' ' Wm j3SBBB||BBBg~- .. Bt„ pi | ;is£ William H. Bunch William H. Bunch 'Named To Post Directors of Edenton Chamber of Commerce Monday afternoon named William H. Bunch president for 1968-69. Bunch will assume the office, replacing W. J. P. Earnhardt, Sr., at Thursday night’s annual banquet. Bunch, an outstanding young com munity leader, is cashier of Peoples Bank & Trust Company. The new president has announced that - Carlton Jackson will direct the annual membership campaign which gets under way at 7:30 A. M., Friday with a kick off breakfast at Edenton Restaurant. Volunteers are being asked to conduct f a two-day membership campaign with a goal of $15,000. Bunch and Jackson urge all team cap tains and* team members to attend the dutch breakfast. New officers will assume their respec tive positions following the banquet Thursday at Chowan Golf & Country Club. In addition to Bunch, officers elected by the directors are: Edward F. Puryear, vice president; Wallace Evans, treasurer; and Elbert H. Copeland, sec retary. New directors, elected to serve for two ► Continued on Pago 4 Classes Planned It is not too late for citizens of Cho toan County to register for adult classes at John A. Holmes and Chowan High Schools. Registration will be held to night (Thursday) at 7 o’clock at these locations. Citizens interested in any of the classes listed at the respective school be low should register at the proper loca tion. Classes will begin for those stu dents who have registered Thursday. At John A. Holmes High School, classes will be held Monday and Thurs day nights from 7 o’clock to 9:30 in the following courses: Typing, bookkeeping, sewing (two ' classes, one on Monday and one on Thursday), shorthand, high school equiv alency and home upholstery (class to begin September 30). An oil painting , class will be held from 7 P. M. to 10 P. M. at the Fine Arts Studio on South Broad Street and begins September 30. At Chowan High School, the following will be-offered on Monday and Thurs day njfhts from 7 o’clock to 9:30. Typing, sewing, high school equivalen cy and adult basic education. Cancer Crusade Goal Set For 1968 A funds campaign to raise $2,500 for Chowan County Unit, American Cancer Society, will be launched here October 1. Mrs. R. Elton Forehand, Jr., unit president, has named Alton G. Elmore, prominent local businessman and civic leader, chairman of the 1968 Cancer Crusade. n H* ‘ -■ .' a®r*i - - '' *'f;- . • - - i4/fon G. Elmore _ Whafs For Lunch? A new feature in The Chowan Herald next week will be the lur- 1 --' n menus from all five schools in Cl "8 County. For many years the men o § n Swain and Holmes schools have. lcluded. Sometime last year the ! .Sj® 5 menu was discontinued by the p 5 | il. There have been nume £ equests from parents for all menus "2 printed and Supt. Bill Britt has ag 'g S o furn ish them. 2 g So, Ma, hereafter, there be any excuse for having Spanish rice for supper when Susie had it for lunch. To Move Ahead Edenton Town Council, upon recom mendation of the Board of Public Works, has set priorities on improvement of the water system as well as expansion of both the water and sewer systems. The projects, while considered to meet mini mum needs, are costly. The total estimated cost of the pro jects considered to be the most urgent is $612,000. If a federal grant of at least 50 per cent of the cost is secured it will still mean $306,000 in local money must be forthcoming. Some of this will come through assessments paid by those who will receive the benefit of the new services while the greater portion must be secured from other sources. Mayor John A. Mitchener, Jr., has Continued on Png* 4 Clubwoman Here Mrs. C. Gordon Maddrey of Raleigh will speak at Edenton Woman’s Club Wednesday at 1 P. M. The meeting will be held at Edenton Restaurant. Mrs. Maddrey is one of North Ca olina’s most active club women and is erving as president of the Southeastern legion, General Federation of Women’s 31ubs. She is a past president of the tate federation and chairman of the Fine Arts Department of the General Federation. She is a native of Ahoskie and gradu ate of Meredith College with an ad vanced degree in political science from Columbia University. A Baptist, she is past president of the Woman’s Miss ionary Union of North Carolina. Mrs. Maddrey is active in the Demo cratic Party and is married to Charles Gordon Maddrey, executive secretary of the ’N. C. Baptist Foundation. The Maddreys have two sons and a grandson. 4.