Thursday, October 25, 1979 Yutetide Workshop Slated *lwii? ??SsS EKhMUi C*y, aft > UL VSrfurii aJ^hMilftiJr «ih Mtml *»w!iri22 to ,lM " >rtii “ i He wart-Tlwp ma» togm rttmtoots. The Mht mmlartily 1:3» PA mi an umted to hrtag a samdtavdh ter haaefc. Mb and dessert «8 he ptouMhd. There a a» dbatgetor the theN. C. Itoseuraaf Hfetafy net he aadi hecaase space is hddL Curt at the <«lshphr«HMtas UJ MAY WE BE YOUR H PERSONAL PHARMACY? H SS 111 B ■*«"«VanTHtS^^Bx*»w-rf«7»7 H l|| POCTOtMM NONE IS ««m mm M Pi im p| I Hoi lowel I B H Blount Rexall I k \ HOLLAND Landscaping SPECIALIZING IN \ Shrubs & Trees Excavating % Planning and Designing % Lot Clearing loader Rental \ Demolition and Hauling 1 CALL RANDY HOLLAND I 4SMQSS I 3554113 M ANYTIME, DAY OR NIGHT M f flfeWE REBUILD HEATERs" I W $65 00 - $ 75 00 [Gordon Sheet Netal Ca MS-S4M £fa«btth Cit y/ , reenter tar the n. c. M am atm STSmcmSmSm^ 2rSr it X «aMheJSrtato hatenc thiaaaeh Tnahiaa i tat ft to bee Mae a part est the Saa'ttw mtaml Afflwgl apart laniL to Albemarle as the first repiaast hnuech el the Manm Associates wiailitirtliln begin aft <u fur adfrutoal members and He Ahaaath. Members receive advaece aatice at sad StTm^X ased hpw&Xrtli Chraßaa artßatte aad tar aiiWMt paw aJTkhM^ I! ~W W ?■ t _. .-- ' **,v. ■,; - LEADER CHOSEN—Sen. Robert Morgan (D-N.C.) and Sea. Join Steanis (D-Miss ) look over material on Army recnatlng la the latter’s office. Steanis, Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, asked Morgan to serve ea a subcommittee that will hold hearings on remriHng practices. Morgan is a member of the Armed Services Committee. Co-Chairs Committee WASHINGTON, D.C. A Senate Armed Services Subcommittee, which will be co-chaired by Sen. Robert Morgan of North Carolina and Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, will begin bearings soon on alleged in the Army’s recruiting program. No date has been set yet for the hearings, which will be held in Washington and possibly in North Carolina. In recent months, the Army has relieved 163 recruiters and three officers for recruiting abuses. It has been alleged that recruiters, in order to meet quotas assigned them, have coached enlistees on en trance tests in order to get them admitted into the Armed Forces. Some of die recruiters Pvt. Coston Reports Fa Duty Marine Pvt Anthony C. Coston, Jr., son of Lorraine J. Coston, Route 1, and whose wife, April, is the daughter of Milton and EhMra Nixon, 409 North Oakum Street, all of Edenton, has reported for ttaty with 2nd Marine Division, Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune. A1976 graduate of John A. Holmes High School, he joined the Marine Carps in November, 1978. Jewelry Jottings —By R. W. Davis— As late as 1873, some Japanese clocks divided each day into two parts based upon sunrise and sun set. The speed of the clock hod to be reset twice each day, os the days lengthened or shortened. Our watches in clude some of the most occurote timepieces ever mode. A fine watch as a gift is sure to be appre ciated. Davis Jewelers TOE CHOWAN HERALD who have been relieved face court martial and some have .admitted cheating in order to get unqualified men into the service. Morgan, who has been studying the matter for several months, has ac cused Army brass of forcing recruiters to cheat to meet quotas for the all volunteer Army. The Army, which denied last year that anything was wrong, now says it is con ducting its own in vestigation, which has extended to all parts of the United States. Attend The Church Os Your Choice This Sunday V ; I THE BIBLE HAS BEEN THE WORLD'S "BEST SELLER" FOR MANY YEARS. ONE CM I - ~ ~r- -v _ TRAVEL TO THE FAR CORNERS OF THE EARTH AND STILL FIND A CORY OF THE C '7 ' BIBLE WAITING FOR HIM THERE. IT HAS BEEN TRANSLATED INTO 195 DIFFERENT % LANGUAGES AND MILLIONS OF COPIES ARE SOLD EACH YEAR. IN A SINGLE v YEAR, ENOUGH COPIES ARE DISTRIBUTED TO AVERAGE 47 FOR EVERY MINUTE of EVERY HOUR, NIGHT AND DAY. WITH SO MANY EDITIONS AND SO MANY * PRINTINGS OF THIS GREAT BOOK,OVER THE YEARS, SMALL WONDER THAT THERE HAVE BEEN OCCASIONAL ERRORS WADE IN ITS C PRINTING! HERE ARE A FEW- n [ f —.. - - - ■ ■ , THE BREECHES BIBLE: in isso an ■ :r. EDTHON OF THE BIBLE SAID ADAM AND v . f Jo> ' "..*?• EVE “SEWED FIG LEAVES TOGETHER AND 7 ' * * .■?:'£& /made themselves breeches." '* •VIME6AR BIBLE : in I '. ' - 'W ~** sf *!Z-***^'.- t ‘ CHAPTER OF LUKE HEADED AS 7 I t' *THE PARABLE OF THE VINEGAR* V £ , &7 r INSTEAD OF "VINEYARD." / FTHE WICKED BIBLE: IN i' - - J • 1631, A PRINTS? WAS FINED - 300 FOUNDS BECAUSE HE ' '•& - —*-* ■ i & - ™ E TREACLE B,BLE: AN - EDITION IN 1566 HAD JEREMIAHS 22 i READING*IS THERE NO TREACLE IN ’ ' GILEAD* INSTEAD OF “BALM*. ~.. BIBLE: in 1702 % L lL*2& THE 119— PSALM, VERSE 161, READ: ? , J* “PRINTERS HAVE PERSECUTED ME ~~ OF “PRINCES" i Br NOTWITHSTANDING THE U L l| 6 )\sS&L ERRORS, THE BIBLE, IN THE ffffi. N . f 2 jgj&M LjkSfy THOUSANDS OF EDITIONS ~? “-jr? 1 T&J'i :'X|| PUBLISHED AND THE MANY * HfP 41 MILLIONS. OF COPIES THAT 7- ; ltxflSH -i/J HAVE BEEN DISTRIBUTED, ML ?