Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / May 4, 1950, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TEN 4-H Church Sunday Wil Bejbserved In Many Churches 4-H Boys and Girls Will Take Part May 14 North Carcdina’s more than 123,000 4-H Cluib members will use the theme "For a Better Rural Community” in thedr annual observance of 4-<H Church Sunday on May 14, according to L. R. Harrill, 4-H leader for the State Col lege Extension Service. A suggested program outline pre pared by the Rev. Garland Hendrix, pastor of Olive ChapeQ Baptist Church of Wake County, will be used by many of the clubs. This includes special music, Scripture reading and prayer by 4-H members, and a talk by the pastor or four five-minute talks by club members on the factors which, maket a better community. In many churches, 4-H boys and girls will assist with the program by serving as ushers or song leaders, dec orating the auditorium with flowers, reciting poems, taking up the offer ing or welcoming members of the con- gregation. The club members will dress in uniform and sit in a body at many of the services. Harrill said 4-H Church Sunday is observed throughout the nation to em phasize the meaning of Christianity in rural life. The program is designed, he said, to re-emphasize the import ance of spiritual growth and develop ment in the life of the individual, the community, the tftate, and the world, and to keep alive the interest of rural youth in the program of the church. “In the observance of 4-iH Church Sunday,” he asserted, “ it is not our purpose to use the church as a means for promoting interest in 4-iH Club work, but rather to help every 4-H Club boys and girls to seek out truths of life, to cooperate in the program of the church, and to help broaden the influence of the Christian church in the community.” BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. gaer, 11, announce the birth of a daughter, Priscilla, bom Wednesday morning of last week in a Norfolk hospital. *253 *7 ĵk Space Maker REFRIGERATOR \ . | 'if MOM tfbait 8 eu ft of rotrlgoratod foodetorago tpaee. if MORE than 14 sq ft of tholf area, j : ft MOM feed forage space la leu floor tpaem. ftYIS fMe big 8-ev-ft O-f tolk for lom thorn many 7<o4t ? 'it. models Why pay mere far fees? only $2.85 per week j SUIT TODAY QUINN FURNITURE COMPANY Edenton, N. C. Authorized Dealtf GENERAL (j§|) ELEOTRIO REFRIGERATORS . S 3 WORLD WAR H DIVISIONS I PLANNING REUNIONS THIS YEAR 1 War 11, reunions are being pj»njed BtStStnr. *•*•••. wto, *»**»* assassss jwasswgtfaft liat of reunions scheduled for tha JjtNsP* ° *■“* "*1 summer and fall of 1960. Former uth infutrr. Ottm OeMm (so 4»u NACuT pfo. Bo?llTl, Washing ton, D. C. AU such inquiries w3l C Y**°E?toib& be forwarded to the man a own u. w . alumni for metion. gj BKSf - I Divisional minions thus far infantry, N«w OrU«n«, Assam] scheduled are! *4-2*. v .. .■ 87th Infantry. N«w York. Iqtntir lit Armored, Cleveland. September 14. lt-17. _ „ . . , let Cavalry, New York. September 1-4. 88th Infutry, Cincinnati. Augoet (no let Infantry, New York, Aosnet 26-21 data ejected). _ „ - _ 2d Armored, New York, July 88-80. »oth Infantry. Tort Wortt, Navmher 3-8. afissaarWir«s&. f 22-24. Arm °” d * W * tortoW,, ' N ‘ Y - JUM f^Tni^.^t^SShSTio. 6th Armored, St. Louie, September 1-4. Ml»t Airborne, Waehlngton, September *l‘o2d Infantry, *. LouU. June (no date l October 1# Hkctsd)e __ _ __ I U< BUi Armored. Chicago. June (no data lMd Infantry. New York. November j | “sthUnfantry. Cincinnati. November 18r20. 104th Infantry, Pittabara’h. September > 9th Infantry, 'Chicago, July IS-16. 1-4. -—J un , muu , nth Armorei Louiivillt. Aucust 5-6. OTHER UNITS MEETING ! ArmoJSJ: Columbue. Ohio. Septem- JtK 24th Infantry. Chicago. Augnat 11-18. eelectad). I 26th Infantry, Waehlngton, July 7-9. Bth Amu, Waehlngton. June 29-JJy 1. 26th Infantry. Woreeeter, Hus., July let Special Service Force. Helena, Mont. 22-25. Angnet 11-18. ONE MINUTE SPORTS QUIZ • 1. Who won the Atlanta golf tourney recently? 2. Do quail and babwhite mean the same in Southern hunting regions ? 3. How long has it been since the last genuine wolf was seen in the eastern states? 4. Is the pheasant of the western plains faster than the wild turkey? 5. What Major League team do the most of the experts pick for first place in the American League? THE ANSWERS 1. Jim Demaret. 2. Yes. 3. Twenty years. 4. No, the pheasant is actually slow, while the wild turkey is very fast. 5. The Boston Red Sox. It is always good to know, even only in passing, charming human be ings; it refreshes one like flowers and woods and clear brooks. —George Eliot. MODEL ■ NB-8F H THE CHOW>“ 1J» gMnWWI. W. 6 THPBSDAT. 