Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Nov. 1, 1973, edition 1 / Page 5
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I Tfun-Mji, M , ' ■ff jvd P'* J -tjt '£.>“* t y *V- £ " , '’ v ' , / I f i V‘ ißjjf* PPjJ •"jfSp't'„.?' -*%■ ■ - '■*>■•«:* wnillßr^ i flßfTtitfi , t I, : A* yp|' -£*• . •• • AWAITING THE SAW— Huge logs are pictured here as they await the saw at a mill located on U. S. 17 torth of Edenton. Patrick Flynn of Paradise was the photographer. ‘Exum Announces Candidacy For N.C. Supreme Court James G. Exum, Jr., of Greensboro resident Superior Court Judge for the 18th Judicial District (Guilford County) has announced that he will be a candidate in 1974 for one of the vacancies which will be created on the Supreme Court of North Carolina. Judge Exum said, “If elected, I would consider it the highest privilege the people of this State could bestow. As a Supreme Court Justice, it would be my goal to make decisions according to an often delicate accommodation between the law as it is and as it ought to be; second, to express these decisions clearly and succinctly; and third, to be alert to the problems and needs of the administration of our State court system and to work to see that the problems are solved ELECT ERROL FLYNN COUNCILMAN ypj THIRD WARD November 6,1973 m “The Man With TvmeJ<h Do A Good FALL FABRIC SALE THURSDAY, NOV. 1 THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV. 10 LARGE NEW SHIPMENT 100% Polyester Double Knit Full Bolts Fall Colon Fint Quality VALUES JO $5.98 VVEB| Now $L2f yard OPTIOO% POLYESTER INNERfacing . 4 yards 99c |JB| %” Non-Roll Elastic sgSfcK 4 yards 89c SSSKgjS new shipment of CO-ORDINATING PRINTS MnZl AND SOLIDS AT Pr/ffigCT LOW DISCOUNT pmces FABRIC BARN 315 North Granville Street EDENTON, N. C. 27932 SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TQ CHURCH, SOCIAL, BUSINESS AND CIVIC GROUPS HffINMK HEATER . - (M«4ei 2119-GB) * * GYRO JET CONSOLE BURNER STYUNG FLOOR LEVEL j* j ENAMEL l HN,SH 40,000 ITU J? He tine it or \ns Thin Deluxe Heater it priced ■ wii iin compmrmote nttpttp * k *a Rwi*V *4 e»er level Meee Gaoler • Wt Do OwrOwAFiMmcbM 4$ v . " www-i L ■.■ T '• *' &Aw" :• » ' - '< . . & AnnlbafA Dlbva In# and the needs met. “I would cite my academic background and my experience as a former membra of the N. C. General Assembly, a practicing attorney and a trial court judge as helping to qualify me for this office. Also I have a keen and genuine interest in working to improve the efficiency with which our state court system operates.” Judge Exum was a Morehead Scholar at the University of North Carolina where, before he graduated in 1957, he was named President of Phi Beta Kappa. He attended New York University Law School on a Root-Tilden Scholarship and upon graduation there was awarded thq Benjamin F. Butler Memorial Prize for his (scholarship and other contributions to student life. While he was chairman of the Continuing Education Committee of the North Carolina Conference of Superior Court Judges from 1969 to 1972, he helped secure a $25,000 grant from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration for the work of his committee. After serving in the North Carolina House of Representatives from Guilford County in 1967, Judge Exum was appointed Resident Superior Court Judge for Guilford County by Gov. Dan Moore in July, 1967. Before that, after he had served as research assistant to Emery P. Denny, Justice, later Chief Justice, of the North Carolina Supreme Court in 1960-61, he was engaged in the practice of law in Greensboro for six years. Artificial Controls Distort Economy Says Tire Executive Government price controls turn the public’s eye from the real causes of inflation—huge government spending, over issue of currency and eco- ' nomically unjustified wage practices, according to Rich ard A. Riley, president of The Firestone Tire & Rubber A supporter of free market controls, Riley labeled gov ernment controls as “artifi cial,” and questioned their