is. n Gov. Scott To Present Awards To Governor Robert W. Scott ii ' ' , scheduled to present awards to a group of distinguished North ') Carolinians who have shown V outstanding conservation leadership in 1970, at the tenth annual awards banquet of the North Carolina Wildlife Federation February 12 at the Durham Hotel in Durham. Open to the public, the Con "n servation Achievement Awards ft are the climax of the "' Federation's 26th annual con " ventloa Other highlights of the February 11-13 meeting 'include uie keynote address, "This is Your World", by the National ; Wildlife Federation president, ut. james h. snaeffer, prominent dentist from Parker. South Dakota. Addressing the convention luncheon as 1971 McClamroch Memorial lecturer will be Roland C. Clement, New York : City, vice-president of the National Audubon Society. The Friday afternoon session will hear the future of the con troversial sports fishing program from Dr. Thomas L. Linton, Commissioner of Commercial and Sports Fisheries for Conservation and Development. . Also teacurea wiu oe a presentation of "Environmental Quality -What It Means To Me", 1 , by Miss Sylvia Muldrow, Winston-Salem, winner of the Federation's essay contest; and a slide presentation of North , Carolina's outdoor opportunities by Joe Arrington of C&D's Travel and Promotion Division. Final address on the program, ( announced Lawrence F. Windt, president of the 15,000-member '- conservation group, will be that ' mini-- ii i i mi in i nun 1 1 inn .i m. i In Memoriam In loving memory of our faith " ful member Mrs. Beulah Bunch Morgan who God saw fit to call to her eternal reward on November 24, 1970. God sometimes calls those servants home Whose years are in their prime, For He has better measures than the pendulum of time; Some workers quickly do their tasks of service and of love, So their promotion early comes to higher work above. j Now, therefore, we offer these 5 resolutions of respect: FIRST - We bow in humble submission to the will of our i Heavenly Father acknowledging J- Him to be perfect in all things, ;"and taketh away, We thank Him for her life. SECOND That in her passing we have suffered the loss of a dear friend and a faithful member of Mt. Sinai Baptist Church and the Woman's Missionary Society. While her family and friends cannot fail to miss her, there is joy in realizing , that her influence and the effect of her work will always continue. THIRD That a copy of these Resolutions be sent to the family 'and a copy be recorded in the Church records. FOURTH - That a copy of these Resulutions be sent to the Perquimans Weekly. Effie T.Miller - BettieStallings ImogeneUmphlett RuthH. Burden rlarrttUMflm HERTFORD, N.C. fi. it' fM vrrrrv . x ' Mim-i .ri s i j i in " anii u.'k i i i,mp nix hmmYz;y v 7m. in save i.n Jw ' v I 1 f tapifclfclWIInriS WW UIITTIKG WOOL RED HEART -4-PLY X Rett. Price $1.39 of Col. Paul S. . Denlson, Wilmington District Engineer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, with closing remarks by Col. Cylde P. Patton, Executive Director of the North Carolina Wildlife Resources ommission. The 1970 statewide Governor's award winners in the various categories of conservation achievement are: Con servationist of the Year, D. Statonlnscoe (post-humously) of Raleigh; Club of the Year, Blue Ridge Wildlife Club of Hen dersonville; Protector of the Year, Walter D. Augustine, Pittsboro; Public Information, David Coxe, Raleigh; Meritorious Service to Wildlife, Tom L. Rollins, Raleigh; Con servation Education, E.A. An drews, Jr. of Montreat; Water Conservation, Governor Robert W. Scott; Soil Conservation, George Ernest Beal, Red Oak; Forestry Conservation, Dr. T Ewald Maki of Raleigh; Wildlife Conservation, Orville L, Woodhouse, Grandy; Con servation Communications, Darrell Louder of Cary; En vironmental Quality, R.B. Hamilton of Hickory; 4-H, Roger Hicks of Rutherfordton; FFA, Tommy Culbreth of Stedman Area award winners in the various categories are: Water Conservation: Dr. Wallace W. Harvey, Jr., Manteo; Dr. Ralph E. Fadum, Raleigh; U.S. Plywood-Champion Papers, Inc. of Canton; Soil Conservation: Floyd Mathews, Hertford; R.O. Jones, Jr., Reidsville; G.C. Palmer, Jr. of