Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / July 1, 1965, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE FOUR ,—SECTION TWO ' Around The Farms BKi In Chowan County By C. W. OVERMAN, Chowan County Ag.nl Peanut Reminders: Leaf- | spot begins to attack peanut plants the very last of June or very early July. Im portant in controlling this disease is keeping a coat of the fungicide on the plants so thet when the fungus spores strike the plants they are killed before they can take root. So, let’s begin our dusting or spray pro gram this week or early next. Copper - sulfur dust should be used at the rate of about 15 pounds for the first ap plication, 18 pounds for the second and 20 pounds per application from then on. ilake an application every 12 to 14 days. For those who wish to use-ti spray instead of a dust, be;? sure that the spray equipment is absolutely clear of any herbicides that have been used. Household am- Rible News Wds By MABY ALI.itED Member of Women’* Speaker* rt&teau. American Bible Society ‘ Cherokee Translation Sequoia, a Cherokee In dian (1760-1843) unable to read or write English, ob served. the white man's use of Writing. Impressed with its, importance, he studied his o\«n language and various alphabets thinking "that if he* pould make things fast orkipaper, it would be like catching a wild animal and taift’ing it.” He spent years at-yi-crk, and in spite of ridi cujfj and persecution (once hi**house was burned down) produced an interesting al plgibet of 86 symbols. It was approved by the Chero kee* chiefs in 1821 and at onfcg put to wide use by the Indians. The Gospel of St. Mark (IJ(}9) was the first com plete book of the Bible to be printed in Cherokee. A ti jjislation of St. Matthew chapters 11-27, had already ,ajspeared as a serial, week by week, in a paper called ■ eke enerokee Phoenix.” This was printed from a mSftusrript version of the New Testament made from the Greek by David Brown, a Cherokee. The present translation was made by S. A. , Worcester, a Congrega tional missionary to the In dians, working with a Chero kee Indian named Elias Bou dinot (his Indian name was Kalakina), so named after the first president of the American Bible Society. The New Testament was printed by the American Bible Society in 1858 and is still in use. : AFTER 9? GO AHEAD MAKE THAT LONG DISTANCE CALL! NOTHING ELSE GIVES YOU SO MUCH PLEASURE FOR SO LITTLE MONEY* Call often. Keep in touch. l 'call slation-tostation anywhere in V.S. after 9 SI for SI.OO or less j>lue fed. excise tag /■ The Norfolk & Carolina r Telephone & Telegraph Co. *eo»o»e»e»e »ee e ■»■«•<.<■>«.»,<■.»> NEW HOME 1 < ; Now Under Construction > JN MORGAN’S PARK iS 3 Bedrooms 2 Ceramic Tile Baths ;: Carport # OPEN FOR INSPECTION • jj - SEE OR CALL -- : I HAYWOOD JONES . Telephone 482-2314 1 -«*- TOM CROSS A Telephone 482-3159 - <■ monia is an excellent chem ical in helping to clean equipment. Liquid copper may be ap plied at 12 to 14 day inter vals according to directions on label. Manzate-D or Dithane M-22 Special rnay be used at 10-day intervals ac cording to directions on the label. Southern stem rot begins to work at early pegging. Terraclor or a combination of Terraclor . and Captain ap plied according to label di rections in early July should help considerably where this disease is prevalent in fields. In order to control in ternal kernel damage, one application of Boron has been found to be very helpful. Growers will be able to get copper - sulfur dust contain ing the right amount ot Bo ron for one application. The Boron application should be made during the first 20 days in July. Apply Boron only once because excess rates can be detrimental to the crop. Land plaster provides readily available calcium needed by "peanuts at peg ging, pod forming and pod development. A split appli cation of 800 pounds of land plaster has proven most suc cessful. The first 400 pound application should be made very early in July and the second application made the latter part of July or early August. Heavier amounts of land plaster has helped to control or prevent pod rot damage in many fields. Cotton Reminders: The cri tical period for nitrogen to cotton plants is from July 15 to August 15 when bolls are forming and developing. Ni trate of soda is a form of nitrqgen that is readily available and should be ex hausted in about 60 days. From 100 to 200 pounds of nitrate of soda should be ap plied per acre to cotton im mediately. The rate depends upon the stand and the na ture of the soil; sandy soils could use up to 250 pounds of nitrate of soda. The ni trate of soda applied imme diately should be exhausted by the'end of August, per mitting the plants to stop growth and the cotton to open up. Don’t tear up the roots. Cultivate shallow from now on. Watch your crop for in sect infestation and keep the insects under control. The Home Garden: Many of us home gardeners get the bug of enthusiasm in early spring and we start out with a good spring garden. Then our energy may lapse or our interest change and weeds, grass and insects take their > toll. Let’s clean up the garden and get the mid to late : summer vegetables going in, ; good shape. Most any warm weather crop can be planted [ at this time. It is rather • late for tomatoes to be seeded but plants set now < should make an excellent \ crop of fall fruit. Use nitrogen as needed “to ] keep ’em growing.” Meeting Held At Center Hill < Center Hill Home Demon- 1 stration Club met on Tues- J day night, June 22, at 8 < o’clock with Mrs. J. C. < Bovce, president, presiding. 