June Calendar For W.S.C.S. The Women's Society of Christian Service meets in the Fellowship Hall of the United Methodist Church on June 5th. at 8 p.m. The Delia Shamburger Circle will be in charge of the program and the Mary Towe Circle will be hostesses at the social hour that follows. The Executive Committee will meet at 7:15 prior to the general meeting. On June 6th. the Minnie Wilson Circle will meet with Mrs. L.C. Winslow at 9:45 p.m. The Delia Shamburger Circle will meet with Mrs. Durwood Reed, Jr. on June 12th. at 8:00 p.m. The Helen Bame Circle will meet June 12th at 8:00 p.m. with Mrs. Percy Newbern. The Wesleyan Service Guild will meet with Mrs. Earlie Goodwin on June 12th at 8 p.m. On June 14th. at 3:00 p.m. the Mary Towe Circle will meet with Mrs. Roulac Webb. Card Of Thanks A special thanks to each in dividual and church organization that remembered me with cards, flowers, gifts and prayers while I was a patient in Norfolk General Hospital. You indeed brought home away from home for me. Thanks to my wonderful neigh bors and friends for taking care of me and my family since I've been shut in at home. May God bless each of you with good health. Mrs. J.B. (Dorothy) Perry Card Of Thanks I would likto express my sincere thanks and appreciation to my many friends and relatives and to all church organizations who remembered me during my stay in the hospital and since I have been home. For the beautiful flowers, gifts, cards, prayers, visits, telephone calls and good food. May God bless each of you. Irene "Renie" White Card Of Thanks I would like to express my thanks to everyone for the cards, flowers, food and visits while I was a patient in the Albemarle Hospital and since I've been recuperating at home. Your kindness will always be remembered. Mrs. Freeland Elliott HARMON'S PHARMACY Is happy to provide you with a Health Sav-A-Tax Service! APPLY NOW FOR YOUR REGISTRATION FORM. WE WILL KEEP A PERMANENT RECORD OF YOUR PRESCRIPTION PURCHASES GIVE YOU OFFICIAL PROOF OF MEDICAL EXPENSE - AND THEN, BEFORE FEDERAL INCOME TAX TIME WE WILL GIVE YOU A COMPLETE RECORD OF All PRESCRIPTION PURCHASES MADE BY YOU AND YOUR FAMILY DURING THE PRECEDING YEAR. Your Private Family Record 1 supplies original prescription number when Refills are necessary- - ", . ...... O YOUR ENTIRE MEDICATION HISTORY CAN BE REVIEWED QUICKLY BY YOUR DOCTOR AT ANY TIME- 3 Health WEEKLY RECIPE : Sank Ana Sheridan Now that this school year is nearly over and summer is just around the corner, sandwiches will be very pop ular. This spread is easy to make and keeps well. It will go well at lunch or at your afternoon bridge club. Raisin Sandwich Spread 1 c sugar 3 whole eggs 2 lemons (Juice of 2 and rind of H lemon) 1 c mayonaise 1 c raisins 1 c nuts Beat eggs to loam, add sugar, lemon juice and rind. Cook in double boiler until it begins to thicken. Cool. Add the mayonaise. Grind raisins and nuts together and add to other mixture. Card Of Thanks I would like to express my sincere thanks to all my friends and neighbors for the visits, cards, flowers, gifts and prayers I received during my recent stay in the hospital and since I have been home. Fernando Hollowell Card Of Thanks This is to thank rny many friends for all their many beautiful cards, letters, fruit, flowers, visits and other gifts while I was in the Albemarle Hosptial, all of which helped me so much to get back home early. I pray God's blessing upon everyone of you. Mr. G.C. Buck Card Of Thanks I wish to express my ap preciation to all friends and neighbors who remembered me with their prayers, visits, cards, flowers, phone calls and all other acts of kindness on the day of my operation and through my stay in Norfolk General Hospital. May God bless each of you. Rossie M.Baker Card Of Thanks I would like to take this op portunity to th nk Dr. Baker and all the nurses for their special care while I was in Chowan Hospital. - Also all my friends for their flowers, cards, visits, prayers and kind deeds extended ' to my family. May God bless you. Irene Meads and family TOTAL OF ALL PRESCRIPTION PURCHASES AVAILABLE TO YOU FOR END-0F-THE-YEAR TAX PURPOSES HARMFUL ALLERGIC RESULTS ARE AVOIDED. WE KEEP ALLERGY DETAILS ON YOUR RECORD PERMANENTLY- Sav-A-Tax Is a Free Who Fought The Civil War For North Carolina "Who fought the Civil War for North Carolina?" is a question being answered by a long-term project in the State Archives The task of documenting information about those 180,000 individuals was undertaken in 1961 by the Civil War Com mission, and its aim is to document as much information as possible about literally every North Carolina who served in the war. As most Civil War buffs know, one roster of North Carolina troops was published in 1882 by Major John W. Moore, a former Bored! More and more firms are turning to innovative work rules and working schedules to fight boredom among work ers and create a better bond of feeling between employ ers and the parent company, plus greater efficiency. One of the new ideas is the summer practice of giving workers Friday afternoons free. That is usually accom plished by having them re port for work earlier on the other four days, either half hour or one hour earlier. Another idea is to offer work ers a four-day work week if they wish to work four ten hour days or four-nine-and-a-half-hour days. (The four day week has proven the most popular innovation of all according to a study of the trend in Massachusetts.) Firms have found that absenteeism is reduced by such plans, morale greatly improved and production often increased-thereby in creasing profits. Generally speaking, smaller firms with 200 or fewer employes have adapted to the new trend most quickly and success fully. But it seems reason able to assume more and more business