SECTION TWO (WT '6^ By WILBORNE HARRELL A * There’s a frightening overtone in the mere fact that safety belts are considered necessary for cars. Now the terrific hazards of the open road are recognized and cast in the same category as that of ships that carry life boats and lifebelts, and planes that carry parachutes. But, for me, just the sight of that safety belt would take all the pleasure out of any automobile ride I may have the occasion to take. Gone would be the enjoyable spin through the countryside, or the relaxed ride just for fun like the leisurely walks or buggy rides we used to enjoy. Now we are' grimlv reminded that death rides in the rumble seat, and each ride may be our last one. But. we Americans are so nonchalantly and unconcernedly killing one another by the hun dreds on the highways, I sup pose something, no matter how desperately or futile, had to be done about it. Nevertheless, I don’t like the idea of the ne> Merry Hill News By LOUISE B. ADAMS Mr. and Mrs. George Oliver and family of Cary spent the week-end with Mrs. Oliver’s mo ther, Mrs. Sallie Adams and brother, Sammie Adams. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Baker and son, Everett spent Thursday in Norfolk, Virginia on business. Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Sr., re turned home Wednesday afler spending several days in Durham to be with her husband in Vet erans Hospital, who still remains DITHANE >.. M- 22 £^> kjjjMl RAY DUST Controls peanut leaf spot Now you can use Dithane M-22 as a spray or dust to control peanut leaf spot. This superior fungi cide, so widely used for disease control in many fruits and vegetables, is highly effective against peanut leaf spot. Dithane M-22 dust or sprays are non-irritating to the operator, and it is safe on foliage when used as recommended* Conventional low-volume sprayers can be used for applying Dithane M-22 sprays. Dithane M-22 has been used successfully by growers in all the important peanut growing areas. "Excellent leaf spot control... healthier plants... much easier to use... higher yields of better quality peanuts ... ", these are typical comments from growers. Dithane M-22 is compatible with all your insecticides. Dithane M-22 protects foliage from leaf spot even during rainy weather because of its tenacity on the leaves. Peanut leaves are difficult to wet. To obtain maximum coverage and performance from Dithane M-22, add Triton B-1956 to all your sprays. See your dealer for additional information on Dithane M-22 for peanut leaf spot control. ROHM H HA & AS ■ PHILADELPHIA I. M. ”\'l 2° cessity for strapping me down, when I take an auto ride. Phil Osopher says, The tragedy i and danger of the false propa ganda that the communists spread among illiterate and un-1 der-privileged countries about! the United States and our demo-1 era tic form of government, is that it is too often believed, j And that also goes for we I Americans —many of us, without I stopping to think, also believe! these preposterious fairy tales.! There are many gullible, ignor-1 ant and credulous people here in J I the United States, who follow; i i | the Party Line without realizing j jit. The Reds are experts at 1 j sugar-coating their ideologies. i RAMBLING Have you ever' caught lightning bugs and placed | tern in a bottle? Thomas A. | Edison, when he held his firstl electric lamp in his hand, was j 'small potatoes as an inventor! quite ill. I Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baze- ( more and children, Patricia and Mike of Portsmouth, Va., visit ed their grandmother, Mrs. C. T. ,Baker and aunts, Mrs. Louise , Adams and Mrs. Viola Cowan on Sunday. Mrs. Sara Baker and daugh ! ter, Sheila arrived Monday from Tampa, Fla., to spend some time with her parents, Mr. and I Mrs. Roy Bakcri- Mrs. W. T. Davis, Mrs. Arthur! Davis, Ken and Kerry Spivey! were in Windsor Thursday on| business. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Baker, Mr.! THE CHOWAN HERALD compared to us when we held in our hands boyhood’s light ning bug lamp. But with child hood’s natural cruelty, we never stopped to think that to thus imprison lightning bugs was not altogether a humane act. But does childhood know the mean ing of compassion, forbearance, mercy? There is as great a dif ference in the glow and warmth of the human soul and person ality, between the child and the adult, as existed between Edi son’s electric lamp and boy hood’s feeble lightning bug lamp. So it is among nations. A people must grow up and gain mature stature, before they can truly understand what the torch of liberty and freedom and democracy really mean. That, is the basic reason for the conflict and unrest among the world’s young countries today— it is a case of too much de mocracy too soon. No compromise with communism! and Mrs. Luther Asbell of Wind sor left Friday to spend until Sunday with their sons-in-law and daughters, Mr. and Mnj. Don Ambrose and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lowers of Portsmouth, Va. Mrs. Chet White and Mrs. Vi ola Cowan were in Windsor Thursday on business. