Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Nov. 8, 1962, edition 1 / Page 12
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PAGE FOUR uSUcttefa two CAROLINA FOOTBALL WITH BILL CURRIE ON I2M)K<; CD j 1000 Wa " s N6v. 10—UNC vs. Virginia Nov. 17— UN C vs. Notre Dame ir' Nov. 22—N. C. State vs. Wake Forest Nov. 24 —UNC vs. Diike THESE GAMES ARE BROUGHT TO YOU BY W W. D. HOLMES WHOLESALE GROCERY. CHOWAN VENEER COMPANY TWIDDY INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE. COMPANY Following the Game Hear College Football Scoreboard SECURITY II | Answers George Dietrich, field representative of the Social Security Administration, is in Edenton every Thursday in the Court r Room in the Chowan County Court House. Q —l am thinking about apply i g for my social security bene f;' How much can I earn and s'.’l collect all my social security 1 nefits? A—ls your earnings from wag es or self-employment are SI2OO c 'ess for the calendar year (tax year), you can receive all of jour benefits. Q —My earnings from my busi ness have been about SSOOO a year since I reached 65, but I do not work every month of the year. Can I receive social se curity benefits at this time? A—Yes. Even though you earn more than SI2OO a year, you can get benefits for any month in which you do not earn over SIOO in wages or work actively m self-employment. Q —l am eligible for social se curity benefits of SSO a month. If I take a job that has been of sered to me and earn $1650 this year, can I receive any of my * social security benefits? A—Yes. Earnings of $1650 for the year will result in a reduc tion of no more than $225 in the amount of social security bene fits payable to you for the year. Since you are eligible for social security benefits of SSO a month —s6oo a yeaiwyou would receive at least $375 in benefits for the year in addition to your earnings of $1650. Q—l am self-employed and understand I can receive social security benefits if I do not “ren der substantial services” in my business. How can 1 tell whether my services in self-employment are substantial? A—This depends on the amount of time you devote to your busi ness, the kind of work you do, how your work compares with the work you did in past years, an dother circumstances of your particular case. You can get a special booklet that gives more details about “substantial ser vices” from your local social se curity offft-e. Ask for Booklet 23. Q —l intend to go on working just as long as I possibly can. How will my earnings affect my social security benefits after 1 reach 72 next year? A—You can get a social se curity check for every month be ginning with the month of your 72nd birthday, no .matter how much you work or earn. How ever, your earnings in the en tire year in which you become 72 are counted in figuring what benefits can be paid to you for btitriluted front BOSTON LOS ANGELES LONDON CHICAGO Interesting Accurate Complete imvravimvi nvwl MTai «,pw The Christian Science Monitor > On* Norway Sr, Barton IS, Mom. Sand your newspaper for lha IBM chocked. Enclosed find my chick or money order. □ 1 year J 22. □ « months *ll Q 3 months fSJO Name ’ :& .\ - !-■■>■* 1 * ■. . I. 1 months of that year while you were still 71. Q —l intend to apply for social security benefits, but I will con tinue to do some work. I plan j to restrict my earnings to SI2OO j a year. What do I include in ! counting this $1200? • A—ls you are working for wages or a salary, count your ‘gross wages or salary, not just 'your take home pay. Also count 1 wages paid in a form other than | cash, such as meals and living quarters. (However, if you work j as a domestic in a private house | hold or work on a farm, count ! only your cash wages). Count | earnings from all types of work whether or not they are covered by social security. Count bonus es, commissions, fees, and vaca tion and holiday payments. Do not count any dividends, interest on a savings account, payments from insurance policies, or pen sions. These are not earnings j from work. j Q —My wife and I together can ■ receive social security benefits of sllO a month on my social 1 security records. I earn S2OO a ' month, $2400 for the year. Bas led on these earnings, could my I wife and I receive any social se j curity payments? A—Yes. You and your wife wold receive $370 in social se curity benefits for the year. It is figured this way: For your first SI2OO in earnings, no behefits are For the next SSOO in earnings, $250 in