SG 11-2010

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November 2010 Tyrrell County’s Country Magazine November 2010 www.ScuppernongGazette.com Cover Photo by Christy Maready

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Scuppernong Gazette November Issue 2010

Transcript of SG 11-2010

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November 2010

Tyrrell County’s Country Magazine

November 2010 www.ScuppernongGazette.com Cover Photo by Christy Maready

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A Silent Benefit AuctionCome support Pocosin Arts Folk School at our last fundraiser of the year...Friday, November 19th, 2010  

A Silent Benefit Auction and Open House for the New Metal's Studio

Friday, November 19th, from 4:00-8:00pm, Pocosin Arts Folk School hosts a silent benefit auction, featuring artwork generously donated by our program participants and other supporting artists.  The

auction will be held at the Pocosin Arts Gallery and Studios at 201 Main Street, Columbia, North Carolina.  Proceeds support the educational programming of Pocosin Arts Folk School.

Pocosin Arts offers a sincere thanks to all the artists who share their talents and have donated artwork for the fundraising event.

Preview the work: November 1st, Pocosin Arts will launch an online catalog at www.pocosinarts.org for a preview of the work to be auctioned. Here are a few examples of art donations to be auctioned on

November 19th... ( Below: Serving Dish by Nick Joerling, visiting instructor / Mattamuskeet Morning, photograph by Betty Fisher, workshop participant / Yemanja's Gift, enameled pendant by Kathryn Osgood, visiting instructor)

visiting instructor

workshop participant

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Southern DreamsDue to construction, Southern Dreams Gallery, located at 205 Main Street, Columbia, is hosting Pocosin Arts fall exhibit, LANDSCAPES AND WATER BIRDS.  The exhibit is through November 20th and features paintings by guest instructor Anthony Ulinski and students from his February 2010 workshop, including Martha Burdette, Lynn Nash, Susan Owens and

Feather Phillips.  

Above Salt Marsh near Columbia, NCby Anthony Ulinski

The exhibit also features decoy and shorebird carvings by Charlie Reber of Engelhard, NC. (on the right)

www.pocosinarts.org

Thank you for supportingPocosin Arts Folk School! Connecting Culture to the Environment Through the Arts

Life has changed for this publisher dramatically. My husband moved full-time to Hyde County and had to leave me behind. We are grateful that I am still employed on Long Island. Yes, it’s sad because we are separated, but I love my job and we can pay our bills, and since our younger son and daughter-in-law live in Tyrrell, Sunny is close to the kids, which is

good. We hope and pray that the Lord has planned to reunite us soon. In the meantime I stay in

contact with all of them on Skype and that includes our older son and his family in Germany. Sunny and I still enjoy our cup of tea in the morning together, I,

wireless in my bed in Montauk and Sunny from our country kitchen in Swan Quarter. xox - Love Ingrid

z Quote of the Month z“My favorite quote from my mother is one that I will always remember,

‘All you really own is your name and your word, keep those and everything else falls into place.’ I find comfort in these words daily. If

ever there was a person who lived by these words, it is my mother.” - Anita

DEAR READER

P U B L I S H E R S : I N G R I D & N E L I L E M M E / E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F : S U N N Y L E M M E

N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 0

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...On the Board Walk...Lady of the

Month Mrs. Margaret Brickhouse Cahoon, please read her story.

Man of the Month

Scuppernong River Festival Grand Marshall Mr. J.D. Brickhouse.

Couple of the Month

Joann Spear Craddock and Devin Craddock, who got married October 23rd @ 4-H.

Book of the Month

Barefoot Contessa: How Easy Is That? Fabulous Recipes & Easy Tips by Ina Garten.

Teen of the Month

Homecoming Queen Miss Courtney Elaine Cahoon - Also Happy 18th Birthday! Movie of the

Month “eclipse” December 4, 2010 - own the movie nationwide that day. Also one of Courtney’s favorites.

