SECTION ONE
PAGE SIX
SOCIETY NEWS
Visit fa Beaufort
Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Downum
were the guests of Dr. Downum’s
mother, Mrs. E. W. Downum, in
Beaufort Sunday.
Removed To Hospital
Mrs. Emily Burt Elliott, who
has been a patient in the Wood
land Convalescent Home, has sus
tained an injury due to a fall and
has been removed to Albemarle
Hospital in Elizabeth City.
Visit Hospital Patient
Mrs. J. J. Long and Miss Gladys
Simpson visited Miss Elliott in
Albemarle Hospital, Elizabeth
City, Sunday.
n- ——.
Patient At Cross Roads
Mrs. Maggie Evans White is
a patient at the home of Mrs. M.
P. Whichard of Small’s Cross
Roads.
Elizabeth City Visitor
Miss .Shirley Langdale of Eliz
abeth City spent Sunday as guest
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
L. Langdale. She was accom
panied by Miss Lois Stallings'and
Douglas and Floyd King of Eliza
beth City.
Guest of Parents
Mrs. Arthur White of Hertford
spent Saturday as guest of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Sut
ton, both of whom are confined
to their home but much improv
ed.
Ayden Visitors
The Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Hol
lowell of Ayden spent Sunday as
guests of Mr. Hollowell’s brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Raleigh Hollowell.
Friday In Norfolk
Mrs. Cecil Fry spent Friday in
Norfolk, Va.
Wm
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Returns From Greensboro
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Swindell
have returned from Greensboro,
where Mr. Swindell has been un
dergoing treatment for the past
two weeks.
Greensboro Visitors
Mrs. Bill Womble and Miss Sue
Womble of Greensboro were the
week-end guests of Mrs. Womble’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
Wheeler.
- n
Visit fa Wilmington
Miss Maidred Morris, Chowan
County home agent, accompanied
by her mother, Mrs. Joe Morris of
Kenly, spent the week-end at Wil
mington and Wrightsville Beach
visiting relatives.
Sunday In Jacksonville
Mayor and Mrs. Ernest Kehayes
and son, Tommy, spent Sunday in
Jacksonville as the guests of Lt.
and Mrs. Roger Millett.
South Dakota Visitors
Mrs. W. H. Millett of Lake
Preston, South Dakota, spent Fri
day and Saturday in Edenton as
guest of Mayor and Mrs. Ernest
Kehayes.
O-
Belhaven Visitors
Mr. and Mrs. W. Carl Credle
of Belhaven were the guests of
Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Downum on
Wednesday.
Visit In Williamston
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Britton
were Sunday visitors in William
ston at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Biggs.
Week-end Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Albert McCauley
of Mt. Gilead were the week-end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mediln
Belch.
Return Froim New York
Mrs. W. B. Rosevear and Mrs.
L. A. Patterson have returned
from New York.
Visit Over Week-end
Dr. and Mrs. Ed Bond visited
in Burlington and Chapel Hill
during the week-end.
Visit In Elizabeth City
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Blades
visited relatives in Elizabeth City
Saturday.
Visits Parents
Mrs. John Byrum visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Godwin in Williamston Sunday.
Visit In Elizabeth City
Mrs. George Twiddy, Mrs. A.
E. Jenkins and Mrs. Allen Down
um visited in Elizabeth City Sat
urday.
Conway Guest
Mrs. J. E. Taylor of Conway,
N. C., spent several days last
week as a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
E. L. Ward.
20 YEARS AGO
Continued from Page I—Section 1
Carolina to take a course in pub
lic health work. He practiced in
Edenton 24 years.
Postmaster C. E. Kramer an-
THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 19»».
nounced that the Post Office De
partment planned to reverse the
Edenton-Suffolk start Toute in an
effort to improve the mail ser
vice.
Dr. Martin Wisely was com
missioned a first lieutenant to
succeed Dr. M. P. Whichard as
commanding officer of the Eden
ton National Guard unit.
J. H. McMullan received a let
ter from Governor Clyde R. Hoey
that the Governor would be able
to speak at the Chamber of Com
merce banquet scheduled for Feb
ruary 24.
Work on improvement and ad
ditions at the United Stales Fish
Hatchery was started on a pro
ject calling for 11 new pooli at
an expenditure of over $19,000.
Enrollment was completed for
a kitchen contest sponsored by
the Chowan County home dem
onstration clubs.
Mrs. J. N. Pruden received an
honor certificate from the Ameri
can Red Cross for distinguished
achievement in the 1938 roll call.
