Malral MlUchcr Ibiiuin
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1939. A* etoriee of local mm tekin* port in I
nh?l from the Fleet hj the Fleet Homo Towb Net* Center in CWeppo, thejr
trill he edited tad i
WALSTONBURG
...NEWS...
Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Brooks visited
friends in Faison, Sunday.
Mrs. Ray West, Sr., visited Mrs.
Pearl Johnston in Farmville, Sunday.
Mrs. Ivey Smith was the week end
guest of Mrs. J. A. Mc-wborn in
Farmville.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Pittman spent
the week end with the lattet's mother,
Mrs. L. H. Goin.
Miss Virginia Fields, who is in
school at Carolina Beauty College in
Raleigh, was home for the week end.
E. D. Mickam left for George West,
exas, Wednesday of last week after
spending several weeks with Bill
Goin.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. H. L. Shackleford and Mrs. Dan
Shackleford visited relatives in Dunn,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Redick and
Mrs. J. C. Redick, of Fountain, were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. V.
Redick, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Eason and
family, of Snow Hill, and Mrs. S. H.
Craft, of yfilson, visited Mr. and Mrs.
I. J. Rtfuse, Sunday. *
Mrs. Annie Morton and son, Wil
liam, of Rocky Mount, and Mrs. An
nie Tugwell, of Wilson, visited Mrs.
K. C. Mann, Sunday.
Mrs. W. E. Lang and Mr. and Mrs.
R. G. Fields motored to Durham, Sat
urday, taking Cecil Lang who has re
entered Duke University.
Friends will be glad to learn that
Mrs. J. M. Boykin is improving from
an attack of rheumatic fever and
has returned home from the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Mclntyre and
son and Mr. and Mrs. Haywood Beach
and daughter of Hopewell, Va., were
the week end guests of Mr. add Mrs.
W. V. Redick.'
Misses Ola Grace Gardner, Joyce
Rouse and Ann Hicks vihited Miss
Ramona Rouse in Greensboro last
week end to attend May Day pro
gram at G. C. W. -
Among those who attended the
wedding of Ensign John Oglesby, Jr.,
of Morehead City and Miss Glennie
Hooten of Grifton, Friday, were Mrs.
Sam Kittrell, Mrs. Ivey Smith, Miss
Jane Kittrell, B niton Taylor and Mrs.
Ed S. Taylor, Sr. Mrs. Smith played
the wedding music and Miss Kittrell
The Wtwe'i Club meets
Mra. Neta Shaekleford was i
to the Woman's Club on Wednesday
afternoon. After the business
big new officers were installed by
Mrs. Sam Jenkins. Mm. W. V.
B. B. Fields, who gave a very bl
and timely talk on
Changing Times." ?
Hie hostess served
I
On Friday night Mrv. Metvin Gay
and Mm. Carl Cobb entertained the
Community Choir at a delightful din
ner party In the-home of Mrs. Gay.
The living room was beautifully deco
rated with roses where card tabiea
were set for twenty. Pink and
filled with nuts and mints
Home Demonstration Club
The Walstonburg Home Demonstra
tion Club met with Mtb. Ivey Smiith,
Tuesday, p. m., with eight members
and three visitors present.
Mrs. Sam Kittrell presided. After
the business meeting Mrs. Nell But
ler gave a demonstration on "The
Care of The Sewing Machine." Mrs.
D. D. Fields, as recreation leader,
presented some very interesting con
tests. Mrs. E. F. Brooks assisted the
hostess in serving refreshments.
DAFFYNITIONS
Adolescent: A person in his early
nicoteens.
Guitar Player: A musician who has
? easy pickings.
Darkroom": Where many a girl with
a negative personality is develop
ed.
Fireman: A man who never takes
his eyes off the hose.
Newsprint: A kind of paper which is
neither news nor print.
Tip: The wages we pay other peo
ple's hired help.
Oyster: A fish that's built like a nut.
Farm wage rates in the United
States today are about six per cent
higher than those of a year ago.
John Arey, State College Exten
sion dairyman, says that Wayne
County affords some ?f the best land
in the state for producing roughage
and dairy feed, particularly pastures.
Gifts for Mother
On Her Day .
CHANDLER'S
TOILET GIFT
SETS
69* to *1.19
- Pins Fed. Tax.
BEAUTIFUL "
DRESSER SETS
Comb, Brush ^Mirror
H4I
? BOXED ?
BEAUTIFUL
ICE TEA SET
DAVPn
TOILET SOAP
AN IDEAL GIFT
9-PIECE DECORATED
ICE TEA & RACK
SET
$1.19
? 7-PIECE?
JUICE SET
- | %?;
PIRE KING BAKING SBT8
59c to 8?c
? ? SPECIAL FOR ? ?