distorting effects on Ameri can industry’s production and distribution. "Beyond the lack of under standing,” Riley said, “busi ness is being blamed for in flation and our government has tried various forms of price control as a remedy.” Riley pointed out his con cern for the lack of belief in America’s economic system and in business and industry in general. “The free enterprise sys tem is the most efficient pro duction system ever devised,” and is needed more than ever “in a world where poverty and food shortages abound,” he emphasized. TAYLOR Theater EDENTON, N. C. Special Late Shews "• 11:15 P. M. FRI.. SAT. • SUN. Cm> at ** to fieeß tat WoMf meee KL ■ jmawtuMm# Postmaster Training Is Course Topic SHELBY - Seventy postmasters from throughout the Charlotte District of the United States Postal Service convened here for an intensive three-day training school October 29-31. Postmaster Janice B. Hobbs of Tyner is one of the designated postmasters enrolled in the training school which is designed, according to the Postmaster William A. Lattimore, District Postmaster Training Officer, “to teach an experienced and qualified postmaster to train new postmasters coming into the postal service.” John J. Wise, Charlotte district manager, told the postmasters at the beginning of the session that their mission was to “go into the field and use this learning experience here in the school plus your own experience in your respective post offices to train new postmasters coming into the service as well as continue to keep your assigned associate office up-dated on the new postal procedures that are constantly being ifrfjMeti«nM;” Wise noted that qualified postmasters were being given more responsibility in the management of their respective post offices by bringing the postal service to the people involved on the local level. Wise stated that “during the 27 months the postal service has been operating under the new Postal Reform Act, we have made rapid strides in improving the mail service despite the huge increase in the volume of mail now being handled.” “We welcome Postmaster Hobbs into the ranks of those dedicated career postal management personnel who are striving to bring about a more efficient operation of the postal service,” Wise said. Postmaster Hobbs has been in the postal service for 28 years and was commissioned Postmaster of Tyner on May 20, 1968, and is one of the 809 postmasters in the Charlotte District which comprises all of North Carolina and part of South Carolina employing nearly 12,000 postal career employees. More than 20 instructors and postal officials from the Charlotte District’s six Sectional Centers and from the Southern Regional Headquarters, Memphis, TN, were on hand to conduct the school according to Oscar Sloan, Charlotte Officer-in- Charge and Acting Sectional Center Manager, who is the official host postmaster. New Postaostors Are Amomcm! MEMPHIS, Tun. - Regional Postmaster General Carl C. Ulsaker has announced the appointment of 51 new postmasters in the 11-state Southern Region, effective October M. Florida had the largaat number, with 13; North each; Georgia, t; and §£5E: »J3““* “ d ■ j n# Ky fkg Regional Mr Tr " h ~ V * G.W. Ob, 69, Takes la Deotk A funeral service was held October 38 for George Warner Ellis, 69, 55 Woodfin Road, Newport News, Va. The service was held’ in the Chapel of the Peninsula Funeral Home with Dr. Loyal Prior officiating. Mr. Ellis was a native of Tyner and the husband of Gladys Smith Ellis. He was a retired machinist with Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock and a member of Hilton Baptist Church. Survivors, besides his widow, are two daughters: Mrs Margaret Will of Carvallis, Ore.; and Lt. Ida R. Ellis of Honolulu, Hawaii; two sons: Rev. Edmund Ellis of Courtland, Va.; ah,d Jerry Ellis of Richmond, Va.; and four grandchildren. His sisters are Mrs. Minnie Chappell and Mrs. Nora Jordan, both of Tyner; Mrs. Lydia Baker of Norfolk, Va.; Mrs. Thelma Weeks of Ft. Worth, Tex.; and Mrs. Lillian