Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / June 24, 1948, edition 1 / Page 10
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PAGE TEN Miss Jape Griffin Weds J. Cod Keeter Impressive Ceremony In Bethel Baptist Church " Saturday, June 19 Miss Jayne Griffin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morris T. Griffin, and J. Cecil Keeter, son of Mrs. R. Z. Aber nathy and the late J. S. Keeter, of Forest City, were married on Satur day, June 19, at 8 o’clock in the even ing at the Bethel Baptist Church, with the Rev. E. G. Willis, pastor of the church, performing the double ring ceremony. The church was decorated with white gladioli and gardenias against a background of palm, fern and other greens. The candles were lighted by Maynard Fleetwood and Morris Grif fin, Jr. A program of nuptial music was rendered by Mrs. R. M. Riddick, Jr., of Hertford, and Mrs. Charles E. Johnson of Hertford and C. W. Over man of Edenton, soloists. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a white satin gown of period design, made with a sheer marquisette yoke edged with petite lace, and a basque bodice with long sleeves terminating in points over the hands. The hoop skirt was caught up at the hem line exposing the lace un derskirt. The sweeping train was edged with petite lace. Her veil of bridal illusion, arranged with a Juliet cap, fell from a band of orange blos soms. Her flowers were white orchids showered with lilies of the valley. The bride’s mother wore a dress of pink sheer brocade with black acces sories and an orchid corsage. The maid of honor, Miss Hattie Hudgins of Sunbury, wore a gown of American Beauty sheer crepe, made with a portrain neckline, fitted bodice and bouffant skirt, with matching head-dress of tulle. Her flowers were an arm bouquet of yellow roses. Two bridesmaids, Miss Katherine White, of Richmond, Va., and Ann Dail, of Keenansville, wore gowns of pink marquisette, and Mrs. Janet Griffin Turner of Norfolk and Mrs. Barbara Winslow Rose of Winston- Salem, wore identically made gowns of blue. All wore head-dresses of tulle to match the gowns, their flow ers being arm bouquets of American Beauty roses. Mary Lou Jordan, flower girl, was gowned in white organdy trimmed with lace, and carried a basket filled with rose petals. The mistresses of ceremony were Mrs. Charles Johnson and Mrs. Olivia Hobbs, who wore black lace dresses and gardenia corsages. The bridegroom had as his best man D. Earl Broome of Marion, and ush ers were Maynard Fleetwood, Dr. •Harrell Johnson of Richmond, Va., Everett White and Morris Griffin, Jr. The bride is a graduate of East Carolina Teachers College and was a member of the faculty of Chowan High School last year. The bride groom is a graduate of Appalachian State Teachers College and served as athletic director at Chowan High School last year. Immediately following the ceremony the parents of the bride entertained at a reception on the lawn of their :; WE ARE NOW RECEIVING . ii II Fresh Salt Water Fish \\ TROUT - BUTTERDISH - CROAKERS 11. ii CRAB MEAT AND SHRIMP \\ :: DRESSED AND DELIVERED FREE <t I Other Sea Foods In Season ii BROAD STREET FISH MARKET | PHONE 26 WE DELIVER "PARTS NEWS" R.I.MCLEAN Tn»psssfj IWPTBH«PRRTS 1-1■- 0 5 ,E AIE c«*. <*. ETAj L"‘PARi sh. ACCE%■«* ■■. * v. 3' l < i ; it/*'J*£ it ~ C&T - fT'Kjc. li~ 4-27 S.BROAD S* • M 0 N E 440 * &DEN IC 5 N *N v■ |j I -- - -1... i miinuMii MI i»iIiIMIMM———IMHIHI——IIMIiIMI I'l i Hi' MU HI i * 11A jMMM home. Mrs. Charles Johnson, aunt .of the bride, entertained the bridal party and out-of-town guests at a cake cut ting Friday evening immediately pre -1 ceding the rehearsal. CHher'social af fairs given in honor of the bride were a luncheon given by the bride’s aunt, Mrs. A. F. Proctor, and a party given l by Mrs. L. C. Winslow. Workers For Scott Appear Confident Edenton and Chowan County Scott for-Governor headquarters are beam ■ ing over local and State pre-primary . news despite the fact mat they did not have huge sums of money to spend during the campaign. Reports indicate that intelligent voters are not being misled by garbled mud-slingiag and issue-dodging, local . headquarters announced, adding that, ; Scott’s go-forward movement