Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Sept. 27, 1962, edition 1 / Page 20
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PAGE SIX ;—SECTION THREE I County News 1 By MRS. ROLAND EVANS Miss Evans went to Norfolk Tuesday. Mrs. Marie Peele returned hpme from the hospital Tues day. Mrs. Mary Small is a patient in Chowan Hospital. .Master Mike Tynch is much improved. Sympathy goes out to the Mark Bunch family. Mrs. Lizzie Nixon is sick. Mr. and Mrs. Evans and Mrs. Perry went to Elizabeth City Saturday afternoon. >Mrs. Lillie Saunders visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Evans over! the week-end. Tonight (Thursday) at 7:30 o’clock Youth Choir rehearsal at Rocky Hock Church; 8:15 Youth Fellowship at Community Build ing. A film will be shown. Chowan County Fair will be held week of October 1-6 at the American Legion grounds. ]V|rs. E. N. Elliott named County Democratic Woman for the Year. Chowan Farm Bureau held its annual dinner meeting in Eden ton armory Thursday night of last week. Lon Edwards was principal speaker. Ryland Club observed open house Friday night, September 21 in their newly completed Community Building. It was held from 8 to 10 with many attending. Center Hill Club had an old Country Sale Saturday, Septem ber 22. The sale began at 10 o’clock in the morning; a pro gram of entertainment was held from 7 to 10 P. M. * Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Forehand and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Here’s A Cordial Invitation To See The IN OUR SHOWROOM FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28th • 29th ) Two completely new hardtops and three new station wagons have been added Ihe 1963 1 OF(l I‘alCOlt, HlOSt SUCCOSSfIII CUI Completely re-styled for 1963 Ford’s top-of-the-line Galaxie 500/XL convertible, to Ford’s Fairlanc series for 1963. This Fairlane 500 sports coupe with its Thunder- ... . . , -. /-i„ rrir ,„„f shown above, offers luxury car features, such as bucket seats and console, a 260- bird styled rooflinc, features a full-length console separating luxury-styled bucket 111 lllStOFy . . . AlfieFlCa S xvO. 1 cubic-inch Challenger V-8 engine, custom-designed interior appointments, and a seats, and a color-keyed interior. console-mounted transmission lever. WE LL BE LOOKING FOR YOU FRIDAY AND SATURDAY . * ' • t - . * t Gifts Refreshments For The Kiddies ; | ALBEMARLE MOTOR COMPANY West Hicks Street Phone 2144 or 2145 dealers franchise license no. is* Edenton, N. C. *" . . few ..-v , fc to the Falcon line for 1963 is this four-door Futura sedan, which LorfsT deluxe* interior and exterior. Shown to good advantage in this picture is tho lew Thunderbird-type roof that is standard on all Falcon sedans for 1963. The new roof, and all-around styling refinements, give the Ford compact a lower, speedier look. Exterior ornamentation below the roofline matches that of othe F P ut ura models (convertibles and two-door sedans) in all respects bright-metal* moU&to Sui whe«l covets, and distinctive Futura idcntdicatton. / J. F. Perry recently. i Mr. and Mrs. Calvin -Keeter and boys visited Mrs. Evans and Mrs. Perry Sunday. McKay Hollowell Dies In Hosital McKay Hollowell, 55, died, Monday morning at 4 o’clock in Obici Memorial Hospital at Suf folk following a long illness. He was a native of Gates County and a member of Warwick Bap tist Church. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Gladys . White Hollowell; four sons, Emory Morris Hollowell of j Suffolk, William F. Hollowell, I USN, Jesse Franklin Hollowell, I USAF, and Julian White Hollo-: well of Hobbsville; two sisters, | Mrs. Ephraim Hobbs and Mrs. I Archie Riddick of Hobbsville; his father, Henry Hollowell of Hobbsville; and four grandchil rHE CHOWAN HERALD. EPENTON- NORTH CAROLINA. TKPHBDAT. SEPTEMBER 27. 1962. dren. j A funeral service was conduct- ( ed Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock in Warwick Baptist Church by the Rev. Warren L. Rollins. Burial was in the church cemetery. New Books At Brown-Carvei Among new books received this, week at the Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library are the fol ! lowing: j Tolstoy Remembered by his I son, Sergei Tolstoy. Vincent, a novel on the life of j | Van Gogh by Joost Poldermans. | i The Siege, a novel of the pe-1 | riod of the Reformation by Peter i Vansittart. * The Rich Nations and the 1 Poor Nations by Barbara Ward. The Favorite, a novel of the Court of Louis XIII by Fran coise Mallet-Joris. For Young People The Sinking of the