Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Jan. 9, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO RED MEN TRIBE INSTALL OFFICERS W. E. Baker Replaces N. J. Goodwin as Presiding Officer; Order In Good Shape Chowan Tribe of Red Men held election of officers at the meeting on Monday night, following which both elective and appointive officers were duly installed. The installation cere mony was in charge of Past Sachem 0. H. Brown, who was assisted by Frank Hughes. The Tribe’s officers for the next six months will be as follows: Pro phet, N. J. Goodwin; sachem, W, E. Baker; senior sagamore, A. L. Sex ton; junior sagamore, L. E. Francis; chief of records, Raleigh Hollowell; collector of wampum, A. S. Hollowell; keeper of wampum, W. J. Daniels; keeper of wigwam, W. A. Munden; first sannap, J. J. Parker; second sannap, Asa Griffin; warriors, Willie Bunch, W. C. Hollowell, George Shaw and J. W. Layton; braves, Wil bur Smith, Augustus Harrell, Percy Williams and William Wright; guard of the wigwam, Eddie Shaw; guard 'Of the foreste, F. F. Tanner. The past year has been very suc cessful for the Red Men, the mem bership being boosted enough to gain an extra representative to the Great Council of North Carolina. j MERRY HILL v ' Rev. and Mrs. E. N. Harrison were luncheon guests Sunday •of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Smithwick. 'Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Byrum, of Windsor, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. White Sunday afternoon. Bill Holloman, of Williamston, was the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. White, last week. Miss Sue Martin Capehart returned to Columbia on Sunday to resume her work as a member of the high school faculty. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pruden enter tained Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams and Miss Manness at tea on Friday evening. The opening of school was delayed until Monday because of the bad weather and the dangerous condition of the roads. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bowen and daughter, Joyce, Betty and Arline Bisping, of Windsor, visited Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bowen Sunday afternoon. Rev. E. N. Harrison conducted ser vices at White Oak Methodist Church Sunday morning. Jonathon Jacobs is at home at Scotch Hall after being a patient in the Windsor hospital. W. R. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Smith were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cad Capehart Sunday afternoon. Tom Smith ha.s returned from an extended trip to Norfolk and Suffolk. Miss Mary Adams has returned to Powellsville after spending the holi days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Adams, and her sister, Mrs. Dewey Crabtree, at Rougemont. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Williford and family have moved to the old Shields farm, which they have recently pur chased. Miss Sue Margaret Keeter is at home after spending some time with relatives in Norfolk, Va. Clifton Keeter spent the holidays here with his wife and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Keeter. Mrs. Pat Baker and children are spending some time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. White. Mr. and Mrs. Alton Andrews are visiting relatives in Williamston and Robersonville.. The faculty returned from their respective homes on Sunday to re sume their work on Monday. | GUM POND I v J Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nixon, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Bunch, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Goodwin visited Mr. and Mrs. Will Bunch Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bunch, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Goodwin called on Mr. and Mrs. Levy Nixon Sunday af ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Asbell called on Mrs. Bettie Harrell Sunday after noon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hughes and son, of Edenton, called on Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Nixon Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Wilkins were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pres ton Parks Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lolice Bunch called on Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Bunch Wed nesday afternoon. Mr. and tylrs. Levy Nixon called on Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Bass Wednes day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Nixon called on Mr. and Mrs. Will Bunch Friday evening- ATTEND DEMONSTRATION Frank Perry, Louis Harrell and Percy Saunders, salesmen for Byrum Brothers Hardware Company, return ed last night from Richmond, Va., where they spent two days attending a demonstration given by the Inter national Harvester Co. Boil Water For Ice Cubes Clear, sparkling ice cubes may be made by freezing water which has been boiled rather than freezing cold water as it comes from the faucet. I QkSNAPSUOT CUILCk 1 HAVE A SNAPSHOT PARTY 1 PHOTOFIOOD 2FT. SUBJECT $ | | c AMER A 2 PHOTOFLOODS > The “magic |§ chair” will gs y.^.