Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 11, 1933, edition 1 / Page 3
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Tuesday, July 11, 1933 I £££££ 111 Society & personals [ tiSH. ( Wedding* I I T» f g Mg T|[rZr:.. • | Mr*. BLBXRT 8. PKKL, Edhw | 45 mBBBBBBBBS&BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBEBSBSsSSS&SSSSm Return From New York Irving Margolis returned home to day after spending several weeks in New York visiting relatives. At More head City Mr. and Mrs. James Griffin, Miss Thelma Harrell, and Herbert Peel spent Sunday at Morehead City. In Norfolk This Week Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weaver ara in Norfolk this week visiting friends and relatives. At Atlantic Beach Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Watts, jr., and sons, Jimmie and John, spent Sunday at Atlantic Beach. Here Yesterday 1 | Mr. J. D. Wynn, of Bear Grass, was here yesterday. DR. VIRGIL H. NEWBORN - Optometrist Next Viiita: Bethel, N. C. t at Blount Hotel, Mon day. July 17, 1933. Kobersonville, N. C., at Fulmer's | Drug Store, Tuesday, July 18, 1933. Williamston, N. C. t at Peele's Jew-! elry Store, Wednesday, July 19, 1933.' Plymouth, N. C., at O'Henry Drug ! Store, Thursday, July 20, 1933. 1 Eyea Examined - Glasses Fitted - At Tarboro Every Friday and Saturday ' I York's I Electrical Service for ELECTRICAL SERVICE on RADIO, MOTORS, and ELECTRICAL I APPLIANCES PHONE 213-W |HJj^ork| Straight on One Unchanging Course Through the Changing Conditions of Fifty-Nine Years A RECORD OF SERVICE AND PROTECTION ONE FACT alone proves the strength and good manage ment of this bank: the fact that it has held steadily year after year to one unchanging course of safety in spite of all the changes that have taken place in these years. This has not been due to superior wisdom upon the part of any one in this bank. We have simply been guided by certain fixed principles of sound banking from which we have never devi ated. « ? This is the whole story back of the solid position of this bank today. But it is a story of service and protection; it is a story of depositors who trusted us and found that their trust was justified. We do not speak of these things in a boastful spirit, but rather in a thankful spirit. We thank our depositors for their splendid loyalty and cooperation. We thank all of our friends for the confidence placed in us. The experiences of the past year, in particular, have given every officer and employee a new feeling of responsibility. More than ever, we wish to make the services of this bank an aid to the financial success and security of every depositor. With this thought, we extend to you our best wishes for the future. ■ ■ ■ ' Branch Banking —and Trust Co. "The Safe Executor" ESTABLISHED 1874 Wilson Plymouth Selma Williamston Kinston Warsaw Goldsboro New Bern Fayetteville Elm City Sound Banking^And Trust Ser 1 i iiiHiNi;,!ii:iiii i in, ; ii. Returns From Washington Mrs. Jim Leggett returned Sunday 1 after spending the • week-end in Washington with Mr. and Mrs. Goodie Gaskins. ' Returns From Mid-*West ' Mr. G. W. Hardison returned on Sunday from Ohio and Michigan, where he has been traveling for the past few months. Mr. Hardison says conditions are improving in the Middle West and business has im proved 100 per cent in the past year. ♦ Leaves for West Virginia Mr. Ernest Etheridge left this week for Bluefield, W. Va., where he will spend several days visiting. In Norfolk, Va. Misses Sophie Little, Mary Car starphen, Josephine Harrison, Kath erine Hardison, Miriam Courtney, and Mesrs. Bill Herring, Charles (Rogers, Durant Keel, and Hallie ! James spent the week-end in Norfolk, Va. ! ■ . i ( In Town I ester day j Mr. Wesley Byrum, representative of the Albemarle Peanut Company, jof Edenton, was a business visitor here yesterday. m | Returns From Asheville Teddy Jackson returned last week| | from Ashville, after spending several day with his brother, Marion Jackson' .cashier of the„Consolidated Realtyj , Company. i ... . # Visiting in Washington Mrs. J. O. Bowen and Mrs. J. L. ; Robertson are visiting relatives in Washington and Greenville this week. In Norfolk Yesterday Messrs. W. C. Manning and Geo. W. Booker were in Suffolk and Nor folk yesterday attending to business matters. They were accompanied by Mesdames E. S. I'eel, Joel Muse, and F. M. Manning. Spend Week-End Here Miss Selma Ayers and J. R. Man ning, students in the welfare school at Chapel Hill, spent the week-end at home. Leaves for Raleigh Mr. Raymond McKenzie left yester day for Raleigh, where he will spend several days on business. Returns To Washington Little Miss Sally Baker Robertson, who has been visiting her cousin, Isabelle Anderson, here for several days, returned to her home in Wash ington Monday. Here Yesterday Professor E. O. Hickman, of Bear Grass, was here yesterday attending to business matters. Judge Peel 111 Mr. R. J. Peel, clerk of the Mar tin County Superior Court, is con fined to his bed this week, suffering with a leg ailment. • —- In Gastonia Last Week Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ward