Entertainments Clob Meetings Ea(«|taeaU Vtddlip Etc. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Brandon left Friday by automobile for McConnells ville, S. C. where they will visit for a week. „• r . „ ' The trip, according to Mr. Bran don, will be made on hard surfaced roads except one of the 365 miles. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Mobley And family of Portsmouth, Va. are visit ing Mr. Mobley's mother, Mrs. Eli Gurganus and Mr. Gurganus. Friends of Mr. Noah Thomas Tice will be glad to hear that he is get ting along very well following the serious operation that he underwent Saturday night for appendicitis at a Washington hospital. He came very near having peritonitis and was crit ically ill for several hours. Rev. and Mrs. C. T. Plybon and family of Washington, N. C. spent Thursday as guests of Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Shirley at their home on Main street. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ruffin and chil dren, of TarboW visited Mrs. Ruffln's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Britt Sunday. Miss Mary Pritchard, of Virginia Beach, accompanied by Mrs. Robert Norman, of Norfolk, motored to Wil liamston Monday, where they are vis aing Miss Pritchard's sister, Mrs. K. P. Lindsley, and Mr. Lindsley. Earl, the 12-year-old son of Mr. J. D. Bond, fell through a hole in the upper story of a tobacco pack house Monday and broke his leg just above his ankle. Misses Laura Norton, Alice Dent, and Biddie Has sell, Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler Martin, Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Watts Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Anderson, JCarl and Bruce Wynne, Herbert Peel, Raymond McKenzie, Bill Carstarphen, Frank Carstarphen, Lyman Britt, James Griffin and R. L. Coburn at tended the dance at Bayview Wed nesday night. t- _____ Mrs. T. F. Harrison and Eva and Thad, jr., Miss Esther Harrison, Mrs. Myrtle Brown and Myrtle Woolard •pent Thursday in Wilson. Elder B. S. Cowing, of Bear Grass, was a business visitor on the streets yesterday. W. G. Peel is spending a few days at Virginia Beach. BITES-STINGS Apply w«t taking soda or bouMboM ammonia, foil owed by VISKS OMT tT MUHmm Jmrm U—d Y.mrh LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOB TAX DEED To Lyon and Lanier, their heirs, as signs, and to all other persona in terested : You will take notice that I purchased at a tax sale held at the courthouse dooi of Martin County on Monday, Nove.nber 2, 1926, for the taxes due and unpaid for the year 1924, on 160 acres of land in Williams Township, known as the Bennett Gray land, which was listed by Lyon and Lanier. If the certificate for the purchase of tame is not redeemed within one year from the date of purchase, then 1 shall demand a deed for same, ac cording tc the terms specified in said rale. This July 31, 1926. A3 4tw GEO. S. WILLIAMS. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the authori ty contained in that certain deed of trust executed to the undersigned trus tee on the 24h day of April, 1928, by J Anna Biggs, and of record in the public registry of Martin County in book S-l, at page 91, said deed of trust having been given to secure a certain note of even date and tenor therewith, and the stipulations con tained in said deed of trust not hav ing keen complied with and at the re quest of the parties interested the undersigned trustee will on Monday, the 6th day of September, 1926, at 12 o'clock m., in front of the courthouse deer in the town of Williamston, N. C., offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the fol lowing described zeal estate: A house and lot in the town of Williamston, N. C., on the north side of the Williamston and Hamilton road adjoining the lands of Fate Cherry on the northwest, the Williamston and Hamilton road on the southwest; E. P. Bunch on the southeast, and being the premises conveyed to Daniel Biggs and wife, J. Anna Biggs, by deed from Paul Ballard and wife, Ella C. Ballard, on the 9th day of August, 19*1, and of record in the public reg istry of Martin County in book J-t, at pag* 292. This the Sid day of August, 1926. WHEELER MARTIN, a 6 4tw j Trustee. Society & Personals Mrs. ELBERT S. PEEL, Editor Misses Sylvia and Jenny Levy of Tarboro, and Ida Margolis, of Golds boro, who have been visiting Miss Laura Orleans, left for their respect ive homes today. Miss Laura accom panied Miss Margolis to Goldsboro to visit her for a week. Mrs. John D. Biggs, who has been visiting her mother and other rela tives in Scotland Neck, will return to morrow. Miss Edith Ramie left today for her home at Richmond, after visiting Mrs. N. j. Green. Miss Edith Staliings will leave next week for Raleigh, where she will spend her vacation. Miss Nelle Booker, of Cherryville, and George Booker, of Winston-Sal em are visiting their brother, Mr. W. H. Booker, and Mrs. Booker. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hughes left yesterday for Asheville, where they will spend a few days before return ing to their home at Providence, R. I. Mrs. Arthur White will return Mon day from Washington, where she has been visiting since she left the Washington Hospital. E. N. Lewis, maintenance supervis or of the State Highway Commission, of Scotland Neck, visited Mr. W. A. Cherry yesterday. Messrs. Clayton Moore Bog Slade, jr., H. M. Burras, C. D. Carstarphen, k. B. Crawford, and R. A. Pope at tended the county commissioners and board of education meetings in More head City Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Harrison and children, Beck, Katherine Taylor and Blanche Mrs. Blanche Anderson, Mrs. P. H. Brown, and Miss Thelma Brown, Mrs. G. H. Harrison, Miss Velma Har lison, and George Harrison, jr., left today for Virginia Beach, where they will spend some time. Mr. J. G. Staton, accompanied by Mrs. A. R. Punning and Mrs. J. S. Rhodes, drove to Wrightsville Beach Tuesday and returned Wednesday with Mrs. Staton and her brother, Com. Gilbert Chase, who have been, spending some time at the beach. Mrs. Sam Godard and children, of Jamesville, were in town Wednesday. W. C. Manning made a business tiip to Suffolk yesterday. Titus Critcher left Thursday for Virginia Beach to spend the week end with his family. Good . FARMS For Sale on Easy Terms Farm No. 1 612 acre# of valuable land. 35 acres cleared. 2 residences. 1,260,000 feet good mill timber. Mail at the gate. Good school, saw and grist mill and church near by. 6 miles from rail road station. Price, S3O per acre. Farm No. 2 65 acres of land; 85 cleared; two story house; good packhouse; two to bacco bams and 1 tenant house. Land in good condition, on highway No. 90. Farm No. 3 66 acres; 40 cleared; 6-room house; two-story pack house; new; good barns shelters and stables; 2 new tobacco barns. On highway No. 90. Farm No. 4 —- 200 acres; 100 in cultivation; two story residence; 3 tenant houses; 5 tobacco bargs; two-story pack house; sheds,.stables and barns. NrfC t Farm No. 5 316.06 acres; 176 cleared; 2 tenant houses; 2 tobacco barns. This farm is so good and so cheap that any body can own it if they are any good at all. It is only a mile from good high School and transportation. Every acre is good for corn, cotton, peanut* and tobacco. All these farms can be bought on easy terms. I have purchasers for two small farms. W. C. Manning Williamson, N. C. PHONE Anything for This Department T» 46 Jack Riddick, of Scotland Neck, made a business trip here yesterday. While here he was the guest of Ben Barn hill. Rev C. T. Plybon, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Washington, with Mrs. Plybon and family, spent last Thursday as guests of Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Shirley at their home on Main Street Dickeys Visiting at Tate Springs, Tenn. , . A card from Rev. C. H. Dickey to the Enterprise force yesterday states his family is having a splendid vacation. They were at Tate Springs Tenn., at the time the card was mailed. They have been away for about two weeks. Miss Mary Harrison Celebrates Birthday Miss Mary Harrison, who lives near here, celebrated yesterday one of her best birthdays. A large number of the young people of the town as well a.s Miss Harrison's neighbors enjoyed the evening. During the course of the evening watermelons, cantaloupes, sandwiches, and lemonade were serv ed. Born to Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Rober son, a son, August 8, Otis Clifton. Frozen fruit salad at Pope's Cafe. CLEAN BAGS WANTED: WE WILL allow 6c pound on your subscrip tion for clean rags—Enterprise Pub. company, Williamston, N. C. LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE To Polly Williams, her heirs or her assigns and to any other persons claiming under, through or by her, you will take notice that I purchased one acre of Don Williams land listed in Bear Grass township by Polly Williams, in the year 1924, at a tax sale for taxes due on said land, on the 2nd day of November, 1926. Unless the same is redeemed as provided by law, on or before the 2nd ctay of November 1926, 1 shall demand a deed for said land. This 31st day of July 1926. 