PAGE SIX —fecnuri fivi 80-SECOND SERMONS By FRED DODGE 'Bjjtt: “Tact arrives at conclus i4pp without expressing them.” —Rodman. M&n the conclusion of a lec tijfe, a famous speaker was met t* a little white-haired lady \QK) expressed her enjoyment o*tr his speech. Shyly, she con fined, jjß’m taking the liberty of s£sfcking to you because youi 3 aid that you loved old ladies." j ,f*Oh, I do, I do,” replied the ifeurer gallantly. “And I also them your age.” pbarl Zuckmayer, the German P<£t, says. “Tact is the great aaflity of seeing other people as t4jy think you see them.” The of tact is a neglected vir tv». In the hurry of modern frankly Speaking £ By Frame Roberts Ived the first edition of I line called the Nafbrat ] !. The title may be id as appropriate as it itself with the Na- 1 isociation for Better Ra- j Television. Amongst •ms in this magazine I ndown on tee-vee shows 1 it children. This was a group of educators, 'ists and the like. The i thing about their list- j s that only five pro-1 ere regarded as excel ehildren; a handful en a good rating: quite round up as fair: the of television programs, ly aimed at children,! ii-ded as objectionable, | ite often the reasons j te interesting. For ex- j •Broken Arrow" was j objectionable, since it i show that violence is ole. Even more sur-1 /as tiie appearance of; id on the objectionable j amp Fox” was objected owing that blood and ( t justified in the cause :ism and another Disney lfego Baca.” was ob on grounds of too much isted as objectioname, Our Gang or Little i ■omedies. Reasons: the I seem deliberately de- j nd disregard parental Also listed as ob- ( le was the Lone Rang-: ion: too much bullets, j body blows. Even round up on the objec list. Seems he sets a j nple by eating spinach ■ sole purpose of beating ] ch-rival Bluto and win- j s lady —or whatever j is. Ramar of the it oo the list. too. Again •h violence. Also, it lp the children in their Since Ramar is spelled • frontwards and back-; lessens the challenge. Tin was listed as ob le. too. Seems the com >esn’t go for the idea of animal. (This reason s odd, considering it is loing all his tricks)., y the way, was regard icellent. He’s not as is ole Yo Rinny, I sup iso on the objectionable Robin Hood. Seems he j prows at the slightest | trovocation. He fights j i, too. The biggest sur-1 food Reading lor the whole Family I News I *Facts I Family Features ■to ChrWtan ftWnc* Monitor Hemay •Won 15, Mow. ■ Sw*f your n«vnpap«r tor tho tlmo ■tocfcod. fnrMirt tmd my chock or ■ l onto.. I yoor S2O □ KiMMho *lO □ i montto *5 □ ■ Nom« ' • V y-T f living we don’t have time to be tactful. At least, that is one excuse. We also excuse our boorishness by saying that tact is deceitful, while we are frank and straight-forward. That is childish poppy-cocx. We are simply too lazy and self-center ed to learn and practice the skill of being tactful. How quickly we blame na tional leaders who fail to use tact. Yet we scorn the use of tact in our personal relations. Why? Your tact can come only from your thoughtful graciousness. Tact reveals your mental dis cipline 'in consideration for oth ers: patience and understanding. Wouldn’t it be well to be known as tactful? prise was their objection to the Roy Rogers show. Roy Rogers is one of the best friends the children have in show business. He, himself, has often deplored the violence so prevalent in the , | adult westerns. Now, however, 1 j the committee gets on him for j what they refer to as implied threats of violence. They’re also lon that super dog kick again, i Seems Bullet has taken over ! where Trigger left off. The | committee doesn’t say how it feels about super-horses. Next on the objectionable list was Sgt. Preston of the Yukon. Seems they object to Sgt. Pres ton taking all the criminals in land not leaving any to any of ! the other mounties. They also object to the fact that the crim inals on this show are crueler , than those on most other tele vision shows. There have even been several women who’ve | been marked as villains. This I the committee couldn’t see at | all. Finally, they object to all the blood, messing up the pret ty Yukon snow. Sky King came out as ob jectionable, too. Too much vio lence again. The Three Stooges were blasted for obvious rea sons laughter at the expense of others; unfeeling and un thinking behavior resulting in its imitation by children in the mistaken belief that they’re be ing funny, too. By the way, l one show had a category all its own. Under the objectionable | came Superman. Well, you know how they feel about super dogs. How do you expect them to feel about Clark Kent’s alter ego? That’s