Newspapers / The Coastland Times (Manteo, … / Oct. 2, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO BOOK CLUB VIEWS SCENES OP NEW ENGLAND TERRAIN J " l Miss Elizabeth Ball, director of the B. H. M. Regional Library, was the guest speaker when the Matcha Pungo Book Club of Belhaven met at the home of Mrs. L. A. Knight on Thursday evening. Miss Ball was introduced by Mrs. R. D. Mitchell, who was in charge of the program. The speaker, Who was formerly connected with libraries in Ver mont, showed slides of nature scenes in Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire, and made inter toting remarks about the trips she made to those places to photo graph the scenes. Miss Ball, who is a nature enthusiast, expressed delight over the many opportuni ties for nature study in this re gion. She displayed and recom mended several books on nature study. Mrs. E. W. Midyette presented the short subject, which for this year will be “Cities.” Her subject I was Monte Carlo, the city that j furnishes most of the revenue for the tiny country of Monaco. At the conclusion of the pro gram Mrs. Knight served ice cream and cake. Miss Geraldine Cox, librarian, at Bath High School, was a guest. Club members present were Mrs. John Boger, Mrs. John Broome, Mrs. J. R. Brown, Mrs. Howard Chapin, Mrs. Andrew Hodges, Mrs. Roy Justice, Mrs. Harold Lupton, Mrs. E. W. Midyette, : Mrs. R. D. Mitchell, Mrs. Jule Purvis, Mrs. Lucy Smith, and Miss Katie Topping. >» EAST HYDE PTA WILL HEAR PATROLMAN SPEAK , ENGELHARD.—East Hyde PTA will hold its second meeting of the year Tuesday, October 6, 8 p. m. i Mrs. Rebecca Spotanski, program chairman, has announced the topics for discussion will be safety and the point system. Patrolmen R. L. ( Rhodes of Swan Quarter and John j Thomas of Belhaven will be guest j speakers. ' Everyone is urged to attend this j and every PTA meeting of the ( year. “Remember, our school sys- j tern is only as strong as the link- , age between home and school,” re- J ] minds Mrs. Spotanski. I < JACQUIN'S JL ROTAILS *2 pint liiilin mltutiii wagftqifl |j| otsrnteo mom chain - 90 99000 cusies iacquih it ci«. lie* ruia* r*. / r WHAT’S THE STORY ON THE NEW FORD FALCON? Come in and we'll 4 tell you all we know! HOW IIG WILL THE ALL-NEW FORD FALCON IE? HOW MANY PEOPLE WILL IT CARRY? HOW AIOUT POWER? To start with, in the New-Size Ford—the Falcon —you save but never “do without!” You get modern, fine-car styling, six people room and comfort, a car that’s born and bred for the American road! LETS TALK AIOUT STYLING FIRSTI You’ll be amazed by the Falcon’s beauty. No “stubbiness” of other cars in this field, but low, sleek, European flair in beautifully proportioned style . . . “wide open” visibility all around . . . interior styling that’s fresh and smart. The Falcon is Ford’s way of proving a true economy car needn’t suffer in looks or ride. j LETS TALI AIOUT THE AU-NEW 1 FALCON’S SIX-PASSENGER SIZEI » In both 2- and 4-door models, the new Falcon will have full width, full-depth seats for six k adults. Plus room in the spacious SEE YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER PUNGO HOSPITAL NEWS I White patients listed at the Pun go District Hospital in Belhaven September 22-28 were Coley Smith, Belhaven, Rt. 2; Ernest Windley, Belhaven; Mrs. Elizabeth Jarvis, Belhaven; Mrs. Carol Waters, Pinetown; Mrs. Mary Havens, Pine town; Barrett Nixon, Belhaven; Mrs. Hilda Allen, Pantego; Mrs. Ellie Mae Braddy, Rt. 2, Belhaven; Miss Melba G. Midgette, Scranton; Mrs. Johanna van Guysen, Pantego; Mrs. Annie Wade, Belhaven; Gil bert H. Boger, Durham; Mrs. Joyce Ann Brooks, Engelhard. Colored patients were Mary E. Griffin Belhaven; Ethel Wiliams, Fairfield; Lucy Stanley, Belhaven; Baby Dianne Murry, Engelhard. Births White: Mr. and Mrs. Latham Jarvis, Belhaven, a son, September 23. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Allen, Pantego, a son, September 27. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin T. Brooks, I Engelhard, a son, September 27. Colored: Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wil liams, Fairfield, a daughter, Sep tember 27. Mr. and Mrs. James Stanley, Belhaven, a daughter, September 27. SOCIAL SECURITY DATES IN HYDE AND BEAUFORT Social security representatives will be available to the public at ten a. m. in the following places and dates. Courthouse at Swan Quarter, October Bth and 22nd. No vember 12; December 10 and 24th. Beaufort County at the city hall in Washington:: October 5,7, 12, 14, 19, 31, 26, and 28th. November 2,4, 9, 16, 18, 23, 25, and 30. De cember 5,7, 9, 14, 16, 21, 23, 28 and 30. .MISS LONA BONNER TO WED WILLIAM RUEL CARAWAN Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Thomas Carmine announce the forthcom ing marriage of their sister, Miss Lona Elizabeth Bonner, to Mr. William Ruel Carawan on the fif teenth of October, nineteen hun drel and fifty nine, at 4 o’clock in the afternoon at Soule Meth odist Church. No formal invitations have been issued. The public is in vited to attend. trunk for all their luggage! And it can turn and park just as easily as most of those 4- and 5-passenger imported jobs! LETS TALK AIOUT HOW IT'S RUILTI Like the fabulous Ford Thunder bird, the Falcon’s built in the latest single-unit construction... adding extra inches everywhere inside . . . making the car one solid, quiet, integrated structure. LETS TALK FALCON PERFORMANCE! The all-new six-cylinder engine’s up front for greater safety and stability .■. . will deliver up to 30 miles per gallon of regular gas . . . has a water-cooled engine which permits use of a water type heater that’s safer, never robs you of gas mileage. You can get an automatic transmission in the Falcon, too! AND NOW . . . AIOUT THE FARULOUS FALCON EXPERIENCE RUN, U.S.A.I Topping off 3 years and 3 million miles of research and develop ment, a fleet of new Falcons is traveling every mile of U.S. highway to prove its “30-miles per-gallon” average . . . and to prove it takes to the roads you .IMPORTANT MEETING OF LIBRARY ASSOCIATION The Belhaven Public Library Association will meet on Friday afternoon, October 2, at 3:30 at the Fanny Mebane Ralph Memorial Library. Mrs. L. A. Knight, newly elected president, will preside. Other new officers for the year are Mrs. John Boger, vice-president; Mrs. Reginald Bishop, secretary; and Mrs. Roy Justice, treasurer. This will be an important meet ing, a? plans will be made for the years operation of the library, and committee appointments will be made. AH members of the associ ation and any other interested in the welfare of the library are urged to attend. SLADESVILLE PERSONALS Mrs. Gus Blake, Mrs. Foster and son, visited Mr. and Mrs. Leo Saw yer Thursday. Mrs. Ethel Gibbs visited Mrs. Flave Spencer, Mrs. Ervin Swish, and Mrs. D. W. Sears Wednesday in Fairfield. Mrs. Harold Spencer and Mrs. Sophia Warner visited Mrs. Warmer’s sisteir, Mrs. Carrie Ca hoon, and brother, W. T. Holland Wednesday. Mrs. Bill Gibbs and Leland Gibbs Jr., visited Washington. Miss Texes Sears visited in Fair field. Gilbert Richards was in Belhaven Monday. H. B. Credle was in Belhaven this week. Mrs. Ralph Green and Mrs. Kenneth Gray were in Fairfield and Killkenny this week. Circle Meeting The Circle of Sladesville Bap tist church met with the president. Mrs. Lloyd Williams Thursday, Sept. 24th. “What a friend we have in Jesus” was sung. Mrs. Williams led the devotional with the reading of Romans’ 12th chapter. Mrs. E. L. Dillon led the group in prayer. A discussison of old and new pro jects was concluded, Mrs. Williams dismissed the meeting. The hostess served cookies and iced drinks to 14 members and one visitor. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Ethel Gibbs, October 22. ENGELHARD FHA PROGRAM To climax a week of initiation activities for the freshmen girls of East Hyde High School, the mem bers of the Future Homemakers of America gave a pot luck dinner and scavenger hunt Friday night, September 2(5, 1959 in the Home making Department. Thirty three members were pres ent including three mothers, Mrs. Mildred Gibbs, Mrs. Edith Pugh, and Mrs. Margaret Gibbs. Mrs. Mildred Gibbs and Mrs. Edith Pugh are Chapter Mothers. Mrs. Mar garet Gibbs was a guest. The freshmen girls as well as the upper classmen have thoroughly en joyed the initiation and are look ing forward to a prosperous year in F. H. A. drive, right around your home, like a duck takes to water! YOU MEASURE THE FALCON'S SAVINGS IN MANY MORE WAYS THAN GAS AND OIL SAVINGS ALONE! ' Take the price. Though we can’t give you the figure just yet, you can be sure the Falcon’s price