Clyde; Forestry Conservation: John Wilbert Raines, Kinston; Ernest W. Davis, Rockingham; J. Craig English of Burnsville; Wildlife Conservation: James R. Davis, Elizabethtown; Donald W Baker, Raleigh; Tom D. Mon schein of Elkin; Conservation Communications: Bodie Mc Dowell, Greensboro; Gene Abernethy, Lumberton; Harry Thatcher of Raleigh; En vironmental Quality: General Electric Company, East Flat Rock; Dr. Martin P. Hines of Raleigh; 4-H: Richard Holz mann, Jr., Norlina; Leslie Crouse, Lexington; Shirley Stout of Stony Point; FFA: Neil Williams, Kinston; Foster Vernon, Blanch; Kenneth Reeves of Leicester. Other winners in the Statewide Environmental Quality Essay Contest, in addition to Miss Muldrow, who placed first, are: Second Place: Michael L. Waters of the Pantego High School, Pantego. Third Place: Robert Michael BRASSWARE SILVER GIFTWARE WOOD REDUCED 15 Sale Starts Feb. 4 - Ends Feb. 13th Sorry No Boxing or Gift Wrap on Sale Items. DIVERS & SON JEWELERS 100 POIYESTEI SHAG RUG - - THUS. $.83 IOMVC LADIES' BLOUSES ROLL UP SLEEVE . PERMANENT PRESS REG. PRICE $1.99 Outstanding Conservation Leaders Leonard of the East Mecklenburg High School. T Third Place: Robert Michael Leonard of the East Mecklen burg High School, Charlotte. . Given honorable mention by the Judges were: Lynne E. Baker of the Mar shall High School, Marshall Robert Evans Dozier of the Rocky Mount Senior High School. Rocky Mount. In Memoriam Ruby Adelle Banks White departed this life Oct. 1st, 1970. She was the daughter of Eugene Franklin Banks and Montpelier Hoggard Banks, and was one of ten children. She was born in Winton, N.C. January 22, 1901. On January 25, 1922 she was married to Robert Ralph White, who at that time was living in the Whiteston Community, and was engaged in farming. They were the parents, of two children, Evelyn White Upton of Camden, N.C, with whom she made her home in her last days and a son, Thurman White. She had five grandchildren. She was a graduate of Chowan College in Murfreesboro, N.C. She taught in the public schools of North Carolina and Virginia for a number of years, and taught music for approximately twenty five years; until her health became bad and she retired. She taught piano lessons in Perquimans Central Grammar School in Winfall, N.C, in Hertford Grammar School, in Perquimans County High School, in Chowan High School, and in Sunbury High School. She was a member of Up-River Friends Meeting where she served as organist for twenty five years. She was instrumental in organizing the Mens' Chorus, which consisted of a large group of Up-River men, who not only sang at Up-River Friends Meeting, but at other meetings in the area. She was very faithful in at tending meetings for worship and Sunday School, even after failing in health. She was a member of the Alice Chappell Circle of the United Society of Friends Women of her meeting, and served as Secretary-Treasurer for many years, and in any other capacity where she might be needed. She was a charter member of the William Paul Stallings Post of the American Legion Auxiliary. Here she was an ac you can count on! Company-traintd ippliinct servicemtn Wtjend cylinders tnd tanks Complttt (as service for home, firm and industry , Quillty controlled lor better performance and economy Over 45 years of leadership ... Now serving 2$ states Call us today for details HARRELL'S Inc. Gas And Appliance Hertford, Next to Perq. High School Ph. 426-5556 Edenton - 409 S. Broad St. 482-3310 Elizabeth City 1019 N. Road St. 338-6994 your home for modern gas appliances - cooking - heating water heating 7(Jee&-Sad Sftecicdb BAGGED CHOCOLATE DROPS 2-LBS. TO BAG. MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Long Sleeve Permanent Press. REG. PRICE 49! SPECIAL 77t Reg. Price $2.99 CHOCOLATE COATED PEANUTS SINGLE DIP REG. PRICE 79 SPECIAL . REGULAR SPINDLE CLOTH 50 CotfM, David Hardin of the A.L. Brown High School, Kannapolis. Haynes Lea of the Rocky Mount Academy, Rocky Mount. Bonnie Gale Banks of the Jones Senior High School, Fronton. Vicki Price of the Mount Holly High School, Mount Holly. Jimmy Pierce of Swansboro High School, Swansboro. tive member for twenty-five years, having served in most of