PAGE EIGHT '—SECTION on SOCIETY NEWS Visiting Brother Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Davis are! Mr. Davis’ brother in Southport and will continue on to Wilmington, N. C., before re turning home. Visit At Dunn Mrs. Aubrey Hardison and Cynthia spent several days in Dunn last week. Miss Pattie Lou Williford returned home with them for a week’s visit. ■ " Return From Nags Head Mrs. Roland Vaughan and Martha have returned heme af ter being in Nags Head for some time. Tennessee Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Shope and children of Nashville, Tenn., are visiting Mrs. Shope’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Hol lowelL New Mexico Visitors Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Shepard, Jr., and children from Albuque que, New Mexico, will arrive Thursday to spend a few days witji his parents, Mr. arid Mrs. William Shepard. Return From South Carolina Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Jenkins, Ann and Ed returned home Fri day after visiting relatives in Columbia and Spartanburg, S. C. Week-end In Maryland Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Downum took their grandchildren home, spending the week-end with Mr and Mrs. Freddie Byrum at Sil ver Spring, Md. L Jm o Alabama Visitors Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Hobbs of Birmingham, Alabama, visited his father, H. T. Hobbs and also his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hobbs. Return From Alabama Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Harless, Sr., returned home Sunday from Auburn, Alabama, where Mr. Harless attended a peanut con ference. Winston-Salem Visitors Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Giles and family of Winston-Salem spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs J. D. Barnhill. Visit At Nags Head Mrs. Charles Small and chil dren were at Nags Head last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bond. Visits Great Great Grandfather Miss Polly Brinn Forehand is visiting. her great great grand father, H. T. Hobbs, and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hobbs, this week. At ViiUiiue Heath .. Mr. and Mrs. Charles New comb are visiting Comdr. and Mrs. Julian B. Timberlake at Virginia Beach, Va. Visit In Elizabeth City H. T. Hobbs and Mrs. H. G. Hobbs spent Monday in Eliza beth City. Vacationing At Beach Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Fry and family are spending this week at Nags Head. o Visiting Grandparents The Charles Tysor’s grand daughter Deborah is visiting them this week. Hampton Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Mills and baby of Hampton, Va., spent the' week-end with his parents, Mr.! and Mrs. S. C. Mills. »" ■ FREEZER PRICES SLASHED $45.00 Cut On A Big 17.2 Cu. Fl Freezer Holds 602 Lbs. WAS $244.95 Now $199.88 CALL STEVE HAMPTON Visits Mother ! Miss Frances Holton of Raleigh visited her mother, Mrs. David Holton, over the week-end. - Visit In Washington ’ Mrs. Charles Tysor yisited the family of her sister, Gen. and Mrs. John A. Lang, Jr., of Washington, D. C. Larkin re turned home with Mrs. Tysor after two weeks visit in the Lang home. Visits In Washington Mrs. George Dail was a visi tor in Washington, N. C., for the week-end. Visiting In Wilmington Mr. and Mrs. Richard Elliott are spending the week-end in Wilmington, N. C. Q ' Virginia Visitors Comdr. and Mrs. J. B. Jones and family of Chester, Va., spent Sunday as guests of Mrs. Jones’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Hollo well. o Visiting Daughter Mrs. L. A. Patterson is visit ing her daughter, Mrs. Charles P. Scott, in Greensboro, N. C. At YMCA Camp Ronnie and Donna Wooten are visiting their aunt, Mrs. Ray mond Bradley, Jr., in Whitakers,. N. C. While visiting, Ronnie will attend the YMCA camp in Rocky Mount for two weeks. Norfolk Visitors Mr. and Mrs. James Dail of Norfolk spent Friday as guests ot Mrs. Dail’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and ’ Mrs. Donald Thomas. Pennsylvania Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Yeingst and daughter Sherrie of New Cumberland, Pa., left Wednes day after spending a few days cs guests of Mrs. David Holton. Visits Mother Martin Zimmerman of Rocky Mount spent the week-end as luest of his mother, Mrs. J. Ed win Bufflap and Mr. Bufflap. Swimming Class Closes July 24 Continued from Page 1, Section 1 skills and made instruction train ing available for those who could qualify. In this 50th year, the