benefits is withheld from your total bene fits for the year ($1 of benefits for each $2 of - earnings). For the next S7OO in earnins, S7OO is withheld ($1 in benefits for each $1 of earnings). Since you and your wife could qualify for sllO a month or $3,200 a year, the withholding of $950 on ac-! count of your earnings would J still leave you with $370 inj benefits. Q—My wages vary from SI2OO | to S2OOO a year, which is the reason I have never applied for i social security benefits even! though I’m over 65. I under-1 stand it is possible to receive some benefits even though a per- 1 son earns over SI2OO. Is this, correct and how does it work? i A—Yes. This is correct. If j there are some months in which j you earn SIOO or less, you can : get your social security checks for those months—even if you earn enough in the other months to put your earnings for the i year over SI2OO. How much will be withheld from your behefits for months in which you earn FARM Farm families today rely FAMILIES more heavily than ever upon HAVE A their telephones. Use it for business, forfyn, for the added convenience of puce in oi/ft everyday living. A TELEPHONE You can depend upon our PICTURE ' keepin 6 it a* tip top efficiency over SIOO will depend on how much more than SI2CO your earnings • are. One dollar of benefits is withheld for each two dollars you earn above SI2OO and up to SI7OO. Another dollar is withheld for every dollar you earn over SI7OO. Q —ls my estimate of earnings will permit some social security payments to be made to .me for a year, do I have to wait until the end of the year to get these playments? A—No. After enough bene fits have been withheld to take account of your estimated earn ings, your monthly benefits will be started. Chappell’s Cows Are Classified For Type The registered Guernsey herd j owned by Clarence Chappell, j Chappell’s Guernsey Farm at Belvidere, has recently been classified for type by L. O. ! Colebank, Knoxville, Tenn., of- ! ficial classifier for the Ameri can Guernsey Cattle Club. A complete type analysis cf the herd was prepared. It snows that of the 143 cows classified, 21 were very good, 69 desirable and 46 acceptable. - Results of this ..work will tell the breeder the strong and weak points in the conformation of the herd. By selecting the better icows and breeding them to sires that transmit gocd conformation herd type can be improved. Eighteen daughters of BayviUe Steadfast Nero were classified: 1 very good, 11 desirable and 5 acceptable. Fifteen daughters of Northern Viking were classified: 7 very good, 7 desirable and 1 accept able. Eight daughters of Chappell’s Forecast Prince were classified: 1 very good, 3 desirable and 4 acceptable. The report of this official classification is now on file a‘ the national office of the Ameri can Guernsey Cattle Club in Peterborough, N. H. Resort to sermons, but to pray ers most; Praying's the end of preaching. —Herbert. KflfDOM “Let not him who is house less pull down the house of another, but let him work diligently and build one for himself.” | funeral Home! \ no w. ALPeMAP.Usr «r« Ql EDENTON.N.C. \ A- 5 ' rl n/( rj n MBuUiMCC -* irr HK. servicc aubemable Mutual Burial association THE CHOWAN hehaLd. edeeHw ffort-rfc cXNotiHA. WhrfWWrt; ftbjW *. Mr. ■\/l ake Ckurcn - Qoing a Ha bit Sunday School Lesson WHY AM I HERE!? ■ ■ I International Sunday School Lesson for November 11, 1962 Memory Selection: “What is hnan that thou art mindful of him, and the son of man that thou dost ,care for him? Yet thou hast made him little less than God, and does crown him with glory and honor.” (Psalms 8:4-5). Lesson Text: Genesis 1:26-31; Fsalms 8; Matthew 6:24-34; Hebrews 2:6-18. Today we seek to understand what it means to be made ii> 1 4od’s image and to discover th£ implications of this idea for our relationships with God and with 1 our fellow men. We need only to. look about us to see that man is much con .cerned about himself. Inner tensions and the uncertainties of our human existence have forced, all cf us to think about our na -1 ture and our destiny in God’s world. Who am IV What a:i Chowan County Churches YEOPIM CHURCH I REV. TERRY JONES. Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning nt 10 o'clock. Preaching services every second Sundav night at 7:30 o'clock and fourth Sunday morning at 11 o clock. edenton bartist REV. R. N. CARROLL. Pastor Sunday Schooi at 9.45 A. M. Morning worship jervlce. 