Page 2-B
Campbell Responds To Attacks On Proposals To Increase The State Sales Tax
RALElGH—Responding to
ivicMy-scattered attacks on
CHURCH DIRECTORY
Ollfiv African
Methodist
Episcopal Zion
Pleasant Grove A.M.E. Zion
, ‘ i ' Church
R'Quteret St.
Pht»e: 482-2206
Kodesh A.M.E. Zion Church
119 E. Gale St.
Phone: 482-8342
Pastor: W. L. Wainwright
Grove A.M.E. Zion
Church
Route 1
Tyner, N.C.
Rev. G. S. Robinson, Pastor
Sunday School - 10:45 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:30 A.M.
Second and fourth Sundays
Hawkins Chapel A.M.E. Zion
Virginia Fork
Eden ton, N.C.
Sunday School - 12:00
Worship Service - 1:30 P.M.
First and Third Sundays
Pastor: W.L. Wainwright
Canaan Temple A.M.E. Zion
Church
Route 2
Edenton, N.C.
Pastor: Rev. T. McPherson
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Sunday School - 9:45 A.M.
First Assemblies
Os God
First Assembly Os God
Church
U. S. Highway 17 South
Phone: 482-4789
Pastor: Rev. Norm Gloeckler
Sunday School - 9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:00 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M.
Baptist
Gale Street Baptist Church
West Gale Street
Pastor: Rev. T.M. Jones; Jr.
Church School - 10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship - 11:00 A.M.
Ballards Bridge Baptist
Church
Route 1, Tyner, N.C.
Phone: 221-4860
Phstor: Rev. George Cooke
Morning Service - 11:00 A.M.
Center Hill Chapel Baptist
Church
Tyner, N.C. Phone: 221-8515
Pastor: Rev. W. A. Moore
Morning Worship - 11:30
Center Hill Baptist Church
Tyner, N.t?:- Phom?;- 221-4060
Pastor: ftev. Robert Kelley
Edenton Baptist Church
South Granville Street
Phone: 482-3217
Pastor: John A. Allen
Sunday School - 9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:30 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M.
Greater Welch’s Chapel
Baptist Church
Tyner, N.C. Phone: 221-4058
Macedonia Baptist Church
Route 3 Phone: 482-3059
Pastor: Rev. Charles Harris
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:00 P.M.
Wed. Prayer Service-7:30 PM
Providence Baptist Church
214 W. Church Street
Pastor: Rev. J.L. Fenner, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 A M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Mid Week Service -7 P.M.
Bible Class - 8:00 P.M.
Phone - 482-4102
Rocky Hock Baptist Church
Route 1 Phone: 221-4015
Pastor: Rev. Don Wagner
Sunday School - 9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:30 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M
Warren Grove
Baptist Church
Route 1, Edenton
Phone: 483-8084
Pastor: Wilbert Mills
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7.00 P.M.
Ryan’s Grove
Baptist Church
Route 3, Edenton
Pastor: Calvin Whedbee
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M
Mid-Week Service - 7:00 A.M.
Phpne: 482-8871
■Veopim Baptist Church
Route 2
Stanley Nixon, Pastor
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morping Worship -11:00 A.M.
>. Cape Colony Free WUI
W” Baptist Church
State Route 33 Alt.
Plmae: 482-8208
Pastor: Rev. Gordon Massey
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 6:00 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:00 P.M.
Oak Baptist Church
Tjapr. N.C.
jpKte: 221-3945
Pastor: Rev. Robert L.
~ 1% Holloman
Sunday School - io:30 A.M.
proposals to increase the state
sales tax by one per cent to
St. Jehu’s Baptist Church
Route 2, Edenton
Pastor: Rev. J. E. Griffin
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship • 11:30 A.M.
Wed. Prayer Service -7 P.M.
Chappell Hill Baptist
Church
Route 1, Tyner, N.C.
Phone: 297-2290
Pastor: Billy Old
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Church Training - 7:00 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M.
Independent
Baptist
Immanuel Baptist Church
W. Queen Street, Extd.
Phone: 482-3567
Pastor: Rev. Ashby Browder
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:30 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M.
