Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / May 16, 1968, edition 1 / Page 14
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PAGE SIX-B Around Chowan County Farms Ky C. W. OVERMAN be 40 to 50 pounds per pect. Peanut Reminders: The of herbicides to con* trol grass and weeds in peanuts is a must. When peanuts are cracking through the soil is the proper stage to apply Di phenamid - Dinitro or Dy nap. Many growers who have incorporated Vernam or Balan at planting fol low with a band applica tion of Diphenamid - Dini tro or Dynap for additional control in the row. All cultivation of pea nuts should be very shal low and never throw soil up on the plant. Just cul tivate enough to control grass and weeds. Cultiva tion just to cultivate is useless and a waste of time and money. Cotton Reminders: Gen et ally the cotton stands that I have observed are good. As with peanuts, cultivate shallow and just etten enough to control grass and weeds. Cool weather often favors aphid (lice) infestation. Watch fields closely and if aphids are found spray or dust with Malathion • DDT or Methyl Parathion - DDT or some other recom mended chemical. Soybean Reminders: Now is the time to plant soy beans for highest yields. May 15 is the target date which is passing this week. Dare, Brag. Hill and Lee varieties are performing well in our area. Seed of these varieties are avail able. Seeding rate should j/ Klftlbfbrft * S FUNERAL home 3 EDENTON, N. C g Dear friends, | From our daily experience I = with the problems that arise | trom bereavement,we can readi = Y answer many questions that the immediate family may have. = other questions can properly be answered only by experts m other fields, *, your attor andy,vb^ f nsurance agents, I and Veterans Administration or I social Security personnel. It I is important to get expert I advice promptly to avoid em- I barrassing and sometimes 1 costly mistakes. Respectfully, 1| //, 3. 1 MR. FARMER! SEE US TODAY FOR YOUR Fertilizer s Spraying Needs WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OF FERTILIZER ATTACHMENTS ELECTRONIC DUSTERS John Blue Dusters CHEMICAL SPRAYERS See Us Now For All Your Needs Bynim Implement&Truck Co. “YOUR INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER DEALER” Phone4B2-2151 D - tart Tr m **« acre based on size of seed. Herbicides are about as important in soybean pro duction as in peanut production. Recommended herbicides that may be in corporated at planting time are Vernam, Planavin, and Treflan. Incorporate one to two inches deep. For pre emergence application (the day of or not more than three days after planting) Amiben, Tenaran, Dinitro or Dynap may be used. For postemergence and be fore weeds are over two inches tall apply Tenaran. Read the label and follow instructions. Our Chowan County Tar get-2 soybean goal for 1968 is an average yield of 36 bushels per acre. General ly 300 to 40 pounds of 0- 10-20 or 0-9-27, depending on potash level of the soil, is needed for highest soy bean yields. Let’s do a good job and surpass our goal this year. Cooperative Lamb Pool: A cooperative lamb pool will be held at the Eastern Livestock Arena, Rocky Mount, North Carolina on Tuesday, May 28. This is the North Carolina lamb pool closest to us this year. Lambs should arrive at the pool between 7:00 and 10:00 A. M. The best mar ket weight for lambs is from 85 to 100 pounds. Growers who plan to sell lambs in this pool should notify me immediately so that I can advise the pool manager how many to ex- THR CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. MAT 16, IMS. Four-H Camp Applica tions: This is to remind 4-H Club members and parents that applications lor the 1968 4-H camp are due in the Extension office as soon as possible and not later than June 1. Die Chowan County group will attend Camp Millstone the week of July 1 to 6. The quota for Cho wan is 32 members and leaders. If our quota is not filled by June 1, vacancies will be released to some ether county. Honor Students Listed By Fry Principal Cecil W. Fry has released the names of .