PAGE EIGHT TWO Il l ' ISAM ERVIN 1| j • says * JgapH* Washington Legislative ac tion slowed down to routine business during the traditional Lincoln Day recess. However, a routine day in the Senate saw seventeen bills and one resolu tion introduced, two judicial nominations confirmed, and a bill to abolish mandatory death sentences in certain cases in the District of Columbia debated. A number of important Con gressional hearings are under way. The Senate Committee on Government Operations has been holding hearings on the proposal to create a Department of Ur ban Affairs and Housing. The Senate’s Special Preparedness' Subcommittee continues its hear-, ings on military cold war edu cation and censorship of mili tary speeches. The Committee! on Foreign Relations is holding 1 hearings on S. 2768 which au- 1 thorizes the United States to purchase United Nations bonds and the appropriation of funds therefor. The Senate Post Os- The best chance 1 I i you’ve ever had to f j||vs/iyE j —V' QUALITY r AUTOMATIC WASHER or DRYER. MODEL A34 MODEL 110 AUTOMATIC WASHER ELECTRIC DRYER • ißOutiM. "oot o f *»»• • §*<>■■»( Styling 10 wo*W Styhnfl match washer • Lighted Confro l P ;n»l • t/'-d Control Pob*l • 2 Speed Bmk rind Gentle • f a t. Vo u,m Principle • 2 Cycle No' " n'ond Short • WM,i,.p,, ou . • H,i '- ' Selection o« hib"t dtying • 4 Woy Lnt o*id Git ■ « # A P Mi. | e ; whc .... • Tronsmiss-o' goOron’eed r-_ -i I Edenton Furniture, Co. ft Phone WHY BUY A "ME II” f COMPACT • | ~ 1 ' pmtwlj Chirac!*, © I*SO Baita Fntari SrsMe. lac. Only Falcon can Out-Falcon Falcon! | with twin buckat salts / I | j 'v and handy personal console. Looks like everybody is trying to jump on the Falcon band wagon and build a compact like the Falcoa. Now for ’62, Falcon jumps even farther ahead with more great improvements! , And noddy’s even close! Now it goes 6,000 miles between Si changes! Only Falcon has the lowest price* for a real Now it has a coolant-antifreeze good for two 6-passenger sedan or 6-cyl. station wagon .. . years or 30,000 miles! Now it has more insula only Falcon has the widest choice with thirteen tion for an even quieter ride! models . . . only Falcon has record-breaking You bet we invite comparison! It’s the only gas economyt that hasn't been matched! way to recognize the genuine article—Falcon, And this year, Falcon has more surprises. King of the Compacts! fStandard equipment includes an improved version of the Falcon Six that broke every gas mileage record for 6-or S- cwtindsr torn in Mobilgas Run's Z5-yeor history! * Based on a comparison of manufacturers’ suggested retail delivered prices , including heater Sec yonr FORD DEAFER low and n„! _ . SEE YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER I fice and Civil Service Commit- I tee has begun its hearings on j postal rate increases. The Sym ington Special Subcommittee will soon be conducting hearings on stockpiling materials for nation al defense. Hearings are under way by the Constitutional Rights Subcommittee on the rights of military personnel. Postal Revenue Bill Postal rates on mail for many years have been subsidized by the tax m payers who have been paying for large postal deficits. The House has approved a bill which provides for increases in postal revenues to meet this annual deficit. I .believe it is impera tive for Congress to take ac tion in this field at this session. I think that the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Com mittee will bring to the Senate a bill at this session which will attempt to equitably distribute necessary postal rate increases. UN Bond Proposal —The task[ of making a decision as to! TOR CHOWAN HERALD. EPEHTOH, NORTH CAROLINA, THTJRgDAY, FEBRUARY ML 1993. whether or not I should vote for the proposal that the United States purchase United Nations bonds to the extent of SIOO mil lion has not been an easy one. When the proposal was first made, I was tempted to oppose it in order to express my dis approval of some of the actions of the United Nations. Since that time, however, I have giv en most serious consideration to the proDosal and have reached I