and chil dren visited Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lowie in Gastonia last week. While away Mr. Ward attended a reunion of the members of the Wildcat Di vision in Winston-Salem and a State meeting of the rural letter carriers in Charlotte. They were accompanied home Saturday by Mrs. Lowie, who will visit here for several days. Herg Yesterday Messrs. Ben and Charles T. Rob erson, of Griffins, were business vis itors here yesterday afternoon. In Town Monday Messrs. Ben Ward and L. T. Hol liday, of Bear Grass Township, were here yesterday. Catawba County Farm Has Clover Nine Feet in Height The Catawba County Home farm has three acres of sweet clover that measures nine feet in height. I THE ENTERPRISE TOBACCO IN MID BELT SUFFERING Much of Crop in Vance Is Ripening Prematurely; Rain Is Needed I Henderson.—Tobacco in this section, i is still suffering from the want of tnois-| ,ture and much of it is coming into a premature ripening stage in a sorry! I' state of quality, according to observ ers of the growing crop. There are exceptions to this condition in locali-j | ties Where rains were more abundant., j The crop is in much better shape there. | Practically no rain has fallen during I the past week anywhere in the coun-: Jty. The temperatures have been low 1 jand the weather cool, particularly at, j night. While hot nights are conducive to tobacco maturity, these have been' ! lacking, but the milder weather has l had a tendency to offset to some ex-' I tent the drought, in that the crop has i not "burned" to the extent it other-J wise might have. Some portions of the northern area of the ounty have had rains within the! i two weeks, but otners have not 1 had a good soaking rain for four or ! five weeks. In the southeastern part of the county the crop is reported in perhaps the wosst condition, while most of the eastesn half of the county 1 has had some rain at times and is not suffering to the same extent as the 1 others. In a few instances farmers have ' been heard to say they expecteo to do 1 1 some curing by the middle of July. 11 but so far as has been heard none at 1 'all has been started in Vance County 1 jso far. The crop is not faf enough j advanced for that as yet. | J 1 his year s tobacco crop in Vance * , Coonty started off onder better than | hshal circumstances and the outlook!' 'was favorable around planting time and for several weeks thereafter, and! there were high hopes of a good yield. I But the outlook has changed material- I ly in many parts of the county in the jpast few weeks, and today the pros- i Ipects are nothing like so hopeful for I quality and quantity as they were even! 1 I a month ago. 1 lie dry weather is | expected to reduce the total yield here'i Ito a point below what was anticipat-'; led earlier in the season. BLALOCK NAMED JAID TO WALLACE i Says It Would Be 'Suicidal' 1 For Growers To Refuse , Reduction Plan - Raleigh.—Declaring it would be "ah solutely suicidal" for cotton producers'. I not to take advantage of the govern- : CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF Branch Banking &| Trust Company AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 30th, 1933 I RESOURCES LIABILITIES | Loans and discounts $1,462,710.58 Other stocks and bonds 170,277.94 Capital stock $ 400,000.00 || Banking house? and real estatfe 226,300.89 Surplus ' * 200,000.00 | Cash & due from banks $1,630,396.87 Ir .. ~ . c = United States bonds 2,587,643.47 Und.v.ded profits 41,231.98 | North Carolina Bonds 906,071.31 Reserves 76,433.23 g Marketable municipal Dividend payable July 1, 1933 8,000.00 H , B ° ndß 4l7 ' 07 " 3 Deposits 7,403,748.58 1 Loans secured by mar- r m k e t a b 1 e securities with cash values in H excess of the loans 728,937.40 6,270,124.38 _____ He $8,129,413.79 $8,129,413.79 ■ (TRUST DEPARTMENT ASSETS NOT INCLUDED) I *• V j * ' ' o | , intent's acreage reduction plan, U. Ben | ton Blalock, general manager of tie • ; North Carolina Cotton Growers Co operative Association, left here for ! Washington where he will serve as one of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace's five regional consultants on the cot ton acreage reduction campaign. "If the farmers do not cooperate jto the fullest extent in this plan to .help to save themselves from disas trous low prices this fall, the blame J for the castrophe will rest entirely 1 'upon their shoulders," warned Mr. Blalock who was appointed consultant |by the Secretary of Agriculture be- I cause of his knowledge of cotton. Mr. Blalock also urged farmers not to undertake to gouge the government ! that is striving so hard to save you ' from wreck and ruin by overestima , ting your yield per acre and in that manner obtaining a higher rental for your acres than you are entitled to."