Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / March 13, 1980, edition 1 / Page 18
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Page 6-B Public Meetings Slated RALEIGH North Carolina transportation officials are encouraging ■'on,, to ‘ transportation needs and priorities at public meetings scheduled across the state. Fourteen public meetings, one in each highway division, are scheduled for March and April to update the Transportation Im provement Program (TIP). Hie TIP is the basic planning document for the transportation department that balances anticipated revenues against estimated project expenditures. The first TIP was approved by the North Carolina Board of Transportation in October 1978. Local officials, county leaders and tffe general public are requested to make recommendations on priority projects for high ways, airports, public transportation, bicycles and railroads at the meetings. Secretary of Trans portation Tom Bradshaw said, “We appreciate the interest shown in the past by citizens during public meetings to update the state’s Transportation Improvement Program. This year we are only having one round of TIP meetings to consider statewide transportation needs and priorities for the next five, 10 and 20 years. “Specific aviation, high way, public transportation, bicycle and rail needs should also be addressed during the transportation improvement meetings. Whorever rs fokes to horvesi bigger yields from your row crops see your Produc non Credit Assooohon about rhe finoncd help you B need PC A offers short ond mtermedtote term credit for oB types of operchng expenses equipment home improvements, and family ond other needs Our loons ore mode or reasonable rotes, ond repayment con be scheduled to fit reolisfiCOMy mro your horvesbng plans So no matter whot crops you grow folk to the agricultural financing speoolisrs of your Production Credit Assoootion A lot goes into ogneutfure PCA covers it Albemarle Production Credit Assn. vSP®® yv, 426 McArthur St. _ _ L=J Phone 335-5395 PC A rrMPK ft “““• Elizabeth City, N.C. iW'WTViail. Hwy. 17 North Phone 482-4904 Edenton. N.C. i CLEARANCE SALE r , SSOO OFF I ON ALL r ] 79 & ‘BO L \ CAPRICES, IMPALAS, PICK-UP { ] TRUCKS & BLAZERS IN STOCK [ \ ALL OUR \ ] OK USED PICK-UP [ L TRUCKS ARE ON SALE I 1 IL Isl yj iv 3 mmm igBE3EHH§PH HUO Transportation projects requested by local com munities will be considered by tV c*at«. o.urd of transportation for inclusion in _the TIP,” Bradshaw noted. ’ , Bradshaw pointed out that inflation and dwindling financial resources are limiting the number and scope of new transportation projects which can be added to the TIP, but the board of transportation is committed to protecting the public’s large investment in the existing transportation system. “The Governor’s Blue Ribbon Study Commission on Transportation Needs and Financing is exploring ways to solve our financial dilemma,” he said. “The commission, as it considers what to recom mend to the General Assembly concerning the state’s difficult trans portation financing problems, wants to base its recommendations on realistic estimates of the state’s trasportation needs,” Bradshaw said. “The Blue Ribbon Commission will use the input covering total needs and statewide priorities in its study of transportation needs and financing. “This is one reason that we’re asking for a listing of total state highway, airport, public transportation, bicycle and rail needs for the next five-year, ten-year and twenty-year periods at the TIP meetings. We Cont On Page 7- B ■ Y m ■ I > ■r %: m 1 in|ftß|Bßßftlßßftft ■F n litfHRBiHHHHHHHHHHBBWWi TOP PRODUCING MANAGER Jimmy E. Stallings, left, manager of the Farm Bureau Insurance Agency in Edenton, is shown receiving a trophy as a Top Producing Agency Manager from Clyde 0. Faulk, Jr., Assoc. Director of Sales for the N. C. Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co. Stallings Is Honored Jimmy E. Stallings of Chowan County was an nounced by Paul J. Lan caster, Jr., Sales Manager of Farm Bureau Insurance Companies, as a Top Producing Agency Manager New Books Shepard-Pruden Memo rial Library has received the following new books: Adult Fiction “Hie Road to Corlay”, Richard Cowper; “I Heard The Owl Call My Name”, Margaret Craven; “Holy Disorders”, Edmund Crispen; God On The Rocks”, Jane Gardam; “The White Lady”, Grace L. Hill; “Deathbite”, Michael Maryk; and “The Right- Hand Man”, K. M. Peyton. Adult Non-Fiction “Index To America: Life and Customs”, Norma O. Ireland; “Don’t Ever Retire But Do It Early and Often”, Joseph Schwartz; “J. K. Lasser’s Financial Planning For Your Family”, J. K. Lasser; “If Only They Could Talk”, James Herriot; “Sunset Cooking For Tw0...0r Just For You”, Sunset; “Care and Repair of Antiques”, Thomas H. Ormsbee; “The House By The Sea”, May Sarton; “The Sword of the Prophet”, Robert Goldston; ‘“North Carolina Superlatives”, Faris J. Corey; and “Mao”, Peter Carter. THE CHOWAN HERALD (Category H) in 1979. Stallings