- y Mrs. C. Gordon Maddrey Elmore, manager of Belk Tyler, said the three-week funds campaign will end October 22 with Victory Day. All con tributions are to be turned in by 1 P. M. on that date. Assisting Elmore in solicitation in the rural areas and the residential canvass are: Mrs. Fran Ward, Mrs. Robert Bembry, Mrs. Anna Bass, Mrs. Ruth Frinks and Earl Jones. The crusade chairman will work with the unit executive committee in a spe cial gifts campaign which will be waged from October 1 through October 5. Elmore will call on fellow businessmen to assist with solicitation of commercial establishments, October 7-12. The resi dential phase of the campaign is set for October 14-19. Several special promotions are now be ing planned. Os the funds collected in Chowan County, Elmore said 40 per cent of them remain here to aid local cancer patients. A breakdown of the remainder includes: state, 20 per cent; national research, 33 per cent; and education, 7 per cent. “Because c' the lack of knowledge, many who ecu je helped locally have not taken advantage of assistance avail able,” Elmore said. He said efforts would be made in the future to get the message of local assistance to the people. Voter Books Open Oct. 12 Voter registration books in six Cho wan County precincts will open October 12, according to Mrs. George Hoskins, chairman, board of elections. Mrs. Hoskins said the books will be open from 9 A. M. to 6:30 P. M. in the various precincts for those who have not registered as well as those who have moved since the May elections. The chairman pointed out that in Yeopim, the registrar will sit at Edenton Municipal Airport Administration Build ing. This is a change from Perry’s Store. In other precincts, the registrar will oe at the following locations: West Edenton, Municipal Building; East Edenton, Court House; Center Hill, Rosser Bunch Store; Wardville, H & H THE CHOWAN HERALD Volume XXXV—No. 39. MIA CANDIDATES FCR HOMECOMING HONORS—Six students at John A. Holme* High School are in contention for two top honors at Friday's homecoming festivities at Hicks Field. A new Homecoming Queen and Princess will be crowned during half time of the Edenton-Scotland Neck football gam*. Contestants are: Elisabeth Williams, 10th Grad*, center, and left to right: Beth Kalkaveck. Ninth Grade; Katherine Fore hand. Eighth Grade; Ginna Jones. 11th Grade; Jackie Habit, Seventh Grade, and Deb. by Adams, 12th Grad*. * Homecoming Is Here Friday Night Halftime activities at the Edenton- Scotland Neck football game Friday night on Hicks Field will center around Homecoming. The event is sponsored each year by Future Homemakers of America of John A. Holmes High School. There are three candidates for Home coming Queen and three for Princess, chosen from their respective grades. They are: Elizabeth Williams, 10th Grade; Ginna Jones, 11th Grade, and Aces Beaten By Williamston; Seek Second V ictory It’s homecoming Friday night at John A. Homes High School and the Aces hope to get back into the winning way as they play host to Scotland Neck. The Aces are 1-1 in the 2-A Albe marle Conference, having lost a heart breaker last week to Williamston, 7-6. It was the first time in 17 years that the Green Wave has been able to enjoy vic tory over the Aces. And it almost didn’t come. Although completely outmatched in the first two periods, the Aces held Wil liamston to a lone TD and in the fourth quarter were able to put points on the board themselves. With the score 7-6, Frank Niepraschk’s boot was wide. The placekicker had booted 4 for 4 a week earlier at Northampton. Gigi Leary and Jay Swicegood were honored Tuesday by the Quarterback Crafts Fair Open ELIZABETH ClTY—Craftsmen from Chowan County are among those from throughout Northeast North Carolina participating in the Albemarle Crafts man’s Fair which opened here Wed nesday. The 10th annual event is being staged in National Guard Armory and will be open from 12 noon to 9 P. M., through Friday. Craftsmen from Chowan include: Miss Diane Peedin, yarn dolls; Mrs. D. Ross Inglis, hammocks; Miss Har riet Leary, Mrs. Graham Byrum, and Mrs. T. J. Wood, chair caning; Mrs. Steve Moreland, pottery and enameling; and Mrs. Ernest Gard, candles. “Craftsmen in the Albemarle Area stress quality workmanship,” Mrs. J. P. Morgan, Sr., of Shawboro, chairman of the event points out. Therefore, only work of the highest quality will be ex hibited. Grocery, and -Rocky Hock, Rocky Hock Community Building. Books will close Saturday, October 