Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Oct. 1, 1959, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE SIX C—-SECTION ONE Funeral Held For | ‘Victim Cif Min der! i ! li*un®ral services for Mrs. Mary ; Louise Snow, 36, were he'd at • Bedard’s Bridge Baptist Church \ Mpnday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock, j The pastor, the Rev. Lamar Sen- j tell, officiated and burial was in J the churchyard. tars. Snow was a native of i Ctiowan County but lived in j Nt.folk 13 years. She was em-1 plbyed at the Naval Operating j at Norfolk as an IDM op erator for six months. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Nellie Eas orf of Tyner and her stepfather, j D&we Davidson: two sons, Gra ham W. Snow and Mack Snow; a (daughter, Sharon Louise Snow, and a sister, Mrs. Marvin Bunch of, Suffolk. Mrs. Snow was Shot to death by her husband, Walton W. Sfow, with a 12-gauge sho;gun.; He then turned the gun and kiU-i ed himself. The murder-suicide occurred in the Snow home in Nbrview as the couple’s three Fresh Tender Dressed and Drawn Pftl FRYERS (whole only) ib.2 5 c I D & Mulrklt Friday - Saturday Only I 303 Cans Red & White Jame stown Brand T ° P R ° md Smalllinta Beans Luter’s Bacon Beef Roa&t I can 23c lb 49c lb. 83c I 12-oz. Red & White B Liquid Detergent you-v* Tried the Rest... Luter s 1 , „ JAMESTOWN BRAND ■ only 29c Now TrY Th * Besl_ c , •J our own sun spun Sausage Meat H 303 Cans Red & White BISCUITS I 1-1 h. pkg. 29c l| Bartlett Pears q 3 cans Zsc ■ can Zdc j 9-os. Gibbs B - NO. JO3 sup„ Pork and Beans I Cube Pickles Succotash 2 cans 17c I jar 29c 2 cans 41c j —————— No. 2 Powhatan or Southern I 46-oz. Libby's Red & White , , . u c Peach Halves Tomato Juice Beef Stew can 29c can 33c can 25q.. -J. 15-oz, can a « m FREE DELIVERY I Mackerel D&M EVERY ?i Y M I , o vT V on orders of $2.00 2 cans 43c Super Market PHONE 2317 | V;.-- f » ' * .M-'CV A I children sat in an adjoining I room. The daughter notified a ! tele: hone operator, who in turn j called the police. Police found ' the couple dead in a pool oi ; fc.’.ocd when they arrived at the I , home. j Funeral services for Mr. Snow 'were held Tuesday afternoon at I the Hebron Methodist Ohutch at i Powell’s Point wi.h burial in the | church cemetery. j WOMAN'S CLUB MEETING ; Edenton Woman’s Club will 1 meet Wednesday of next week at I ■1 o’clock in the Parish House, j Mrs. Wesley Chesson, Jr., re ; quests all members of the club I to be present. EASTERN STAR MEETING Edenton Chapter No. 302, Or der of the Eastern Star, will meet Monday night, October 5, at 8 o’clock in the Masonic Tem ; pie. Mrs. T. J. Wood requests I all members to be present. Three may keep counsel, il two be away. —John Heywood. I Health For All ) l (Making Th* Bathroom People-Proof Friend of ours is going around > [ these days looking as though he . went ten rounds with the champ. : Fact is, he lost a bout with the bathtub. Slipped getting out, cracked his chin on 'the edge, cut his forehead on the faucet and j j chipped his elbow on the wall. ' | We’ve sent him a rubber mat for ■ the bottom of his bathtub as a . “get well” present. That bathroom certainly can be a dangerous place. Palls in the tub or shower are the most common hazard. In addition to a rubber mat, a solid handhold set ’ 1 in the wall at a height honveni ' j ent for grabbing can prevent a ! tumble in the shower or help you I stand up safely in the tub. Keep | the soap in sight, though. Not even a rubber irrat can save I you if you should put your foot 'down on the soap. ras CKOBAR SZSAL2X EDHSTOX KOKTH CAROLSUL THURSDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1959. The medicine cabinet Offers its own perns. Please, always openj your eyes and put the light on before helping yourself to any-J thing from the cabinet. Dori’t! put pills or liquids In unlabeled bottles or switch them from their! own bottles to others. And do ! hang that cabinet way out of the reach of children, remem bering [that the little ones know all about climbing on chairs .to get at things. Thousands of Chil dren are poisoned every year as i a result of eating aspirins, laxa tives, and other tasty items. I When using any medicine, it is a good idea to follow the hospi tal nurse’s rule: look at the label when you take the bottle out, again when you remove the pill or pour the liquid, a third time when you replace the bottle. Then administer the dose. That way, you’re less likely to make any mistakes. Many bathroom mishaps result in no more than a few lively i bruises. But it’s worth taking ' I the trouble to people-probf your [ I bothroam, just to