a part of the list, j You may or may not agree with ! the findings of the board, but I | think you will agree that the, listings are fairly interesting. | Once again, the findings are a j result of study by the National Association for Better Radio and Television —NAFBRAT. !. Closing Thought: The homes of a nation are the bulwarks of j personal and national safety and- SfarifW. ~■ ‘ ♦ Plowed-Under Plant | Material May Hinder I Drainage On Farms Plowed-under cover crops or| crop residues sometimes hinder, soil drainage in the spring arj cause drought damage to crops j i in the summer. Studies by scientists of USDAj and the Missouri Agricultural! Experiment Station show that j .when crops are plowed under_ I they may create a vegetative i mat that blocks the capillary \ flow of water between surface | soil and subsoil. Dr. Vernon C. Jamison of Find It Fast in the k YELLOW PAGES -k? The Norfolk ft Cairolins Tikipkoiio ft Tdemyk Co B ~ SS2 SE2AID. EDZTTTC3. £731173 CagS&SaL TEuSSDfI?. AUGUST i 5. M apF • : ,.V , I '• •! : ' ;y .- . Jr 'Hsi? Lb ' K# . •' f >-• ASKS DISARMAMENT Comedian Steve Allen asks Republicans in Chicago to en dorse total disarmament. He is head of Hollywood chapter of the National Committee on Sane Nuclear Policy. USDA’sT~Agricultural Research Service says this restriction of water movement may cause some plants to “drown” in the spring from too much water and| i too little air in the soil. In ( the summer the same olondi- 1 | tion may cause trouble from drought, if the lack of capillary contact prevents an adequate amount of water from passing back from the subsoil to the root zone in the upper layer of soil, says Dr. Jamison. Further research is needed, the scientist says, to determine how a farmer can eliminate or reduce the effect of the mat of plant material. Present find ings indicate that harmful ef fects may be reduced by turn ing the furrow slice on edge to achieve patrial contact be tween the plow layer and sub soil, without any intervening vegetative layer. •The research, conducted in a laboratory, made use of silt' loan to simulate the plow lay er and a loessal silt for the sub soil material. Shredded corn stalks were used as the vege tative “mat" material between the two soil layers. "TnTXIfEHALD^LASSrFIED^ WIfDOIM a{f tkeCUjM— “The great- thing in this world h not so much where we are, hilt in v)hat direc tion we are moving." We constantly study so that our service may include the most modern knowledge of our profession. Our equip ment. too. reflects today's im provements. nmfaui Tfuneral home] r now al semaru sr LrlOl EDENTON N C 24 HR.*®! T AltU'-MAUu: Mutual Burial association let's qp to Sunday School Lesson THE DANGER OF MILITARY ALLIANCES International Sunday School Lesson for August 28, 1960. Memory Selection: “In return ing and rest you shall be sav eu, in quietness and in trust shall be your strength.” (Isaiah 30:15). Lesson Text: Isaiah 30-31; 20. Tire purpose of our study to day is to evaluate the effective ness of military alliances and to discover the true basis for security. Groups of people as well as individuals have always shown hesitancy to go it alone when facing the crucial issues of life. This was true with Israel at the time which is the subject of our study today. Being weary of Assyrian domination, Israel sent an ambassador to Egypt to ask help from Pha raoh for their proposed revolt. Because the government of Egypt was a corrupt and weak one, Isaiah cried out’ in pro test against an alliance with it. He felt that such a false military alliance was immoral, was not a good political move, and was an offense against God. Chowan County Churches YEOPIM BAPTIST a Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o'clock * Pleaching service* every first and third Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. EDENTON BAPTIST RF.V. R. N. CARROLL. Pastor Sunday School at 9:45 A M. Morning worshln sendee, 11 A. M. Training Union at 6:30 P. M. Evening service at 7:30 o'clock. MI t-week prayer service Wednesday at 7:30 P. M. GREAT HOPE BAPTIST REV HENRV V WAPiro Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Morning wnrrS'o -eond and fouith Sundays at 11 o'clock. • Evening worship first and fourth Sundays at 8 o’clock. Prayer service Wednesday at 8 P. M. Rocirr hock baptist THURMAN W. ALLRED. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. • Morning worship at 11 o'clock. I Training Union at 7 P. M Evening worship at 8 o’clock. EDENTON PRESBYTERIAN REV. JAMES MacKENZIE. Pastor , Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. Morning worshlo at 11 o'clock. Girls' Meeting—all teen-age girls— Sunday, 6:30 P. M. Christian Service Brigade—all teen age hoys—Tuesduy. 