cannot • be stopped by such tactics. His unimpeachable stand for pro ceeding with the great program of public health and hospitalisation adopted by the Medical Care Commis sion and approved by the General As sembly of 1947 along with a fair and equal tax on all types of business cannot be questioned. A platform appealing to all the people with emphasis on the repeal of the sales tax on all food; no bond is sue until the surplus is reduced and good roads is making people rapidly switch to the Scott cause, they said. Improved schools and conditions, a better welfare program and a square deal for veterans is also creating a great,deal of interest. To round out the platform, Mr. Scott promises financial relief for municipalities, balanced agriculture and a better gov ernment. Headquarters also announced that A. B. Harless, a member of the com mittee, had the privilege of working with and under Mr. Scott for six years before coming to Edenton and is of the opinion that Mr. Scott will make the State of North Carolina one of its greatest Governors. Colson-Irick Wedding Will Be Solemnized In Methodist Church Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. William Armstrong Colson, of Oconee, Ga., of the engagement of their daughter, Miss, Ruth 'Pauline Colson of Oconee and Macon, Ga., to Major Andrew G. Irick of Hanni- I SMtlfi ivsomsti ; HW TOUR COUNTRY... I HOT YOURMLFI A J J Ther. (a atffl a very ml aaad :• . for avwy ounce of vmi fists'w* • . can Min*. Tht world-wid* J • ihorta** Is mater today than • • mtWba Plea*.... kaep J •avinf and turning In your u*ed ! # I kitchen fate. P. S. Veil you • ~do get paid for them... and . • you know how ready ea.h • • count* today. , • KeepTnrniug in Used Fotsl • l tauten M Srinp Cisuittw, Ik. • jtfsgggrj Xvl jeAta* nu. Chowan aaanok a. u. nuLamr. juss a. rna WUUMWM ew MtWffMMKON AUTOPARTS ... . . •"■MWW." * • '>- t * bal, Mo. The wedding will take r place Sunday, June 27, in .the Eden ■ ton Methodist Church. The bride-elect is the youngest - daughter of her parents. Her* mother * is the former Miss Charlie Pauline > Kessler, daughter of the late Mr. > and Mrs. Charles Boneparte Kessler of Oconee. On4ier paternal side, she , is the granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Lon Colson of L Oconee. “ Miss Colson attended West Georgia College and GAB College. . She also " attended the American Academy of " Fashion Modeling and is a member 1 of the Georgia Tau Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, international sorority. 1 For the past five years Miss Colson has been employed by Civil Service t in a secretarial capacity. * Major Irick is the only son of Mr. 1 and Mrs. Samuel George Irick of > Hannibal, Missouri and Quincy, II- linois. 'His mother was before her marriage Miss Mary Grace Royalty ■of El Dara, Illinois. His- paternal ' grandparents are .the late Mr. and 1 Mrs. Andrey Irick of Pittsfield, ll ' linois. | The bridegroom-elect is a graduate J of Hannibal high school and for 11 ’ years has been in the United States Air Force as a meteorologist, during ! which time he served two years over seas in the South Pacific. At present J Major Irick is staff weather officer [ for the Ninth Air Force, Greenville, South Carolina, where the couple will 1 reside after a short wedding trip. The bride-elect is a sister of Mrs. 1 J. H. Thigpen. i Back To Earth When the operation was finished, the patient was asked how she had felt under the anaesthetic. “It was beautiful,” she said. “I thought I Was in heaven till I saw the doctor.” Backache^ eMMr mteOnftaMns mnBS t aa»*igas**ai*tMMfaSS* Stew«s Imbeds Deeply To Cauae Painful Cracking, Burning, Itching. HOW TO KILL IT A treatment, to be efficient, must PENETRATE to reach the germs and , be POWERFUL to kill them. TE-OL, the only product we know of made with undiluted alcohol, penetrates. Reaches and kills more germs FASTER. FEEL IT TAKE HOLD. IN ONE HOUR If not COMPLETELY pleased, your 35c back at any drug store. TE-OL is clean, odorless, easy and pleasant to use. Apply FULL STRENGTH for insect bites or poison ivy. Today at LEGGETT & DAVIS, INC. I “ to* L Th* n.w BAU DOME (2-pitc* J T roalal) LID it aa (last io «»• and ] ! surest to tool. Flit any Mason J jar. To loti tool % pratt tl. I’ I b*.n laio.it.! hr gHM> A Kona. Thoy tool all Mason jars. T Easy Io osol « 0 u)<»»r j I IWXIW *«*• mf§L I™ i < *«sisi OLD Mr. POSTON BRAND ROCKING CAAII RLf:N DE 0 WHISKEY •w«n» Him niwui W * i. *> • - • •■ ■• :'■! ' j*"" » 1111111 ;■ • "•■'■""i. |" *■■■■"■ '' v * '*'■ (Political Advertisement) % * \ ' • ■ Kerr Scott Offers : ••• x ■ -; PROGRESSIVE |L f J| LEADERSHIP SCOTT knows what farmers and City Dwellers must have to make k *• | | * A Balanced Prosperity. 