Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / June 30, 1939, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Enterprise Published Every Tuesday and Friday by the ENTERPRISE PUBLISHING CO. WILLIAMS TON, NORTH CAROLINA W. C. MANNING | Editor ? 1908-1938 SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Strictly Cash in Advance) IN MARTIN COUNTY One jftT ? *1-75 Sue months . .1.00 OUTSIDE MAKTIN COUNTY One year *2.23 Six months 1.25 No Subscription Received Under 6 Months Advertising Rate Card Furnished Upon Request Entered at the post office in Wilhamston, N. C., as second-class matter under tile act of Con gress of March 3, 1878. Address all communications to The Enterprise ?nd not individual members of the firm. T I ~ ? ?. Friday. June -iO- IV.V/. \lr Hiilliimlfr Sidney Hollander, successful Baltimpn busi nessman who life no pohtical aspirations asks no special consideration and who is not a mem ber of any union or liberty league asked a per tinent question or two during the course ol an address befoio the National Conference of So cial Work in Buffalo recently. Commenting on the relief situation, the businessman said "Will we go on shouting down efforts to find work for the workless because taxes are high'.' Will we still complain that tin burden of re lief is too great'.' Alt' we forgetting that the heaviest burden ol relief is burnt by those who are on relief "Last year then wen about If,0110,(1(10 chil dren born in this country, and of that number, ttbtrtri 4.000.000. fia per cent, came to lanulies on relief, or in the very tow income groups. "Let us assume that this will happen again this year and next, and throughout the years to come. "In just one decade there will be 11.000,000 children growing up in homes that are but a travesty on the word homes in which most of the opportunities that should be, the right of every child will be wanting. "These children may be dependent on us now. but in a generation we may be dependent on them?for they, will be the majority. They will fill the offices that govern us and make the laws that control us "What kind of America will we leave if we fail to provide these children with a measure of the satisfaction, the security that all chil dren should have? "TaflTwith those who vainly seek woik, who suffer the daily humiliation of empty handed ness, who cat tin bitter bread uf failure tulk to them, there are 1(1.000.000 of them, of the meaning of democracy, of the boon of liberty and equality. We've got to make liberty mean to every.man what it means to us. or it won't mean much to us very long "Let us not forget what happened in other lands where millions were hungry and without hope. We can't risk that here. "Once this nation went forth to make a world safe for democracy. There is a danger closer at hand now. "Democracy has no appeal for discouraged, rebellious youth?for workless and hungry men. If we continue to deny Americans food to sus tain them, clothing to'cover them, homes to shelter them, we are implanting resentment which will not quickly be forgotten. "America must have a program of welfare that faces realities, not one that ignores them; a program that recognizes the fact that we can and must provide work for those who can la ple must eat whether we list them as 'employ ables or unemployable;.', thut-they must have clothes, whether they are married or single; that they must have a place of shelter, whether they are black or white that they are eligible for sickness and death even though they may he ineligible for relief. ' Machines can he replaced, plants can be re built. acres can he replanted, but the deteriora tion of wasted men is a progressive liability. They cannot hi charged off to obsolescence or sold for scrap "Only as we protect them, only as we give them security, do we insure protection and se curity for ourselves Until their needs are met, America's budget will never balance. 