Thursday, May 9, 1974 - I % * r I M ifc ,: ' - ti v - fe , :‘: 1 i fc®*r f; V ■ -lit f ILJbfl SiJBPv - «■■■■■■ I fMi SPECIAL TRAINING AWARDS—Above, nurses who planned and coordinated •training experiences in the Alcoholism Detoxification Program were given special awards at completion of the six week course. These awards were also presented to those with a perfect attendance record. The detoxification program, now open at Chowan Hospital, is coordinated by AHRDS. Mrs. Barbara Cale, director of nurs ipg, standing center, and Jerry Lotterhos, director of the Alcoholism Training Pro gram at East Carolina Univefsity, present the special awards. Alcohol Detoxification Center Open At Hospital Through the cooperation and approval of the Chowan Hospital, Inc., administration and l board of directors, and hospital medical staff; Albemarle Mental Health Center’s area board, and the Albemarle Human Resources Development System an Alcohol Detoxification Program has been opened at the Edenton hospital. The program is being coordinated by the AHRDS under the supervision of Donald L. Young, alcoholism program Coordinator. In addition to the central office at 100 East Queen Street, Edenton, two satellite offices have been established to proovide information, feferral, pre- and post-hOspital consultation and therapy. One such alcohol information and treatment center is located at 203 Budieigh, Manteo, and the second center at 304 East Colqnial, Elizabeth City. Dr. Robert E. Lane has been designated the medical director of tpe detoxification treatment program. Prior to the opening of the hospital detoxification unit in Edenton and the alcohol k information and treatment an intensive six weeks program was instigated by die IAHSDS for the medical staff the hospital and the alcoholism program staff qf the system. This program was conducted by the Alcoholism Training Program for North Carolina. Seventy-eight individuals were enrolled in the in-service training program and 55 were awarded “Certificates of Attendance" from the Alcoholism Training Program Tor, jNprth Carolina and the 'feast Carolina University. A fording to Jerry F. Lotterhos, director of the START LOOKING FOR DETAILS OF GOODYEAR'S UPCOMING WAREHOUSE SALE SOMETHING DIFFERENT FOR THE ALBEMARLE AREA [ Get this new 1974 1 II soHd-state I CHROMACOIORn SSwfe I ; ' J » -n, ■■ The MANDALAY 1 I I ' *i ,r | h I I Grained Kashmir I I ■MI Walnut color ■ ‘jjjjp'F. Wf& J H RegulatorChromatta I One-button Tuning. ' XV *rnrmM 'Bi ■ II CTIOMIV r- .-■ --■[ 111 I ■-. 9 - t ;i.4G£j£3L>t*. mj-M- m Hariri r t 1 alcoholism training program located at ECU, TP “provides training experiences to a variety of health and human resources personnel in the eastern region of North Carolina. The training program is available to serve interested health or service agencies that desire training or consultation in coping with alcohol related problems”. Special recognition was given to those who planned and coordinated the training experience and to those who had a perfect attendance record for the 12-hour course. The special certificates were presented to Barbara Cale, director of professional services; Judy Peele, supervisor of nurses; Debbie Bunch, nursing supervisor of the alcholism unit; William Goodman, alcoholism counselor; Rosemary Dunford, alcohol education specialist; John London, alcoholism counselor; Debbie Smith wick, Lillian Parrish, Jo Ann Roulac, Mollie Hawkins, Hilda Boyce, and Josephine Hollowell, and Young. “Certificates of Attendance” were awarded to 42 other members gs tte hospital staff. Certificates were presented to - Brenda'Bunehi Bsgiwe Bub ah; Jane Bunch, Lorean Flynn, Carol Ober, Josephine Nixon, Hattie Downing, Betty Forehand, Bernice Langley, Madge Fleetwood, Margaret Badham, Helen Parks, Norma Simpson, Mildred Layton, Joan Bailey, Bernadette Johnson, Pat Holcomb, Thelma Hughes, Millicent Jordan, Shirley Rauson, Doris Hurdle, Ida Long, Nell Moore, Elffise Rhodes, Bonnie Overton, Daisey Bembry, William Roberts, Mirian Byrum, Linda Babeaux, Joyce Felton, Ida Fayton, Cathay Hall, Janie Evans, Mary Ashley, Linda Hudgins, Rose Marie Byrum, Catherine Slade, Alberta Wills, Syble Jons, Daisey Jordan, Barbara Harrell, and Mildred Roulac. Young stated the proper procedure for being voluntarily admitted to the alcoholism detoxification program is through the counselors located in any one of the three alcohol information and Treatment Centers!. The purpose of the program is to provide short term hospitalization on a local basis to the citizens of Chowan, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Currituck and Dare counties and to provide for after-care services for continuing therapy in the local community following hospitalization. \ A Mother’s Day Message f By GENEVA GADOW As I sit alone tonight, my mind goes back to a time when I was a little girl. I can see a very special person rushing off to our little church, trying desperately to make it on time but never seeming to do so. As she enters the church and.takes her seat, she arranges her skirt to make tienreff- CbtltfUi Üble "for the reading of God’s Word. And I think what a mystery it is to see her rushing; I watch her sing. There is