was selected as one of five Top Producing Agency Managers in North Carolina because of his Agency’s outstanding sales and service record during 1979 for multi-lines of in surance. This honor was announced at the Annual Sales Con ference of the Farm Bureau Insurance Companies held in Charlotte at the Radisson Plaza on February 26,27,28, 1980. Stallings and his wife, Pam, reside in Edenton. Attend The Church Os Your Choice This Sunday fa& AMflfy ■H»l^ THI AMIRICAN INDIAN Ml MLB! QUITE FITTING ENOUGH IS THE FACT THAT THE VERY FIRST BIBLE ACTUALLY PRINTER IN AMERICA WAS WRITT»I IN —NOT ENGLISH —BUTXnATIVE AMERICAN LANGUAGE— ALGONKIAN/ THE TIME’I66S, THE PLACE ; THE COLONY IN MASSACHUSETS, ANP THE MAN RESPONSIBLE : JOHN ELIOT, CALLER ‘THE APOSTLE TO THE NORTH AMERICAN BLIOT CAME TO AMERICA FROM ENGLAND IN 1631,VNAS MARE TEACHER OF THE CHURCH IN ROXBURY MASS, ANP ORGANIZED THE FIRST VILLAGE OF INDIAN CONVERTS AT NATICK, NEAR BOSTON, IN 1631. KIXT WKK*THE W9THRIOUS* SELAH ! ® SAVE THIS FOR >OUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK These Messages Are Published Under The Sponsorship If The Following Business Establishments Byrum Implement 4 Truck Co, Inc Mw wmd IW >mt* Omtm OtykTyfo womgomery wi«q «mw<n«iiii mim B*Mm.N.C Winners ifl^nnounced The ChowjM County Conservation Poster con test, an annual event ■pmunraH fay fitt ChOWSU Board of Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisors, was held February 21 at Swain Elementary School. * The event is tbs climax of a course on conservation conducted in the fourth, fifth, and sixth grades during the months of January and February. The ■hiitfiiti study conswvation and then prepare individual posters on any sound con servation idea at the end of the course. Winners in the contest were: Fourth grade: first place - Wendy Rountree and second place Leanae Perry, botjh students at Chowan Academy; Fifth grade: first place - Liza Vaughan, Swain Elemen tary and twtmd pj**** - Molly Lane, Chowan Academy; Sixth grade: first place • Paul Russell and place * Jamas Earl Darnell, Jr., both from Chowan Academy. The posters were judged on how die conservation idee was presented, SO points; originality, 25 points; ar tistic ability, 15 points; and neatness, 10 points. Cash prizes of $lO were presented to die first place winners and $5 to the second place winners. A $3 prize was also presented to room winners for those rooms not having a county winner. The county first and second place winners went on to compete with winners from Perquimans, 77 -.Vi-« A Friend AJbmnario Motor Co. , AM* KMO OaWar' . W. Hkta •L-trtwHdA, It C ■ I M‘ V - *4* ■ Pasquotank, Camden and Cuatituck Counties in the Albpmarle District Poster Contest held at. the Albemarle Electric Membership Building in Hertford on February 27. Liza Vaughan from Swain Elementary School cap tured first place for the fifth grade in this event. Her poster will be entered in the Area Conservation Poster Contest which covers a seventeen county area. Hie local board of Con servation District Super visors and the Albemarle Conservation District wishes to express their appreciation to the students, teachers, school officials and the Albemarle Electric Membership Corporation for making this event poeWbie. If money will help, we’ll help with money Atlantic Credit has been helping family finances work w better for over fifty years. With special services like our bill consolidation loan. That pays off a pile of bills so voull only have one convenient monthly payment And a lot less to wony about. When we say “If money will help, we’ll help with money,” iJB ■ at we really mean it. flMonbc Credit A Virginia National Banhsharts Company 2075. Broad St. Phone: 482-4461 BridwTum Euon r Ntppy Motohng' \tmv fnmOr BOOH Oaokr' SnoN Praducte-Atlas ■mcnener s rTiarmacy PRESCRIPTION PHARMACISTS Ww—4i2-37n,EdHon , Pariter-Evans Hardware Company : oleem paints '' T J i B m 11 ft * |1 § . V m s'm &&& t / * 1 ~ 1 Earl White, Chowan County Conservation District Super visor, are first and second place winners in the Chowan County Conservation Poster Contest. They are, left to right front row: Leanne Perry, Molly Lane and James Earl Darnell, Jr. Bad: row:' Wendy Rountree, Liza Vaughan and Paul Russell. "Being brilliant i* no gnat feat if you respect nothing." ti Goethe ..y Edenton Tractor & Equipment Co. Tour FOOD Tractor Dealer Agents Far totinrudo QtAboards US 17 South. 6Won. N. C CalamAam Cauinoi toenton savings m Low M*»r» You Save DOCS Mofce A OHhrmcml Edenton, N. C. moods impiemem to. YOUR JOHN DEERE DEALER 1 | Jgil tQu*»ne'»» N.'wH Thu ,day, March 13, 19$$ Leary Bros. Storage Ca ■uyv. « Soybeans And CouXry Fradutx T —J f «1- Anri m 1 ww* o iwiww ™w <eea» Phone 02-2141,482 2142 W.E. Smith GCNiRAL MCKHANUSC eoo«r hock' Phone 221-4031, Edenton a : ; ■ Friend
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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March 13, 1980, edition 1
18
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