Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / March 31, 1960, edition 1 / Page 13
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m YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY I J 1 ""if ™ | ** d| y r—■ftifiw offin m the Pe**M times f* mt*riom>t at <w Vt& Vais; mtton, Tm thinking of .ctiring t*kt year ami wtmg tor so cM security payments but I 4pA have « birth certificate.' that'm earth am 1 going to *r .JOr a ywatn r» (who per-' Mips has just bcught an insur ance policy ant is thinking way ahead) will sa/, ‘‘What kind eff pack shca'd my wife bring 1« the f>.id security office in cape «g n*y death?” 'Some ad the folks Who ask these questions are just ewwus, stfcne want to start getting their pmts ready ahead of time, and at; few are realty worried be cause they fear'thatifSA* social' security payments may fee de ■hjped because they don't have a. birth certificate, they’ve lost tifeir marriage certifiiate, or same other item of pro may aft be easily available. Since these problems may concern a lot of people who haven't asked about' them, here’s tfce story on the proofe you’ll Med dor your social security claim. Tirst, the proofs most often needed are proof off your age, dt yow marriage, of the ages of your wife and children, and dt your recent earnings. Some times other proofs are needed— Pfeof ed a divorce, for instance, there’s no way to be sure exact 1 Oub Cateodar ] i. Monday. April 4, jfeo W XL— ' Advance Club tt'mife Corn s- TOunity Building. jTUcsday, April 5. 2:30 P. M R» l»nd Club at home of Mrs. & & Ward. •Tuesday. April 5. 7:30 P. M Oil Grove Club at Oak Grove Obmmunity Building. Wednesday. April 6s Tkw P. M —<Jum Pond Club of Mrs Clarence Bass. Wooday. April U.‘ 2:30 P. XI Chowan Club at Chowan Com munity Building. •JMonday, April U, a P. M Yeopim Club at home of Mrs. Stanton Harrell. •'Tuesday. April 12. 7:30 P. XI Beech Fork Club ai " home of Mrs. Gilbert Harrell. Wednesday, April 13, 2:30 P. M —Wards Club at Community Building. ..Wednesday. April 11, 7_W P. M. —Enterprise Club at home of Henry Goodwin. .Tuesday, April 11 7JO P. M.— ‘ Center Hill Club XV hdme of Mrs. Cameron Boyce. - •:« Wednesday. April 20, 2:30 P M|— Byrd Club with,«fcp;C. W. .Overman Thursday. April 28, 3 P. M.— Cakyrual Club, meeting place to be announced later. Thursday. April jfc. 7:36 P. M. —Rocky Hock Club at home of Mrs. Jack Leary. ‘'Strawberry Delight" will be given as the demonstration for the April Home Demonstration Chib meetings in Chowan QR«ty 1* - ,|Me characters and lives of 1 men determine the pence, pros perity and life of nations. —Mary Baker Eddy. Tj Uonm^H I $3.95 /^y/ 4A Qi. / i :jly what proofs prill be needed until your claim is ready to be 1 -a cja- -a r aeodeoL So hold on to any family rec ti ords you have—birth and baptis . mat certificates, marriage and [ divorce certificates, certificates , of adoption if any od your chil dren are adopted, and so on. If | you have lost some of them, jjyou may want to get certified i copies. Certified copies are al ,i«nost as good as the originals, r and they may be helpful to you ,i «n many ways. i They may car may not be ne cessary in connection with your . social security daim; we do not '|like to see people worry and go ’] to a lot of trouble to get proofs I just for social security when they may never be needed, but |. these papers are important in so many dfferent ways that they . should be kept by everyone. ’ If you're concerned because . they didn't keep birth records , and issue birth certificates when you were bora, quit worrying. Tew people realise what a trail 7 of records they have left be ’ I hind them. If you've ever join ! «d a church or a lodge, if you 1 i have ever been married or been jin court, if you've ever been I counted in the Census, or gone ■! to school, your age is probably , listed somewhere. There are s literally downs of places to look I —and when you apply for social - security payments these records - which you had probably forgot . ten, win help to prove your age - if necessary. { SUNDAY SCHOOL ] J LESSON I insights, and new attitudes ward God and his rule in their J lives. j Pleaching has been defined as the dispensing of truth through j personality. Teachers are ehan jncls through whom God's truth is carried to others. The call to be a teacher is therefore a very worthy and high calling. A great teacher laces the fact that God's