MONDAY. OCr. 7. 1946 \S. '4s^‘'
Ubris Club Met
Mrs. i^^ston
brla «M>
•nlipftIBed It SHfr |prH>4p^
tteTMion M
HrnTMAiitp,,iA*»»po tiL .jjUr
tom# M V«m MWW*»
WM «y|B|i It ^ui#s# ,tMt4 Ol
tha boQii *l*t 111* SM
read tM fiwiiK Jw >«l»r*
protraiti BctreahaMol* vere
serred 0it Sosteas at it* close
of the afternoon.
FOB SAIiE: 100 large bales of
wheat and oat straw. 11.00
per bale. Also sereral bales
leapedeza, |1.60 per bale,
W.l
Mr, omi Mrs. J. ^
Spot^^f On !
Anrtlwrsdry • ,
. Mr. and Mrs. J. %4]^nliofr
were boqtrtk W»7
nor” gtrtt br;ti^: l^Sdrea ft
the home of Mr; IN-
ooln Sp^hour oni^^lliin^, 8«^
tembcr lit to cMM^tU Uif.Spri^
hours' gfll^ hanlrar^
ary. D!dn« iras serred at the
noon hoir at a beautifully ap
pointed table in keeping with the
golden note. Yellow roses were
used for the centerpiece, the
place cards were sugg-jstlTe of
the'occasion, and about the ihomo
were arrangements of goWenrod.
Those present for the dinner
besides the honored couple were
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Spelnhonr,
of Elkin; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Spainhour, of Hlckiory: Mr. and
Mrs. W. J. Bason and son Billy
Bason, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
Spainhour and two children,
Mary and Jimmy; and
Mr. Roy Spalnhour, who present
ed their parents with a hand
some purse of money.
After the dinner the grriup
F. Rash, Cycle, N. C.
It-pd i
\ went to the home of the Senior
FOR SAIiE: One good nsed Un
derwood Typewriter. Better
Homes Furniture Co. It
SPECIAL 0\ PLANOS: We have
a splendid lot of used upright
Pianos; in good condition.
Priced to move quick. Wilkes
Furniture Exchange, Tenth
Street. 10-10-2t
i Spalnhours, where they were at
home to a number of their
friends, who called during the
aftemodn to offer thrfr congratu
lations and best wishes. The call;
ers were served the wedding cake
with Russian tea.
FOR SALE: One Guitar; nearly
new. Rhodee-Day Furniture
Co.
It
FOR SALE: Team logging hors
es, with or without harness, 7
and 8 years old; work any
where, at a bargain. Ralph
Wright, Route S, North Wll-
kesboro, N. C. 10-7-pd
FOR SALE: .About seventeen
bushels of Rye. Would be good
for seed. See D. W. Miller,
near the Wilkee Hosiery Mills,
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
10-7-tf
FOR SALE: A pair of good rab
bit dogs, three years old. See
C. F. Walker after 4 p. m. at
Oakwoods.
FOR S.ALE: 1 mule, black fe
male, weighs 900 to 1000 lbs.
Good working condition. Rea
son for selling, not able to
work mule. I. J. Lovette, Sr.,
Moravian Falls. N. C. It-pd
DRY WOOD for stove or heatw,
large truck load $10; all kinds
of good hay, lespedeza, red top
and timothy, large bale $2.
Merrymont Farm, Dave Hall,
Wilkesboro. 10-10-2t-pd
FOR SALE: 6 room house,
practically new, with hall and
bath. 4-room house,- running
water on porch. 5-room house,
" running water In kitoben. • 8-
room house, not completed.
Can get 4, 5. 6 or 8 acres with
each house. 1 1-2 mile from
city limits on 421. P. tl. Bll-
llngs. Route 2, Wilkesboro, N.
C. 10-14-6t-pd
FOR SALE: SawmUl, good CO»-
dltlon; 2 50,000 feet timber,
with or without land; 2 horses,
6 years old, weight 1400 lbs.:
10-year-old mule. Can furnish
hay and feed tor horses while
getting out timber. Moravian
Falls township on Brushy
Mountains. P. U. Billings. Wll-
koeboro Route 2. 10-14-6t-pd
400,000 FEirr or more Tim
ber, 4 20 acres land, about half
in cultivation, about ten miles
from Statesville: three sots of
buildings, dwellings all paint
ed and have lights: land can
all be worked with machinery.
