Early Farm Program Payments Depend on
Farmers' Early Action
North Carolina farmers who are
taking part in the feed grain
wheat, and cotton programs arc
(being reminded that earlj
compliance and early cer
ttfication will mean early
payments this year, i
H.O. Carter, State Executive
Director for the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
. Service, said that while firmers
should certify compliance as soon
as possible, they also must ,un
derstand that acreage cer
. tifl cations are not to be made
unartoey snow tney are in
compliance with all program
regulations.
When a participant in a 1970
farm program certifies com'
pliance, he certifies accurately
to acreages in the program crops
and to diverted acreage. He also
cetifies that be has complied
with conserving base provisions,
with regulations that apply if he
has an interest in more than tone
farm, that the diverted acres on
bis farm are devoted to an ap
proved conserving use, and that
all other program requirements
have been met.
As soon as a program par
ticipant certifies, the County
ASCS Office begins processing
papers for his full payment for
1970 program participation.
Payments to producers will
begin soon after July 1 and are
expected to be completed by the
end of August - the easiest date
ever set for completion of
program payments.
After a farm has been certified
to be in compliance with farm
programs, it may be checked at
any time to determine if any
errors were made in. cer
tification. If errors are found, the
producer will be determined to
have not fully complied and may
lose some or all of his farm
program payments. - ? ,
Carter said the County ASCS
Office has received instructions
to keep up to date on farm
control checks.
ROB JOE E. BROWN
BRENTWOOD, Calif. (AP) -Veteran
comedian Joe E. Brown,
ailing and under sedation, slept
through a robbery by three
masked men in which hid wife
said the loot included jewelry,
furs and non-negotiable bonds
worth 9100,000.
The robbers bound and gagged
Mrs. Kathryn Brown, 77, and two
male nurses at the Brown home
Tuesday. Brown also is 77.
NOTICE!
ALL PROPERTY OWNERS ARE REQUIRED
TO CLEAN THEIR LOTS
THREE (3) TIMES
A YEAR
MAY-JULY- SEPTEMBER
IF OWNERS DO NOT COMPLY WITH ORDINANCE.
THE TOWN WILL CLEAN THELOTS AND THE COST
WILL BE CHARGED AGAINST THE PROPERTY. . .
TOWN OF HERTFORD
JToualrty Ind
w Saraica
VQuarantaad
IF
ma.
f O
(Iteitiute)
Meet some of our
friends...
Thnn'rn nnnrl nnnnlo
to know
if you're BUILDING,
RFP R UG or REuDDEUuB!
OKI
I I RUTLAND vft 1
uMIxL- DRY-WALL u JWL3-
vJjjsk1-'- ' ADHESIVE rrs : aJSJ
''Wr V V "''' , For tileboord
18.95 I j 15t.
( 1 !S& Al4 n MEDICINE i )
! JnmWr CABINETS JJ f AM
! IIKHfiU IS" lL
J LOW AS gjjrjrr stylm to lit ' ''T jtft
i IIhelvingoi '' '"TO IJL 'IT ':rfr-
1 V BOARD W A Designs unlimited, J
n A ' A
f TEXTOLITE P" Rutland DEL MAR
1 COUNTER TOPPING z 5-P.ECE BATH SEVg&
SS-hW B TILEN iui-u.M '
SV.WCciI.any,0,PP'y IfJ CAULK .M-.-
:'t 'I Oi.aino.1. 'I !,WiI"' f . f I
Many patterns fft ' ' whii. .lt M WMr f M
"ar . Si .a- j f '"";;' Agraatbuy, vj
, ww 'r'NA . 84( 14.75 J
i f Jfl VV r " o l-wory Fmtgrw .h.'-ium iyi fc: -l-: il .
i Bt- I ' Ravara Trap Clotat Mumtnum Inin Hh nylon Htt ffH IJv!' '
LmPrTMv I La and Towal Bar rolltr 1 1 roaw lrch ILl-'i
P3. : "Hi cMa i , Include lew bar 4S M ' '
1 JuZi; Jyl - Hi2.55 - Zo.vj I
- i "iVLJlZil-JIJll-? i in i mi "iiiiJ-jJtijLujiiuaiTuuii i.iiwiwiiMi ' 1 iii I ..mi. I. II '
N HltOHES iLVO. 301 N. HUCHES BLVD. inv HAWK. H.C.
