PAGE TWO C. W. Overman Sees Better Egg Prices Next Two Months Temporary Surplus Was Caused By Fear And Now Vanished County Agent C. W. Overman says a temporary egg surplus has devel oped in many sections of the State during the first half of January, and that apparently this condition was due mainly to reduced settings by hatcheries, open winter weather and fear on the part of egg dealers that the market would drop sharply. This fear caused the dealers to buy for immediate use only, thereby weakening the demand on the local markets, but this temporary surplus and scare has about vanished, and the egg markets are now much stronger than was the case in mid' January. Plans for extended price support for eggs during the coming spring season of flush production were an nounced January 22, by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Design ed to carry forward the Depart ment’s program of supporting pro ducer egg prices at a minimum of 85 per cent of parity to encourage ex panded production of War Time needs, the plans call for increased purchases of eggs during the months when supplies are greatest and prices are normally lowest. Purchases of eggs by the Department during the months immediately ahead will dim at continuing the support of producer prices at a level equal to 85 per cent of parity, and, in addition, preventing a disorderly seasonal price adjust ment. The plans for supporting egg prices during the next few months of flush production call for the following: (1) Make full use of virtually all of the_ production capacity of egg-dry ing plants. (Operating on an around the-clock basis, present egg-drying facilities can produce more than 200,000,000 pounds of dried eggs an nually, which would require over 20,000,000 cases of eggs). (2) Inaugurate purchase of U. S. wholesale grades of fresh shell eggs . for school lunch, relief and other im mediate distribution purposes, and for storage for subsequent distribu tion. (3) Make purchases of shell treated export grades of fresh eggs later in spring production season for storage, until shipment during the fall months. (4) Continue, for the time being, limited purchases of export grades of eggs for immediate use. The average U. S. farm price of eggs for February was about 17c and 85 per cent of parity will be nearly 21c per dozen for that month. The March farm price was about 16c per dozen and 85 per cent of parity will be a little over 19c. The April U. IS. Farm price was nearly 20c and 85 per cent of parity will also be a little over 19c. “Therefore,” says Mr. Overman, “we are assured of better egg prices in February and March this year than were received last year. May we suggest that the farm people cut out the loafers but do not sell off the layers. We believe that local egg prices will be considerably better than they were last spring. Be sure to produce clean, quality eggs, gather them in wire baskets and store in a cool place on the farm while they are being held. The quality of eggs must be reasonably good for the Government to buy them.” Definite “Where shall we meet?” “Anywhere you like.” “At what time?” “Whenever it suits you.” “Very well —but be punctual.” CARSTAIRS White Seal 86.8 Proof. 72% grain neutral spirits Carstairs Bros. Distilling Co., Inc. Baltimore, Md. Funeral Held Sunday For Mrs. H. S. Young Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon at Ziegler’s Funeral Home for Mrs. Julia Ann Carthina Young, > the ceremony being performed by ( the Rev. E. L. Well*. Mm. Young, widow of the late Harry S. Young, died Thursday in the General Hos- J pital in Norfolk, Va. She was 75 years old and had been an invalid for over two years. She was a native of Bayview in Beaufort County, but for over 50 years lived on the Al . bania Farm. For many years Mrs. Young was a > familiar attendant at every funeral , held in Edenton, holding to this cus , tom until her health failed. i Surviving are three daughters, • Mrs. Jesse Adams and Mrs. Upshur i Wilson, of Norfolk, Va., and