Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Oct. 29, 1981, edition 1 / Page 3
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-flshley l/onotcd During homecoming last mday in Elizabeth Baptist lurch in Sampson County, ev. G. N. Ashley was rnored. He was recognized r 37 years of service to at church and for 55 years a Baptist minister. Mr. Ashley, who lives in e Autryville area and rves as pastor of the Long *anch Baptist Church, eached the homecoming rmon at Elizabeth Bap it, according to the pastor, jv. Lamar Eilend. At The Hertford United ethodist Women will onsor their annual bazaar d luncheon on November at the church in Hertford. The theme will be “Our tir” and booths will be en from 10:45 A.M. until 5 M. Crafts and other items interest will be found in i Knot Nook and Kiddie mer, the Country Kit en, the Not New Shoppe, i Celebration Center, the ternational Way and per Place, and the All rough the House Booth, rhe chicken salad lun eon will be served from 30 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. :kets are $3.25 and must purchased in advance imUMW members. Voter* of The Third Ward • RE - ELECT JAMES P. RICKS, JR. Council - Third Ward Experienced - Capable Municipal Election November 3rd. Your Vote And Support Will Be Appreciated SAMPLE BALLOT AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR VOTING CANDIDATES FOR MUNICIPAL OFFICES OF THE TOWN OF EDENTON AT THE MUNICIPAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 3. 1981 3fl Each candidate's voting pointer is located just above ~ r §’’ IF'f' , his name; o voting pointer must be turned down 1 9 I ’ BPkl mA irAmrma ‘ I over the name of each candidate for whom you INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS wish to vo,e - AND LEFT down. f I 1. Move the Red Operating Lever to the Right Until Bell Rings. IPtW Th. machine Is so arranged that you cannot turn I' I _ x m down more than the proper number of voting ft 2. Turn down a Voting Pointer over the name m,. of each candidate you , 9 pointers for each office. You cannot spoil your i i CMHNMTE ‘ zt'~ x ffl ballot by voting for too many candidates. wish to vote for. LEAVE THE POINTERS DOWN. V I vj , In an office to which mbre than one coridWofe is to I 1 3. To vote in favor of the question, turn down a voting pointer over the word YES. To vote I v i° ,ed you ‘I 0 ? turn f* o **? the P r °P er i | II in opposition to the question, turn down a voting pointer over the word NO. LEAVE I lif num r ° voins poiners ' or e “ ut no more I | Ilf THE POINTER DOWN. 41, !r- 11. .. . JLJLJLJMy ff 5f —rj No votes are registered until the Red operating lever gp —i I 4. Move the Red Operating Lever to the left. w *k I is moved to open the curtain. You’con moke as • if I I w many changes as you desire while the operating VOTER ABOUT TO lever ,he ri 9 ht side - CURTAIN CLOSED CLOSE CURTAIN VOTER VOTING No one will know how you have voted, because the movement of the Red operating lever returns the voted voting pointers to their unvoted po sition before the curtain begins to open. 3 4 5 6 7 8 Por I- - For Mayor For For Councilman I OFFICES Councilman-at-Large Councilman Fourth Ward (You May Third Ward 1Y „. 1M ... Vote For (You May Vote For One) (You May Vote For One) Vote For One I FIRST WARD Roy L. Gil j. l. Harrell Burroughs Fenner. Sr. SECOND WARD 3B 4B 5B Roy L. Gil J. L. Harrell Burroughs Fenner, Sr. THIRD WARD 3C 4C 5C 9C 7C " i, Roy L Gil j. L. Erwin C. James P Harrell Burroughs Fenner. Sr. Griffin, Sr. Ricks, Jr. FOURTH WARD 30 4D SD KoyL. Gil J . L. Willis M H,rrcH k Burrtm * k> j Femmer, Sr. PHvoU This was the first time the former minister had returned to preach at Elizabeth since he left after his long service there. He has served several other churches in Sampson County, including churches in Roseboro and in Salemburg. He is now serving as pastor of the Long Branch Baptist Church. Sunday’s recognition ceremony noted that Mr. Ashley was ordained to the ministry 55 years ago in October, 1926, in the Rocky Hock Baptist Church in Chowan County. Xbw/MfiM A/tati GompLttion Revaluation program for Chowan County is very near completion. All property has been visited and appraised by Carroll Phelps Co. All property owner’s have been notified of the new values. If you have any questions about the value call Carroll Phelps Co. Phone number is 482-4842. Please call by November 4th as the company will be leaving this area. Office is located in old courthouse second floor. Marty Hines is the super visor. ‘(ln d ■(ibout Women October 29, 1981 THE CHOWAN HERALD wmm Work Force Continues To Grow The number of women in this country who work out side the home continues to rise