the conclusion that responsible action on my part obliges me to i vote for it. The United Nations is the only association of nations pledged to the task of preserving peace. We cannot afford to per mit it to die for lack of finan cial sustenance. The President, who has access to sources of in formation far beyond those available to most of us, has ex , pressed th* opinion that thepe is a grave possibility that the Unit ed Nations will cease to exist if the United States does not purchase its bonds and thus en courage other nations to do like wise. Despite its imperfections, rt is conceivable that the Unit ed Nations may eventually prove itself to be the road to a peace ful world. I am not willing to block a possible route to man kind’s most cherished hope. f County News [I By MRS. ROLAND EVANS Lewis Harrell returned home from the hospital Sunday. Lloyd Parrish is a patient in Chowan Hospital. W. A. Perry is a patient in Chowan Hospital. Miss Linda Monds of Tyner is a patient in the hospital. Sympathy goes out to the Vandy Boyce family. Miss Zoni Whiteman is ill with the flu. Last week was YWA Focus Week. A group of YWA mem bers was recognized at Rocky Hock Church Sunday. A White Bible Ceremony was held Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock at Rocky Hock Church, honor ing Miss Loretta Bunch and Frank Evans who will wed soon. The Chowan Home Demon stration Club will have a joint meeting in the community house Tuesday, February 27’ at 6:30. Members are asked to carry sup per, husbands and other guests. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Keeter and boys of Elizabeth City were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Evans Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Sawyer and Scot tie stopped in later. Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Overman of Gatesville, Mrs, Aubrey Ralph, Bob and two girls of Corapeake, Mrs. Wallace Hobbs of Sunbury, Mrs. Bert Perry, Mr. and Mrs. Wavland Perry of Carrsville, Va., visited Mrs. Annie Leary Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Edith Perry, is visiting Mrs. Annie Leary this week. Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Crist of Madison Heights, Va., visited W. A. Perry recently. Miss Sarah Ann Voliva of Co lumbia is visiting Mrs. Irving Bunch. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Cash of Rocky Mount visited Mrs. Mona Hoffler recently. Troy Toppin has had the flu. A note burning ceremony will be held Sunday, February 25, at Rocky HocK Church. The Rev. B. L. Raines, former pastor and now pastor of First Baptist Church of Kings Mountain, will bring the message. A Spring Revival is set for the week of March 18-25 at the Rocky Hock Church. ' Homecoming will be observed at Chowan High School gym on Friday night, February 23. Cho wan will play Central High School. Crowning of Home coming Queen will take place. The Firemen of Cross Roads- Center Hill Fire District were pleased with the response at the ball game last Tuesday night at Chowan High School gym which they sponsored. The tall and leans, the fats and clumsys were in there along with the cheering squad helping out. Britton By rum and his music boys and lit tle A1 presented special music. A drawing for a ham was held! with Thomas Perry being the I winner. | BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT j Mr. and Mrs. Roy Briley an- j nouhee the birth of a 6-pound 1- ounce daughter, born Wednes-j day, February 14, in Chowan I Hospital. Notice To Housemoving Contractors: Bids will be received until 10:00 o’clock A. M., Tuesday, February 27, 1962, in the office of the Division Right of Way Agent, State Highway Commission, Ahoskie, North Carolina, covering the moving of a two-story frame combina tion store and service station located at the intersection of Secondary -County Roads 1211, 1212, and 1216, approxi mately seven and one-half miles northwest of Edenton, North Carolina, in Chowan County, along with the moving of other buildings in Bertie, Hertford, Gates, and Martin Counties. Proposals may he received by writing to Mr. J. G. Sellars, Division Right of Way Agent, Ahoskie, North Carolina. exciting and beautiful! / Spring is such a pretty season, yau’H want to dress up to it MA •<? ... and our gala array of fashions makes it easy to I M o choose everything from a complete wardrobe to those important little / />\ costume accents. Choose a coat, a suit, a dress | • . GREY SUIT . . . with lightly-fitting jacket, abbreviated sleeves with a new JfM PORTRAIT IIAT . with wide brim that dips at a provocative angle, a % SPARKLNG PI.XS . . . destined to be the highlight of many a spring cos-. 