". J r ~ '.'■M % t W ■L * Doris Helen Dickson *" fc 1* 1 tt* {4 ffm ~""* B : m Harriett Anna Winslow 111? Stringed instruments played with a bow are thought to have originated in Asia about the Bth or 9th century. I \ HERITAGE / I 1 REALTY f commercial - residential I farms I NEW LISTINGS $.! INCOME PRODUCING INVESTMENT Excellent U SP 1 *?! brick duplex with 3 BR apartments. I Good location. Great jirice. $26,000. | Urge MOBILE HOME LOT Just outside city I limits, owner financing at 12 percent APR. WATERFRONT Elegant home in a spectacular I setting on the Albemarle Sound, featuring: foyer, great I room, 3or 4 bedrooms, Florida room, 2 full baths and 2 I half baths. Plus 3 bdrm. guest house. 1.1 acres with I sandy beach. 12 per cent owner financing. I COMMERCIAL BUILDING —On 2.6 acres with 365’ ■of highway frontage -12 per cent owner finan- I c 'ng $65,000 1 APARTMENT HOUSE-For Sale $38,000 I COMMERCIAL BUILDING Highway frontage on I 2.8 acres $39,500. $ DUPLEX APTS. SOLD * 2 per cent owner ■ financing $29,000 I * J® sl ? Rlc DISTRICT - Charming 4 BR home with 2 ■ full baths, eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, LR, den, ■ and utility room. Beautiful yard. Price reduced to ■ $52,000. I FOR RENT—3 BR house at the edge of town. ■ HANDI-MAN SPECIAL 2 room house on large tot. I Arrowhead Beach $12,860 I CAPE COLONY Charming 2 bedroom home, lVfe I baths, eat-in kitchen, LR, Florida rm, carport, large ■ utility rm. Beautiful, wooded setting. Many extra I features $39,000 I ARROWHEAD BEACH —On the canal, nice 2 bdrm. I home with option to buy additional lot. 9 per cent I assumption $35,500. § CAPE COLONY Unique, custom built home on I dbl. lot, 3 bdrm, 2Vfe bath, rec. rm., LR, cathedral I ceiling - balconies - decks, fireplace, 2 bay carport, I workshop, beach and much more SOO,OOO { MOBILE. HOME 1974 Double-wide. 3 bdrm. 2 I baths, Excellent condition Reduced to SII,BOO | WATERFRONT —f\ ton Chowan River with • I septic tank, count yJVV ?lectricitv. 12 per cent I CHOWAN BEACH —lO x 50,2 BR mobile home. Nice I shaded lot, beach access. (Owner financing 12 per I cent) «... Make an offer I WATERFRONT HOME - Arrowhead Beach - 3 I bedroom home, 2 baths, LR with fireplace, kit., DR, I utility rm, 1 car garage on beautiful extra large lot. I Bulkheading and pier with spectacular view of the I Chowan River (Owner financing at 12 per cent) . Make I an offer. I IN TOWN Stratfordlmmaculate home on a I beautiful lot. 3 BR, I hardwood floors. In' 7 Client condition. 7% assump- I tion $37,566 I VALHALLA Owner Must Sell Now! Eight year I old spacious country home with over 1750 sq. ft. in ■ eluding 3 bdrms., LR, DR, kit., IV4 baths, utility room I and studio. Situated on two acres north of ■ Edenton Price Reduced $34,666. I NEAR COUNTRY CLUB On AtfMM Lane. Log ■cabin, rustic and beautiful, built for many years of I maintenance free living. 2 bedrooms, great r<ymn with I fireplace situated on 5 acre wooded lot. I M 2 ACRES with large lake, timber and cleared lan£ I Excellent for development. Negotiable. 12 per cent I owner financing. I Waterfront Lots - Snug Harbor and Arrowhead. [ Other Lots and Acreage For Sale. , * £nyayamant 43m onnead Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Dickson announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Doris Helen Dickson to James Murray Tynch, Jr. Mr. Tynch is the son of Mr. James Tynch, Sr. and Mrs. Shirley Ashley of Eden ton. Hie wedding will take place June 19 in Virginia Beach. Winslow "to Matty Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee Winslow of Belvidere an nounce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Harriet Anna to Jarvis D. Winslow, Jr., son of Mrs. Judy H. Winslow and the late Jarvis D. Winslow, Sr. Harriet is attending College of The Albemarle and is employed by J. A. Cooper Insurance Agency. Dickie is a self - employed farmer. The wedding will take place on June 6 at 3 P.M. at Warwick Baptist Church. No invitations will be sent. Friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend. Have a favorite pattern that is so worn it’s beginning to fall apart? Press it onto fusible interfacing. There are several products on the mar ket just for this purpose. WBm * ■u- - Amby Faye