1 The meeting was called ’ to order by Mrs. Boyce who 1 gave the devotion; she then < turned the meeting over to J Miss Pauline Calloway, coun- J ty home agent who gave the < demonstration on Cottons, < Good Buys and Bad Buys. J She showed garments made < of different materials and J showed how they retained < color and original freshness J after repeated washings. Mrs. B. P. Monds gave a ■ very interesting report on < Homemakers Week. ■ - j Mrs. Lois Venters was hds- « tess for (he meeting and ser- ! ved refreshments during the ■ social hour after which the ! group was dismissed by the J Club Collect. JIOODSBfD BOXSCdRI OH ICC. HIGHWAYS RALEIGH—The Motor Ve hicles Department’s sum mary of traffic deaths through 10 A. M. Monday, June 28: Killed to date 646 Killed to date last year__694 This Is The Life By DONALD B. THOMAS WHAT MUST I DO? Some people make salva tion so hard but it isn’t. It is easy. You can show some people the plan of salvation and they will say there is more to it than that. It is too easy. The jailer asked, “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?” They didn’t tell him so min a church and be bap tized. They said, “To believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and uiou snait be saved.” The rest comes later. I laid a dime unon the table in Sun day School this morning and said, "Whosoever shall come ( and get this dime can have it.” A little boy came and picked it up. I didn’t call his name, but I said who soever will. It is the same way with Jesus. I don’t care ' who you are or what you 1 are, or what color of skin ! you have, Jesus Christ is the ■ only way. What must I do to , be ; saved? The Bible says: “For ' whosoever call upon the ; name of the Lord shall be - saved.”—Romans 10:13. PUZZLE SOLUTION WORTH BIG CASH Can you solve the cross word puzzle correctly for j $2,000? That’s the kind of j prize that could be paid for 1 the right answer to the Bal timore News American Jack pot Crossword Puzzle. Try this week. See clues, word list and entry blank in THE BALTIMORE NEWS AMERICAN On Sale At Your Local Newsdealer i “I used to 1 cry for no reason at all” One of the first "change-of-life* danger signals No wonder a woman feds lilt* crying! The suffocating surge of hot flashes one minute; cold, clammy perspiration the next can make a woman wonder “What’s come over me!” Change-of-Ufe panic seta nerves onjedge, fills her with fear! Proven help! Woman after woman in doctors’ teats pet remarkable relief from hat flashes, nervous tensions! Some women worry themselsas sick; some women do some thing about awesome change of-life symptoms. Thousands have found that Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets helped them as dramatically, as quickly as this gentle medication has helped other woman- Not a new, johnny-eome-lateljr rem edy, but a tried and trusted “friend”...to relieve func tional mid-life complaints...ta relieve woman’s burden of suf- THE CHOWAN HERALD, JSDBNTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. JULY 1, 1«66. l\/fade Cdured-Goinga^Siti JL,w L~ id jL J : THE FOUNDATION OF CHRISTIAN GROWTH International. Sunday School Lesson for? July 4 Memory Selection: “Mo other foundation can anyone lay than that which, is lais, which is Jesus Christ.” -—ft Corinthians 3:11. Lesson Text: I Corinthians 3; II Corinthians 5:11-20. ‘ ■= Today we begin a neyv series of lessons, the con text of which is our growth as Christians. To this end we return again to the inspiring teach ing of Paul. We can read and re-read, again and agaip, his letters to the churches }>e brought into being, and each time we can absorb sonae new fact, some subtle nuance that has hitherto escapfd us. We live, in short, ai>d we leant. Paul’s was a restless spirit- He was so thoroughly in doctrinated with Christ's teachings that he could not contain himself —he had to share this great joy this great experience with the world. Therefore, we find him journeying from one place to another, laying the foundations of churches wherein the Christian faith could be proclaimed. The foundations upon which Paul built the Chris tian faith were (1) forgive ness of sins; (2) strength tor daily needs, and (3) hope for the future. Man, introduced to God, becomes conscious of his sins, and upon confession of his weaknesses and fail ings, receives God’s full for giveness. Thus is established a hew and different rela tionship with God. And it is in this new relationship that man finds strength for his daily needs. He is conscious of inner strengths and re sources hitherto unsuspected. Hope for the future is auto matically born of this new sense of confidence. The true believer fears nothing, knowing his strength is in the Lord. Herein, then, lies the foun dation of a true Christian’s Colonial Motor Co., of Edenton BUICK - OLDS - rpONTIAC GMC TRUCKS 4-,*Belk- Tyler’s >f < . ‘ 7 ' EDEN TON’S SHOPPING CENTER W. E. smith GENERAL MERCHANDISE "ROCKY HOCK” PHONE 482-3022 EDENTON M. G. Brown Co., Inc. LUMBER MIULWORK BUILDING MATERIAL Reputation Built on Satisfied Customers PHONE 482-2135 EDENTON 1 1 ■■■ 1 11 I’ ' '' ' " Edenton Tractor & Equipment Co. YOUR FORD TRACTOR DEALER AGENTS FOR EVINRUnC OUTBOARDS U. S. 17 SOUTH— JSDENTON. N. C. READ The Chowan Herald YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER 1 «i i u —~*" Bridgre-Tum Espo Servicenter “Your Friendly $390 Dealer” ESSO PRODUCTS ATLAS TIRES AND BATf^RIES —■. .