PAGE TWO BEvTIOW rwu WITH THE FARM WOMEN By VIRGINIA M. NANCE, Extension Horn* Economics Editor It’s a natural thing for people to pass on bits of useful information 1 and hints to friend, and that’s just what home demonstration club women in NEW HANOVER County have been doing, says Velma Belle Lowery, home agent. I Mrs. J,. P. McGinnie, a club mem-| ber, expressed it this way, “As fan back as I can remember I’ve beta* sewing. But the simple sewing tricks I’ve learned recent-, ly at club meetings have helped, me make garments more profes-| sional looking. Most of what I learned, I’ve passed on to another Seamstress friend.” . . . 4-H’ers in i RANDOLPH County have really! been baking lots of corn meal muffins, as part of their activity, in the Corn Meal Muffin program. Reports from Ida Maude Black,' assistant home agent, show that at least one adult 4-H leader has worked with 21 girls in making' their muffins. Prizes were offer-, ed by the leader as incentive for: the girls to make a higher quality I product . . . The Leon Thomas family, in JONES County, has a problem which seems to be pre valent in landscaping, says Home ' Agent Faytie Cox. It seems that j when they began to set out shrub-1 bery around their home, the j TIME TO PLANT • BEETS • CABBAGE • COLLARDS • BROCCOLI • TURNIPS • RUTABAGAS • HANOVER KALE • CURLED KALE • LETTUCE • MUSTARD . • • RADISHES -• SQUASH • SNAP BEANS • CUCUMBERS New Shipment FRESH SEEDS Just Arrived! E. L. Pearce * Seedsman Phone 3839 Edenion A COME TO NORFOLK FOR A GOOD * TIME AND A GOOD GAME! I FOREMAN FIELD—NORFOLK, VA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 ■ (Night Game) ■ (West Side—V.P.l.) (East Side— ■ Sponsored by Norfolk Sports Club. All Ti. k is ■ $4.00 add 230 for each mail order. Make ■ Checks or ni<#:ey orders payable to Norfolk Sports Club. Mail Orders Now Being Filled at H 738 Granby Street, Norfolk, V’a. 1 VIRGINIA'S FRIENDLIEST CITY ■ EXTENDS YOU A WARM WELCOME! FIELD DEMONSTRATION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1958 No. 60PTO Goodrich ' Peanut Digger, two-row, power-driven, 36”-42” rows COME! BRING YOUR FRIENDS See the latest peanut digging equipment for pole-stacking method and wind-rowing for combining; also the latest plant ing and cultivating machinery. Get the DIRT out of your pea nuts! Remember last year. t RAIN or SHINE, assemble at 1 P. M., at our experimental Suffolk, Va., highway No. 13 south at city limits. Well be Tlie Ferguson Manufacturing Co~ Inc. * . I " o fra/'' n plants we*e small and set too close together. Now, several years later, the plants are quite large and are marring the looks’ of the home and the shrubbery with their closeness. As a result, the Thomas’s are making plans to re-distribute the plants, using the excess ones around a new ad dition to their home . . . Conserv ing food has kept RICHMOND County women unusually busy this summer, say reports from Frances Temple, home agent. She indicates that gardens are better this year and with the high cost of food, the women have been anxious to conserve what they have. Miss Temple observes that “Richmond County people- will certainly be well fed this winter.” . . . Mrs. Willie McDonald, Cataw ba, Rt. 2, didn’t have to wait for painters to redecorate her home. She decided to do it herself. Home Agent Marjorie Gilbert ex plained that Mrs. McDonald came to her for help in planning her son’s room. To save money, her plans were to do all the painting herself—which she did, and with good results. ►SENATOR SAM ERVIN r « SAYS « Washington The Senate Rac kets Committee under the Chair manship of Senator McClellan has continued hearings in the labor management field since the ad journment of Congress. Hearings To Continue The committee has much work to be done. It is now planned to hold hearings regularly during the coming months. We can accomplish this by al ternating attendance at the hear ings. Under our procedure we re quire at least two Senators pres ent when the committee is in ses sion. Prior to formulating my plans for the period between now and the next session of Congress which convenes on January 7, 1959, I agreed to be available for a considerable part of the time to attend the hearings in Washing ton during November and De- { ABUNDANT LIFE H? W*" -1 ROBERTS AN EAGLE SETS HIS WINGS ! Two liwle girls were gathering roses. One of them ran into the house crying. "Mother," she said, "every rose 1 have gathered has stuck me with its thorns.” The other laughed gaily and said, “Mother, all my thorns have roses!” ! What would you have seen—roses or thorn*? Same people arc sicker than others because of their melancholy out look