OKI MS SOiO j OMt 335 3495 DIAL 44 1 4961
'V
TILC30ARD
Fifllth oH th naw tub
amlaaura with baliad
anamal tilabeard. Many
kaoutilul colon.
4X8 SHEET
Year 'Round Head
Start h Announced
v The Economic Improvement
Council, Incw according to W.G.
Pierce, Deputy Director, ' will
sponsor a year-round Head Start
program beginning June 1, 1970
In the following counties
Chowan, Dare, Gates, Hyde,
Pcumtotank, Perquimans and
Washington.
This i program is to be funded at
a level of $384,647, on a full-day
basis. Children of three, four and
five years of age will be eligible,
Its major objective will be to
provide new and exploratory
experiences for the children of
working mothers. " '
In each county the Head Start
program will be coordinated
very closely with the school
system. ,
This is my second year! as a
Head Start parent and believe
me I have learned a lot and my
ideas changed as I ahderstood
the program better. '
If you lust send your child to
Head Start and don't get In
volved yourself then you and
your child are missing a great
deal. It Is not a free babysitting
service and any child 'that ' is
being sent as such is letting vary
little out of the program'.' " .
Also Head -Start to not a boot
camp for next year's kin
dergarten kids, t it's so much
more that it's hard to put into
words. You might say , it's a'
whole new and different way of
life opened lip to these kids. It
doesn't Just help them get ready
for kindergarten; it helps them
face life as it really is. They learn
right away that they are a special
PERSON and not Just a four-year-old
who should be seen and
not heard. Believe me in Head
Start they are seen, heard and
LISTENED to.
These little people learn fast
with their whole mind and body.
Their eyes see things they have
never seen before. Their ears
bear sounds and words and
stories that they never heard
before. Their binds do things,
they never dreamed they could
do like paint pretty pictures or
draw or color or build something
nice with blocks. They also learn
bow nice It is Just to have a friend
whose hand they can hold onto
for a little while. Hands are
important to a four-year-old.,
I'm sura some of them thought
when they first started school
that hands were Just to hit with
or be hit win, but they soon
learned that at school there were
so many nice and fine things to
do with their hands that they
dont have much' time to use
them for hitting.
As you can see, I believe these
kids learn slot about themselves
and at the same time they learn
about the people and things
around them. Tot this reason
they soon learn how to get along
with other people. They realise
that other people have feelings
Just as they do. They get their
feelings hurt sometimes but they
also learn that it's really fun to
share things and help other kids
and have other kids help them.
It's really fun to do things
together. Life is really a give and
take thing and the sootier a child
learns this the better off he will
be.
Last year when Viola Ealy
came around to recruit my girl, I
knew almost nothing about the
program. I had heard of it only as
summer program. I mink
people from the program came
to my house three times befoN n
finally decided to send Shelly. I
was so unsure about the program
I didn't know what to do.' . -;
When I finally did decide to
send her, I did so on a trlathasto.
By this I mean. I sent her to see
bow she would like It, but at the
same time I went over and got to
know the staff and learn aU I
could. I helped out as much as 1
could last year and really en
joyed myself. I had no idea that I,
Ccrd01Thib
I wish to express my ap
preciation for all the kind
remembrances while I was a
patient in Chowan Hospital and
since my return home. Your kind
deeds and thoughts will always
be remembered. !
Sincerely,
L. A. Proctor
a parent, the mother of five
chUdren could learn so much!
This year when Alice Brown
came around to sign my girl up
again, we taikea aoout me
program . She told me it would be
a lot different. She told me they
would have' freedom of all the
rooms and I couldn't believe it.
told her I didn't like that idea
because I felt it would be hard on
the kids. Again I was thinking
about how it would help them for
kindergarten next year. I felt it
would really be hard for them to
have all this freedom one year
and the next year to all at once be
put in one room. Again I was so
wrong. '
' I have been lucky enough to
have been able to go over and
spend a day in each of the dif
ferent rooms with each of the
staff and I -have learned more
these past few weeks than I did
all last year., . ;
I only with this program could
have started a few years ago and
that I could have gotten involved
sooner, because I'm sure 1 could
have done a much better Job as a
mother.
