Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / March 14, 1968, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
>1 ■“ v:r ' !;:; ' i SUCTION B Poster Contest Winners Selected The Chowan Conserva tion Poster Contest was held at the Chowan High School last Tuesday morn ing. reports Lloyd C. Bunch, .Chowan District chairman. The fourth, fifth and sixth grade students study conservation and then pre pare individual posters on any sound conservation idea at the end of the study. The event is spon sored annually by the Cho wan Board of Soil and Water Conservation District supervisors to inform our younger generation of the value of conservation. County winners in the nw rime To Halit COME IN AND Evergreens BROWSE AROUND BOXWOO<I JjL g, Hollies fir, Camellias Dogwood Trees t Azaleas Junipers Candytuft Call For Free Estimate On Landscaping Chappell's Nursery 1 Mile Off Highway 17, Snug Harbor Road PHONE 426-7261 HERTFORD, N. C. * • • 7* - THE GREAT WIDE-TRAGK DRIVE ISON! I Portiac Motor Division m u,a, is, , rs , ~ ruff jM i. ■■ ■■ l '• B '' Wm. —_ H Hfe^=^=^=-.-.•= - .—'_i- |feil| || } TjJi *t |jhßS§ , Therms very little difference betweenWideJracking in a Pontiac and ordinary driving...in dollars. A big, powerful Wide-Track Pontiac costs no more than some of the so-called low-priced cars. So if you're settling fa less than a4oocubic inch V-8 and a big-car 121-inch wheelbase, stop settling. Start Wide-Tracking. The drive is on. See your Pontiac deafer. He's out to smash sales records for the 7th straight year! . * See the U.S. Ski Team vs. World Competition, Sunday, March 17, NBC TV. Free 24-page Ski Team Race Guide at your Pontiac Dealers. I——"- rs COLONIAL MOTOR COMPANY OF EDENTON, INC 165-109 E. QUEEN ST. Ddkr Ue. No. ISOS EDENTON, N. C. THE CHOWAN HERALD contest were: Fourth grade, Win Dale, first place and Harry Ward, second place. Fifth grade: Mike McMul lan, first place and Brad Hollowell, second place. Sixth grade: Wendy Cran dall, first place and Jean Byrum, second place. Also in addition to the county winners the best poster in each room was selected. They were: Beth Boswell, Ronnie Harrell, Ronnie Byrum, Billy Gaino, Hillary Shoaf, Teresa Dix on, Lorie Dees and Herman Bond. The posters were judged on how the conservation idea was presented, 50 Edenton, North Carolina, Thursday, March 14, 1968. points; originality, 25 points; artistic ability, 15 points, and neatness, 10 points. Gash prizes of $6 were presented to the county first place winners and $4 to the second place win ners. Room winners won $2. The county winners will compete with the winners from Perquimans, Pasquo tank. Camden and Curri tuck counties in the Albe marle Conservation Poster Contest to be held in Eliza beth City on Thursday, March 28. The local board of sup ervisors wish to express their appreciation to the students participating, the teachers, school officials for a job well done and for making this event possible, Bunch said. Services Set For Mr. Baker Robert Lee Baker, 87- year-old retired farmer, died Tuesday in Louise Obici Hospital in Suffolk- Va., following a recent ill ness. Mr. Baker was a native of Northampton County, a son of the late Boston and Dora Bryant Baker. He was married to Mrs. Ossie Ola Baker, who survives. Also surviving is a broth er, Everett Baker of Eden ton; and two sisters: Mrs. Nola Hanson of Weston. Idaho; and Mrs. Eva An derson of .Preston, Idaho. Graveside services will be held at 2 P. M., Thurs day in Beaver Hill Ceme tery with Rev. George Cooke in charge. "W *wsrr W IRH . 1 • : * CONTEST WINNERS—Shown here are first and aec ond place winners in the Chowan County Poster Con test. First row, left to right, Harry Ward and Win Dale. Second row. left to right, Mike McMullan and Brad Hollowell. Third row, left to right, Kenneth Stalls, principal of Chowan High School, Jean Byrum, Wendy Crandall and Lloyd Bunch, chairman of Chowan County supervisors. Scott Campaign Leaders Picked Six “Scott for Governor” precinct chairmen were named this week by James C. Dail, county chairman for Bob Scott, who is seek- Revells Assigned To Vietnam Duty WITH U. S. COMBAT AIR FORCES. Vietnam— S/Sgt. William M. Revells, whose wife, Hida. is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Jordan, Route 2. Tyner, is on duty at Binh Thuy AB, Vietnam. Sgt. Revells, a radio re pairman, is a member of the Pacific Air Forces. Before his arrival in Vietnam, he was assigned to Mac Dill AFB, Fla. The sergeant, a graduate of. D. F. Walker High School, Edenton, attended the University of Tampa (Fla.). He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Manison Revells. Hobbs Implement Co. Brings Electronics To Farms °° M ' T r: sum plant VISUAL ELECTRONIC SIGNAL I 'G* ( -:v [ *S MOUNTED UP-FRONT ON YOUR TRACTOR ■j, 0 - 1 4 5 6 $ SIGNALS WHEN SEED HOPPERS ARE EMPTY INSURES AGAINST COSTLY SKIPS AND MISSING ROWS “POSITIVE PLANTING” Corn, Beans, Cotton, Potatoes, _ ___ f* or Any Seed ggj m ★BE certain of greate yields. ill *■■ i?J j.j , ★ have straighter rows .. . better :*dmß& "ssß 5 |I imm looking fields with sure plant. , * KNOW for si re seed l' yLgr&J r 'j* ” ING THROI (iH Ell R Pi As [ f i- h,„O ‘ + , :Sfft' r ‘<?