'There are ftews -tti thr program?plenty of them but what branch of our government is lice 11xiii Han.1'' Tlieie's waste, too. It's mes eapable in any plan that has to deal with mil lions of human beings m, more ethical than the rest of us "But then is waste in the army too; there is w aste in the navy. Heaven knows there is waste m tin1 Congress and in the legislatures. But are wt suggesting that soldiers and sailors be thrown out on their ears, or that Congress or //<?!? Ilum I (lie Ifh'/thotH' Mono/mly? Report:, from Washington state that the Sen ate Interstate Cotnmerce Commission is rec ommending that a subcommittee be directed to conduct a "thorough and complete" inves tigation of the telegraph industry. I 'ossi bjy. the telegraph industry should be in vestigated, but in the opinion of the hundreds of thousands ol telephone users, the telephone monopoly should get a "thorough and com plete" investigation first. The telephone owners have gone so far to dominate the industry that they no longer try to cover up their interlocking scheme. They are milking the public to the lust drop and even in this little town the people know that service is secondary to the company's profit sheet. Sean/tin# For Christianity Persecuted and driven from their homes in Germany, 907 refugees started out a few weeks ago in search of Christianity. At their first stop, Cuba, thcv were turned away, the iron hand of the law there forgetting all about the perse cute >n the people of Cuba experienced just a few years ago. Sad to relate, the refugees did not find-Christianity on American shores and they started drifting. World conditions present a baffling problem today, a problem that the visits of royalty or the diplomacy of all the diplomats will solve. Surely, at some time in the distant future man kind will apply the principles of Christianity to his problems and find them solved. ??i A:' 'C f \*ST IN v $fcU$ F'KSTih Mia? m VJ \ -?T>?>* Consider all factors? purchase price, gas, oil, upkeep, tires ? and It's the thrifti est car In the field, bar none/ eeesee Not only doe# Chevrolet brlnd you the swiftest acceleration, tne strongest nill-clinib ing ability, the finest all-round per formance ever built into any low priced car ... Not only does it give the greatest driving-ease, greatest riding-ease and greatest day-in-and-day-out depend ability . . . But it also delivers these results at lower cost In purchase price, gas, oil, upkeep and tires! Chevrolet?first In performance, first in value, first in features?is first in economy, too! See, drive and buy this thrifty per formance-lander?today / Roanoke Chevrolet Company NOTICE North Carolina, Martin County. In Superior Court. Tina Staton v. Grant Staton. George Brown and wife, Edna Brown and Jim Staton. The defendants, Grant Staton, George Brown and wife, Edna Brown and Jim Staton, will take no- j tice that an action entitled as above lias been commenced in the Super- i ior Court, Martin County to quiet j the title of a twenty-five acre tract of land now in possession of the | plaintiff and located in Goose Nest; Township and the said defendants will further take notice that they are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court, Mar tin County in the Courthouse in i Wllltamston. N. C., within thirty days from service hereof and an swer or demur to the complaint in ?MM iff said action or the plaintiff will ap ply to the court for the relief de manded in said complaint. This 15th day of March, 1939. L B. WYNNE. j9-4t Clerk Superior Court, j TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL LSTATE Pursuant to the power and author-1 ity contained in a certain deed of ' trust dated the 18th day of January, 1935. executed by Alton E. Grimes, single, Carrie Louise Grimes Whit- j field and husband. Lester L. Whit- j field and Jessie Walton Grimes Mob-! ley and husband, William Ernest Mobley to T. C. Abernethy, Trustee, which deed of trust is duly register ed in the office of the Register of j Deeds of Martin County, North Car-1 olina, in Book N-3, page, 507, secur- j ing a certain note payable to Home! Owners' Loan Corporation, default having been made for a period of i more than ninety (901 days in fh<> ? payment of said note as provided | therein and in the performance of j certain covenants set out in said deed | of trust, and demand of foreclosure having been made by the holder of j said indebtedness, the undersigned! Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash j at the Court House door in Martin j County, Williamston. North Carolina : at 12 o'clock noon on the 17th day of July, 1939, the following described! real estate to-wit: Lymg and being in the Town xif Rube mm vi I4e, Rob? ersonville Township, County of Mar tin, State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as fol lows: All that/certain tract or parcel j of land lying and being in the Town j of RobersonviJle. bounded on the j North by the lands of R. L. Smith and Oscar Smith, on the East by the lands of H. D. Whitfield, on the South by Second Street, and on the N O T I C E! I*a**eiij?er Servi fc (Train* No*. .'17 ami 36) will bo ili*<'Oiiliiiut'<l be tween I'lvinoiitli. W i 1 liam*toii and I'armele. Effective July /. 1939. V. I). GODWIN Williaiii*ton, !N. C. I'bone No. I.) fliLflrnic coast uiu ariiroao Wesl by Hie lands of the Estate of J. H. Grimes, and more particularly described by a plat of same made by Sylvester Peel, surveyor, on the J4th day of January, 1934, now on file with the Home Owners' Loan Cor poration and more particularly de scribed as follows: Beginning at the | corner of this land and the southeast corner of the lands of the Estate of J. H. Grimes on Second Street 233 feet eastwardlv from Main Street, thence along Second Street Ndrth 82* 30' East 210 feet, thence North 7* West 205 feet, thence due West 243 feet, thence South 6* 15' East 141 feet, thence South 83* 15' East 31 fMt thence South 6* 15' East 92 feet to the beginning on the north side of Second Street, and being the same land allotted to. R. E. Grimes in Special Prc^ecdings which was duly recorded in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Martin County on March 20, 1901, in Judg ment Book 3. page 330. This property will be sold subject to 1939 taxes. The purchaser at this sale will be required to make a cash deposit of 5 per cent of the purchase price to show good faith. This the 14th day of June. 1939. T. C ABERNETHY, Trustee. Hugh G Horton. Attv 2*6-41 SAVE on TIRES JUNE 20th TO JULY 1th 50% SAVINGS KKMJM M AIM II An I) LIST On Big Husky Genuine New GOODYEAR TIRES Ifeal lire uch ? fur yuu! For one-half lilt- rust of little-known or off-brand "standard" lire*. you net tin- PATH IIMHIH. made and guaranteed for life by COODYIIAK! Pathfinder is u big loiipli tire with long-wearing center-trac liou tread and bruise-resisting, blowout pruhxtid plies of low stretch Supertwist (lord. Don't delay ? these special prices ure good only until July lib ? so buy now for your Holiday Trip! 1.75-19 1.50-21 $5-74 $5.56 T>.25-1? $6-66 $7 .50-17 .32 0.00-16 $7-98 Net Price? Inchuli, 6.50-10 $9-70 lift Your Old Tirv SinclairService Station ASA J. MANNING. Prop. ISfxi To C.iiy Hull \\ II.LIAMSTON, N. Telephone ISo. 177-J Colonel Bain Takes Command! Brewers and Distributors Inaugurate North Carolina "Clean-Up or Close-Up" Campaign. State and Local enforcement Heads Lndorse Plan. IN NORTH CAROLINA, as in many other .states, a few retail beer outlets which flout the law, often bring dis credit upon the entire business. lirewers and distributors are convinced that thin business can ami stlould al ways be conducted properly and in full conformity with the law, and they are determined mat this shall be the case in North Carolina. Consequently, v. e, \'is i.udcrsigned, re cently formed the Brewers and North Carolina Beer Distributors r.