on life. They see the bad side of life because they practice wrong think ing and wrong believii^. It is the people who resist self-pity, who refuse to feel sorry for themselves, who will not allow themselves to cringe and whimper about life's struggle who know what living reaHy is. They are the ones who can stand up and say, ”1 love God, I have faith in God. I believe God is with me, and if he is with me, nothing or no one can successfully be against me. 1 will succeed, in his name.” i I learn a wonderful lesson from the eagle. When a storm strikes art eagle, he sets his wings in such away that (he winds lift him above the storm by (heir very fury. The set of the wings docs it. And it is the right use of our faith that determines how the storms that come our way will treat us. We will rise above the storm; its very fury will lend us higher and higher toward God—or it will wreck us for time and eternity. Faith makes the difference. ► A young man out of college asked his father, ''Dad,” do you still believe cember. Schedule After my first vacation since coming to the Senate in 1954, I plan to do what I can in the cam paign during the month of Octo ber. That will give me consider able time for my turn on the com mittee in the two remaining months. While I prefer to spend all of the recess in North Caro lina, I do feel that the work of the committee is of such importance that personal preference must be sidelined in favor of the work at hand. Full-Time Job | Senator McClellan and I are the , only Senators assigned to as ; many as three regular committees , and a special committee that func ' tions as regularly as the select 1 committee, the so-called Senate | Rackets Committee. As I have I previously reported, my other, committee assignments are Ju diciary, Armed Services and Gov ernment Operations. The Senate Rackets Committee is a full-time job. I am convinced that it has made a significant contribution. } No Comment V r By JAMES W. DOUTHAT Assistant Vice President, Government Relations Division of the National Association of Manufacturers "NO COMMENT" is a report of incidents on the national scene, and does not necessarily reflect NAM policy or position. Washington—The closeness of the vote by which the Senate killed states rights legislation served to stimulate its advocates to launch immediately an inten sified campaign for favorable ac tion by the next Congress. Because it was brought up so close to the time of adjournment the measure, to protect state laws against federal preemption, never had an opportunity for considera- THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON. NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 11, l»l. there is a God?" ' ”Ycs, son.” "Well if there is a God, where is he?" The father smiled and asked, "Son, where is he not?” God is present everywhere at the same time. He is like the sun when it is shining. Vou may close your eyea but the sun shines right on—whether you look toward it or not. You do not have to go anywhere to find God, for he is here and he is there. I find Him here through my faith You will find him there through your faith. You can find him today. Let me em phasize that faith in God is the greatest single possession you will ever have in , this world. There arc people who think 1 if they had lots of money, they would have everything. In my city there is a very rich woman who was afflicted with an incurable disease. One day her doctor came in and asked her, "Well, how are you today?” She said, "About the same, doctor, and how are you?" He said, "Lady, there is nothing wrong with me that a million dollars won’t cure.” She said, "Doctor, 1 have a million dollars and you can’t cure me.” In this world money is necessary and God has promised to supply our needs—all of them—according to his riches by Christ Jesus. But the most important thing in this world and m eternity is to have faith, faith in God. tion on its merits. It was a victim of a combina tion of filibustering tactics, an adroit political maneuver to post pone the crucial vote until some of the measure’s supporters had to be absent from Washington, and of determined opposition on the part of Senator Johnson of Texas, the Democrat leader,- and of Attorney General Rogers. Despite these highly unfavora-l ble conditions, the vote to send! the legislation back to the Senate! Judiciary Committee (in effect,' killing it) was a hairline 41 to' 10. Its backers contend that it j would have been approved by the, Senate had there been time to | ride out the filibuster by north i em Democrats —and had the vote) not been so accurately timed as. i to gain maximum advantage