Bismarck by William L. Shirer. Treegate’s Raiders by Leonard Wibberley. You Come Too, Favorite Poems for Young Readers by Robert F'rost. v Let’s Read Aloud, Stories and Poems selected by Ruth Gagli ardo. Perhaps and Perchance, Tales of Nature compiled by Laura E. Cathon and Thusnelda Schmidt. Magic With Paper by Bill Severn. The Lady of the Linden Tree j by Barbara Leonie Picard. Bristle Face by Zachary Ball. All Together, A Child’s Treas | ury of Verse by Dorothy Aldis. TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED Ruth Carolyn Forehand Weds Thomas Bunch Hr ajj| ' tl||| ■pi, ••lIBiMF ■r 5 v mmmmm W fIU iliKiJilr- • iiigiWßM MRS THOMAS HAROLD BUNCH ! The marriage of Miss Ruth Carolyn Forehand, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin S. Fore hand to Thomas Harold Bunch, son of. Mr. and Mrs. Haywood , Bunch, Jr., of Suffolk, took place Sunday afternoon, August 19, at 4 o’clock in the Eureka Baptist Church. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. John D. Hemingway, pastor of the church, in a setting of palm standards of Camedor and arrangements of white glads and mums and light ed cathedral, candles. ‘ The program cf nuptial music was rendered by Mrs. L. Frank Rountree, organist, and Mrs. John D. Hemingway sand “Be cause.” “O Perfect Love” and “Nuptial Benediction.” Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown designed by her grandmother, Mrs. J. F. Perry of Edenton. It was made of white silk organza and Alencon lace over pou-de soie. The basque lace body feat ured a portrait neck line em broidered with irredescent se quins and seed pearls. The .long sleeves ended in points over the hands and fastened with five tiny self covered buttons. I The body came to a point in the back and closed with tiny self covered buttons. The’ full skirt was accented in the front with a' wide panel of Alencon lace appliqued in the white silk i organza over skirt which ex i tended all the way down to the ' floor and ended in a chapel train ! beneath ah abi back sash of the lace. Her veil of imported illu i sion fell from a matching lace pill box crown embroidered with irridescent sequins and seed pearls. Her white prayer book was also covered with Alencon ilace and topped with a white | orchid with a purple throat and showered with stephanotis. Her ornament was a string of pearls, given by the bridegroom. Miss Melva Forehand, the bride’s sister, was maid of hon or. She wore a street length dress of green organza organdy fashioned with oval neckline and short sleeves and full skirt and picture hat and carried a cas cade of yellow chrysanthemums I and tied with yellow ribbon. -! Bridesmaids were Miss Mary Anne Hare and Mrs. Kenneth ! Bunch. They wore yellow ' dresses like that of the maid of honor and picture hats and car ; ried a cascade of bronze chrys : anthemums tied with bronze ribbon. Derwood Bunch, the bride -1 groom’s brother, was best man. BLOODSHED BOXSCORE; ON N.C. HIGHWAYS Raleigh The Motor Vehicles Department’s summary of traffic deaths through 10 A- M., Mon day, September 24, 1962, follows' ' nilled To Date M* Killed To Date Last Year 822 Groomsmen were Jimmie Bunch, Kenneth Bunch, RicharJ Earl Bunch and Vernon Wins* low.' The bride’s mother wore a light blue lace gown and matchr ing accessories and a corsage of pink roses. The bridegroom’s mother wor<* a pink lace dress with matching accessories and wore a corsage of white roses. Mri Marshall Brinkley was mistress of ceremonies. After a northern wedding trip, the couple will reside in Nanse mond ’County. For traveling the bride wore • a navy two-piece suit with , matching accessories and an or ■hid lifted from a prayer book., Plagued Day And Night with Bladder Discomfort? Unwise eating or drinking may be a source of mild, but annoying bladder irri tations— making you feel restless, tense, t and uncomfortable. And if restless nights, I with nagging backache, headache or mus j cular aches and pains due to over-exertion, strain or emotional upset, are adding to your misery—don’t wait—try Doan s Pills. Doan’s Pills act 3 ways speedy re lief. 1- They have a soo> •ng effect on bladder irritations. 2 - A fast pain-reliev ing action on nagging backache, head aches, muscular aches and pains. 3 A wonderfully mild diuretic action thru the kidneys, tending to increase the output of the lf> miles of kidney tubes. So, get the nine happy n Itaf trillion's have enjoy' d
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1962, edition 1
20
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