and there is every in dication the trend is not likely to change. Women are working for personal fulfill ment, for self-satisfaction and to help support their families. These facts are among many in the findings of a survey entitled Families at- Work: Strengths and Strains and presented by General Mills as its American Family Report 1980-81. The re search was done by Louis Harris and Associates, Inc., New York. The study also pinpoints one indisputable fact: ■ women will continue to work outside the home, re- • gardless of marriage and . child-rearing responsibilities, i Their right to do so is i supported by their em- 1 ployers, their spouses, their 1 children, and indeed, the 1 public in general. I The other side of the picture reveals that working i mothers bear particular . burdens and pressures, < which have an impact in i two important ways: the I ability of women to build I and sustain careers and to i discharge their parental re- I sponsibilities to their satis- I faction. The study delineates the ( conflicts facing women as 1 wives, mothers and wage- 1 Ilirani Tamil y Reunion Ds -field The family of the late Mr. and Mrs. Zack T. Evans held their annual reunion on Sunday, October 25, 1981 at the Rocky Hocky Com (Tkutek "To 4/old 4/allowtn (2atnival A Halloween Carnival will be held on October 31 from 10 A. M. until 6 P. M. at Riverside Baptist Church, located on Hwy. 45 between Colerain and Midway. - There-wtH'bebnked goods-, handmade items, yard sale items, a farmer’s market and much more. Hot dogs will be served for lunch. We will have pony rides, a haunted house, and fun and games for all ages. At 2 P.M. there will be a cos tume contest. Proceeds from the car nival will go toward sup porting team projects at Riverside Baptist Church. Page 3-A OF WOMEN earners—especially the fact that the constant demands of job, home and family leave them little personal time. This concern was re flected throughout the study. Woman on the job . . . a picture that's not likely to change. A high percentage oi women feel special pressures in balancing demands of work and family. Women citing this problem including many in manage rial and executive posi tions—said that if economic factors were not involved, they would prefer part-time to full-time work. The report is the fourth in a series of General Mills American Family Reports examining attitudes on issues affecting family life. Opinions of both adults and teenagers were assessed as well as those of business and labor leaders, family tradi tionalists and feminists. To obtain a free copy of the report, write: General Mills, Box 6, Dept. 760, Minneapolis, MN 55460. munity Center with 121 family members and guests in attendance. Those present included the twelve Evans children, their spouses and families: Mrs. Lillie E. Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Carey M. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Harrell, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L. Harrell, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Z. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Milton J. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Evans, "Mr. Slid Mrs. Roland G. Evans and Mr. and Mrs. *> AMn J?*Evans of Edenton, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Leon W. Byrum of Tyner,; Mr. and Mrs. Hubert H. Lowe and Mr. and Mrs. Nurney J. Williams of Suffolk, Va. Good fellowship and a delicious meal was enjoyed by everyone. Fasten a few spare strands of yarn onto the back of a finished needlepoint project. It may come in handy for future repairs. Community (Policy* Hxhitrit Wins 4jonou -fit State Talt RALEIGH - The 58 campus community college system walked off with top honors October 21, at the 1981 N. C. State Fair. The community college exhibit, which offered fairgoers hands-on displays of job training opportunities and a chance to talk one-on one with faculty and staff in the system, won the Governor’s Award for Best Educational Exhibit at the State Fair. The award was accepted on behalf of the system by Dr. Larry J. Blake, state president of the Department of Community Colleges, in award ceremonies held Oct. 21 at the exhibit. In making the presentation Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham called the exhibit tremendous and said it exemplified what is good A tmon "Topic A &ioien “Christianomics” is the topic of the sermon selected by Rev. R. R. Blankenhorn for the morning worship service at eleven o’clock at the Edenton United Methodist Church on Sun day, November 1. The text for this message is Matthew 20:16. The Council on Ministries will meet at 7 P.M., Sunday, November 1, in the church library. The United