11 A. M. i Training Union at 6:30 P. M. 1 Evening service at 7:30 O'clock. MI 1-week prayer service Wednesday «t 7.30 P. M. , GREAT HOPE BAPTIST rtEv. HKN'Ki V. n*MEB. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Morning worship second and tourtt Sundays at 11 o’clock. Evening worship first and fourth I iundavs at 8 o’clock. _ „ Prayer service Wednesday at 8 P. M CENTER HILLMETHODIST REV. C. T. WILSON, Pastor Preaching service: .very flrat ana third Sundays at 11 A. M. EDENTON PRESBYTERIAN REV. HUGH S. EVANS, Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning ai 10 o'clock. Morning worshlo at 11 o'clock. Girls' Meeting—all teen-age glrla- Sunday. 6:30 P. M. Christian Service Brigade—a.l teen age ou., a—Tuesday. 71. 1. Mid-week Prayer Service— Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. FIRST CHRISTIAN REV. E. C. ALEXANDER. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Morning worship at 11 o dock. y irjng People s meeting at b:3O P. M. Evening worship at 1.30 o'clock. Wednesday evening sendee at 7:30 O'clock. ST. ANN S CATHOLIC REV. MICHAEL MULKERN, Pastor Sunday Masses at 8 A. M. Holy Day Masses at 8 P. M_ Lonfesslons oerore every Mass. Sunday School 11:43 Sunday A. M. Convert instructions ot private con sultation by appointment. Phone 2617. CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV. HENRY V. NAPIER, Pastor Morning worsnlp at 11 o'clock first and third Sundays. Sunday School at 10 A. M. B. T. U. at IP. M. , _ Evening wor.wip at 8 o dock second and fourtn Sundays. _ _ Prayer service Thursday at 8 P. M. EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH MISSION Corner Cabnrrns St. and Park Ave. RT\ r rRyPR BOATWRTP.HT. Pastor Sunday School. 10 A. M. Morning service 11 o’clock. EDENTON ItfETWOOIST . REV. VAN T. CRAWFORD. Pastor Church School Sunday morning at 9:45 o'clock. Preaching service Sunday morning at 9 o’clock. „ .. MACEDONIA BAPTIST REV. GORDON SHAW. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Pre&c.ilng every Sunday morning at 11 o'c) ick and every Sunday night at 1:X o clock. * Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 .'•dock. * WARWICK BAPTIST REV. WARREN L. ROLLINS Sundav School at 10 A. M. Preaching sendee at 11 A. M. 3TIJ at 7 P M. Preaching service at 8 P. M. Piayer service Wednesday nights at 3 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. M.. Adult Bible Oasi. 11:00 A. M.. Morning Worship. 7:30 P. M.. Young OlurrhiM —, BALLARD'S BRIDGE BAPTIST REV. A. CARL HART, Pastor Sunday School Sunday morning at 10 * Pretchlng rtrvlcrt at 11 A. N. BE 8 Prater meeting Wednesday sight at 8 o'clock. . ■ C,HUHC.W»r OOP REV. RICHARD SWISHER. Pastor sunday School at 10 A. M. P tVvSn*. YPE Wednesday at 7:80 P. »£7 fal lowed by prayer meeting. JEHOVAH'S fTITHIPfgs . 1 af ßme° stody K>^&Mii& L rtaht rt ■ _ ASSEMBUf OF (SOD M M Wed^day li M l ftrt »«y4ea I? Why am 1 here? Where am I going? s These are dominant questions in our thinking today. Our plight reminds us of the mood of insignificance that the psalmist expressed in his- ques tion, “What is man that thou art mindful of him ... ? (Psalms 8:4). The first chapter of Genesis has amazing insights into spirit ual truth. One of the greatest verses says, “Sq God created man in his own image.” (1:27). He-, brew thqught centered its atten tion upon the whole man, in cluding the body. For that rea son bodily form probably enter ed into the thinking of the writ er in his reference to the di vine image. But the most sig nificant truth in his affirmation has to do with the. spiritual powers of man. In his power to reason, to love, to choose, tc commune, man is set apart from the subhuman wo'rld. Yes, the gift of freedom of choice is one of God’s great gifts. It is often ! misused, and yet it is the one | endowment that distinguishes | man from anything else in. a 1 Continued on Page 5, Section 2 EVANS METHODIST REV. C. T. WILSON, Pastor Preaching sendees e> try first and third Sundays at 9:30 A. M. HAPPY HOME PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH HAROLD C. LEAKE, Minister Sunday School, 9:43; Morning Wor ihlp. 11:00; Llfellners, 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 U o’clock. Training Union at TP. 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 ll o’clock. Evening service at 7:30 o’clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. Young people’s and senior choir practice Friday nights at 8 o'clock. Men's Bible Class meets Monday night o’clook. ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST , EPISCOPAL l REV. CLYDE BEATTY. Minister First Sunday at 11 A. M.. Holy. Oom mttd A.*.. Holy Com munion. Third Sunday at 9 A It. Holy Com mune. Fourth Sunday at 11 A. K. tmuraiat prayer anti sermon. * Sunday School each Sunday after noon at 3 o'clock. CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST ELDER J. A. SAWYML-Pastor Every second and fourth Sunday. Pastor’s Day. .. Every first and third Sundffy. Church Day. Sunday School at 11 A. M. to 1 P. It. Prayer and Bible Band Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. Wednesday night choir practice at T:3O o'clock. Thursday night choir praetee rl 7:80 ° Friday night Pastor’s Aid Society it 8 o’clock. * Saturday night young neopla’a Bible quiz and recreation. WARREN GROVE BAPTIST REV. J. E. TILLETT. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M. Preaching sendee At 11:30 A. M. every second and fourth Sunday. Women’s Educational and Mission Union jnaetg Sunday after WELCH'S CHAPEL BAPTIST REV. W, H. DAVIS. Pastor Sunday School at 10 A. M.y service drat Sunday it m. JOHN BAPTIST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG. Pastor Sunday School rft 10 A. M . deeper vice at 6 o'clock. GALE STREET BAPTIST REV. C. M. HEIDELBURG. Paßtof Sunday School at 10 A. M. Su^rafii e iT<t* 8C ° Bd ““ ,oUr f Prayer meeting Wednesday even ing at 8 o clock. fUtrr sroVe a. ft e. z. REV. 1L H. EBRON. Pastor UNION GROVE jl'm. e. z. REV. 3. £ GORDON, Pastor »r. Ltnci chri^tPian REV. KELLY GOLDMAN. Pastor JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES ELKS J. C. HALL Pastor • CENTER HILL BAPTIST REV. H. C. SAUNDERS. Pastor A. M. E. ZION REV. ll A. WILLIAMS, Pastor Sun day schooi at 9 .30 JB M. s JtK *» .' -0f ... ‘ - , - . , ' 1 i iftc CHURCH FOR ALL ... ALL FOR THE CHURCH Tbe Church it the greatest factor on earth for the building of char acter and good citizenship. It is a storehouse of spiritual values. With out a strong Church, neither de mocracy nor civilization can sur vive. TTtere are four sound, reasons why every person should attend services regularly and support the Church. They are: (I) For his own sake. (2) For his children's sake. (3) For the site of his com munity Sad nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and material Sup port. Plan to go to church regu larly aad read jour Bibb daily. Suhday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday I Haggai Haggai Ezra Matthew Malachai II Corinthians Mark I. 1:2-6 1:12-15 3:8-11 , , 5:21-26 3:0-12 | 9:6-15 12:38-4| | Cojjright ISM, Xebter AdvertUin* Service, be., Stmburgr, T 4 These Religious Messages Are Published In Tile Chowan Herald And Are Sponsored By The Following Business Establishments: M a Brown Co me. Edenton Restaurant | LUMBER*— MILLWORK BUILDING MATERIAL “Good Food PIeMQTIt SurTOltndtttgS * I Reputation Built on Satisfied Customers PHONE 3135 EDENTON phon* ms edenton n —■—~— c ' ! -C',- ' • r--'» —M ■ 1 ' —--ii-rtifc Belk - Tyler’s W. E? Smith EDEN TON’S GENERAL MERCHANDISE SBOPPINO CENT Eh SNTOH A— * ■ I ’. - I- i tim Hudhes-Patfkei* if aWlware Co. MitChferter’s Pharmacy SHERWIN-#ILL-lAMS RAINTS _ PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS j PHONE 2316 EDENTON, N. C. PHONE 3711 EDENTON 1 ' # , • , * • • # .S- v • • ’ . .* < i< . , . si i him ii inuntf ' • j • f - * h • d. . •' - vi-'''V^’ v •v' . ' • ! | > I \ . I —. , , ~ YOtk < PORD l T^CT^k^E^LEg Eb * NTON ' H c —i• >■., iii ii. i —JHaan— • . | - f ' « '-M py ■’- ; i Be A Better GUjen, Go To . A . SBSfc;* ' ■ ’ '- 2. . T> ' y. < v SAkfA GniifCn Nawt Shwiav V“ urwi «™R9iPUBp»y ,-•• . . i It’s November. And in many a local Church it’s time to think about the budget for another year, i This is cause for being thankful. Really it is* For aren’t there many places in this world where men haven’t any opportunity to support their Church ... or any Church to support if they had opportunity? i And aren’t there many places where men are 1 compelled to work for causes they do not believe in ... instead of free to work for a cause in which they do believe? Frankly, piuch of the responsibility for keeping our land.and our people what wft want them to b$ rests with our Churches. j So let’s rejoice in that happy American tradition the’ Church budget. ! And, in keeping with another fine tradition of our people, let’s roll up our sleeves and help! i
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1962, edition 1
12
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