Girl of the Month Unfortunately we don’t know her name, but she captured the eyes of Photographer Christy Maready at the

Scuppernong River Festival.

Boys of the Month

We love this photos of these 2 boys having so much fun at the Scuppernong River Festival.

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Courtney loves her family Court loves her family, her siblings and especially her mother. She writes: “Cousins are there as childhood friends, and are there when we are older as forever friends.... No one will ever understand your crazy family like your cousins.”

Courtney, a Young Woman with GutsCourtney is fun, and likes to sing and dance. She favors Classical Southern Rock, Hip Hop and R and B, Alternative rock, Country music, and the music of our very own Jonny Waters. She likes to read, watches TV and movies and has her dreams. One of these dreams just came true!

Courtney Elaine Cahoon, YOU ROCK!

(Her e-mail: [email protected])

Our Tyrrell Teen of the Month is

Miss Courtney Elaine Cahoon

Miss Courtney Elaine Cahoon, she just turned 18 on October 18th, is our Homecoming Queen 2010. Congratulations! Courtney was nominated by her class and she said she was representing girls that think dreams can (not) come true. She posted as her bio on her Facebook page one sentence only: “Loud proud country and southern by the grace of God.” As her favorite quotations she quoted ‘Forrest Gump’: "Moma said life’s like a box of chocolate you never know what you gunna get". - Well she’s got it!

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Our Boys of the Month!

Photo by Christy Maready

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Man of the Month J.D. Brickhouse

Photo by Hubert Ward

Metal Arts & Business Boot CampSession 1:January 10 - March 11, 2011(CLASS FILLED!)Session 2:March 21 - May 20, 2011(Applications due Nov. 15th)Click here to apply.Click here to apply for a scholarship.

Upcoming Weekend Workshops

November 13th & 14th Oil Painting w/ Anthony Ulinski  November 13th & 14th Creative Writing w/ Kim Church  December 4th & 5th Stone Setting w/ Tim Lazure

www.PocosinArts.com

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LADY OF THE MONTH

MARGARET BRICKHOUSE

CAHOON

Born January 11, 1926, Margaret Brickhouse Cahoon still remains a force to be reckoned with. She is a gentle soul, with the heart of an angel, but will stand up against anyone to defend what she believes is right. Known to many as “Nanny Margaret”, she has known great joy and intense sorrow, but through it all has remained faithful in her belief of God, family and country.

The child of Johnson and Ella Brickhouse, she was raised on Sound Side with six brothers. She is predeceased by her parents, two husbands, Alton Jack Cahoon and Willard Luther Cahoon, a son, Glynn Thomas Cahoon, a grandson, Blake Edmond Cahoon, and all

six brothers. She is the mother of five children, Jacqueline C Smith, Glynn T Cahoon, James W Cahoon, Ginger C Hassell and Anita C Simpson. She is the proud grandmother of eleven grandchildren and eleven great-grandchildren.

A lifetime member of Sound Side Free Will Baptist Church, her faith has always been her mainstay, her beliefs and charitable ways never ending. She is always there to lend a hand, never expecting recognition or anticipating anything in return. Living a modest and unassuming lifestyle, she tends to see the need of others and is ready at the helm to cook a meal for

someone, or give aid to someone in their time of need. The power of prayer is indeed her tower of strength.

As many others in Tyrrell County, she grew up on a farm and has never been afraid of hard work. A go-getter from the start, she worked on her father’s farm, picked pine cones for WestVaco, waited tables for over twenty years and to this day remains strong and active. At 84, almost 85, she continues to do her own yard work, clean house, wash and wax her car, cook enough food for an army, and still be there to help others where there is need…and wouldn’t have it any other way. continues...