9 tume; in our group of fashion jewelry. H '*! /**! j '-’j , COSTUME JEWELRY ... in a season of elegantly simple Vannie Boyce Dies After Long Illness Vannie Ernest Boyce, 67, died at his home in the Tyner sec- • i tion Saturday morning at 3:45 1 o’clock after an illness of three j 1 years. A native of Chowan) ■ County, he was a retired fanner, j - Surviving are his wife, Mrs.! Rosa Boyce; three sons, W. V. 1 Boyce of Elizabeth City, David ( E. Boyce of Belvidere, and Rob- 1 ert L. Boyce of Rome, N. Y.;|_] five daughters, Mrs. Matthews of Winfall; Mrs. D. M. i 1 Copeland of Smithfield, Va., Mrs. 1 1 Isaac Byrum, Jr., of Tyner, Mrs.) L. J. Daniels of Colerain and! Mrs. Carlton Bunch of Edenton; 1 a sister, Mrs. W. T. Eason of Norfolk. 22 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. A funeral service was held at' Williford Funeral • Home Mon day afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. The Rev. L. C. Chandler, former pastor of Center Hill Baptist Church, officiated, assisted by ( the Rev. Harold Leake, pastor | of Happy Home Church. Burial, was in the Byrum Cemetery'at! Tyner. Usefulness is doing rightly by yourself and others. 7«w|JpS C|f ( 6B6 CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY Mrs. William K. Davis gave her son, Ike Davis, a surprise party Monday night at his home on Court * Street. He received many lovely gifts. The guests enjoyed refreshments of potato salad, peanuts, cookies and Kool- Aide. v Guests were Joe Stokely, Oran Spivey, Terry Jcuxian, Randy Copeland, Kent Haskett, Charles Driver, Bobby Henderson, Lloyd Belch, Ann Parrish, Judy Twid dy, Barbara Adams, Ronnie Dun low, Sharon Dunlow, Sandy Davis. Taylor Theatre EDENTON, N. C. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, February 22-23-24 WHERE THE BOYS ARE Tuesday Weld, Richard Beymer and Terry Thomas in "BACHELOR ELAT" Cinemascope and Color Saturday, February 24 2:110 r. M. PEANUT TWIST CONTEST For Small Fry 12 and I’ndor All Seats 35c Itricistrr by Writing Frank Roberta, ttadio Station WCDJ; Give Name, Aildreas and Phone Number. Prizes: $lO Cash, Free Passes, Gift Boxes by Jimbo's Jumbos, Six 45RPM Records by Griffin's Musicenter. ON THE SCREEN "THE HALF PINT" Sunday and Monday, February 25-26 Bob HoDe and Lana Turner in "BACHELOR IN PARADISE" with Paula Prentiss and Jim Hutton Cinemascope and Color Tuesday and Wednesday, February 27-28 Paul S'evens and Claudette Nevins in "THE MASK" f ■ x Lunch Roorfi Menu I , V —L ' - Menus at John A. HoJrpes 5 High School lunch room for the * week of February 26-March 2, 5 will be as follows: 5 Monday: Tuna fish salad on lettuce, cranberry sauce, apple pie, butter, crackers, green string 1 beans, milk. [ Tuesday: Grilled fish sticks, ’ cole slaw, peach halves, butter, cornbread, buttered potatoes,) milk. ! Wednesday: Fried chicken,! string beans, fruit jelloi, butter, | potato salad on lettuce, hot rolls, 1 KENTUCKY ttSBL STRAIGHT mil BOURBON ■!« WHISKEY BjpgP^ old SILVER I 111 i | OILiIO : Menmqtf '^'hJCKY | *° tJ aaoN whi9 iC * y | U i?® oiarmjsßns ß cf y milk. Thursday: Beef soup, raisin pie, milk, pimento cheese and peanut butter sandwiches, but ter. j Friday: Pork and gravy, tur nip greens, cheese slices, milk, creamed potatoes, hot biscuits, apple sauce, butter. Shrink Painful Piles with "REMEDEX" { New Medicated Formula Relieves fain and Shrinks Hemorrhoids Complete instructions appear os I every package. Ask for REMEDEX at your drug store today, and for complete satisfaction do aot accept ! any substitutes.

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