firms, small and large, will take advan tage of the mutual benefits inherent in such plans, which can also improve the nation's business-labor atmosphere. The criminal is a criminal whether he is rich or poor, regardless of what society failed to do for him when he was young. Free Service Confederate officer. This listing, however, is known to have thousands, of .omissions and errors, and it gives only the name and rank of each in dividual listed. The new roster will also in clude each soldier's "service record" indicating (when known) his county of birth, residence, and enlistment; his age and occupation at the time; and additional information relating to promotions, demotions, wounds, transfers, and the circumstances of his service termination. Information for the new roster is being drawn primarily from the records of the con federate War Department which are preserved at the National Archives in Washington. They include company muster rolls, prisoner of war records, medical records, and a great mass of miscellaneous documents. Other imformation is being found in Confederate pension records of the U.D.C., and Civil War -newspapers. Among the thousands of listings that were made under serious and even grim cir cumstances during the war are jm JT'-v Maverick Is the simple economy car. Simple to operate. And simple to drive : itr with excellent maneuverability. Simple "-'gsr 1 to maintain with easy do-it-yourself Zm features. And simple to own at a price i that beats compact as well as many V5 i subcompact cars. u u many that have taken on a note of humor, with the passing of a century. One notation indicates that a soldier's service was terminated "when he ac cidentally shot himself while mounting his horse." Another . mentions an individual who was "distinguished for robbing hen roosts," and another documents that a soldier's release from duty was "officially requested" by a certain young lady so that "he (could) come home and marry her as he had promised." To date, the first three volumes of the series which eventually will include twelve or more are off the press. The completed' roster will be of considerable value to pre sent and future North Carolininas interested in the Civil War service of their an cestors and to professional genealogists. More importantly, the published volumes will for the first time provide to amateur and professional historians alike a great mass of readily accessible, reliable information concerning North Carolina's participation in the Civil War in terms of the individuals who served. The The New Radicals This is a time of rapid change, stated today by Mrs. M.B. Taylor, Home Economics Extension Agent. Some thoughts and quotes from a most interesting book, The Lessons of History by Will and Ariel Durant are appropriate. The Durants, who wroked 40 years on the ten volumes of The Story of Civilization, have written a small book, only 100 pages, outlining insights from history into the nature of man his fundamental feelings and tendencies. They include that history shows little alteration in the conduct of mankind. Motives and ends remain the same throughout history only the means change. They write, "Nothing is clearer in history than the adoption by successful rebels of the methods they were accustomed to condemn in the forces they deposed." "Out of every hundred new ideas ninety-nine or more will probably be inferior to the traditional responses which they propose to replace. No one man, however brilliant or well informed, can come in one lifetime to such fullness of understanding as to safely judge and dismiss the customs or institutions of his society, for these are the wisdom of generations after centuries of experiment in the laboratory of history. A youth boiling with Perquimans Weekly, Hertford, N. hormones will wonder why he should not be given full freedom to his sexual desires ; and If he Is unchecked by custom, morals, or laws, he may ruin his life before he matures sufficiently to understand that sex is a river of fire that must be banked and cooled by a hundred restraints if it is not to consume In chaos both the individual and the group. ' "So the conservative who resists change is as valuable as the radical who proposes it perhaps as much more valuable as roots are more vital than grafts. It is good that new ideas should be heard, for the sake of the few that can be'used; but it is also good that new ideas should be compelled to go through the mill of objection, opposition, and contumely; this is the trial heat which in novations must survive before being allowed to enter the Permanently Located three miles from Moyock, N.C. on Highway , 168, five miles from Virginia State Line. Look for Indian Head Sign In front of her home. . C, Thursday, m lUTJ-fjjs human race. It If food that the old should resist the young, and that the young should prod the old; out of this tension as out of the strife of the sexee and the classes, comet a creative tensile strength, a stimulated development, a secret and basic unity and movement of the whole." cxe me mm m 1. Who recently won tot world tennia title? 2. Who wss the loaer In the finals? 3. HowoldlaKenRosowall? 4. For whom doea Willie Mays play baaeball? 5. How old was Jim Mulloy? AiJW to Sports Qili 1. Ken Rosewall. 2. Rod Laver. 3. 37. 4. The New York Mets. 5. 37. SISTER 0AKA The Indian Healer and Sdvlsor Solves all problems of life! Friends wo urge you to sn Sister Oaka, The religious faith heal er. Are you sick? Suffering? Need help?: One visit will convience you of her pow er to bring you happiness and suecen, ooo 'Based on a comparison of sticker prices for base 2-door models. .1.1 1 .PI Spend 15 minutes i with tho Ford Team HERTFORD, N. C. PHONE 426-5527

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view