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Smith wick spent a few days last week with her brother-in-law and sis ter, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Keet er in Edenton. Miss Nancy Pruden of Wil son spent Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Willis at Willis Landing. Bill Cowand left Friday with the National Guard Unit of Windsor for iwo weeks duty at Fort Bragg. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Davis for supper on Wednesday night, the occasion being Mr. Davis’ birthday, were: Mr. and Mrs. Bill Altman and children, Gerald, Morris. Stewart, Joann. Janie Ella and Stevie, Mrs. Wat ford Phelps and .girls, Rita Ann and Lorraine of Portsmouth, Va., also Mrs. Kenneth Spivey and boys, Ken and Kerry. Mrs. L. M. Pierce entertain ed at a fish fry at her home at Merry Hill Friday night for the following: Mr. and Mrs. Cecil White, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hog gard and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pierce of Windsor, L. M. Pierce and Norfleet Thompson of Merry Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Graham Willi ford had as their guests for dinner on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Mitchell and Miss Edna Snell of Creswell and Tom Lodge of Edenton. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Winborne visited Mr. and Mrs. Grover .Kabrich of Anderson, Indiana, at the home of her mother, Mrs. CHAMPION BOURBON oj| by Schenley jflgg&A. 8 YEAR OLD ■■lHh straight Bourbon fl j jA 5 2-75 pint ■ !« $ 4.20 4 /s quart U ‘ ctroight UlhUk« u |K Hpsll Sdttlrft hi .Sritmlni 9wtillrr«. 3nr. * MBS H9HP 8 YEARS OLD-STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY-86 PROOF. SCHENLEY DIST. CO.. N. Y. C. - Im snip l' M JH & llll' sff v : ' .JmMKL ' y i\ - (S fi SMIgK FACING TIIK ISSUE A real flesh and blood totem pole brightens the scene in Dallas, Tex., as three cub scouts pose with scout-made totems. Nancy Winborne of Ahoskie on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Kab- Tich is the former Miss Hannah Thomas Winborne of Ahoskie. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. George Bowen and daughter, Suzanne, of Windsor. Tommie Rhea of the U. S. Soldiers Home, Washington, D. C., spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. Britt Smithwick. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Bissette of Raleigh spent Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Smithwick also. Mrs. Cecil Newborn of'" Wil liamstori and Mrs. Bessie Coffee and daughters of Newport News, Va., visited Miss Beulah White and Mrs. J. W. Winborne Tues day. Jo Lo Williford was the guest of hi.s daughter, Mrs. Walter Lawrence and family of Windsor ! ANNOUNCEMENT The Fruit Stand Operated By [ FRANK AM) HFYWOOD JONES Is Now Open For Business FULL LINE OF CANTALOUPES, WATERMELONS AND PEACHES All Kinds of Fruits and Vegetables ; WHOLESALE AND RETAIL > Highway 17 South .5 Miles from Edenton > (No Sunday Sales) rcr Sunday dinner. Miss Phyllis Smithwick re turned home Thursday after spending a week with her sis ter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Bob House of Harrellsville. Mrs. J. Britt Smithwick visit ed her sister, Mrs. Gladys Out law Saturday in Edenton. Mrs. Outlaw and daughter, Jerry, re turned home with Mrs. Smith wick to spend Saturday night and Sunday. Mrs. H. R. Outlaw spent a few days last week with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Kccter in Eden ton. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Keeter and son. Scottie of Edenton visited ,re ! ntives and friends Saturday. Mrs. W. T. Davis, Mrs Ken neth Spivey and son. Kerry, were in Jackson and Aulander Saturday on business. