Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / July 12, 1962, edition 1 / Page 16
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PAGE EIGHT —ssonow rws "Jtlui Mid unlo them. Thou (halt lore th* Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy »oul, and with all thy mind." —JMatt. 22:37. During the time Moses was on Mt. Sinai communing with God the children of Israel began to be Restless. They wondered what had happened to their leader Jo make him stay so many days and nights. Then probably un der evil leadership the people gathered together and told Mos-1 es’ brother Aaron to fashion I them a god. They wanted a god they could see and touch. They forgot all Moses had told them about Jehovah God and they forgot about all the times God had helped them. Soon Moses returned from the Mt. with the Ten Command ments written on two stone tab lets by God. When Moses saw the people singing and dancing to the golden calf they had made he threw the tablets down and broke them. Because of theit gin the people suffered greatly. WAKEUP PARIN' TO GO Without Nt||ing Backache Now! You can get the fast relief you need from nagging t>ackache, headache and muscular aches and pains that often cause restless nights and miserable tired-out feelings. When these discomforts come on with over-exertion or stress and strain —you want relief—want it fast! Another disturbance may be mild bladder irritation following wrong food and drink—often set ting up a restless uncomfortable feeling. Doan’s Pills work fast in 3 separate ways: 1. by speedy pain-relieving action to Omse torment of nagging backache, head aches, muscular aches and pains. 2. by soothing effect on bladder irritation. 3. by mild diuretic action tending to increase output of the 15 miles of kidney tubes. Enjoy a good night’s sleep and the .same happy relief millions have for over 60 years. For convenience, ask for the large sixe. Get Doan’s Pills todayl ; FOR SALE NEW OR USED Scotsman Automatic Icc Machines Super Flakers and Super Cubers Sizes from 40 lbs. daily to 4,500 lbs. For Fur tha Information Call or Write B&P Refrigeration Sales & Service SCOTLAND ifecit, N. C. PHONE VA 6-4756 Samovar VODKA S.j <& W 100 rTf R ° oF F - v ’-v.s Tj DISTILLED FROM GRAIN BOAKA KOMPANIYA SCHENLEY. PA. AND FRESNO, CALIFORNIA . MADE FROM GRAIN. PRODUCT QF THE JJ.S. A 100 PROOF* God Is God By TERRY JONbS Three thousand were slain by the sword in one day and God .jent a plague on the ones that . xemained. Today man has come to the point that he knows better than to fall down and worship a golden idol. But it seems men ( still have the ability to make I gods out of things of the world. , often the teenager makes an im | age to worship out of his car. .v man will put his money or I job before God A woman may in it. Now we may not realize that we have put another god before the one true God, we of ten forget the words, "THOU SHALT HAVE NO OTHER GODS BEFORE ME”. It was expressed once by a well knownj person just how foolish men are. \ It was 6aid that man cannot j create one single little worm but j he can make gods bv the dozen, j Anything that we put before i God and His work becomes a j god of the world. Stopiand think over your life,' have you made God step down from His throne to let some god • of the world reign in your life? 1 Keep in mind that God is God; i He is supreme over all. He i knows every latest world crisis, 1 but He also knows every prob | lem of a small child. This is your God, don’t forsake Him. Look upon every day as the whole of life, not merely as a j section and enjoy and improve the present without wishing, through haste, to rush on to an other. —Jean Paul Richter. TRY ? HERALD CLASSIFIED l[ Hospital patients | Visiting hours: K-ll A. M.; 3-4 r ' sad tt-8 f. M. Children and or 12 are [ ‘ Out iieiiil.iled to l oil putleuiß. Patients admitted to Chowan Hospital from June 30 through ' ; j uly 9 were as follows: 1 Whit* 1 Mrs. Willie Marie Evans, Miss | Darlene Evans, Samuel James ‘ j Sutton, Mrs. Leslie E- Blanch | ard, Mrs. Nollie