. . V v V'l >ociaianb ^ rsonalsl Mr. and Mm J. 0. Pollard spent Monday in Greenaboro. ? ? ? J. W. Hardy and J. B. Brfley were Richmond visitors Monday. ? ? ? Mrs. Neal Howard left Saturday for a visit to New York City. ? * * Harold Sugg Askew, of Wilson, was a visitor here Thursday. ? ? ? Flave Darden has returned from the Kentucky tobacco market. ? ? ? Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis, Jr., were Raleigh visitors Saturday. ? ? ? Mrs. J. E. Harris and Roderick Harris were Durham visitors Sunday. * ? ? Friends will reg-ret to learn that Mrs. C. A. Tyson is ill at her home on Grimmersburg street ? ? ? Friends will be glad to learn that Mrs. Pearl Johnston is recovering from a recent illness. ? ? ? Mrs. Robert H. Wright Sr., of j Phoebus, Va., spent the week end with Mrs. T. C. Turnage. ? ? ? Friends will regret to learn that Mrs. W. S. Royster is receiving treat ment at Duke Hospital. ^ ^ W Misses Louise and Virginia Harris, students at Duke University, spent the week end at their home here. ? ? ? Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Joyner and Eli Joyner, Jr., are attending the Furni ture Show in High Point this week. ? ? ?' Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Smith, Jr., and small son, of Petersburg, Va., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Smith, Sr. ? ? ? Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Smith, Mrs. Flave Darden and Mrs. Frank Graham were Rocky Mount visitors Monday. ? ? ? Mrs. J. C. Corbitt, Mrs. J. M. Stan sill, Mrs. George Beckman and Mrs. Frank Dupree, Jr., spent Tuesday in Greenville. ? ? ? Friends will be glad to learn that Mrs. C. E. Moore, who has been ill at her home in Wilson, is reported as recuperating. a ? ? Charles Blount, student at Darling ton School, Rome, Ga., spent several days at his home here following ex ams at the school. ? ? ? Miss Martha T. Rasberry left today to enter Richmond William and Mary College, where she will take a course in Social Science. ? ? ? Mr. and Mrs. Russell Britt and Mrs. J. B. Pierce, of Ayden, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis, Jr., and Mrs. Agnes Binint, Sunday. Mr% Frank Davis, Sr., has returned from a visit to relatives in Wilson. ? ? ? Friends will regret to learn that Donald Baucom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. F. Baucom, is receiving treat ment in a Kins ton hospital. Late reports state that he is improving. ? ? ? R. D. Rouse and James Monk have returned from a motor trip to Goergia and Florida. Miss Hazel Monk, who has been visiting friends in Nashville, returned with them. ? ? ? Friends will regret to learn that Dorothy Mozingo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mozingo, left Thurs day for a Rocky Mount hospital, fol lowing an attack of appendicitis. ? ? ? Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Lore and family left Tuesday to make their home in St Pauls, where Mr. Lore has opened ? grocery business. Their many friends here regret their change of residence. ? * ? Mrs. Madeline H. Rountree and Mrs. Frank Cappe, of Washington, D. C., ?pent the week end with Mrs. Dora ]L Keel. Mrs. Rountree and Mrs. Jhpps came to attend the Wright , wrton wedding, which occurred in Wilson, Saturday. 0 0 9 Mr. and Mrs. John B. Wright, Jr., who -were married Saturday in Wilson, 1Kb expected to return from their wedding trip to New York daring the week end, and 'will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Shackleford, before tttving for their home in Greensboro. See Mrs. J. Leroy Parker or any ?nitsi of the Junior Woman's dub y get your ticket early for 1|? r""TH AM.WUU ri* - ?crflKT j Mr. ?ad Mrs. Tommie Sugg an-1 neonce the ttrth of a son, Wayne | Thomas Sugg, en Sunday, January 21.1 H BOTH ANNUONCEMENT t^pfr. and Mrs. John D. Dixon an 3E* - - ? ? "" ?; "' " I I SOCIAL CALENDAR ' Monday, January 29 7:00 P. M.?Red Men. 10:00 P. M.?President's Birthday Ball to be held in the Gym under auspices of the Junior Woman's Club. Tuesday, 39 6:30 P. M.?Rotary Club. 8:00 P. M. Junior Order. Thursday, February 1 % 3:00 P. M.?Junior Woman's Club meets at the home of Mrs. J. M. Wireless with Mrs. Cleveland Paylor and Mrs. M. E. Pollard as joint hostesses. 3:00 P. M.?Septuagenarian So ciety meets in Home Office. 8:00 P. M.?Modern Woodmen. Friday, 2 3:30 P. M.?U. D. C. 7:00 P. M.?American Legion. 7:00 P. M.?L 0. 