PAGE SIX SECTION TWO IffiooOWvoWcHmD j Bf John Cony. Appalachian State Teacher* College Rfiir Do You Rato As Parent pdf'Sehohl-oge Child? It's wise to remember that tt child spends far more of waking hours at home than school. Thus you yourself f Other members of the fam ( are likely 'to be much more nti&itial than his teachers in term ini ng what kind of man ' 'vyoman he turns out to be. How do you rate as 'the par !t of a school-age child? ht an age when we are prone Stress academic achievement r Children, many parents fail Pfovide a stimulating envir ment at home, according to v Robert S. Fox, director of e University of Michigan’s eining school. Fox; suggests that parents ask emSelves these questions: 1. Do you subscribe to a va ety of magazines and read em? 2. Do you discuss “meaty” oblems at home, such as lo ti, national or international af irs? Frankly Speaking | By Frans HvAWTti Some six or so weeks ago a lend of mine started telling e about the John Birch Socie- I never heard of it before at time, but by now every te has heard about this or- 1 tnization and almost everyone, ts formed an opinion one way I ■ another. A definite opinion, j ne doesn’t take the John Bit ch ociety with a grain of salt.; o middle of the road opinions j ■ganization. Some people have! tiled for an investigation of the >hn Birch Society, and > ■= under says he would welcome ich ah investigation. He say. would disprove charges that le society is dictatorial in na ire. On the other hand, ho ants only members that believe i him and are willing to accept is leadership. The founder r; a ex-candy manufacturer narr- I Robert Welch. The name o' ahn Birch, by the way, refe - a man who is said by some i be the first casualty of the i lid war. This has never been | (WVen, but the fact that Birch' ■3B a missionary and later a i toll!genee officer makes him j ncrful enough as a guide-post. | tholgh it’s not known wheth-1 1 Birch himself would’ve roved of the methods of tb ■ iciety bearing his name. The iciety, founded in late 1958, ad dues of $25 a year for men. alf that for women. The ulti late goal is a million members ad a million dollars to help its ork. Its aim, fighting com unism, is, of course, admir )le, but its methods are ques-; »ned, even by those who ap-. bve of the rudiments of the ganization. The John Birch 1 iciety has attacked, either as mmunists, or tools of the mmunists, such people as Su eme Court Justice Warren, rmer Presidents Roosevelt, ■uman and Eisenhower and ith John Foster and Allan Lilies. These attacks, particu rly those leveled against Eis- ( ihower, proved 'too much even.' r many political figures who,j one time, backed the late, ena to r Joseph McCarthy, elch’s exact words, regarding senhower, were these “ . . . rm belief that Eiesnhower is a idicated, conscious agent of the ommunist conspiracy.” Welch Good Reading [for the whole Family •Mins •Facts •FaraDy Features *——— —— ghHMIon Scktnct Monitor [«M Norway St. Barton 15, Ma* [ ini your nUmnpw far tho time -«hockod. tnrtcood find my chock or pb.ir«L ■EE*:. Vi*-'. - > ' » * .. j; . ■fit* 3*' -r 3. Does Dad take the young-1 sters with him to some of his civic and social activities? 4. Does the family, on vacq tio ntrips, make it a point to visit historic spots or special interest places? 5. Does the family have avail able in the home some reading resources the child can use, such as a good encyclopedia, and good general interest read ing material? 6. Does the family attend cul tural programs, go to concerts, visit museums? 7. Does the family read aloud occasionally? « Any parent who answers “yes” to fewer than four of; these questions has some home work of his own to do, says Dr. Fox. (Editor’s note: Readers having questions concerning education are invited to send inquiries to School and Your Child, Appa j lachian State Teachers’ College, Boone, N. C.) later claimed that it was un-j ethical to quote from the book, since it was privately publish-' ed. However, he was one whoi circulated the book to get re cruits for his organization. Many of his early recruits, who are now top council members, are moneyed and influential. i men, including T. Coleman An-j draws, former U. S. Commis-i | siontr of Internal Revenue; for-] 1 mer Assistant Secretary of State 1 ! Spruille Braden; the Rev. Rich- I ard Ginder, editor of a Catholic newspaper; William Grede, for ! m;r head of the National Asso- I "iation of Manufaiturers; Clar- I ence Manion, former dean of the University of Notre Dame law| ichool; Frank Masland. who is, head of the carpet company! that bears his name; Colarj Parker, another former presi- j dent of th? National Association} of Manufacturers. There are many, many others, all men of influence, mostly in the world i» i ■ ! 