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Jr., and Mrs. E. J. Pruden, Sr., I were in Durham Sunday to see , E. J. Pruden, Sr„ who still re- j mains very sic'" in Veterans Hospital. j Mr. and Mrs. Eldridge Baker I visited Mrs. DaXer’s father, Zeb Cobb, who is a patient in the' sanitorium at Wilson, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Davis, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Davis, Ken j and Kerry Spivey, Mrs. Minnie j Bazemore and son, Bert of Eden- j ton visited Mr. and Mrs. George j Davis and family in Elizabeth j City Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Kate Johnson of Cole rain is spending two weeks with Mrs. W. H. Taylor. HD Clubs Urg-e More Consumption Os Milk Chowan Home Demonstration Club members urge drinking more milk and using more milk products such as cottage cheese in one's diet. utril onis's i‘>d t« u,,- plicate the food elements in a quart of milk by purchasing oth er products, it would cost about 43 cents. Dr. Charles 11. Mayo, iate d s tinguished surgeon at the fa mous Mayo Clinic said, “Consid ering its cost per pound, mil offers more fond for the mo”?v j than any other food material available.” Studies of consumer food ex penditures show that 18 to 20 percent of the family food bud-! get is spent for milk and milk! products. Here’s what the Amer ican family gets for this money:! 23-26 percent of their calories,! Don’t Gag—Buy oiaj j dentists say "wonderful" . 'best I're ever used" . . . 'best tooth paste or the oarKei ! BUCKET SEATS ALONE DO NOT A MONZA MAKE —-■"»' ■ 11 ■ Gee! ■ Little did we know, when we introduced the j i could buy a car that treats ■ a Molina handles—some'- fasr-.; A. II ■ / J I 11 1 fill K cause Corvair is the only fp|| i|| |i :•'! |:’.i.;||j|!|j ;; rear-engined car made in this I, | I III! I ■|i| lj|;j j!|| 11 !| H countrv, and vou know what yill[|||N fe |ll =j |!i „„e,i„ s light a, rJi thistledown. (You even park this one more easily, it steers so briskly.) Beautifully bal anced braking—the car stays (level even under panic brak ing, which we hope you’ll never have to do. Traction ■ and more traction, so you that’s sheer joy to experi ence. ■ You get more: a shocks before they can ruffle Thoroughgoing economy, erating cost. ■ You’re not bucket seats alone, are you? CORVAIR BY CHEVROLET Drive the Corvair Monza at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer’s George Chevrolet Co., Inc. 1100 N. Broad St PHONE 2138 Edewfcon, N. C. Manufacturer’s License No. 110 DEALER’S FRANCHISE NO. $69 Edenton, North Carolina Thursday, June 15, 1961. 40-45 percent of their protein, | 75-84 percent of their calcium, 50-76 percent of their riboflavin, 35-39 percent of their Vitamin A, 18-19 percent of their thia- ! min, and 5-6 percent of their iron and niacin. In terms of today’s factory wages, the “real” price of a quart of milk is the lowest in history, according to the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Back in 1890 it took 26 minutes of factory work to pay for a quart of milk selling at the average price of 6.8 cents. Today it takes less than 7 minutes to earn the price of a quart of home-delivered milk figured at 25.2 cents pci- quart. “June is Dairy Month and .‘The Livin’ Is Easy With Dairy '‘d’. Use;.them in vour menu planning.- say Chowan Horne Demon"ration Club members. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Captain and Mrs. W. O. Spe’ght f u’t'stov' - r Air Force Base, 4 Prescription r t Service // * —by / / REGISTERED PHARMACISTS /-4 pt ‘ ' ; , i Have your , physician nr 1* v tJ callus! '/Ok * 1 MjT v 'O’ DIAL 3711 ‘Cmf Ny? WE PICK VP > ' li. AM) DELIVER jU*- % * Mitchener’s Pharmacy 301 S. Broad Street Edenton, N. C. Massachusetts, announce the birth of their second child, a daughter, Lisa Carol, bom June 4th. TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED Plagued Day And Nightwithßladder Discomfort? Unwise eating: or drinking may be a source, of mild, but annoying bladder irritations making you feel restless, tense, and uncomfortable. And if rest less nights, with nagging backache, headache or muscular aches and pains due to over-exertion, strain or emotional upset, adding to your misery don’t wait try Doan’s Pills. Doan’s Pills act 3 ways for speedy relief. I—They have a soothing effect on bladder irritations. 2 A fast pain relieving action on nagging backache, headaches, muscular aches and pains. 3 A wonderfully mild diuretic action thru the kidneys, tending to increase the output of the 15 miles of kidney tubes. So, get the same happy relief millions have enjoyed for over 60 years. New, large economy size saves money. Get Doan’s Pills today I % Doan s Pills

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