the offices. She was an active member of the Perquimans County Home Demonstration Clubs, having served in the Belvidere and Whiteston Clubs for a total of thirty-three years. Here she served as President and in other capacities where needed. She was a member of the Hertford Lions Auxiliary for many years, serving as their President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Director. She was a very active member of the Order of Eastern Star, Number 137, where she served as organist for thirteen years. She received many invitations to serve as installing organist in many other Eastern Star Chapters in the surrounding counties. The many activities in which she was engaged kept her quite busy, however she was a faithful and loyal wife and mother. She seemed to find time for all. She was always cheerful and op timistic and won many friends. In sincere appreciation of her devout Christian faith, and her sincere loyalty, we bow in humble submission to our dear Heavenly Father's will, and extend to the family and loved ones our deep sympathy. May this tribute be recorded in the minutes of the Society of Friends Women of the Up-River Meeting, a copy be sent to the Perquimans Weekly, and one to the family of the deceased. Written in behalf of the United Society of Friends Women of Up- River Friends Meeting. Mary W. Winslow Card of Thanks I wish to express my sincere thanks to each of you that remembered me and my family with your prayers, cards, flowers and food while I was a patient in the hospital and since my return home. I am in deed grateful. Ann M. Berry JL. Cyyndtf Sinrict tha name of the flam pyrofax . . . It ion cut wm hr Kuml 1.38 SAVI 54 mmm saveN s.a ilHSALE 1 86k 41 INCHIS WIOS YARD 50 tortnl. Diet The outlook for 1971 is for a per capita increase in both calories and fats, states Mrs. M. B. Taylor, Home Economics Ex tension Agent. With the decline in the use of fluid whole milk, reduced calcium and phosphorus intakes can be expected. The use of non fat dry milk is not large enough to offset the decline in fresh milk usage. Vitamin A will be affected by the declining use of whole fluid milk and lower usage of sweet potatoes. Looking at trends over a period of years, stated Mrs. Taylor, we see the nutrient intake levels of 1970 varied about 1.0 per cent from 1969 levels. Based on 1957 59 levels, as 100, Vitamin C in take has increased to 103 per cent, while Vitamin A has dropped to 98 per cent. And don't forget, using 1957-59 as a stan dard does not mean that 100 per cent of the population had the Vitamin A and C needed for optimum health. Robert A. Nanz, Consultant in Foods, who did much of the work with NASA on space foods spoke recently at the Florida Dietetic Association. Here are some of the things he sees for the future: Aquarians are alert and un predictable. Their sign is an outpouring from a large jug, held by a Grecian goddess. We are now in a dawning of a new world of food wonders. What is ahead? I'll tell it like it will be. . .you will be amazed with what you will see. There will be even far more expeditious and much easier forms of food service. This is through expanded, more com plete sectrum of custom com pounded foods. Preprepared foods will provide fast service for all types of institutional volume feeding, and at a lower cost. Computer activated portion processing takes the food from chill storage to the plated on-tray gourmet meal. Ready within one hour of patient selection, this pleases the diner. It cuts waste on meals missed. There is no cost recovery on leftovers. Con venience foods prove their im portance in these new developing systems, for homes, hospitals, and all institutions. In the face of consumer demands and the shock of finding malnutrition cropping up in the United States, nutritional enrich with a The Perquimans County Weekly, Hertford, N. C, Thursday, Ftbruary 4, 197V Pajt 3 Outlook For ment programs must be revitalized. The food manufacturers are altruistically cooperating. As found in the aerospace food system, there are many compact foods, convenient to eat. Break fast, in bite size pieces, eaten while in transit, is feasible. Foods can be custom-blended, from materials' like textured