0. F. 7:30 P. M.?Boy Scouts. J Julian Smith Shows That Good Men Also Are Found On Bench Chapel Hill.?There hasn't been a better basketball player the last two Carolina games than Julian Smith, the Pitt County Panther. He made 12 points against The Citadel, added six more in the VMI game, showed the way in floor-work and fight in both battles and generally appeared to be the hottest thing to show in short pants around these parts for several cold winters. Yet, when the season started few people thought of Smith as a eager. As recently as Friday night when the Phantoms were doing a thorough job of crushing VMI, Boy Armstrong, who is in charge of rushing any and all prospective students and learning their habits, talents and aversions, noticed Smith on the floor and ob served, "well, there's one of my boys. But I didn't know he could play basketball." Bill Lange may have had hope that j Smith would develop but he knew Julian was as green as unripe celery. The boy hadn't been any better than reserve squad on the freshman team of a winter ago, and that didn't give much promise for varsity preatness. Things didnt happen in the first few games of the season. Lange had promised to substitute freely, experi ment with men and positions, but Smith didn't figure too heavily in his plans. Not just yet The Phantoms began their regular schedule against. Applachian and Catawba with wins? still no Smith. Conference triumphs over Davidson, Virginia Tech and Wake Forest . Brother Smith was still on the bench, enjoying the scenery, the trips but perhaps not the idea of other fellows getting an op portunity to perform. That would bring the story up to last Wednesday. The Citadel was the opposition and by half-time the first and second Phantom teams had done such a thorough job of demolish ing The Citadel that bystanders were suggesting rescue squads be sent out to save the Bulldogs from further humiliation. .bange tried to do ms part, or ne thought he was. He sent the third team out on the floor. There was Smith. The thing becomes as ex plosive as a country fair show. Julian started slowly, took a couple of shots and missed. Then he started putting in baskets. He put them in from all angles. He made all kinds of shots. The stands laughed at first The fellows on the bench smiled. Still Smith kept making points. The spec tators were standing and cheering by this time; the players clapped. All in all, Julian collected six field goals He was cheered to the roof, to coin a phrase, when he left the game. The Smith performance against The Citadel moved the lad, up to the St<6 ond team for Friday's VMI game. Wt played seven minutes at the first half, made three baskets. By this time everybody had gotten used to Smith exploding all over the place. Julian it from Farmville and he looks like he might collapse out on the floor at any moment. He playaf forward at Farmville high and was reserve on the Tar Babies. He plana to go into the commerce school and major in accounting. \ The war haa not yet appreciably stimulated United States export traded and as a result, export figures for last yesx show a decrease, while in* ports increased, ? Saaa CULLING S :? . fMj to 80, W. L. Stewart of Bakers , I _ - - ?1 ||f(i ^ PBOSPBSOU8 Mrs. Robert Bryan Wright, Jr., of Greensboro, whose marriage occurred in the first Presbyterian Church, in Wilson, Saturday, January 20. Mrs. Wright was formerly Miss Evelyn Milburoe Horton, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. McDonald Horton, of Faraville. Mr. Wright is the son of Dr. and Mrs. John Bryan Wright, of Raleigh. jj - ? ? . ' * ?' .1 * ? r r.^ ? i?*?* "' 4 ' I Miss Evelyn Milburne Horton Is Bride of John B. Wright, Jr. ? ? a Ceremony Is Performed In First Presbyterian Church In Wilson A wedding characterised by im pressive simplicity was solemnized in the First Presbyterian Church . in Wilson Saturday morning, January 20, at 11:00 o'clock, when Miss Evelyn Milburne Horton of Wilson and Farmville became the bride of John Bryan Wright, Jr., of Wilaon, for- 1 merly of Raleigh. Offidant in the service was the Rev. E. C. Lynch, pastor of the church, who used the double ring ceremony. The chancel of the church was banked with palms and ferns, and standard candelabra bore cathedral candles. The central arrangement was a basket of Madonna lilies, white gladioli and snapdragons, and floor baskets of lilies were at either side of the steps, where the vows were spoken. Mrs. Frank S. Davis, organist, ; played a program of nuptial -mtffiic ncluding "Liebestraum" by Listz, 'Evening Star," by Wagner, Schu wrfs "Serenade" and "Dawning" by Tadman. Mrs. Charles F. Williams it Raleigh, sistev of the bridegroom, sang "I Love You" by Grieg, John D. and Elbert C. Holmes of Farmville tang a duet, "The Want of Yon" by ftmdiford, and. Mrs. J. W. Joyner of Farmville, cousin of the bride, sang 'O Perfect Love" by Burleigh. Traditional wedding marchee were osed and MacDowell's "To A Wild Rose" Was softly played duriqg tlje ceremony, and fallowing the bleating f the church a muted echo of the IVmID V*? fiiriliiTi OX JrslgBiivUMM 0O6 tr^ynnodt ^ pink j. iL-Qtlniip Dr Jem** R_ Wriffht. f ru U w * ? * ,4 fin ?