L. Hollowell, Mrs. Hanna Ward, Mrs. Lois Ma rie Lankford, Mrk. Bera Nixon, Mrs. Dollie Weatherly, Ira A. Holder, Mrs. Ora Jean Jones, Annie Valentine Burke, Mrs. Lo rena Garland, Mrs. Mary Belie Duncan, Mrs. Mary Nixon, Mrs Eva Byrum, Mrs. Elton T. Chap pell, Leo Charles Boucher, Mrs. Nancy Bateman, Willie O. Spi i vey. Colored Robert Burnett, Gladine Ber tha Walton, Hattie Bond, Madic | Drew, Marsha Raye Barton, Bar j >ara Spruill, Willie Overton. | Carol Faye Elliott, i Patients discharged from Cho | wan Hospital during the same ’period were: White Mrs. Marjorie Davenport, Mrs Doris Hoggard and baby boy | Mrs. Hazel Boyce, Mrs. Hettir jL. Walla e, Mrs. Cora Evans Mrs. Minnie Ashley, Mrs. Bett - Rawls, Robert Inglis, Mrs. Joyce Byrum and baby boy, Mrs Claire Nixon and baby daugh ter, Mrs. Annie Chappell, Mrs Lucille Hoskins, Mrs. Willie Ma ■ rie Evans and baby boy, Mrs Alethea Small, Mrs. Nell Powell, Mrs. Annie Mae White, Mrs Darlene Evans, Mrs. Leslie E Blanchard, Mrs. Nollie L. Hollo well, Mrs. Hanha Ward, Mrs. Bera Nixon, Ira A. Holder, Mrs. Ora Jean Jones and baby daughter, Mrs. Mary Belle Duncan, Mrs. i Elton T. Chappell. Colored Lla Randolph, Sharon Young Cora Felton, Gladine Berth; Walton, Madie Drew, Marsh; Raye Burton. Births Births occurring at Chowan : Hospital during the period from June 30 through July 9 were as follows: White Mr. and Mrs. Carey M. Evans of Route 3, Edenton, a son; and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Thomas Jones of Route 2, Edenton, a daugh ter. What you dislike in another, take care to Correct in yourself. —Thomas Sprat TUB CHOW AW HERALD, EDEHTOW, HOOT CABOImA. THTTMPAT. JULY 12, 1882. ~ BIG CLUB—Jack Nicklaus, winner of the U.S. Open in Oakmont, Pa., packs a big club, but not as big as it seems to be here. Camera distortion has enlarged Jack’s driver. This Is The Lav By ROBEHT LEE .For the N. C. Bar Association) Effect Os Offeror's Death Brown, residing in North Car )lina, wrote White, residing in Texas, offering to sell him for $5,000 a horse known as “Nelly.” The letter containing the offer was mailed from North Carolina on October 1, and it was re ceived in Texas on October 5. On October 6, White deposited a letter of acceptance in a street letter box. An hour earlier, unknown to White,. Brown died from a heart at tack. Must the executors of Brown’s estate deliver the horse to White? No. There is no contract. An offer is terminated by the death of either party prior to the' ac ceptance. The purported acceptance oc curred in this case the moment the letter of acceptance was dropped in the street letter box. A letter of acceptance is mailed when it is put in the hands of an authorized post office em ployee or in a receptacle under the exclusive control of the post office. It must,' of course, be properly stamped and addressed. The offeror died one hour be fore the mailing of the letter of acceptance. There is no con tract in this case, because the minds of the contracting parties must be in existence as of the time the contract is consummat ed. If one of the parties is dead as of this moment, it is im possible to have a meeting of the minds. Executors of a deceased of- I 'v. mli ■te*' 'yu ji-/ i ■ i pißlf ’ iigPPNB BIG Alexander, 2, . driv£“ St* «S*fi£feet SS force cannot accept an offer on behalf of his estate; neither can : 4 communicated acceptance to the executors of an offeror bind the ‘ offeror's estate. This is so even though the acceptance is iispatehed by the offeree in ig norance of the offeror’s death, j .If Brown had died a few minutes subsequent to the drop ping of the letter of acceptance into the Texas letter box, there would have been a valid con tract. Death has no effect upon an offer that has been turned into a binding contract by an acceptance prior to death. A person cannot die and thereby get out of his contractual obli gations. Death, as a general rule, discharges only those con tracts that involve personal ser vices on the part of the de- ! ceased. *- More School Pays For Farm Workers More school means more pay for farm workers. And steadier jobs. . And a bet ter chance at non-farm jobs.