avoid the one j accident which may have tragic consequences. | HAYSEED ] By UNCLE SAM ’ ——S Preparing Food Dorothy Dix once wrote that only one man in sixty had a breakfast sufficient to give him the necessary strength for effici ent work until noon, and only one woman in two hundred had sufficient breakfast. The housewives have rebelled against preparing food for the family. They have turned to canned goods, frozen goods, something which they can pre pare in just a few minutes with a can opener or just a little heat. One of the main food prepa rations in the home has be come the sandwich. A couple of slices of bread with a sliced ba nana or tomato in between and a slap dab of mayonnaise and that ends the food preparation. We wonder if the shirking of Halsey SPECIALS RYE GRASS VIGORO SOWER LOANED COLLARD PLANTS GARDEN SEEDS FRESH EGGS 2c AND UP EGG PRODUCER K $4.49 PER 100 BABY CHICKS HOG FEEDS . MINERALS BAKING HENS LAYING HENS LIVE XMAS TREES Halsey Feed & SeecfSlbi-e 1 u S. Broad St Edenton (Champion sourbon 'iSchenki) :>;.'•£ v' Sj*-| * JB S^ 00 • i * fearcPW ar m , t ..„ug frsnmckf I 0 * j'. * '• « ~ y < All ||||p||* mw BXfli BKmIBBK. bSSI! \ & ■ jsiPpflffir jSEiSS tflSm TWO-WAY STRETCH — Neck-and-neck, flamingos battle for a single tasty morsel spotted under water at the zoo in Chess ington, England. food preparation is not an invi tation to doctor and hospital bills. It may be that the necessary vitamins may be Stored in grass and weeds but if they are it is necessary to put .thelm through the necessary process before they can be assimilated by the human body. Ordinarily hay may be all right for cows, horses and sheep but if they should throw a bale of hay on the table and tell me to help myself I would soon chahnge boarding places. Much goes into preparing the food for a family. To make a happy contented home the fami ly must be well fed. Much dove is lost and many homes break up around the dining table/ If a woman expects to be. a suc cessful wife and mother it is ATTENTION LADIES! ] wraMnS beginning today... • 3 DAYS ONLY • SPECIAL sale: MOUTON JACKETS Here’s real news for the budget-minded woman with a flair for » si 'TEb fine fashion! Mouton has a warm softness, a new lightness of / flB V weight, and a look of self-assurance that makes vou feel you 1 jMjP '*& ** belong! YOU’VE NEVER SEEN A BETTER MOUTON |Br, 1 ’ This versatile jacket is W designed with trim taper- .jZ&I&Lt'Z &. ed . . . turn-up cuffs . . . shawl stand-up E> p||§i*j §\ rjl I ollar ... in exquisite log- vood c °i° r - Get yours! , Reserve Yours Mow On Our - **• fWs ■ I .. mintffite* f -i&i&SkM. :§■ ■ ■ ■^p®sp h ®l| *h & vv / - I,#^1 1. I __l _ 7 _ WfflS****! y i *■ I y/ It v -g-.ft £* '’ ■ Ai.- c m£>. > Ma»Si| Jv WflkAA A y fill •■ * |~| I Hill I lIrfV»LT • * -1; ' • ’ /sJSSj more important to know how to prepare food than to know how to dance, play bridge or pass in society. Credit For Crops Must Be Certified Official credit for high crop yields must be certified. A county certification committee usually consists of a county agent, another agricultural work er to certify the land measure men, and a fanner. The county agent has the certification forms. Before any harvesting .is start ed in the field to be checked, the farmer must notify the coun ty agent. The county agent visits the field with the t grawer and makes a preliminary check to see if the yield has a possi- measures the field or portion of the *ieM to be checked. The ' field is harvested. The commit tee supervises the weighing and i signs the fqrm. The form is sent ' to tfie respective state committee for/approval. “This may appear to be a lot of trouble," says County Agent C. W. Overman, “but it isn’t. The grower can notify the agent iby telephone. It takes only a few minutes to make the pre liminary check. Harvesting is hindered very v f*.' • I | “Last week, Mepoy Spivey in- 1 I formed me *that last fail die had , some peanuts Which yielded IIWSI/SESfc/SBaMpocCiMf Mwlml pllsil WHISKEY V. LAWRENCEBUR6, KENTUCKY > he had harvested the peanuts* Another grower told ine of mak " ing a little over two bales of cotton per acre. There 4ia'£2’; ' been several others with ciup ' record yields. “In North Carolina we have a * ‘Two-ton Peanut Clu/b’, a ‘3OO Bushel Sweet Potato Club’, a "Two-bale Cotton Club’ anvi a TOO Bushel Corn Clyb.’ I hope our growers will try for these attainments.” | If you communicate your se | cret to another, you make your -1 self that other’s slave. I —Baltasar Gracian.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1959, edition 1
6
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