7 P. M. Mid-week Prayer Service —Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. FIRST CHRISTIAN REV. E. C. ALEXANDER, Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Morning worship at 11 o'clock. Young People's meetlngat 6.30 P. M. Evening worship at "i. 30 o’clock. Wednesday evening service at 7:30 o'clock. ST. ANN'S CATHOLIC R£V. C. F. HILL, Pastor Masses 8 and 11 A. M. Confessions before every Mass. Sunday School 11:45 Sunday A. M. Convert Instructions or private con sultation by appointment. Phone 2617, CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV. HENRY V. NAPIER. Pastor ' Morning worship at 11 o'clock first and third Sundays. Sstidav School at 10 A. M. B T. U. at 7 P. M. Evening worship at 8 o'clock second and fourth Sundays. Prayer service Thursday at 8 P. M. EDENTON METHODIST REV. RALPH FOWLKES, Pastor Church School Sunday morning at, 9*45 o'clock Preaching’service Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. | MACEDONIA BAPTIST REV. GORDON SHAW, Pastor ' Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and every Sunday night at 7:30 o'clock. . . Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 o’clock. x WARWICK BAPTIST REV. R. B. COTTINGHAM. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11 A. M. BTU at 7 P. M. Preaching servtcee at 8 P. M. Prayer service Thursdya nights at S o'clock. SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL REV. GEORGE B. HOLMES. Rector 8:00 A. M. Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.. Church School. 10:00 A. M„ Adult Bible Class. 11:00 A. M.. Morning Worship. 7:30 P. M.. Yeung Churchmen. Wednesday. 10.30 A. M.. Holy Com munion. BALLARD'S BRIDGE BAPTIST REV LAMAR SENTELL. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at IP o'clock. • Preaching aervlce* at 11 A. M. and 8 f. ivi. Prayer meeting Wedneeday Bight at 8 o'clock. CHURCH or GOD , REV. JOHN MARTIN. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11 A, M. WPE Sunday at IP. M. Evening worship at 7:30 0 dock. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES R. P. LONG Congregation Servant Bible study at 3.00 o'clock SundaJ afternoon at Kingdom Hall. Bible study Wednesday night at • o'clock. . . . _ . . Service meeting and ministry school Friday nights at 9 o’clock. ASSEMBLY OP GOD REV. C. L WILES. Pastor Sunday School, 9-C A. M. Worship Service. 11 :C0 A. M. Israel, however, sent this mis sion of secret diplomacy, which ended in death. Egypt was easily defeated by the cruel As syrians, and Israel remained in bondage. Isaiah, for his part, insisted that the basis of na tional integrity is ultimately spiritual. One miist Itrust .in God, surrender to him, and .have a quiet, reasoning mind. . This was the only way to lasting deliverance. - The problem of trusting too fully in alliances was hot pe culiar to Isaiah’s time. Chris tians today are confronted by the same problem. Nations are forming all kinds of alliances in an effort to find security in this troubled world in which we live. We, ourselves, have made agreements with many countries which will enable us to establish a ring of missile bases from which nuclear bbmbs may be shot into any part" of Russia. We have armed nations in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to increase our strength. We have poured food and military supplies into many ocuntries of the world with a view to making them Our friends during times of both peace and war. We have not always been particularly con- Concluded on Page 3—Section 2 WHITE OAK CHAPEL BAPTIST ( REV. R. M. McNAIR. Pastor EVANS METHODIST REV. FRANK FORTESQUE. Pastor Preaching services every first and third Sundaya at 9:30 A. ML CENTER HILL METHODIST REV. FRANK FORTESQUE. Pastor Preaching services every first ana third Sundays at 11 A. M. COLORED CHURCHES PROVIDENCE BAPTIST REV. F. F. LaGUARDE Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Morning service at 11 o'clock. Evening service at 7:30 o'clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 o’clock. Young people’s and aenlor choir practice Friday nights at 8 o’clock. Men's Bible Class meets Monde* night at 8 o’clock. ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST EPISCOPAL REV. CLYDE BEATTY. Minister First Sunday at 11 A. M.. Holy Com- I munlon and sermon. Second Sunday at 9 A. M.. Holy Com munion. i Third Sunday at 9 A M.. Holy Com munion. Fourth Sunday at 11 A. M.. morning prayer and sermon. Sunday School each Sunday after noon at 3 o’clock. CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST ELDER J. A. SAWYER. Pastor Every second and fourth Sunday. Pastor's Day. Every first and third Sunday. Church Day. Sunday School at 11 A. M. to 1 P. M. Prayer and Bible Band Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. Wednesday night choir practice at 7:30 o'clock. ■Thursday night choir practice «*. 