Price $85. per acre. Contact
W. C. Taylor, Rl. 2. Saliabun’.
N C 10-7-2t
SPECIAL:
8 X 10 pictures of
Farmers’
Day events now on
sale. Get
yours now, Harvel’s
Studio.
It
» WA_bLT££
WANTED TO BET Locust Posts,
sawed, spilt or round. If you
have anything to offer contact
C. V. Henkel, Jr., StatesvlUe,
N. C. 10-17-4t
Social Citkote
oi «i6 '"Ynilai*-
Boro chnrdh we bmM^
ing oB'mMdw M foUoera;
Circle jpa tt Mrs. Everett
.^Mder, i. at.
, Ctocl# i|k a Miss MeUe
Hendiaii f idhi jk m.
Mrs. P. K.
W-
, Mrs. Presley
idden
dtlo. Are*. Hft .r«0«SYad JHa ^
o)twse in July *nd ia vow **•
WIUCESBOR9|#ht. C
*9
Ktihi, James Creedmoore. X- '
Out of toira gBeets >wwe Mrs.
■odkted in 4>nsinsM Arttb hli hr ^lolA «bropd^ fWrt^llaa
tber ta Qte^ Wilkes ^pleiQMii 'iSrii' Do^ Hlgglna;.;^iuL
in iWtlkesbora. ...i BOggtos of WliutoD-Sals^
r" '■-* t » and MfS^Jaasa Oresdntooro
Phillips-Fletcher
Vows ^lemnized
W.ANTED: Stenographer, Collec
tor, Bookkeeper, Salesman.
Reply In own handwriting. Ad
dress Box 426, North Wilkes
boro. N. C. 10-10-21
W.ANTED: To buy aU kinds of
logs; eight feet, and up, in
length. Delivered to our n.ill
on 421, near Moore Grocery
Co. J. W. Nichols. 10-14-41-p
WANTED: Dried Apple*—
in any quantity.^ Highest
market cash price paid.
Tal J. Pearson Grocery.
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
lO-24-lOt
FOR SALE: latematlonal Cater-1
pillar Tractor with blade. Good
for excavating, ditching and
road work. See Robert Hol
land. 10-7-4t-pd
W.ANTED: Good body man. Now
oipea at new location near
Parkway Bus Oo. garage.
Parker and Foster, all kinds
body and paint work. 10-10-pd
FOB SALE: A good horse and a
one-horse wagon. Also a good
milk cow. See M. W. Snider,
3 1-2 miles west North Wll-
kestx>ro on Highway 421.
10-7-3t-pd
FOR S.ALE: 4 Sets of Booths to
seat 4 people, 1 Coffee urn,
1 Steam Table, 1 Bread warm
er. Call at Beeche’s Cafe.
10-7-2t-pd
FOB SALE: House and lot on
Highway 18, nine miles from
North Wilkesboro: also a Rip
Rap pointer bird dog, three-
years-old, well trained. Fred
M. Phillips, Boomer, N. C.
10-10-4t
FOR SALE: Esed girl’s Bicycle,
In good condition; new paint.
Alma Sloop, 618 B Street.
North Wllkeaboro. It-pd
fob SALE: 4-irfece Bedroom
Suite; good condition. Miss
Beatrice Triplett, Purlear, N.
C. lO-7-.pd
P.
FOB SALE: 18 1-2 acres land;
1 mile of Rock Creek church,
3-room house under repair,
45,000 ft. merchantable tlm-
i>er, 240 ft. road frontage,
good spring and branch on
place, on bus route. Priced
right. Richard L. Whitley,
North Wilkesboro, Route 2.
10-7-2t-pd
SALE: Stark’s Ddldoiis,
Ooldeu, and Roman Beauty aJ^■
plea. Paul Delp, Millers Creek,
K. 0> Talepbon* S8-F-13.
, 10-17-4t-pd
WANT*© TO BET: Any
ber good used bicycles
tricycles. Motor Market,
and
Ins.
8-8-tl
WANTED: I have been head
quarters for Sun Dried Apples
for more than quarter century.
See me before selling. Also
want Poultry, Eggs and But
ter. E. E. Ellar. 10-14-41
_ FOR RENT
FOR RENT: Basement 50 x 100;
cement floor; under Reins
Meat Market. Charlie Johnson.
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
10-10-pd
a*M**a«a*MaiM%Mi«aaaMa%M%Ma
• Lost and Foimd
LOST: Two black and white
spotted male pigs In Wood-
lawn Thursday night. Reward
for return to Charlie Redman,
“Town Cleaners."
