PAGE FOUR i SECTION TWO i SCHOOL AND YOUR CHILD By John Corey. Appalachian State Taachora College WANT TO SEE THE WORLD? BE A TEACHER j Want to see the world? For get the Navy. Become a teach-i er! j That’s the advice of Professor Robert L. Randall, placement di-j rector at Appalachian State | Teachers College, Boone, N. C. j Teaching posts are available in virtually every free country.' Pay is excellent, transportation! free, housing often provided, j spare time for plenty of sight seeing—and at places ether than' just seaports. Thousands of children of! American business, military and] church parents abroad must bei taught, reports Randall. Thej Armed Forces alone this year' operate 267 overseas schools ser-i vmg 133.350 children. Qualified men and women with the yen of travel can teach at a choice of exotic locations from sunny Spain to intriguing Japan. | It's possible for a teacher to : work a year at Madrid, the next' at Tokyo, another at Rio de Ja-| nerio. And if homesickedness; develops, he can return for a! year’s stateside instructing be-1 fore shoving off for another for- • eign locale. Stateside school officials nat urally prefer their teachers to stay longer than a year. But most administrators understand! and in some cases encourage i their tutors to enhance back- j grounds through travel, saysj Professor Randall. Typical of the “gypsy-but highly-respected” band of in structors using their profession to see the world is Mildred! Bradford. This globe-girdling school ma’am has taught in Asia, South America, Central I America and 12 American cities.' Miss Bradford, holder of a master's degree from Appalach ian State Teachers College, ■ caught the travel bug as a | fourth .grader at Abbeville. S. C., when her teacher introduced world geography. ‘T admired the teacher so much,” Miss Bradford remem bers, “that I decided to become a school teacher like her some day and visit the foreign coun-: tries she taught about.” Miss Bradford got her chance in 1937, two years after finish- 1 ing Winthrop College at Rock hill. She went to worth Korea] to teach children of officials of* a gold mining company. Neither the Japanese bombing of China’s Marco Polo bridge, prelude to World War 11, nor the well-known rigors of Ko rean winters deterred her from completing the assignment. i For three years the charming, gentle South Carolinian tutored eight students of hodge-podge nationalities from a German Nazi’s son to an Australian. The little United Nations of kiddies were in five different grades. 1 During summers Miss Brad ford visited China and Japan. Bought oriental colisonne, teak and linens. Learned Korean i language, but taught in Eng- : lish. Saved $1,500 in war bonds. Returning to America, she I taught a year at Greenville, S. j C., and four war years at Wil- j mington, N. C. The Port City’s I ex-Superintendent of Schools H. j M. Roland, a geography expert j himself, was pleased to have a j teacher with such an extensive 3 background. 3 During World War 11, Naval j intelligence, anxious for latest 3 description of Japanese indus- | trial facilities, questioned Miss 3 Bradford concerning every de- j tail of her Japan travels. X ‘The officer seemed particular- I w Good Reading lor the Whole Family •News •Facts •Famiy Features Hv Christian Sciancm Monitor Om Norway St., Boston IS, Maa. Send yoor newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check or one place,” Miss Bradford re ly interested in what I saw at | calls, ‘‘lt was Hiroshima”. War’s end saw Miss Bradford: packing off for Nicaragua. she taught two years at an i American school subsidized by j the State Department. She un j derwent local hazards like dys entery, earthquakes and dust 1 ' storms. j Kiddies in Maryland and North j Wilkesboro, N. C., received Miss I Bradford’s tutoring before she ! left on another foreign tour of | duty—this time to South Ameri !ca s Peru. For four years an i oil company’s 6th, 7th and Bth i grades were under her wing in | a one-room school in a desert ' area at Talara. I In 1957 Miss Bradford served in the Winston-Salem school sys tem. The next year she enjoy ed teaching in the mountains at Boone. Inen back to Winston for three sessions. This year? | The likeable school ma’am is j in Caracas, Venezuela, teaching ; at a private school. ! Free Pine Seedlings For 4-H, FFA Boys Weyerhaeuser Company, North Carolina Division at Plymouth, I will give free pine seedlings to i 4-H and FFA boys in Eastern • North Carolina beginning Janu i ary 1 and continuing through | the remainder of the planting season, according to an an nouncement made by E. K. Pit man, conservation forester for j the company. The area in which | seedlings will be available is the general area in which the com pany buys wood and extends from the coast westward to and 1 including Scotland, Moore, Mont-, gomery, Chatham, Durham, 1 Franklin and Vance counties. j The seedlings are given to the boys to encourage them to start planting idle land on their farms I and to impress upon them the I importance of proper care of all* forest land. j During the 1959-60 planting l season Weyerhaeuser Company, gave 762.500 seedlings to 7121 boys. 421 FFA boys and 291 i 4-H boys participated in the pro-| gram. Applications for seedlings should be for either 500, 1,000, or the maximum 1.500. County agents and teachers of Plants & Shrubbery FOR SALE Cabbage Plants Early Jersey Wakefield And Asgrow Early Round Dutch Steel’s Jumbo Pansies in mixed and separate colors. Sweet Williams (tall and dwarf), English and Shasta Daisies, Candy Tuft, Bas ket of Gold. Nursery Slock I Hollies, Azaleas (tall and ; dwarf). Camellia, Junipers, | Legustum Pyracanthia. ❖ | IPc Guarantee The Plants lVc Plant! Leary Plant Farm EDENTON. N. C. Phone 2744 Located In The Heart Os Rocky Hock Do tomorrow s TELEPHONE Today a successful businessmen are using the tele phone to get more business in less time and at less cost. Business done by phone cuts down on costly mistakes and irritating delays. Call us tomorrow k and let us show you how telephone efficiency leads Bk to mure efficient business. JP Hie Norfolk & Carolina jjW Telephone & Telegraph Co - -y THE CHOW AH HEBALP, KDKHTOB, WORTH CAROLINA. THPIWPAT. JANUARY 5. ■ ■ HR*'' JHW I gi&gJ AH BEL i S ft' gar » I it M "L* HU 'jdHRKH I UP AND OVER—Christl Vie | weg and Roland Schillinger are heels-over-head about each other at Frankfurt, West I Germany, in this hand-in | hand flip which helped them i win the German trampoline i gymnastics championship. 1 vocational agriculture have in- I formation as to. how to secure 1 application blanks. The Weyerhaeuser Company j purchases the seedlings for dis- I tribution from the North Caro lina State Forest Service nurser ies and delivery is made by the nursery. j fuliTcolor"picture^ OF ALL 1961 CARS ! For the first time in its his tory or the history of any maga i zine, the American Weekly pre -1 sents a beautiful quadruple pull ■ cut sheet showing all the 1961 automobiles in full color. You’ll i want to see and save this un- I usual presentation in the Janu ary 8 issue of the AMERICAN WEEKLY j distributed with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN i on sa'e at your local newsdealer ■ /// u / “The making of all things has keen speeded ut> the making ni everything except friends. It takes the polish ing ni years to brighten friendship Ours is a service founded upon years of study and ex perience . . . upon a spirit of fairness, courtesy and tact. M ake Ckurek - Qoing a Haoif Sunday School Lesson JE3US BRINGS JOY International Sunday School Lesson for January 8, 1961. I ______ s Memory Selection: “This, the first of his signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested hi j glory; and his disciples be lieved him.” (John 2:11). , Lesson Text: John 2. The purpose of our study to day is to show that life’s great-' est joy comes from knowing Jesus Christ and obeying his commands. And to illustrate this theme, we turn to our Bibli cal text for the story of a wed-1 ding which Jesus attended, a wadding at which, according to John, Jesus gave the first of his “signs”. i In John’s writings, the reader' must remember that the word “sign” means “proof.” It is fre-! quently used of an event or act i that enables men to see Jesus’ J real nature. And so. to the new I converts at Cana, the “water to | wine” miracle had a deeper j meaning than the mere furnish-! ing of wine in which to toast the newly-married couple’s hap piness. When John wrote “there was a marriage,” every reader knew I Chowan County Churches r YEOPIM BAPTIST 1 I Sun aay School Sunday morning at lc] I o’clor k I Preaching services every first and f third Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. EDFNTON BAPTIST REV. R N. CARROLL. Pastor f Sunday School at 9:45 A M. 1 Morning worship service. 11 A. M. W Training Union at 6:30 P. M. I Evening service at 7:30 o’clock. I Ml 1-week nrayer service Wednesday 1 at 7:30 P. M. j £ GREAT HOPE BAPTIST I ft EV. HENRY V. NAPIER Pastor I Sunday School at 10 A. M. • M irnlag worship second and fourth Sur.dnvß at 11 o’clock. t Evening wor.-hlp first and fourth Sundays at 8 o'clock. Prayer service Wednesday at 8 P. M. 'TNTFP HIT T. MFTWODTST REV. FRANK FORTESQUE Pastor Preaching service* every first and. third Sundays at 11 A. M. 1 EDENTON PRESBYTERIAN j REV. JAMES MacKENZTE. Pastor • Sunday School Sunday morning at C 0 o’clock. Jr Morning worship at 11 o’clock. 1 Girls' Meeting— all teen-age girls— C ur.day. fi-30 P. V * Christian Servlet Brigade—all teen ’«* hoys—Tuesday. T 11... Mid-week Prayer Service—Wednesday 'ght at 7:30 o'clock. I FIRST CHRISTIAN REV. E. C. ALEXANDER. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A, M tnrnlng worship at 11 o’clock. Young People's meeting at fi-30 P. M. I Evening worship at ’< .30 o’clock. ’ Wednesday evening service at 7:30 clock. ST. ANN'S CATHOLIC . REV. C. F HILL. Pastor ' Sunday Masses 8 and 11 A M. Confessions before every Mass. Sunday School 11:13 Sunday A. M. Convert Instructions or private con sultation by appointment. Phone 2617. CENTFR HILL BAPTIST REV. HENRY V. NAPIER. Pastor Morning worship at 11 o’clock first and third Sundays. ■ Sunday School at 10 A. M. ’ B T. U. at 7P. M. Evening worship at 8 o’clock second and fourth Sundays. Prayer service Thursday at 8 P. M. t EDENTON METHODIST REV. RALriI FOWLKES. Pastel Church Scnool Sunday morning at 9:43 o’clock. , Preaching service Sunday morning at | 11 o’clock. MACEDONIA BAPTIST REV. GORDON SHAW, l’astor . Sunday school at JO A. M. I Preacnlng every Sunday morning at ■ 11 o’clock and every Sunday night at | 7:30 o’clock. | Prayer meeting Wednesday night at ( 7:30 o’clock. a WARWICK BAPTIST t REV. R. B. COTTINGHAM. Paste. I Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11 A. M. t BTU at 7 P. M. Preaching servlcee at 8 P. M. Prayer service Thursdya nights at B o'clock. . SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL j REV. GEORGE B. HOLMES. Rectov 8:00 A. M.. Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.. Church School. 10:00 A. M.. Adult Bible Clast. 11:00 A. M.. Morning Worship. ■ 7.30 P. M.. Yeung Churchmen. Wednesday. 