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Our mother never knew on Friday night if there would be 5 children or 15, yet she never complained and always made everyone feel welcome. Whether playing games or dancing to the record player, she was, and still is, the life of the party. Through all of this, she never ceased to remind of our roots and our need to remain faithful in our beliefs. Through the years, our mother has been an inspiration to many people. Her life has been, and continues to be, an example we should all pay heed too. Her concern for her fellowman is always highly evident in her words and her actions.

There are so many things to say about our mother, the inventions she has seen, the wars she has lived through, the family and friends she has seen pass away, yet she remains constant. The values and morals she insisted on instilling into her children are the ones she remains to live by. The life of Margaret Brickhouse Cahoon has not always been a leisurely ride, but she has always managed to make the best of what was facing her.

I would like to pay tribute to Margaret Brickhouse Cahoon,

my mother, to give her the roses she deserves while she is alive and can still smell them. The life she lives should be a reminder to all of us; it’s not what you have but what you do with what you have been given. WE LOVE YOU MOMMA!!!

Quotes from her Children

Jackie - “I love my mother very much. She has done so much for me in my lifetime I will never be able to repay her but she will receive her payment in Heaven. I thank her for all she has done, for the memories we have made together and I think she is a terrific person.”

James – “Mom has always been an amazing source of strength for our family. She has been blessed with a wisdom and a love for others that reflect her strong Christian faith. She always taught us children to respect our elders, treat each person with the dignity they deserve, and always be there for family. As children, she taught us that we were no better than anyone else, and no one else was better than us, never belittle someone less fortunate than ourselves, and always be true to our principles and our faith.

She reinforced these beliefs with a green whip, a strong will, and a kind and loving heart. She also demonstrated her convictions by the selfless life she has led: always putting her children, her husband, and others ahead of herself.”

Ginger – “Mom always had a phrase for every situation. My most memorable is, (and I have quoted it to my children) ‘There is Nobody in this world any better than you…..and YOU are no better that anyone else!’ I have found that living by that philosophy I have friends everywhere I go.”

Anita – “My favorite quote from my mother is one that I will always remember, ‘All you really own is your name and your word, keep those and everything else falls into place.’ I find comfort in these words daily. If ever there was a person who lived by these words, it is my mother.”

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Photos by Christy Maready

On Duty in Tyrrell County

US Coast Card rescue chopper at the Scuppernong River Festival

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Our Girl of the Month!

Look at these cute girls watching the parade.

Photos by Christy Maready

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Friends of the Library FloatPhotos by Ms. Arnette Parker  

At the Scuppernong River Festival Parade

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TEACHER OF THE MONTH

JEANNE LAPLANTE THE ART TEACHER

AT COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL

What a perfectly beautiful day for a festival!  The sun was shining and the humidity was low.  The food vendors offered such a selection that it was overwhelming to have such choices here in eastern North

Carolina.  The music selection was equally as diverse with two tents that offered tunes to please everyone.  The 'something for everyone' theme was also apparent in the

vendors, which offered everything from inflatable toys to CDs to handmade crafts and foods. We did not attend the parade, but I heard that the art masks were quite impressive.  They were a

created through many hours of work by Pocosin Arts and Jeanne LaPlante - the art teacher at Columbia High School during their summer program. My daughter really enjoyed the 'jumpy jumps' in the kids area and found the music to be dance-worthy. We enjoyed our day and are already looking forward to next year's River Festival.

- Crystal Levis Swindell

- Photos by Christy Maready

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“THE RECIPE” BY

WILLIAM R. WEST

I grew up in Tyrrell County and at 11 years of age began brewing “the recipe.” My maternal grandmother Beasley had passed away and my parents had sold our little farm in order to move in with my grandfather, who was infirm with rheumatism. Duard Brickhouse, who grew up to become the Sound Side “Collard Man,” then 2 years older than I, lived across the road with his grandfather, Amos Brickhouse. That fall Duard and I picked a batch of James grapes from Pappy Beasley’s big, walk-under arbor, mashed them, and added sugar and water in a wide-mouthed, gallon, “pig’s feet” jar. We covered the jar’s mouth with cheese cloth, placed a slab of pine bark over it to keep out rain and placed it beside a big pine stump behind Pappy Beasley’s barn. I have made wine pretty much ever since and given most of it away.