1 1 , “Os all faiths a man’s faith in his own destiny is the most important.” The traditions are respected in rites conducted by us and j the ceremony is one of beau- | ty and dignify. j i | ' KfMfeU [Funeral Home] r | no w. a l etMAff'£ sr -CIO edenton, n d.. 24 MU-’UAL BUH:aI ASSOCIATION Far away Low cost, convenient long dis , tance telephone service makes at SChOOI it so very easy for and blit CIOS6 their chi,dren away at school to . . . keep in touch these days. tO ilOmß so next time you'd like to be by Long With your children, do the next Dfctanr(& best thin§*nd call them long It. distance. - JWUJw. gpw p. jujin THtwsa**. amul « iwi of big business. Speaking 6f I those who've had their say ■ aboiut the John Birch Society, * Richard Cardinal Cushing, the famed Massachusetts Catholic leader, at first endorsed Robert < Welch, then later backed down somewhat, claiming that Welch was; “speaking absurdities.” On c that subject, Welch says that the big American defense budg et against the external threat of communism is itself part of < the communist plot. If that’s a little hard to make out, check Senator Barry Goldwater’s 1 statement that he disagrees ' with many of the theories of the Birch organization, but he agrees with the people who ex pound those theories. As of this writing, the Birch Society has been getting a lot of publicity, pro and con. Will it become a powerful organization, or will it I just peter out? Only time will tell. Right now it’s creating a big stir, due to its being the first time this country’s ultra conservatives have been organ ized in any way. However, even many conservatives feel that the society has gone to the extreme in its name calling. Thus far ( nothing constructive seems to I have been done by the John t [Birch Society and it’s felt that' not too many Americans will • | follow the dictates of the ex candy manufacturer who de | mands that John Birch Society followers, quote: “accept my leadership.” It seems too dic tatorial in nature and the peo ple of this country aren’t in the j mood to be dictated to by any- I one. j Closing thought: Character [is made by what you Stand for; ieputatipn by what you fall for. Vegetable Plants Flowet* Plants Shrubbery • Nina Varieties in Tomato Plants from Big Boy Hy brid to Tree Tomato. Pepper and Egg Plants FLOWER PLANTS SWEET WILLIAMS SALVIA ENGLISH DAISIES BASKET CiF GOLD CANDY TI’FT GERANII'MS PETUNIAS PRIMA DONNA PALEFACE BINGO DOIHLE PETI NIA TANGO MAYTIME GLITTER WHITE MAGIC POPCORN FIRE CHIEF COMANCHE SNAP DRA< K. VERBENA AGEKATI .« COLEI’S BEGONIAS We Guarantee The Plants IVe Plant! Leary Plait Farm 8 Miles from Edenton N. C. 32 North on the Rocky Hock Road Cdurch - Qoing a Ha6i<! Sunday School Lesson Wtm tkß RIfeHTEOUS suffer i rniefnaflonal Sunday SChdol Lassort for April ifeitt. lSfcl: f Memory Selection: "Blessed is i the man who endures trial; for [ when he has stood the teat he • will receive the crown of lift [ which God has promised to those I who love him." (Janies 1:12). I Lesson Text: Job 1 and 2: 19:13-26; James 1:12-15. S The purpose of our study to | day is to consider some of the [ perplexing questions raised by L the suffering of the righteous | and to discuss some of the an | swers to be found in the Book 3 of Job. The story of Job indicates that prosperity and health of ( ten make it difficult to develop w real religious convictions. In Job’s case, we see that a man , can be both prosperous and gen- I uinely religious. But Satan’s shrewd insight into human na ture reminds us that many peo ' pie are devoted to God only on * a sort of contract basis. If God fails to provide his blessings, then devotion to him cools. Chowan County Churches TEOPIM BAPTIST I Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o’clock Preaching services every first and third Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. EDENTON BAPTIST REV. R. N. CARROLL. Pastor Sunday School at 9:45 A. M. Morning worship jervlce, 11 A. M. I Training Union at 6:30 P. M. Evening service at 7:30 o'clock. MM-week prayer service Wednesday at 7:30 P. M. , OREAT HOPE BAPTIST REV. HENRY V. NAPIER. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. 1 Morning worship second and (ouitn Sundays at 11 o’clock. Evening worship first and fourth I * »♦ Q o'p’ "•cvV Prayer service Wednesday at 8 P. M. CENTER HILL METHODIST REV. FRANK FORTESQUE Pastor Preaching services every first and. third Sundays at 11 A. M. EDENTON PRESBYTERIAN REV. JAMES MacKENZIE. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Girls' Meeting—all teen-age girl*— lur.day. 6-30 P. M. Christian Servlet Brigade—all teen ge hnvs—Tuesday. 7 F. .... Mid-week Prayer Service—Wednesday dght at 7:30 o'clock. FIRST CHRISTIAN REV. E. G. ALEXANDER. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A M. 'taming worship at 11 o’clock. Young People’s meeting at 6-SO P. M. Evt-nlng worship at 7.30 o'clock. Wednesday evening service at 7:30 'dock. ST. ANN'S CATHOLIC REV. C. F. HILL. Pastor Sunday Masses 8 and 11 A. M. Confessions before every Mass. Sunday School 11:45 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 flrsf and third Sundays. Sandav School at 10 A. M. B. T. U. at 7 P M Evening worship at 8 o'clock second and fourth Sundays. Prayer service Thursday at 8 P. M. EDENTON METHODIST REV. RALPH FOWLKES, Paste* Church School Sunday momlhg a* 9’45 o’clock. Preaching service Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. MACEDONIA BAPTIST REV. GORDON SHAW, Pastor Sunday School at lo A. M. Preac.ilng every Sunday morning at 11 o’cl »ck and every Sunday night at 7:30 o clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 o’clock. WARWICK BAPTIST REV. R. B. COTTINGHAM. Pasto. Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11 A M. fc»TU at IP. M. _ „ Preaching scrvlcee at 8 P. It Prayer service Thursdya nights at a o'clock. SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL REV. GEORGE B. HOLMES. Rector 8:00 A. M. Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.. Church School. 10:00 A. Hi.. Adult Bible (Ml 11:00 A. M., Morning Worship. 7:30 P. M.. Young Churchman. Wednesday, 10.30 A. M.. Holy Com munion. BALLARD'S BRIDGE BAPTIST REV. A. CARL HART, .Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o’clock. ■ .... „ Preaching services at 11 A. M. and 8 P M Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 8 o’clock. CHURCH OF GOD REV. JOHN MARTIN. Faster Sunday School at 10 A., M. Preaching service at.ll A, M. WPE Sunday at 7 p. It Evening worship at 7:30 o’clock. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES R, P. LONG Congiegatlon Servant Bfble study at 3:00 o’clock Sunday afternoon at Kingdom Hall. Bible study Wednesday night at 8 ° Service meeting and ministry school Friday nights at 8 o’clock. ASSEMBLY OF GOD REV. C. L WILES. Pastor Sunday School. 9:45 A. NT Worship Service, 11:0 A ft P. 0!?.? Erangellstte* r 3etM«! Ce 7 :»* P M.; Wednesday night prayer service. But prosperity operates against religion in another way which is more subtle. So long as everything is going well we tend 10 lose our sense of need fbr God; and we feel independ ent arid self-sufficient. -When this happens, the prescription for a radical cure requires the lOss of this cherished prosperi ty. Taking away our blessings uncovers our inadequacies and forces us either to despair or to become aware of the grace of God. In a real sense, learning to acknowledge our dependence on God is the basis lesson in Christian living. As someone once very wisely remarked at a time of world conflict: ‘There are no atheists in foxholes!” The church is spiritually ! strongest in hard times. It may [be superficially larger in pros perous times, but its true mem bers are best exposed in the trials of depression. We are apt, as were Job’s friends, to classify suffering as a punishment for soma sin. Of ten it is. Certainly we are cor rect in assuming that there is some connection between sin and suffering. There is a lot of suffering which is deserved. Continued on Page 7—Section 2 I HAPPY HOME PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH 1 HAROLD C. LEAKE. Minister I Sunday School. 