Edenton - Chowan Lunch Room Menus m. Menu* in the lunch rooms ~of Chowan County schools lor March 23-26 will be as .follows: *John A. Holmes High School ! Monday—Fkh fillet, French ■ fries, turnip greens, corn ■ bread, butter, fresh apples, :spice cake with peanut but ;ter frosting, milk. — Cheeseburger Jptth bun, potato chips, green peas, peach cobbler, bulk, j Wednesday—Spaghetti with :meat sauce, cole slaw, butter ed corn, corn bread, butter, pineapple cake, milk. :: .Thursday Roast turkey, dressing and gravy, buttered rice, green succotash, fresh apples, rolls, butter, apricot : halves, milk. i 0. F. Walker Junior High School [ Monday Frank, dried ' beans, cabbage slaw, roll with butter, chocolate cake with white icing, milk. Tuesday— Fried fish, lima : beans, French fries, corn meal square, strawberry jello, milk. $ Wednesday—Sloppy Joe on bun, green beans, apple sauce, cake square, milk. Thursday Fried chicken, l Evans & Smith CONTRACTORS Finance Internet Lot fonts Cory. Rates 3 Bedroom Homes From $8,500 lip Also Custom Built Homes Built To Your Plans 221-4939 -PHONES- 221-4314 . EDENTON, N. C. N. 0. VIS. COXTB. LIC. NO. SSSS NOTICE TO ADMINISTRATORS, EXECUTORS AND GUARDIANS! The law requires an ANNUAL ACCOUNT to be made each yea r and an INVENTORY to be fiW within 90 days after qualifying. If your Annual Account Inven tory or Final Account are past due, we respectfully urge that 'you file same at once, as we are required to report all such cases to the Grand Jury, which will convene at the March term of Chowan County Superior Court, March 30th. LENA M. LEARY Oerk of Superior Court TIDEWATER TRAILER SAI£S i “The Home of Better-Buys” < ITS WHERE the finest the besti MOBILE HOMES To Suit Your Terms and Budget North Carolina’a Largest Mobile Home Dealer 70 Mobile Homes To Choose from ... 8-10 & 12-ft Wide 1,2, 3 and 4 Bedrooms See Peek for a Better Pick ... The Man With The Plana TIDEWATER TRAILER SALES Wifkwi NI4IU Washington, K. C. cubed potatoes, English Peas, roll with butter, cup cake with icing, milk. Ernest A. Swain Elementary School Monday Weiners, csrrot and cabbage salad, dried beans, rolls, butter, apple pie, milk. Tuesday— Ravioli, buttered corn, rolls, butter, pineapple upside down cake, milk. Wednesday Cubed steak, gravy, green beans, steamed rice, rolls, butter, peach halves, milk. Thursday Beef stew with onions, potatoes and carrots, garden peas, biscuits, butter, jello with whipped topping, milk. White Oak School Monday—Barbecue beef on bun, lima beans, buttered corn, chocolate cake, milk. Tuesday—Oven fried chick en, potato salad, green peas, fresh apples, rolls with but ter, milk. Wednesday Fish portions, French fries, carrot and cab bage salad, corn bread, lemon cookies, milk. Thursday Meat loaf with gravy, green beans, apple sauce, spice cake, rails with butter, milk. THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 1» K 1976. Chowan High School Monday Hamburgers, creamed potatoes, blackeye peas, sliced pineapple, cook ies, rolls, butter, milk. Tuesday—Pizza with ham burger and cheese, tossed salad, fruit cup, peanut but ter cookies, crackers, bread, milk. Wednesday Baked ham, potato salad, turnip greens, beet pickles, chocolate pud ding, rolls, butter, milk. Thursday Roast turkey and gravy, sweet potato puff, green peas and carrots, cran berry sauce, strawberry short cake, rolls, butter, milk. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Clinton O. Davis of Titusville, Fla., an nounce the arrival of their daughter, Julia Kathleen, on March 4. Mrs. Davis is the former Judy McLaughlin of Edenton. Anyone who drives regular ly in his business, from town to town, must be lucky to survive the ordeal for a life time. New Editor Speaks Mind (Editor's Note: The follow ing article appeared in the February issue of Atlanta Magazine, put out by that city’s Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Shavin is the new edi tor. It is quite likely some can substitute “Edenton” or | “Chowan County” where he uses “Atlanta" and the infer ence would be the same). ' By NORMAN BHAVIN In their innocence, children occasionally etch immortal lines whose intentions are serious