- Proof of the importance of ed ucation to income shows up in a nationwide survey made in! 196.1 by the Bureau of the Cen-1 a . a. ■ Chavy n/Nova Convertible-Thrifty way to get in on top-down traveling! bejjm with a —. —— / Chevy n Nova Station Wagon-Family-sized, easy to park, pack, pay for! and sum f | I b’hevrolatlmpala Sport Sedan - Jet-smooth ... rivals the expensive makes. f §Sr h | | wvy "iSvyi"W Jm ' * Chevrolet Bel Air 9-Passenger Station Wagen-Just about ill the station Sports car spice on the family plan. wagon anyone could want. Reef Luggage Carrier is optional at extra cest See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer ' George Chevrolet Company, Inc. Telephone 2138 1100 N. Broad St. EDENTON, N. C. Manufacturer's License No. 110 . . • - .. ; ; ■ 111 ■will ■ I .111 . I • *« ■*jjL ' **l V ! - . W. . - ■.% jj3 sus for USDA’s 'Economic Re search Service. Male household heads with a year of high school earned al most twice as much per day at farm work as those with only four years of grammar school, the survey showed. The better educated had steadier employ ment, earned higher annual wag es and more often worked at non-farm jobs. Average educational level of farm laborers hasn’t improved over the past 20 years, the re port shows. In 1960, about six of ten U. S- hired farm workers had no more than eight grades of school. Only about one in seven had finished high school. And in the South, hired farm workers had finished an aver age of seven years of school. Outside the South, the average was nine years. > Retailers Os State Unite With NRMA The N. C. Merchants Associa tion, now in its 60th year of service to retailers of the State, has become affiliated as an as sociate member of the National Retail Merchants Association, ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT. IN 3 D/YS. If nut plrnsrd with uti- in*. inst»nt->trv in-r T 4 1., ynnr 4R<- buck at any drug stare. Match infected akin 8l»ogh off. Match healthy skin replace it. Itch and burning arc gone. TODAY at ail drug stores adv. Taylor Theatre F.Dr.\rnx, a\ c Thursday and Friday, July 12-13 'William Holden and Kim Novak in "PICNIC" Cinemascope and Color Saturday, July 14 doiblk feature Elvis Presley in "WILD IN THE COUNTRY" —and— Rock Hudson in "THE LAWLESS BREdb" Both In Color Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, July 15-16-17 Angie Dickinson and Maurice Chevalier iit "JESSICA" Cinemascope and Color ADH.T ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, July 18— FLAY LUCKY, IT’S FREE Carol Lynley in "BLUE DENIM" ADULT ENTERTAINMENT j according to Thompson Green wood, executive vice president of the state group. “We are delighted to become formally affiliated with NRMA, which now has 11,500 dues-pay ing members in all sections of the United States”, Mid Green -.lf' T I’ve always been partial to lilUstao, but this is the best ever.” □ “Sweetest run ning machine I’ve ever operated.” □ “It picked under what were probably our worst conditions, yet it saved more pea nuts than ever before.” n “We’ve seen many combines in operationand Lilliston’s got them all beat.” □ “I need a machine that will work early mornings and late at night and this Lillis ton does it—tough vines have nothing to do with it.” □ “Wasn’t any more strain on the tractor than if a combine wasn’t hooked to it. n They’re taming about the 1962 Llltiston Peanut Combine. The proof is in the picking, and thesi men have seen it proven. Before you do anything, see the Lilliston. It’s the finest Peanut Combine, ever built. L-LILLISTON 5 WISFUNIHT COMPANY Edenton Tractor & Implement Co., Inc. W. QUEEN EXTD. PHONE 3123 wood. He pointed out that George W. DoWdy and the late David Ov ens, Charlotte merchants, had * each served terms as presidents of the state organization and the National Retail Merchants Asso ciation. £ i' I
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1962, edition 1
16
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