• MiseeBaneous
WOOD SAWING: We wUl saw
your wood, any quantity, any
where. Raymond Minton,
Phone 711-J. It-pd
HOME-OWNERS, let «B paint
yonr home. (Rinreh A Kaever,
eontractOTB. Writ* Roea
Church, Pnriear, N. C. 10-10-p
EXPERT PAINTINO and Paper
Hanging—^Estimates furnished
cheerfully, all work guaran
teed. See or Call J. V. BUUnga,
Phone 469-M. 10-24-8t-pd
$i|ipeilY^M.6;^A.
f iR
ride ,
dienn Wifitfers
The wedding of Miss Rntli
Elisabeth Bidden, daughter of
Mr. and Hr*. Ctonneey C. Bid
den, of (North WllkePboro, and
Glenn Samn^ WintMk, eon of
Mr. G. Bam Winters, of North
Wllkenboro, and the late Charley
Belle Huitt Winters, took place
Saturday, October fifth, at five
o'clock in the afteiuoon at the
First Baptist chnrch. Dr. David
E|. Browning, pastor of the
bride, and Rev. Watt M. Cooper,
pastor • of 'the groom, were the
officiating ministers, using the
double ring ceremony.
The front of the church was
banked with white pine and
ferns Interspersed with floor bas
kets of white gladioli, and light
ed by white candles in branched
standards forming a pyramid ef
fect. Special perws were marked
with clusters of the white flow
ers, caught with white satin rib
bon, while in the windows gleam
ed white candles embedded in
greenery.
Prior to the ceremony hour a
program of nuptial music was
rendered by Miss Lois Scroggs,
organist, and -Miss Dot Gabriel,
soloist. Miss Scroggs In prelude
played ‘'Air” (Bach), “Ro
mance” (Wheeldon) and “On
Wings of Song” (Mendelssohn),
after which Miss Gabriel sang
“Because" (d’Hardlot), and
"Always” (Berlin). During the
ceremony Miss Scroggs sounded
muted notes of “Ave Marie”
(Each) and at the close Miss
Gabriel sang the marriage hymn
“O Perfect Love.” The tradition
al wedding marches were used
for the processional and reces
sional.
The bride was given in mar
riage by her father and attended
by threo of ber sisters. Misses
Blanche and Mabel Bidden as
maids of honor, and Sue Bidden
as flower girl. Gene Winters,
brother of the groom, served as
ring bearer. Best man for the
groom was his brother, Charles
Winters, and the ushers were
L. E. Pickens. Claremont; J, T.
Sldden, of Winston-Salem; Ed
ward Pendry, of Hays; and Clar
ence D. Wiles, of North Wilkes
boro.
Wedding gown for the bride
was of white satin fashioned
with fitted bodice, long puffed
sleeves ending in points over the
hand, and net, over a full skirt,
which extended into a long train.
At the waist was a scalloped
peplum which was repeated in
the edging of the net yoke. Her
fingertip veil of net was caught
with sprays of orange blossoms,
and she carried a white prayer
book decked with a white orchid.
Her only ornament was a double
strand of pearls, a gift of the
groom.
The maids bt honor W'ore iden
tical dresses of pink taffeta de
signed with sweetheart neckline,
close fitting bodice, short puff
ed sleevee, and net over a very
full skirt. They had pink flowers
in their hair, and carried nose
gays of pink roses showered with
blue delphinium. The flower girl
was dressed In white dotted
Swiss, which was made similar
to that of the maids of honor,
and she had a white basket fill
ed with rose petals.
The ring bearer, dressed in a
white gabardine suit, carried the
ring on a white satin pillow.
Mrs. Sidden, mother of the
bride, was dressed in a navy blue
pinned striped suit, black ac
cessories, and her flowers were
a corsage of red roses and baby
breath. Mrs. O. Sam Winters
wore a black bolejo crepe dress,
with aqua trim, black accessor
ies, and a corsage of pink roses
and baby breath.
Immediately following the
ceremony_ the bride’s parents en
tertained at an Informal recep
tion at their home on Trogdon
Street for members of the bridal
party, relatives, and out of town
guests. Later in the evening the
bridal couple left for a wed
ding to Virginia, and upon their
return will be at home tempor
arily at the Winters home on
Ninth Street. For traveling the
bride changed to a light brown
wool suit, with white pin stripe.
Her accessories were dark brown,
and she pinned at her shoulder
the orchid from her prayer book.