but whose results spawn humor and insight. One child thus scrawled on a test paper a definition worth consideration: “A pub lic servant,” he claimed, “is one who serves the public for his own good.” | It is a generalization and all generalizations are un true—even that last one. But that child's definition ;is presently pertinent for this I great city, Atlanta, is a squirming, confused witness to a difficulty school de segregation—a difficulty com pounded by voices shrill, voices threatening, actions destructive, movements ugly. None of it is necessary; worse, some of it is bom of self-seeking opportunism. Atlanta—and our mystique made real, the spirit of the city—is more than 100 years in the building, much of that creative construction the dis play of the past decade. Now, in 1970, divisiveness threatens to sunder all which honorable and sacrificing men and women have labored to build, brick by brick, being • by being, in the heat of the day. Only of such painful and patient work is the mighty structure of a decent and lasting society erected. There are those who see only the problems and would use them to exacerbate the raveled mood of a commun ity—for personal gain. . And there are those who see problems as opportunities •for constructive growth. ! Atlanta has chosen before which leadership it will sup. 'port. It must do so again. !| You and I individuals all i —may permit impatience to become anger, convert anger to hostility, and in a mo \ ment’s frustrated discontent, i translate hostility into de | structlon. | It takes but moments to i destroy. But to build—to use that divine spark to continue the touching-of-hands of dia | logue toward creative effort, | there is the truest test of i man’s humanity to his broth i er * | Some years ago, John i Gardner, now of the Urban, | Coalition, employed a phrase - | which remains fixed in my I own being. ! pressed for the concept i of “self-renewal,” urging each i man, each institution, each community, each government to devote itself to persistent self-inquiry better to evalu ate directions and goals. With- I 004 "•elf-renewal,” without a | «»«tant reappraisal of who and what we are—as indivi duals, as a community —we stagnate. To remain as im mobile as Stone Mountain, to listen to shrill voices that in sist on granitic resistance, to, remain unaltered in our atti tudes is to die a little bit fester every day. “Self - renewal” implies frowth; it suggests a rededi cation to what this nation is all about on the threshold of its 200th anniversary, Tot America is a nation still in' | process of becoming—and that l its agony and its A crisis in embryo can be— must be —gentled with Retired Farmer Taken h Death James Earl Jones, 64, West Queen Street Extended, died last Thursday at hia home. He was a retired farmer. Mr. Jones was a native of Chowan County, born March 8, 1906, son of the late George W. and Allie Virginia Mor gan Jones. He was married to Mrs. Ora Brown Jones, who survives. Also surviving is a son, George Ellis Jones of Eden ton; two daughters, Mrs. Doris Jean Saunders of Edenton, and Mrs. Audry Lee Nixon of Winfall; three brothers, Erie, Frank and Haywood Jones, all of Edenton; one sister, Mrs. Reuben Bass of Edenton and four grandchildren. He was h member of Mace-: donia Baptist Church, where funeral services were held at 3:30 P. M. Saturday with Rev. Virgil Wilson and Rev. Terry Jones officiating. Burial was in Beaver Hill Cemetery. Williford Funeral Home was in charge of arrange ments. calm. And this is Atlanta's need: It owes a debt to those of the past who met impend- J ing calamity with patience i and thought; it owes the fu-| ture no less. The Founding Fathers, who. shaped dissent into democ racy, spoke of “one nation in divisible, with liberty and justice for all.” Those words are no less vital now than in the whirlpool days of their creation. How each Atlantan responds to the mandate will tell the world what Atlanta truly is—a city in the process of self-renewal toward its unique destiny as a potential model for greatness, or simp ly a place where unreasoning : fear, fueled by opportunists, convinced us that self-de struction is the