Weekly Daycare and
Christian School grades 1-12
Catholic
St. Anne’s Catholic Church
207 N. Bread Street
Phone: 482-2617
Christian
First Christian Church
McMullan Avenue
Phone: 482-4587
Pastor: Rev. E. C. Alexander
Church Os God
901 Johnston Street
Phone: 482-3554
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Sunday Night - 6:00 P.M.
Wednesday Night - 7:30 P.M.
Edenton Church Os God
In Christ
Corner of North Granville and
Peterson Streets.
Pastor: Elder Alexander Dixon
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -12:00
YPWW - 6:30 P.M.
Prayer and Youth Service
Tuesdays at 7:00 P.M.
Prayer Service & Bible Study
Friday at 7:30 P.M.
Church Os Christ
Church Os Christ
Route 3, Mexico Road
Phone: 482-4815
Minister: Robert Mayo
Bible School - 9:30 A.M.
Morning Worship -10:30 A.M.
Evenjig WorShip - 6:00 P.M.
Cape polony Church Os Christ
Minister: Thbmas-Biggs
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:30 PM
Wed. Bible Study - 7:30 P.M.
Episcopal
The Church Os St. John
The Evangelist
East Church Street
Priest-in-charge:
Ven. Webster Simons, Jr.
Church School -16:00 A.M.
Morning Worship -11:00 A.M.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
101 W. Gale Street
Phone: 482-3522
Rector: rev. R. W. Stone
Holy Eucharist - 8:00 A.M.
Service and Church School
11:00 A.M. •
Interdenominational
Bandon Chapel
Route 1, Edenton
Phone: 221-8195
Minister: Rev. Robert Harrell
Faith Pentecostal Holiness
Church
Route 3 Phone:4B2-7545
Pastor. Rev. Danny Gurganus
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Worship Service -11:00 A.M.
Evening Worship - 7:00 P.M.
Mid-Week Service - 7:30 P.M.
Jehovah Witnesses
Kingdom Haß Os x
Jehovah’s Witnesses
Hwy 17 North
Telephone: 482-1321
Pentecostal
First Pentecostal Church
First Street
Phone: 482-9871
St. Mark’s Pentecostal Church
Route 3, Box 366-A
Pastor: Rev. Henry Moore, Jr.
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Morning Services -12:00
Tuesday Service - 8:00 P.M.
Thursday Service - 8:00 P.M.
Friday Service - 8:00 P.M.
Presbyterian
First Presbyterian Church
W. Queen and Moseley
Pastor: Dr. H.E. Mallinson
Phone: 482-4963
Worship Service -11:00 A.M.
Sunday School - 9:45 A.M.
United Methodist
Edeaten United Methodist
Church
Virginia Road
Phone: 4824219
Rev. Richard Blankenhorn
Sunday School -10:00 A.M.
Worship Service - H:00 A.M.
Youth Meeting - 6:00 P.M.
Council oa Ministries
.Ist Sunday at 7 P.M.
aid both state and local
government, the president of
the N.C. Association of Coun
ty Commissioners, ForreSt
Campbell of Guilford County,
issued a statement outlining
some of the alternatives to
such a plan.
“Without additional sources
of revenue to meet state and
federal mandates, counties
will be forced to increase the
property tax burden which
hits very hard at most of the
elderly and others on fixed in
comes,” Campbell declared.
“The idea of earmarking
the revenue from an increase
in the sales tax for two or
three specific areas also
presents a number of pro
blems,” he continued,
“possibly as many as 100 -
the number of counties in the
State.”
He pointed out that some
counties have been attentive
to school construction at the
expense of some other needed
services, while others have
been forced to spend large
sums on jail improvements,
social services, or other pro
blems arising from directives
from higher authority, in
cluding the courts.
“Thus, we believe the
revenue should not be ear
marked but appropriated to
the counties’ general funds
budgets so that the county
commissioners who live right
next door to the problems can
decide where to put the em
phasis,” Campbell added.
The county commissioners
organization has endorsed
House Bill 426, introduced by
Reps. Vernon James of Pas
quotank and Jeff Enloe of
Macon. It would increase the
State sales tax by a penny and
divide the resulting revenue
equally between the State and
the counties, cities and towns.
