Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / June 17, 1982, edition 1 / Page 9
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Thursday, June 17. 1982 Recreation News Special Summer Programs <lhe Edenton Recreation Dept, is sponsoring many summer programs which i include a Summer Basketball League, ages 13- 19, Youth Tennis Lessons, ages $-13, Soccer League ages 8-13, a Water Ski Clinic for grades 4-12 and a series : of Sailing Lessons for all ! ages. The gym will be open I' for adults as well as children j Hand under beginning June , ; 21. For more information j : contact the Rec. Dept, for : registration dates and times ; at 482-8595. Aerobic Dance and Exercise A new sengon of Aerobic Dance and Exercise began Monday, June M. There are still openings ror'those in terested. Classes are held Monday and Wednesday evenings at 6:00 P.M. ln the Rec. Center Gymnasium. Registration fee is $20.00 for . the entire session. Saturday ■ morning drop-in classes are also offered to anyone not : registered in the weekly classes. $1.50 is charged for ; each Saturday morning class, which begins at 10:00- ; 11:00 A.M. Janice Dillon is • the instructor. Adult Softball Rainout Schedule Men’s League " June 21 Bears - Natural 9:00 June 29 Perry Holland - Bears 9:00 July 13 Millers • Picwic 9:00 Women’sTeague June 29 Ryland - Nixon’s 9:00 \ July 6 Ryland - Chowan Beavers 7:00 July 6 Superstarletts - Nixon’s 8:00 Little League Baseball Raiaout Schedule June 28—8:00 Texaco - Rotary WfammtMf %vt4 foe. je^HS/B^- xx MV«ru M. « THOMAS K. PWTOMM /fl^Rr^lSL^ CIS E, MM STKIT - ' pojor^amiicwctTT,iXJTiw SEPT. 22-21; OCT. M: OCT. 11-17 ’ ** NEW TOOK CITY l MOMMY SNOWS - JULY 7-10 DiSNEYWORLD, SEA WORLD, CYPRESS GARDENS t MORE - JULY 19-25 PENN. DUTCH C READING, PA. - AUG. S-7 A OCT. C-10 f i .’••./ t. Only first class transportation (Trailways Bus) and accommodations (In Knoxville. |ust 7 mllas from fair slta) will bo usodl COMPLETELY LICENSED. ROMEO A INSURED FOR YOUR PROTECTION , MINI STORAGE YOU Lock It Up & Keep The Key Store Anything, Any Size, Anytime, As Long As You Need > \ j Open 24 hrs. a day - 365 days per year (4xß) (4x16) (8x16) or (16x16) To Chooso Motor Homo Or Boat Parking \ STORE ANYTHING 1 At Mini-Storage, you can store almost anything. A TT It’s a great place for household goods between |\/l 11 \| I moves. (It’s cheaper to stare with us for a 1T AJ " L " A month than rent a moving truck overnight) Keep building materials safe and dry during ✓Nr% * a—i I | construction or remodeling SJ I f A f L, I It’s a safe harbor for your boat or motor home ij I V/1 \ /~~\ Vll i I during the cold winter months It’s a dry storage place for extra furtilture or the ■ ! babythingsyoucan’t bear togetridof M It’s a great place for large, expensive tools, j lawn mowers, garden tractors, etc., when you don’t need them at h0me..... '' v Vk It’s a place for excess inventory from your huninfst, i place to keep-seasonal star- 1 chandise until it’s hock in season..... K, * STORE ANY SIZE , At Mint-Storage, you can rent as or as - Jy ! little space as you need. We havestorage opacas available in all sixes, so we eon hand* almost U any otorags problem. . *> X' S And you never have to pay for more space than \\ you really need. ; : , • 1 / Saaks 4 Plnaocs Coopenies-Thit Is the Answer! dr H0I1; Qm or flommobl# motorlois oicludod If I Also AvsUsWs Vans, Pickup*. • Bovins Tracks on Advene* Notice! Wholesale \ MINI STORAGE \ N. Broad Street Extd. Edonton, NC | 482-8421 • * June 29-8:00 TG&Y - Fisher Nut Mite League Standings Heels r l-O Cards 2-0 Jays o-2 Robins 1-2 Midget League Standings Uons l-i Utters „ 1-2 Bears 0-3 V** i \i mi vs. ** Glidin 2-2 Little League Standings JC’s 8-1 Nat. Guard 4-4 Rotary 5-3 TG4Y 7-2 Fisher 2-7 Am. Legion 4-5 Texaco 2-6 Hardees 2-6 Jr. Babe Ruth Standings Hoke 2-0 Fisher l-i Optimist 0-2 Brik Tylers l-l Warners Softball Standings Ryland 5-3 Nixons 6-1 Superstprletts 7-2 Beaver’s 2-6 BiueJays\ ,■ 1-8 Charlie Angels 4-5 Men’s SsftbsU Standings Ryland \ 8-3 PicWic \ 10-1 Te»c# :> i'i \ 9-3 Millers V : * 6-5 A’s * 10-2 Exxon 7-4 Natural 3-8 P.D. B^3 Bears \4-6 Tyner mo Cotton Mill 2-9 Perry Holland 3-8 At. Forest 1-10 The largest living thing in tha world it tha General Shaman tsquoia traa in Sequoia National Park, California. It standi ovar 272 faat tall. Whispers Os Tine By Murrell Smith Time is Mercury with wings on his feet. The recurrent messenger of the Gods. Time is the sand in an hourglass. Time is the center of everything. Time has no memory. Time has no