results of this ongoing program are - certifi cates have been issued in water safety, lifesaving and small craft safety. Over 1.1 million instruc tion authorizations have been given persons certified to teach water "SSTSTy sTtiTTs, act as life guards, waterfront directors, teach free swimming classes, act as swimming coaches and gener ally enhance the program of saf ety education in this field. With 100 million Americans now participating in some water safety activity and more joining each year, as the population in creases, the Red Cross water safety program faces a growing need for educating Americans in the principles of water safety. VFW MEETS TUESDAY William H. Coffield, Jr. Post No. 9280. Veterans of Foreign Wars, will meet Tuesday night, July -21 at 8 o’clock. Com ! mander Noah Goodwin, Jr., ! urges a large turnout of mem | bers. THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDEWTCRT. NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. JULY 16. 1964. | Recent Bride , ip Miss Joan Thomas Goodwin and Maurice Ray Forehand were united in marriage Saturday, July 4 at the Edenton Baptist j parsonage in Edenton. The Rev.' R. N. Carroll performed the double ring ceremony. The par ents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Roy Goodwin of 1 Elizabeth City and Mr. and Mrs. | Fate Forehand of Edenton. Thej bride is a graduate of Elizabeth City High School. The brir'e-, groom is a graduate of John A. Holmes High School in Edenton. I 1 On July 3 the couple was' honored at a cake cutting at the! hoftne of the bride's aunt. Mrs. Robert L. Pratt. Some 50 or more guests were present. Councilmen Adopt Dog Ordinance Continued from Page 1. Section I nance without the section. In other action, Council voted! to increase parking meter fines to 25 cents for the first hour and 5 cents for each hour thereafter, effective August 15. The increased fine, Town Ad ministrator William B. Gardner said, will make available morel parking spaces on Broad Street. The spaces will also be widened after the street is resurfaced, probably before August 15, he said. Councilman Phillips also rec ommended that some of the ad ditional revenue from the in creased fines be used to rein state the meter envelopes for collecting fines. The Fire Station Committee of Council. recommended that “we go ahead and build our new building up there beside the armory.” Councilman J. D. Elliott, chair man of the committee, said the site was the only one available] free, and that the committee was not in favor of buying more land for a fire station. Mayor John A. Mitchener, Jr., said he would appoint a build ing committee “in the next day or two to consider the type building we want.” Council was also presented a report by Dr. Richard Hardin, chairman of the Airport Com mission, in which he recommend ed building a hangar at the air port. The hangar is necessary, the report stated, in order to attract a fixed-base operator into the lo cal area. Such an operator would be necessary to develop a mar ket for the airport. The hangar recommended would be 60 by 60 feet and could be built at a cost of SIO,OOO. W. P. (Spec) Jones appeared before the Council on behalf of the Aviation Committee of the Ohamber of Commerce. He urg ed Council to make improve ments at the airport, and prom ised the aid of the Chamber in all such efforts. “More industrial executives are flying today. We have a place for them to land, but we don’t have the facilities to offer them,” Jones said. J. M. Robinson, executive 'vice president of the Chamber of ( Commerce, urged Council to make improvements at the air port, “making it an asset, not a liability.” Robinson recommended build ing a larger hangar than sug gested in Dr. Hardin’s report, peihaps 100 by 100 feet. Ac cording to the report, such a building would cost approxi mately $20,000. Attitude of Council, however, was to wait for something more :®ncrete. “I would like to see KHheone agree first to lease this langar if we build it dowr here,” Councilman Phillips said Council will meet again or Thursday morning, July 23. at 8:30 o’clock to adopt the budget for 1964-65 fiocal year. i New Books At Local Library New books received at the Shepard - Pruden Memorial Li brary this were are: The Grandfathers, a novel by Conrad Richter, author of The 1 Trees. Marianne Moore by Bernard F. | Engel. This is one of the U. S. Authors series. | Poets of North Carolina edited by Richard Walser. For Young People Mon Premier Dictionnaire, a Rainbow Book