26 at 6:30 P. M. Challenge Day will be November 2 from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. No one will be allowed to register on this day. A new provision has been made for new residents of North Carolina. A newcomer who otherwise meets voting requirements may vote for president if he has lived in the state for 60 days or more prior to November 5. In the past, it was necessary to be a resident of the state for one year and of the voting precinct for 30 days to be eligible to vote. This is still the re quirement for voting in any election ex cept for the presidential contest. A newcomer desiring to vote for the Edenton, Chowan County, North Carolina, Thursday, September 26, 1968. Debby Adams, 12 th Grade; Jackie Habit, Seventh Grade; Katherine Fore hand, Eighth Grade, and Bet Katkaveck, Ninth Grade. Patricia Ashley, 1967 Homecoming Queen, and Julie Habit, 1967 Homecom ing Princess, will crown their successors during the halftime of the game. A dance will be held in the high school gymnasium following the game. Music will be furnished by The Barra cudas. Club as back and lineman of the week, respectively. At the same time the club honored Earl Chesson and Allen Swan ner for the posts for play against Eliza beth City. Williamston scored on their second offensive play. Jimmy Hardison threw a quick pass to Ronnie Wynne who raced 22 yards for the score. The play caught the Edenton defense completely flatfooted. The Aces hadn’t recovered from a busted play where the center J 1 Up: fSflKiwflL 1 * m WILDLIFE CLUB LEADERS—George Lewis, standing left, charter president of Albe marle Wildlife Club, is pictured here with new officers elected Thunder night at the dub's annual meeting. Dr. Richard Hardin, center, was elected president, while Joe Thocud, left, was named rice president, and If. J. George, right, eras re elected secre tary-treat u; -r, s : the meeting held at Colonial Restaurant tr-~ <* 30 members dis cussed proj tit i.-r the coming year, includi-... i. is rtl f business. presidency must apply in person to the chairman of Chowan County Board of Elections not more than 20 days before the date of the election and not later than 5 P. M. on Friday preceding elec tion day. Those registered voters who have moved from the precinct in which they registered during the new registration in the spring must apply for a transfer at the precinct in which he now resides. A qualified and registered voter who expects to be absent from the county during the entire period that the polls will be open on November 5 can make written application for absentee ballots to the board chairman not earlier than 45 days nor later than 6 P. M. on Wed nesday before the election. Single Copy 10 Cents Fair Booths Are Judged The grand prize booth at Chowan County Fair was arranged by the Epis copal Young Churchmen of St. Paul’s Church. The booth, using the topic ‘“We Serve The Community,” was erected around the cld country store theme. Second place in the booth division went to three youngsters who erected an individual display titled: “Happiness Is a Clean Community.” Those who pre sented the display were Henry and Mike McMullan and Gris Bond. W. A. Perry, president, Chowan Coun ty Fair Association, said the booths were especially nice this year. “It is about the best displays we have ever had,” he said. Edenton Home Economics Extension Club won first place in the adult booth division and Byrd HDC won second. The YMW organization placed third. Booths in the junior division placed in order, included: Episcopal Young Churchmen, Holmes FHA, Oak Grove 4-H, Center Hill 4-H, Walker FFA, and Yeopim 4-H. Entries in several other divisions were more than allotted space could handle. Perry pointed out. He singled out art as one of the fastest growing exhibits at the fair. He suggested that next year there might be a special art exhibit. “We are extremely well pleased with the entries in each division,” the leader said as he pointed to cured meat, a first for the fair, and many other items. Judges were busy early Tuesday as- Continued on Peg* 4 threw the ball over Earl Chesson’s head as Chesson stood in punt formation and Williamston took over deep in Edenton territory. The Aces w r ere able to stop several other Williamston drives and were on the Waves’ three when the half ended. In the third quarter the Aces were again in deep trouble due to another bad pass from center. Leary was able to stop Bebe Batts short of paydirt as- Conttnuad on Pag* 4