truth seeks to find an out let through him. This calls for dedication and consecration to the task. Parents need to feel ■this as they seek to teach their ■ children about God's will as seen in Jesus Christ. Parents are God’s first channels to the life of a child. As with parents, so Jesus was unconcerned as to places when he taught. He could teach in a synagogue or at a customs bouse, or while waiting for din ner (as with Mary), or to a woman taken in adultery. When ever a person was obviously in j n:«d. Jesus was ready to teach, i All he required was a searching mind, as with a little child who constantly asks the reason why. In fact, great teaching rests on a iccognition that those whom they teach are realty wanting to find the truth. Sene of the characteristics which made Jesus a great teach er ought to be studied in order that we may imitate him and his methods of teaching. First, his approach was natural and informal His method was one of intimacy and concern. He never depended on fine oratory; nor did he prepare his ad dresses in formal style. He •'■. . - • THE CHOW AH HERALD. EDENTOH. NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY. MARCH 31,. 1330. wm hv - -mm i ■ ■r 4 1 jk MADE FOR EACH OTHER— Tommy Smrekar, 10, gets an affectionate kiss from his new pal. He found the dog wandering the highway near his Willston, Wis., home. Hit parents wrote the owner, whose name was on the dog’s collar, asking if Tommy could keep the animal. He could. never wrote a sermon in his life., He certain'v thought through them, although none were re corded. He was full of his sub ject and love for both God and man. We do not have a record of a single time when he de fined words. He always illus trated his concepts. He was not concerned with flowery argu ments; he was concerned with giving such motivation that men’s lives would be changed. Jesus knew that the old ways of Judaism were necessarily giving way for a newer concept of God’s rule. The kingdom of God had to find new forms. So Jesus used parables and meta phors to illustrate his point In our Scriptures for today we find three of them Christian ity, he said, was a matter of joy, not of solemn fasting; the old faith and the new forms cannot be combined, as in the parable of the unshrunk cloth; new wine cannot be put in old J wineskins, or they will burst i and the wine be wasted. One of the things which made Jesus an witstanding teacher is that he met the basic needs of men. Above all else, men have always needed a sense of direc tion. The meaning of life was summed up in the very life and teachings of Jesus. Men arc children of God, and he has a purpose for his whole creation, and especially for his creatures called men. Truly, we have a lot to learn in this business of teaching. < These comments are based or anilines of the International Sun day School Lesson. copyrighted by the International Council of Religious Education, and use< fcr» permission.' Coast Guard Recruiter Is Assigned To Area Boatswains mate, second class Allison L. Day, USCG. formerly i assigned to the Coast Guard Aim Station, Elizabeth City, has been j named Coast Guard Recruiter' for the Elizabeth City and A NEW CAR! I^l and I got it with a LOW-COST IdMii&dkMi ••••«••»»«*•••*(•••««• LOW BANK RATES ... BUILD YOUR CREDIT WITH A BANK ... PAYMENTS TAILORED TO HT YOUR NEEDS... NO "EXTRA" CHARGES • • zri - » t Peoples Bank and Trust Co. Consumer Credit Branch 210 South Broad Street EDEYrO > Edenton area. Day will operate out of the Norfolk office, visiting on a regular schedule in Elizabeth City, Edenton, Hertford and in Camden County. The new recruiter is a na tive of Statesville, North Caro lina, and a veteran of close to six years of Coast Guard duty. The 23-year-old petty officer is well qualified to talk to those interested in enlisting in the Coast Guard having served in various assignments throughout the Service. TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED Taylor Theatre EDENTON, N. C. Thursday. March 31— LAST SHOWING "THREE MURDERESSES" DcLuxc Color O Friday and Saturday. April 1-2 DOVRLK FKATI RK Elvis Presley in "JAILHOUSE ROCK" also— Sterling Hayden in "TERROR IN TEXAS TOWN" o Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, April 3-4-5 Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner in "ON THE BLACH" NO ADVANCE IN TRICKS Sunday: 2:00-4:30 8t 8:45 Weekdays: 7:00 & 9:15 o Coming . . . April 