^CT/' l Y-|Vr>Tr>4 | nSlfl >lllll CONTINUES TO BRING TO is i | *t||(T iSST »B|l HUMANITY THE SPIRITUAL r i& I IVT1 V T 'JI I ||J| AND MORAL VALUES SO ''' ' ' , i‘ " - NEXT WEEK •• WOMENS v LIB IN THE BIBLE?!! © L—- 4 * SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAP-BOOK . —-f— * These Messages Are Published Under The Sponsorship If The Following Business Establishments Bynim knptemcnt A Bndge-Tum Exxon Edenton Tractor A Leary Bros. Storage Truck Co, Inc. A Servicenter Equipment Co. Co. _ . , For hhppy Motoring Omot o» Wi So^m, •-I I-1 I--1. - ~ - Friend Mffr«<,E»ON[Wr’ OMMtv <**,!>«<, Emu ProdUCtl'AttßS t»*ndl CWAwrA SaieiaiMkerAWSiaA WMMIMM Tjr—AwdßMWrm US 17 South, td onton. N C Phone 482^141. A/bwnorf* Motor Co. kitchener's Pharmacy Edenton Savings A W.E Smith tffrffMr FnescwrooN Loan gcnom moomnusc to Mow MM Oar Moh» A fthrwwl W. Mda St-EOenMn. N. C Phone 4BX-37U, Edwlan Edenton. NC Phone 2214031. Edonton Wwd qm 1 Pamar-tvans hoods impienient ul «*«.**. «MtoNB -d XOiOldMX.*>d n—etUP Phene <ag-*4Ol. Ede Wen MHtotu.itoMiM.iki Draft Supplement Plans Are Released WILMINGTON Design changes and right of-way needs are among the subjects or a draft sup plement to the - en vironmental impact statement about stabilizing Oregon Inlet with jetties and expanding the navigation channel through the inlet to Wanchese Harbor. The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers has prepared and circulated the document in consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service. There has been a congressional allocation of $2-million to start con struction during the current fiscal year. The corps has made two significant design changes during advance engineering and design work: - The first has been to narrow the distance bet ween the jetties from 3,500 to 2,500 feet. This will help Jones Announces Grant Rep. Walter B. Jones has announced the approval by the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service of a grant of $15,000 to the N. C. Department of Cultural Resources for the restoration of the Newbold- White House near Hertford. The state will contribute ensure that the current is directed through the navigation opening of Bonner Bridge. The jetty anchor sections on the beach will allow overwash, yet prevent the opening of a new inlet immediately adjacent to Oregon Inlet It will remain possible for storms to breach the shore elsewhere, but jetty con struction will establish a hydraulically efficient channel through Oregon Inlet and reduce the possibilities of a new inlet remaining open. - The other has been to eliminate the doors midway through each of the jetties. These were to have provided a dredge with easy access to the near shore area in order to bypass sand across the inlet but swift currents have made them impractical. Current plans are to have the dredge move to the near shore area under the protection of a floating $20,400 to the project for a total of $35,400. The Newbold-White House is perhaps the earliest ex tant building in the state, and the objective of this project is to restore it to its pre-Georgian appearance and to open it to the public as a historic house museum. The corps has found that the combination of jetties and sand bypassing will reduce and perhaps eliminate erosion along three miles of beach on both sides of die inlet. It will be necessary to bypass sand across the inlet periodically to prevent the accumulation of too much sand along one side of the inlet to the detriment of die other. Jetty construction will also require the permanent use of 18.8 acres to anchor the north jetty on National Park Service lands on Bodie Island. Much of the land section of the jetty will eventually be covered with sand through natural processes. Another 42.7 acres will be needed during BINGO EACH THURSDAY 8 P.M AT ST. ANN'S CATHOLIC CHURCH TWO JACKPOTS s2oo°p Each Page 3-B jetty construction and 61.5 acres are to be the right-of way associated with sand bypassing. About 4.4 acres of Fish and Wiklife Service lands at Pea Island will be required to anchor the south jetty, 19.6 acres will be needed during construction an# 20.5 acres will be associated with sand bypassing operations. Other subjects in the supplement include the impacts of the jetties on recreation and management of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, the establishment of wetlands for oyster reef production and a program to manage dredge disposal islands as nesting sites for migratory seabirtfc.

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