l THE ENTERPRISE | & Published Every Tuesday and Thursday by ^ I ENTERPRISE PI HUSHING CO. k | WILLI AMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA ^ SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Strict1',’ in AH-»nrwp1 .- " '"’WiviAK-nf One Year Six Months OUTSIDE MARTIN COUNTY oUfC'-r';'..."a* $3.00 <£ . 1.75 * I One Year Six Months $3.50 | 2.00 I ,s | No Subscription Received Under 6 Months (V ==- ■■.■■■"■-«"'■ > Advertising Rate Card Upon Request w ... — f Entered at the post office in Williamston, X N C., as second-class matter under the act S of Congress of March 3, 1879. J Address all communications to The Enter- jj prise and not individual members of the ^ firm. Tuesday. October 5, lO.'yd i lire Prevention The people of Martin County can well mark the observance of Fire Prevention Week with a determination to work for the elimination of those causes that result in great fire losses. It is time right now to do something about the defective flue or chimney, to check the oil stove or heating plant, to clean away rubbish in the closets, basements and at tics. Fires are more common where there are shingles. A fire-resistant roof is costly, but it could be cheaper in the long run. Consideration given to the surroundings and conditions comes in handy if and when a fire starts. A convenient water hose or even a bucket of water or sand can mean the difference between a small and a large fire. And then in the event of fire, it is well to know your fire department's number, to think about what directions you would give the fire department in directing the fire men to your property. It is far less costly to prevent fire than it is to fight fire, and d is well to remember that mistakes can’t always be reconciled, not even by the best fire-fighting depart ment m the world (hi Fussing Judgment Bv Ruth Would you be content to be judged by the same criteria by which you judge others? If you would, then skip this article. It is not for you. You don't need it! It is meant for the rest of us fallible mor tals who are too apt to let our prejudices run awav with our tongues, who all unin tentionally -convert half facts to a concep tion of fact. What started me on this theme was the Sunday papers Thev were full of speeches —and each speaker was vary definite not only on what he thought and believed, but on what someone on the opposite side thought and believed. In short, he was quite sure his motives fvere misunderstood, but was equallv sure that he understood the motivations of the opposition. It is a good thing to be definite about your Awn beliefs 1 just wish there were more people who knew what they believed, and why they believed in a cause or a program, and then stood up for it at all times. But there are very few people who are in a position to have enough facts to know why then opponents think as they do Of course, you want your side to win. You know your program is best for your group and—you think—for every one else as well. But mavbe the other man thinks the same thing. Maybe you're both thinking in gen eralities. Mavbe vou both aie talking too fcroSWP No one likes being misunderstood. No one likes having his or her motives im pugned And you and I know from our pwn cvp< rimer that name-calling, group judging, general-assumptions, never really convince arvone but the person talking and the un-thinkers who believe onlv what they want to believe—and who are usually look ing for a scapegoat for their own shortcom ings. If you just want to talk—or if you wish to start a fight—then let your prejudices run rampant in your speech. But if you want to convince your listener, stay off per sonalities and stick to the facts. Don’t say anything that vou don’t know—and might have to retract. And above all. don’t play guessing-games : with your opponent’s mind. Not unless.you are willing to be- judged by him on the same amount of information you have! The man who makes no mistake usually makes nothing else.—Phelps. The I'eo/tle's Intelligent e Imlitleil The Republicans promised a lot in 1952 and kept their promises only to the few. Now. thev are indicting the intelligence of the American people. The approximately four million unemployed are being told that the economv is in tip-top shape. The Re publicans. led by that little Vice President, Dickie Nixon, tells in one breath about the reduction in military expenditures and de clares in the next breath that the defense of the country was never stronger. Farm . i O'- uo ,.ji-W-- H-’t Hi - "CVUUH ...C ladder. are told that they must go lower, but that Everything is all right. The Republicans talked about mink-coat and deepfreeze corruption in 1952. Now. it seems, that corruption is sweeping across the country from the offshore oil fields to the oil fields in Alaska, with a barren land policy shaping up in between. Billions were voted in tax relief, the party chiefs proclaimed, but the people are learn ing the painful way that only crumbs were intended for them The people are painted a beautiful picture on the surface, but underneath turmoil and strife exist. And it is apparent