Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Aug. 22, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE ENTERPRISE Published Every Tuesday and Friday by the ENTERPRISE PUBLISHING CO. WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA SUBSCRIPTION R ATES (Strictly Cash in Advance) One Year - $2.50 Six Months . 1.50 IN MARTIN COUNTY OUTSIDE MARTIN COUNTY One Year . $3.00 Six Months . 1.75 =...= Advertising Rate Card Upon Request Entered at the post office in Williamston, N. C.. as second-class matter under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Address all communications to The Enter No Subscription Received Under 6 Month* prise and not individual members of the firm. Friday. 4 it gust 22. 1*417 1 liutl Stall* Of if fairs The Army is flooding newspaper waste baskets, sending its recruiters up and down the land and literally begging for volun teers. Possibly the Army needs men, but while it pleads for more manpower, its per sonnel can do some of the most foolish and absurd things imaginable. One may be inclined to join up after read ing all the promises that are made and the beautiful pictures of the service are paint ed. but he’ll change his mind in disgust when he reads such reports as those coming from the Mediterranean Theater, telling all about Lt. Gen. John C H. Lee’s high-living staff and the rotten deal the enlisted man is receiving. Lee, it is reported, has three pri vate residences, one in Rome, another in Florence and still another in Viareggio while the enliste d men are in cramped quar ters and are receiving poorly prepared food. It is a bad state of affairs and in it there's >.» vlt « ^ ' • ■ v .vV^v- .1 "‘v.-* -»v'' must alter one of two conditions: we must j remove the rotten fruit out of the armed services or we must advise the diplomats to change their course. A Congressional committee is being sent to investigate the charges made against the I oil It'll amount to little more than a paid vacation for that many more, and a white wash for the general. It would be quite in order to send another committee to investigate the investigating committee. \ Brave Heart By Ruth Taylor Many centuries ago, when Greece flour ished as the great democracy of a world whose center lay in the troublous waters of the Mediterranean. Pericles said, “The se cret of happiness is freedom and the secret of freedom is a brave heart.” What was true then is true today. What is this secret to which a brave heart- is the key? Happiness is the result of free choice: of the ability to give freely and not upon the demand and according to the will or whim of some self imposed overlord. Happiness is found in the freedom to live according to the laws of right and justice: to work in a spirit of friendly intercourse with our fellow men, unhampered and unhindered by prejudice against anyone because of race or creed or color or class. Happiness rests in freedom to worship as our conscience dictates: to pray to God as a free man, at peace with one’s own soul, and to see to it that our neighbor has the same privilege. Freedom is the absence of fear—of that corroding dread of impending evil, that can cerous mistrust of one’s closest comrades which is the deadliest weapon of any dic tator—of the left as well as of the right. Freedom is the security envincod through peace of mind in a world in which men are motivated by respect for the rights of others and by a sense of their own obligations to society. Freedom is the knowledge that suc cess or failure depends upon one's own self and the way in which one’s talents and abilities are utilized. Freedom is the way of life for men who are not afraid of living. A brave heart is one that has courage and faith. It has courage to go ahead: to believe in the integrity of others to combat evil wherever it exists to fight loyally and wholeheartedly to the bitter end; to face the unknown because of the building light of purpose, the hope of a finer goal. It has faith—faith in one’s self, in one’s fellow men, in the God of one’s belief and in the future whether it he a future in this world or be \ owl' -hr-. . ••••»••.-->•• •• -■ . th(> secret of freedom is a brave heart.” Paint a cat that looks like a tree, or a dog that resembles a running brook, or a brook that's second cousin to a radio, and you’re in. - A Greenwich Village artist giving the formula for success in the art world today. 