Friday ami Saturday Selling I i
? ?BOYS' OVERALLS?*
8-Oz. Wt. Sanforized Sknok ? Sizes 8 to 16
DRESSES
Children's Fairy Tale
DRESSES
?? Sizes 7 to 14
$1*90
? CHILDREN'S ?
PINAFORES ]
Five nation-wide radio broadcasts
will plug national Borne Demonstra
tion Week, May" 5-12.
North Carolina cotton farmers lose
half a million dollars each year be
cause of ranch prep gtafcafe
THREE-YEAR-OLD VICTIM OF ftUN&ER. Like conntlew Eu
ropean children, little Stoyan is a wartime rietim of starrstion.
His Yagodnr and father were too busy fighting the Nazi
to care for him. America's famine emergency campaign is di
rected at erasing pictures like this.
WORLD FOOD NEEDS AND SUPPLIES 1*46-46
EXPORTABLE SUPPLIES NEEDED TO MEET WORLD POOD SHORTAGES
liBll _
??liSHW
FATS a OILS
saw*
SUGAR I
SoaaaaiJlin
EACH SYMBOL ? I MILLION SHOOT TONS
1
KRCAHm re? CONSUMPTION H CAU)ftCS.PREvrW? AND
JAN. L1946 IN SELECTED COUNTWES
. L
' r'l
yr- i5V
1 X*S
/
WHAT d'va
mMHhCI
READS UW
I do^/b
\r
iread
un mi run .jjj|
UMIt
The Best Artists Records
For RCA Victor
"GETTING SENTIMENTAC" With Tommy Doney and his orchestra.
A Volume of his Famous Hits?Who?, Marie, Star Dust, Song of
India, Little White lies, Royal Garden Blues, 111 Never Smile
Again, and I'm Gettin' Sentimental Over You.
Vocals by Frank Sinatra, Jack Leonard and The Pied Pipers.
RCA Victor Album P?SO.
Jerome Kern's "SHOWBOAT* Starring Tommy Dorsey and His
Orchestra.
Eight Outstanding Hits from the Show including.01' Man River,
Bill, Cant Help Lovin' That Man, Why Do I Love You?, Make
Believe, and Others?
RCA Victor Album P?162.
Sammy Kaye and His Orchestra Presents
"STEPHEN FOSTER FAVORITES," Featuring BUly Williams, Nancy
Norman, Arthur Wright, Sally Stuart, The Five Kadets and the
Kay Choir. N
RCA Victor Album P?140.
"8 TO THE BAR," Two Piano Boogie Woogie for Dancing, Pete
Johnson and Albert Ammons.
RCA Victor Album P??9.
Tchaikovsky?"ROMEO AND JUL1JTT OVERTURE"
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky,' Conductor.
Victor Red Seal Records.
RCA Victor Album DM?347.
MANY OTHER ALBUMS AND RECORDS IN OUR STOCK.
COME IN AND HEAR THEM !
FARMVILLE'S LAKGB8T JEWEL.KY STUKE
103 North Main St Farmville, N. C.
PHONOGRAPH NEEDLES ! ?, EMERSON RADIOS !
*
Qualifications For Primary. Kogit
tration And Voting
1. Applicant for registration must be a citizen and shall
be ahie to read and*write any section of the Constitution
^ in the English' language, unless registered prior to Decem
ber 1, 1908} in accordance with the permanent Registration
J Art (Grandfather's Clause).
2. Applicant must he twenty-one years of age hy the next
General Election,- November 5, 1949.
3. Applicant must have been a resident of the State of
North Carolina for one year, and in the Precinct, Ward or
other election district, in which he offers to vote, four
months next preceding the General Election on November
5, 1948.
The Registrars of the various precincts of Pitt County
are as follows: . *$$$* v -
REGISTRAR:
Heber Cannon
John Wflkerson
R. H. Parker
Miss Olive Jones
Gordon Roebuck
Mtsl Elizabeth Fleming
Mrs. Tom Tyson ?
L. C. Venters ,
Prince Mills
Harley A. Nelson
J. B. Joynes
C. M. Smith
J. C. Tyson
John R.~ Barker
L. A. McLawhorn
Mrs. W. W. Phelps
Louise Mew born
James B. Barnhill
O. H. Wilson '
Mrs. J. R. Oox
m
'i&r
, PRECINCT:
Ayden
Beaver Dam
Belvoir
1
Township
No. 1
No. 2
Chksod No. 3
icod Nq. 4
Falkland
Earmville
Fountain
Greenville No. 1
Greenville No. 2 ?
Greenville No. 8
Greenville No. 4.
Grifton / 4i^j
Pactolus
Swift Creek ,
WintorviDe
The
SATURDAY Mrv 11 \
All Se: lr'y llf 1946> at sunset
i-i
Books wiH close on
sunset
mail must