that the crowd tn Washington will not be satisfied until the people' have beem stripped of their __ heritage* and reduced to the role' of serfs. I.ootnut! if ter Their Omi The powers that be in Washington are looking after their own, turning a political ear after a token fashion to the farmer and laborer. While the kept press and the Eisenhower administration apologists have never missed a day in misrepresenting the facts underly ing the farm program, it is now mentioned in a casual way that right at five billion dol lars are tied up in stockpiling of certain items outside the realm of agriculture. Some of the stockpile is classilied as “critical and strategic” defense materials, the promoters explaining that war could close the trade routes and leave the materials in short sup ply. It is not explained why aluminum and other metals found and produced right here at home are included in the list of “critical” materials to be stockpiled. Maybe it is essential to stockpile the ma terials. including even aluminum. And, maybe, it is essential to stockpile food and feed, but Mr. Eisenhowei and Mr. Benson don’t think so. The plan to stockpile certain things to benetit certain groups that have been taken, under the wing of the administration and at the same time cut agriculture adrift is just •-.n..■ '< the -aw deal that is being rammer! down the" larmci'S rmoats m wus eountrv bv that sanctimonious group in Washington. hurls Do \»V Support Claims Free enterprise has been given endless lip service by the present administration, but not since the days before the anti-trust laws have there been so many mergers and consolidations. The facts do not support the claims advanced by big business through its mouthpiece in Washington. Everv time' two corporations agreed to bed down together, the poorer the chance a smaller company has to compete in this world. Monopoly is running wild with the blessings of the administration, and mon opoly has always exacted its pound ot tlosh. GO Second Sermons By Fred Dodge TEXT: "You can lead a , bov to college but you can’t make him think.” Elbert Hubbard The postman was shoving letters and magazines into the farmer's mailbox when the farmer's son came racing out of the driveway in his convertible, and n.ii ; ■ The ;>estn..t-:;-c.^h'd to the farmer in the yard. “Your son is a college graduate, isn't he?" “Yes.'' drawled the farmer, “he is. But to be fair to the college, he didn't have no sense io begin vvitn ' College educations are easier to obtain now than they were 30 years ago. More young men and women are completing their college training. This is a good trend, but not absolutely necessary for a happy, suc cessful life. A wise man has said that education is that which remains after we have forgotten what we have been taught. Formal school ing does not. of itself, make a man impor tant, successful or wealthy. There are three degrees which no college can give, that have more to do with successful living. They are. first, a Degree of Humility; second, a De gree of Sympathy; third, a Degree of Cour age. ' Earn those degrees and you are certain to graduate with honor. Las! Bites Held For Mrs. Sullivan Mrs I.ula Johnson Sullivan, a naiivc i*i Washington t oitnty and tlic mother of Mrs. John Swinson of the Dardens Community, this county, died at her home in Hayttsville, Maryland, last Fri day morning She had been in declining health ton years. She was born in Washington County 73 '.cam a a the daugh Iha Halt Johnson, and moved to Maryland twenty years ago. She was the widow ol Robert H. Sul livan. She was a member of the Baptist church in Hayttsville Surviving besides her daughter In this county are one son, John 1,. Sullivan, of Washington, D. C., three daughter,s Mrs. D. R. Hun ter. of Hvattsville, Mrs. W. C. Woodard and Mrs Arthur Mur ray, both of Washington, D. C.;j one brother. A. L. Johnson, of Belhaven. , The funeral service was eon-j ducted in the Methodist Church! at Plymouth Sunday afternoon [ at 4:30 o’clock by the Rev. D. L. j Font:, assisted by the Rev. P. B. i Niekens. Interment wtis in the [ Jackson Cemetery near Plymouth. | Nehru says war is only alter-j native to coexistence. Snooky BOV WANTED . Not a tliinn to wear Vou don’t have that problem when your mom let's MeLa whorn's take rare of your (‘lothing needs. Still Hopeful Of Cooperation Moscow.