Mackey of Idabel, Okla.; and brothers: Herbert and Clifton Ellis of Norfolk, Va.; and Otis Ellis of Lorain, Ohio. Appeal Made For Auxiliary Volunteers New officers for the Chowan Hospital Auxiliary were elected at the recut October meeting of the organization. The slate includes: Mrs. Charles A. Creighton,president; Mrs. Jack Harris, vice presidut; Mrs. J. P. Timberlake, 111, secretary; and Mrs. W. Landis Voigt, reasurer. A shortage of volunteers was reported by Mrs. E. L. Hollowell, volunteer chairman. She enlists the aid of anyone in the area who can take two or three hours per week for this necessary and vital work. There are volunteers needed for the morning, afternoon, and evening shifts. Those interested in this worthwhile project are urged to call Mrs. Hollowell at 482-3537 or Mrs. Marjorie Timberlake at 482-2270. The next meeting of the auxiliary is scheduled for November 5 at 10 A.M. in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Parrish, House. WL Come Check Our Volume Buying Power Prices . . . If You'll Realize We Buy for Less and Sell for Less tj 1:1 iu» 1 /|fTTTT\ OVER 1600 EMPLOYEES SERVING YOU FROM 76 NORTH CAROLINA CITIES QUALITY + SAVINGS + SERVICE Whan Yav Ivy Ovality Pradvcts in Quantity far 242 Starts, Yau Naturally Buy far Lass And Our Indapandant Pharmacia* Pass ttsa Savinys On ta Yav. K .. ?>» >«■ W.nt.i Sllwwlllartti. 11, HT> ■ - j i & dSf7 s ii ij h m. sr n i a 7 for zz m ‘ un > V J *1 CHRISTMAS SST *2” T fl jSZ ~ Ml rT^^ll* /t WMILI rrr 1 ' CIkIADCCT O Si I fV THisiMONir- pj . SINAREST tn £ I f ) BAYER i! ■ IT I I flAl A saving gifts } N I |J y J jjjp M jF aminstock TABLETS ISi \ VOLUME $197 hMdache and conges- j g* r :Scec:aHv minor lywl Syriy VFRICE I A / toirU " m M 's cowui 1 JbJ WU...W artMticatin I a Jj / Mnn... “ c»u<.n >. "» k—J ,__ it,, nmm at i.w IV,Unse y jk ™ *l l4 _ _ :?,«■ «.93‘ sr *]» 5a*.... > 1 11 packer aa* 1 84‘ r ‘ i 98 c mioumjk / XjfiPeSITIN’ 1 If SHESE TEGRIN -Dabawdsff. m ■» A „„„ <.,p> •® *. " nr _ ■__■ IP '' ' hky Fki I V 7{r?s ' »t tjt Bttawiy* sk B /?. ft vamqubh tablets CanM 4 ku * T >•'’ I _ cmrm „, Jl B ■’»<—*'« Sali. TaM*m 3>' VMIAM Mr HIM f/» __ B nn , p»mA«lliyli.»Hll Itti COWTATt AT I.W sr 99 s sr 56 e sr Aftcl 1 98 lSnsl si it jst I ma...W B »%#■ ■ ' e.—.v GILLETTE TECHMATIC TAKE I *«C« ■ - ■ ■■ ■ —————l Sa » Y aojustaale aanos M«=— Coughing All Night? JIT"*"" t Fast relief for I~T7 n »I-Cf V N *1” “nqesied colds ■Sjl Komilar CoriCidin O m \ steam a payjaow __ JV | m a-Stru. AS J m-w CLEAR STRIPS m _ gw T^u£ s ~"^"~ ~Sr*tw>Yr«f Hrriiwg WTliliVfiw^t rzvzsw&zrz \ JUEMwn / 1 T \ o. .Tl Elactrk Blanket I M f*l ET«r'~n« I i .»“•* I 1 I I _ mV A* l».aa ■ •. .. J»- •eonn« lOO’o n f to« Completely Bf*w» 12 »0 25 CUP* ft If wtnnobN NV7*NpMot CvnnVt c— .«(« ® Zeiffia?! ■mi. <«—...» *”■" Pal H “*“"'■"•■■• 1 *■ *2’' r 77* •£ ?73* B|al =-7j«9W sF *l w Family's Good Haafth Is Our Busmass mq Mitchener's Pharmacy E] 1 v * Phana 4MHI lit -■: sshL- : . y » *: Going To Florida-Navy Seaman Recruit David L. Spruill, son of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Spruill, Route 1, Edenton, graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Cuter at Great Lakes, 111. A 1973 graduate of Chowan High School at Tyner, he is scheduled to report to Personnelman School, Orlando, Fla. Baptist Church Plans Services The Church School of Providence Baptist Church will begin at 9:30 A.M. Sunday with Charlie L. Downing, Sr., director. The sermon will be preached by the pastor, Dr. William C. Butts; Sermon-Subject: “An attitude of Christian Gratitude” the fourth in five sermons. The Senior Choir will serve. A church meeting will be held on Friday at 8 P.M. The meeting will be held in the W. E. Charlton Building. On Saturday at 7 P.M., The Young Adult Choir will meet at the church. All former members and persons that wish to join are welcome to attend. “W ho-Done-Its ?” Back on Radio As Nightly Fare Mystery dramas had their heyday on network radio of the ’4o’s and one of the most prolific