-pi', prove to be a popular at traction. ‘ SOME people just naturally frown on the Idea of doing anything un usual or different, but be that as It may, here’s a suggestion for a new kind of party. A “Snapshots at Night Party” and the chances are it will be voted by those who are fortunate enough to be invited as an outstand ing success. To further add to the merriment of the party you might have your guests come in costume. Tell them to come dressed as their favorite movie star, some famous person of history, a character from one of the nursery rhymes, or, you might sim plify the matter of costumes and make it a regular “Kid Party,” all guests dressing as children. Setting the stage for your Snap shots at Night Party is very simple and can be done before your guests arrive. Here is what you do. Place a chair in an out-of-the-way part of the room so that it will not be dis turbed by the guests as they arrive. Close to the back and to the right of the chair place a floor lamp so that the light bulb is about two feet from the back of the chair. Now tilt the shade slightly upward so that it will throw the light directly over and down on the shoulders and head of the person sitting in the chair. About three feet directly in front of the chair place another floor lamp with its shade tilted to throw the light directly on the front of your subject and chair. You now have one floor lamp back of and to the right of the chair and another one three feet in front of the chair or subject. 1 OAK GROVE j V J j Miss Bessie Nixon was the dinner | guest of Miss May Belle Bunch Sun-1 day. Misses Essie Belle Harrell, Evelyn : and Lessie Bunch and May Belle i Bunch were guests of Misses Bessie J and Hettie Nixon Sunday evening. Miss Gertrude Nixon and Mrs. R. ! W. Parrish called on Mrs. Reuben Nixon Friday afternoon. Elbert Nixon and Mrs. Anthony Gosser have returned home from Norfolk, Va., after spending several days there with relatives. Miss Evelyn Parrish was the guest of Miss Bessie Nixon Saturday even ing. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Peele and chil dren, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson Nixon, Mr. and Mrs. John Parrish and chil dren, Mrs. G. W. Forehand and chil dren were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Nixon Saturday evening. Miss Helen Nixon spent last week with her sister, Mrs. Percy Harrell. Miss Hettie Nixon spent the week end with her sister, Mrs. Will Bunch, i Miss Evelyn Parrish was the guest of Mrs. Reuben Nixon Tuesday morn ing. Mr. and Mrs. John Parrish were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Bunch Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Byrum and children called on Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Nixon Sunda'J evening. Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Bunch spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Par rish. | CENTER HILL | \ J Miss Hilda Boyce has returned to Knott’s Island, after spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Boyce. Mrs. N. Bunch spent Sunday night in Norfolk, Vp., with relatives. Mrs. Mollie Bunch, who has been quite sick, is improving. Miss Lucy Myers White, who has been ill for several weeks, is able to be out- Mrs- Tim Blanchard visited rela tives in Gates County Friday after noon. ,!JTI It does not seem practical to estab lish a stand of pine by sowing seed in an open field, reports Extension Forester R. W. Graeber, after study ing several such demonstrations started last spring. The North Carolina Experiment Station recentely received an order for two Ayrshire heifers from Mrs- Agnes Moore of Cable Beach, Nassau, The Bahama Islands. THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, N. C-, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1936. With the lamps in this position you will have to take the picture from the side; so place your camera on a table or some firm support at a point where you can see all of your subject in the finder. If you have a folding camera with an /.G.3 lens open it to this aperture and set the shutter speed at 1/25 of a sccon-i. With supersensitive panchromatic film in your camera and two Photo flood bulbs in the lamp facing the subject and one in the lamp back of the chair you are ready for the ar rival of your guests and fascinating indoor snapshots at night. In placing your camera be sure that neither of the lights shines di rectly into the lens of the camera or shows in your finder. After your guests have arrived lead them one by one to the “magic chair,” switch on the Photoflood lamps, and —snap —you have the pic ture. And you can count on much merriment as each faces the camera. . Suppose you do not have a camera with a lens as fast as /.6.3. You can have your party and take pictures with any camera just the same. You can take a short time exposure with out any change in your set-up. In taking either a snapshot at night at 1/25 of a second or a time exposure picture, caution your guest not to move when the picture is actually being taken. You and your guests will have fun at a Snapshots at Night party and in turn you will have some highly interesting pictures to enjoy look ing at for many years to come. JOHN VAN GUILDER. Former Edentonian Locates In Richmond I j The following item appearing in j the current issue The Commonwealth, j the magazine of Virginia business , will be of interest to many Herald j readers: | “Among recent comers to Vir ginia is W. S. Dunning, manager of j the Richmond warehouse of the Pitts burgh Plate Glass Company. Mr. Dunning is a native of Edenton, N. C. , and has been with the Pitts burgh Plate Glass Company for twelve years. He has served with the company at Savannah and Atlan ta, and came to Richmond from Mil waukee, where he was manager of the company’s glass department.” Mr. Dunning