— Alexander Troyano vsk.v. first Soviet Ambassador in Washington, nas emerged briefly from retirement to express faith in ‘cooperation" between the So viet Union and the United States. The veteran diplomat opened the first Soviet Embassy in the United States after President Roosevelt accorded recognition In an article in Net*,^ the So viet English-language magabine, Mr. Troyanovsky described him self as "a man who continues, to believe firmly in the possibility of understanding and cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union." Mr. Hroyanovsky, Ambassador in Washington until 1939, said: "Plans for atomic war . . . can only involve the nations, the Am erican nation included, in un paralleled disaster, in a catastro phe which would endangei the very existence of civilization. "We are Firmly convinced that therp i? tod*;'.' no ? *n ternafional issue which could not he seltled peacefully by mutual agreement between the parties. All that is required is strict non interference on .ill sides in the domestic affairs of other coun tries and a desire to safeguard in ternational security and promote business and cultural intercourse among all the nations of the woi VI." Commenting on t^e American Declaration o‘ ; dependence. Mr. Troyanovsk.y said; "very influ EjatiSTg-l1 Vm • it . ’..r, ’i:e rather strange vir-v that what was the lawful right of the Am erican people back in the 18th century cannot he acknowledged as the right of the Chinese, Ko rean, Indochinese, and other peo ples in the middle of the 20th." Little is now heard of Mr. Tro yanovsky in Moscow diplomatic circles, although he was known until recent years as a lecturer at the Soviet Foreign Ministry’s School of Diplomacy. His son Igor, educated in the United States, is English inter preter to the Soviet Foreign Min Plan- I p Iron Ore And Ship It Off Their form* Birmingham, Ala.—Farmers in south Alabama are plowing up ac ceptable iron ore nv the ton and shipping it to North Alabama steel mills. More than 1.050 car loads of iron ore have been ship ped from pastures and cotton fields since January. About five loads of unwashed ore will pro-. duce one load of ore ranging from ister. Vyacheslav M. Molotov, and accompanied him to the Geneva rot it" er: •<.. 50 to 56 per cent metallic iron, it i? said. ARTHRITIS? I hove been wonderfully Metted hi b*iAg ^ restorer to octive life ofter being tripplej m neorly every joint in my body and with muscular soreness from head to foot, I hod Rheumatoid Arthritis and other forms of Rheumatism, hands deformed and my ■nfcles were set. limited space prohibits telling you more here bv4 if you will write me, I will reply ot once and tell you how I received this wonderful relief. Mrs. Lela S. Wier 2805. .A^bo* Hilfs Drive, ?. O. Box .. —tx" " »”*'■ j' v. -.r.,..- • - -~-"c—^ THE BEST DEAL IN TOWN IS AT Chas. H. Jenkins i C, §p l wesf AM) COMPANY', INC. USED CAR SALES LEADER Don't liny u iikhI our until yon vi*it onr lined car lot. Many to neleet from—all reconditioned ami gnur> antccd. Every one fully equipped. All reanonaldy priced. Chas.H. Jenkins & Co. \Y jlliamnton. N. C. "That's the Kind of Insurance I Want!" • "Ever since I started my business. I have been looking tor lust such a policy as Se curity Life's new Business and Professional Special." say young executives when they get the facts on this new, low net cost insur ance that provides maximum protection Even with the exceptionally low net cosl. unusually high cash jralues are available after the first year. Excellent dividends are paid annually, with an extra dividend at the end of 10 years and every 5 years thereafter. Proceeds of this policy may be taken under several attractive settlement options. Dou ble Indemnity. Waiver of Premium and In come Disability features are available. This is one of the finest insurance plans you can buy, so call your local Security 1 ifn Representative today Have turn explain fully the advantages of this Special low net cost plan of life insurance. Remember too. Security Life and Trust Company, now in its 35th year, had a greater net gain of ordinary life insurance-in force in its home state of North Carolina in 1953 than any other company You can be sure when you “face the Future with Security" St SECURITY LIFE And Trust Company MOM* OMlCt • *IS$T©N SAlfM I J. PAUL SIMPSON iwonvral Trlrpiionr 2f Vt^ illiaiii*lmi. 1\. (!. J We're out to break a record in October! There’s a mighty good chance that October 1954 will he the biggest October in Buick history 3n fact, we know it will—if we canfeccp Buick sales rolling as they’ve been roll ing thus far this year. This is the car that has romped ahead oi competition climbed up into, the circle of America’s three top sales leaders It’s the car that has been winning cus tomers because it has the power, the ride, the room, and the styling that make it the buy of the year. So we’re in the mood to talk turkey, if you are in the market. Come in today for a car — and a deal — too good to miss. THIS IS THE 3-WAY BONUS WE OFFER IN BUItK TflrMft* 1. Tomorrow’s Styling True year-ahead beauty with long, low yianiOf lines, keynoted by that spectacular new panoramic windshield that most other cars won't have till 1953 or later 2. Higher Resale Value In the years to come From the far-in-advance styling th^'w^T**** keep your Buiek new and modern-loo''ing well into the future as other cars catch up. 3. Bigger Allowance from our volume business For the huge soles success that has moved Buick into the circle of the "Big 3" means we can offer you a higher trade-in on your present car. Cqme in and see for yourself that we can make you a better deal. i MILTON Util STAtS KM WICK-Sm TV. kick 4*4. SLw Altvmt. Tim^vi \ WHIN UTTIt AUTOMOtllCS AM tUILT WICK WILL WHO TMiM Chos. H. Jenkins & Co. of Williomston, Inc. Highway 17 PhotiM 2147 Williiimatnn. f.