PAGE SIX V-ggCVWP TWO r ’ Merry HNI News I By LOUISE B. ADAMS ■■ ■ : ; Mr. and MrS. Hiram Baker of 5 Windsor visited Mrs. C. T. Bak er and family Sunday. £ A. J. Lawrence is a patient •' in Bertie Memorial Hospital at ‘ Windsor. I / Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rogerson t of Norfolk, Va., Mr. and Mrs.j i Watford Phelps and daughter, Lorraine of Portsmouth, Va., visited Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Davis Sunday and were supper guests. Mr. and Mrs. George Davis and children, George, Jr„ Becky Dee and Christine of Elizabeth City spent Sunday with Mr. Da j vis’ parents, Mr. and Mis. Ar thur Davis. Mrs. Lewis Britt of Edenton: visited Mrs. C. T. Baker . and' family Friday afternoon. ' Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Outlaw and the Rev. Oscar Turner were : in Norfolk, Va., Friday on busi -1 ness. Mrs. Merrill Perry of Edenton visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cobb Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Starkey Sharp and children. Jane and Starkey V of Harrellsville visited Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Jr., and fami ly Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Miller of Ross Community, Windsor, visit-, * ed Mrs. C. T. Baker and family Monday afternoon. Patrolman Wayne Keeler of Rocky Mount spent Tue ...ay "t home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Keeter. i Mrs. Ralph Smithwick and Mrs. Viola Cowan were in Wind-, sor and Edenton Tuesday of last week on business. I Mrs. Chet Chite visited her brother, Stanley Evans, of Wind sor, who is a patient in i’er tie Memorial Hospital at V.'ir.d- —. SMUV.H Model 211-CB-S2 ECONOMY-PRICED "LIVING COLOR " TABLE TV • 21" Tube (Overall Diameter), 260 sq. in. Viewable Picture • New Super-Power Chassis • New RCA Long-Range Tuner • Picture Stabilizer Circuits • Improved Mirror-Sharp Picture • Balanced Fidelity FM Sound • Tube Guard •P») I *) Western (ias Ker\ ice. Inc, EDENTON CLEARANCE JMI [M jKy||l ||jj ,f CONTINUES : All Fall And Winter Merchandise,r i > - INCLUDING - Dr i k ßscs *" Coats “ Car Coats **■ Suits | !! Jackets - Rain Coats - Skirts 1 f Blouses - Sweaters ~ Hats Purses And Many Other Items < f All Fall and Winter Jewelry V% Price 1 > ALL SALES FINAL , SHOP TODAY FOR BEST SELECTIONS , , j sor. Mrs. Lillie Evans is spending i a few days ' with her daughter in-law, Mrs. Stanley Evans in! Windsor while Mr. Evans is a patient in Bertie Memorial Hos-i pital at Windsor. | Mrs. J. B. Smithwick was in ' Edenton Tuesday on business. Mrs. H. R. Outlaw, Raymond ■ Outlaw, Mrs. Cliff Keeter, Mrs. ! Roy Baker, Mrs. Ed Pierce and Roy Pierce attended Jim Out law's funeral in Greenville on* I Tuesday. i Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Jr.,’ attended tire funeral of Miss. Doris Chitty in Murfreesboro on* Wednesday. Mr. Pruden was aj ' pallbearer. Mrs. Chet White and Mrs. Lil lie Evans visited Stanley Evans in Bertie Memorial Hospital at' j Windsor Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Robert- 1 son of Rosemead spent Sunday; with Mrs. Robertson’s parents, i Mr. and Mrs. Chet White. Mr. and Mrs. Chet White, Mrs.! Lillie Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Robertson of Rosemead! visited Mr. and Mrs. Claude Small, Jr., and family in Eden ton Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Virgie Phelps and daugh ter. Miss Beulah Phelps of Wind sor visited Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Willis Sunday. . Mrs. B. G. Willis visited her sister, Miss Nancy Pruden in Wilson Saturday. ! News Items Too Late For Last Weslc's Issue Due To Holiday Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wil liams and children of Portsmouth spent Sunday with Mrs. Wil liams’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. El bert Pierce. Mrs. Bettie Sue Bunch and children of Washington, D. C., spent Sunday and Monday with Mrs. Bunch’s mother, Mrs. Bet tie Ceffield, also her brother-in law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Keffer Baker of Windsor visited Mrs. Bettie Coffield and Mr. and Mrs. John Brown Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Smithwick spent Monday in Suffolk, Va., with Mr. and Mrs. Willie Haw kins. Kermit Mizelle of Edenton] visited his ."randmolher, Mrs. C.j T. Baker and aunt:,, Mrs. Viola Cowan and Louise Adams Thurs daj. Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Sr., and! Mrs. E, J. Pruden, Jr., were in Edenton shopping oil Tuesday. Marvin Cobb left Tuesday to r< turn to Dover, Delaware, after ■pending the Christmas holidays a’ home with his mother, Mrs. Lloyd Cobb, also his brother and .. tcr-in law. Mr. and Mrs. Brax ton Cobb. Butler Williams, Harvey Wil liams of Portsmouth, Va., and Gilbert Williams of Ahoskie visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard ffiasco and family in Durham on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. George Baze more of Edenton visited Mrs. C. T. Baker and family Monday j afternoon. I Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Dorsey of Franklin, Va., spent Tuesday ! visiting with Mrs. C. T. Baker, Mrs. Louise Adams and Mrs. Vi- I ola Cowan. I Mrs. J. P. Love and daughter, Nina, spent from Monday until Wednesday with Mr. Love’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Love in Wingate. Mrs. Jessie Perry of William ston, sdr. and Mrs. Jimmie Smith ; of Norfolk, Va., were visitors in i the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Sr., on Monday. Johnnie B. Smithwick of Eliz abeth City spent a few days last week with his mother, Mrs. J. D. Smithwick. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Davenport and family on Monday were Mrs. Louise Pratt and son, Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Goodwin and daughter, Joan of Edenton, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Pratt of Washington, D. C., and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ward and son Billy of Winton. Margaret Davenport was in Raleigh Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Goodwin and daughter, Joan to visit Mrs. Ella Simpson, who is a patient in State Hospi tal. Mr. and Mrs. Pruden Forehand and family and C. B. Davenport of Edenton were visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Davenport and family Monday. Mrs. W. T. Davis was in Eden ton Wednesday shopping. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Swain of Plymouth, Mr. and Mrs. John nie Keeter of Edenton spent Monday with Mrs. Swain and Mrs. Keeter’s sister, Mrs. J. D. Smithwick. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Swann and daughter, Riia of Norfolk, Va., visited Mrs. Swann’s mother, Mrs. J. D. Smithwick Thursday night. Mrs. Frank Overton of Wind sor is spending some time with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Outlaw. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker re turned home Friday from Tampa, Florida, where they had spent a few days with their daughter, Sara Baker and granddaughter, Shelia Miller. Janie Ella Altman of Ports mouth, Va., and Dot Wright of Edenton spent Friday night with Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Altman. Mrs. Wesley Winborne spent Thursday in Windsor with her sister, Mrs. G. E. Keeter. Tommie Cobb and son, Ken neth of Elizabeth City spent Sun day with Mrs. T. E. White and Mrs. Virgin Baker. Mrs. S. B. Adams and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Sr., were in Newport News, Va., Wednesday with Mrs. Frank Bradshaw and daughter, Brenda of Greensboro to visit Mrs. Adams’ daughter, Mi-s. Bill Parker and new granddaughter. Mrs. Parker is the former Mar garet Adams. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Tart of Princeton spent the week-end with Mrs. Tart’s mother, Mrs. C. T. Baker and sisters, Mrs. Louise Adams and Mrs. Viola Cowan. ' ' THE CHOW AH HE&ALO. EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. JANUARY 12, 12S1. Mi. and Mrs. Bobby Rhea of Franklin, Va., spent Sunday with. Mr. Rhea’s grandmother, Mrs. C | T. Baker and aunts, Mrs. Viola Cowan and Mrs. Louise Adams, j Fonda Smithwick returned to East Carolina College Sunday af ter spending several days at home enjoying the Christmas holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Smithwick and brothers, Britt and “Sis”., Mr. and Mrs. Chgt White and Robert Turner of Newpiort News;' Va.j made a trip to Farmville, Va., Sunday to take Mr. anfl Mrs. White’s daughter, Anna Raye back to Longwood College where she is a student, Anna Raye's Christmas holidays were enjoyed -very much at home with her parents and brother, Martin and sister, Marion. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Bass visit ed Mr. Bass’ mother, who is a: patient in Chowan Hospital at Edenton Sunday. Mrs. Fint Mizelle and children ( of Windsor visited her grand mother, Mrs. J. D. Smithwick Saturday. Mrs. Willie Castello of Wind sor visited Mrs. J. D. Smith wick Thursday. Farmers Offered Resolutions For ’6l Wilson County Agent Bill Lewis has come up with some 1 New Year’s resolutions for Tar! Heel farmers to consider: 1. Produce better quality to-] bacco. “This means planting several varieties, especially some: with pointed leaves, spacing plants so that more sunlight can reach the leaves; topping down to let the leaves develop body; priming ripe tobacco,-and sort-1 ing into grades,” says Lewis. 