Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 18, 1941, edition 1 / Page 4
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Weddtac* Club MeeUnis birutneiits Entertainment* . ? Society and Personals OF WILLIAMSTON and MARTIN COUNTT This Department PHONE Anvthine for To 4 6 H as Business Visitor Here Mr. W S Bland, of RobeflQB* ville. attended to business here this morning Visit Here Sunday Miss Audrey Williams had as her guests here Sunday her father. Mr Williams, and her sister. Miss Elean or Williams In Newport News Saturday Miss Marion Pender and Dr Llew elyn were visitors in Newport News Saturda\ ? Visits in Hamilton Miss Saru Edmondson. leather in the Conetoe school, spent the week end in Hamilton. In Plymouth Sunda\ Mr. and Mrs David Hix visited in Plymouth Sunday Visit Near Here Sunday Mr and Mrs. W E. Malone and son. Mike, of Roxhoro. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs Ellis Malone near het< Sunday. Are Visiting in Florida Mr and Mi's B S. Courtney and Mrs John Peel are spending two weeks in Florida Visit in Hamilton Mr and Mrs Clinton' James, of Norfolk, were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Long, in Hamilton last week-end. Spending Holidays Here Miss Patsy King, student at St Ann's, Charlottesville. Vu.. is spend ing the spring holidays here with her parents. Mr and Mrs .1 K King Return to Pocoinoke City Mrs Payne and two sons have re turned to their home in Poeomoke City, after a visit here with her daughter. Mrs Jim Manning She was accompanied to Norfolk on Sim day by Mrs. Manning. Mis James Bailey Peel and Mr. J O Manning. Visit at Maul's Point Mr. and Mi's Marion Cobb visited at Maul's Point Sunday Were Here Sunday Mr. and Mrs Durant Keel, of Plymouth, visited relatives here on ' Sunda.N Spends Week-end Here Mis. Jimmy Harris, of Raleigh, visited relatives here last week-end. In Tarboro Saturday Miss Kathryn Mewborn visited in Tarboro Saturday Visit Here Sunday Dr. and Mrs. Neville, of Scotland Neck, were the guests of Miss Ema lvne Evans here Sunday S|MMiding Holidays Here Misses Virgil Ward. Reid White. Adda Lee Meador and Mary Helen Boykin. students at E. C. T. C.. Greenville, are spending the spring holidays here with relatives Returns to Hamilton Miss Cornelia Deal has returned i to her home in Hamilton after a vis it with relatives in Greensboro Visits in W hi takers Miss Katherine Bradley visited in Whilakers and Raleigh last week end. Was Here Saturday Miss Mildred Ambrose, of Plym outh, visited here Saturday. Awaiting Stork Sixteen-yetr-old Lois Andrews Jessel, wife of comedian George Jessel, is in California awaiting the stork, her husband reports. Jessel currently is appearing in Miami, Fla. Lois recently was refused a permit to work in a Boston night club: "Too young." SprmlniK Huliduvs Near Here M Ola Lee Lilley. student ?>f E C T. C GreenvilU. i spending the! spring holidays with -relatives near j here Return from Goldsboro Mi Charles Bowers arid daugh- i ter. Tenny. have returned from a v isit with relatives in Goldsboro. Visiting in Norfolk Mis. How ard Hardison. of James- j viHe. is spending a few days with relatives in Norfolk Visit Near Here Sunday Mi and Mrs. Claude Green and daughter, Lois, of Robersonville, visited Mrs Mamie G Taylor, near hert- Sunday.. ? , In Raleigh Saturday Miss Edna Barnhill visited in Ral eigh Saturday Visits in Greenville Miss Betty Mayo Everett spent the week end m Greenville Is Expected Here Thursday Mis.s Louise Cook, of Baltimore, is expected Thursday to spend some time here with her parents Mr and Mrs. John Cook Visits Here Saturday Miss Leslie Darden. of Plymouth, visited here Saturday ?<$??? Spending Holidays Here Stuart Cri tcher, C T Ruber sun and Lick Dunn, students at State College, Raleigh, are spending the spring holidays here with relatives Were Here Yesterday Mrs. N. C Everett and daughter. Mildred, of Robersonville, were visi tors here yesterday Attend Church Meet Here Mrs. Henriie Ballard. Mrs Dave Malthews and Miss Effie Wuldo at tended a church meeting in William ston Wednesday night. Visit in Kaltunore Mr. and Mrs I). V. Clayton, the lutten's sister. Mrs Ethel Eubanks. of Durham, and Mr. C. D. Pittman 1 spent Sunday and Monday in Balti- j more. In Washington Yesterday Mesdames John Cook*- and Ira Harrison were visitors in Washing ton yesterday. % Visits Here Saturday Mrs. W A Darden. of Plymouth, was a visitor here Saturday. Visits in Grifton Miss Hazel Jarrell. teacher in the Hamilton school, spent the week-end in Grifton. Spends Holidays Near Oak City R A Haislip. Jr.. and Tommie Haislip. students at State College, Raleigh, are spending the spring hol