Salvation Army
week May 20-26
Work of Organization
Shows Phenomenal
Progress
National Salvation Army Week,
k period for celebrating the organi
sation's progress in helping the
nation’s unfortunates, will start
May 20 in hundreds of communi
ties throughout the United States.
Noting that The Salvation Army
In the last ten years had provid
ed 100,000,000 free meals, or the
equivalent of one meal for more
than, half the country’s population,
National Commander Donald Mc-
Millan reaffirmed The Salvation
Army’s twin goals of physical re
generation and spiritual rebirth of
the nation’s unfortunates.
As in The Salvation Army’s be
ginning—it's first open-air meeting
was held in New York in 1880—the
organization’s emphasis has been
on spiritual help to the lowest-in
come segment of the population
Whose members have few churches,
family or other supporting rela
tionships. Last year Salvation Ar-,
my officers and soldiers conducted I
indpor religious services attended
by Jf1,tW>7,423 persons.
C{js(danCe to persons who found
thejnseltes facing domestic and
otheif-problems was given last year
by T&a Army’s Family Service Bu
reaus-to 324,039 individuals.
Assistance in catastrophes such
as floods, storms, fires and wrecks
is being provided on a nationwide
scale by The Salvation Army. The
organization cooperates closely
with other organizations in such di
sasters, particularly in the opera
tion of its growing fleet of mobile
i
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BEO k DICKEL DIST. CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY. . 65 WOO*
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PROUD WOMAN’S CLUB WINNERS j
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Members of (he Edenton Woman’s Club who attended the N. C.
Federation of Women’s Clubs Convention held recently in Durham
proudly display the 10 top honors they won at the event. No other
North Carolina Club shares this distinction with the Edenton or
ganization. They are, left to right: Mrs. W. J. P. Earnhardt, im
mediate past president; Mrs. Thomas Ward, Mrs. John Kramer,
Mrs. Earl Goodwin, Mrs. A. F. Downum, Mrs. A. R. Dulaney, Mrs.
T. B. Smith, Mrs. Hermit Layton, Mrs. T. C. Cross, Jr., Mrs. Wen
dell Copeland, Miss Elizabeth Moore, Mrs. Joe Thorud and Mrs. A1
Phillips. The latter two sang in the State Chorus, which consisted
of 100 selected voices from clubs throughout the State.
—(Evelyn Leary Photo).
canteens.
Records of The Salvation Army
j for 1955 show that lassies of The
I Army’s League of Mercy visited
more than two million persons in
hospitals and homes for tHe aged,
and that spiritual leadership and
recreational opportunities were of
fered to almost four million boys
and girls in Salvation Army youth
centers.
I
Spry Old Dame
Office Boy—Please, sir, can I
have the day off tomorrow ?
Employer Grandmother going
to be buried, I suppose.
Boy—No, sir—married. j
THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. MAY 10,1956.
Day-Old Chicks Need
“Best Foot Forward”
A day-old baby chick requires
about as much attention of its care
taker as a newborn baby, accord
ing to W. G, Andrews, State Col
lege extension poultry specialist.
Andrews says that in order to
set its best foot forward in life, a
baby chick must be properly nour
ished, along with having many oth
er comforts.
As hd puts it, “Wo are growing
the young orphans for either meat
or egg production, and we can in
fluence either of these courses fa
. vorably by placing a good starting
J mash before the baby chicks at all
I times. A good start in life by be
' ing fed this kind of ration can
make a good end.”
Poultry nutritionists have work
ed long and hard to find the cor
rect proportions of each ingredi
ent. Producers shouldn’t alter this
balance by feeding additional grain
in the form of cracked corn or oth
er cracked grain, thereby unbalanc
ing the ration, Andrews warns;
Andrews points out also that the
poultryman can save monej' by
avoiding wasting of the feed. He
says the mash hopper shouldn’t be
filled more than two-thirds full.
Almost Worth It
A man managed to board a street
car the other day, after a hot
with unwonted politeness, “you
chase. On regaining his breath,
he said, jokingly, to the conductor,
“Suppose I’d slipped and - lost a
leg—what then?”
“Oh,” answered the conductor,
1 wouldn’t have to do any more run
ning then; we always stop for a
man with a crutch.
(Hospital Patients]
Visiting Hours: 2:00-4:30
P. M.. and 6:00-8:00 P. M.
Children Under 12 Years
of Age Not Permitted To
Visit Patients.
Patients admitted to the Chowan
Hospital during the week of April
30-May 6, were as follows:
White
Edenton: Mrs. Dorothy Brickie,
Miss Lenora Cavendish, Miss Alice
Jean Davenport, Robert Winbome,
Roland Ward, Mrs. Mabel Bass,
Miss Betty Dixon, Walter Small,
Mrs. Esther Johnson.
Winfall: Mrs. Marie Winslow,
Mrs. Elizabeth Morgan.
Belvidere: Miss Joyce Daven
port.
Roper: Carroll Livingston. Jr.
Hertford: Travis White, Rudy
Cayton. Miss Sylvia Daniels, Miss
Doris Stallings, Mrs. Sally Cope
land.