Mrs. W. W. Upton, of Edenton; and three , sons, Horace Young, of Norfolk, Va., , Harry Young, of Portsmouth, Va., I and James Young, of Edenton. ! Pallbearers were: L. S. Nixon, I Jesse Adams, Upshur Wilson, Wal lace Griffin, Harry and Julian Upton. * CENTER HITJ, , » • Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Boyce ac companied Mrs. J. Frank Miller, Jr., . to Wilmington Sunday to see her husband, First Sergeant J. Frank Miller, Jr., who has been transferred ; to San Francisco. While her hus band is away Mrs. Miller will be with , her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. O. I Furry. i The Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Stephen , son and Mr. Stephenson’s father, ■ went to Aul'ander Monday to visit , Mrs. Stephenson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sumner. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ellis and Miss Thelma Ellis, of Norfolk, Va., dined with Mr. and Mis. T. E. Chappell Sunday. Miss Garnette Jernigan spent the week-end with friends in Newport News, Va. Mrs. J. S. Turner and daughter, I Peggy, Mrs. J. P. Byrum and Mrs. Alma By rum visited Mrs. Richard I Copeland, in Edenton, Friday. Mrs. Duck Henigar, of Ryland, is i visiting Mr. and Mrs. Silas White. Mrs. Novella Bunch, of Sunbury, . is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Theo dore Boyce. Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Furry had as j their guests on Sunday Mr. and ’ Mrs. R. W. Leary, of Rocky Hock, I and Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Boyce. O. J. Parker, of Norfolk, Va., spent Sunday with his wife who is at the bedside of her father, Elbert Bunch. . Mrs. Edward. Byrum and daughter, Doris Jean, are spending the week , with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Byrum, of near Cannons Ferry, j Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Jones, of ’! Norfolk, Va., spent Sunday with , Mrs. Ida Reed. ' Mrs. J. S. Turner and daughter, j Peggy, visited Mrs. Edward Byrum , and. Mrs. J. T. Byrum, of near Can \ nons Ferry, Thursday evening. . Miss Lucy Myers White, a nurse I in King’s Daughters Hospital, Ports mouth, Va., spent the week-end with ■ her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. , White. Mrs. Richard Copeland and son, Harold, of Edenton, spent Thursday ’ with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. ’ Byrum. j Mrs. Willie Byrum and daughter, t Shirley, spent Friday with Mrs. Her , cules Byrum. IMPmgm'jgm l •s Circulates Warm Air Through I Your House like A FURNACE! Only Coleman Heaters have the new "Pur -9 nace-Type" Unit inside the heater which circulates the warm air in toot boose three T to five times an hourl Gives you warn I in floors, warm walls, warm corners -forced K as warm air withoutmoving parts oreleetricityl 7*l W* Carry a Complete Line of Coleman oil HEATERS /T' rluced aiJcw ai ¥ Floars Electric & Plumbing Co. Edenton, N. C. ~ urn wmmummmmmmmmammmmmrnmumummmmmuaimammmmmmammmummummaaumuuammmmmmmmmammammmmmmmamgmiAaaa¥ammaamWtoi^mmmmmmamammm^auammt^mmmmmmm^m THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1942 Mrs. Silas White visited her sister, Mrs. Charlie Chappell, Sunday. .Mm. J. Frank Miller, Jr., visited Mrs. J. S. Turner Monday. Mr. and Mm. Roland Winslow and 1 daughter, Ruth, of Elizabeth City, spent Thursday with her mother, ' Mrs. J. M. Turner. William Belch, of Newport News, 1 Va., spent the week-end with his . parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Belch. ’ Mrs. Ernest Privott visited Mrs. , Wilbur Privott Monday afternoon. Mrs. Oliver Jordan, Mrs. J. S. Turner and daughter, Peggy, visited Mrs. J. P. Byrum and 1 , Mrs. Alma By rum Saturday evening Mrs. T. E. Jernigan visited Mrs. Nearest Jordan Monday. Mrs. O. J. Parker visited Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Furry Saturday afternoon. Mrs. J. I. Boyce visited Mrs. N. Bunch Thursday evening. Mbs. Alexander Boyce and daugh ter, Mrs. J. S. Turner and Mrs. G. A. Hollowell