The bride, a graduate of the
North Wllkeaboro high school,
attended the Twin-City College
of Commerce in 'V^nston-Balem,
and now holds a position with
the American Furniture Com
pany In North Wilkesboro. The
groom, graduated from the high
school in Lanrlnh'i^rg and served
two years la the n*v}%. f6ax$*ea.
month* of which **1 In th« P»*
^ 'Misa Ines Phillip* became the
.bride of Mr. WTllh^ Pletohsr,
both, of Purlear, at the hmne of
Ui* groom, Friday. Rev. Veriion
ESl^ .offlciatedibefore an a»-
rangetsent of vAite pinea, eafr
delebra and whita iorge^muM^
using tbs doulbls ring esrsmony
Only the dose relatives of -the
bride and grown were present
The bride wore a wodlen ice
blue dree* with ellver se}uln.
trimminga and black accessoriea
wme need. Her shoulder bon*
qnet wga American Beauty Rose
bud*. M'laa PbUlipB Is ^e second
daughter of Mr. and Ifn. Clause
'Phillips and WlUlam Fletcher 9
the mb of the late Mr. and Mri
William E. Fletcher, and
nephew of Wlnflild S. Fletcher.
After a diort wedding trip
through the Weetem part of the
stata and Virginia the conple
will make their home at Pur-
iear.
and. danghters, Jahe and Nancy,
the tfiongnfhmMi of her giMiy
trlenda.
Mesdamei.
Hauser and
Give Tea Thurscfciy
A daligbtfhl *0*1*1 affair' ef
th*, f**k ■ the •*pom»4ad-
' M*. tiW bye Mai^ Gny LU
SH'
Mrs. M. F. Brown is
Feted On Birthdqy
To honor Mrs. M. F. Brown on
her 86 th birthday her only
daughter, Mrs. J. W. Neel, en
tertained at a come and sit tea,
on the last day of September.
Those present were relatives and
close friends. The occasion was
a complete surprise to Mrs.
Brown, who was visiting in the
home of Mrs. I. M. Myers, of
North Wilkesboro, and return
ed home after all the gueats had
arrived and were singing Happy
Birthday when she entered the
room.
The home was decorated
throughout with a profusion of
Pall flowers some of which were
presents for the honoree. The
dining room table was covered
with a cream lace cloth over yel
low. A white cake with yellow
candles was placed at one end
while at the other was a crystal
bowl with yellow chrysanthe
mums.
After a social hour together
the guests were served Ice
cream and angel food cake by
three granddaughters, Miss Nan
cy Brown, Mrs. Arthur Lowe and
lard, Mii' Sprogp ^nier
and their nlie*; |frs. Paul flarr
rel, Jr„ at Jhs linird hog|* qn
C Btre*t Tbignday aftemooi^ A
large number pf friends ca|lsd
in groups between tbs hours of
t:80‘tb 6:00 $o enjoy the grao-
iohg hospttaliti' of the hostesses.
The gufwts -Ferre greeted at the
door by Mrs. J. 8. Deane, Mrs. J.
M. Crawford and Mias Ruby
Blackburn alternated In pouring
tea at the dining table, and
those assisting In the serving
were Mrs. T. G. McLaughlin, Mrs.
W. P. Absher, Mrs. C. C. Paw,
Sr., Miss Charlotte Harvel and
Mrs. Maurice Walsh. Mrs. Roy
Forehand directed guests to the
living room where they were
seated tor the refreshments. As
sisting the hostesses here were
Mrs. William iCarrington, Mrs.
Melvin Stahl, and Miss tols
Scroggs, sister of Mrs. Lillard
and Mrs. Hanser.
The dining table, spread with
a Maderia cloth, was centered
with a bowl of talisman roses a-
bout which yellow candlee gleam
ed. Mixed fall blossoms were
used about the borne.
ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE
Having qualified as administra
tor of the estate of Mary V. Se-
R-aves, late of Wilkes county, N.
C., this Is to notify ell persons
toving claims against said estate
to present them to the under
signed, whose address is Roaring
River, N. C., duly verified, on or
before the 6th day of September,
1947, or this notice wUl be plead
in bar of their right to recover.
All persons indebted to said es
tate WW please make immediate
settlement
•niiB 6th day of September, 1946.
R. G SEGRAVES,
Administrator of the estate of
Mary V. Segravei, dec'd. 10-21M
S
'4
.
—3
PAYNE CLO.
North Wilkesboro, N. C.
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