Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Dec. 2, 1982, edition 1 / Page 15
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Thursday, December 2,1962 E- wn /HE p. ft ft ft* I m 4 SmT' I ■ jme REFLECTIONS—Members of the Albemarle Community Chorus and the COA Chorale are reflected in a mirror in the music room at College of The Albemarle during a rehearsal for a holiday performance of the “Messiah” at the First Baptist Church in Elizabeth City. The time and date of the annual concert are shown on the poster in the foreground. (COA Photo) Musical Group To Benefit The Blind Popular musical groups and individuals will assemble for the first time so benefit the MINI STORAGE YOU Lock It Up & Keep The Key Store Anything, Any Size, Anytime, As Long As You Need Open 24 hr*, a day • 365 days per year <4*> («uo (feta) m (taut) T. chooM Ssj^^ mU ANYTHING MINI ■m. (»•» <feK to fen Mk a to a IT 111 II MMh ttaa M • awriag track ranfel) gss-sErr:: STORAGE Etatry elorate place tor extra fcnttoreor the■ Mgr iEpyee cast buteptrMef . JJ IY • groat plMe hr Imp. rgwdvi tools. Im mtmmt, prPo tractors. etc., eta* yea 1 u 4totf| aeed Emm ot hMM..... I •** a place lor easees lav artery fresn year I I haejeaeL aad e keep eeeeeaei awr ■TWU AMY MSE iE H At Wal ttoreji, yea caa not eo modi or ee jy H llll|Upaiaoyaaeeed Wtkevertarsf eperee // H Aad yeaooverhoveto pay ter aero poet then C | yea reoly aead. 1 80000 A fieeeee CwfMiM. .flue s the Answer' Hole: See or fitmmrtlt ■eterials ticludad M /Bee A nedsils Veae. ftUuoe. • Mevw* Trucks ee Advance NeOce! I ta N. Broad Street Eitd. Edanton, NC 50 || 482-8421 M FOR SALE FOR SALE-1979 Conner Mobile Home. 2 BR. Total electric, partially furnished. Small downpayment and assume loan. 1978 DOUBLEWIDE On large corner lot with 3 bedrooms, living room, family room, kit., 2 full baths. Dining room. Underpinned washer, dryer, living room furniture, furnished. Financing available at 14 percent. LOT ON WEST GALE STREET Close to downtown, churches, hospital, and school. Perfect for building. LOT CORNER OF PARK AVE. AND JOHNSON ST. Priced for quick sale. LOT ON MONTPELIER DRIVE Reduced for quick sale - 100 x 200 $3,900 COMMERCIAL BUILDING lncome producing downtown Edenton. Good long-term investment, tax shelter. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ACROSS FROM SHOPPING CENTER Excellent investment, income producing. HOME SITES NEAR COUNTRY CLUB Wooded and dear. Low downpayment - 5 yrs. to pay. TRAILER LOTS 5O x 150. FOR SALE 23.22 acres, 5 miles north of Edenton, in tersection of U.S. 17 and N.C. 37. Ideal for commercial or in dustrial use. WATERFRONT LOT - On Chowan Golf and Country Club. Breathtaking view of Albemarle Sound. OVER 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN *LL KINDS OF IN VESTMENTS. CALL US BEFORE YOU BUY. CONSULT WITH US BEFORE YOU LIST FOR SALE. Home Realty 482-2153 Dtiys 482-2375 Nights blind and visually impaired of Hertford, Gates and Chowan counties. f The special program, in i eluding gospel and contem porary music, will be held tonight at 7:30 P.M. at the Roanoke-Chowan Technical College. Free Will donations will be made at the door. Participants include the Ahoskie Men’s Chorus directed by Eliza Jenkins, the Gospelets and the Golden Harmonarics, both of Mapleton, Larry Vaughan and the Disciples of Christ gospel singers of Ahoskie; Mary Harrell Delane, soloist, of Winton; Daryl Morris, pianist, of Ahoskie; Norvella’s Group of Mur freesboro; Michelle Britton, soloist, of Ahoskie; Larry Debruhl, blind guitarist, of Roanoke Rapids; Emma Joyner, Conway’s Baptist Choir. Also appearing will be Elliott Frank, guitarist, who is the performing artist in residence at Roanoke- Chowan Technical College. There will be other groups appearing. The names will be announced at a later date. The public is urged to sup port. these performers, who. are so generously donating blind and visually