6-7-8— Sal Mines and James Darren in "THE GENE KRUPA STORY" CHoWsss! News By CATHERINE AMAN Assistant Horn* Economics Agent With spring officially here, it is time to turn our thoughts to the 4-H demonstrations for 1960. These demons;: o.ion« are set up in the county program because giving a demonstration a 4-H boy or girl has on oppor tunity to “show how and tell how.” Giving a demonstration strengthens a 4-H’er’s all' round club activities; gives the dem onstrator mere self assurance and helps develop poise tor ap pearing before groups; helps to improve the individual's tech niques in the phase of work he or she is demonstrating in; and it gives the 4-H’er an opportun ity to teach others. Choosing the right subject fer a demon stration is the most important step in showing and telling. In the past Chowan County 4-H’ers have done excellent in the various demonstration fields. This year we are goirg to h» even harder to have 4-H’ers giv- — • WE SALUTE John A. Holmes High School Band! P & Q GWALTNEY D&M SUPER MARKET , SITPT^RTTTT! EDENTON, N. C. ig| l i I J 4 ■ M. GROCERIES - MEATS SUPPORT c M!THF ieID, VA. YQIJR BANP Representing Edenton and North Carolina in NATIONAL SAFETY PATROL PARADE Washington, I). C. Mav 13-14-L5 BAND BENEFIT SALE! MARCH 31 - APRIL 1- APRIL 2 Proceeds from the sale of Gwaltnev's Branded Meat Items will go to finance band's ashington trip for the National Safety Patrol Parade. BUY GWALTNEY! -AND SUPPORT YOUR BAND '■J! 11 1 "■ ■ P 0 Participating Firms Where Sale t-v q m m OC of Gwaltney Merchandise Will J J Q£ IVI SUPER MARKET Go Toward Band Trip. SUPERETTE • - Ik.:. * • .v.'JfeVA'l ling more demonstrations in ; J more fields. To familiarize the public with the demonstration 1 ! program here is a list: Bee * I keeping, entomology’, farmer co- i 'operative, forage crops, fruit, .and vegetable marketing, fruit 1 and vegetable production, fruit J ' and vegetable use, peanut uro jduction and marketing, poultry | | marketing, poultry production, i • soil and water conservation, to bacco, wildlife, electric and dairy foods. The above demon strations are open to both boys and girls. Boys only’ may 7 par- j ticipate in the following: Cotton : production and marketing, for estry, dairy . management and J livestock conservation. The sew- j | ing demonstration is open for j ’ girls only. The enriched corn 'meal muffin activity is open for | | Junior (10-14) girls only. ■j The Chow~n uruny Denton- \ ! stration Day v ill be sometime i • around mid-June. The Eastern District .Demonstration Day will ■ be on June 22. I Four-H members wiii be work • ing on their chosen demonstra • tion subject throughout tlie next • few months. Three Beauty Queens In Azalea Festival i Three state beauty queens will > take part in the N. C. Azalea' - Festival at Wilmington, Mareh ( 31-April 3. Festival President Robert A. Little announces. ! They are Sue Williams, Miss 'Virginia: Judi.h Lynn Klipfel i Miss North Carolina, and Nettie Adelaide Dennis, Miss South j Carolina. i The three beauty queens will take part in or be spectators at i several attractions in the four ' day festival. These include two coronation pageants, during which the festival king and queen will be crowned, a three-! hour parade, outdoor art exhibit ! air show, street and formal dances, harness racing, variety show and fireworks. Tight Wad Polly When Freddie and : Elsie came back from the bridal | trip he still had $2.50 in his | pocket. Jesse—The stingy thing. TO THE VOTERS OF THE SECOND TOWNSHIP I hereby announce my candidacy for County Commissioner fr.m the Second Township, subject to the Democratic Primary May 2S, 1960. VOI R VOTE AXD SUPPORT WILL BE GREATLY APPRECIATED! T. O. ASBELL PAGE FIVE SECTION TM Bingo Featured A Meeting Os Teenagen A goodly number were ah hand at the Teenage Club Sgfe urday night when the feattS was a bingo party. The club • now in charge cf Mr. and Mr . Harry Lassiter, who were a ■ sisted Saturday n'ght by M t and Mrs. Tom Ridgeway ail I Mrs. Myda Taylcr. The club is open every Sa - urdav night from 8 to 10® o’clock and all teenagers afe invited to attend. Really Lovely Lieutenant (roaring with rag< I —Who told you to put thoi : flowers on the table 1 [ Steward — The commander, s* ! Lieutenant Pretty, i thCy? i
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 31, 1960, edition 1
13
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