Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 14, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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Local and Personal Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hollinsworth, of V.ashingion, D. C., visited Mr. and Airs. G. B. Hollingsworth here last week. Mrs. John A. Ward and #ons, James Willis and Jchn, jr., returned Friday from Elizabeth City and Nor folk, where they visited friends and telatives. I'iiss Nellie Berras left yesterday for Baltimore after spending some time with Mrs. Mary Bell Osborne. Miss Willamena Stockley of Em poria, Vs., has returned to her home alter visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jordan Ward. Mrs. Gladys Charles who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. J. L. Wil liams and Mr. Williams has leturned to her home in Grifton. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Williams visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Chap man in Grifton on Sunday. Mrs. Anna Harrison is spending the summer with her mother, Mrs. Sherer in Lancaster, S. C. "Mr. and Mrs. John Rodgerson and daughters spent the week end in Nor tolk. .. iA> ■ Ai Mrs. Myrtle Brown and little de.ugh ter, Myrtle Wooiard, are visiting friend* in Durham. Mrs. Mary H. Ward and grand daughter, Miss Stella Ward, will leave next week for Panacea Springs, Lit tleton, N. C. They will there for about a month, in the interest of Mrs. Ward's health. Miss Martha Louises Andeison left 'his morning for New York. From there she will go to Asbury Park, N. J. to visit friends for some time. Mr. Milton Norman spent the week end at his home in Halifax. Mr. T. C. Cook of Rocky Mouat spent the week end with his family here. Mr. Wilmer Sitterson of Colerain visited Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stubbs here Sunday. - » ___ Mrs. H. M. Stubbs and little son spent the week end with her parents in Wake Forest. They were accom panied home by her neice, little Miss Alice Gibson Wright. With Whom Do You Wish To SELL YOUR TOBACCO? If You Wish to Sell It with Men Who Know Tobacco irom the Seed to ' • the Factory Men Who will Trf»at| Yon with Absolute Fairness Men Who Guarantee "You ■ ■- ■ . ■■ - .: £ - , • c" ; .. ' , THE MARKET PRICE FOR EVERY PILE \ ic'v g"'g "|| £' ' ' t",/ ' ■"\ * A t T. ----- ' f" -. -* , L • 't. And Men Who Appreciate Your Business Sell With Griffin - Morton - Watts & Gurkin ROANOKE WAREHOUSE *3?V| 111' ~ -LA WILLIAMSTON, N. C. Mrs. Blanche Anderson has return ed to her home near Tarboro after, . .si ...g her daughter, Mrs. C. A. Harrison for several days. Mr. Julius S. Peel has returned from a business trip which took him to Koanoke and Bluefteld, Va. and Balti more, Md. Mrs. Martha H. Britt and Miss Mary Louise Carstarphen lefi. Satur day for Morehead City where they will spend a week. Mi. and Mrs. Norman Shepherd and little son, Norman, jr. arrived this Afternoon to visit Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Dunning for a few days. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thai k all friends who so kindly and tenderly ministered to my wife and our mother, in her sickness and burial, and for the token of love for her, expressed in the beautiful ilowers placed on her grave. We also jippreciate the sympathy extended us in our bereavement.—John H. Mizeil and childrea. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the large num bei of friends who so vigorously fought the fire which consumed our Kin, for it was through their aid alone thut we saved our saw mill, planirg mill, and lumber shed, and meant a saving of many thousands of dollars. Very respectfully, BAILEY A BARNHILL, By J. T. BarnhUl. IN MEMORY In memory of my loving sister, Pearl ttennett I.iggett, died July 13, 1924. The month of July once more is here. To me the saddest of the year, Because one year ago today My darling siHter was taken away. I grieve for her in silence, No eye can see me weep; But many a tear is shed, While others are asleep. The flowers we place upon her grave Will wither and decay; But our love for her, who sleeps be neath, Will never fade away. —Loving sister, Charlie Bennett. BABY'S COLDS ■ ~a are soon "nipped in the bod" without "dosing" by o— of— MAOfINE SHOPS AND LABORATORIES MAKE CHAMGEB W STYLES FOR WOMEiv Vknmkl" fcahiona--a n d ■art too, tor that matter— an cawtod in madMne aSapa fIDO QnHXBOBft ■DoraioriQß. tw» k the oocitantkn at Imam Bon% beaaty spadal- during the last Um jam baa tranafarred her MtMttaanom Pack to Mew RHM w£s& stoSd know uihaa talking about iar tM thai tt bereto ft baa ban tta onni gyinkwi that tfaa mooes of mnant ta naatfcnlße, an the rawdt of the whim of soooo cr—tor o t go was or ooAffores in the French capital. "Bobbed hair, for example*" UU MTTE SMII recently to a rep resentative rf the pr ss, "is to my fated not the result of a new trend of tboaght. Philosophy has never Ptajed any great part in the day-to-day life of women. New ideas may have changed the for tunes of nations, but have had little effect upon the way women >.ore their clothes. "So it cannot but appear that mvenience and necessity have far •••re to do with it. That is the nerat reason given for the rrop ;"tig up of cropped hair. - 't i ick of the reason—which itainly is sound—is the fact | at certain new inventions in the '•rid have made convenience a • ire vital matter. Robbed hair, >r instance, has come in at about ». same rate a.« has the low i iced, generally available auto mobile. Riding in automobiles, as > - fry one know*, is destructive of • 'coiffure at all elaborately or Uflcially arranged. The wind niply wastes all the time that s been spent. So this happen people found that they would her ride in automobiles than t ride; and fio they must And •Moans of fixing the hair attrac »ly, yet in a style which would 1 hstand the breeses. That's what I mean by saying' Mrs. Martha Gurganus, of Bear •Grass, returned to her home Friday, utter ' spending .sever: I days with her mater, Mrs. Mary H. Ward. NOTICE OF SALE ' ■*'-■ r-r. !' Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain THE ENTERPRISE WILLIAMSTON, N. G _—- —-- i that fashions some from the ma dhtne afcopa, the ohemioal labors todat, mmmt than n«m the salons of the oootoriers and coiffeurs of Pari*." The same tfcfaff, according to Mile, Ruere, has tsiken place in men's styles. A notable instance Is the now nearly obsolete Whisker. Our grandfathers, said the Fretvch authority, and hers, too, for th»it matter wore the hirsute herbage chiefly becsus shaving it off, with an open rn/.o and soap that now is- consider ' soap that now is considered to" too harsh for laundering, was too much an ordeal. A man let nature and the facial flora take their course, rather than risk his throat to the unguarded ramr. The in vention of the safety raaor and ; pecial soaps for softening the beard natum! removed the ha?, ards to nm.culine pulchritude and with the removal of the haz ards came the removal of the beard. A present development- of fashion, due directly to scientific research, is the rapidly growiic number of women with gray ha.i who are coloring it It is only r cently, yvithin the last three fi'i four years, Mile. Ruere point, out, that .