impaired. Hamburger was originally Hamburg steak" and took its name from the city of Hamburg, Germany. THE CHOWAN HERALD Christmas Festivities Across The Tar Heel State By Glenn Mays , Travel Editor People in cities and towns across North Carolina will be saying “Mary Christmas” in a variety of ways during this Christmas season. From McAdenville’s nearly a half million lights as Christmastown U.S.A. to the candlelight tours of Try on Palace and the festivities of Asheville's BUtmore House and Old Salem, it will be a special time of celebration in the Tar Heel State. The activities encompass a myriad of traditions both old and new and a spirit of warmth, hospitality and charm which everyone can enjoy during this special time of year. In Asheville, Biltmore House and Gardens will celebrate the season with more than 20 Christinas trees throughout the house decorated with thousands of Victorian ornaments. The an nual celebration there is much like that of the Christmas Eve when George W. Vanderbilt opened the house in 1895. A series of Christmas con certs will be presented on weekends during the December 4-31 celebration. North Carolina’s Folk Art Center near Asheville will celebrate November 23-December 31 with holiday music, storytelling, slide pro grams and crafts befitting the season. At the Thomas Wolfe Memorial garland greenery, candles and other traditional Christmas decorations will provide a special touch to the holiday season December 21-31. In North Carolina’s oldest town, Bath, handmade or naments will adorn Christmas trees in the Palmer-Marsh and Bonner houses during festivities there December 12-22. Open house will be observed December 12. Several madrigal celebra tions will be staged during the season. At Boone, Appalachian state Uswreratojrill conduct "Ye Olde Madrigal Christmas Feaste, a celebration of the 16th century with music taken from the period of Henry VIII. It will be offered December 2-7. N. C. State University in Raleigh presents its third an nual madrigal dinner December 3-8 featuring Elizabethan dishes, magi cians, jugglers and musicians. Wake Forest University also will present a madrigal event December 3-4 and 10-11 featuring music by the Pied mont Chamber Singers. Chapel Hill’s Preservation Society conducts its annual candlelight tour of homes December 11-12. The Horace Williams House there will be decorated for the season December 13-January 9. Morehead Planetarium on the University of North Carolina campus, presents its annual Christmas program “Star of Bethlehem” November 16-January 10. Charlotte celebrates the season with a holiday tour of Fourth Ward Homes December 3. A series of Christmas concerts and strolling carders will add to the holiday spirit December 6-23. In the Gaston County town of Dallas children 12 and under will luring their hand made ornaments to place on the town Christmas tree December 4 in this traditional annual celebration. In Historic Edenton a wassail bowl celebration and Christmas in the James Iredell House will be observ ed December 5. Historic bouses there will be adorned in 18th century decorations. A Christmas candlelight tour of private homes in Edenton will be December 18. . FayetteviD too will be bath ed in candlelight December* 5-6 In the fifth annual tour of old Fayetteville. Homes and churches dating to the early 1800’s are part of the tour. “Connemara,” home of famed poet Carl Sandburg, will be dacora ted in the Sand burg holiday tradition December lfrJanuary 8 in Flat Hock. The Mustnim of Natural History oatofaratoa December 19 with its annual frontier settlement hearthside yule and colonial candlelight service at its pioneer site. The reenactment includes preparation for Christmas and a traditional candlelight procession through the forest led by a town crier and pioneer families. The museum’s “Star of Bethlehem” planetarium presentation will be featured December 4-5,11-12 and 16-19. In