Ed Bond Post of the American
Legion announced a square dance
in the armory with music furn
ished by the Swanner String
Band.
Chowan County Commissioners
appropriated 5450 toward wiping
out the debt for erection of the
new Edenton armory.
Chowan and Perquimans Coun
ty Commissioners arranged to
jointly employ J. B. Small as Ne
gro County Agent to serve both
counties.
Stewart Stephenson, former
Edenionian, was elected president
of the Southeastern Class B Base
bal League.
Linda Downum’s Oil
Painting On Exhibit
Continued From Page 1, Section 1
submitted their work, each being
permitted up to three entries.
Thirty-six are represented from
15 communities in the two states.
A distinguished jury of three
art experts chose 47 paintings to
be exhibited from the 440 that
were submitted.
In addition to selecting the
pictures for the exhibition, the
three-man jury named ten out
standing paintings to be known
as award pictures, as recom
mendations for possible pur
chase prizes. A local committee
will later make choices for pur
chase from this group to become
part of the museum’s collection
of contemporary Virginia and
North Carolina paintings.
Linda M. Downum, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Downum,
now living in Philadelphia, is
represented in the exhibition by
her oil painting, “Still Life With
Red Door,” which is also one of
the ten award pictures. This is
the second Irene Leache Mem
orial Exhibit in which Miss
Downum has achieved this honor.
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Brotherhood Week I
Observed Feb. 16-23 j
The President of the United' (
States has again designated the .
i week of Washington’s birthday, '
I that is, February 16 to 23, as ‘
Brotherhood Week.
This is the twenty-fifth annual ■
observance of Brotherhood Week
sponsored by The National Con
ference of Christians and Jews.
Again, as during the past quar
ter of a century, Americans of
all walks of life, in schools,
churches and synagogues, civic
and service organizations, will re
dedicate themselves to the old
ideals of brotherhood, fair play
and justice which have been the
proud tradition, the beauty and
the strength of our country.
The twenty-fifth observance of
Brotherhood Week takes place
under ominous circumstances.
The challenge to our religious and
humanitarian ideals by a relent- 1
less and powerful foe is felt by
all good Americans —which means
by all of us in the town of Eden- 1
ton.
In proclaiming February 16-23
as Brotherhood Week Mayor Er
nest Kehayes says he urges his
fellow citizens to meet the chal
lenge of Soviet sputniks and mis
siles by an untiring and courage
ous effort to build, here in our
own community, the spiritual
American unity in brotherhood as
the foundation of our material
strength.
i
Mrs. Robert Boyce
New Club President
Continued From Page 1. Section 1 <
ents) will not be there. He urged (
that parents always put their chil- '
dren first and placed the import
ance of their training above ev- ’
erything else. The simple “God
is love” is essential to all, he said.
A letter of resignation as pres- '
ident for the 1958-1959 year from
Mrs. J. M. Thorud was read to,
the club and Mrs. Robert Boyce.j
was elected to the presidency for] 1
the coming year.
During the business session, 1
Mrs. Ed Bond announced plans :
for a story hour for children to be 1
held in the Shepard-Pruden Me
morial Library. The program will
be held under the direction of
Mrs. Eugenia Babylon of the Pet
tigrew Regional Library. Chil
dren between the ages of 4 to 12
are invited to attend these ses
sions. •
Mrs. Scott Harrell. Fine Arts j
Chairman, announced the annual ■
Art Show will be held March 8-9 j
in the Penelope Barker house.';
Mrs. Richard Goodwin presented
plans to complete the decoration
1 of the club room in the Barker
: house. The plans were accepted
and the project should be com
; oleted in the very near future.
Guests at the meeting included
Mesdames Frank Collins, Todd
Whitten, Hey wood Ziegler, Jr.,
Leroy Harrell, John Pavlich and
Richard Barrett.
Hostesses were Mesdames Earl
Goodwin, Kermit Layton, Rodney
Harrell, Jr., Louis G. Wilkins, Lo
gan Elliott, W. J. P. Earnhardt,
and Miss Kathryn Brown.
Ten Leaders In
Bridge Marathon
With the twelfth round complet
ed in the bridge marathon spon
sored by the Chowan Hospital Au
xiliary, the ten leading teams and
their scores follows:
1. Dr. Richard Hardin and Joe
Thorud, 45,630.
2. Mrs. L. A. Patterson and Mrs.
W. B. Rosevear, 43,900.
3. Cecil Fry and W. T. Harry,
42,820.