something very special in her voice. Now I know the mystery of it all. Our Lord was very near to her. So she sang of the wonderful love that God shared with her. You see, as she sang, she was giving to all of us a little of that which God was sharing, and the look on her face was as if to say, "This is what makes my life so wonderful.” Then, one day she slipped away into the arms of Jesus. And I see her again tonight—my grandmama with the One who was so real to her when I was a little girl. Because she was able to share the realness of God with others, she is rejoicing with Him in heaven, just as I am rejoicing here. (Geneva Gadow is the daughter of the Rev. P. E. Cayton who writes for the "Sermon Builder.’’) Crude oil reserves total 700 billion barrels, enough to last into the 1990's without new discoveries, shale oil, or tech nological developments, ac cording to the U.S. Geological Survey. More than half, S 4 per cent, of the supply is in the Middle East. Africa has 15 per cent, the Soviet Bloc 12 per cent, and the U.S. 6 per cent. Armco Corrugated Steel Pipe For IrrigaHon/Dreinage rrs EASY TO IN STALL. STRONG . . . Urns include road cul verts, ditch cross-overs, stock water supply lines and turnouts. Durable iinc-coated Armco Corru gated Steel Pipe is avail able in diameters I to H inches. We maintain stock for your needs. Call us tor prices— Company, Inc. WINDSOR* c. .THE CHOWAN HERALD County ASCS Office In order to be eligible for benefits under the various farm programs for 1974 all producers must file an acreage report at the ASCS office. This acreage report should be filed by the farm operator or by a person designated by the operator who has complete knowledge of crop acreage for the farm. If measurement services are needed, they are available at cost. When you visit the office to make your acreage report you should be prepared to report on the following items: 1. Accurate planted acreages of flue-cured tobacco, peanuts (by type and use), cotton, wheat, barley, corn, grain sorghum, soybeans and other non-conserving crops if needed to protect allotments and vegetative cover on cropland if needed to protect allotments. 2. All producers sharing in the crops and the share they have'in each crop. 3. Intention to participate if you wish to enroll in the 1974 cotton, feed grain or wheat program. 4. Report any disaster or condition that has prevented planting of a crop or that will substantially reduce the yield. (These reports may be made any time during the year but Land Topic Os Heeling Land management in North Carolina’s coastal counties will be the topic of a conference May 16-17 at the Duke University Marine Laboratory in Beaufort. The two-day event will provide a forum for views of the public, planners, developers and representatives of state and local governments and the financial community on the controversial issue of coastal management. The conference, a N. C. State University continuing education program, is sponsored by the University of North Carolina Sea Grant Program, the Center for Marine and Coastal Studies and the Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. N. C. Secretary of Natural and Economic Resources, James E. Harrington, will open 'the conference at 10 A.M. May 16 as representatives of state government outline their interests in coastal land management. “ Dr. Thomas Linton, director of the N. C. Office of Marine Affairs, will address the importance of a coastal management program in achieving the state’s environmental goals. Lynn Muchmore, state planning officer, will discuss the implications of statewide economic and social development policy for coastal management. Local government leaders, led by Graham Pervier, Currituck County manager, will explore the interests of local governments in a coastal management program in the early afternoon session. Later in the day, Delilah Blanks, social work instructor at UNC-Wilmington, will lead a session pn the public’s interests in coastal management. Developers and consultants open the May 17 sessions with a discussion of their interests in the coastal area and a coastal management program. George Stephens of Stephens Associates in Raleigh will act as moderator. Later in the morning a panel of planners, led by Paul Foster, consultant in urban and regional planning, will explore the impact of coastal planning on local areas. In the final session, representatives of the financial community will outline their interests in a management program and discuss how financial interests can influence coastal growth. Robert E. Leak, administrator of the N. C. Office of Industrial, Tourist and Community Resources, will act as session moderator. Advance registration is requested and may be made by writing to Maynard Shields, Division of Continuing Education, Box 5X25, N. C. State University, Raleigh, N. C. 27607. draperies Individually Custom Created For Your Windows * I am Impeccably custom tailored to your taste. From trimly tailored draw - --v draperies to the more elaborate and very important swags, jabots, Aus \ trian and Roman shades. Choose from hundreds of norman’s of Salisbury .. \ fabrics . . . satins, sheers, damasks, linens, cottons . . . from pale-face 111111 colors to bold and beautiful prints and solids! A complete custom service jHH ' * ' nC * UC *' n * ex * )ert installation. 