Maybe you are a real shy
person and don't think you would
be any good working with these
kids, well, how do you know until
you try? Kids have a way of
getting you Interested so that you
forget that you are shy or scared.
Believe me it does your old heart
good to have a little boy look up
at you with brush in hand and
say, "I'm going to' paint your
happy face." You feel even
better after he has finished and
you see yourself ai he sees you.
Oh, to be a four-year-old in our
Head Start program! I guess the
next best thing is to be the parent
raft four-year-old in our, Head
Start program. ,
Believe me I'm very proud and
happy to be involved.
I wish to take this opportunity
to thank each and everyone who
remembered me with cards,
flowers, prayers, visits, and all
other acts of kindness shown me
while I wu a patient in Watts
Hospital to Durham ahdjalnce
my return home.
: Mrs. George Sutton
The . Flying Dutchman
Crc;:::!:n, 1970
. The 1970 harvest of high school
and college graduates is at
handand it is appropriate to take
a look at the world these
graduates are entering, what
they can seek to accomplish,
what opportunities they will find
open to them.
, This years graduates enter
our free society possibly han
dicapped by recent experiences.
They have listened to students,
some of them militants and law
breakers, telling the nation what
is wrong with it, what changes
must be made, etc. They have
heard fellow students lambast
the establishment, call for
revolution and damn the
capitalist system.
They have been confused
because so many school officials
have been hesitant to defend
their institutions, ' the govern-
ment, or even the country. It has
been a time of "appeasement,
fear, and negativism on the part
of authority and militancy, self
righteousness and cocksureness
on the part of students and
Juveniles and the Immature. In
short, traditional values have
been out of balance, common
sense often ignored.
The misled 1970 graduate will
gradually adjust his philosophy
as he learns the facts and learn
to appreciate the wonderful
advantages of being an
American and of living in
America. He will soon learn that
his youthful idealism must be
tempered with realism, and that
the older generation is not, after
all, a generation of idiots. The
many who were not misled bv
events of recent years will im
mediately appreciate their vast
opportunities for economic,
intellectual and social gain in the
land of opportunity - still the
United States.
Page 6 - The Perquimans County Weekly, Hertford, N. C, Thursday, May 28, 1
, EISZLE ON GROUND
Club Uzzb
Herman Melville wrote
'Moby Dick, or the White
Whale."
uww-i
Mrs.' Walter Dale entertained
her Rook Club Friday night at
her home in Whiteston. Those
playing were Mrs. A. T. Lane,
Sr., Mrs. J. H. Towe, Sr., Mrs. C.
T. Skinner, Sr.; Mrs. G. R.
Tucker, Mrs. R. M. Fowler, Miss
Mary Sumner, Miss Gladys
Felton and the hostess.
Miss Sumner won the high
score prize. A sweet course was
served.
-4
- SPACE CENTE&, Bom
- Astronaut Donn F.
sele, a member of the Apollo
crew which orbited the earth f
11 hours In October 1968, h.
decided to take a ground Job. ;
An official . announceme
Tuesday said Eisele, 39, wou
leave the spaceman corps 1
mid-June to become technic
assistant in the research divislc
of the space agency at Langk
Research Center in Virginia. - I
mid-vay c::svnciET, ...J.
Y ' ' ""
SALES ZH Z7 SERVICE
PHONE4S5-3821
SUNBURY, NORTH CAROLINA,
KEATONS KICKS
HIGH PRICES !
BIG-SCREEN ALL-WOOD
CONSOLE
lilf
Color TV ' iNTf
71 ::-'"i-:---"V--: 7 fS With Trad -A
Sf GM-521 SB Arvir
KEATONSTV
SALES AND SERVICE
Bob Keaton. Owner
'1 service What I SelT
104 WOODLAND AVE., HERTFORD, N. C.
1
c:s jD
sio cjd tern
UJuwT) Sffiui oJCftSO
Why gamble when you shop for a
used car? Your Ford Dealers got a
big selection of late-model beauties
all backed by his reputation fcs an
outstanding local businessman. He
has the staff and facilities to put used!
cars in top condition. And he stands
behind his used cars just the way he
stands behind his new cars-for
keeps. Vils A-1 sign Is a trademark
of trust.