greater glory. A College Park boy, now 10, published an occasional little newspaper and in his December issue, he paid tri bute to that passionate com poser, Ludwig Van Beet hoven: “Happy birthday to Mr. L. V. Beethoven who was 200 years old on December 17. He wrote nine symphonys (sic) and was deaf most of the time.” The boy editor’s details are not wholly true—but his last phrase is applicable here. Ask yourself: Shall we be “deaf most of the time?” And shall we—you and l— act to compose for our Atlan ta a symphony—or a dirge? Listen to the inner voice that whispers reason. Easter Helper for # Bunny F\yf r n ilk ARGAINS • JmJ That's what you’ll call your j£c X/ First National Card when you use it for your family’s head- ('v // to-toe Easter outfits I It’s the only bank cart that iiJp' | gives a full 30 days without \ - Y/y service charge on retail purchases! So use it now for all your bunny bargains. Make this your biggest and best-dressed Easter ever! ACCOUNT NUMMH 2SR 101 23H sbl Only Bank Card with a 20% Time Bonus! lose 07/721 (J) ■ Jr-u IS -J) FIRST NATIONAL BANK of eastern north Carolina Golf News: Associational Play Begins April 5 By LEW DEXTER A reminder to all men players that want to play on the Edenton team in the Ro anoke Golf Association tour naments beginning April 5 must have completed their 36 hole qualifying by March 22, so those of you who have not turned in your two 18-hole scores, please do so by Sun day the 22nd. All members must also turn in scores for handicap ping purposes so that I may keep your handicaps. If and when we have a handicap tournament and you don’t have an established handicap you will have to play scratch if you want to play in it. Another reason for you t Help Wanted Experienced Sewing Machine Operators Beautiful Factory - Completely Air Conditioned Excellent Workiny Conditions; Good Pay FLAIR MANUFACTURING, INC. Columbia, No C. 27925 Phone 796-5881 JOHN F. WHITE CANDIDATE FOR JUDGE First District Democratic Primary, May 2nd 44 YEARS AS A PRACTICING ATTORNEY Former Prosecutor, Recorder Judge, Legislator Your Support and Vote Will Be Appreciated! keep your handicap up is so that when you go play in other tournaments you must have a handicap or you can't play in them. Following is the Roanoke Golf Association 1970 sched ule: April 5 Tarboro at Williamstou. Edenton at Plymouth. Robersonville at Windsor. April 12 Williamston at Robersonville. Plymouth at Tarboro. Windsor at Edenton. April 19 Williamston at Plymouth. Windsor at Tarboro. Edenton at Robersonville. April 26 Windsor at Williamston. Robersonville at Plymouth. Tarboro at Edenton. May 3 Williamston at Edenton. Plymouth at Windsor. Tarboro at Robersonville. May 24 Tournament at Williams ton/Plymouth 18 Hole Medal Play in flights. Banquet at Williamston 7:00 P. M. I’d like to request that all players please rake the traps upon leaving them. There are rakes provided for this. r \ (fir■ M I l\ J| GET THE 1 \\M Simple It Is To Tract Your Home Your- V\\\ n With Arab U-Do-lt. Do It Now And Prevent Thousands Os Dollars In Dam age By Termites. M. 6. BROWN CO. Inc. Phone 482-2135 Edenton. N. C. i tummt PLANTING TIME IS HERE... Cabbage Plants Fruit Trees Round Dutch Peach Trees Early Jersey Apple Trees 0 , , Grape Vines bhrUDS Pecan Trees Hollies Sasanqua Shade Trees Junipers T*in Oaks Boxwood Sugar Maple Azaleas R e d Maple Camellias Norway Maple Rhododendrons Annuals- Flowering Perennials Trees Pansies Magnolias Sweet William Dogwood Foxglove Kwansen Cherry Basket of Gold Flowering Peach Candytuft Flowering Plum ALSO 15 VARIETIES OF HYBRIDIZED ROSES CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE ON LANDSCAPING Leary Plant Farm Phone 221-4671 - Edenton, N. C. PAGE SEVEN-A If you have ever landed in a foot print in a trap you know the reason they must be kept smooth. Pro Tip of the Week: On any golf shot, including the putt, you must follow through. How many times have you had a short shot around the green, or maybe had a trap to go over in order to get on the green and had your ball fall way short of the green or go into the trap? Most Continued on Page 8

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