visited Mrs. W. S. White Monday evening. C L A SSIFIED AND LEGALS FOR RENT—THE MISS LILLIE Bond House on Broad, Street. Will rent as a whole or apartments.; See Claude E. Small. febl9,26pd. WANTED—BALED PEANUT HAY and Corn in the shuck or shelled. T. Cam Byrum, Edenton, N. C. febl2tfc PAINT AND ROOF COATING SALESMEN Can place several men on substantial commission ba sis. Season just starting; earning opportunities unlimited. Write: The Electric Paint and Varnish Com pany, Cleveland, Ohio. feb.12,19,26pd. HEAVY SHOES AND LEATHER Coats should be kept well-greased to insure best service. Ward’s Shoe Shop, Edenton, has a splendid grease for leather; also rawhide boot laces. PAPERSHELL PECAN TREES afford early fruit. Lifelong shade. Information free. Watson’s Pecan- Wood Nurseries, Orangeburg, S. C. feb.5,12,19pd. KEYS MADE, SAFE COMBINA tions changed, guns repaired, ana any work of a locksmith done in first class order. See Geo. Leary, Queen St., Edenton, N. C. t.f. LONELY?—RESOLVE NOT TO BE lonely another Christmas. Join The Happiness Club, P. O. Box 863, Nashville, Tenn. jan.29,feb.5,12,19pd. BABY CHICKS—WEEKLY BAR red Plymouth Rocks, $7.95 per 100, postpaid. Don’t delay, order now. Shipped when wanted. Offer good until Feb. 15, 1942. Address: Seeley’s Market, Norfolk, Va. jan.29,feb.5,12,19pd. MAKELY APARTMENT FOR RENT —On second floor, three rooms, private bath, lots of closet space and garage. Apply to The Chowan Herald. jan.29tfc ~NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of a deed of trust executed to the undersigned W. D. Pruden, Trustee, by S. D. Mc- Rae and wife, Lillie O. Mcßae, tjiated September 1, 1936, and recorded in Book 45, page 271, in the Public ] Registry of Chowan County, N. C., l the undersigned trustee will on March i 14, 1942, at 12:00 o’clock noon, at 1 the Chowan County Court House i door in Edenton, N. C., offer for sale 1 for cash at public biddings the fol- 1 lowing real estate in the Town of < Edenton, Chowan County, N. C., to- i wit: 1 Two lots on East Albemarle Street, 1 being the same conveyed to S. D. Me- 1 Rae by S. P. Drew and wife by deed dated October 12, 1920, and regis- • tered in Book O, page 259, and by J. G. Morris et als by deed dated April 26, 1919, and registered in Book N, page 537, both in the Public Registry of Chowan County, to which ( deeds reference is made for more particular description and chaip of title, and one lot on Oakum Street conveyed by V. D. Jones and others to S. D. Mcßae by deed dated No vember 30, 1918, registered in Hook N, page 392, in the Public Registry of Chowan County, to which deed re ference is made for more particular j description and chain of title, and being the same lots described in the deed of trust aforementioned. This 12th day of February, 1942. W. D. PRUDEN, Trustee. feb.19,26,mar.6,12 —WDP. j FOR SALE ‘ After February 19, 1942, one bull 1 dog entered at my hospital as be- j longing to Mrs. Lillian Amick, of Windsor, N. C., will be sold for j charges. Dr. L. A. Deese, Edenton, N. C. jan.29,feb.5,12,19—pd. North Carolina In The Chowan County Superior Court < IN RE THE ESTATE OF ] W. L. COPELAND 1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS 1 The undersigned, having qualified < as administrator of the estate of W. [ L. Copeland, deceased, all' persons having claims against the decedent are hereby notified to present the same to the undersigned administra tor on or before the 16th day of Jan uary, 1943, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. This the 15th day of January, 1942. J. CLARENCE LEARY, Administrator of W. L. Copeland, Deceased. jan.15,22,29,feb.5,12,19 —J CL. North Carolina, In The Chowan County. Superior Court. Before the Clerk. Clarence Bembry, Plaintiff Vs. Annie Martin and Husband, John Martin; Ella White and Husband, William White; Henry Hathaway (Unmarried,); Alfred Hathaway and Wife, Della Hathaway, De fendants. NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SUM MONS BY PUBLICATION The above-named