Further, it would permit local
officials to choose the most
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Homemade JjCLti lyitf Buyers Os Peanuts 1111 North Oakum Street
Biscuit Breakfast Soybeans and Country Produce
Fried Chicken and Fresh Seafood Your Happy Shopping Center Sellers of Fertilizer and Seeds EdentOn 482-3700
Phone 482-4721 Phone 482-2141,482-2142 We Specialize In Outlet Priced Fabrics
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and frozen foods Mitchener Village
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BBFu ™st ou,let This Sundav! «
Monday Through J g en Rjddjcfc JeWC^S
Badham Road, Cdenton Phone 482-8012 _
“Better Buys - Bigger Bargains” -rrV \ 1 1-M » V V J
Ju&AfatfTh m 4 .lSfeS.l —siaandOK—
EDENTON TRACTOR &
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Your Ford Tractor Dealer Agents WE WORK FOR PEANUTS,
N.C. 32 North, EdentOn 1 new»aiah,cf the tribe of jucw.ToecFFiciw. cudbears? \ A AND WE 4Rt PRO I ID OF IT!
to king artoxbres or Persia -r* jews, ho/ing been taken ' Jr PHONE 482-2112 EDENTON,.NC
__ CAPTIVE OUT OF JUDEA ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY ySWS BEFORE y' / I^—.———«■—— ■' '■"*
- - BY ICIWO NEBUCHADNEZZAR, HAD RISEN TD HIGH FI ACES IN MANY tUiWBJIF- 77? tTV' Cu.tom Mod. Cabin.l. and Fin. Wood Product.
INSTANCES BECAUSE CF THEIR TAIEW7S NEHBMAH,BOCN IN f . f fv JT Cu.lon. Moa. .
CAPTtVITX ROSE TO THE LEVEL OF CLOSEST ROYAL ADVISER /// fc* C. NOBLE
IN THE ENTIRE KINGDOM. IN 445 B.C.,HEARING OF THE Jy- L Ju „
11 mTiTIII CTllTll PESPEBWE PLIGHT OF THE FEW JEWS LEFTIN JEPUSALBIA-A & OON
IIIIIHIIIIB* 111111 RUINED CITY OF CRUMBLED WAILS AND BROKEN GATES, COM- A*-. V Sft ,
ymyii|vmii flctely at the mercy of coving bands of cut-throats / pabl net chop
AND THIEVES WHO TERRIFIED THE COUNTRYSIDE-NEHEMIAH ~ *>"s*o* ti.* r'^l K T(T«I V 0
GOT PERMISSION FHOM HIS KINGTO SO THERE AND TO \ ’ T.t.phon. (919) 221 81 13
■KScORPORHIiOH REBUItD ITS WALLS SO THAT THE INHABITANTS WOULD HAVE \ V s .
EDENTON NC pbotection agmnst marauders a perioo of twelve vews I nil >' y -iXlil/i- route 3. sox U7A edenton .n.c. 37932
Tjn.no ELAPSED, FROM THE TIME HE ARRIVED IN THE CITy UNTIL THE / 'WTW rl> , Noh ,. Donni. Nobl.
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COMPLIMENTS OF EXCEHJINay DIFFICULT TASK, WHEN ONE OONSDERS THE ft A I. . Ml
EDENTON COTTON MILLS eSSfe^MGjCOmplilllCntS Ot I
MEMBERSHIP CORP. Late ' ai,llw ■' , Shop
"OWNED BY THOSE WE SERVE" 315 SMth Broad Street
Edenton Savings f 1 jfHOUOWtu o«d biount
Loan I [@* t h.s for vodr s un »ay school j I
Whan You Save Oom Hate A Omeraneal w h.».h,mmi, W i.i.k. l i, .., —>■— V "\ EDENTON 482-2127
Edanton, N.C. .—-J
compliments oi "John Gross? Bethel Fishing Center c^pn^uoi
Bldg. Contractor Hertford. NC 426^434
Spedic Vending Service Box 681 open under new Management Edenton Testee Freez
Industrial Part
Boswell’s WOODLAND ThtJoh „ n ltZ2?“* “muon sh.ii
Market m . no
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HBHHBBHHMHMHBHWHriBHIIVMH BUB
THE CHOWAN HERALD
appropriate use of these
shared revenues based on
ra||toeedß and conditions.