11AY 4.1W0 FOR SALE I “THE KING OF SWINE” Original Strain 1 Breeder 35 Years § Selby R. Minton I MERRY HILL, N. C. J BBIOBT NEW TOUCB TOM MQ SOLA MMMUTW 6m MMtttog mw tent IW» rfcM—ft* shaming iwMfoqpaa hilWiff 1 " 11 '"' 11' /| <hH 555- • -«*■ ■ ii'iWiwlWff nt***W ---. Hfta/jr 15ft* secret of the "UNRUFFLED"RIDE ? SOME car makers say springs make the ride—and so we give every Buick four of the soft, gentle coil springs practically all cars use on front wheels only. Some say the drive is important— how power is transmitted to the rear wheels. We agree—and use a torque-tube drive, that takes up all the thrust, freeing rear springs of driving pulsation. Some stress tires—so you’ll find low-pressure casings on every Buick, mounted on our own kind of Safety-Ride rims. Some play up shock absorbers —we make ours fast, soft and sure in action, to wash out all 14 after* bounce.” ■ rouM-wAY roAsraow* Vtk rv m*4 fro«f mS (I) ** ft* Syfc *o#fc (2) mi •« iwpnir uft *rtW ft" *• jrfSfc m* iMfacmbft, “«■><*»* *"*•» E!j' ;• ••> > ' ■' B _ fi/ne in HENRr J. TAYLOR, ABC Network, every Monday evening. ■ ■ Chas. H. Jenkins Motor Company, Inc. 105 to 109 E. Queen Street Phone 147 Edenton, N.C ’ ‘ • •• ' When better automobiles are butti BUiCK wUi build them ■— Loan Approved To Increase Electric Lines In Chowan $1,070,000 WUI Be Used To Serve 2,012 Homes In Four Counties A $1,070,000 loan which will make possible the construction of 500 miles of new electrical lines serving 2,012 rural homes in Northeastern North Carolina has been approved by the Rural Electrification Administration, Congressman Herbert C. Bonner has disclosed. Mr. Bonner said the REA advised I WANTED I BOWL GUM, rarun AND SWEH GUM VENEER LOGS 10 Inches and Larger In Diameter LARGE AND SMALL QUANTITIES Bring us good quality Veneer Logs and you will get more money than you can get anywhere else. Hervey Foundation, Inc. HARVEY POINT HERTFORD, N. C. Then there are frames—and car weight and engine mountings, which on Buick are a very special kind used nowhere else. They’re all important—yet the plain truth is no one of these things—or two or three—gives a ride you can truly call “unruffled.” We feel it takes all of them springs, tires, shock absorbers, drive, engine mountings—care fully and precisely brought into balance with each other. You can see why we think so in any Buick—SPECIAL, SUPBR or Roadmaster. You can feel it on cobblestones Only Bulek baa Dynoflow- and with It geest metm-eeerentkm fktbaiiwchtimimdipomrhemumd*** (NbwMesif»»iSu««»wfcfc.) «mr.MnaW STYUNO, «Mb MULTI. OUAMb fonfroaf, topar-ftKWB* MM*” hi#. WWO-ANOU VltmiUTY, 4>w«p rood vtar bof hrwarj and bade . nAmC-HAHOY mZt, hm am ot h»g* hr im>t parting mmd gorogjag, dfrt fcmniigfdtm • BCTMA-WMO MATS traM baftMW *• iifat • ton MUCK Ues,tnm mttt» primehe StMy-lUnkm, hw prmmm Qm, Me odjjae Sepe mh • MM amav or mooes** «•* v «*. ■" romKermQMAmVMui'jff' Buick fioodmostw Phone TOUT BUICK dealer ter a demonstration -Bight Newt Y •- gg-i.-w , L - - - ' him that the money would be loaned ) to the Roanoke Electric Membership j Corporation with headquarters in Rich Square. The counties primarily included in the electrification project are Hert ford, Gates, Chowan and Perquimans. , The loan was approved for the pur- „| If You Need Money To Finance or Re-Finance Your Farm atLow Interest Rates... SEE ' T. W. JONES Edenton, North Carolina Representative of One of the Nation’s Largest Insurance Companies TAKE UP TO 20 YEARS TO REPAY LOANS ■■■■( poee of furthering system Improve monte and for the construction, of the new lines, it Was explained. * (Household Doctor Jim—My wife’s been nursing a grouch all this week. Joe—Been laid up, have you? and car tracks, washboardy gravel and weather-pocked macadam, country lane and city street. You even feel it on boulevards, which grow still smoother when you travel them in a Buick—especially when it has Dynaflow Drive? So we would like you to try a ride that is truly “unruffled.” Free of harshness—undisturbed by jounce and jitter—level —steady-going— smooth. Just ask any Buick dealer for a chance to try out any Buick. You’ll find it “the ride of a life time”—and the buy of a lifetime too! * Dynaflow Drivt it standard on RoADM AST**, op- Uonal at tmtra taut on Sum and Sracuu. modtlt.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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May 4, 1950, edition 1
10
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