■ "■» ■ m 4 w Western Gas & Fuel Oil Service SIS SOUTH BROAD SPREI’I v r ' . ’ . v- ■ jJKKgBBgkM-- faith. Christianity is not to be passively accepted, and subsequently neglected through familiarity. It is a tool to be worked with—with which to shape man’s des tiny, much as a sculptor brings form arid substance out of a mass of shapeless stone. True, as the sculptor labors over his task, his hands may grow- calloused and sore. But he is building something that will bear witness to his lab ors down through the ages. So it was with Paul. He formed the churches, one af ter another, and then found that he had to retrace his steps, for Christianity was suffering its growing pains. It could not be otherwise, for men made up the ranks of the Church and, being men, were subject to the various weaknesses and failings that habitually beset mankind. Thus it was that jealousy and bickering among the converts became Paul’s cal louses. He, however, was equal to the task. With infinite wis dom, in terms the people would understand, he pointed out that one man planted, another watered BUT it was God who gave the in crease. What Paul was saying was that everyone had his place in laboring after God’s ap pointed task. Paul himself laid the foundations of the Christian church, knowing full well that the building would fall to other hands. This fact did not trouble Paul at all. His only con cern was that the foundations he laid would be strong enough to hold and support that which would follow. For Christianity had to grow to live; just as Christians have to grow to become better people in God’s holy name. How strong are OUR foundations? Are they firm ly laid m Christ? (These comments are based on outlines of the Interna tional Sunday School Les sons, copy-righteded by the International Council of Re ligions Education, and used by permission). This Space Sponsored By A Friend Os The Churches In Chowan County Edenton Construction Co., Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS . us avona n siee-zßfr aNOHd Edenton Savings & Loan Association Where You Save DOES Make a Difference EDENTON, N. C. Hughes-Parker Hardware Co. SHERWLVWILLIAMS PAINT'S PHONE 482-2315 EDENTON Edenton Restaurant “Good Food Pleasant Surroundings" MRS. W. L. BOSWELL, Prop. PHONE 482-9723 EDENTON CALL AT Whiteman’s Service Center FOR Complete Line of Groceries and Meats UP-TO-DATE RESTAURANT pure oil products A. T. WHITEMAN, Owner Byrum Implement & Trudk Co. INCORPORATED International Harvester Deafer PHONE 482-2151 EDENTON, N. C. This Space Sponsored By A Friend Os The Churches In Chowan County •- .... ,-L -L ... . ■ - ’• ’ . .. ' " • 4 ,yj 1. • <....* v . ..'l ' z&mf JnEyf / . .■ O. jfl ¥ * m : mmm mi *1 4 j w ■ajß 1 j" jflPf ■ . Jt ■ MlfaL A JUi 1 % j Du t llation Mioisibk .. That this Nation, under G0d...” or victories won, or soldiers’ in abundance flow. Words that bind a Nation’s wounds silent sleep, We find our God, at home , 1,---*. Who, by their death, gave life; m church, in hearts that this Jay life that throbs and pulsates in sing out in joy. that have affliction known. this Nation’s womb. We thank Thee, Dearest Lord. We pause, this day, to remember w e to r e^ era ber Now, bless us, and this Thy land and to forget: our gifts from" God and all therein .. . our own, Yet, not to forget the battles l«et from whom our blessings our native land! UopyriffU 1965 Ktitter Advertising Service, Inc, Straeiurg, Vc Sunday MowAv Tundiy W«dn»«l«y Ttiuf«d«y Friday WtuAy ~ Nunbart Dairtarouomy Jodua II Samual bialirn t! 1217 21,7-14 »:I-H t:lltl , 4717 **=lO-'4 I WW , <SI2> t t <sip V <dz> V <st2? t <sjz» t <siz? t These ReligiQus Messages Arte Published In The Chowan Herald and Are Sponsored By the Following Business Establishments Va. Fork Service Center FANCY GROCERIES ' 4 : WfNMM *— . * • OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK • •' . < - , Mitchener’s Pharmacy / i PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS PHONE 482-3711 EDENTON Edenton Office Supply EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE - ' •: V - ’ PHONE 482-2627 5Ol S. BROAD ST. Albemarle Motor Company “Your Friendly FORD Dealer" W. HICKS STREET EDENTON —-■—■ ■ .. . Leary Bros. Storage Company BUYERS Ajlj. Peanuts, Soybeans and Cotintry Produce SELLERS OF Fertilizers PHONES: 482-2141 A?n>4B2-2142 Hobbs “YOUR JOHN DEEW DE4f£W {{ ri, Ik Your F*im Equipment ] L&ZLj a Life Time j£ With Us! 1 ■ 11,1 r -■ ■ ■ 'igpfc* 11 ""t"*-* 1 i .-i Quinn Furniture i|gnpany HOME OF FINE FURNITURE
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1965, edition 1
10
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