-:? 5 son, Dr. Hpbert H. Wright of Fhoebas, son. bers of the immediate families. > After the luncheon the couple left by motor for New York and other northern points. Upon their return on February 1, they will be at home in Greensboro, where Mr. Wright has recently accepted a position in the Federal Housing Administration office. Mrs. Wright is the daughter of. the late Mr. and Mrs. McDonald Horton of Farmville. She received her edu cation at Salem College, Winston Salem, and the Peabody Conserva tory of Mask, Baltimore, Md. She was graduated from the Episcopal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital, Wash ington, D. C., and received her busi ness education at Temple School there. For the past two years Bhe has been connected with the Carolina General Hospital as historian and librarian; Mr. Wright is the son of Dr. and Mrs. John Bryan Wright, of Raleigh. He was graduated from McCauley's School, Chattanooga, Tenn., and at tended the University of North Caro lina. For the past five years he has been connected with the Branch Banking and Trust Company in Wilson. A number of prenuptial social courtesies were extended Miss Horton here prior to her marriage. Those just preceding the event included a lovely bridge luncheon, held on Fri day, with Mrs. M. V. Horton as gracious hostess. Potted plants' made a gay setting for the tables arranged in Hie living and dining rooms of the home on Wilson street Following four progressions the high score award, dainty handker chiefs, was given Mrs; Wesley R. Willis, and the bingo prize, a potted plant, went to Mrs. John E. King. Fhe honords "jieceived crystal in her pattern. A delicious barbecue plate was fol lowed by individual lemon pies. Out of' town gueeta lSere; Mrs. J. Blackshear, Jk, Mr* ?. V. Grady, Mrs. Badie T. Clarke and -Mrs. C. T. fegStZ-tf* .*** Mr. and Mrs. E. B# Crow, j?, were hosts at a buffet supper at their home in Wilson, following the re hearsal for the Wright-Horton wed ding Frida^ ,evening, at which the bridal party and out of town members of % two families wprp guestfc Mrs. Crow is^a sister of ^eMWd^ /V-1, n7.uii|ii Mu.l IW1KJ.J i.Iji Millar IHW,,,. ooiuBi w*0 wuiuk room Dy*nK ' l 1^ ^ ^ 1*8^1 ci ' RTipe 9 cue ox tnree uers u>ppea -?JlL n -wy- ??}n -g-)1 x+ff 1- ? ' An/| t | | y... TV lLfl ?' j ?11? n ! r V*|ii4 ft 1*3 * |11| f'* r-r f 3^^ 7 ^ DilVlk ?M dolior overliBsi table, and Mrs. diaries F. Williams,' of Raleigh, presided at th$ coffee table. j The bride's cake was cut and serv ed with ices moulded in bridal motifs. Mrs. Lath Morriss charmingly en tertained the Contract Club with Miss Horton, bride elect, as a special guest Potted plants were placed on end tables and forest greens were artistically arranged. Mrs. Wesley R. Willis was winner of the club prise, a double deck of Congress cards, end ; Mrs. J. Y. Monk received the guest prise, mixing bowls. Mrs. Boy Las siter received a kitchen memorandum as consolation. Miss Horton was presented with crystal in her pat tern. y Sharing in the^plefsnres of the aft ernoon with clulrihamben were Miss Horton, Mrs. J. Y.. Monk, Mrs. B. A. Parker, Mrs. Robert Lee Smith, Mrs. j L. T. Pierce and Mrs. D. R. Morgan. ? After the games tipsy cake, salted j nuts and coffee were served. | , ?; ??? V I' ~ ? ~ ? ?. i -J939-I IChevroletsl I H I We are offering 3 brand new I I 1939 new Chevrolets at a big B I discount We are offering I these cars at a discount due to the fact we are making room I for the 1940 cars. If you want B I a new car. at a big saving SEE B I us immediately. B B I ???? I ?? I vl ??, 9BflP^iHMSulk Jj^p 0 1 l I B^'' Ib. & W. Chevrolet Co.1 I (INCORPORATED) 9 I FARMVILLE, N. C. I B - AN EXCLUSIVE MEBANE ROY ALL FEATURE flrmrm ?i%/w ? j vi 1/ ?? %no-._ ffnytyiy -tcmiiifi pyip XkmUbJw CuX9 ft - uittvuTCos lu tivv yuu