PAGE FOUR r-C Senator Sam J. Ervin Says WASHINGTON Much has been said about the Senates exercise of its con. stitutional duty to examine the qualifications of Jus tice Fortas to be Chief Justice of the United States. In some quarters it is said that senators should abdicate their duty and comply with the Presi dent’s request without in quiry. The criticism ignores the real obligation of senators and particularly those who are members of the Judici ary Committee to forth rightly perform their con stitutional tasks. The ob ligation arises out of Ar ticle II of the Constitu tion which provides that the President shall appoint Supreme Court Justices •‘by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.” The gravity of this ob ligation is clearly revealed by the nature of the office "marketlWMtt to table by your Vepco Home Economist "Dollar Dinner Night" comes to your house when you combine economical convenience foods with thrifty electricity to serve MEXICAN SKILLET. 8 frankfurters diagonally sliced in thirds y 2 cup green pepper strips 1 j cup chopped onion 2 tbls. margarine 1 can condensed tomato soup } ri cup water 3 cups cooked rice 1 tbls. pickle relish Brown franks and cook green pepper and onion In butter until tender. Stir in remaining ingredients. Heat, stirring occasionally. Makes four servings for one dollar! Electricity saved you time and trouble and cost just lc. For more great recipes, call your local Vepco office and ask for your free copy of “Electric Cooking—the Easy Flameless Way.” Or write to Vepco, Box 1194, Richmond, Va. 23209 They All Appear The Same From The Front ..... But! TAKE A LOOK AT THE REAR ~*"**"T' ~ our Bottom Dollar You See The The Leader! DAY N DAY OUT! LEADER’S SPECIAL THIS WEEK ~CHEVRSi^N"i 4-DOOR SEDAN POWERGLIDE RADIO $1,968-00 j YOU GET A BETTER NEW OR USED CAR DEAL AT ALBEMARLE FORD THE SWITCH ISON ... SEE THE LIGHT! a Supreme Court Justice occupies and the awesome power he exercises in it. Supreme Court Justices hold office for life, and cannot be held responsible in any way to the people. After they ascend the bench, no external author ity can control their of ficial conduct or make them keep their oaths to support the Constitution. This in itself ought to give the nation pause. The tragic truth is that in re cent years the Supreme Court has repeatedly usurped and exercised the power of Congress and the states to amend the Con stitution while professing tc interpret it. On some occasions it ha 3 encroached upon the con stitutional powers of the Congress as the nation’s legislative body. On other occasions it has stretched the legislative powers of Congress far beyond their THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, AUGUST IS, IMS. m ‘.'MB' * - . ' constitutional limits. On oc casions too numerous to mention, it has struck down state action and state legislation in areas clearly committed by the Constitution to the states. In so doing, the late Justice Owen J. Roberts put the problem aptly two decades ago in his dissent in Smith vs. Allwright: ‘The reason for my con cern is that the instant de cision, overruling that an nounced about nine years ago, tends to bring adjudi cations of this tribunal in to the same class as a re stricted railroad ticket, good for this day and train only.” It is idle to suggest that Congress and the states can redress the conse quences of judicial usurpa tions by exercising their power to amend the Con stitution. In the first place, the Constitution cannot be amended fast enough to redress the con sequences of wholesale ju dicial usurpations; and in the second place, it is ab surd to expect that Su preme Court Justices who do not observe the langu age and history of exist ing constitutional provi sions will abide by the language and history of newly adopted amend ments. Chief Justice Harlan Fisk Stone stated this under standably in the Butler case: “While unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the govern ment is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our exercise of power is our own sense of self restraint.” Justice Fortas has been cn the Supreme Court for three years. The question confronting the Senate is whether he ought to be elevated for life to the of fice of Chief Justice —an office more powerful than that of the Presidency in its impact upon constitu tional government My questioning of Jus tice Fortas in committee hearings has been directed solely toward determining whether he possesses a sense of judicial self-re straint and is willing to exercise it. In the last analysis, the only way to preserve constitutional gov ernment is to deny seats on the Supreme Court to men who are unwilling to in terpret the Constitution ac cording to its true intent. Sutton Playing At Livingstone Sylvester Sutton of Eden ton will be a tri-captain of the 1968 Livingstone Col lege Bears, according to John D. Marshall, 11, foot ball coach. Sutton, a rising junior at the Salisbury college, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Sutton, 401 North Oakum Street. The tri-captain was a standout at D .F. Walker .High School. He was chos en on the first team of All- CIAA in 1966 and was honorable mention in 1967. As a freshman and soph omore, Sutton has caught 87 passes for over 1,600 yards and 16 touchdowns for the Bears. He is 6 ft. 1 in. tall and weighs 185 pounds. Sunday School Lesson Continued from Page 2 we have our bodies, our sculs, this bountiful uni verse in which we have our being; our loved ones, Ihe privilege of our senses —all these are God - given blessings that we enjoy from day to day on our al lotted span on this earth. As Christians we accept the statement of the Sav iour: “In my Father’s house there are many man sions ...” and, in ac cepting, we affirm our be lief in a life after death. This, too, is God - given. Should we not find the time, therefore, to do our level best to find the time tc continue God’s work while we are waiting, here c-n earth, to inherit the Kingdom? Is not this our primary commitment our first duty? The works of the Bible should be our compass, and they should bp referred to when we lose our way. For from this Book we can learn much. Insuring Glass NEW YORK—Americans spent some S4O million to insure glass during 1965, the Insurance Information Institute reports. This is almost four times the sll.B million in glass insurance premiums recorded in 1941. wno pays... If you’re tick or hurt? Kiio«wM» linfun 4om—•' '—- "■» — jM m i—i wnß ms noapuai amo surgical Jhooat omnp foe yowK sSLs?" >o*ej • aMMtvmr gjgjgjfSS -J JOE THOKUB 1H But Stay IM F. O. B*k CM PRONI «M4H Nationwide Insurance Wj * ** s*’ ■IrTSTaW Trurf-h * \ KY.