8-6-4 M. D. TAYLOR. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a certain collateral ncte executed by J. G. Godard to the undersigned, which said note was giv en on the 13th day of May, 1926, and bears interest at six per cent, default having been made in the payment of fuid note and the terms of same not having been complied with, the under signed will, on Tuesday, the 31st day of August, 1926, in front of the court house door of Martin County in the town of Williamston, N. C., offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the folio ed property, to wit: ./: Fifteen shares of the capital stock of the Farmers & Merchants Bank, Williamston, N. C., represented by certificate Number 246. This the 30th day of July, 1926. JOHN S. JENKINS t CO. A3 3tw Mortgagee. Hugh G. Horton, attorney. 666 it a prescription for MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER. DENGUE OR BILIOUS FEVER It Kill* the Germs DO YOU SHAVE?. A GENUINE AUTO STROP RAZOR WITH STROP IN ATTRACTIVE CASE AS •SHOWN BELOW jfl I^ ABSOLUTELY FREE WITH A YEAR'S aubscription to this paper and a 3 yeara' aubacrip tion to the Southern Ruraliat at the apeciai club price below. We believe the value of thia offer ia apparent to all our readera, and consider it the moat attractive offer we have ever made. Uae cou pon below. Enterprise Publishing Co, Wiliiamston, N. C I am enclosing 12 'for which enter my subscription for one year to your paper and 3 years to the Southern Ruraliat, mailing me, without charge, an auto atrop rax or In case together with strop. i• ' ' Name Town Route Bute - ——— jt THE ENTERPRISE—-WILLIAMSTON. N. C Phenomenal Success of Harrison Oil Co. 'A stranger in town recently asked the question, "Who is the Harrison Oil Co., and where are they from?" A Williamston citizen said they are from nowhere but here; they are just home folks? they are George and Gus Harrison, just two gooJ hard-working brothers who were able to see ahead far enough to know that the demand for gas and oil wfes a coming thing. Three years ago they established a wholesale gas and oil business, putting one truck on the road. Their business grew and at the end of the first year they had built up such a large busi ness that it required a second truck. They built the Texaco Filling Sta tion, fronting the Coast Line railroad station. Their retail business grew so rapidly that they purchased the Highway Filling Station adjoining, and have since merged the two into the Highway Service Station. Early this year they constructed, on the corner of Main and Washing ton Streets, the Central Service Sta have also established a nice service tion which is one of the most beau- LEGAL NOTICES^ I NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE Default having been made in pay ment secured by that certain deed of trust to me as trustee for the Jeffer son Standard Life Insurance Co. by J. L. Hassell and wife, Mary Hassell, oti the 15th day of November, 1922, and recorded in the office of the reg isterjgsf deeds for .Martin County, Nora Carolina, in book K.-2, page 442, 1 will, under and by virtue of the power of sale vested in me by said deed of trust, and at the request of the cestui que trust, and for the pur pose of discharging the debt secured by said deed of trust, proceed to sell to the highest bidder, for cash, at tfie courthouse door, m Williamston, Martin County, North Carolina, at 12 o'clock m., on Saturday, August 28th, 1926, the following described land, to wit: Situate on the west side of Main Street in the town of Williamston, N. C\, beginning at the C. B. Hassell WEAK, JtESTLESS Tmmmm Lady Had So Little Strength She "Couldn't Get Arwi." Took Cardai With Benefit. Otauwajr. Tenn.—"l want able lo do any of lay work, and it seem ed like Ihsd SO little strength I Just couldntget around," says Mrs. Prank Murphy, who lives near here. "My mother knew of the good Cardui .could do, eo ahe told me to MI aent and got a bottle, and like all the time I grew ben Buffering with jpaina lee all the time, and Cardui helped this wonderfully. I needed • tonic lor female trouble, and Car dui just fitted the need. I waa awful ly raetleea and could not Bleep at night, but after taking two bottles of Cardui I could Bleep like a top*. I got along all right, and I know it was dae to Cardui. I can certainly recommend it to women suffering from woman's troubleh. "My prsaent health is