idays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs R A Haislip, near Oak City. Visiting in Jamesville Miss Kris Stallings. student at E. C. T. C.. Greenville, is spending the spring holidays with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Stallings. in Jamesville i - Spending Holidays Here John Pope, Jr., and Ray Goodmon, students at the University, Chapel Hill, are spending the spring holi days here with relatives. Were Here V?4erday Mrs K. F. Pittinan and Miss Bea trice Turner, of Oak City, were visi tors here yesterday In Richmond Saturday Mr. Bill Glover, Hudson Hoyle and Lin wood Pate were in Richmond Saturday Visits in New Bern Miss Polly Dewey spent the week end in New Bern. Visiting in Washington Mrs. Woodrow Tice is visiting in Washington this week. Were Here Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Frank Massey, of Sylva. were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fitzgerald here Sunday. Mrs. Fitzgerald accompanied them home for a few days' visit In Hamilton Sunday Misses Dorothy and Jennie Per kins. of Raleigh, spent Sunday in Hamilton with relatives. Spending Holidays in Bear Grass Miss Grace Rogers, student at E. C. T. C . Greenville, is spending the spring holidays in Bear Grass with relatives. Returns from Greensboro Mrs. Laura Taylor returned Sun day from a visit with her daughters in Greensboro. She was accompan ied home for the day by Misses Vi vian and Virginia Taylor and Mrs. W. O. MeCluskey. of Youngstown, Ohio. Visiting in Hamilton Miss Elizabeth Haislip. student at E (.' T. C., Greenville, is spending tie spring holidays with relatives in Hamilton. Return from New York City Mesdames H. A. Critcher and John A Manning have returned from a visit with Ben Manning in New York City Spends Week-end Here Dick Champion, student at V.P.I., Blaeksburg, Va.. spent the week-end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Champion. <$> Visits in Wellington City "Pap" Diem visited in Washington City last week-end. g In Henderson Sunday Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Edwards and son. Jack, Mr and Mrs. Hewett Edwards and son. Billy, and Mrs. W. H. Edwards were visitors in Hender son Sunday. Spends Week-end Here Keg Manning, student at Duke University. Durham, spent the week end here with fui parents. Mr. and Mrs. John A Manning 1 Visits in Wilmington Taylor Malone visited relatives in Wilmington last week-end Spend Week-end Here Misses Frances Spivey and Elma rie Waters, of Windsor, were the week-end guests of Miss Faye Gur ganus here. # Visits in Rich Square M iss Maggie Brown, teacher in I tlie Hamilton school, visited in Rich Square last week-end. ? Returns from Hospital Mrs. C. B Roebuck has returned from a Washington hospital, where she has been receiving treatment. ? In Norfolk Sunday Mr and Mrs. Oswald Stalls were visitors in Norfolk Sunday * Spends Week-end Here Mrs. Frank Johnson, of Raleigh, spent the week-end here with her father. Chief W B Daniel Mrs Myrtle Bunting has return ed lo her home in Hamilton after several weeks' visit in Roanoke, Va. Mrs. Clara Everett, Misses Mildred Everett and Elisabeth Haislip met her ill Petersburg Sunday. ? Visits Near Pinehurst Miss Evelyn Lilley visited friends nesr Pinehurst last week-end. ? Was Business Visitor Hore Mr. M. N. Griffin, of Jamesville, attended to businesa here yester day. , Only Kelvinator has it! 'XiPi /New % f Moist I Master \ Model With All-Glass "Cold-mist" Freshene AND SEPARATE COOLING , COILS in tlM WALLS! A revolutionary NEW KIND of refriger ator giving the MOIST cold that prevents foods from drying out ?keeps them fresher, longer! A marvelous new feature?the giant "Cold-mist" freshener with two glass doors, provides SUPER-moisc storage that keeps vegetables garden-fresh behind glass! Other new features too, including glass Thi> b* 6i4 ,u. h-s * modd oolr M? UK ML ft lUMutert traa* 'DilwrWm r?trkiuken uiih 5-Yt*t J Pi**- 51*40 mmd L*t*J ImMtt kxtt Catral In sdditioa to the High Speed fleeter their t ? itpuiK let of toolwi coils cooccsled in rhs ?ill? of the food roapsna IkaJK Farmers Supply Compan; Increased Interest Ls Being Shown In Local Girl Scouts Feeling the need of the local Girl Scouts for a meeting place of their own. Messrs Frank and Irving Mar golis have given them two rooms above their store on Main Street to be used for meeting and social | events. In cooperation with the scouts. Mr D N. Hix. principal of the local high school gave the boys in the work shop credit on their y?