friend. We are all in one long caravan at road’s end. Yet time is the root of all this earth. Time guides us still and we must all follow. How goes the time. The night is not yet done - midnight has still to come. Dawn on the green - the touch of the moon’s glimmer shines faintly. I hear far off the throbbing of the boat oars. The morning glories climb above my head. The flowers are white, pale purple and red. Whispers of Time travels through our town • our hallowed town. All the children singing cheerfully and applauding around a blazing camp fire. The winds are fragrant and move across the rocking sound. Time is where the street of old towns is crowded with ghosts of yesterday - where weather - beaten barns crack under the fierceness of a summer’s storm. Time is where garden gates swing on their hinges - and in old and new houses, doors Mow open to let in old man Time. Time is the echo of a little girl singing to a rag doll with a sawdust heart. At her side an old clock marking Time. Time is a lovely old house where floors creak eerily and on moonlit nights the quaint old curtains dance to a slow waltz by Strauss as the winds blow ever so softly • and a straw hat falls to the floor. Time is where boys are playing marbles. Time is where two girls are laughing and running merrily and their faces are full of cheer. Under the front porch an old dog takes a nap. Hie peaceful people that you see everyday -of their delight in days that Ming silver rain and falling snow. The velvet blooms that nod and sway - warmed by the sunbeam’s golden glow - all of that is The Whispers of Time. t THE CHOWAN HERALD Up* V I Sffg II I icortaid @Ref£ Tuier downtown kJedenton SHOP EARLY AND SAVE! 1117 ■ On Friday, June 18th, Ms. Hill Stancil, Q for 2.00 one of North Carolina’s most profess- LOttßfS lonal monograsmers, will personally monogram your garment purchases with three letters. She will monogram men’s O Msdillffl AA shirts, oil weather coats, jackets, swea-A tars, pajamas, ladles’ tops, glrlswear, LowOiS and boyswear. Her work is unsurpassed and we know you'll be pleased too! And s% le>m AA it's an opportunity to save also! Come 4 , * sot AOO early and avoid the rush and save up to *1 LettWS ~W 50X on three letters of monogrammlng! Shop Monday Through Thursday 9:30 KM. Until 8:30 P.M„ Friday 9:30 AM. Until 9 PJYL, Saturday 9:30 AJd Until 6 PAL Phono 482-3221 Or 482-4533. Exam Date Set The Special Enrollment Examination administered by the Internal Revenue Service each year to qualify persons other than at torneys and certified public accountants to practice before the IRS has been set for Thursday and Friday, October 14 and 15, 1982. The special test will be given in Charlotte, Greensboro, and Raleigh. Those interested in taking the examination should request a free materials packet from the IRS by calling 1-800-822-8800 any weekday between the hours 8 of 8:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. The packet includes Form 2587, “Application for 1982 Special Enrollment Examination,” and Publication 486, d “Requirements for Internal Revenue Service 1 Enrollment and Special Enrollment Examination.’’ The latter publication • outlines the general requirements for 5 enrollment and identified r sources of tax information which are helpful in preparing for the test. The 1 examination will include • true - false, multiple choice, and problem - type 1 questions. Hie application fee is SSO for those taking all four parts of the examination 1 and S4O for prior year ' examinees taking fewer 1 than four parts. All checks must be made payable to the “Internal Revenue Service” and postmarked no later 1 than August 16, 1982. No extensions of time to file applications will be granted. VOTE • Jr Yvonne A * Smith ®° arc * W Education Li June 29 Wk?. ’ I I mi mm ■ •f- i f‘V .. Your Vote and Support Will be Appreciated BBSwo—— mmmmmm—JSSSSSSSSm ' i ■ ' ■MI IHi It/, enjEL * ■ gRBr flB BUI Wagner ' I Chairman Honored ! 