I am neither scientific nor purest in my wine making. I use crushed fruit, water and sugar and never check the brix or

other niceties and somehow it turns out well. I originally made do with the wild yeast that was on the fruit but that gave varying results and today I use a vintner’s yeast that can produce up to 16 percent alcohol. Over the years I have made wine from various varieties of grapes, blackberries, strawberries, peaches, plums, sweet and tart cherries, wild cherries, and elderberries. I neither cared much for the elderberry nor tomato nor dandelion wines made by friends, but the “corn cob” wine made by a Tyrrell County man was pretty good stuff.

My wine is not for sale but over the years I have given enough of it away to float a fish-laden Henry Smith shad boat. I have given many bottles of wine to complete strangers and more to “down-home” friends. Such gifts have resulted in lots of new friends. Sadly, some of them last only as long as the wine flows!

For several years I hosted an annual wine and cheese get-together at my campsite in Cades Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains at least one night during my camping week. At that time, the project to introduce red wolves into the

area was in full swing and I had an open invitation to the project’s staff and the summer rangers and naturalist/interpreters. As a result, I met a number of interesting, dedicated young people who opened many “doors” that would have been closed otherwise. Seventeen people showed up for one such session. Our guests often brought over a week’s supply of split oak wood for our campfires. One of them, a young lady from Ohio named Ann, asked me to let her know which campsite I preferred before arriving at the cove on my next trip. When my wife and I went into the office on the following summer’s trip, Ann asked which of the two campsites that I had mentioned did we want. She grinned and told me to choose which site. She had reserved both sites at a time when one could not officially reserve a specific site.

It has been my custom to carry a supply of the recipe every time I go camping and each time I meet new people by sharing a bottle. One couple was from Alabama, a gentleman from Louisiana who goes to Cades Cove during full moon week every October to hike the 11-mile loop road under a full

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moon, and another from Soddy Daisy, Tenn. A Chinese-American lady from Chicago and a young lady and her boyfriend from former East Germany once joined me. Last fall my camping buddies and I met a family from Wisconsin who had three adorable young daughters, who we “adopted.”

After a day of rambling the woods and pastures or other activities, my camping buddies and I prepare dinner and then sit around a campfire, sipping the recipe, eating crackers and cheese, and “solve the problems of the world.” Such times are just about as good as it gets.

Pappy Beasley made wine and moonshine whiskey as well. Every Thanksgiving he gave wine to some of his Tyrrell County friends to put on their Christmas fruit cakes. At that time my mother and a number of other ladies made their fruit

cakes at Thanksgiving and kept them covered with a wine-dampened cloth to keep them

moist and to ”ripen.” Many Tyrrell County folks made syllabub at Christmas. Syllabub is a wine-fortified cream concoction whose recipes were brought over from the “old country” by our English and Scotch-Irish ancestors. In my son-in-law’s Scottish recipes

book, there are several recipes for syllabub. If you haven’t tried it, you “ain’t lived yet.”

Slathered on sweet potato or pumpkin pie, it is good stuff !

When I was a child, many of the older people used corn whiskey and/or wine as a tonic. They used the homemade kind, believing that the “store-boughten” products were inferior. Pappy Beasley prepared a number of remedies with dried buds, etc., that he bought from Doc McKeel’s drug store in

Columbia and then steeped them in some of his moonshine. My mother used camphor gum in moonshine as a rub for headaches and other maladies. A standard remedy for coughs was wine or whiskey and honey or sugar. Today, my wife uses a dollop of my wine in

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the mixture when she bakes sweet potato pies. She only uses sweet potatoes grown in Tyrrell County by J. D. Clough that are, as one of my friends says, “as good as they is.”