1939-1947 it's true\ FOLKS/J < rv y / LOOKS LIKE LOWER LIVING COSTS STARTED WITH REDDY KILOWATT... EVEN V DURING THE WAR// ELECTRICITY ALWAYS LEADS TWE WAY TO ^BETTER LIVING.1] 7^—■— EVERY WOMAN v ho goes shopping . . . every man who looks over the pile of monthly bills... knows that the cost of living h*is increased substantiallv in the last few years. The one bright spot in the family budget is the low cost of Electricity! You can still buy Electricity at pre war prices — the lowest in Vepco history! VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY l CHURCH NEWS nirnc n of christ , Hamilton D. A Hudson. Pastor. Services at 8 o’clock Saturday night. Sunday school, 10 a. m. T. F. Respass, Supt. Preaching at 11 o’clock. Young peoples meeting Sunday night at 7:30 o’clock. Piaycr meeting every Wednes day night. The public is invited to attend all services. CHRISTIAN John L. Goff, Minister. Bible school, 9:45. Classes for all ages. J. O. Manning, supt. Mrs. G. G. Woolard, teacher of Phila thea Bible Class and E. S. Peelj teacher of Men’s Bible Class. Morning worship and Lord's supper, 11:00. Subject: “The Grace of Rallying.” The pastor speaks. Union service at 8:00 in the Methodist Church with Rev. B. T. Hurley delivering the sermon. The public is invited to attend the services. METHODIST B. T. Hurley. Pastor. 9:45. Church school, W. M. Man ning. supt. 8:00. Union evening service. The pastor of the Methodist church preaching. There will be no morning ser vice on account of 1he pastor’s appointment at Cashie Methodist Church. -#. BAPTIST Ira D. S. Knight, Pastor. Margaret Wacaster, Education al director. 9:45, Sunday school. Urbin Rog ers. supt. 11 a. m., morning worship. 7 p. m., Training Union. Hil dreth Mobley, director. 8 p. m., Union service at the Methodist Church. Sermon by Rev. B. T. Hurley. Tuesday afternoon at 4 o’clock i\... ;r,vl,tu Piwu,' ..-ill »vi<* 1 -. ♦'■ Mid-week prayer service will be held at the church Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. Churrli Of The* Advent (Episcopal) Angus* 24. St. Bartholomew, The Apostle Day. 9:45 i m . Church school. 1 1:00 .. in. Morning prayer Ji ltfl Union serve e at t*-r jmjtbm ■Mw*"*-*■ Met hod i .1 Cbm ciTj; RIDDICK’S GROVE Regular services at Riddick Grove Baptist Church Sunday, evening at 3:00 p. m. HOLINESS J. Floyd Williams, Pastor. Sunday school at 9:45, B, D. Wynn, supt. Morning worship at 11:00. Youth service at 0:00. Evangelistic service at 7:30. Mid-week prayer service, Wed nesday night at 7:30. Contractor Gives Retonga Full Credit —.. Eaat, Sleeps und Feels Like A l)iff<'ri“nl Person Now, Stales C>I<1 Time Resident “I had about lost faith in all medicines but Retonga soon brought be real relief,” declares Mr. C. M. Whiteside, well-known contracting carpenter of 12 Laurel Avo.. Asheville. N C., and a re spected resident of the City for 40 years. '1 always enjoyed extra good health until about a year ago,” continued Mr. Whiteside. “Then I began having trouble with my food disagreeing with me. Soon I seemed to have sour stomach all the time. My appetite left me, I slept so poorly that I never felt rested, and I had to resort to vari ous kinds of laxatives. I felt so weakened and run-down that I realized I could not keep up un less 1 could get relief. “Retonga is the first medicine I found that gave me the relief I needed. I now have the appetite of a wood-chopper and all that distress from indigestion is re lieved 1 rest well every night the sluggish, elimination is reliev ed. and 1 feel like a different per son. I never before used a medi cine as good as Retonga.” Retonga is intended to relieve distress due to insufficient flow of digestive juices in the stomach, loss of appetite Vitamin B 1 de ficiency and constipation. Accept no substitute. Retonga may be ob tained at Clark's Pharmacy, Inc.'1 EVERETTS BAPTIST E. R. Stewart, Pastor. 10 a. m.. Bible school. 11 a. m.. worship service. | Theme: "Profit and Loss.” 7 p. m.. Baptist Training Union. 8 p m . worship service. Theme: Sowing and Reaping.” 8 p. m.. Thursday, prayer service, j All members urged to attend The public is invited and welcomed. | Revival meeting will be held Sep- ; tember *18 to 28. Rev. E. C. Shoe j will assist. HAMILTON BAPTIST E R. Stewart, Pastor. TO a. m.. Bible school. 7 o. m.. Baptist Training Union. 8 p. rrr, Friday, August 22. or dination service—Rev. Elliot Erown Stewart. 