producers at the time was Hi Brown whose squeak ing door signature of “Inner Sanctum Mysteries” led a pa rade of half-hour thrillers. Now he returns as execu tive producer for hour-long nighttime mystery dramas on CBS radio, seven nights a Week, starting in January entitled, “The CBS Radio Mystery Theatre.” Advertisement For Oidi The Economic Improvement Council, Inc., it soliciting forbids for furnishing raw food for too meals per day, five days per week for 52 weeks. Bids will be received until 5 P.M., November 1, 1973, by Mrs. Maggie Griffin, P. O. Box 1263, Elizabeth City, N. C. 27909. The Economic Improvement Council, Inc., reserves the right to reiect any or all bids. November 1c ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK Having qputified as Ad ministratrix of the estate of James E. Ward, Sr., late of Chowan County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before the 19 day of April, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of any recovery thereon. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 10 day of October, 1973. NOVELLA C. WARD Administratrix of the Estate of James E. Ward, Sr., Deceased. Oct. 18, 25, Nov. I, Bc NORTH CAROLINA CHOWAN COUNTY File No.: 73-CVD-251 Film No.: IN THE GENERAL COURTOF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NOTICE OF SERVING OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION RUTH E. SLADE SPENCER, Plaintiff —VS— SHERLEY SPENCER, Defendant TO: SHERLEY SPENCER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: an action for absolute divorce on the ground of one year separation next preceding commencement of this action. You are required to make defense to such pleading within forty (40) days of October 11, 1973 or not later than the 21st day of November, 1973, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought. This 9th day of October, 1973. IENAM. LEARY Bertie Oyster Bar IN WINDSOR WELCOMES YOU! We have a variety of delicious sea food. We are open six days a week— -5:00 P. M. to 10:00 P. M. Closed on Sunday. YOUR PATRONAGE APPRECIATED! Page 5-A Clerk of Superior Court for Chowan County Max Busby W. J. P. Earnhardt, Jr. Attorney at Law Edenton, N. C. Oct. 11, It, 25, Nov. 1C LEGAL Sealed Bids Sought Sealed bids will be received by Bertha B. Bunch, Clerk to the Board of Chowan County Commissioners in the Register of Deeds office Edenton, N C.. until November 26, 1973. Bids will be publicly opened and read on November 27th 1973 at 10 o'clock A.M. for complete installation of a self service elevator In the Chowan County Oftice Building, including all labor and materials. All contractors are hereby notified that they must have proper license under the State Law governing their respective trades at time of submitting bid. The Commissioners reserve the right to reject any or all bids. Dated: October 25th 1973. Signed: Dallas Jethro, Jr., Chowan County Co-Ordinator. Oct. 25, Nov. lc EXECUTOR'S NOTICE IN THE GENERAL COURTOF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISIdN BEFORE THE CLERK Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Henrietta L. Parks, late of Chowan County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before the 19 day of April, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of any recovery thereon. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 12 day of October, 1973. L. T. CHAPPELL Executor of the Estate of Henrietta l. Parks, Deceased. Oct. 18,25 Nov I,Bc EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of John Parrish, late of Chowan County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned on or before the 12th day of April, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of any recovery thereon. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 11th day of October, 1973. JOHN L. PARRISH Executor of the Estate of John Parrish, Deceased. Oct. 11,18, 25, Nov. lc
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1973, edition 1
5
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