1833 CHEVROLET
BelAir,4 Dr.,AlrCond.
1637 FORD
Oust 600, 4 Dr., Std. Shift
33 FALCON
Future, V8,Std. Shift, 2 Dr.
68 MUSTANG
Conv. Cru (somatic, V8 .
65 FALCON
2Dr.,Sdn.,6CyLStd.Shlft
65 OLDS 88
4 Dr., H. T., Full Power
64 OLDS 68
2 Dr., HT.,Auto Trans., V8,
PS PR s
63 CHEVY II
2JDr.t HT.,V8,Mtt
63 FORD GAL. 600
4 Dr., Auto Trans.
61 FORD WAGON
Std Shift, Good Motor.
63 CAMARO RS
4 Spd, Vinyl Roof
67 FORD FAIR 500
4 Dr., Sdn., Va
63 FALCON "
4 Dr., Std. Shift, 6 CyL
68 MUSTANG
2 Dr., V8, 4 Spd. Trans.
65 FORD GAL.
4 Dr., V8.
500
65 MUSTANG
2 Dr., ET., 289, 4VMtr.,
4 Spd.
64 FORD GAt 500
2 Dr., H.T., Vinyl Roof
63 FORD
2 Dr., H.T., V8
62 PONTIAC
2 Dr., 4 Cylinder
62 FALCON WAGON
Stand. Shift. 6 CvL
67 MUSTANG
Conv., Crulsomatic
67 FORD WAGON
AlrCond.,V8
68 FORD GAL. 500
4 Dr., Sdn., V8, Cm.
68 FORD GAL 500
4 Dr., Sdn., Va
65FORDCUST.500
4 Dr., Std, Shift, New Motor.
65 FORD MUSTANG
2Dr.,H.T.,3Spd.,V8
64 FORD GAL. 500
2 Dr., H.T.
63 CHEV. WAGON
V8, PS, Rack on Top
62 CHEV. BA.
4 Dr., Extra Gean
61 FORD GAL. 500
4 Dr., H.T.
65 FORD CUST.
2 Dr., V8, Auto Trans.
64BUICK
4 Dr., Std. Shift
63 PONTIAC
2 Dr., Auto Trans.
62 FORD GAL. 500
4 Dr. Sdn.
63 BUTCK
4Dr..Spl.,V8Mtr.
67 FORD FAIR. 600
2 Dr., ET., 4 Spd, Vinyl Roof
67 FORD GAL. 500
2 Dr., ET., Va PS
68FORD7LITRI
2Dr.,ET.,V8
66 OLDS 442 v ,
Conv., 4 Spd Trans
65 FORD CUST. 600
4 Dr., Std Shift
Many of our 1964, 63, 62, 61, 60 models of can will be sold to you at
wholesale prices. Come in and get the prices on these cars today.
63FORDF10Q
Pickup, 4 Spd Trans., Radio,
, Custom Cab, Big Tires. . . , -
C3FORDF1CO
Pickup Ranger, Grubs omatk,
Radio, Good Tires
63FORDF100
Pickup, Long Body, Cruise-
matlc, Radio "
67 CHEVROLET
Flebsp, Long Body, 6 CyL,
TRUCKS
87FORDF100 4
Pickup, V8 Mtr., ED. Sprgs k
Tires.
es CHEV. C10
Pickup, V8, Mtr. Std Shift,
New Tires.
63FORDF100
Pickup. Short Body, 6 CyL
63FORDF1CO
Pickup, Long Body, Custom
Cab, Radio, New Mtr. 6 CyL
61FORDF1C0
Pickup, V8 Mtr. .
63 FORD FCCO
2-Ton Truck, 174" WB,
900x20 Tires, 2 Spd Axle,
V8Mtt
U.S. 17 NORTH
r.rr,TFcr.D,N.c
could be seta erf the Cer ci
Good Hope in stormy wetusr,
the phantom into lesend