY COURTHOUSE j Tuesday Night May 16th at 8 O’clock | 1 The Women Are Especially Invited to | I Hear Mrs. Tillett I ■S HERE BE THERE,! I ■MB Grains, field row crops, vegetables—whatever I is planted in this mellow, weed-free seed bed, the new Farmall C Tractor with Touch-Control will be on the job all the way. The Farmall C is shown here with the McCormick-Deering No. 10-A Disk Harrow. For the Farmall C delivers practical 5-way power: (1) at the i drawbar, for pulling trail-benind machines; (2) at its mount- 1 . ing pads, for pushing forward-mounted implements; (3) at the belt pulley; (4) at the power take-off; (5) at the Touch-Control .power arms for raising,,lowering and regulating mounted implements -by hydraulic power. All at surprisingly low open ating cost! Available for the Farmall C is a full line of matched, quick* change implement units. New and simple in design, each low* > cost implement mounts on the tractor to form a compact oper*l!. ating unit. Rear-mounted implements, likewise, are quick*] j change. f Implements for the Farmall C are under the complete, 2-wayj 1 hydraulic control of the Farmall Touch-Control. The Farmafij) j C pulls one 16-inch or two 12-inch bottoms; cultivates two rows of wide-planted crops. Ask for full information: " BYRUM IMPLEMENT & TRUCK CO. EDENTON ELIZABETH CITY I FAR?/.ALL LEADS THE WAY I ————g—»< SSS^^B‘" v ' k ' SEIIC T*E P lp!a» m pint ,jl£=j»| $ 3.40 Vs Quart *.-,✓. . - GIBSON'S SELECTED • MINDED WHISKEY • liJ PROOP • Ml ORAIM NEUTRAL SPIRITS • GIBSON DISTILLERS, INC, NEW YORK, N. Y. Apartment For Rent BEE DAVE HOLTON Edenton, N. C.

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