‘.tudents on the “A” honor roll at John A. Holmes High School for the fifth six weeks of the 1967-68 school term. They include: Seventh Grade: Janet Gaino, Walter Byrum, Jer ry Castelloe and Ralph Nixon. Eighth Grade: Patti Ha- I bit, Rachael Holmes, Debra Wynn, David Hollowell, Gary Lowe and Blount Shepard. Ninth Grade: Jewell ' Small, Jane Holmes and Tommy Jackson. 10th Grade: Jane George and Pat Reaves. 11th Grade: Ronnie Rog-! erson. 12th Grade: Jill Cran dall, Carroll Lassiter, Mal colm Dixon, Donald Jordan and Henry Wells. Airman Byrum Finishes Course DENVER Airman Ed ward D. Byrum, son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Byrum. 136 Morris Circle, Edenton, has been graduated from a U. S. Air Force technical school at Lowry AFB. Colo. He wps ,trained as a sup ply inventory specialist and has been assigned to a unit of the Air Force Systems Command at Patrick AFB, Fla. The airman is a graduate of John A. Holmes High School. Good Answer Father: “Get up, Jim. When Abe Lincoln was your age, do you know what he was doing?” Son: “No, Dad, I don’t. But I know what he was doing when he was your age.” Make Church - Going A Habit . . SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON WHAT IS MAN’S DUTY TO GOD? International Sunday School Lesson for May 19 Memory Selection: “Fear God, and keep His commandments; for this is the whole duty of man.”—Ecclesiastes 12:13. Lesson Text: Ecclesiastes 5; 12. The message contained in our lesson today is that insincere worship is an offence to God. He sees into our hearts, so we do not deceive Him if we are hypocritical. We must not go into His house simply because it is the “thing to do”— an ecceptable custom. We must go, rather, fully aware of where we are going, and what our at tendance implies. This attitude on our part is the only way to be receptive to the renewal we can derive from our church attendance—the re newal of spirit that everyone needs in life—the ability to hear, to remember, and use. For a clear, uncluttered mind, divested of everyday cares and business worries, is a receptive mind. The philosophy contained in the Book of Ec clesiates is especially applicable to our day and time. Ecclesiastes is concerned with spiritual riches, as opposed to worldly riches. Today, unfortunately, money—and what money can buy—has become the yardstick of modern American living. We need to heed the voice of Ecclesiastes: “He who loves money will not be satisfied with money; nor he who loves wealth, with gain; this also is vanity.” If we will but pause and reflect we will rea lize that money cannot satisfy our spiritual needs: on the contrary, it can blunt our sensitivities, our concern, our love for our fellowmen—all of which was the basic teaching of Jesus Christ while He was on earth, among men. And while we acknowledge that there is, of necessity, no virtue in poverty, we CAN take heart in the knowledge that there IS an advantage in being unencumbered by possessions. Tranquility of spirit is hard to come by, em broiled as we are in the hectic pace of our twen tieth century world; yet is one of mankind’s greatest riches. For, while knowledge and pro gress have ’brought mankind many benefits, they have also exacted their toll—mentally, emo tionally and physically. It becomes increasingly harder to set aside a time for quiet reflection, lor communication with one’s inner self, and with God. Indeed, there are many among us who actually fear solitude, so conditioned are we to the pace of today. It is noteworthy that communion with God, throughout the Bible, has always taken place in quiet, lonely places. God chose His leaders from among the people, and—without excep tion—they were men who, by occupation, were forced to live apart from the companionship and the distractions of cities and commerce. Would it