7i30 ° Frfday night Pastor's Ald.SqcJttX: ft 8 o’clock. Saturday night young people's Bible quiz and recreation. WARREN GROVE BAPTIST REV. J. E. TILLETT Pastor Sunday School at 10 A M. r : • Preaching service at 11:30 A. M. every second and fourth Sunday:* rK • women’s Educational "and' -Mission ■ Union meets every fourth Sunday after the morning service. WELCH'S CHAPEL BAPTIST REV. W. H. DAVIS Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service first Sunday «t 11:30 A. M. - St. JOHN BAPTIST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG, Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Servl-e* every first and rtUrd Sun days at 12 o’clock noon. Vesper ser j vice at 6 o’clock. I GALE STREET BAPTIST 1 REV. C. M, HEIDELBURG. Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Morning service at 11 o'clock. PINEY GROVE A. M. E. Z. REV. M. H. EBRON. Pastor UNION GROVE A. M. E. Z. REV. J. E. GORDON. Pastor RYAN GROVE BAPTIST REV. M. A. RIDDICK. Pastor REV. C. M. HEIDELBERG. Pastor REV. RAYMOND A MORRIS. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Services every second and fourth Sunday at 11 A. M. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at S o'clock. ST. LUKE CHRISTIAN REV. KELLY GOLDMAN. Paste* JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES ELDER J. C. HALL. Pastor CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV. H. C. SAUNDERS. Pastor KADESH A. M. E. ZION REV, L. A. WILLIAMS. Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. , Morning worship at 11 :Q0 o’clock. Evening service at 7:00 o'clock. PLEASANT GROVE A. M. E. Z. REV. G. L. SCOTT. Pastor 8 o'clock. CAKAAS E. z. Church Sunday [ The TP&tmKm T<;/w | . —L ... m THE CHUSCH FOR ALL . . . All for rue church *' . . Hardest fact for the adult mind to .comprehend good ci'iitmhip. hug Morehouteof j s that a teen-ager stands at the threshold oi me. spiritual value*. Without a wrong * • -*• church, neither democracy not civiiiw- When you enter a strange door you are uncer* lidn cin survive. ThEr, ,re four sound a j n y ou don’t know what’s in store for you. You ZZ&tStoZStS aren’t sure which way to turn. Tim. be Mhr, welcoming votes - but uw of hi» community *nd nation. (4) even these now have the ring of uncertainty, ro F.r the f#)t* of the church iiwif. which when your whole world is changing, can you be sure nreds Ki. moral and ma«ri»t support. that the people around you are not changing also? flan to so to church regularly and read r ,ou.Bibi. daily. For boys and girls in this time of uncertainty. Us Book copter Vsnss the Church is the fulcrum of strength. Its truth i. j. -j.. 4 , ~ is unchanging. Its teaching is clear. Its promises are. Moadsy Homsos M 22-33 worthy of hope, trust, endeavor, sacrifice. < ’! PfAlma 102 25-28 25k H 10-ii ... but so is the might of his God. The character, • Cer^a * n^> e^ar • inspires ’Conr.ftl !•<*. Emm Ats. Srr sire. SrrsrEatf. V*. • B j. These Religious Messages Are F uWished In Tile Chowan Herald And Are Sponsored By The Foil owing Business Establishments: P & Q Super Market EDENTON, N. C. M. V G. Brown Co., Inc. LUMBER JIILLWORK **- BUIJLJDING MATERIAL Reputation Built M Sdtis'fttd’ttmdmm PHONE 2135 EDENTON Interested Citizen Belk-Tyler’s EDENTON’S SHOPPING CENT Eh Hughes-Parker Hardware Co. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS PHONE 2315 EDENTON. N. C. Hoskin Harrell Texaco Gas, Oils, Groceries ROUTE TWO _ EDENTON. N. C. The Jill Shoppe Edenton’s Newest Popular-Price Shoppe For Ladies ' EDENTON, N. C.' Edenton Restaurant “Godd Pbod Pleasant Surroundings” - ’ ■ • —'— - limn in i—l i iiHioi nil —o——f * J«J^——_JJJ Be A Better Citizen, Go To OIV I a ; 9 ' ftl ■ m fH m Some Church Next Sunday E. L. Belch J Buyers All Kinds of Produce PHONE 2770 EDENTON, N. C. W. E. Smith - GENERAL MERCHANTHSE “ROCKY HOCK” - PHONE 3022 - EDENTON ' Mitchener’s Pharmacy .... PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS PHONE 3711 -:- EDENTON The Betty Shoppe , Edeiiton’s Complete Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Shoppe Quinn Furniture Company HOME OF FINE FURNITURE EDENTON, N. C. i' _L—— ' ». The Chowan Herald -YOUR HOME NEWSPAPER ** % m n —— Edenton Tractor & Equipment Company YOUR FORD TRACTOR DEALER AGENTS FOR EVINRUDE OUTBOARD U. S. IT SOUTH- edenton; kc. A Friend ; F I fi rap I • - * - C ' ’ff I *■ . I ml

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