from . the absence of some of the bill’s I supporter. | But the fight oror Ibis legisla-, tion was the principal bar to plan ned Congressional adjournment! only two days distant and so, j rather than prolong the session, a i bare majority voted for recommit tal and thereby postponed a final decision until next year. Incidentally, the filibusterers! centered their remarks around a' highly volatile proposal for the Senate to go.on record in favor of Supreme Court anti-segrega tion decisions. This tended to) create an atmosphere making it, difficult to consider the states NOW-AUTOMATIC DYEING , tuiiv * n th,s Now - frigidaire ’] WASHER fJlfllSk 'y » H'» simple 1 It's foolproof I It's terrific f And as easy as washing a load of clothes in the new Frigidaire Washers! Just pour all* f§f§||§|». \_ purpose dye into the Frigidaire Bleach and Tint Cup in the top || Ni >>» of the Agitator—set the controls only once, that's all! No boiling 1 fl§§|§§§||ik || f bother, no straining mess. Automatically, the dye is evenly mixed I || in water to prevent streoking or spotting. Everything blooms with , c °l° r ' a n * w I*°** on life. * cLoTfias I j~~ J UUIT4N SUDSWATIK-SAVH—AT NO IXTRA COST I F ** I DM and S»« _ | I V** ' $4 PARRISH, INO*. . mt won ft; wit. inono m *vnrin FfiinnAiln? /># aiwb* 1 ■ w wwa* rights proposal objectively. The legislation had passed the House by the overwhelming vote of 241 to 155. Its chief sponsor was Rep. Smith (D-Va.), chair man of the House Rules Commit tee. A similar measure, sponsor ed by Senator McClellan (D-Ark.) and others, was before the Sen ate. Its sponsors included both Democrats and Republicans. Under the measure, the Su preme Court would be barred from invalidating state laws merely because Congress had passed legislation covering the same area. Federal law would be supreme if there was a direct conflict with state law —or if Congress specifically “preempted” the field —but, in the absence of these conditions, the Supreme Court would have no right to as sume that a federal law on a sub ject automatically nullified a state law on the same subject. Backers of tne legislation con tended that the Supreme Court had made this assumption in a number of cases —and thereby had deprived the states of the right to deal with local problems, such as communistic activity. Senator McClellan, chairman of the Senate Rackets Investigating Committee, led the drive for ap proval of the measure. He was ably supported by a number of his colleagues from both sides of the aisles. Actually, many of the backers were surprised that the measure received as much support as it did considering the circumstances under which it was considered. This surprising amount of strength encouraged them to look ! forward to—and to plan for—the | next session of Congress conven / FURNITURE COMPANY 1 DfU n W-\j M ing on January 7. \ They firmly believe that the legislation is among the most im poitant —if not the most import ant V-considered by Congress and its enactment is essential to pre serves local government and pro tect ttle people against the evils of a gifcnt bureaucracy in Wash ington. \ JBad Prospects Bridegroom—You are my all in Jife. Bride—Yes, I don’t own any thing outside of you, either. Minutes Os County Board Os Education v. *—«—»— The Chowan 'County Board of Education held its regular meet ing September A. M„ with the (following mem bers present: G. 'B. Potter. E.- Nixon, J. I. Boyce, D. H. Bbrry man and Carey Evans. .” i ;i The minutes of the last meeting were read and adopted by a iqo tion made and duly passed. • The reports of the Local School, Fund Treasurer, and the Courtly Treasurer were received and adopted by a motion made arid July passed. The bills for the .month of Au gust were presented and approv ;d for the following items: Cur •ent Expense. $1,681.36; Veterans Program, $873.81; Capital Outlay Samovar 100 PROOF VODKA • I SanroVar] .VODKA . 250 L®J 030 PINT ? f E* 4/5 IT. * . f '- •- eitmilD MOM 0 8 AIN. SC HI NIC V OIST. CO.. N.Y.C. items, S7.W, or a total at $2.- 562.95. The superintendent reported that the Septic Disposal Sfrstbm for Chowan High School had been completed and the contractors and architect paid in full. During the reeent rains, one Wall of the filter bed had toppled, and the contractor had been called in. and is now in the process of repairing the damage. The schools in general, as re ported, seem to be getting off to a good start. The enrollment at White Oak School at the end of the first week was 396. as com pared to the enrollment of 363 last year at the end of the first week. The enrollment for Chowan High School for the first day was 529 1369 elementary and 160 high school), as compared to the enroll ment last year of 489. and 31 at the Rocky Hock School. There to be a gain of 9 stu dents. -It is reported that several other students are due to enroll. By a xnotion made and dulv passed; the following school fees were approved; 'V, Chowan High School - v Supplementary reader fee for grades 1-2, $1.00; for grades 3. 