Harrell £nyayamant 4 Tnnonnead Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stanton Harrell announce the engagement and forth coming marriage of their daughter Amby Faye Harrell to Frankie Lynn Parrish sort of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Moore Parrish. The wedding is planned for July 11. Miss f/oyut, Mt. £sfuite On April 10, contestants in the Miss Vogue - Mr. Esquire Pageant and their parents were given a special luncheon by the members of Nu Eta Omega Chapter, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. The Luncheon - one of several activities planned for the contestants, was designed to show ap preciation to the parents for allowing and working with their child and the Sorority in this year’s Pageant. The Luncheon started with a brief welcome by Mrs. Vendetta Sutton. An introduction of contestants was presented by Mrs. Mary Copeland. Mrs. Mary Lewis introduced the parents. Blessings were given by 1 Mrs. Hannah Owens. Some of the students from John A. Holmes High School provided entertainment. Members of the Sorority were then introduced. Special reminders to the contestants were given by Mrs. Jolyquin Belfield and closing remarks given by Mrs. Bettie Bembry. Contestants in the Miss* . Vogue - Mr, JEsfluire Pageant wflK make -their* formal debut to society on May Bth, at 8 P.M., in the gym of D. F. Walker School. Matkodist Woman The Perquimans - Chowan Subdistrict of United Methodist Women will meet Wednesday at 10 A.M. at Oak Grove United Methodist Church. The Subdistrict Leader, Miss Helen Evans, urges all United Methodist Women and their pastors to attend. The devotional will be given by Mrs. Charles B. Smith of Edenton. Special music will be provided by Mrs. Austin Weeks, soloist, accompanied by Mrs. John Bettis. Mrs. Elizabeth Craft will lead the officers of the Elizabeth City District of United Methodist Women in presenting a program on the theme “Love Is Caring”. Mrs. Margaret Saunders, president of the Elizabeth City District United Methodist Women, has asked that each person attending bring a can of meat, such as tuna fish, corned beef, Spam, etc. This 1 will be taken to the Robeson County Church and Com munity Center to be added to their food bank to assist the needy. The center is one of the projects of the North Carolina Conference of United Methodist Women. Lunch will be served by the host church. AHyktinyata Service NORFOLK, VA After 42 days of operations, Medical Center Hospitals officials are extremely pleased with the utilization of Nightingale, the area’s new air ambulance service. Since the February 25 start - up date, the medically equipped helicopter has completed 35 missions. “We are very happy with the initial indication of Nightingale’s success. We believe this can be directly attributed to sophistication of the region’s E.M.3. and medical communities,” said Ed Holmes, the project’s administrative coordinator. Pre - operational data Coni.nued On Poge 6-A -- m - 4 -V ..£v- ZJI L \ .. %t 4ktd ■4HfOut Women Aifril 15, 1982 Shadall descendants Visit £danton The Fish Market, Etc. was the scene of a luncheon held April 10 in honor of Mr. and Mrs. David Iredell, descendants of Arthur Iredell, brother of James Iredell, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Iredell came from London, England to be the Easter guests of Mrs. Cornelia J. Privott of Blount Street. The members of the James Iredell Association, the Edenton Tea Party Chapter DAR and the Historical Commission were in at tendance. John Morehead, Vice- President of the James Iredell Association, presided at the tables, in droducing Mrs. George Hoskins who gave the in vocation. The luncheon, enjoyed by all, was followed with a welcoming speech by Mrs. Cornelia J. Privott, who showed the group her gift from the Iredells, an ostrich egg decorated in the Faberges fashion with a beautiful picture of a Bullfinch on it. Mrs. Privott read letters from Lady Diana, wife of Prince Charles, the Queen Mother, and the Queen, who had also received eggs decorated as was this one, thanking the artist for their eggs. Mr. Iredell spoke of his Continued On Pago 8- A lITCwilSr family centers II EDENTON VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER I O DOOR BUSTERS <3 H • ~ ; -r>d ■ ‘ 'l,: •>. . juv a iIOa itiii j-.is -ioP qri I i, .