PAGE EIGHT SOCIETY NEWS Charles at Campbell College, spent the week-end with. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haste. Mrs. J. L. I’ettus is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W 0. Buys, in Lenoir, N. C. ‘ V Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Trick have re turned to their home in l'ort Huron, Michigan, after spending a few days with Mrs. Tuck's parents, Mr, and Mrs, J. F. Crummey. . Vernon Farrow, USN, stationed in Norfolk, so,m tile week-end; vistiiiip his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Har row. Mr. and Mrs. John D, Langston ; Jr., and two daughters of Elizabeth City were Sunday visitors of Mr. and 1 Mrs. John F. White, George C. Ward, MM 1 c. and a j shipmate, E. R. Rarnish, spent the week-end with Mr. Ward’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Julian E, Ward. Their ship, USS Valley Forge, has been at Norfolk Navy Yard for the past sev era! days. CIRCLE WILL MEET MONDAY j The Ruby Daniels Circle of the Raptist Church will meet Monday af ternoon at 3 o’clock with Mrs. C. T. Doughtie. DIME SOCIETY WILL MEET The Dime Society of the Baptist Church will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock with Mrs. W. M. Wilkins. All members are urged to attend. WHUitCm Breathe \ It your nose some times fills up with stuffy transient con gestion-put a few drops of Va-tro-nol In each nostril. It quickly reduces con gestion and makes breathing easier in a hurry . . . gives grand relief from sniffly. sneezy, stuffy distress of head colds. Follow directions in the package. VICKS VA-TRO-NOL Keepsake; DIAMOND HI NO ' TWAO« MAJIK ■y _ . '.moo For or <^j^vuhd(Mf . • On any gift occasion, a Gen uine Registered Keepsake Diamond Ripg is the traditional way to say, "I love you." Only one Diamond in hundreds has the lovely color, exquisite cut and clarity to meet the high standards maintained through six decades by Keepsake, the most famous name in diamonds. AN t.rujt iNutfrotes! OvOsktbto to white os well at normal ooMkj y Prior* include Federal tax V; *- V Guaranteed by v vGood Housekeepingl CAMPEN’S JEWELERS ENTERS HOSPITAL Mrs. I!. R. Hare entered Lake View Hospital, Suffolk, Monday, where she , will undergo an operation. I -V IN JOHNS HOPKINS Dr. and Mrs. W. I. Hart left Mon- May for Baltimore, Md., where Mrs. Hart entered Johns Hopkins Hospital. MASONS MEET TONIGHT Unanimity Lodge, No. 7, A. F. & A. M., will meet tonight (Thursday) at 8 o’clock in the Court House. The j second degree will be conferred upon a candidate and W. 0. Elliott, master! of the lodge, urges a good attendenee.:j HIRTII AN NOFNCEMENT Horn to Mr. and Mrs. W. D. O’Neil, !at Atlanta, Ca, a daughter, Nancy i Jeanne, on Tuesday, January 14, Mrs. O’Neil is the former Miss Jean Smith, daughter of Mrs. Harry Smith and the late Mr. Smith. METHODIST SERVICES I Preaching services Will be held in j the Methodist Church Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock, when the pastor, the Rev. H. F. Surratt, will preach on the theme “Enlarge Thy Tent, Strengthen the Cords.” Church School will he held at 9:45 Sunday morning and the Youth Fellowship meeting at 6:30 Sunday evening. [High School News] Last Friday, January 17, several balls in various athletic sports were given away in a chapel program. Various groups of young boys and girls who had been the most attentive at the recreational programs were presented with basketballs, footballs,, baseballs and bats. The first young athlete to receive! a ball was John Dobson, who is , the ! leader of a group of young football- j ers of the fifth grade. The second gift was a practically i new basketball to a group of young I basketballers: Murel Layton, Paul-1 ette Lane, Emmett and Malcolm Eas on, Gary Martin, Donald Batton and ; Charlie Overman. The third present was a new base ball to Roy Harrell, Wallace Goodwin, Haywood Rogerson, Jack Habit, Fred ! Keeter and Maurice Hassell. The fourth present was a new bask- , etball that went to a group of sixth ‘ grade girls who have been regulars at the play program: Sharon Lupton, f Ruth Rae Elliott, Carolyn White, Joan Cobb, Harriett Conger. Mary Etta . Perry and Sarah Wood. The fifth present was a football that went to Frank Hughes, Tom Wright, Mickey Wright. Haywood Rogerson and others of this eighth grade team. The last present was a new slug ger bat, a hard to get item, to A] Habit for his perfect attendance rec ord to practice for the sports foot ball, basketball and baseball. The purpose of the program was I to present balls to these groups that ! are taking part in these various * sports, with the suggestion that they j. use the balls together, letting the I members of each group play with them. Plan Locker Space Before Filling It A lot of paper work is going to be needed before North Carolina’s freez er locker plants will be able to handle all the food patrons want to store in them. Hr. D. E. Brady of the N. C. Agri- ! cultural Experiment Station, in mak- ] ing this prediction, points out that many patrons do not even know the amount and kind of cuts they can get from a carcass of beef or pork. Some few have the mistaken idea that if they deliver a 400-pound beef car cass to the locker plant they ought' to get about the same number of pounds of steaks and roasts. However, he explains, a 218-pound side of beef will have only about 50 pounds of steak, 80 pounds of roast, 60 pounds of stewing, grinding and boiling beef, with the remaining 28 pounds lost due to trimming, bones and shrinkage. Likewise, a 160-pound pork car- s SHEAFFER AND PARKER PENS CAMPEN’S |j CONSTIPATION Risky in BAD COLDS OaMnni] imrilffWited food b®COTMI «wii interfering with their treatment, erht »fir« this chance when you can take CatotabeT Calotabe thoroughly wet Dleasantly act on every foot of Sniir intestine®, sweeping out toxin* tood? and virus laden mucus, enabling you to mege Sjeeted. 