\ J Flshboat Sanitation Most commercial fisher men have long been aware of the need of keeping their vessel’s fish hold clean. Sanitary conditions in the hold directly affect the quality of the fish held in this area. Yet, only scanty information has been available to fishermen on how to properly clean and sanitize this most cri tical region. The closest approach to cleanliness in many cases has been to wash the hold, pen boards and fish boxes with harbor water—without using bac terial or other suitable cleaning or sanitizing com pounds. Experiments have shown that conventional hand scrubbing and rinsing with harbor water does not re duce the bacteria in wood en fish holds, even though the surface of the hold ap pears visually clean and free of slime. Fish holds, in many cases, have been construct ed to store fish, with little or no consideration given to ease in keeping them sanitary. Slime, blood, ex creta and water from iced fish contaminate the hold area. These materials are especially difficult to re move from wooden holds because only the exposed, outer surface of the wood can be effectively washed. Debris which enters inner layers of wood through porous outer areas remains in the wood to cause foul, bilge-like odors and con taminate incoming fish with “spoilage causing” bacteria. Painting, to seal the wood against the uptake of debris, has been largely Rb MR Btiß | Hf dMj M| ■ IHV H fljj HB HR H I I BK SB JBBm SBR bww Hi 9H He mm gH wm nBBK |®i|r naWK m EBB! ■ J mfGOOP^M^ * *“”"""* rubber adds extra iw.mm.mm_m 111111 gripping edges gitfc *csKj|< 8.15-15 $19.45 i 2.36 surer—stop fasts*. §tmsi rain or shine /jjjA Q§ — " ■ ■ plus j2.lt around tread jjjjp"*" * nd °* d Wf * provides better CM steering control mKm in the turns on our Easy Pay Plan! REBIILAR Goodyear Motr-Sptnr Batteriei S 6-Volt 0n1y... 12-Volt on* .-toTSS $33.02 Bssy Terms-Free mslsMkt — SHf discontinued. It was rela tively ineffective and, in some cases, the bilgy con dition became more pro nounced. However, im pregnation of the wood of the hold with a solution of copper - quinolinolate (cunilate), a wood preserv ative, has been quite effec tive in resisting uptake of the debris. This makes the wood easier to wash. Basic to all effective cleaning are the following steps: (1) rinse, (2) wash, (3) rinse, (4) sanitize. Rinse: Cleaning the hold should be done as soon as possible after the fish and ice are removed. Flush down as much debris as possible using fresh water applied at a high velocity. Pump this watery waste from the bilge. Cleaning: Before the sur. faces dry from the rinse, a concentrated detergent so lution— up to 10 times more concentrated than recommended for normal cleaning should be ap plied by a high pressure sprayer or by means of a stiff brush. Synthetic household laundry-type de tergents are usually quite effective. They should be of the type suitable for re moving material of a pro tein nature. Chlorinated— and iodinated—type deter gents are available that re act chemically with the proteins causing an effer vescence of CO2 that actu ally lifts the debris from the surface. Detergents are most effective when used with warm water. Rinsing: Rinse the hold with cool to tepid water and pump the used clean ing solution from the hold. The Yellowed Pages Continued from Page 1 Junior Memory Work Tour nament at the State Bap tist Assembly Grounds near Carolina Beach. Town Council authorized the Board of Public Works to install a water main on West Albemarle Street in the vicinity of Beaver Hill Cemetery. Agreement was made to furnish the town suitable right of way for the location of the main and for the petitioners to pay connection charges when a bill was presented. David E. Hervey told Town Council that he was overcharged for electricity at the Edenton Naval Air Station which, he said, vio lated both the spirit and letter of the agreement ar rived at in federal court in Elizabeth City. Town At torney J. N. Pruden, how For Quick Results, Try A Herald Classifyt tc (df^emembei By MARVIN BARHAM “BELIEVE YOU CAN, AND YOUcff^™ The above statement is something you might believe—or disbelieve. However, belief is one of the most powerful of all problem solvers. As an illustration—it was generally accepted for many years that it was impossible for a man to run a mile in four minutes. Along came a frail Englishman by the name of Roger Bannister —he ran the mile in 1954 in four minutes flat. Today there are many who even break that record. Why do men break records? They believe they can! Why do people reach for goals? They believe those goals can be obtained. The chief reason that people are beaten down by difficulties is because they allow themselves to think they can be beaten. Don’t all of us finally find out that we are usually bigger than all our difficulties. OUR THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: We repeat: “Believe you can and you can.” Colonial Funeral Home Edenton, North Carolina ever, ruled that there was no violation of any agree ment. In considering the town’s budget, Town Councilmen made provision for chang ing police headquarters from East King Street to the northern end of the town plant o n South Broad Street. The move saved the town the rent for the headquarters. Superintendent W. J. Taylor was authorized to purchase chairs for the Rocky Hock and Chowan High School lunch rooms. What was said to be the final boat load of Chowan County watermelons left the county dock for north ern markets. Over 20 boats left Edenton with approximately 500,000 mel ons shipped by boat and truck.