8 p. m., Wednesday, prayer scr- ' vice .followed by teachers’ meet ing and choir practice. . ! Revival meeting will begin Sep- | lember seventh. Rev. E. C. -Wil kie will assist. An insurance salesman tells j about a valuable wardrobe which his firm insured for a client dur ing a European trip. Upon reach ing London .site wired: "Gown lift ed in.Lond. ' After due delibera tion he sent his reply: “What do yOu think our policy covers?” The Georgia election board was counting bailots. A Republican j ticket showed up. Not finding I anything wiong with. it. the board j put it aside as suspicious only, j After several hours a second Re- I publican ballot showed up. This was going too far. The judge said: "The son-of-a-gun voted twice, j Throw 'em both out.” ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having this day qualified as ad ministratrix of the estate of Myr tle E. Bunting deceased, late of Martin County, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said estate to present them for payment on or before the 2fi day of July 1948. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their ree ’Ht ery. All persons indebted to s: 9 estate will please make immediate settlement. This the 20 day of July. 1947. Clara J. Everett, Administratrix au 8-15-22-29 se 512 TRUCKING and HAULING MANNING TRUCK LINE Jaek and “Blue” Manning Temporary Phone 213-J Williamslon I I ? ^4 1/fjarL of Quality ZJoocL JL \ MILK A brown, juicy roast right out of the oven, fluffy hot biscuits, fragrant coffee . . . these in viting sights and tempting aromas draw the family to the table, repay you a thousand times for all your work and planning. * Now, with the new CS trademark guiding you to finer foods, you can be sure that every meal will be delicious and nourishing. Whenever you shop, look for this distinctive trademark on the labels of good bread, flour and canned ^ goods, and on Colonial Stores them selves, where traditional high standards of quality and service always prevail. 1 %e gold Jabel ficCFFH AMOURS VII NS A 4 Oz. C n SAUSAGE SANDWICH BREAD OUR PRICE Lb -»■ l?i «€i FESTAL FANCY IAUGE PEAS n AltMOI It'S < <>HNI I» 2E wm KX'I'RA ST'NIl.MID <0(1.01 V CREAM CORN N, 2 Can IS* D,AVBFRRV S\Vvr STOKELT’S c„2S« MOTHER’S KALAD DRESSING 31$ I’nnnr/. FeKf/er Fil'd’ SIRLOIN STEAK. Ih. 73c T-BONE STKAK. Il». 75c ROUND STKAK, IS. 73o GROUND Kill poiintl I".. STEW BKKF. plain nr brisket. 11> if.‘In Club or ■ammms* y ' to ‘ Bag, €?£ Porlrrlmust*Sleak lb 9.*>e iin it SPRY SHORTENING m» cm. 39c SPAGHETTI d p 2 « o, 17c RITTER’S Chili Sauce Relish 12J-Oi. jar 25c CHEESE RITZ. nabisco « or Pkg 25c FRUIT JARS d°‘ pm*. 69c FRUIT JARS Dot Quart, 81c TOMATO SOUP heinz iioi. can 12c KELLOGG VARIETY CEREAL Pkg 25c (ini Pi!) Roasts, 111.69c* TIJ R k E VS - II). 59e Shrimp, II). .79 I)rc‘ssc*(l Fish .29 l.IBBV PARTY PACK SWEET MIX Pickles Cl RAPE JUICE Colonial TOM ATO SO CP HurSf’s 3 PACKER’S LABEL TOMATO Juice 12-Oz. Jar Pt Bot. lOJ-Oz. Can, 46 Oz. Can ce®o catijvq 1e221L‘22?“v TRI«s l‘<«“ * . «ie stauneh al n«dilan7nTroe t;/rrs-*" fh'IIrious «i,,i ,,03c deserts will, fresh fruit curior too. 1 tuP or toe cream LIBBY’S DEEP BROWN BEHAIS 2 14°, 25« Cans nw Fanny Mountain Barllolt PEAKS, 2 lbs 2.V thirst quencher I?' '*2;;’,>7“ h!,*y <0 make. PeHWr bevp>a*re. Ply 1 < Trent result* .... PIT time if von t ' resuHs rv •wineas mi,p|,'(e this: Use twice Ha much tea *tL • : l7se 'Valins water 3V0 BPin.fr,sl1 Then pour tl>» tint J minute*, fracked jof> * tea over keeps the l>a rW ‘a m<'hi,iin sprig of fresh mnt»d1 * 0001 lemon slices. nt> garuislt with LANCS PROCi.SSED DILL PICKLES 23e MORTON CHICKEN NOOD1.E i6-0z. jar 25$ LARSEN'S FRESH-LIKE CORN M> Oz. Can £3(« MAGIC CHEF RICE DINNER 14 Oz Can ?4©$ Malaga drapes, 2 lbs 29e Hovea fntn 'the0/",^' S,,'k Whole for rnp lenron elices. AnJ hot - „ cinnamon t„ .e3 STRONGHEART dog rooo hot ' a . ‘ttnanion t0 the ask *>»« the tSsrsr*Theru 15; Oz. Cans 19 POTATOES, Porlo Rican, Sweet, 2 lbs. 19e G R E E N BEANS, _3 lbs. 23c BLUE PEI \1S, California, larj>r. 2 lb*. 35e YELLOW ONIONS, U. S. No. 1, 3 lb*. l«)e 2-Pound Mesh Bag 21e EGG PLANT, fancy borne grown, 2 lbs. 17c CARROTS, California Green-Top, 2 bunches'19c Honsi»hn!d Snppli*** LUX FLAKES When Available Lge Pkg. 3IC RINSO WHEN AVAILABLE Lge Pkg 31® LIFEBUOY SOAP 2 cake, 17c LUX TOILET SOAP 2 cake, 17c INSECT SPRAY Pt. Can 2Sc ROACH KILLER 2i*Oz. Crn BLUE LABEL DETHOL 20-o*. can 19c
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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Aug. 22, 1947, edition 1
2
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