*ar's work : for making two benches and a book case from lumber donated by the i Farm ville-Wood ward Lumber Com- j pany and Williamston Supply Com- j pany. The scouts have cleaned up the room, scrubbed the floors and win- j dews and will furnish and decorate | it themselves. I To use these rooms as a recrea tional room, the scouts plan to have a small library of their own and will appreciate any discarded books. Meetings are held every Thurs day night at seven o'clock and new members are always welcome. Under the leadership of Miss Eve lyn Li Hey and her assistant. Miss Marjorie Grey Dunn, the girl scouts have aided in a number of worth while civic projects. Members of the Williamston girl scout troop are Misses Mary War ren. Delia Jane Mobley, Ann Fow den. Alberta Knox. Jane Johnson Goff. Ann Meador. Frances Jarman Betsy Manning. Frances Thomas. Angelia McLawhorn, Gertrude Me Law horn. Sylvia Green. Barbara Margolis, Dora Twiddie. Gloria Rob erson, Lucy Roberson. Thelma Car roll. Mildred Lassiter, Nancy Mer cer. Maxine Lassiter, Rose Leggett, Edna Ray Thomas, Barbara En right. Lib Taylor, Mary O'Neal Lindsley, Ann Lindsley, Gloria Hay man. Eliza Daniel, Margaret Ward and Unis Anne Britton Latent Additions To The Enterprise Mailing List Listed among the recent additions to the Enterprise mailing list are the following: Claude Mendenhall. Williamston; Oscar" Little, Ruber so n ville; ~J7 W. Cherry. Hassell; Mrs. Frank John son, Raleigh; Roberta Wallace, Brooklyn; W A. Spruill. Roberson villc; W. C. Chance, Parmele: Edwin Corey, Williamston; Mrs. W. J. Ri ley. Robersonville; A. D. Griffin, Jr., Williamston; J. N Hopkins, William ston; Virginia Lilley, Williamston; Dr R. G. McAllister, Williamston James Keel, Everetts; W L. Lee. Williamston; Lee Hardison. William ston; Frank Hopkins, Williamston; Paul I). Roberson, Robersonville; A1 len Griffin. Jamesville. e ? Missionary Society l ists Meetings For The Week The Woman's Missionary Society of the Memorial Baptist Church an nounces that: The Girls' Auxiliary will meet with Nancy Mercer Tuesday after noon at 4 o'clock. The Koyal Ambassadors will meet at the church Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. Shelbon Hall is the lead er. The Sunbeam Band will meet at the church Friday afternoon at 3:30. Mrs Ernest Etheridge is the leader fr CHERRY -TAYLOR Miss Mat tie Bell Taylor and Rol and Cherry were married in the home of the justice of the peace, Ben Reddick. in Everetts, on Wednesday March 12th. The brido, daughter of Mr and I Mrs. Luther Taylor, of near Ruber-1 sonville, was a senior in the school there. She wore for her wedding an ensemble of soldier blue with black accessories. Mr Cherry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Cherry, of near Wil liamston. and is a promising farmer of this community Prior to the wedding on Tuesday night the bride's parents entertain ed at their home at a miscellaneous shower. - Visits Here Yesterday Mrs. Mary White Pruitt, of Green ville. visited Mrs Roy Ward here yesterday. a In Portsmouth Sunday Mrs Pcrlie T. Roberson and daugh ter. Frances, and Mrs Allie Rober son spent Sunday in Portsmouth with Mr and Mrs. B. T. Cullen. C Spends Week-end Here John A Ward, Jr., student at State College. Raleigh, spent the week-end here with his parents. Mr and Mrs. John A. Ward. * Visit Here Last Week end, Mrs. C. B. Harrison, of Rocky Mount, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John A Ward, here last week end. Was Here Yesterday Mrs. Lester House, of Roberson ville, was here yesterday, visiting her daughter. Mrs Ernest Ether idge. and Mr. Etheridgc l/e/p/ul .Suggestions In Trantplanting Tobacco a l.loyd Weeks extension tnharco specialist of State College, says a distance of 24 inches between hills when the rows are four feet apart has proved to be the most satisfac tory spacing under average condi tions for tobacco plants. On more fertile soils even closer spacing will be profitable. In pulling plants from the bed, select only those which are uniform in size and free from dis ease. The first cultivation should be made about a week or ten days after transplanting, followed by cultiva tions every week or ten days until just before topping. For Husband's Post - --r m ma Friends of Representative William D. Byron, of the Sixth Maryland District, who was killed in a plane crash near Atlanta, Ga., initiated a movement to have his widow named to succeed him. Pictured in bis Washington office, she said she would seek the nomination. Father and Son Meet' \fter Twenty Years For more than a year, two men ? one elderly, the other young ex- j changed furtive glances when they met at a tool crib window in the Pontiac Motor Division plant Carl Farner is a skilled grinder in the tool repair department. Max Bry an, 24. is serving an