Hobbsville: Mrs. Mary White.
Creswell: Michael Phelps, Miss
Gail Aidoock, Mrs. Martha Phelps.
Columbia: Mrs. Grace Spruill.
Negro
Edenton: Lillian Morring.
Hertford: Earl Burke, Earline
Burke, Jerry Walker, Curley
Thatch, Rosie Billups, Annie White,
Wealtha Holley, Vernon White.
Hobbsville: Margaret Holley.
Merry Hill: Pauline Burke.
Plymouth: Thelma Simmons.
Patients discharged from the
hospital during the same week
were as follows:
White
Edenton: Robert Winbome. Bil
ly Isaacs, Mrs. Dorothy Brickie,
Mrs. Mabel Bass, Miss Betty Dix
on. Arthur Hollowed, Mrs. Esther
Johnson, Walter Small, Miss Le
nora Cavendish, Miss Alice Jean
Davenport.
Hertford: Ray Lassiter, Miss
Doris Stallings, Miss Sylvia Dan
iels, Rudy Cayton, Mrs. Helen Mur
ray, Travis White.
Winfall: Mrs. Marie Winslow.
Creswell: Michael Phelps, Mrs.
Dora Snell, Miss Gail Aidoock, Mrs.
Martha Phelps.
Hobbsville: .Mrs.. Mary White.
Roper: Joseph Swain, Carroll
Livingston* Jr.f ; ,
Belvidere: Miss Joy c e Daven-
Stores food the way
j' *i h, v
you buy if/and the Way
you use it/ too!
iiijn|- --- -‘" .nirj j.
it’s all in the new Color-Styled
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Porcelain or Durable Dulux. ' —» 1
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“YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER"
EDENTON '
11
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Up i ill
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IMI USUI
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Wfr's OL
“STOLE’’ THE SHOW
Polka-dotted stole which dou
bles at each end as an elbow
length glove has captured buy
ers’ eyes at recent showings in ■
Paris. France.
port.
Negro
Edenton: Margaret Badh am,
Thomas Gilliam, Lillian Morring.
Hertford: Jerry Walker, Earl
Burke, Earline Burke, Curley
Thatch, Rosie Billups, Annie White,
Wealtha Holley, Vernon White.
Winfall: Helen Pettus, Johnnie
Fettus. \
Hobbsville: Margaret Holley. |
Williamsburg: Bessie Hayes. I
Births
Births during the same period
were: Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Bass of Route 3', Edenton, a daugh
ter; Mr. and Mrs. William W.
Copeland of Hertford, a Son; Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas S. Morgan of
Winfall, son.
Visiting ministers during the
week of May 7-13 are: White, the
Rev, Joseph; Bouman, Negro, the
Rev. E. E. Williams.
Can't Blame 'Em
Cohyear—Could you lend me $5?
Gunhusta —No.
Conyear—Have you a friend who
could lend hie %•> ?
(Junbusta. —Yes, hut friends like
that are so'rare that 1 can’t afford
to share this one with you.
VV^ /VV ' /VVVSA/ ' /V * Vy ' /VV ' /WVVVWN/V «f VVV
Three Chowan Boys
Training At Lackland
j Carl Edwin Forehand, son of Mr.
I and Mrs. Curtis Forehand, Route 3;
Robert Lloyd Garrett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. O. B. Garrett, Edenton,
and Jack E. Hassell, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ruby Hassell, Route 2,
are completing their Air Force
basic military training at Lackland
KILL ROOTWORMS
l with
aldrin
\ j/ Thoroughly tested in all peanut growing areas, power
yw- v ful aldrin is recognized as a top cont rol for rootworms.
\ Aldrin can be applied as a dust, spray, or granular j|
', - formulation; or you can mix it with fertilizer. And aldrin a
is economical. A single application kills rootworms for ||
\ an entire season.
Get. bigger yields of bet ter quality peanuts this season. ||
Use aldrin! Aldrin is available under well-known brand ||
| names from your insecticide dealer. If
SHELL CHEMICAL CORPORATION (SHELU |
AGRICULTURAL CHEMICAL SALES DIVISION !/Ml J
% 55 Marietta St., N. W., Atlanta 3, Georgia J?
' r @ • . 'mm. % - mmm
IfawHier ;
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T CHOICE OF COLORS! ' f
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j Edenton Furniture Co.
1 So. Broad Street PHONE 516 Edenton,N.C a .
• / ' .
I Air Force Base in Texas.
Lackland training is preparing
them for entrance into Air Force I
technical training or for an Ail-
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includes a scientific evaluation of
their aptitude and inclinatio’n for
following a particular career field.
Lackland, situated near San An
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Metal Chair
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-SECTION TW*
PAGE FIVE
USAF. Officer Candidate School,,
the USAF Pre-Flight Schol and
I Officers Pre-Flight Group are op
erating units.
A New Standard
Rufus—They say that radium is
always giving off parts of itself
and yet it never gets any less.
, Goofus—ls that so? That’s the
sort of stuff they ought to make
■ money of.
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