-**yy >V' # : Sri 0R seed chutes H* P! v< IH<■ \ Available For _ .. 4,6, and 8 Row Planters K. W, Williams Holds One of the Electronic Devices _ HOBBS IMPLEMENT COMPANY E. CHURCH STREET “YOUR JOHN DEERE DEALER» EDENTON, N. C. ing the Democratic nomina tion in the May 4 primary. Dail said the following will serve in their respec tive precincts: Roy Harrell, East Eden ton. W. B. Gardner, West Edenton. Mrs. B. Warner Evans, Center Hill. Jack Evans, Rocky Hock. Tom Hoskins, Yeopim. C. A. Perry, Wardville. Also, Dail announced that Thomas Paul Griffin and David Bateman, have been named co-chairmen of the “Farmers for Scotf’ or ganization in Chowan. “Women for Scott” ac tivities will be headed by Mrs. Clarence Britton who has Mrs. E. N. Elliott and Mrs. Edward G. Bond as co-chairmen. & A fault confessed is more than half amended. Subscriptions To UNC’s Friends Os The College Top Last Year RALElGH—Subscriptions to the 10th anniversary season of N. C. State Uni versity’s Friends of the College are running ahead of last year’s record sales, Campaign Chairman Rob ert P. Holding, Jr., has announced. Holding, a Smithfield banker, reported a total of $79,844 after the first re port meeting of campaign workers. The Friends of the Col lege, largest concert series of its kind in the nation, was founded in 1959 to bring internationally recog nized artists to the Raleigh campus. Since that time a total of more than 750,000 people have attended the concerts. Membership in the FOC is open to all North Caro-! linians. NCSU students are admitted through their reg ular student fees. More than 150 workers for the 1988-69 season re ported their initial sub scriptions. Holdings’ tabu lation showed the cam paign well over half way toward the total budget of $125,000. Mrs. R. J. Pres ton’s division in Raleigh repot Led highest sales $2,292. Henry Bowers, director of the Erdahl-Cloyd Stu- j dent Union, noted: “The ! subscriptions are going so fast that we definitely will have to close sales on March 19.” The season subscriptions are $7 for eight concerts during the 1968-69 season. Those concerts will include: Violinist Yehudi Menu hin. Arthur Fiedler and his orchestra, Eric Leinsdorf with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the American Ballet Theater, Fiesta Mex icans, soprano Leontype Price, Orchestra De Paris and a bonus concert. According to Holding, the largest report from towns outside Raleigh came from Durham, which sold $4,718 through Tuesday, March 5. More than 50 other North Carolina communities also turned in strong reports. Those communities include: 1 Apex, Buies Creek, Cha pel Hill, Carthage, Clayton, Clinton, Durham, Edenton, Elizabethtown, Elon Col lege, Enfield, Faison, Fay etteville, Four Oaks, Fre mont. Fuquay - Varina, Golds boro, Greenville, High Point, Hillsboro, Kinston, Laurinburg, Louisburg, Lil lington, -Lumberton, Max ton, Nashville, New Bern, Norlina, Oxford. Pembroke, Pittsboro, Re search Triangle, Roanoke Rapids, Red Springs, Rocky Mount, Roseboro, Roxboro, Sanford, Selma, Smithfield, Southern Pines, Spring Hope, St. Pauls, Tarboro. Wake Forest, Warrenton, Warsaw, Weldon, Wilming ton, Wilson, Winston-Salem, Youngsville and Zebulon. Wm YOU’LL FIND delightful Easter cards ... baskets ... candy... toys everything to gladden the heart, at Mitchener’s Pharmacy DIAL 482-3711 EDENTON, N. C. _ M§\ lu£3y| SECTION B Sewing Classes Added At School The Adult Education De partment at John A. Holmes High School are beginning two new sewing classes to be held on Mon day or Thursday nights, 7 to 9:30 o’clock. This in cludes both beginner and intermediate sewing. There are three new classes for those who are interested in completing the high school equivalency. These classes will meet on Monday and Thursday nights, 7 to 9:30 o’clock. Anyone desiring to par ticipate in this program may come out tonight (Thursday) or on Monday night, March 18 at 7 o’clock.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 14, 1968, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75