9:45: Morning Wor ship, 11:00: LiMiners. 6:45; Evening Worship, 7:45: Wednesday Prayer Ser vice, 7:45. WHITE OAK CHAPEL BAPTIST REV. R. M. McNAIR. Pastor ROCKY HOCK BAPTIST THURMAN W. ALLRED, Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. . Morning worship at 11 o’clock. I Training Union at 7P. M. 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 7:30 o'clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. Young people's and sealer choir 1 practice Friday nights at 8 o’clock. Men’s Bible Class meets Monday night at s ß 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 muo. Fourth Sunday at 11 A **.. «™™m» prayer and sermon. Sunday School each Sunday after 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 Day. Sunday School at 11 A. M. to 1 P. M. Prayer and Bible Band Tuesday night at 8 o'clock Wednesday night choir practice at 7:30 o’clock. , . Thursday night choir practice »t 7:30 o’clock. Friday night Pastor’s Aid Society at 8 o’clock. Saturday night young people’s Bible Quiz and recreation- WARREN GROVE BAPTIST REV. J. E. TILLETT Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service at 11:30 A M. every 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. DAVIS. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching service first Sunday at 11:30 A M. ST. JOHN BAPTIST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG, Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Serves every first and third Sun days at 12 o’clock noon. Vesper ser vice at 6 o’clock. GALE STREET BAPTIST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG, Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. lit. Services every second and fourth Sunday at 11 A. M. Papyer meeting Wednesday even ing at 8 o’clock. PIWEY 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. Pasta* JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES ELDER J. C, HALL. Pastor CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV H. c. SAUNDERS. Pastor K ADEBH A. M. E. ZION REV. L. A WILLIAMS Pastor Sunday School at 9:30 A M. PLEAKANT GROVE A. M. E. Z REV. JAMES WILLS, Pastor PWflAtaK 8 o’clock. ■ THE CHURCH FOR ALL .. . ALL FOR THE CHURCH The Church is the greatest (actor on earth For the building of character and good citizenship. It is a storehouse of spiritual values. Without a strong Church. , neither democracy nor civilization can survive. There are four sound reasons why every person should attend services regularly and support the Church. They community and nation (4) 1 <>: (hr sake of the Church itself, which nreds his i'S A,'’w’v- moral and materia! support. Plan to go Io f^ ccgular!y and read your Bible M daily. ». ?*/ JF f Dmy Book Ch»pt« Verw |- ■ ■ Sundmy Prowl* 7 1-0 ■ I TuaxUy Matthew 7 24-20 I I r^i rerb * 22 I Copyright 1821, Kclatcr A4r. Sank*, Straibvrt. V*. I SatunUy U»ltlMW 10 11-15 I These Religious Messages Are Published In The Chowan Herald And Are Sponsored By The Following Business Establishments: P & Q Super Market EDENTON, N. C. M. G. Brown Co*, lttC. LUMBER —"MILLWORK BUILDING MATERIAL Reputation Built on Satisfied Customers PHONE 2135 EDENTON Broad Street Fish Market Complete Line of Fresh Seafoods PHONE 2217 • BILL CORPREW. Owner - ii ii I 1 | ill i i Ti t.i i T fill . Belk - Tyler’s EDENTON’S SHOPPING CENTER . -- 1 - « « I • Hughes-Parker Hardware CJo. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS PHONE 2315 EDENTON. N. a Lira l i n The Jilt Shoppe Edenton’s Newest Poptilar-Price Shoppe For Ladltii EDENTON. N. C, Interested €iti*«f M-■ . '’ V ’ : « " ’I" —I I f ! L I* •• :'.jr*rrf -M.y, . > 'a, *.« ' -;>• .T» •• . Edenton Restaurant | li Good Pood Pleasant Surroundings” ■ ( MRS. W. L. BOSWELL. Prop. PHONE 9723 EDENTON mmmmm ““"Wi—*~**™~™**"~ ( W. E. Smith GENERAL MERCHANDISE "ROCKY HOCK” - . PHONE 3022 EDENTON Mitchener’s Pharmacy - PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS PHONE 3711 EDENTON i The Betty Shoppe Edeoton’s Complete Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear Shoppe -- -.r - : Quinn Furniture Company ' HOME OF FINE FURNITURE EDENTON, N. C. - - ■ ■ " : i. ■ ■ i . , . i The Chowan Herald "YOUR HOME NEWSPAPER” i

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