At one time, North Carolina led the nation in wine production but the War Between the States and later the Prohibition Act delivered death blows. Now, wineries are popping up all over the state again, several of them in Alamance County, where I now live. Most wineries in the Piedmont and mountain regions use European or hybrid grape varieties and some use both these and our native muscadines. A winery in Tyrrell County uses Scuppernong grapes, the progenitor of which was discovered on the shores of Scuppernong River, according to tradition.

Probably the worst tasting wine I have ever had was a bottle of banana wine from Burundi, a small African nation. Our group was having dinner in the hotel atop the rim of Ngorongoro Crater in

Tanzania and someone ordered wine. The banana wine, all that was available in the lodge, was so awful that everyone who tasted it signed the label. Conversely, the best wine party I ever attended was our farewell dinner at La Ronda Restaurant in Quito, Ecuador. We had just completed a spectacular trip to the Galapagos Islands and our group leaders, who had also been group leaders a year earlier in Antarctica, treated us to a big dinner party. They kept ordering “mas vino” and we had a sumptuous dinner and a big row of empty bottles when we finished the meal.

Doctors now tell us that a glass of red wine per day is good for us. Red wine contains more resveratrol, a powerful anti-oxidant, than rose or white wines. The old timers were right all along when they said that wine is good for what ails you. My camping buddies always make sure that I carry a supply of the recipe on our annual camping trip to Cades Cove every October.

STORY AND PHOTO BY

WILLIAM R. WEST

Scuppernong grape vine. Roanoke Island. (Courtesy B. W. Kilgore.)

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CIVIL WAR SESQUICENTENNIAL

PLANNING UNDERWAY FOR

NORTH CAROLINA

Preparations for the commemoration of the Sesquicentennial of the Civil War are underway with 150 programs, educational symposia and re-enactments already scheduled by the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources (www.ncculture.com). For the past year a team of Cultural Resources staff, operating with an experts advisory panel of leading historians, has planned events, lectures, exhibits and informational resources for commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. 

 

Activities for life-long learners, travelers, teachers and school children will feature the theme “North Carolina and the Civil War: Freedom, Sacrifice, Memory.”

 

News and information are available at www.nccivilwar150.com. A logo, designed by the Department of Cultural Resources, presents that theme against a sunburst image, based on the button worn by North Carolina soldiers, 1861-1865.

 

North Carolina’s planning comes as a similar national effort is underway. Several other states have established commissions or other boards to

mark the anniversary. Keith Hardison, Director of the Division of State Historic Sites and Properties, and Michael Hill, Research Branch Supervisor, co-chair the North Carolina group.  

 

In establishing the committee of researchers, archaeologists, librarians, preservationists, educators, exhibit designers and curators, Dr. Jeffrey J. Crow, Deputy Director of the N.C. Office of Archives and History, noted that the Department has long held a commitment to projects associated with the Civil War and that, during the anniversary, those efforts will intensify.

 

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“We anticipate that interest in the Civil War will draw tens of thousands of travelers to North Carolina,” Crow said. “Because cultural and heritage tourists stay longer and spend more than typical travelers, the Sesquicentennial will provide an economic boost. The Civil War was the most critical moment in the nation’s history. Understanding the conflict’s effect on the life of the nation, its institutions, and its people remains as important today as it did 150 years ago.” The Battle of Bentonville 145th re-enactment held in April 2010 drew 50,000 visitors to the Johnston County location, for example.

 

The group will develop and execute a multiyear program of state-sponsored activities to commemorate, in an appropriate and historically accurate manner, the richness, diversity and significance of the state’s participation in and contributions to the American Civil War. Accordingly, the objective is to extend to North Carolinians and travelers an understanding of the complexity of the issues surrounding the war and to

transform the interpretation of the events for a new generation, via a layered and interdisciplinary approach. 