Tim bill has been co
sponsored by Reps. Charles
Evens of Dare, Charles
Hughes of Henderson,
Margaret Kieesee-Forrester
of Guilford, Mary Seymour of
Guilford, and Henry Tyson of
Cumberland.
“Most attacks on the sales
tax carried in the media have
labeled the tax “regressive”,
with the connotation that such
is “bad”, he said;
“Economists’ use of the term
“regressive" does not in
dicate relative “goodness” or
“evil” of any tax; simply that
lower income households pay
a higher portion of their in
come when such a tax is
levied.
“Remember, however,”
Campbell cautioned, “that the
property tax on homes is
more regressive than the
sales tax and it is the tax that
will have to bear the weight -
if additional sources of
revenue are not found -for
counties to meet State law
mandated public health,
social services, mental
health, a share of the
Medicaid program, and
facilities for public schools.
“That is not to mention the
fact that county governments
Alcoholics
Anonymous
and
Al-Anon
Meet Monday Nights
at 8:00 P.M.
at
First Presbyterian Church
corners Os
West Queen and Mosley Street
are faced with very expensive
capital project- needs in a
number of important areasin
cluding, in addition to im
Albemarle’s Newest Exhibition
The Museum of the
Albemarle is pleased to an
nounce die opening of its
newest exhibition, From
Fiber to Fabric: Early Tex
tile Production on Friday,
April 8, 1983. This exhibit,
originated by the North
Carolina Museum of History,
highlights early textile pro
duction in colonial homes
through the use of text,
graphics, textiles and actual
equipment dating to the ear
ly 19th century.
Textiles and textile produc
tion have been an integral
part of our North Carolina
heritage and economy, but ob
taining finished textile pro
ducts in colonial North
Carolina was difficult.
Poor transportation limited
the distribution of imports to
Clothing Closet
Located Oner Pate's Florist
Open
Mon. and Tlturs.
IfsOO A M. 2:00 P.M.
All Items
50V.
Th ; Service Is Sponsored
By The Local Churches
provements to public schools,
jails, court facilities,
hospitals, ambulance ser
vices, and water/sewer
the colony’s scattered popula
. tion, and poor incomes
limited the purchase of those
expensive yarns and fabrics
that were at times available
in larger towns. Most North
Carolinians therefore fashion
ed their clothing within their
homes. With cards, spinning
wheels, and handlooms, a
fanner’s wife or planter’s
slave would patiently spin
coarse linen, woolen, and cot
ton yarns and weave cloth for
shirts, dresses and blankets.
By 1814 there were reported
ly over 40,000 looms in North
Carolina homes, producing
7,500,000 yards of cloth! To
day, this tradition is carried
on with North Carolina textile
plants producing more tex
tiles than any other state in
the Union, and more than
systems,”
As he put it; in conclusion;
“There is no question that
these things Will have to be
most nations of the world, in
cluding Great Britain, Italy
and Canada. •
Several weekend events in
cluding, sheep shearing, spin
ning and weaving demonstra
tions have been planned in
conjunction with this exhibi
tion. (announcements to
follow) "f
The exhibition will be on
display through June 12,1983.
The Museum of the
Continued On Page 7-8
Hollowell’s
Electrical Service
Edenton
ifffl
Alvin Hollo well
Owner
(Licensed Electrician)
Phone 482-2603
For Free Estimates
Call After 3:30
1 • |
New Work Contractor
1 —r- -ir- -ir- -ir- -ir- -ir -ir- -ir- —-
Thursday, April 7, IMP
done because in most cases
State law will mandate that
they be done; the only ques
tion is which taxes will pay for
them to be done.”
Horse An<J Pony
Show To Be Held
- Perquimans County Horse
|tnd Pony Club will hold its
first show of the year on Sun
day, Aprß 10 at 1:30. The show
ring is located on the Joe
Perry Farm. They will be
judging halter, pleasure and
speed classes. The judge will
tie Kemp Itock of Bethel, N.C.
The concession stand will
be open with homemade
goodies for everyone.