Doris Jean Lewis Weds G. A. Keeter Wedding Performed In Methodist Church jpL 13 marriage of Miss Doris Jean Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Robert Lewis, to George Albert Keet er, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George Albert Keeter, took place Sunday af ternoon, June 13, at 4 o’clock at the Edenton Methodist Church. The dou ble ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. E. B. Edwards, pastor of the church, in a setting of summer flow ers and cathedral candles. A program of wedding music was rendered by Mrs. Paul Holoman throughout the ceremony. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a formal gown of slip per satin with a bodice of nylon lace with portrait neckline edged with dainty lace and pearls. Long sleeves tapered into wedding peaks over the hands and bouffant skirt extended in to a full train. Her finger tip veil of illusion fell from a shepherdess cap of satin and tiny pearls. She carried a prayer book topped with a white orchid with a purple throat, showered with white satin streamers tied in love knots. Miss Clara Jean Lassiter, as maid of honor, wore a waltz length gown of lavendar net over taffeta and matching headband. Miss Betty Smith, Miss Estelle Stal lings, Mrs. Ruby Vopelak and Mrs Rose Parilla were bridesmaids. They wore waltz length gowns of shades of pink and blue net over taffeta. They carried bouquets of net centered with a lighted candle with white streamers tied in love knots. The bridegroom had Billy Moore as best man. Ushers were Billy Gray Forehand, Lynn Perry, Lloyd Goodwin and Ter ry Bennett. The bride’s mother wore a street length dress of navy and white ac cessories. Her corsage was red car nations. The bridegroom’s mother wore a street length dress of navy with white accessories and her corsage was white carnations. Following the ceremony, a recep tion was held at the home of the bride for immediate friends and rela tives. I f bride wore a fig u\ JS nylon style, with white accessories and the orchid lifted from her prayer book. Upon their return from a wedding trip to High Point, they will make their home in Edenton. WMU CIRCLE MEETINGS Various Circles of the Baptist WMU will meet at the following times and places: Sophie Lanneau Monday afternoon, June 28, at 4 o’clock with Mrs. Bran ning Perry. R. T. Bryan, Monday afternoon, June 28, at 4 o’clock with Mrs. W. J. Berryman. Ruby Daniels, Monday afternoon, June 28, at 4 o’clock with Mrs. E. W.| I PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR A NEW f 6 - ROW HIGH CLEARANCE HORSE - DRAWN 1 DUSTER POWERED BY A 2 H.P. CONTINENTAL ENGINE f e s We also have John Blue tractor mounted Dusters and Fertilizer 1 11 Side Dressers for immediate delivery. c COMPLETE LINE OF REPAIR PARTS AND SERVICE siofcbs Implement Co., Inc. | * ' Q ujr q Hobbs, Mgr. "Your John Deere Dealer” Edenton | Turnover In Debt Exceeds Amount Outstanding I WHAT HAPPINBD TO | CONSUMER INSTALLMENT CREDIT IN 1993 (In billions of dollar/) *267 1/ hT I sorrowed repaid fjk lWjfs3 1953 F 1 *lB7 5= SEE I 121.8 1 OWED END I OWED END OP 1952 gg, 1953 j Prepared by NAM Research Department i Board Dot During 1953 the outstanding amount of consumer installment debt —the type of loans people use to buy cars and furniture—increased from 18.7 billion dollars to 21.8 billion dollars. However, it is prob ably even more significant that the turnover during the year con siderably exceeded the outstanding balance at either the beginning or the end of the year. ( The consumer installment credit extended on purchases made dur- j ing 1953 totaled 29.8 billion dollars. But during the same period the borrowers paid back 26.7 billion dollars through their regular install ments. These repayments were applied in part against the 18.7 bil- ’ lion dollars outstanding at the beginning of the year, and in part against the 29.8 billion dollars contracted during the year. The net ] effect was to increase met unpaid balance T>y 3.1 billion dollars. , Some concern has been felt in certain quarters regarding the vol- i ume of installment credit and the increase in that volume during 1953. However, those who look only at the statistics on the amount of such credit outstanding miss one of the most important aspects , of the