Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Dec. 12, 1968, edition 1 / Page 18
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PAGE TWO -C Age Proof Necessary For S. S. Many people delay filing their social security claims because they don't have any proof of their age. In some cases, this causes a delay in receiving their first check. The following advice is given to help speed up that first social security check. First of all, don’t delay filing your claim. File early, two or three months before you plan to retire, even if you don't have proof of your age. Your social security office will be able to suggest some Mass Schedule At St Ann’s Father Joseph J. Lash, pastor of St. Ann’s Cath olic Church, announces the following schedule of masses: Friday, 7 A. M.; Satur day, 8 A. M.; Sunday, 8 A. M.; Monday, 7 A. M.; Wednesday, 5:3Q P. M. At All Souls’ in Colum bia: Tuesday, 6 P. M.. At St. Joan of Arc, Ply mouth: Thursday, 5:30 P. M.; Sunday. 10:30 A M. W lUfrUffor) I === funeral home B === edenton. n. c eM Hfe that the^umlrmind^e-" 8 H qiures tame to accept the fact Therefore 1 *^ 011 in death - S proper and I ereaved should respect the J heJe 1 on l e a°th, Wh^ Ch remains Sj AUCTION SALE! Valuable Farm Equipment On Saturday, December 14th, 1968 At 10:00 A. M. / will offer for sale the following items. This being the property of J. D. Ward (deceased). Sale at the home place in the Sign Pine Community of Chowan County (N. C. Highway No. 32). 1967 Pick-up Truck with Rucks 424 International Tractor '6B Super C Farm all Tractor Farm all "B" Tractor with Planters Farmall "H" Tractor with Lift John Deqre Manure Spreader Two "C" 254 Cultivators IHC 4-Row Middlebuster One Set Rotary Weed art 200 Cultivator Draw Bar Seed Sower Hand Grease Gun One Set C-53 Fertiliser Attachments One Pair Fertiliser Boots One Set Cole Planters for Super C Tractor C-20 Flat Bottom Plow Tractor Drawn Pea Weeder Two Horse Drawn Pea Weed ears One Set H-71 Mlddlebusters John Blue Duster 3 Point Adapter tor Super C Tractor Mixon Sprayer (Barrel and Pump BasQ Farm Trailer Sow-Right Sower Two Sets Disc Hillers One Set Fertiliser Disc Openers Four Long Handled Pitch Tories One Pair Hole Diggers Tobacco Truck C-16 Middlebuster Miscellaneous Horse-Drawn Equipment Section Harrow Mew Ground Harrow Six Horse Drawn Carts Horse Drawn Farm Wagon Two Mules Two Row Stalk Cutter King Disc Harrow—Two Row Hog Scalding Vat Twelve Rolls Fence Wire Bean Grader Two Pull-Type Disc-Harrows TERMS: CASH J. F. Ward, Executor AUCTIONEER; L. A. Benton proofs you can use. The best thing is to start early in proving your age. You can visit the so cial security office at any time and discuss what proofs you have and what will be necessary. Am a general rule, the older the evidence, the better it is. The very best evidence is a birth certificate made at or shortly after birth, but people now reaching re tirement age may be un able to get an original birth certificate. Other evidence, such as early church records showing age of date of birth, old family Bibles in which the age was entered in child hood, early voting or mar riage records, or other old records may be used. One of the best and most fre quently used records is a federal census record. Most people now filing for so cial security will be listed on a 1910 or 1920 census record. You can obtain an application for a census record from the social se curity office or the health department. TMI CHOWAN NiIALP. KOWTOW. MOUTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. DECEMBER It UN. lik Supply Said hi Danger “North Carolina’s milk supply is threatened by the inability of dairy farmers to make a profit,’’ it was revealed today by B. C. Mangum, president of the North Carolina Farm Bu reau. In an obvious reference to the Farm Bureau’s re cent request to the N. C. Milk Commission for a 60 cents per hundred pounds increase to producers for Class 1 milk, Mangum stated that “dairymen simply cannot continue to operate at current pro ducer prices. “Dairy farmers,” the farm leader said, “have been fighting a losing battle in maintaining a balance between produc tion costs and the prices they receive. Supplies and equipment have gone up at least one-third over the last five years. Coupled with minimum wages and the shortage of labor, these factors have rocked the fi nancial structure of most of the state’s dairymen.” Mangum cited figures to support his claim. "Since 1963,” he asserted, “1,023 of North Carolina’s dairy men have quit. We now have only 2,421 dairy pro ducers in the state. Half of those remaining are ready to quit,” he report ed. “Based on the present rate of population growth,” the Rougemont farmer fig ured, “we will need an eight per cent increase in milk production to meet demands barring adverse weather conditions. OMmsl wise, we will have to de pend on imports. Certain ly, consumers cannot pos sibly benefit through sup plemental import of milk. It costs more, and the supply is not reliable. Dairymen throughout the country,” Mangum con cluded, “are experiencing the same problems we are having.” Greater love hath no man than this, that a mah lay down his life for his friends. —John 15:13. Make Church •Going A Habit . ... , - . ■. % ** . SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON ASSURANCE FOR THE FAITHFUL International Sunday School Lesson for Dec.' 15 Memory Selection: “Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honor, and power, and might, be unto our God for ever and ever. Amen.”—Revelation 7:12. Lesson Text: Revelation 4-5; 7. Continuing our studies in Revelation, the Bible material at our command today is a very comforting Book in context. For in it we find that—beset as we are by trials and tribulations when such things count as naught, and we will stand at the throne of God freed from all earth ly tensions and anxieties, all unhappiness and injustice. But, until that time comes, the trials and tribulations of the world are very much with us. And sometimes they can get us down— (there are few among us who will deny that). And this, above all, is one reason why weekly worship is so important The hours spent in God’s House, on the Sabbath, provides an oasis for man—a time to renew his faith, restore his soul, gamer the physical and spiritual strengths with which to face what lies ahead in the week to come. It keeps him ever aware that that which is evil and hurtful will pass (as all evil and hurtful things have, from time immemorial) and the future lies ahead, shining brightly with HOPE. HOPE—what a beautiful thing it is! With out it, mankind would indeed be desolate. Jesus died, to give us hope—rope in life eternal—hope that all the pettiness and sins that are an in tegral part of man’s all-too-human nature, would be washed away in His blood, and we would one day come into the riches that God planned for us to inherit. The average Christian, all too often, finds it difficult to remember that he is only a sojourner on this earth) and that eternity awaits him be yond the grave. He is too much pre-occupied with the NOW. And it is not until Death—one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, so vividly depicted in the dramatic words of John in these particular chapters of the Revelation— is looking over his shoulder that he really stops and takes a good, unclouded look at his life, his actions, his beliefs. And then, too often, he fears that it is much too late. But it is never too late. This, in essence, is the message we are receiving today, as we per use the majestic pageantry depicted in the verses . under study. This is assurance for the faith ful—in all its magnificence. For the faithful are to be clothed in robes of purest white, made so by being bathed in the blood of the Lamb; they are to serve God day and night, and they ■ will not be touched by hunger, or cold, or heat. And if it might seem