10c and 36c at ah druggists. U. CALOTABS THE CHOWAN HERALD, ED EXTON. N C.. THURSDAY JANUARY 23, 1947. j Your Contributions Restored Her Health W Jj | jP ;i 1 ifWI < vv x---**''**&*«*** pp %.5 ' ' ■ - v ~ "-M r V . /*'*£'': A m w % «>. - ’ , N »* 71M' si 0 ./ & M \ * • "v .;A : : : C 4 M* M : i s' <■■■& Your contributions of dollars and dimes last year made it pos sible for this young lady to recover from an attack of the dread in fantile paralysis. She and her doll (at left) were admitted to Ihe State Orthopedic Hospital at -Gastonia several months ago. She is Mimi Eve Elliott, daughter of John W. Elliott, Route 2, Shelby. You can help many other such youngsters regain their health by contributing to the annual March of Dimes campaign which is now under way and continues through the month. cass will yield about 80 pounds of curing meat, 30 pounds of chops and sausage and 25 poqnds of rendered lard. The rest will be neck bones, spareribs, head, feet, waste and trim mings. | Once the locker patron realizes ! this fact, he should then figure out j how many pounds of meat he will need for his family, Dr. Brady says. A family of five may need, for ex ample, 500 pounds of pork, 375 pounds of beef, 50 fryers and 1 00 pints of fruits and vegetables. To put this 1,125 pounds of food through the locker would call for careful bud geting, since the average six cubic 1 foot locker box will not hold more than about 150 pounds at one time, and could not, under any circum stances, take care of all this food. , Therefore, slaughtering would have to be properly distributed through out the year so as to turn over the i /. . \ AS APPEARING IN 3' JANUARY CHARM [ \ j \ '(P j K’ V wKWIf-: /\v Q \J n Top of capricious colors mingled in print . . . with a wide navy skirt. “Talon” zipper. , Sizes 9to 15 516.95 The Betty Shoppe EDENTON, N. C. k ' / contents of each locker at least three or four times a year. Under such conditions, two boxes would suffice. Burial Association Will j Meet On February 3rd W. M. Wilkins, sqcretary-treasurer ,of the Albemarle Mutual Burial As sociation, announced this week that the annual meeting will be held Mon day, February 3, at 1 o’clock at Quinn’s Furniture Store. Mr. Wilkins has mailed to members of the association a statement of the financial affairs for the year ending December 31, 1946, which reflects j a healthy condition of the association, j ______ j Sites have been selected for 63 of the 89 new hospitals that Veterans Administration is authorized to build in the world’s largest hospital con-> struction program. Building And Loan Association Meets Tuesday, January 28 Rate of Interest Earned Slightly Higher Than Last Year Every member of the Edenton Building & Loan Association has been notified that the annual meet ing of the stockholders will be held in the Court House at 8 o’clock Tuesday night, January 28. Every stockholder is requested to attend the meeting, but for those who can not attend, proxies have been provid ed to be properly exeeuttd and given to a stockholder who will be present so that enough stock is represented at the meeting to provide a quorum. According to Secretary R. E. Leary’s report,, the rate of interest earned during the year is .066806, which is slightly abqve last year, when the rate was .062267. Assetß of the association are $313,525.19. National Meeting To Be In Raleigh The Ninth Annual Veterinary Con ference will be held at State College in Raleigh, January 28-31, 1947. Dr. C. I). Grinnells, chairman of the program committee for the con ference and veterinarian with the N. C. Agricultural Experiment Sta tion, in making this announcement, reveals that a portion of the program has also been drawn ud. Heading the list of lecturers in vited to address the group will be Dr. B. T. Simms, chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the U. S. I). A. and formerly connected with N. C. State College. In addition to Dr. Simms, other speakers will include Dr. Frank Breed of Lincoln, Nebraska, whom Dr. Grinnells describes as a leading Midwestern authority on swine dis eases. Dr. A. H. Groth, head of the Regional Animal Disease Laboratory at Auburn, Alabama, will also speak to the group, as will Dr. R. E. Lubby- r —TM. ' Greeting Cards For All Occasions CAMPEN’S JEWELERS r— \ * / l on you in Berkeley JunUr/ lacy print dress, topped with shoulder bouquet against surplcn neckline. A soft rayon with black print onfink, Aqua, or Gold grounds. Sizes 9t015 516.95 The Betty Shoppe EDENTON. N. C. S■, ■ / huesen of the Purina Laboratories in St. Louis, Mo. Further details of the program will he announced later, Dr. Grinnells says. “plant™" BELL’S TOBACCO SEED i -FOR BETTER YIELDS -FOR BETTER QUALITY FOR— BETTER RETURNS • BRING US MAIL US or PHONE US YOUR ORDER • Byrum HARDWARE CO. EDENTON, N. C

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