Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Aug. 31, 1961, edition 1 / Page 14
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—SECTION TWO PAGE SEVEN Federal Wage-Hour Law Changes To Become Effective On September 3rd “Tar Heel employers are re minded that amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act, gen erally known as the Federal Wage-Hour Law, become effec tive on Sunday, September 3, 1961. The reminder comes from State Labor Commissioner Frank Crane who administers the Federal Wage-Hour Law in North Caro lina under a 22-year old coop erative agreement between the N. C. Department of Labor and the U. S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division. North! Carolina is the only State hav ing such an agreement for local] enforcement of the Federal law. 1 Commissioner Crane said that employees who are now covered by provisions of the Wage-Hour Law will be entitled to a mini mum wage of at least $1.15 an hour starting September 3rd. The law continues to apply to employees engaged in interstate commerce or the ‘ production of goods for interstate commerce, unless specifically exempt. New Coverage Coverage of the Act also has been extended to employees of large enterprises engaged in commerce or the production of goods for commerce, Crane said. These newly covered employees, mostly in the retail and service trades, will be due a minimum wage of at least SI.OO an hour, starting September 3rd. Also newly covered are employees of some gasoline service stations, local and interurban transit sys tems, and construction enter prises. Crane said the Act’s overtime provisions will continue to ap ply to workers who are already covered. They require time and one half pay for all hours work ed over 40 in a work-week. For employees who are newly cover- Taylor Theatre EDENTON, N. C. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, August 31-September 1-2 Sandra Dee and John Gavin in "TAMMY TELL ME TRUE" Kastman Color Sunday, Monday, Tuesday September 3-4-5 All The Mere Wonderful Because It is True! "THE TRAPP FAMILY" AM, STAR CAST Cinemascope ami Color Wednesday, September 6 FAMILY DAY Shows Continuous from : i’.O Admission All Ages 25c or Entire Family 50c WALT DISNEY PRESENTS Hayley Mills in "PCLLYANNA" Technicolor (I. S. Shell Homes, Ine. MAIN BRANCH NOW LOCATED ON HIGHWAY 17 BYPASS. SOUTH OF ELIZABETH CITY. N. C. One oj the South’s Larger Home Builders \ YES! We will completely wire your house, do the install a ! beautiful -3-pc. bath set, water heater and | kitchen sink of your choice. Plus Many Other Extras! I No Money Down - 84 Mos. To Pay | WRITE OR CALL P. O. BOX 90 PHONE 8828 ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. Write or Call Our Nearest Office □ HAVE REPRESENTATIVE CALI, ON ME WITHOUT OBLIGATION ON MY PART ) ’ Q PLEASE SEND MOKE INFORMATION NAME | ADDRESS , ! CITY STATE If Rural Route Give Directions .. : Your Phone (or Neighbor’s) □ I Own a Lot _ □ I Am Buying a Lot I ed under the Act, he sad, over- I time pay will not be required I until 1963. Exemptions ! Exemptions continue to apply [to such establishments as ho- I tels, motels, restaurants, hospi- I tals, movies and a few other ser vice establishments. Crane add ed that the retail or service es tablishments exemption now in effect will continue to apply to establishments which are not in a $1,000,000 enterprise, or if in such an enterprise, have less I than $250,000 in annual gross sales. | The seafood industry will no ' longer be exempt from the Act’s minimum wage provisions, Com missioner Crane added. Em ployees of seafood processing es tablishments which ship products out of the State will be en titled to at least a SI.OO an hour. This change in the law will have a considerable effect in North Carolina crab factories, shrimp heading and oyster shucking operations, and the j ! menhaden industry. Commissioner Crane said that | employers or employees whoj have questions on how thej amended Act applies to them) may obtain answers by writing] or calling the Wage-Hour Of fice in the North Carolina De-J partment of Labor, P. O. Box; 1151, Raleigh, N. C. | Frankly Speaking 1 1 By FRANK ROBERTS x. — ———? • j | Cheer up! The summer re run season will be finished within less than a month. Very | few tears will be shed as, with ! the Monday night exception of Spike Jones and the Glen Mil!-! er Orchestra, this summer has been a real yawner for tele- ■ viewers. The new season com ing up doesn’t resemble the ; I past season at all. Many new j shows will be on the screen ] and some of your old favorites' will be Shifted around. Any-! way, if you’re interested in a look at the future, let’s take it night-by-night and see what’ll ; be happening on your 21-inch screen. One big change is a j shift of time and network for! j Disney. He’s with NBC now., !is being given freer rein, and! is much happier. Unfortunate ly, for the viewer, he’s on op posite Dennis the Menace at I 7:30, and also cuts into the first ! half of Ed Sullivan. During the second half of the Sulli van show, NBC has a cops ’n robbers comedy show called “Car 54, Where Are You.” This 1 should be good, since it’s pro duced by Nat Hiken, who made the Phil Silvers show so suc cessful. On ABC, opposite all this fare for western fans. An hour show called “Follow the Sun,” and then “Lawman.” At 9, that network comes up with another new one, called “Bus Stop,” and based on the movie of the same name. Opposite THE CHOWAN HERALD. EPENTON. NOItTM CABOLINA, THTTBSPAT, AUGUST 31. IMI. I that, on NBC, will be “Bonan za,” switched from Saturday. On ‘ CBS, the two standbys, “GE Theatre” and “Jack Ben ny.” At 10 ABC has scheduled “Adventures in Paradise.” That’s another switch in time. For the intellectual mind, NBC has, opposite that, the DuPont Show of the Week and for the ma jority of the viewers CBS re tains the wonderful Candid Camera, followed by (what! else?) "What’s Iviy Line.” Come, Monday night, ABC keeps west- J ern fans happy from 7:30 to 9:00 , with Cheyenne, followed by' Rifleman. Next an hour of j “Surfside Six.” Next another , newcomer. This one called “Ben , Casey.” CBS meanwhile will fill 7:30 to 9:00 with the al- ' ways wonderful “To Tell the Truth,” followed by “Pete and 1 Gladys”. That’s followed by a 1 new one called “Window on Main St.” Then come two top fav orites, , Danny Thomas and Andy Griffith. Two more favorites for that final hour: Hennessey and “I’ve Got A Secret.” New date for that. Opposite those two fine shows, television’s fin est show of its type, “Thriller.” That’ll be a tough decision for me. Prior to "Thriller” on NBC a new police show called "87th Precinct.” Prior to that “Price is Right,” then “National Vel vet,” switched from Sunday. On Tuesday, Bugs Bunny and Bachelor Father” on ABC will be pitted against “Marshall Dil lon” (Gunsmoke re-runs) and the new Dick Van Dyke show on CBS and opposite “Laramie” on NBC. Come Tuesday at 8:30 and ABC has another new one whipped up and titled “Calvin and the Colonel.” CBS, at that time, continues with Dobie Gil lis (final season probably), while NBC continues with Hitchcock. At 9 two hour shows. On ABC, a new one. called “New Breed.” On NBC a fairly new one head ed by Dick Powell. CBS coun ters with two half-hour shows. One is new and it’s called “Ich abod and Me” and the other is good ole Red Skelton. From 10 to 11 all three networks offer hour-long presentations. ABC has Alcoa premiere, alternating with “Close-Up”, alternating with some Ernie Kovacs spe cials. CBS continues with the Garry Moore Show and NBC comes up with a new one called “Cain’s Hundred.” Comes Wed nesday and here’s what’s hap pening. At 7:30 Steve Allen re turns with a new hour variety show. That’s on ABC. NBC continues with “Wagon Train at that time, while CBS comes up with the Alvin Show (you know, the Chipmunks), followed by more re-runs on the won derful “Father Knows Best." At 8:30 ABC has another new one.- It’s a cartoon job called “Top Cat.” During that same half hour NBC offers the new Joey Bishop Show, the pilot of ! which was seen on the Danny j Thomas Show early last season. NBC? They switch “Check- -JOE THORUD SAYS: f NEW IDEAS FOR A NEW ERA ANNOUNCING invincible!j k * 11 PROTECTION ... a low-cost accident and sickness plan by Nationwide. Offers seven hospital; medical, surgi cal coverages to choost from . . . cash benefits . . . world-wide protec tion! Contacts JOE THORUD 204 Bank of Edoaton Bids. P. O. Box 504 PHONE 3420 llationwidc mate” from Saturday, followed by a new one called “Mr. G Goes to College.” Opposite that on ABC is “Hawaiian Eye.” Op posite on CBS' is Mr. Como, once again. For the final hour on Wednesday, ABC continues with “Naked City.” CBS continues alternating U. S. Steel Hour .with Circle Theatre. NBC coun ters with two new ones. One features popular, comic Bob I Newhart with his own show. Second half-hour will be Brink ley’s Journal, featuring the pop ular reporter. Let’s see now. That’s the new schedule for this fall from Sunday to Wednesday. Next week, I’ll cover the latter half of the week, and we’ll see what’s in store for tele-viewers at that time. | Closing Thought: The use of money is all the advantage there is in having it. S‘ ' \ | Lunch Room Menu j j Menus at the John A. Holmes High School lunch room for the week of September 4-8 will be as follows: Monday Tuna fish .salad on lettuce, green garden peas, salt ed crackers, apple rings, cherry pie,' milk and butter. Tuesday—Hamburger, creamed potatoes, turnip greens, ham burger rolls, gravy, apple sauce, milk and butter. Wednesday—Sliced ham, green string beans, potato salad, bread, pineapple upside down cake, butter and milk. Thursday Weiners, weiner rolls, pork and beans, carrot and cabbage salad, peach halves, milk arid butter. Friday Spaghetti with meat balls, green lima beans, cole slaw, hot biscuits, butter and milk. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Cont’d. from Page 6—Section 2 he was a full-fledged non-Jew. Timothy’s status was more am biguous, since his mother was Jewish and he had been reared with a knowledge of the Jewish Scriptures. Paul realized that unless Timothy were in every respect a Jew, he would be ex — Yet “Have you any children, Mr. Smith ” “Yes—three.” “Do they live at borne with you?” *49 “Not one of them they are not married yet.” ( CARD OF THANKS We the family of Carroll Baker Hollowell wish to ex press our thanks to every one for their acts and deeds of kindness, every prayer and the beautiful flowers and cards in his recent death. None will ever be forgotten. —Mrs. Hazel Hollowell | p and Children. I §3 do you think UV Jr Vll M it makes sense to expect one combine with hardly any adjustment to perform efficiently in all types of soil under all kinds of conditions? Field tests have shown that it’s just too much to ask. That’s why Lilliston has produced six models with actually hundreds of possible variations That means that you not only get a combine that is practically custom-tailored to your specifications, but one that you can easily adjust to suit your land, your crop, and the conditions prevailing at the time you’re harvesting. Result: cleaner, faster, better combining—and higher profits when the harvest is done. just a few of the special features on the new 1961 Lilliston peanut combines DRAPER adjusts autor [he proper tension. You don't have to touch it. It also cleans itself specially designed rollers simply auger the dirt back to the soil. V.--; WLmJL " SPEED of cylinders can be changed to suit the conditions and type of crop. You can get mild or aggressive action from one extrema tv the other or anywhere in between. > ■ 1 II 'U> . •* £ COME IN and let us show you aH the new engineering achievements that make the 1961 LBtiston Combine the finest implement that ever harvested a peanut crop. No other machine can touch it. Edenton Tractor & Implement Co. f Phone 3123 , ' - A eluded from the synagogues in I which he, Paul, expected to *. work. 1 Furthermore, there was great * hostility on the part of the Jews in the Asia. Minor area toward Paul. Thus, .as a strate -5 gic move to eliminate any pos sible obstacle to his work, Paul circumcised Timothy. In this ' instance, especially in the light of Timothy’s Jewish training, Paul saw fit to make a conces sion with reference to a techni cality. He was by no means ' forsaking his basic principle that both Jews .and Gentiles were ' saved by ttm grace of God through faith rather than through human merit. I Timothy, for his part, core plied with Paul’s decision, and permitted himself to be cir cumcised. He could, revering i both his parents, have very eas ily regarded this as an insult to his Greek father. Or he could have resentfully charged Paul v/ith compromise. With com mendable flexibility, however, he did neither. He saw the dif ference between yielding to a demand that sacrificed principle and voluntarily accommodating himself to the scruples of pro vincially minded folk as a means of helping them to better things. That action marked Timothy as a leader of great promise, j That Paul was well aware of Timothy’s value to the concept of Christianity is evidenced by i the fact that while he himself I was languishing in prison, he ‘ continued his work through Timothy, sending him to the ' Philippians time hfter time, to minster to their needs. Timothy “took over” from Paul on sev eral occasions, not self-assert ively, but because he shared ' straight bourbon WHISKEY I i J m3O /I fors i If/ #■ Vw /I S V 80m 0H J Public ml J | I. “ ” /» m M <r*jcn LtftZZS&M? I iJOU 86 | T * PROOP JJ JAMES WALSH 4 CO., INC. —LAWRENCEBURG. KENTUCKY VK- : : SIMPLY by pulling a pin you can quickly change air blast direction to maintain consistent top performance .. . adjust separation as the combine is working. FLASH ! More evidence that the Liltiston Is the Combine for 1961. Here's what Mr. L- B. Connell, Manager of Wight Tractor Sales, has to say: "/ have lust come from a field demonstration where lilliston's 1961 Peanut Combine was in operation and I want you to know that your machine tad the field in every manner of speaking the forward motion, clean nuts In the bag, nuts off the vines. And there is no has this year behind the machine. Again LillistOn has proven its superi ority in engineering a machine for the peanut grower." 1 111 '■"** Paul’s concern for the church. Where Paul’s presence would have invited disaster, Timothy’s presence soothed ahd disarmed. What lessons we can learn from Timothy’s great sense of discipline and innate modesty, as we strive to be good Chris tians and serve Jesus! (These comments are based on outlines of the International Sun day School Lessons, copyrighteo by the International Council of. Religious Education, and used by permission). Cooked a Fine Dinner; ‘Then Threw It To Dog One lady recently stated that she used to throw her own din ner. to the dog most of the time. ; It made her sick just to look at anything to eat. She was swollen with gas, full of bloat, had head aches from constipation and felt worn ’ out. Finally she got INNER-MED and says she now eats everything in sight and di gests it perfectly. Bowels are regular and normal. She is en joying life once more and feels like “some other woman” since taking this New Compound. INNER-MED contains 12 Great Herbs: they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on slug gish digestive tract. Miserable people soon feel different all over. So don’t go on suffering! Get INNER-MED. Sold by all drug stores. . —adv. LOR Contract A INI) Repair Work CALL Twiddy Insurance & Real Estate, Inc. PHONE 2163 EDENTON m&fXiiMk- I “ ■ Jilt . I Jmßh BKay ) We salute the men and women who labor at all tasks...build ing a better community on this LABOR DAY, September 4th, In observance, this bank will not be open Monday, Sept. 4. THE PEOPLES m
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1961, edition 1
14
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