to be literal-minded that , the comparison of robes being white by reason i of being bathed in Christ’s blood is paradoxical one must remember the greatest paradox of all— Continued on Page 3 BELK - TYLER’S COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME EDENTON CONSTRUCTION EDENTON’S Hiway 32 North Edenton, N. C. COMPANY, INC. PHONF 4#2 448* GENERAL CONTRACTORS SHOPPING CENTER PHONE 482 4486 phone 48*3515 - N. BROAD ST. •MMMMMMMtMMMIMaMMMMSMMMMMMMMtMIStSSMeitMSIMHMMMMIMMMaSMSMM MUNNHINHNnmiNINtHtHHINUHNINHMtHUNIIUIINmHMIIIItHtHHNHIMUM IHftSSMMUf MIMSMIHMI—IM6IM I WSeSIHtoM Hi 11 1—HUM l| W»« W. E. SMITH GENE’S 6 & 10c STORE MITCHENER'S PHARMACY GENERAL MERCHANDISE o 0 & lUC DlUttJh -Rocky Hock- SELF-SERVICE Prracriptkm PhannacW. PHONE 462-3711 EDENTON PHONE 221-4031 EDENTON v M. G. BROWN CO., INC. EDENTON SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION EDENTON OFFICE SUW*r Lumber - Millwork - Building Material » • „ , Where You Stive DOES Everything For The Offke Reputation Budt on Satisfied Customers # Dijfer(Hce! PHONE 482-2135 EDENTON EDENTON, N. C. Ph ° D * 4tt * 2#W “ 801 s -'*»•**. tug. This Space Sponsored By a COLONIAL MOTOR CO, ALBEMARLE MOTOR OP EDENTON COMPANY Friend of the Churches RTiiry fit ns pnwTTtf' BUICK - OLDS - PONTIAC „ Y(m rQRD In Chowan County GMC TRUCKS W. HICKS STREET EHENTQN, M. C. Hlirupq PARPPR LEARY BROS. STORAGE EQUIPMENT COMPANY HUGHES-PARKER COMPANY YOUR FORD TRACTOR DEALER HARDWARE COMPANY Buyers Os Agents For Evinrude Outboards SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS S °y be^^ Ptsdncs U. S. 17 SOUTH— EDENTON, N. C. PHONE 482-2315 EDENTON Fertilizer* and Seed* PHONES 422-2141 AMD 422-2542 BRIDGE-TURN ESSO RESTAURANT HOBBS IMPLEMENT SERVICENTER EDENTON RESTAURANT COMPANY, INC. -Ter fne»Uy RSSO “ GMi ‘ l™*™!™** “£££ MRS. W. L. BOSWELL, Prop, lour ** na «|wp««e®t V ESSO PRODUCTS ATLAS TIRES - ™ Needs Are a Life | jf* 1 AND BATTERIES T*®® J o ** With Vsl "!zz" ' -■■■■—»■■■■, m- TTSES Western Gas & BYRUM IMPLEMENT & QUINN FURNITURE Fuel Oil Service JjMU! TRUCK COMPANY, INC. COMPANY 313 S BROAD STREET International Harvester Dealer HOME OP PINE PUttN/TVttß Ph. 482-3122 . Edenton PHONE 482-2151 - EDENTON, N. C. *sv' vi' ; \V • Yes No Though Ido worry, I feel JBj there’s away to prevent it. I Yes No Sometimes I antagonize people because of my actions or attitude. I know there must be away to correct this. Yea No It seems contrary to reality, but I feel that real happi— THB CHUtCH FOtt Alt ness is something apart from ... aU KM THfrCHUtCM wealth, power, or fame. The Church l> the siaewm Yes No There must be a practical way factor on »«>» of raising my family in a chip, in. astcrehouceefspfcM better world. uet vetucs. Whhoui e mww , .mL v.nvrcn, iwfrnmw epkiwnij iw A "yes* answer to any of these questions civiliiohon con survive. There is definite proof of God’s conoern for you. miiajuT God talks to man by making him "feel* and V ~il —nir**~t •know" of a better way of living. You feel Chureh. They ere. (!) Nr hj» discontent about present oonditions, you take *°(3) E* rtw^sokedThb sense "something better," somewhere. community andnetfee. (4)Fer That’s God talking to you. Listen to him. •«*» o* the Church Meek. Come to church this Sunday. Read His Living tertoT euppertl* Hwc^tT'ae'w Word in the Bible. church reoulewiy ewdiwed your This could be the ohanoe you've been wait- KWedohy ing for. Cm»»te*t ml Xmur -n Into, lac.. We IKkS"IM9 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday w'Mm- Deuteronomy II Samuel Luke I Corinthians Ephesians Hebrews Hebrews jiiOorfWSEl 8:11-20 16:5-14 12:9-21 10:23-13 3:14-21 9:23-38 )1:>-14 (r - ?-■ - -it miri.i ■•>?...( , 'iie'iiw NwmwAcofrwßh These Religious Messages Are Published In The Retail Under The, Sponsorship Os The Following Business Establishments:
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1968, edition 1
18
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