1— > KERR SCOTT '\- ' • . THE RECORD SPEAKS! ■*' ‘ . t IKERR SCOTT defesfted an entrenched office-holder for Commissioner of Agriculture in 1936. He revitalized the Department. He gained the reputation of being the nation’s outstanding Commissioner of Agriculture- , _ When KERR SCOTT resigned in February, so as not to run for Governor at the tax -2 payers’ expense, he turned over to his successor a Department that had improved farm production and marketing and added vastly* to the income of farmers, merchants and industry—and sent State revenues soaring. t ■> ' • (Louis Brumfield, the noted author, wrote recently: “This is a paean of praise • , | to the State of North and the great advances made by the State ... Agricultural income there was increased from 200 million to 800 million dollars annually in five years” (during the administration of Kerr Scott as Commis *• ' 1 sioner of Agriculture). As Commissioner of Agriculture, Kerr Scott saved farmers trillions of dollars “by tak -3 ing the sand out of fertilizer and sawdust put of feed”; by pioneering development of wilt-resistant tobacco, improved com, cotton and peanut seeds, and by making scales give honest weight, and gas pumps a full gallon. e—- Kerr Scott, probably more than any one man in America, Is responsible for rural elec 4trifioation and the REA. He saw the need for electricity on farms, and with the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, had tremendous influence in establishing the mral electrification program that is the boon of country life today. Kerr Scott is a vigorous . advocate of extending not only electricity but telephones throughout North Carolina. 5 1 ■ ' 5 Kerr Scott has lived on a dirt road all his life. He would revitalize the Highway Com mission for the removal of the “mud tax” on rural population. > Kerr Scott knows what it is to meet a private payroll and to PAY taxes. He is for a 6 balanced budget and against the State going into debt for any purpose until the mil lions of dollars of tax money now in banks without interest are used for the purposes for which they were collected from the taxpayers. • 7 KERR SCOTT is for a State Government that sets the pace—does not lag behind the progress of the people. He believes that tax dollars should be returned—with interest— to the taxpayers in services such as better schools, better roads, better health. , ' > > 8 KERR SCOTT is for majority rule on all issues. He is against the Gag Rule. He is running for Governor without any big money chains around his neck, and he is making no campaign promises that would prevent his being Governor of all the people. KERR SCOTT MEETS THE PEOPLE’S SPECIFICATIONS FOR GOVERNOR Go Forward With Scott FOR GOVERNOR! We Solicit Your Vote For the Man Who Meets the People’s Specificatiohs For Governor L. W. BELCH HERBERT LEARY HENRY GOODWIN THOMAS ASBELL JIM WOOD MEDLIN BELCH LONNIE BOYCE - ROSS BUNCH A. B. HARLESS BERTRAM HOLLOWELL R. C. HOLLAND ' H.*A. CAMPEN JOHN WHITE GIBSON BRICKLE MONK MILLS Scott Committee For Governor—Chowan County Democratic Primary, Saturday, June 26 CONROY PERRY SHELTON ROGERSON ERNEST KEHAYES WASH WRIGHT ELTON FOREHAND HOSKIN HARRELL -DAVID HOLTON JOHN BYRUM JOE WEBfi, JR. ROY EMMINIZER RALEIGH HOLLOWELL KENNETH WRIGHT LESTER JORDAN ' HENRY ROGERSON y W.'E BOND i < . PERCY PERRY CLAUD GRIFFIN RUFUS STOKLEY THURSTON STALLINGS y ELTON JORDAN •* DAN MORAN ' CHARLIE BOYCE *\ ? CHARLIE HUDSON LLOYD BUNCH CHARLIE SMALL KESSLER PHILLIPS JOE RASNIGHT Eugene <shorty) perry Lonnie bunch
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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June 24, 1948, edition 1
10
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