11l Iv For In-Your-Home Consultation PHONE 482-4785 Ru-An Interiors msontiißiw^stKgt before-the land is put to any other use.) This information must be supplied before the applicable crops are harvested, but not later than July 15. The county office is located on King Street and is open from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Monday through Friday. PROPOSED CHANGEB IN TOBACCO PROCEDURE Tobacco producers may be able to designate the warehouse in which to sell their tobacco in 1974. The proposal now being considered provides that producers will be required, as a condition of price support, to designate the warehouse at which they will market their tobacco. You are reminded that these are proposed changes. Some of the important points of the proposed changes are as follows: 1. Farm operator will designate the warehouse or warehouses that he wishes to sell his tobacco. 2. Designation may be at any warehouse or warehouses with a radius of 80 miles of the county seat of the county in which the farm is located. 3. A producer may obtain price support only in a warehouse he has designated. Designation of warehouses will be made at the county ASCS office during a period to be announced later. Designation may be changed at a designated time during the marketing season. More information will be forthcoming if and when these changes are made effective. Many of the ware houseowners and oper ators are sending out letters and cards requesting information concerning the farm’s tobacco quotas. Please keep in mind that if these proposals are put into effect, each producer will have to make a designation at the ASCS office. NONCONSERVING CROPS Nonconserving crops are any annual crop intended for harvest and produced for market or feed except for the following; 1. Annual grasses regardless of use. 2. Legumes. Peas or beans produced for seed, grain, or processing are a nonconserving crop. 3. Feed grains and small grains destroyed by any means or used for other than grain by the date of certification. Corn or grain sorghum is a nonconserving crop when: a. Used for silage. b. Harvested for any purpose after the date of certification. Barley or wheat is a nonconserving crop when harvested for any purpose after the date of certification. When pastured out or harvested for other than grain by the date of certification it is considered to be: a. A nonconserving crop for allotment protection when the operator requests credit. b. A conserving crop and excluded in determining eligibility for an amount of prevented planting payment or low yield payment. 4. Other crops grazed to the extent they cannot be harvested. All annual nonconserving crops (except marketing quota crops) can be substituted as an acreage of feed grains, wheat, or cotton for allotment preservation. COME TO LEARY PLANT FARM FOR YOUR Mother's Day Gift Hanging Baskets, Geraniums and Bedding Plants PHONE 221-4671 ROUTE 1, EDENTON, N. C. I 9 ******" BUDDING ARTIST?— Monica Williams is artistic all right but she is just pre tending to enhance a portrait from the current display of her father, Jack Williams. His works are now on display at the Shepard-Pruden Memorial Library during the month of May. The pictures range from pictorial to human interest studies and many of his works have won awards from Best In the State to Best In Nation. The public is invited to come and sec the pictures of this talented photographer, espe cially the blue ribbon winner of the Barker House. IN MEMORIAM In memory of our daughter, mother, and sister, Esther Tynch Owen who departed May 6, 1972. You went away with out farewell. You said, boodby to none. Your loving hands will toil no more. Your work on earth is done. The weary hours and days of pain And troubled nights are past. And in our aching hearts, We know, you, have found rest at last. Our loved one has fallen to sleep. Never again to sigh or weep Angels in heaven will guide her Jesus, will still bless and keep Not for the world, would eve wake her Our loved one has fallen asleep. Mother, children, Dad.Sisters&Brother SERMON TOPICS Rev. E. L. Earnhardt has chosen sermon topics for two services Sunday at Edenton United Methodist Church. “The Woman’s Touch” is the topic for the 11 A.M. service. It is taken from Proverbs 31: 10-31. At the 7:30 P.M. service his topic will be: “The God We Serve” from Daniel 3: 16-18. 8 I^)] CONTENTS 40 PILLS ] REGULAR PRICE SI.SC OUR PRICE $1.39 Mitchaner’i Pharmacy EDENTON, N. C. Attention! W « During these improved • traveling days, we have j NFKfIN D rHCADC P ros P ects visitin S us or I nCLoUN y. LntAKo telephoning us seven days a week. EDo 2’AU wish to sell or rent your property? A Ve would certain y L enjoy handling your transactions. O Call or Visit town - country Nelson P . Chears WATERFRONT REALTOR * ,ns Street . rKUrxKI lcO.| 4g 2 . 828 4 482-3302 fdafs yj \ Edenton, N. C. f **** \ c °'°* * One Group of DRESSES 10-50% off ❖ SHOPPING HOURS: Monday Saturday 10:00 A. M. - 5:00 P. M. Wednesday: 10:00 A. M. - 1:00 P. M. 320 South Broad Street, Edenton, N. C. Page 7-A