j? Th? NrgvUnM wmiy. Harttord. MX.. THyrWy. July 7. ??M Area obituaries BRABBLE EDENTON, N.C. - Willie Lee -3-' (Bill) Brabble, ?l. died Saturday in Chowan Hospital. He wai a native of Chowan County and the husband of Nolva Jordan Brabble. He was a fanner and was a member oi Yeopim Baptist Church. Other survivors include a daughter. Sue Brown of Edenton; three sons, Wayne Brabble of ~k ? Greensboro and Ricky Brabble and Greg Brabble of the home; a sister, Elisabeth Kirby of Edenton; and > three grandchildren. ^ The funeral was conducted at 11 a.m. Monday in Beaver Hill Cemetery by the Rev. Stanley Nixon. Williford-Barham Funeral Home in ~ charge of arrangements. WILLIAMS Ms. Glenda Godley Williams, 48, of Route 3, Hertford, died Tuesday , ? ? morning in Albemarle Hospital. A native of Belhaven, N. C. she was the daughter of Dawson Godley of Washing too, N. C. and Malinda Dixon Cotaon and Bruce CoUon of Route 1, Hertford. She was also the widow of Blanco Williams. Betides her parents, surviving are two half-sisters. Mrs. Annie Coward of Waahington, N.C. and Ms. Robin Colson of Durham; three step brothers, Thomas Dawson of Raleigh, Charlie Ray Godley and Sidney Earl Godley, both of Washington, N. C. Funeral services will be conducted today, Thursday, at 2 p.m. in the New Hope Assembly of God Church by the pastor. Rev. Samuel Taylor. Burial will be in West Lawn Memorial Park in Elizabeth City. Swindell Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. PATTON PLYMOUTH ? Mrs. Dorothy Brannon Patton, 49, died Saturday. Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. on Monday at Hope Free Will Baptist Church. Burial *u held In HUlUide Memorial Gardens. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Linda Harrell of Plymouth; two sons, Douglas Hodges and Jimmy Hodges, both of Plymouth. Other survivors include three brothers: George Brannon of Plymouth, Charles Brannon of Belvidere and Jake Brannon of Alabama; and four grandchildren. Information provided by Swindell Funeral Home. MURPHY Edward Leroy Murphy, 80, of Route 1, died last Tuesday from Injuries sustained in a fall from a scaffold. He had been installing aluminum siding on the Ballard's Bridge Church in Chowan County. A native of Carthage, Miss, he was the husband of the late Linda Lee Thurmond Murphy. He was the owner-operator of Ed Murphy Aluminum Products and was a member of Bethel Baptist Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Martha Ann McGohon and lira. Lorraine Lamb, both of Route 1; six sisters, Mrs. Sarah Pauline Horn, Mrs. Emma Ruth Stribling, Mrs. Ada Joy Cochran and Mrs. Nell Gene Waggoner, all of Carthage, Miss., Mrs. Mary Elisabeth Watkins of Louisianna and Mrs. Mildred M. Ellis of Jackson, Miss. Other survivors include three brothers; Daniel Perry Murphy and Thomas Herman Murphy, both of Carthage, Miss, and William Hendrix Murphy of Jackson, Miss.; seven grandchildren and nine great grandchildren. Funeral services were held Friday at 3:30 p.m. in the chapel of Swindell Funeral Home with Rev. Charles Middleton officiating. Burial was in Bethel Cemetery. Pallbearers were Roger Ferrell, Marq Gray, Danny Harrell, Mike Rucker, R. S. Chappell, Jr. and E. J. Proctor. Community Calendar II m*Wmmmm~rnm-~-,~ . Babe Ruth Tournament Perquimans first game in The Babe Ruth Tournament for 13-year-olds wilU " be held July 8 at 4 p.m. at the Elizabeth City Parks and Recreation Depart? .L ment, field 5. In the 14-15-year<old division, Perquimans will play July 8 at 2:30 p.m. at Knapp Junior High in Currituck. ' I Adventure program The Perquimans County Library is having a Summer Reading Adventure Program for children reading age through eighth grade. Activities and demonstrations are planned every Friday froin 10:00-11:30. Everyone is invited to come. Call the library at 426-5319 for complet^ 1 schedule. V Correction In the front page story about the upcoming Heritage Day in the June 30 issue of THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY an inadvertent error was made in both the headline and the story concerning the date. Heritage Day, which will kick off the Indian Summer Festival, will be held Thursday, September 15, not September 16, as was reported. We regret the error. Health clinic schedule The following is a schedule of services scheduled for the Perquimans County Health Department located on Charles Street in Hertford. July "i'T'l ? General Clinic, PM, WIC All Day A ? Holiday T* Is ? Prenatal Check, AM 3- Pediatric Clinic, PM ^ General Clinic, PM *12 ? Prenatal Recheck Clinic, AM -13 ? Child Health Clinic All Day ? General Clinic, PM, WIC All -H- Day ? Maternity Clinic, AM, Family . "Planning Clinic, PM ?0 ? ChUd Health Clinic, PM C; ^2? General Clinic, PM 25 ? TB Skin Test Reading, PM ; 28 ? Prenatal Rechceck Clinic, AM ^*77 ? Eye CUnic, AM ??