1 Dr. Melvin L. Murphy, Chairman of the Social Sciences Department at Elizabeth City State University, has been awarded a $2,500 stipend to attend a National En dowement for the Humanities (NEH) Seminar at Johns Hopkins Univer sity. The eight-week seminar, June 14 - August 6, focuses attention on the “Sociology of Early Modern Anglo - American Colonization, 1607 - 1763.” To be conducted by Dr. Jack P. Greene of the Johns Hopkins University Department of History, the “seminar will examine the Anglo-American colonial societies established during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in five main cultural regions” along the Atlantic coast. According to Dr. Greene, “The primary purpose of the seminar is to familiarize college teachers of Continued On Page 12-A Gospel Music Concert Is Slated BiU Wagner has been in gospel music most of his life. He has travelled ex tensively throughout the United States and Canada. Most of his work has been as a singer with groups or quartets. He last sang with the well-known Wetherford Quartet. Through full-time evangelism BUI is sharing Christ in concerts everywhere. He also sings in evangelistic campaigns for outstanding preachers, including Dr. C. M. Ward former Revivaltime speaker on International radio. Dr. Ward says the MUFFLER Installed SQO9S most American cards & trucks Albemarle Tire & Aa to Parts N. Broad St. 482-4454 Edenton, NC 482-3384 m \\ HERITAGE // I H REALTY ill 1106 E King Street ‘. NEW LISTINGS 1 10 PERCENT ASSUMABLE LOAN Payment* of ■ 304. per month buys this like new 3 bedroom home in I the country with % acre lot. Call for further details. I Low downpayment. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY Apartment ■ house with eight apartments. Excellent income in ■ prime location. 9Vi percent assumption. HALF ACRE LOT Just $60.00 per month buys your I own half acre lot with septic tank, water and alec- I tricity, perfect for mobile home. Low downpayment. I PRICE REDUCED —, Log Cabin, beautiful inside ■ and out,, Large fireplace, 2 Bedrooms and, Loft, I Maintenance free, energy efficient $38,000. ■ ACREAGE Three, Lovely acres in a choice I Location, privacy. 12per cent owner financing. SIO,OOO. I SNUG HARBOR Partially furnished mobile home I on a well landscaped lot. Large workshop, room ad- I dition, and deck. lOper cent owner financing. $14,000 I HICKORY LANE Spacious 1 story home with 3 I or 4BR option, family room with fireplace, livingroom, I dining area, kitchen with built - in appliances, ■ recreation room, 4 Baths, utility room, 2 car garage, ■ heat pumps. 9‘/fe per cent assumable loan. I WATERFRONT Two story home with 3 BR, IV4 V baths, livingroom, dining room, kitchen, large family S room with fireplace, Florida room, workshop, out- ■ buildings, bulkheaded with pier, paved driveway $89,000 | INCOME PRODUCING — Excellent I rental property, brick CQLU 3 BR apartments. I Good location. Great p 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 dent owner financing. I COMMERCIAL BUILDING —On 2.6 acres with 365’ I of highway frontage -12 per cent owner finan- I cing $65,000 I APARTMENT HOUSE Needs work. Price! reduced to $36,0001 COMMERCIAL BUILDING Highway frontage on! 2.8 acres make an offer I HISTORIC DISTRICT Charming 4BR home with 2 | full baths, eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, LR, den, | and utility room. Beautiful yard. Price reduced to I $52,000. CAPE COLONY Charming 2 bedroom home, IV4 ■ baths, eat-in kitchen, LR, Florida rm, carport, large I utility rm. Beautiful, wooded setting. Many extra I features $39,000 I CAPE COLONY Unique. ’ u *lt home on I dbl. lot, 3 bdrm, 2^: J-q kQ\ Wrtß, cathedral I ceiling - bakpQyN »” frireplace, 2 bay carport, I workshop, beaViand much more WATERFRONT HOME Arrowhead Beach -3 | bedroom home, 2 baths, LR with fireplace, kit., DR, | utility rm, 1 car garage on beautiful extra large lot. ■ Bulkheading and pier with spectacular view of the I Chowan River (Owner financing at 12 per cent).! Reduced to $48,000. VALHALLA Owner Must Sell Now! Eight year ■ old spacious country home with over 1750 sq. ft. in-1 eluding 3 bdrms., LR, DR, kit., 1H baths, utility room I and studio. Situated on two acres north of ■ Edenton ...... Price Reduced $34,000. ■ 162 ACRES with large lake, timber and cleared land. I Excellent for development. Negotiable. 12 per cent I owner financing. I Waterfront Lots - Snug Harbor and Arrowhead. ■ Other Lots and Acreage For Sale.'. I Page 9-A “Bill is a Christian Gen tleman who brings to the ministry character and dependability. His clear, rhythmic, masculine voice has ministered from a thousand platforms - and always pointing the way to JESUS.” Wagner is returning to Edenton for an evening of gospel music at the First Assembly of God church cm June 18th. The concert begins at 7:30 P.M. and the public is invited. First Assembly is located on US Hwy 17 Business South (Queen St. extended.)
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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June 17, 1982, edition 1
9
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