4. Mrs. Thomas Shepard and
Mrs. Wesley Chesson, Jr., 40,920.
5. Mrs. Richard Goodwin and
Earl Goodwin, 38,370.
6. Mrs. R. F. Elliott and Mrs
J. H. Conger, Sr., 37,490.
7. Mrs. Elton Forehand, Jr., and
Miss Kathryn Brown, 35,800.
8. Mrs. J. W. Davis and Mrs.
Earl Goodwin, 35,330.
9. Medlin Belch and Al Phillips.
34,170.
10. Mrs. H. A. Campen and Mrs
A. M. Forehand, 33,250.
Little Symphony
At Elizabeth City
Teh Little Symphony of the
North Carolina Symphony Soci
ety will present an evening con
cert in Elizabeth City on Fri
day night, February 21 at 8:30
o’clock in the S. L. Sheep Audi
torium. Admission will be by
membership in the North Caro
lina Symphony Society. Mem
berships will be on sale at the
door.
The 25-man group, under the
baton of Benjamin Swalin, will
play Bizet’s L’Arlesienne Suite
No. 1; Haydn's Symphony No.
102 in B flat major; Strauss’ Em- j
peror Waltz; Sibelius’ Finlandia,
and several shorter pieces, in
cluding a flute solo by Gretel
Shanley.
Soloist for the evening will be
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Kentucky
Bourbon
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STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKEY. 86 PROOr
ANCIENT AGE DISTILLING CO. FRANKFORT. KY. 4
soprano Darleen Miller. She will
sing Handel’s O, Sleep, Why Dost
Thou Leave Me, from the operg
Semele; Mozart’s Non So Piu
Cosa Son (I No Longer Know
What I am), from the opera The
Marriage of Figaro; Strauss’ Al
erseelen (All Souls Day) and
Nicolai’s Recitative and Aria of
Mrs. Ford from the opera The
Merry Wives of Windsor. '
Sunday, February 23
Will Be Heart Sunday
Continued From Page 1, Section 1
“Several of our residents have
already volunteered to serve as
1958 Heart Fund workers on Sun
day, February 23,” says Dr. Ed
Bond, chairman, “but we must
have many more to call on every
home in the area and previous
experience in fund raising is un
necessary.’ 1
The canvass will be made be
tween 2 and 4 P. M., Dr. Bond
says and volunteers may enroll
by calling him or Mrs. W. B.
Gardner.
“For you it will be a grand ex
perience,” says Dr. Bond. “You
will renew old acquaintances,
make new friends, and feel the
glow of inner satisfaction that
comes when your service helps to
make this a better and healthier
world in which to live.
“If you are not able to be a
volunteer worker, there are still
ways you can serve your Heart
Fund. Be a generous contributor.
Familiar red heart-shaped coin
boxes will make their annual ap
pearance throughout Edenton Sat
urday to remain on display for
the balance of the month as both
fund collectors and vivid remind
ers that this is Heart Month.
“These boxes will be distribut
ed to banks, department stores,
service stations, restaurants, ho
tels, transportation depots and
many other organizations. The
hearts are mounted on colorful
display cards bearing the legend
‘Help Fight Heart Diseases’.”
Famous Quartet
At Kadesh Church
j The famous Pearly Gates Quar
tet of Suffolk, Va., will render a
musical concert at the Kadesh!
A.M.E. Zion Church Sunday night,
February 16, at 7:30 o’clock.
The pastor, the Rev. R. A. Wil
liams, will also render music.
The concert is sponsored by the
board of stewards and the public
is cordially invited to attend.
Roy S. Cayton Is
Member AICPA
Information coming from New
York is to the effect that Roy
Spencer Cayton, Ashland CPA,
has been elected a member of the
American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants. He is asso
ciated with the firm of Andrews,
Burket & Co., in Richmond.
Mr. Cayton is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. C. H. Cayton of Eden
ton.
'! UveKe l
ORDER. HERE. TO
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Maidred Morris
Rotary Speaker
Miss Maidred Morris, Chowan
County home agent, was guest
speaker at last week’s Rotary
Club ipeeting. Miss Morris pre
sented a very interesting program
having to do with improving and
beautification of farm homes.
With a chart she very ably show
ed that by proper planning a
home can be made very attractive
with very little expense.
Miss Morris was intoduced by
C. W. Overman, who had charge
of the program.
During the meeting President
Robert S. Marsh gave a brief re
port of a district Rotary Confer
ence held at Burlington.
In this world, one must be a
little too kind to be kind
enough. -—Marivaux.