apprenticeship in the same trade as a 'tool chaser' ?he brings dulled tools to the grind- -j ing department for re-sharpening. Thus the two met frequently at the window, looked intently at each other beneath lowered lids and hur ried away. One day last week Max Bryan pushed hi stool-laden cart up to the receiving window. The attendant turned to Farner who was standing nearby and said: "Here's plenty of work for you, Farner." I used to know a man named Farner." he said ' My name is Max Bryan." "I used to know a boy named Max," the elderly man replied. Then he stopped short and grabbed the youth by both shoulders, peering in tently at him. There w as a long mo- j merijt of silence. "Hello, son." said Carl Farner. Hello. I)ad." said Max Bryan. There?among snarling machinery and rumbling trucks?? father and son had met again after twenty years. Max Farner was a child of five when his mother and father separ ated. When his mother remarried he look the last name of his step-father but lie always remembered that his true name was Farner. In the twenty years that passed son had wondered about father and the fathei had wondered about son. they both now say. but had never been able to locate each other. "I always thought he looked fa miliar. seeing him at the tool win dow gave me the funniest feeling that I w as seeing myself thirty years from now," the son says. "But I nev er had the.nerve to ask his name." The kid looked familiar to me, too'." says Farner "But finding him here almost 111 the same depart- I merit was too much like story book j stuff for me to believe. I always fig- j ured that 1 was just kidding myself | (nxxl Investment For U. S. Business The most important investment American business can make in Latin America is in "men," according to Cornelius V. Whitney, authority on Inter-American trade and a found er of Pan American Airways. In a recent talk to a group of New York businessmen, Whitney said the cali ber of representatives selected by American firms for work in Latin America might make the difference between "profit and loss" over a long ? that he was my boy." father and son have been living within a few miles of each other for years, they discovered. Farner lives in Otisville while the son now re sides in Columbiaville with his wife and children. "That's the only drawback to the whole thing," says Farner. "I find that I have become a grandfa ther without warning." period of time He listed the major qualifications as follows: 1. Language ? A knowledge of Spanish or Portuguese, or both. 2. Deportment?Courtesy is of ut most importance in doing business south of the equator, according to Whitney. 3. Education?A knowledge of the customs and history of the country is important as background. 4 Mutuality?A willingness at all times to "give-and-take" in equal amounts and with an eye for devel oping lasting trade relationships. Mitirits ?f Haad HCOLDS RELIEVED FAST Put 3-purpose Va-tro-nol up each nostril... (I > It shrinks swollen mem branes; (2) floothra Irritation. <3> Helps flush out nasal passages, clear ing clogging mucus. VICKS VA-TRO-NOL NOW IS THE TIME To Check Your I'rcsent Insurance Protection /Iitiiuh' Reliuildiiift l.oslii and Replacements t allies ire Steadily lioinn I!p. \\ e nlinll ylaill* i lii'i'k your |>re?eiil lunuruoee Cov i'ra)fi> anil offer reeouiiiieiulatiou* mi llial you ma\ obtain the iiiaxiiiiuiu Protection al lilt- leant rout. Of course, )un will incur itu ublittalion at all! WK HANDLE ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE \ND CIVE THE BEST OF SERVICE J. E. POPE Easter Permanent Two Important Words * In order for your |ierinuiieiit lo be at its Ih>I for Kapler and your lieu *pritif{ clothe*. eome in and let u* uive you one TODAY! Our price* are \ery reasonable and our operator* liave year* of experience. We (iive b>u Aii "INDIVIDUAL" PERMANENT City Beauty Shoppe I'lioiir 12-J Mr*. Thettir Harnliill, Mpr. We Have Moved To the Bowen Building WASHINGTON STREET ? WILLIAMSTON Ah elated eeveral time* hefore we have varaled our store on Main Street. However, due to the faet that we ttlill have a fairly large sloek we will he loealed in the Bowen Brother* building long enough to dinpoee of the remainder of our Htork. Merchandise at and Below Cost If vou are looking bargains, our stock is still large enough to adequately supply your needs. Our shoe stock is especially large ami we have many unusually fine bargains in yard goods. Fay us a visit first when shopping in town. We'll guarantee to save you money. BARNHILL BROS.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 18, 1941, edition 1
4
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