just fine." Thousands of women have written to tell bow Cardui relieved them of pain and suffering, and helped them to improve in health and strength. Cardui is perfectly harmless, be ing an extract of mud-acting herbs, and oontains no dangerous drugs or harmfiil ingredient*. Sold everywhere, NC-IU resßßaaJ tiful as well as most complete filling stations in this end of th« State.Jfhey station in Robersonville, known as the Robersonville Oil Co., which does a good business. They also have a 22,000 gallon storage tank at Kober- where they wholesale gas and oil furnishing Hassells, Gold Point, Parmele, Leens, and Stokes,j from their tank wagon. Their two trucks are constantly. busy at Williamston, supplying the: trade at Hamliton, Everetts Bear | Grass, Jamesville, and many* other' intermediate points. They have large ! tanks on the river where the£ are supplied by tank steamers. Gus and George declare their suc cess came from the superior prod ucts they handle, claiming the Texas J gas and oil lead them all, but every body that knows those fellows knows j that they are workers and that at j least a fair proportion of their suc cess came from hard work and fair dealing—just two good wholesome business men. • LEGAL NOTICES heirs home place east corner on Main j Street; running thence an east course, ulong Main Street 83 feet to the' Peoples Bank Corner; thence north 32 J degrees west along the Peoples Bank line 100 feet to their northewesterly corner! thence N. 58 east 66 feet par allel with Main Street to J. S. Peel's] line; thence N. 32 W. along J. S. Peel's line 107 feet to F. U. Barnes' corner; thence S. 58 W. along F. U. Barnes' line 149 feet to the C. B. Hassell yard fence; thence south a bout 32 east along said C. B. Has sell heirs line 207 feet to the begin ning, excepting from this conveyance a right of way in the rear of the SECOND HANI) PEANUT BAOS FOR SALE Patched and in good condition, for prompting delivery. 10c each, cash. Apply CLARK PEANUT COMPANY jylU 8t Plymouth, N. C. CRUSHED BARLEY MALT One Hundred I'nuiuU s3.:>o Hop Flavored Malt Syrup, per dozen cam* 7-- AMERICAN MALT CO. Albemarle, North Carolina. jls-20 H. P. FOXHALL- JOE V. MO YE JULE JAMES Sell Your Tobacco With i , * __ k Foxhall, Moye & James CLARK WAREHOUSE • • jr ——- TARBORO, N. C. We Always Get You the ? High Dollar ' . * • The Tarboro market opens this season on Tuesday, September 7th, and we solicit your patronage and ssure you that every pile sold on our floor will be carried to the top-notch price. The Tarboro market has buyers from every company this sea son and has redrying facilities which will enable us to take care of our customers as well or better than any market in the State. -—• L - 1 I "7 * "" ♦ Mr. Frank Batts, of Macclesfield, will be with us as floor man ager and will assist us in looking after the interest of all our cus tomers. " . -j • • BRING US YOUR FIRST LOAD AND WE WILL SELL YOUR ENTIRE CROP PRICES AND SERVICE—OUR MOTTO i * * •' Foxhall, Moye & James TARBORO NORTH CAROLINA LEGAL NOTICES Peoples Bank 30 feet lO in. wide and 20 feet deep, and being a part of the land devised in the will of William Slade to J. L. and Mary Hassell, and being the three brick stores on Main Street and land adjacent thereto, and PEN DEWS YELLOW FRONT STORES LOOK FOR THK YELLOW FRONTS The Thrift Road Is Paved With Values Like These N. B. C. Vanilla Snaps, pkg 4c Van Camp's Evaporated Milk, tall can 10c Libhy's Potted Meat, 6 cans , 25c Gosman's Ginger Ale, bottle 13c WONDER and PALACE FLOUR - A Product North Carolina Can be Proud of 12 lb. bag 24 lb. bate 48 lb. bag 59c SUS $2.24 Herring Roe, Black Flag No. 1 can 12 l-2c 1-2 pint can 23c Libby's or Del Monte Fruit Salad, Large No. 2 can - 47c Armours Grape Matches, Globe Juice, 1-2 pint .. 22c Brand, 12 boxes 15c Morton's lodized Salt, pkg 11c Ball Bros. LOBSTER FRUIT JARS M STAR BRA ™ , „ MASON IDEAL No " 14 ran No ' 12 can HOc do/.. Pints .. don. 95c 31c 57c 90c do/.. Quarts doz. 91.10 1 91.20 d,,/.. 1-2 „al. d»z.sl.r,o p g AC Q N Our Pride Bread Hickory Smoked Kindlran (Jiant 21-ounce (Quality Loaf I*2 lb. carton 1-lb. carton Squire's Prepared Mustard, bottle 10c 1). P. Coffee, 'the worldfa best drink,' lb. 47c Land o'Lakes Sweet Cream Butter, lbj*49c Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Received Daily LEGAL NOTICES which were occupied by J. L. Hassell ft Co., and Saunders A Fowden. This the 24th day of July, 1926. JULIAN PRICE, Trustee. Brooks. Parker & Smith. 4l.ixio.gy.*, Greensboro, N. CT" jy 27 4tw