• m I Wooden II os. Finesse a , , I Clothespins Conditioner M rne © I . S M . mm 1 57 1 *|67 g I ■ Reg. 1.97 J I I son.. Reg.i.67 Carpet Fresh •*.*** 88 1 II TG&Y Glass s 16 ©*. Clorox I I Cleaner B 57 Pre-Wash I || IC'\ n oe " R **' , " 6# 17 | II E//erdent Denture L=s==J ■ I Reg. us 83o*. Cleanser Reg>l6B I II Palnt.llee Di.kirasbi*g 97 II LlflUld 96 tablet Reg. 3.97 B.H*ee I h W7 18 Fabric So/tener |» I sgß7 I Beg IA, SS47 I II * 9 SO (keel be* Reg. 3.17 | Sprag-N-Wash R«g.i.s7 c *"* 4 * Di.k I r—> »- Deterge* 1 1 $ | S9 I Reg. 1.5 b|g 818 I •/f' ‘‘ J Li'rk, j i • ■ > wUK . i’.'v . ‘ • t\ , Page 2-A Carol Williams Wedding Plans Announced Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Williams of Edenton an nounce the engagement of their daughter Carol Williams to Paul Copeland, the son of Mr. A.M. Copeland of Hertford and the late Mrs. Lillian Copeland. The bride - elect is a graduate of Immanuel Christian School of Edenton and is presently employed at the Winn Dixie of Edenton. The prospective bridegroom is a graduate of Perquimans County High School and is presently employed at Jacksons Wholesale of Hertford. The wedding is planned for May 1 at Burgess Baptist Church on Harvey’s Point Road Hertford at 2 P.M. Friends and relatives are invited to attend. Hendon A/otefsook Prayer List: Please add our friends to your prayer list. Bruce Doughty is confined to Maryview Hospital, Portsmouth, Va.; Joan O’Neal is hospitalized at Walter Reid Army Medical Center Washington, D.C. 20012; Jessie Baines is still in Chowan Hospital and needs your fervent prayers; Mrs. Sue Britt remains at Albemarle Hospital and needs prayer; please remember J. D. Swindell; Willie Darden; Janie Midgett; pray for our Nation, its leaders and its people; our missionnaries; and our Pastor, Rev. Robert S. Harrell and his family. Our Worship Service topped off the morning. The Shepherd of Bandon’s flock, Rev. Robert S. Harrell, graciously welcomed the capacity crowd assembled Continued On Page 6-A Pceslstftetian “Topic “On a walk through the country” some friends met a third hiker who joined with them. A conversation took place. Join with us at First Presbyterian Church this Sunday at 11 A.M. to listen in on their chat. Homecoming dates for First Presbyterian Church are May' 15 and 16. This will be the 73rd Anniversary of the organization of the church. Supper on Saturday night at the Sound view Restaurant for members, former members and Continued On Page 6-A i I s I I jlj| : * I t H 1 1 "vy**;-. t l Kathy Gall Wright —.... ■ ■ 1 . i. = OR A. F. DOWNUM, JR. ’ OPTOMETRIST Two For One Contacts If you’ve readied the point your brain will see a sharp where you need bifocal and clear image, corrective lenses to see well And even though one eye at a distance as well as dose will only transmit a blurred up, you don’t have to opt for image, you won’t be aware of bifocal lenSes. it. You will, if you put one If you’ve been wearing hand over the eye that has the contact lenses and don’t want lens for that kind of vision to lose the comfortable (farsighted or nearsighted, feeling or natural look of your depending on where you’re face, you can have separate looking). Then the only image contact lenses made for each you get will be a blurred one. eye. One will correct for Otherwise you’ll see dearly distance vision, the other for at all times and never be near vision. aware of the difference. This may seem an unusual m the Interest of better vision solution to bifocal needs, but it works. When you’re looking from the office of: at something, both eyes will see what you’re looking at. A F. Downum, Jr., O.D. But the eye that sees the K>3 w. Edsn street object sharp and clear will criPM-msi dominate. This means that 482-3218 WaddUy Plans Htnomncad Mr. and Mrs. Warren Calvin Wright of Edenton have announced the engagement of their daughter, Kathy Gail Wright, to Edward Allen Malloy, son of Mrs. June P. Malloy and the late Gerald Malloy of Bethel. A May 28 wedding is planned. Americans spend 11.3 mil lion on mail-order books and •478 million on mail-order records and tapes each year.

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