be too much to suppose that such men were therefore given to analyzing themselves inward ly, without the distraction of people, places and things? Would it be unreasonable to presuppose Continued on Page 7 BELK - TYLER'S EDEN TON’S SHOPPING CENTER MMMaMMNMMMMMaMMaMMMMMMNMMaMMaWMMOMMMMMMMMMMMMMIMM.Ma I W. E. SMITH GENERAL MERCHANDISE "Rocky Hock" PHONE 221-4031 EDENTON M. G. BROWN CO., INC. Lumber - Milhrork - Building Materiel Reputation Emit on Satisfied Customers PHONE 482-2133 EDENTON lijiw aomucimpj This Space Sponsored By a Friend of the Churches In Chowan County EDENTON TRACTOR ft EQUIPMENT COMPANY YOUR FORD TRACTOR DEALER Agent* For Evinrude Outboard* U. A 1? SOUTH— EDENTON. N. C BRIDGE-TURN ESSO SERVICENTER "Yarn Friendly ESSO Dealer” ESSO PRODUCTS ATLAS TIRES AND BATTERIES Western Gas ft M Fuel Oil Service JUggSL SIS S BROAD He’s always there on that busy corner—like thou- J ! the church for all . . . sands of other paper boys across the land, i ~ THE And he doesn’t get discouraged though you ignore 5 j on earth for the building of ch»rac- him day after day. Give him so much as a glance • ! h °P eful > “PAPER . . . MISTER?” ■ without a rtrong church neither What makes him so ready and eager to serve? It’s • survive. There are four sound tne certainty that he has something everybody needs. • * reasons why every person should { attend services regularly and sup- ie "k ic | port the Church. They are: (1) For i_ a j aL. his own sake. (2) For his children's On many comers there are churches. And they 5 nation!** neVer CeaSe Ur « in £ T Oll to COme .. . always ready .. . ■ I sake of the Church itself, which eager to Serve! ■ needs his moral and material sup- ... „ . 9 j port Plan to go to church reg- Here again is the certainty of something EVERY- 5 I ularly and re.« your Bible daily. BODY needs ! ■ 4i ! What they have has come to be called the Gospel j — an anc ' en t word that means “Good News.” A few ■ Sundays in church and you’ll understand why! J Copyright 1968 Kfiller Adt-crliiing Service, Inc., Strmburg, V«. 2 ( ———— m ; Sundoy Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday ■ Exodus Psalms Matthew John Ephesians Philippians Hebrews j, ; 23:22-33 73:21-28 6:5-15 12:20-26 4:25-32 2:19-30 4:11-16 i <s±2? + <112? + <si2? + <512? + <5T2> + <s±2? t <322? + <532? + <512? + <22? + <522? + <St2? 2 i■ • : | These Religious Messages Are Published In The Herald Under The Sponsorship Os The Following Business Establishments: GENE'S 6 ft 10c STORE SELF-SERVICE EDENTON SAVINGS ft LOAN ASSOCIATION Where You Save DOES Make a Difference! EDENTON. N. C. COLONIAL MOTOR CO., OF EDENTON BUICK - OLDS - PONTIAC GMC TRUCKS HUGHES-PARKER HARDWARE COMPANY SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS PHONE 482-2313 - EDENTON EDENTON RESTAURANT “Good Food - Pleasant Surroundings” MRS. W. L. BOSWELL Prop. Phone 482-2722 BYRUM IMPLEMENT ft TRUCK COMPANY, INC. Intemijtitmtt H ip vcstsr Dctltf PHONE 482-8181 MENTON. N. C. ■— i ’• • ** ■ I* ** vi» r * • ' THE CHOWAN HERALD TOUR HOMETOWN p * ■ , NEWSPAPER ■ r ? ,' i * .. .v V. y.\-- 'lt ~ ‘ EDENTON CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. GENERAL CONTRACTORS PHONE 482-3315 N. BROAD ST. MITCHENER'S PHARMACY Prescription Pharmacists PHONE 482-3711 EDENTON EDENTON OFFICE SUPPLY Everything For The Office Phone 482-2627 SOI S. Broad St. ALBEMARLE MOTOR COMPANY “Your Friendly FORD Dealer” W. HICKS STREET EDENTON. N. C. LEARY BROS. STORAGE COMPANY Buyer* Qf Peanuts, Soybeans and Country Produce Selim Os Fertilizers and Seeds PHONES 482-2141 AND 482-2142 » P" - HOBBS IMPLEMENT COMPANY, INC. “YOUR JOHN DEERE DEALER” Your Farm Equipment >,< Needs Are a Life | ] Time Job With Us! ——* ■ ■» ii ■■■■" COMPANY .s*&. HOME OF FINE FURNITVRE vs* . *d*'- \r
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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May 16, 1968, edition 1
14
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