Methodist Men’s Club will meet for supper and a program on Wednesday, November 4, 6:30 P.M. at the church. >»»»»»»»»»»** y-i’i * , > > AEROBIC DANCE CLASSES BEGIN IN EDENTON The Chowan Academy of Dance, . directed by Marsha T. Gordon, is now ' ' offering an Aerobic-Jazz dance class < - twice weekly for ladies 18 to 35 years of 1 ; age on Mondays from 7:30 until 8:15 P.M. - and Thursdays from 8:30 until 9:15 P.M. 1 The six-week session will begin on ' Thursday, November sth and will be a ! I total fee of $20.00. For registration and ' ; further information contact Marsha 1 ! Gordon at 482-8239. about the State Fair. “We are very pleased to make this award to the community college system,” Graham said. “Lots of work went into the displays and I’ve seen alot of people go through the exhibit.” The free exhibit was located in the large geodetic dome next to Dorton Arena. The dome was donated by the State Fair organizers to the community college system in recognition of “1981, Year of the Com munity College System in Tall 7titlral At Tot 3/n Center Hill Extension Homemakers Club an nounces the date for their annual fall festival will be Saturday, October 31, beginning at 10 A. M. Country dinners of ham and collards or chicken pot pie will be served from 11 to 12:30 P. M. There will be bazaar type items for sale, a country store, and a bake table for eating there or take home. Fried chicken plates will be served at 5:30, tickets for this dinner may be obtained by calling Mrs. Helen Hollowell 221-4940 or Mrs. Kate Boyce 221-4374. A halloween parade will be featured by children of the community and en tertainment after the evening meal. Center Hill club members invites you to come and enjoy this fall festival. North Carolina. The design of the dome interior was the work of Anita Prysby, a student at Randolph Technical College in Asheboro. Prysby won a system-wide contest for designing the exhibit space. The winning theme,” Your Part of Something Great,” was submitted by Lenoir Community College in Kinston. Displays in the exhibit depicted a number of programs in the system. The new and expanding industry display features a tractor-trailor cab made entirely in North Carolina. The super, deluxe edition cab sleeps two and carries its own television set. Other displays highlight the system’s nationally recognized energy technology program and its programs in adult literacy, the construction trades, health occupations and job opportunities in the up-and - coming field of electronics. Views On Dental Health ml ll® Richard N. Hines, Jr. D.D.S., Fellow of mJ The Academy Os General Dentistry help! help! Emergency Measures Restorations (fillings, out until you see your caps, bridges, etc.) have dentist - do so. If you away of breaking or must have it in place for getting lost at the most appearance’s sake, inconvenient time - like vaseline or denture when you want to look cream will hold it in place your best. The only temporarily, permanent kind of repair Don’t try to repair a is that made by your broken denture or bridge dentist, but here are yourself. If could damage a few emergency both the appliance and ’ the tissue against which it If a filling falls out (and rests. A broken denture is it happens in the best of a rea j emergency and can families) it has to be be repaired quickly by replaced by the dentist, the dentist. A single You can ease some of the fractured tooth in a discomfort by rinsing denture can also be with luke warm water replaced quickly by the and them placing a piece dentist lv 0 i tO nlX led l o4 ' ° f A public service with the aim cloves into the cavity. promoting better dental If a crown, jacket or health environment. From cap pops out, don’t put it the olll||l: RICHARD back with commercial iiiNRS.fIH, n.D.S.. 437 glue. If you can leave it South St.. Edenton. Phone: 40K7C. "We Cater To Cowards" "Your Chamber of Commerce Work* For You" More than 135,000 persons toured the exhibit during the nine days of the fair. pTG To 4/oit (Tatnival The D. F. Walker PTA will hold its annual Halloween Carnival on Halloween night from 6 - 9 P. M. in the D. F. Walker School Gym. This is the PTA’s biggest fund-raising project for the year. There will be prizes for best costume, fun and games for all the kids, a fortune-telling booth, or sit down and have a cup of witch’s brew and Matilda the Witch. Children of all ages and their parents are invited to come by and enjoy a safe Halloween during the D. F. Walker Carnival. The longest running variety show on television was Ed Sullivan's, from 1948-1971.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1981, edition 1
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