** ?8 ? Adult Health Services Clinic All ? Baptist Assembly ^employs White Z'l James White Jr., son of Mr. and James G. White Sr. of Hertford 33s working as a building supervisor tor the North Carolina Baptist -Assembly this summer. y 1 His duties include general clean-up 'jF land care of his building and assisting 3n the cafeteria. ? White is a senior at Campbell ? I ?University where he is studying trust ??<* ^management. His interests include ?^reading, sports, writing and com U* unity service. The North Carolina Baptist -Assembly is a statewide retreat and convention center provided as a ministry of the Baptist State con vention of North Carolina. The staff consists of young men and women from all over North Carolina and several other states. The staff's main job is to give cheerful Christian service to the Assembly and it's visitors. Chowan accepts Woodle Alfred Douglas Woodle of Hertford, and a senior at John A. Holmes High School has been accepted for ad missions to Chowan College for the fall semester beginning August 21, 1983. Chowan College is a two-year, co educational, residential college. For students wishing to pursue the baccalaureate degree in senior colleges and universities; Cbowan College offers thorough educational opportunities in most professional . fields. ^ Students whose formal education ^Jrill not extend beyond the associated -jfegree can enter the world of work in business, accounting, secretarial administration (legal and medical), merchandising management, news writing, advertising, printing technology, photography and com munication art - Chowan offers opportunities in 12 -professional fields: business, English, fine arts (music and art), graphic arts, photography, health and physical education, language, mathematics, religion aad philosophy, science and social i Play^bur Cards Right And StayAhead Of The Game. ?' For most Americans today, the Age of Plastic has arrived. But then, so has the Fee System. For years, Diners Club, Amencan Express and other cards have charged fees.Now many banks-including us have announced card fees. PlayingYbur Cards At NCNB Available this summer, a $5(1110 line ol credit, or more, recognized at over 3' j million places around the world. $35/yr., IH% interest on unpaid balance ($25/yr., 15% interest with DeLuxe Banking). Use it to buy tickets and automatically get Travel Insurance coverage. a cm <" Both offer credit at millions of places all over town, all over the world: shops, hotels, restaurants, airlines, and Plus System banking machines across the country. Use them to buy tickets and auto matically get SKXIJXX) Travel Insurance I coverage.Take your choice and save. Both i charge $M/yr., M% interest on unpaid J balance (Sltt/yr., 15% interest with DeLuxe Banking). The phshc check which lets you use your checking account instead of credit. l_ Accepted at 31 j million shops, hc tels,and restaurants all over the world, and Plus System banking machines across the country. 75t/mo. No charge with DeLuxe Bank ng NCNB24 A llou s you to use savings and/or checkmgoccuuntsat all NCNB 24 machines, and Plus System banking machines across the country. S5/yr. All told, carrying four or five cards could cost you as much as $130 per year, or maybe even more. But it doesn't have to. Because you don t need all those cards. Not when do business with First, no one greater variety of cards. Ji ook at the chart on the left. With one of our cards or credit and one for banking, you'll get more convenience :han you can with any four or five credit cards. Second, in most cases we 11 match the credit you get now with several cards in one card. (Say your limit is $1,000 on Visa, $1,000 on MasterCard. We 11 give you a $2,000 limit on one and save you $18 a year in fees.) Third, both our new W)rld Cardand Visa offer all the travel convenience of Diners Qub and American Express. So, if you carry both of those cards, we can save you $40 to $55 a year in fees. Finally, if you'd rather not use credit, you can use Checkmate", the plastic check. /* At over 3 1/2 V ? .. | million places, \/ its a lot easier than^g, paper checks. am ? * _ . a bank oilers nation Sa (nr anu **' can bonk wtth a k_JU,IUI ally System bcahons acn situation, we have a card that works. Plus something else most banks don't have. TheRrst24?our Banking Coast-Tb-Coast. With the new Plus System, you can use any of * our cards to bank 24 hours a day at machines all the country. ?So, any time of day, almost you're traveling, ? 1 - ? f you 11 never be tar away from yotir money. NCNB DeLuxe Banking: The Ultimate Bargain. \ou ve just read some good reasons to bank with us. But probably the best is DeLuxe Banking." Just keep $2,500 or more in regular savings (or $10,000 in a certificate).Get interest on checking, NCNB Checkmate and a standard-size safe deposit box ? ? ? f i \:y at no charge. L?et special rates and in North Carolina reduced fees on oide 21 -hour hanhinq . 11* loans and credit cards. Plus other services. Come see us. Nobody else in the neighborhood is offering you this many ways to

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