<mmi?te.. which, acting in close cooperation with state and local enforcement bodies, has launched a vigorous cooperative cani pnign to riil the state of Hiuse few ~berr outlets which persist in disregarding both the law and the public. In plain words, we refuse any longer to tolerate outlets which use their beer licenses as a "cover-up" for flagrant bootlegging operations; which sell to minors or otherwise violate the law and their license privileges. With the brew ers, our Committee includes wholesalers who distribute approximately ninety per cent of the beer sold in North Carolina. And we also have the wholehearted sup port of the large majority of our re spectable and law-abiding retailers. Furthermore, duly constituted enforce iir'iu omciais nave approved our OOJCC (ives and promised their help. And ACTION is certain now that Attorney General MeMullan has declared it is the request for revoeutiun of malt bc'.viagv licenses, to hold hearings. Colonel Edgar H. Pain, ? .i' Gnldsbor", N. C., has l)een appointed by the Com mittee to direct its activities. "Good Conduct" Committees of locyj beer distributors, each headed by & chairman, have been set up in tep div triets of the state for close cooperation with law enforcement olfieers, anp with our own Kxeeutive Committee, in(eradi catlng objeciionable places of f busuiess. hasi.^ our Established on a permanent Brewers and North Carolina Beer Dis tributors Committee seeks to protect the legitimate beer business in North Val"o lina from the depredations of a small and irresponsible minority, and to per form a worthwhile service to the public. The Committee is sponsored by the United Brewers Industrial Foundation, a national organization of brewers. The Brewers and North Carolina Beer Distributors Committee is convinced that its work is in the public interest. Therefore, we respectfully solicit your cooperation with our efforts. COL. EDGAR H. BA.'N State Director Colonel I tain recenth resigned front the State Senate to take over the directorship of our Committee. He is a World War veteran, decorated with the Dis tinguished Service Cross and the Silver Star. An official of the U. S. Army Reserve Officers Corps, he is well-known through out the State as a militant cru sader for law enforcement. Brewers and North Carolina Beer Distributors Committee SUITE 813-17 COMMERCIAL BUILDING, RALEIGH, N. C NORTH CAROLINA EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE , Distributor Members J. P. Pries, Chalrmnn, Greensboro Distributing t o., Gross W. K Griffin, Iiurhnm Fruit * Produce Co., Durhssi W. 8. Burruss, Capital lea A Coal Co, Raleigh Fred Mills, Dunlap S Mills, Wadeeboro Edward Hecht, Hardaway Hacht Co, Charlotte Frank E. Barnard. Beer With Ts. Inc.. AsherUle Brawar Mambara L B. Wkeelar (Aaheville)?Joe. Schlita Brewing Oa. David GaUo (Norfolk, Va)?Southern Brewertea, Inc. C. M. Wright (Newark, N. J.)?P. BallanUne k Sena S. A Caak (Louievtlle, Ky)?Prank Kehr Brewing Oa. W. H. Jolly (Norfolk. Va.)?Pabot Brewing Co. Walter Bartlett (Norfolk. Va)?Jacob Ruppcrt Brewery r 4 X CoIn Co., tllDMWI: C. W. Cover, Jr.: ASHEYILLE: Boer With Uj, Inc.. Better Beer Co.. Peore-Young-Angel Co., Itnln Distributor*. lac., BBT80N CITY: Nehi Bottling Co.: CHARLOTTE: Cooed* Dry Bottling Co., Southern IVutt Co., Hordevrey Co. Thoaua Howard Co.: CONCORD: Old North State Brewer*. Inc.: DURHAM: Miller Brewing Co, Durham Pratt A Produce Co.. J. ML Mat he* On. lac.. A mortal ad Bottler*, lac.; ELE1N: Elgin Bottling Co.; EATETTKVILI.K: A. M nelahmaa. GA8T0NIA: Orange OMR Bottling Co.: GREENSBORO: Oreenaboro Diet rl but lag Co. CaroUAa Dlatrlbutlng Co., H. G Wright Kstrlbutlng Co., R H Berringer nMUIIimm Co.; HENDERSON TILLS: Coo troll Produce Co.; BICHOBY: Ualon Wholeaale Co.; HIGH POINT: Garland Distributing Co ; RI.YSTON: Noon* Dleti-lbuttag Co.. LENOIR: Blue Ridge Dlatrlbutlng Co. LUMBER TON: Nu-Icy BotUlag Co.; NORTH WILRESBOBO: Pvpel-Oola Bottling 0*.; RALBIOH: Garland a Norrl* Co.. Brosden Produce Co. Bet la Coal A Oil Co. Capital loe * Coal Co; REIDSVILLB: Big BUI Bottling Co.; BOCEINOBAM geago Bottling On J ROl'ET MOUNT: George S. Edward* A Co; BOXBORO: Rogboro Beverage On; SALISBURY: Orang* Cruel: Bottling Co SANTORB: Snnlord Dlatrlbutlng Co., WAD Eg BO BO: Dunlap A Mill*. Inn; WILMINGTON: J. W. Jackets Beverage Co.; WILSON: A*m* CaMdy On; WINSTON-SALRM: Katnan Co
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1939, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75