 

An ambitious three-part series of symposia is planned, with the first dedicated to “memory” taking place at the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh on May 20, 2011. Following that, keeping with the theme, panels will be held at Winston-Salem State University in 2013 (timed to coincide with the anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation) around the topic of “freedom,” and in Wilmington in 2015 on the topic of “sacrifice.” Calls for papers will be forthcoming.

COMMEMORATING THE 150TH

ANNIVERSARY OF THE CIVIL WAR IN NORTH CAROLINA,

2011-2015

(Photo courtesy of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources - released by Beverly Eaves Perdue, Governor and the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources)

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ABOUT OUR COVER PHOTOGRAPHER

CHRISTY MAREADY OF COTTAGE

PHOTOGRAPHY AND DESIGN

Cottage Photography and Design was established around the year 2000, although my love of taking pictures started at a young age. At around age 10, I purchased my first camera by saving up Bazooka Comics and paying postage. All through childhood I had a camera and laugh now at the pictures I took then and still have today! In 1996 I graduated from James Sprunt Community College with a degree in Commercial Art & Advertising Design. During my time in college, we had to take photography courses, things which are virtually extinct today, such as darkroom technique and developing your own film. We have now grown into the digital and online age which has made photography so much easier! After working for a daily paper in Jacksonville, NC as a Graphic Designer for a few

years, I realized how much I also loved to take pictures and even write copy. A few years later, I became a newspaper Photo Journalist, all the while taking pictures on the side. I moved to Columbia, NC in 2006 and have had the

opportunity to continue to do what I love, TAKE PICTURES! Thank you to all of my loyal customers across the state who have helped to make me what I am today!

Sincerely,

Christy Maready

Christy Maready: Cottage Photography & Design 252-394-4094

http://cottagephotography.zenfolio.com/

[email protected]

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Our Tyrrell County Couple of the MonthMr. & Mrs. Loretta Joann & Jaymes Devin Craddock

October 23rd, 2010

A Beautiful & Creative Fall Wedding

in Tyrrell CountyNovember 2010 www.ScuppernongGazette.com Tyrrell County, NC

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Joann Spear Spear of Washington County and Devin Craddock of Tyrrell Co.got married at 4 pm October 23rd at the 4-H Center in Tyrrell County. Devin & Joann were on the cover of last month’s Scuppernong Gazette - on the 4 wheeler! The happy couple currently lives on Soundside in Tyrrell County. Devin is a Volunteer Firefighter in Tyrrell Co & does general construction with his father. Joann am a dental hygienist in Nags Head. The newlyweds honeymooned in Gatlinburg,TN.

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Joann & Davin are Dancing Down the Isle at Tyrrell’s 4-H Conference Center

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Brides message on bottoms of bridesmaids

shoes.

WeddingPhotos by:

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Cassandra’s Fall BazaarCassandra Moran Reynoldsinvites youSaturday, November 13 · 8:00am - 2:00pmto come to Tyrrell Hall, Raffle, jellies, canned goods, Christmas ornaments, jerky, and more. All money at my booth goes to providing Christmas to the Ronald McDonald House and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in Greenville, NC

“I have drop boxes for sticking stuffers and donations jars at Flemz, Columbia Crossing Restaurant, and Cutting Up (Ashley Hux). I will also have a booth at the Fall Bazaar on Nov 13, with great homemade items for sale, raffles, and more. Also will have a dance at the Tavern on Nov 20. All door money goes towards the fundraiser. Donation can also be made at any BB&T in the NICU & RMH XMAS FUND. Please come to any of these events and help support the Ronald McDonald House and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in Greenville, NC. Also remember at the drop boxes there are flyers with all info you need to know and how you can help. While visiting the drop boxes don’t forget to support local businesses that are helping.” [email protected]

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N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 0

SCUPPERNONG Gazette436 Bridgepath RoadColumbia, NC 27925Tyrrell County [email protected] www.ScuppernongGazette.com

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