4 feridm»; SL2O; for grades 6,7 and 8. $1.40; high school book rental fee, $3.60: high school commercial fee ($13,50 for year) or per month (typing). $1.50; science laboratory fee, $1.00; home economics fee. $2.50; instructional fee for grades 1-8, $1.00: scholastic insurance premium (students and teachers). $1.25; school paper, 50c: cost for lunch (grades 1-8 elementary), per day 20c; high school per day, 26c; teachers per day, 33c. White Oak ’ Grades 1-3 (for workbooks) 50c: grade 4 (for workbooks). $1.12: ’ grade 5 (for workbook and week ly reader). 86c; grade 6 (for week ly reader and workbooks). $1.98: grade 7 (for workbooks), $1.46; grade 8 (for workbooks). $1.90: grades 1-2 supplementary reader fee, 75c; grades 3. 4 and 5 supple mentary reader fee. 85c; grades 6,7 and 8 supplementary reader fee, $1.00; for all students using the library, 10c; for all students insuring under the Scholastic In surance Plan for teachers and stu dents. $1.25. By motion made and duly pass ed, William Chappell was granted permission to enroll in the Per quimans County School System. There being no further business the Board adjourned. G. B. POTTER. Chairman W, J, TAYLOR. Secretary Statement GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY _ Washington 5. DC. Condition December 31. 1957 As Shown By Statement Filed: os AM?tI Pinds. 51.393.739.69 SP« S\Hd Be Loans on Real Estate. *4.- Cfl»h and bonk donnslts. $279,051 88 Policy Loans. $208,282 93 All other assets (as detailed In an. ni”il statement) SB7O WO OS n an- Total *'*reltte(l A'Sefh $7 4.38 547 12 Liabilities*. Snmln. And ‘ Other FnnHs oo&SV TSm 00 " te po,,c,es and h accident and SuDplementa'-v centres without life .too 000 rv) noui ~re 373*38 Cy and contract Claims. *IOO.- Premlums and annuity considerations received in advance, $44,455.45 $26 638 22 expsnses due or accrued. Taxes licenses and fees due or ac crued (Including $11,665.53 Federal In come Tax). $69,997.66. Unearned Investment income. $174.08 Amounts withheld or retained bv com pany as ayent or trustee $57,050.23. Amounts held for agents’ account (Including $27.67 agents' credit bal ances). $27.67. and not allocated, 9460.441. 75. Miscellaneous liabilities. $53,488.76 Mandatory Security Valuation Re serve. $4,843.09. (except capital). $5.- Soeclal surplus funds: $25 152.00: Capital paid-up. $.316 725.00; linasslgn ed surplus. $1.50". 137 22: total capital and surplus. $1 845.014.22 Total $7,438,547.3^ Business In The State Os North Carolina During 1957 Number of Ordinary Policies on the lives of citizens of said State In force December 31st of previous year. 331. Amount, $836,894. Group Policies, amount SBB 464. Number of Ordinary Policies on the lives of citizens as said State Issued during the year 125. Amount $4*U.- 500 Grout) Policies, amount, $49 568. Total number of Ordinary Policies. 456 Total amount Ordinary Policies, 51.328.394. Total amount Group Poli cies *l4B 032 Deduct censed to be in force during' the year: Ordinary 25: amount. $57.- 560 Group amount. $774. Ordinary Policies In force December 31st 431: amount. $1 '>’0,834. Group Policies: amount. $147,258. Losses and Claims unpaid December 31st of previous year: Group Policies, amount, $59 08 Losses and Claims Incurred during year: Group Policies, amount, $822.46. Total Losses anl Claims: Group. $881.54 Losses and Claims settled during the year. In fu'l: Group. $774.44. Losses and Claims unpaid December 31 «*: Group $107.10. Premium Income Ordinary. $28,- 091 42: Total. $28.091.4,7. A * H. Premiums. $3,860.66: Losses. $3,141.23 President. Leo Goodwin. Sr.; Secre tary. Warren Nigh: Treasurer. Ray mond F Rodgc-s- Actuary, Robert .1. Towns 1 Home Office. 10*>1 14th Street NW Washington 5 D. C Attorney for Service: Ghas. F. Geld. Commissioner of Insurance. Raleigh, V C North Carolina Insurance DeDartment ReMgh April 10. 1958. I. CHAS. F. GO’ D Commissioner of Insurance do hereby certify that the above fc r, true and correct abstract of the statement of the Government irmnlovees Life Insurance Company, of Washington. D C . filed with this De partment showing the condition of said Corcnapy on the 31st day of De cember 1957 Witness mv hand and official seal the day and date above written. (Seal) ' CHAS. F GOLD. Commissioner of Insurance.