10:30 A. M.. Hoty Com munion. BALLARD'S BRIDGE BAPTIST ■ REV. IaMAR SENTELL. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 1 o’clock. | Preaching services at 11 A. M. and BPM i Prayer meeting Wednesday tight at! | 8 o’clock. CHURCH OF GOD REV. JOHN MARTIN. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11 A. M. I WPE Sunday at IP. R Evening worship a* 7:38 o’clock. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES R. P. LONG Congi ?eat!on Servant I Bible study at 3:00 o’dloek Sunday ’ afternoon at Kingdom Hall. Bible study Wednesday night at 8 o’clock. ■Service meeting and ministry tchoal Friday nights at 8 o’clock. 1 ASSEMBLY DF GOD REV. C. L. WILES; Pastor Sunday School. 9:45 A. M. Worship Service, 11:60 A. M. bVIUVS ' I he meant more than the fact that some couple was being 'married. He meant also that there was a celebration, for a wedding in that day and time was more than a ceremony at the church and a reception in the home. A marriage frequently required several days of gaiety, and the whole village shared in the cheer. There was feasting, danc ing', drinking, and honoring of the village bride and groom. So, to John’s first readers the cry “They have no wine” had but one implication: They have no joy. This was true because to these people wine was the sym bol of joy. But these words concerning wine have a deeper meaning. John, through his words, is say ing that the entire gospel is a new wine bursting old skins. The Son of man ate and drank, and the wine of the Last Supper symbolized the new covenant. The kingdom of God is a wine producing vineyard, and Jesus is himself the true Vine, the Source of all holy joy. John’s sign, therefore, now becomes clear. Into the thirsty lives of men, into the dull, monotonous bur den of dreary rounds, Jesus brought not water but wine. He Continued on Page 3—Section 2 1 HAPPY HOME PENTECOSTAL 1 HOLINESS CHURCH „ HAROLD C. LEAKE. Minister Sunday School. 9:45; Morning Wor imf'P* Llfoliners. 6:45; Evening V; orship. 7:45; Wednesday Prayer Ser vice, 7:45. WHITE OAK CHAPEL BAPTIST REV. R. M. McNAIR. Pastor ROCKY HOCK BAPTIST I THURMAN W. ALLRED. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o’clock. Morning worship at 11 o'clock. I Training Union at 7P. M l Evening worship at 8 o’clock. COLORED CHURCHES PROVIDENCE BAPTIST REV. F. H. LaGUARDE Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Morning service at 11 o’clock. Evening service at 7:80 o’clock. , Prayer ™ eeUn * Wednesday night at 7:30 o clock. Young people*! and senior choir practice Friday nights at 8 o’clock. Mon s Bible Class meets Monday tight at v 8 o clock. ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST EPISCOPAL REV. CLYDE BEATTY. Minister First Sunday at 11 A. M.. Holy Com munion and sermon Second Sunday at 9 A. M.. Holy Com munion. Third Sunday at 9 A. M.. Holy Com muii.. - Fourth Sunday at 11 A. M„ *„.„ing prayer and sermon. Sunday School each Sunday after l noon at 3 o’clock. CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST ELDER J. A. SAWYER. Pastor Every second and fourth Sunday. Pastor’s Day. , Every first and third Sunday. Church k/fly. . Sunday School at II A. M. to 1 F\ M. Prayer and Bible Band Tuesday night at 8 (. clock Wednesday night choir practice at 7:30 o clock. Thursday night choir practice i> 7:30 o clock. 8 o'clock nlKht Pastor ’ s A,d Society at Saturday night young people’s Bible quiz and recreation. WARREN GROVE BAPTIST „ REV. J. E. TILLETT Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M Poaching service at 11:30 A M everv second and fourth Sunday Women’s Educational and Mission Union meets every fourth Sunday after the morning service. WELCH'S CHAPEL BAPTIST REV W. H. DAWS. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A M. lI I 3o a A W M* aervlco flm Sunday at ST. JOHN BAPTTST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Servt-es everv first and ’bird <s.m -days at 12 o’clock noon. Vesper ser vice at 6 o’clock. GALE STREET BAPTIST REV C. M. HEIDELBURG, Pustor Sunday School at 10 A. M Services every second and fourth Sunday at 11 A M. Prayer meeting Wednesday even *ng at 8 o clock. PINEY GROVE A. M. E. Z. REV. M. H. EBRON. Pastor UNION GROVE A. M. E. Z. REV. J. E. GORDON. Pastor RYAN GROVE BAPTIST REV. M. A. RIDDICK. Pastor ST. LUKE CHRISTIAN REV. KELLY GOLDMAN. Pastor JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES ELDER J. C. HALL. Pastor CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV. H. C. SAUNDERS, Pastor KADESH A. M. E. ZION PEV. L. A. WTLI-TAMS, Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Morning worship at 11:00 o’clock. Evening service at 7:00 o’clock. , PLEASANT GROVE A.M.E.Z, REV. G. L. SCOTT. Pastor Sunday School at JO A. M. Morning worship service at 11 o’clock. _ Choir rehearsal Wedneaoay nls-'it at 8 o cion. CANAAN TEMPLE A. M. E. X. REV W*. H SESSGM. Pastor Sunday School at 1015. Morning worship at 11:80 o’clock TuPsrjHV night first flsntor rhdr p r fls«g.«iß.°:ciodt. „ yjL’.n v • - Vi ’ . i H is THE CHURCH FOR ALL . . ALL FOR THE CHURCH ' The Church is the greatest factor on earth for the building of character and good citizenship. It is n storehouse of s spiritual values. Without a strong Church, You don’t expect a child to stand toe to toe with neither democracy nor civilization can a man. You lift a child ... and hold him above you. Thtre •* (<> “' «**i «*“*• why every person should attend services You don’t expect a child to understand fully what rrjui.riy ,»<i »u PP ori the Church. They i. right .nd wrong. LI You don't expect , child to comprehend every “55 tE <STSIt spiritual ideal* moral and material support. Plan to t° You don’t expect a child to sense instinctively £;^ urch r ** Ml * rlr , * d •“ d 7<mt Ba>^ the constant concern of God in his li£e. You lift a child .. . you give him the opportunity \ V<^J* in his Church and in his Christian home to gain 24 7-10 moral and religious insights. iwbl «■ :1j Thursday II Timothy 2 1-3 And you hold him above you . . . dedicating your 7 J own time and strength to your Church so that you v and your child can find together the spiritual founda tion on which men should build their lives. C*>yrtfil I Ml, Khun AJr. Strvicr, 5/r.ih.rg, V,. These Religious Messages Are l J üblishea In Tide Chowan Herald 4 And Are Sponsored By The Foil owing’ Business Establishments: | P & Q Super Market «r EDENTON, N. C. M. G. Brown Co., Inc. LUMBER —THILL WORK BUILDING MATERIAL Reputation Built on Satisfied Customers PHONE 2135 EDENTON Interested Citizen _ Belk - Tyler’s EDEN ION’S SHOPPING CENT El IHughes-Parker Hardware Co. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS PHONE 2315 EDENTON, N. C. The Jill Shoppe Edenton’s Newest Popular-Price Shoppe For Ladies EDENTON. N. C. Edenton Restaurant “Good Food Pleasant Surroundings” MRS. W. L. BOSWELL Prop. PHONE 9733 EDENTON < i v ' ••• . • wtM, y »* - ‘ * - r u E. L. Belch Buyers of All Kinds of Produce I< ! PHONE EDENTON, N. C. I ' ' /I W. E. Smith i» GENERAL MERCHANDISE ’’ROCKY HOCK" PHONE 3022 EDENTON __ ' - Mitchener’s Pharmacy PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS PHONE 3711 EDENTON I * The Betty Shoppe Edenton’s Complete Ladies’ , Ready-to-Wear Shoppe ' Quinn Furniture Company 1 HOME OP FINE'FURNITURE EDENTON, N. C- L_ 11 ■ v -'- 111 I ' " i The Chowan Herald I "YOUR HOME NEWSPAPER.” 9 * Y ’v- . W *

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view