problem—namely, the turnover in installment debt. ’ Installment debt is not a constant, or gradually increasing, burden on the same group of consumers for the same original purchases. It i is a continuously revolving debt, in which the annual amount of new loans, as well as the annual amount of repayments, is greater than | the unpaid balance at any given moment. The increase during 1953 was the effect of the small differential between a large volume of new borrowing and a large volume of repayment. Bond. Olea Lea Monday night, June 28, at 7:30 o’clock at the church. H. H. McMillan, Monday night, June 28 at 8 o’clock with Mrs. Ernest Lane. Mary Powell, Monday night, June 28, at 8 o’clock with Mrs. Wesley Chesson. IF YOU SMOKE you need I OLAG \\J toothpaste f Exclusive formula : contains soothing, sani \ v tizing oils : eases throat : mouth feels so ' clean : teeth look cleaner : dentists say rifle, wonderful, best I’ve ever used, you can’t beat it.” AT DRUG STORES EVERYWHERE OLAG HITS THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON. N. ft, THURSDAY, JUNE 24, lftM. Anne Bagby, Tuesday night, June 29 ; at 8 o’clock with Mrs. Bert Willis. Vivian Nowell Tuesday night, June 29 at 8 o’clock with Mrs. Sybil Jones. Originality is the one thing which ■ unoriginal minds cannot feel the use of. —J. S. Mill. Minister Os Year REV. EDGAR O. PEELER A man who helped make his way through college by raising chickens and milking cows has been named as “North Carolina’s Rural Minister of the Year.” Rev. Edgar O. Peeler, pas tor of five rural churches in the West Forsyth Charge, Pfafftown, received this recognition from The Progressive Farmer and the Town arid Country School, Emory University, Georgia. Oak Grove Plays Two Games Over Week-end Murry Nixon, manager of the Oak Grove baseball team, announces that his team will play two games over the week-end, one Saturday night and the other Sunday afternoon. Saturday night at 8 o’clock on Hicks Field Oak Grove will play Hertford, with Edgar Lane slated to get the nod for mound duty. On the Rocky Hock diamond Sun day afternoon at 2 o’clock Oak Grove is scheduled to play Beech Springs. Mark Bunch will start on the mound for Oak Grove. Op Air Market FRANK JONES, Prop. CARROLL W. JONES, Mgr. . . . Open 24 Hours Daily . . . Fresh Vegetables, Cantaloupes, Wa termelons, Tobacco, Cigars, Ciga rettes, Candy, Ice Cream and Soft Drinks. We Specialize In PEACHES / OV j PLYMOUTH | I lowest price I I BEST BUY I remarks: Part-by-part comparison now proves I Plymouth is best buy of the lowest-price field t i • / ° n V '—7 ([ \ &XB3Quth If a£3'..\ ctor *s to / \ dec Oet thii 8-page book at our showroom today I It contains all the buying Informa- B tlon you need I CHOWAN MOTOR CO., Inc. Water and Commerce Sts. Edenton, N. C. Oak Grove Baseball Team Is Grateful To Merchants For Suits Members of the Oak Grove baseball team are sporting brand new uniforms and this week Murry Nixon, manager, expresses his thanks and appreciation to the concerns who made it possible to purchase the baseball suits. Concerns who furnished suits were: Gene Perry’s Texaco Service, Eden ton Tractor & Equipment Company, J. H. Conger (Texaco), Dixie Guano Company of Suffolk, W. E. Smith, Hobbs Implement Company, 8.8. H. Motor Company, Byrum Hardware Company, Edenton Feed & Livestock Company, D. R. Barber & Son, L. C. Baker, Leary Bros. Storage Company, CARD OF THANKS I am taking this means to sincere ly thank my many friends for cards, flowers and gifts sent me during my [ recent stay in Chowan Hospital. This 3 kindness will never be forgotten. \ MRS. MARTHA CRUMMEY c. •4 |« G&W : SEVEN l ' STAR 1 I n |9O Proof! [S l iIE HI A I$o«5 'Wmm l g»w )• so.s> l M PINT f! r bmmmmrnm—mimmmmm—mmmmm w i i i ■ •LENDED WHISKEY, UK* NEUTRAL SPIRITS DISTILLED FROM GRAIN GOODERHAM A WORTS LIMITED, PEORIA, ILLINOIS ■ v The results are ini Plymouth has been declared the winnerl That's on the basis of actual part-by-part comparison with the "other two" low-price cars! K You can read all the results of this revealing comparison in a big, illus trated fact book—just published I It's FREE for the asking now at our show- S room. Get your copy today—look It B over carefully, then go for a demon- B drive in— 9 America's best-buy low-price carl B I