defendants will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Chowan County, North Carolina, for the sale in lieu of partition of the real estate of W. D. Blair, deceased, said real estate being described as follows: Bounded on.the North by the lane leading from the Montpelier Home; J East by the Main Road; South by the lands of R. C. Halsey & Company, and West by the line beginning at the Eastern edge of the swamp in Hal sey’s line, containing 35 acres more or less. Said deed recorded in Book I, No. 2, page 406 in the Public Registry of Chowan County. And the defendants are all proper parties thereto, the plaintiff and de fendants being tenants in common; and the said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Chowan County in the Court House in Edenton, N. C., on the 10th day of March, 1942, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action or the plaintiff will ap ply to the Court for the relief de manded in said complaint. Witness my hand this 28th day of January, 1942. .E. W. SPIRES, Clerk Superior Court. feb.5,12,19,26—JWiG. North Carolina In The Chowan County Superior Court John Lowe, Plaintiff Vs. Aggie Holley, Defendant NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ES TATE UNDER EXECUTION Under and by virtue of an execu tion directed to the undersigned Sheriff from the Superior Court of Chowan County, in the above entitled matter, I will on the 2nd day of March, 1942, at twelve o’clock noon, at the Court House Door of Chowan County in Edenton, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, to satisfy said execution, all right, title, and interest which the defendant now has or at any time at or after the docketing of the judg ment in said action had in and to the following described real estate, lying and being in the Town of Edenton, Chowan County, North Carolina, and more particularly defined and de scribed as follows, viz.: A house and lot on the south side of Carteret Street, beginning at a point on Carteret Street 391 feet westerwardly from Oakum Street, thence westwardly along said Carter et Street 60 feet, thence southwardly parallel with Oakum Street 165 feet, f WITH THE j THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNINQ CAMELS CONTAINS Tg^lSjp^^fe 28* LESS NICOTINE /* _?*v(c 7^B old-style floaties. Goodie i j rswAN FLOATING soap 1 1 'v v * Two convenient tins—Large and Regular by>\ Ho U »k« P W ) \^I w tnciM 'tdrCW* * Geor E ie says the only thing harder than my head is Swhn JSfjftvWfJofi! Soap. He just talks like that because Swan is harder than old-time floaties. • What fun I have now, doing dishes, what with SWAN laugh-laugh-laughing at hard water! Nothing stops '%/'# JfJ SWAN from kicking up won- JKM-qg derful suds. 'vS'Jyßy j ORAOE ALLEN • GEORGE BURNS • PAUL WHITEMAN LBVCO IIOTHIM COMPANY. CAMOAIDOt. MASS. . \p -V '• : ?■" . I T I WMBHH : thence eastwardly parallel with Car teret Street 60 feet, thence north p wardly parallel with Oakum Street ■ 166 feet to the place of beginning, ; and being property conveyed to Ne p miah Holley by J. N. Pruden, Sub. i Trustee, and by deed conveyed to r Aggie Holley 11th April', 1986, Re i cord of Deeds 2, page 202. , Another lot beginning at southeast 1 corner Oakum and Cemetery Streets, i thence running east 66 feet with • Cemetery Street, thence 161% feet ■ southward parallel with Oakum Street to a point one-half way be ’ tween Cemetery and Hicks Streets, thence wast 66 feet parallel with Cemetery Street to Oakum Street, . thence North 161% feet with Oakum . Street to the beginning, conveyed by Deed Book 2, page 435, Chowan County Registry. : This the 22nd. day of January, 1942. J. A. BUNCH, Sheriff of Chowan County. jan.29,feb.5,12,19—C8H. ANEXPECTORAHT j FOR COUGHS ’ A “HONEY” FOR RESULTS Compounded from rare Canadian . Pine Balsam, Menthol, Glycerine, i Irish Moss and other splendid ingre , dients. Buckley’s CANADIOL Mix ; ture is different more effective— ' faster in action. 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