spun" protein, flavorful and enriched, without excess fat calories. Freeze-dried complete meals are now available, with other shelf-stored ready-to-eat meal items just over the horizon. Protein concentrates, needed to saye lives in a deprived population, are extracted, cultured, or made from un derutilized aquatic species. Imagine a lowder, practically all animal protein. So useful to really fortify our diets and build tissue, not fat. Beverages, so enriched, are in use overseas. To add enjoyment, we can tailor-make fruits and vegetables in gels, nuggets, or chewy crisp. Now used in bake mixes, their potential is great for decor or desserts. Made-to-order, they can give a bland or fiber-free diet a pleasure factor. So easy will it be to give you the egg-free, wheat-free, low fat, or most any "special diet. . . through synthesizing whatever flavored food you wish. This is where the skill of the food technologist, who's also a flavor man and a researcher, enters in. Which do we enrich? Those foods lacking vitamins, like the B group, or minerals lost in processing. Also foods for low income groups, who substitute EFFECTIVE MARCH 1st HAIR CUTS FOR ADULTS WILL BE J1.50 And '1.25 For Children Blanchard's Barber Shop AND Hertford Barber Shop Peoples Bank Sa vings Account While the supply lasts, Peoples Bank is giving away a free box of Tide detergent tp anyone who makes additional deposits 1 in their already opened Peoples Bank Savings Account (or opens a new account) Whyaboxof Tide? Because Peoples Bank wants to remind you that a Peoples Bank Savings Account may be just the thing to help Tide you over someday. Peoples Bank A mombor i d. I.e. 1971 snacks or other filling food for!P 'g vocabularies thnj'ri some of the basic four classes ofl foods. What do we see in the crystal ball? Bread, everfresh, 'with built-in butter flavor, meats, man-made to meet every need. Synthesized nutritious medium calorie desserts. Pouch packed! main meal items aseptically processed and a shelf-item. Beverages in dissolvable bags Disease control through selec tively balanced synthetic meal items. . .or enriched to ward off mental disorders and wasting malnourishment The world's marketing experts are working right with you. The food chemist does the im possible. His thing now and beyond the "Age of Aquarius" is to give you economical, flavorful, safe, convenient, dietarially - useful and notably nutritious foods for all time. Be on the lookout for more 1971 prediction in next Week's paper. A common carrier is a person or organization that for hire undertakes the conveyance of goods or persons, inviting the employment of the public gen e rally. Card of Thanks We wish to thank our many friends and relatives for their love and sympathy during the sudden death of our loved one, Ernest Lee Cartwright. For flowers, cards, food, visits, prayers and any other act of kindness. May God richly bless each of you. Wife and Daughter LARGER VOCABULARIES LONDON - Boyi devel- because they have more freedom than girls, ttyt a British schoolteacher. Girls read more than boys, but boys learn more words because of the wider variety of experience their freedom gives them, he says. Rothwell Bishop, who teaches at Slough, near London, wrote in the journal "Educational Re search" of a 12-year-old boy who , made a 400-mile round trip in a day for "train spotting" -r watch ing railroad locomotives. A girl would not have been allowed to make such a trip, he said. Rothwell found that children learn as many, if not more, new words during vacations as during schooltime. because the experience of being out and about is the important thing. A ride on the winged horse Pegasus was supposed to give inspiration to poets. Air CpwSfioneT""" TAYLOR THEATRE Edenton, N.C. WEDNESDAY 6 THURSDAY, FEB. 3-4 - RATING (X) "The Bang Bang Gang" FRIDAY & SATURDAY, FEB. 5-6 - RATING (G) VICTORIA VETRI IN "When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth" i SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, FEB. 7-8-9 -RATING (R) DES ROBERTS & LINDA JACKSON IN "Black Angels" COMING FEB. 10-11-12-13 (G) JOHN WAYNE in "Rio Lobo" saveV ;j47 Sale rSH CLOTH ASSUPECIAL REG. SAVE 12 "''' save. wJJE i m f