2. Produce a bale and a half-of cotton per acre. “You’ll have to PURE gasolines “hold more records for performance than any other”' a \ ■* J• - • -a • PURE gasolines have sparked 38 different makes and models of cars to over /JmIIIICbIi 240 certified performance records. Records for acceleration, power. /vplllvr MIJ '■ £■& tnileage and economy. W* 1 MJJ And now Pure-Premium has been boosted in Octane... boosted into the super-premium class. It delivers more anti-knock power than over before. So drive into any Pure Oil station and get Pure-Premium. It’s sonar duality ... ready to give record road performance in your cer. I *C*rti/Ud ky NASCAR (NatiMnl Auodation fgr Stock Care) V ■ - **®®®* ~ %.*'?:v ■ v ■. * Rr W dHi dp*" we 4HHNB UR W (Rp RRRNI Up RF <j|Rk dURv'-iT dßib " dP® die Ri gRp '.'...'< plant early, curb weeds with : cihemicals, fertilize for high I yields, get a good stand, con trol the boll weevil, defoliate, I harvest 'mechanically,” he says. “Cost can be cut to 25 cents ? pound by producing IMi bales per acre. It costs about 35 cents a pound to produce 300 poqnds of lint per acre, and a man can’t make money at that rate." 3. Sell corn and small grain’ for 50 per cent more. “You’ll make more money by wrapping them in pigskin, cow hide or egg shells,” gays Lewis. | “The corn and small grain will bring $1.50 a bushfel by market-] ing it through livestock. And it will employ labor at off sea-1 sons.” 4. Wean 18 pigs per sow in -1961. “Flush sows with extra feed and get them gaining for. two weeks before breeding; feed them a balanced ration (but con- 1 trol weight during gestation); and practice ‘B-2-4-6-8-10,’ says Lewis. | “That means ‘B’ prepared at farrowing time: By cleaning and disinfecting the farrowing quarters, by keeping rail guards or farrowing crate in place, by using heat lamps in winter, by being on hand at farrowing time.! “It means start creep feeding* when pigs are two weeks old; castrate at four weeks; vaccinate for cholera at six weeks; wean at eight weeks and deworm at 10 weeks.” 5. Improve ten acres of wood land in 1961. “Improvement in the stand of : timber is the greatest need,” says Lewis. “A stand of timber is 500 living seedlings; 250 trees at ten inches in diameter; 125 trees at 15 inches in diameter, and 65 trees at 20 inches.” Lewis advises dividing wood land into ten-acre tracts, so the units will be large enough to manage profitably. . 6. Spend ten minutes a day of rjtal planning. . “Remember what Dean Csu- | • vgrd said: ‘The farmer of t«-| morrow will lean on the pencil j instead of the hoe’,’’ says Lewis.' A farmer cannot plan without I records, says Lewis. “Income j and cost records are vyfal for! , tyx purposes,” he says. “And | tjie greatest ‘tax’ is the low yield, the sow with the small 'dumber of slow-gaining pigs. | “Ten minutes of planning, ( keyed to accurate records, will] i decide whether you farm as a I business or a habit.” I CHRISTIAN SCIENCE j j How true health and harmony are established will be brought out in . the Lesson-Sermon en titled “Life” at Christian Sci ence chundies Sunday. Included in the Bible readings is this statement from Deuteron ! omy (5:33): “Ye shall walk in all the ways which the Lord your God hath commanded you, that ye may live, and that it may be well with you and that Iye may prolong your days in the land which ye shall possess.” j This passage from “Science and ■ Health with Key to te Scrip tures” by Mary Baker Eddy will also be read: “Our proportion ate admission of the claims Os good or of evil determines the harmony of our existence our health, our longevity, and our Christianity” (167:7). The Golden Text is taken from I John (5:11): "This is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life isi in his Son.” The act of dying is also one of the acts of life. —Marcus Aurelius. ‘ Home In iC&oweH C. Hare, 70,,died suddenly t flhursday morning of last week [at 10 o’clock’ at his home in-* the Creswell section. He was a native of Washington County [ and * a retired farmer. 1 Surviving are three sons, Hen ry Hare of Cresweil, Mgrk Pare of Fayetteville and Furpian ] Hare, stationed in England; three daughters, Mrs. George 2jemka of Bermuda, Mrs. James A. White of Orlando, Fla., and J. W. Bess of Portsmouth; a broth-, er. Louis Hare of Raleigh; two 1 sisters, Mrs. C. E. Campen andj Mrs. Joe Ambrose, both of Cres- . We'll design forms to speed-up the routine of your office or shop. W ' Get our suggestions, without obligation, on anything from a shipping tag to a COOT* H dingted system of forms. er aldj| .rv c ■ -v._ I . officiated and burial was in the §1 family cemetery. -.? •*; Jflj Quite CooL Indeed I A hotel. was on fire: and the j| guests, gathered out in front, ■ were watching the flames. ■ m I “Nothing to get excited about,” I one traveling man was ■ i’l took my time about dresniag. If Lighted a cigaret. Didn’t like 1 the knot in my neckties and -**+ || tied it. That’s how cool I was.” || “Fine,” remarked a' bystander. 1 “But why didn’t you put your II pants on?” ,

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