is the son of W. F. Swaringer, who was the editor of The Edenton Transcript from 1904 to 1909. County Club Women Resuming Activities Activities among the woman’s clubs of the County have been resumed since the holiday season, with the clubs now holding their regular meet ings. The following schedule will 1 observed by Miss Rebecca Colwel! home agent, during the week: Friday—Office. Saturday—Office. Monday—Office in morning; after noon, Chowan Federated Woman’: Club at school building. Tuesday—lo:4s A. M., Oak Grovi girls; 2:30 P. M., Enterprise women with Mrs. S. F. Small. Wednesday—9 A. M., tenth grade 10 A. M., eighth and eleventh grades; 2:30 P. M., River View women wit Miss Myrtle Twine. Thursday—Office in morning; 2:f P. M., Beech Fork women with Mrs. Craig Haste. Billiard Experts Will Appear In Edenton Billiard fans in Edenton are look ing forward with pleasure to seeing the country’s most outstanding bil liard wizards perform on the tables of Chap’s New Deal billiard parlor. The National Billiard Association is sponsoring a program of sending the best billiard artists all over the country, and they will demonstrate their skill as well as render any ser vice possible within the short time they appear. Definite appearances for Chip’s New Deal has not been announced, but will include such stars as Wyllie Hoppe and James Caras, rdeent champion. I TOMATOES By The Ton! MORE tomatoes than any other vegetable are canned in this country today. The annual value of our tomato crop is estimated at more than $50,000,000 of which approximately $20,000,000 is spent for tomatoes by canners and man ufacturers. Besides being canned, tomatoes are manufactured Into soups, purges, catsups and tomato juice. From 1,000,000 to 1,250,000 tons are grown annually for the canners and manufacturers! There is a very good reason for this. And that Is that modem cooking minus tomatoes would be very much like the play of Hamlet with Hamlet left out. Not that there is anything so dramatic or heroic about the part the tomato plays in modern cooking, but as a general utility man he just simply can’t be left out. What would the following recipes taste like, for instance, without the tomatoes? Tomatoes Give the Tone Tomato Fritters: Beat one egg slightly, add two cups canned to matoes and one and a third cups crushed cracker crumbs, and sea son with salt and pepper. Drop from spoon into plenty of hot fat in a skillet. Brown on one side, turn and brown on the other side. Drain on brown paper. Makes about twelve small fritters. Meat Loaf with Tomatoes: Add one small finely chopped onion, one teaspoon salt, one-fourth tea spoon pepper, one teaspoon sage and one-half cup dry bread crumbs to one pound of chopped beef. Add one beaten egg. Mix well together and pile in a rounded mound In the center of a flat baking dish. Pour over one cup canned to matoes and bake in a hot —400 degree—oven for about forty-five minutes, basting occasionally with the tomatoes. Serves four. T. E. L. CLASS HAS * ENJOYABLE MEETING The T. E. L. Class of the Edenton Baptist Church met Monday evening for the regular monthly business and social hour. The meeting was held 1 I All Wool and Part Wool 1 j BLANKETS I Are Here I Here’s comfort for cold nights! The Blan- ■ • 1 < | I kets are soft and fluffy .. . come in soft pas- 3 ; I tel tones (some are reversible) and you’ll find 3 3 <> J l $ colors to complete any scheme*.. and comfort - > . 3 3 I for any wintry night! 3 : 3; Priced From - f 33 $1.48 to $6.98 1 : f 3 3 1 v < , j J. H. Holmes (9. | I The Albemarle’s Leading Department Store • I EDENTON, N.C. 3 3 with Mrs. George W. Lassiter at her home on North Broad Street. “Wonderful Words of Life” opened the meeting, and Mrs. J. Frank White, Sr., led in prayer. Mrs. Lassiter read the 37th Psalm, which was followed by singing “Rock of Ages.” Routine business was disposed of, and some discussion of new business made. Catherine Shump recited “The Ging ham Dog and the Calico Cat,” and several selections were sung by the male quartette of the Baptist Church. Mrs. C. S. Cozart invited the class to meet with her in February. The hostess served dainty refresh ments to the following class mem bers: Mrs. B. F. Francis, Mrs. C. S. Cozart, Mrs. J. C. Leary, Mrs. J. Frank White, Sr., Mrs. J. J. Long, Mrs. J. C. Dail, Mrs. R. W. Boyce, and Mrs. H. B. Jones. Mrs. W. Jim Daniels On Honorable Mention List Last week the Garden Club com mittee in drawing off their list of names of those to be given honorable mention for residential Christmas decorations overlooked mentioning the home of Mrs. W. J- Daniels. The Club asked The Herald to mention this oversight and to say that the decorations arranged by Mrs. Daniels were very beautiful and that they regret the omission, which was later discovered. His Guess Mr. Softy—You know, I am very fond of birds. Yesterday one sweet little thing actually settled on my head. Mr. Tuffguy—lt must have been a woodpecker. (ROYAL Typewriters Expert Repairs On All Make Typewriters And Office Machines OFFICE SUPPLIES EMMERSON'S INC. 231 High Street Portsmouth, Ya. For quick results try a Want Ad i nothin! J IjiPipilfpil Better : Than Jh - -:c Wk A M > i Fo r j- GREATER ECONOMY ■ For MAXIMUM WARMTH ■ For COMPLETE CONVENIENCE —■— !' 1 Now Is the Time to Put In Your! Supply ... I PHONE 47 For Prompt I Delivery || EdentfcJ
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1936, edition 1
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