-.erious scientific attfU— tion has been brought to beai upon the rather neglected subjec of coloring human hair. "Women a few yearS ago—«i deed a vory few .war- ago," she said, "had to choose between loi 1. ' ! deed nf trust cx-Mutcil to tho unitwH • .ii u t>> icui'.' .• tvrt.tin i >ie ni I nut tee by It. K. Itarnhill ami iu " i *'"'*'»* ! «»•'. wif*> .Su>it liaHtliill oil l.lif . na> ' 1 . •. i i-t»i Ti.i\nnr iM'fii i-i.nfjTrTi-.T fi'Trfj, ai tnr 1 of Dei'enilict' 19111, said dr;-d nf t: if I „f | , I f 111K ol record 111 lilt' I'lllilil' ';; i •' I-—I U_UJ mU— I r I lilt .las hi' \ii>'u ' l!» :.. I 2 o(i' f Martin Counlj in llnuk S I «(| M , | tm| ;„ i,, Mat |»aife "71; .said deed of trust heitiM' mi (nun \in \\ 'lli.ini; .tin', Nt ,•. • Ing gray or ghafltly Anil the col orings th«n were so very crude, so i very unconvincing, that they per ' for«* chose Rrayness. "It is cou nie, dif i fer»uC" v -The hnlrslinit, a new\no j~ CBMT~of ~ccrtormg nuir, especially i designed for human hair, lias heai . , evolved; it allow* any woman to I chanp? the hue of her iiair heck to -that of her youth within tiio , short space of 'fifteen or twent;, .'minutes; and sn vunrrtngly is the •niaration compounded that it; vis are ([\iito indiscernible as I .uulicial. "Rut not only has science > achieved a natural coloring hut a ■ Puck in, tin*bu-'le e*r:i, t hair dyes - Containing a suhstmice entitled paraphenylene diatom I were about a-, safe to m i proximity to the •■'p HS tin- njvn raior- was to--the throat. Uh««u»..u— have eliminated (his itijifr«**li>- it - and with it the ch'ief ground. to i many wotnen'. " prejudice un-it coloring their hair." "The coming of bibbed I ai'r. the going of the untat .■! whi.-k i and the almost universal custom of - coloring 1 huip—all tin r are the product of the work r the enijin eer or the chemist. The dp maker, the huirdre;scr and other _ JUlfihfoTk a.H coimnonh :h*» Mip posed To t"o t lie vruMnHTTTT 1 styles are really but .caii vinr em the order - ; .of necessities- JW»: necessities brought alxnit ne •mechanical ami chemical mvi j tions." ■it for sale to the hitfbeisl biilticr for V"->l' »t public auction Uie fallowing • ■ ill'-ii icar lv aV: Being thu lot I .it \\UU, UnriiLC lit tin; T( wn of William:,ion, N. 0. um.l bound ' T T H-f! by WV i iili|tlon >.u»iv; tin (»u h. by U -i i ,!m .in i lie ot-st, I»\ the ljt. of i. i . r i Jim 'it. ; ; .oilin iiui mi 'he «fs' ii> A. R nuin.iii!,- .iii'i 'loin v\»ok l.Hs, »nd being the Mini lot and v ■ : ry~->. Civ s. j ii M.I;*•« i v \ ' ir i - nM v, ■ . fJo " i ! . > t • 'f r ; i t r* - ' . \ »•, »•-. . • r ",V I*\ t 4 ■ ; . ; • j ** -fa * •, . thus r • r?r J . 0) ' \i iC VtAfa (LAbT CALL % * P'Lasjl IN otice! |-• _ ■ , —' . Tiu i ' a inmi>siuijcrs at its last f i imi, ril.v - ' i-'v. authorized me to cut off*- ' " "» ~ i" ar>> *nn« ifi *>er-ms thai ha . o tailed io pay Uum Jii i uaier aiul liviit bills by July 15. 7Y v.ui ~r\ inu p.iic: >>i;r June li_iht and . at „ i ii.iL pic. '.v >:!; m'mm.o, i'ore Uk 1 15th o:' Jul , ,kS *>*> bic • ill ;'o around to collect I these t 'Us ii.vi no .hi tlyrnotice will he 4ii til to ,ui\ i«. theni. A'iail vlttvks to \Y. T. . s inui tlii' nu#n ! e\ -ai lii- ut ihe hi\ie Warehouse. i • - Last Notice ,i. L - ¥ | ara*e iWiW occupied by B. U% Hum ' the 13th lay of July, 1925. WHKEtER MAUTIN, Trustee. ; : " 4 ' 4t i j B n fl TO. j l'iili-nl l.awywe i ll**. S' vWt'h SI \\ 1>" 0\ 4"A v' u experi'WP J I' A T I: NTS i i | Si-nd iiri.'fl or Jc?t*h j j- "•! wn Aiit p'->fill» ml you -i j _LI I liiv bunk patent*- it).! j jI j ira it-1 .aiki v I. be Tnt.lCL-ys i j | ,i". rcqiiot-t. i 1
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 14, 1925, edition 1
3
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