by Roger Piflet: This is a beginners’ dictionary which, includes not only basic French, but also recognizes the vocabulary American children know and use in speaking and recognize in reading. High, Wide and Handsome and Their Three Tall Tales by Jean Merrill and Ronni Solbert. More “Quality Readers" Barbara Adams, Jackie Czer niak, Susan Hare, Vivian White man and Carroll Lassiter. Manufacturers Will Meet At Goldsboro Continued from Page 1, Section 1 [with the government buyers. They .will be given pointers on bidding on government con tracts and told how to bring their products up to government ‘standards. In addition, the gov 'ernrhent specialists will see some >f the products that North Caro lina can provide. Government representatives will be available at the Wayne Center from 9:30 A. M. to 5 P. M. The Clinic is part of a state wide emphasis on the promotion of federal spending in North Ca rolina to be carried on during the week of July 26-31. Gover nor Terry Sanford will officially l designate the period as ‘Gov ernment Sales Week In North (Carolina.” Griffin Family Escapes Drowning Continued from Page I. Section 1 I But Girffin’s craft had filled i with water and capsized. “We couldn’t pull it upside down, so we got Jimmy Ricks and his cabin cruiser,” Griffin said. Ricks, who participated two years ago in the dramatic Tes cue of Chester Weikel, Carl Forehand and Weikel’s two small children from a similar acci- 1 dent, managed to pull the cap sized boat to the dock. By the time they had pulled the boat in, a crowd had gath-1 ered around the dock. Many of the on-lookers helped right the overturned boat. Finally, about 6 P. M. the | .workers turned the boat over. | “We put a makeshift patch over the hole and pumped out the water with the Rescue Squad’s pump,” Griffin said. ; In order to turn the water- j filled boat over, the men sent. for Bert Willis and a crane be-| longing to Union Bag-Camp Pa per Corporation. The boat was pulled from the, dock to the Edenton Marina, where it was loaded on a trailer and pulled away from the water. Dry Weather Hurts Crops In Chowan » Continued from Page 1. Section 1 . late vegetables and other crops, Overman said. “But even during the past week Yeopim and Gliden have ' gotten very little rain. The rains Have just been too spotty to do the entire county much good,” he said. Overman flipped through hiS| personal record, added a few > figures and reported that inches of rain had fallen into his' ; rain guage at his home on N. C. ! 32 south since early April. “We would like to have about one inch of rain per week for good crops,” he said. “Instead of , the 13 inches we would like to (have had since April, we’ve got -1 ten only 3%. “Os course, they’ve had more 1 rain than that in other areas of the county, even in Edenton, a mile away from my guage. But out there in Yeopim, it’s been ’ mighty dry.” ' TWIDDY ON HONOR ROLL Curtis Twiddy, Jr., made the , Honor Roll in .the College of f Arts and Sciences at the Univer : sity of Nfcrth Carolina during the! i spring semester. That is an, average of B or higher on all work "taken (not less fhaft-1^ ’ hours). Only 1$ per cent of the ► students achieved such high aca : have beenjoon* LADIES,TAKE A SECOND I ■ n ALL OUR FOOD PRICES ARE LOWER kV PD pmm ra rn i null o • -sttamfsH \ ri FREE PARKING Town Paved Parking Lot Just Across The Street gAIMI" 3 5 WHOLE lb. 43c (ENTER SLICES lb. 69c — # SMALL LEAN TENDER FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS lb. 39c 16 to 8 lbs. HARRELL’S SMOKED Lb. 1-lb. Luter’s Cedar Farm Brand PICNICS 31c Sliced Bacon j 31c Pillsbury ■ Bollards BISCUITS 4 i 35«' 1 Lb. ” 1-LB. HARRELL’S ' 7 Navy Beans i 10c PURE LARD s 13< 60-COUNT KLEENEX FAMILY 46-OZ. HI-C Table Napkins 10 Orange Drink 29c Freezer & Cabining Supplies □ Quart and Pint Freezer Bags Cmiac OC . ] □ Freezer Boxes and Cups IldlUl ■ I ICS AJ* □ Freezer Tape and Wrapper Paper io-OZ. SINGLETON GREEN ■ PinMt Qulliiy Prrsh Product Arriving 6-OZ. MINUTE MAUI Daily ... Including Corn, Butter Beans, ORANGE DELIGHT c «n \ Snap Beans, Squash and Tomatoes ... nT . TmTfr a I j from local farms. DRUNK • . . • • •. N IW* RIPE FIRM 2 lbs. 10-02. DULANEY ' - V v 1 BANANAS 25c Green Peas i 19c j| NEW! Scott's Cut Rile I 24-Weee J a Roll | Knife,Fork andSpoonSet COLD CUP | H Deluxe 4-Way Partitioned (Plailic Coaled'. 13-o*. Kreg f Size 380 Del Monte E. G. j & , DIXIE^ PLATES j BEEF AND GRAVY | ASPARAGUS SPEARS i|

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view