| j "Even though the necessry contracts are obtained throughout each cotton 1 producing state, the secretary still j has the right to reject any and all pro- 1 posals if he thinks the rental charge ur estimated production of any grower jis out of line with his proposal," Mr. j Blalock said. | Mr. Blalock, who has just returned | from a New Orleans meeting where! he contacted cotton producers from | all over the cotton belt, said he be- j lieved the acreage reduction campaign "will go over iti good shape in all the j cotton producing states;" | Mr. Blalock who spent sometime j in Washington helping to work out ! the acreage reduction plan, said the j goal of those in charge was to work out the best plan that could be offered to the cotton producerc throughout - the entire belt as a uniform plan.the object being to make it just as fair and equitable to all classes of producers East and West, as a uniform plan could be made." —• Field Day Exercises Are Planned At Six Stations Raleigh.—Thousands of North Carolina farmers are expected to at- I tend the annual field day exercises to be held this summer at tell six branch stations of the North Carolina Experi- 1 ment Station. The branch stations are owned by the state department of agriculture but the research work con- ! ducted on them is done in cooperation with State College and members of the , college research staff will attend each of the field day exercises. Dates for'the field meetings are as ' follows; Klackland station, Wenona, ! July 20; Tobacco Station, Oxford, Au gust 8; Upper Coastal Plain' station, Rocky Mount route, \ugast 10; Mown tain station, annanua, A'ugust 17; Piedmont s.ation, Statc>ville, '\iigust 24; and Coastal Plain Station, Willard, September 14. | NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE North Carolina, j Martin County. Whereas on Ist day of December, . 1930, John T. Daniel and wife, Vic j toria Daniel executed to Edward E. j Rhodes, Trustee, a deed of trust which j is recorded in book G-3, page 29, of fice of of Deeds of Martin | County; affa whereas, default has been made in the payment of the in ! debledness secured by said trust deed, j and the holder tliereof has requested exercise of the power of sale therein ! contained; Public notice is hereby given that on Saturday, the 22nd day of July, 1933, at 12 o'clock m„ at the front door of the courthouse of Martin County in the town of Williamston, N- C., the undersigned will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the following describ ed real estate lying in Goose Nest Township, Martin County, North Car olina, to wit : Bounded on the north by the lands ot Spencer Burnette, on the east by the lands of VV. K. Harrell and Joe Staton; on the south by Conoho Creek, and on the west by the lands of Spencer Burnette, and more par ticularly described as follow.", to wit: Beginning at a stake on the Sherrod Mill Road, the same being the corner of the lands of Spencer Burnette; tlicnce south 13 1-2 degrees west Nen Series . . . Building & Loan Opens September 3. 7933 At the close of several years of service to home owners and investors of this section, we now announce the opening of a new series of stock, and believe that our unparalleled record of se curity justifies and warrants a heavy subscription. Building and Loan stock, it ir. well to know, represents the only security that has retained its true value during the years of de pression, when all other stocks and bonds have slumped, many of -them becoming totally worthless. This record stands out-preeminently, and is the strongest possible endorsement of Building and Loan policies. If you want to own your own home, or to enable others to do so by small regular savings, and at the same time receive sub stantial earnings, call in and let us talk over the Building and Loan plan with you. Martin County Building and Loan Association PAGE THREE thence south thirteen and one-half de grees west twenty-four hundred and seventy-five feet to the run of Con oho Creek; thence along the run of said creek in a southeasterly direction thirty-one hundred and sixty-five feet to a point opposite three gums and a hornbeam marked as pointers; thence a straight line to said three gums and hornbeam; thence north nineteen de . grees and fifty minutes east sixteen j hundred and thirty-one feet to a fork ed poplar just east of the run of Long | Branch; thence along the run of said j branch twenty-seven hundred and j sixty-four feet in a northerly direc tion across the Sherrod Mill Road to a large black gum in the run of Long Branch; thence north seventy-five de j grees and ten minutes west fifteen hundred and sixty-seven feet to a 'small branch; thence along the said Miiall branch two hundred and eigh 'f en in a southerly direction to the Sherrod Mill Road; thence along llie said road north seventy-five de grees and thirty-five minutes west nine hundred and thirty-four feet to the beginning; containing 200.33 acres more or less; being the same latd deeded to John T. Daniel by Hattie V. Daniel (same person as-Victoria Daniel) by deed of record in the pub he registry of Martin County, in book W -2, at page 464. This the 19th day of June, 1933. EDWARD E. RHODES, J ,'„ 4tw o Trustee. Hbcrt p e( ,| Attorney.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 11, 1933, edition 1
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