Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / Sept. 19, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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MM u owe of tfca NatWa ? 10,000-word marj, at dM State's ?Itrwetia? far you Always Jf Get the Best Buy at FLOODS YOUR CAR WITH H*AT IN 90 SiCONDSI QASOUNI j AUTO HfATCft i A SIZ THtSE PHONO RADIO FomwHy 9*tS ftmt 69** : CONSOLE RADIOS i '" ?->?".- " ' " .- '? ? >???''? ? ?' '. ' ft mMKk I ? *.-7, V:... 'Bn'1 WHILE THE r L /V S T * ?vm vacuum at mm >M ! ? ? dm# ** i ?Ml wEM , Nodi Carolina ssue of th. rkhest State to the _ . ?r.j?j5&??ssj trated 2?-page portfoUo |?v*f I Holiday readers a complete guide to the interests that lie within its bor ders. This year the State will tea lire $175,000,000 from visitors seek ing ''sun, fan and a wonderful oppor tunity for laziness," adds the review. According to publisher* of Holi day* more than five million persons will are the North Carolina issue, for which Jonathan Daniels, well-known newspaperman, has written a 10,000 wprd account of his native State. More than'100 photographs, most of them in color, depict many of the State's attractions. The magazine's tobacco-tan cover, executed by artist Arthur Williams, carries five scenes of the State, the words "North Caro lina" and-the State seal. The State's industries have provid ed it with the wealth "which has been the basis of the burgeoning of North Carolina ? comparison with Ha sister states in the South," the magazine says. It makes more tow els than are produced anywhere the world, it produces more denims, and at High Point more furniture is made than anywhere else in this country with the possible exception of Grand Rapids. . | ' Added to this, the magazine con tinues, it is the leading State in the production of peanuts and American cigarettes and one of the first two states in the raaBaifactw?joj_jyk>n i': -IjHBBBiBBBWWpii In; its pictorial review Holiday mams the State to compile a com plete record, of the North Carolina scene. Its four-oolor reproductions capture the black-blue-gray shades of the Groat Smoky mountains. -They are beauty beyond descrip tion," observes Daniels, "accessible to eighty million people who live! within 600 miles of their breath-tek->| ing scenery." "Established only since 1926, the I Great Smoky National Park already | outdrawe the older and more specta cular Yellowstone," he points out. The Smokies, highest mountains in the East, are traversed by some of the Nation's best highways, says the article, which claims that though new and still incompleted the Blue Ridge Parkway is the "most beauti ful in Eastern America." Also in the color parade ate scenes of the bathing at Atlantic Beach, fisherman surf casting at Hatteras, the bus that runs from Hatteras to Man too, Main Street in Rocky Mt., the City Hall at New Bern, lettuce fields at Gastle. Hayne, strawberry farms near Wallace, the color guard at Elizabeth City high school, Nu Wjay Hotel at Bunaville, Fayette ville Road in Raleigh, the North Carolina State College Experimental Farm, Salem College, tobacco ware houses at Wilson, the mills at Cram erton, and Lake lam formed by a J dam across the Broad River. The Piedmoon^! is described as North Carolina's richest asset. Not ing that the tobacco factories a?d cotton mills of this "area pushed their value up*lo the two billion dollar j mark last year, Daniels adds: "In its banks it has enough home resources to rebuild its entire present indus triaT plant without any outside help." ? -i'v ??? ' ? * ?ty, L . of ', with another like it ?11 r:*': . * ?. ? T? rilities in the three towns are P? ftbijr unsurpassed in. the Smith. In I music, the theater, and sports, jossess the advantages of wr cities." Eastern North Carolina, the States | third portion, is rich in fish Same as well as history, says Bolt-J lay in its review. ? "It happens to be a place where more history happened among fww ? people than at any other point on the Atlantic coast," says Daniels. In a list of historic "firsts" which took place in tins region the raaga riqe includes the birth in 1587 of Virginia Dare, the first child of Eng lish parents bom in America, and the first airplane ride by the Wright mothers to 1908. Continuing its roundup of the State's coast attractions, the maga zine refers its readers to New Bern, where North Carolina ladies are jtanmng the restoration of a gover loris palace; Tarboro Common, where he town green is without equal any where outside of New England; and he famous nautical reference points Cape Hatteras, Cape Fear, and Hamond Shoal, by which Atlantic [ hipping steers. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as administrators f the Estate of Mm. Mattie J. Tug rell, late of Pitt County. North Ca olina, this is to notify all pemoms laving claims against the estate of he deceased to exhibit them to the mdersigned or to R. R. Lee, Attor tey, on or before the 11th day of leptember, 1948, or tips notice will e pleaded in bar of their recovery, ill persons indebted to said estate rill please make immediate settle ment This the 11th day of September, 947. IARRIE PHILLIPS mid J. R. TUG VELL, Administrators of the Estate f Mrs. Mattie J. Tugwell. deceased. 1. R. Lee, Atty. 19-6c NORTH CAROLINA ' ? PITT COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT NOTICE SERVICE SUMMONS FOR| PUBLICATION EDDIE McKENZIE ' vs. MARY TYSON McKENZIE The defendant, Mary Tyson Mc Kenzie, will take notice that an ac tion entitled as above hat been com menced in the Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, to se cure for the plaintiff tor absolute divorce from the defendant; and the wid defendant will further take no tice that, she is requited to appear at the office of the clerk of Supe rior Court' til eaid County in the Courthouse at Greenville, North Ca rolina, within 30 dayp after the 13th day of October, 1947, and answer or demur to the complaint in said ac tion, or the plaintiff will apply to the ?urt for the relief demanded in said romplaint. "i-r: ? house, s&j!? Clerk of Superior Court. This the 17th day of September,! 1947. S19-4c . .\? - "THF Ufd JP ts n v iruK B&KSllSi %tR is OVER > i ?rLORSHEIM.: S8P9?$?SmMmh ::.i."4"^f,-? ;v i;|ffu?.yi ;','i:U:' ?v ,"?? Jv? ? >?' It's only natural for people to wonder why, with the war and rationing over, there aren't won ~ Florsheim Shoes available. The answer, according to the Florsheim Shoe Company, is that reconver sion is not as easy as it sounds. ~r'- vV,',j*r>:*? v- 'v'f?;^ V'r:- ;'T" To change overnight from military to 100% civil ian production is no easy task. New leathers J&d materials must be obtained... more workers em ployed ... new, highly specialized skills taught them. Above all, Florsheim standards must never be for gotten. We agree with Florsheim that quantity is too high a price to pay for the quality that has built the largest fine shoe business in the world. We have several different styles in a wide range of ?v eixM V.U , 'Y... 'Hi .. -,-pppr: ~'? ? ?/s ~ Corntf Main and Wilson Sts. Farmville, N. C. No traipsing around to stores and offices ou pay bills by check the safe, Wk * rr: jrcgra 11' J -.*>* T.,-* - ? . W* ? 1 G? A., 126 N. Main Street Farmville, N. C. ? a/,? 'm
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1947, edition 1
2
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