Greensboro the Civic Ballet Theatre performs the “Nutcracker Ballet” December 17-18 at Carolina Theater. Greensboro’s Green Hill Art Gallery will feature works for the season by 90 ar tists and craftsmen. “Fools”, a light-hearted play by Neil Simon, will be presented December 9-12 and 16-18 by Hickory Community SOUTHEASTERN PROFESSIONAL COATINGS, INC. In House Financing For First Five Customers Will Be Given 14” Color T.Y. Sets. Albemarle's Largest Home Improvement Co. Specializing In Room Additions, Sidings Os All Types (Stucco, Vinyl, Shingle Shape, Brick). Edenton Office At Night: 482-7147 Elizabeth City Office: 338-1217 • Free Estimates • For All Your Home Improvement Needs ‘Now there’s a brand-new reason tobuyanew’B2Uuick. ‘Low finance rates. Because right now, your selection—Skyhawks, financing. Buick dealer can offer Skylarks, and Centurys, as Now at your 10.9% annual percentage well as Regals, LeSabres, participating Buick dealer, rate financing to qualified Rivieras and Electras. Get Dealer contribution may retail buyers of new'B2 one while they jj affect consumer Buicks, if delivered by last, and get aer cost. Not December thirty-first. 10.9% annual available in Pick from a fine percentage rate Arkansas. WnikMt you really nUtcr hmt a'Buidi? MM annual percentage rate financing. XtBKjWIT THIHOMI OF THI *OM* WANT MOTOR CORP. Ml Hill r EDENTON4B2-8421 a q|IUIIL n - Broad St Ext Theater as part of the holiday season festivities. Also in Hickory the Holiday House celebrates Christmas around the world November 19-20 with special decorations, crafts and food. The Western Piedmont Symphony presents a holiday concert in Hickory December 12 featuring the Catawba County Children’s Chorus. The N.C. Shakespeare Festival in High Point will again offer Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” during the Christmas season. It will run December 15-22 and will include some matinees along with performances each evening. High Point Museum will feature a Christmas exhibit and a tree adorned with hand made ornaments during open house December 2. The “Twelve Days of Christmas” are celebrated December 14-25 in Historic Kenansville with a communi ty Christmas tree lighting, caroling, holiday readings, concerts, historic home tours, community supper, a nativi ty pageant and other activities. This year December 3-26 the Gaston County town of McAdenville (population 947) again becomes “Christmastown, U.S.A.” with nearly a half million lights and 275 decorated trees brightening the holiday season for more than a million people who visit the little town during Christmas Mother and Daughter Lose 150 Pounds Thanks Slim & Trim Patricia Johnson and her Mother, Jo |n Scott, have lost 150 jlft pounds on the Slim & ftL ~ft £ vftl Trim Diet in less than a year. Patricia, em Jti v ployed by Fidelity, and a mother, says the pro 1 gram has been great J for her and she highly J recommends Jo J says she believe ■ how better she ft feels and looks. Tne ftT^^^ftH diet gave her the incen f support and guid- i ance she needed. Edenton Monday, December 6 at 7:30 P.M. Shepard Pruden Memorial Library Call 482-3526 —l~ nnnenri n~r- * rgf r r Registration $6.00 (. Weekly Dues $3.50 y This Coupon and Save $5.00/^ Offer Ends Dec. 13 Page 5-B season. New Bern’s Tryon Palace observes its candlelight Christmas tour December 11-12,14 and 16. More than 700 candles Illuminate the decorated rooms of the Palace and five other historic houses in the complex which was North Carolina’s first capitol. The aroma of Christmas cooking, fruits, nuts and greenery also permeate the surroundings during the season. Christmas attire will bedeck the complex December 11-23. In the present capital of Raleigh a candlelight tour of Historic Oakwood is schedul- Continued On Page 7-B
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Dec. 2, 1982, edition 1
15
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