will help prove it’s the savingest car, right from the start! Actually, we’ve just started to scratch the surface of the Falcon news, here. Come in. Bring all your ques tions, but make it soon. We have many orders in already. COMING OCT.BTH... THE NEW-SIZE FORD /wj; ralcorh Th« Eatlttl Car In Iha World la Owa THE COASTLAND TIMES, MANTEO, N. C. BELHAVEN PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. W. E. .Tilson and their four daughters, of Rocky ■ Mount, were Sunday visitors here, i Mr. Tilson, former Belhaven prin cipal, is teaching in Nashville and Mrs. Tilson is teeaching in Rocky Mount. Mrs. W. T. Ralph and Mrs. George Riddick are spending this week with Mrs. C. R. Potter at her mountain cabin near Burns ville. Dr. Ralph and Mr. Riddick ! drove them up on Friday and [ were accompanied home on Sun . day by Mr. Potter. Mrs. Sarah Latham had as week end guests Mrs. Roscoe La tham, Miss Betty Aberly, and Miss Sarah Greene, of New Bern. They were joined on Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Latham and their three children, of Oriental, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Latham, of New Bern. Mrs. F. L. Voliva has re turned from a visit to Martins ville, Va., and Charlotte. Miss Lynn Cuthrell, of Wil liamston, was the week end guest of Misses Carol and Cheryl Bak er. Mrs. J. R. Brown and Mrs. John Tooly visited Ernest Swindell in Nashville on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Credle and Miss Mary Elizabeth Bell spent last Thursday in Elizabeth City. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Johnston are visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pin ner, in Gainsville, Floridaf. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gray and daughter, of Princeton, N. C., were guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Wahab. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Dunbar, of Henrico, Va., were week end guests of Mrs. W. C. Swindell. Baptist women attending the meeting of the South Roanoke District of the Woman’s Mission ary Society in Washington on last Thursday night were Mrs. Jim Hayes, Mrs. Paul Dawson, Mrs. Statz Cullifer, Mrs. Glen Carawan, Mrs. Delma Tolan, Mrs. Mack Carawan, Mrs. K. C. Wilkin son, and Mrs. Hubert Windley. Mrs. T. A. Rydingsvard and daughters, JoAnna and Lynn, of Norfolk, were overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Heber Wilkinson on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Willifard and children, of Wilson, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bullock. Mrs. Fred Alford, of Aurora, spent the week end with her sis ter, Mrs. T. H. Blount. Among the college students at home for the week end were Misses Lillie Ann Midgette and Mardge Etta Lupton, Mrs. Willie Stanley, Mike Wilkinson, Richard Howard, and George Zambos, all of East Carolina College; Miss Sandra Noble, of Atlantic Chris tian; and Reggie Bishop, of State College. ESPISCOPAL DINNER Members of the Laymen’s League of St. James Episcopal Church, Belhaven were hosts on Friday evening to the men who had helped them play softball during the sum mer. The men helped to make up a team in a series of competitions among the local .churches. Guests present at the chicken dinner Served at the River Forest Manor were John Sparrow, Delmar Sparrow, Ray Selby, Ottis Errol Selby, and “Doc” Sadler, all of the Winsteadville community. League members present were the Rev. John Broome, Leigh Wahab, John jTooly, George Cooper, John Boger, j and Albert Gaylord. Grantee “iHATS GOOD FOR A LIFETIME Your telephone is the one thing in your home backed by a lifetime guarantee. It assures you that repairs for the telephone equipment in your home will be made without charge. 1 f something is wrong with your telephone equipment, call us and we will do what ever is necessary to provide you with good telephone service. This guarantee is one of many features which makes t he telephone your home’s greatest value, today and in the years to come. /• —~s The Norfolk & Carolina Telephone & Telegraph Co. • Manteo - Elizabeth City - Coinjock Kill Devil Hills - Edenton k ' m,. r COMMISSION NAMED FOR HISTORIC BATH PROJECT Several citizens of Beaufort County are included in the 15 mem bers of the Historic Bath Com mission who were named last week by Governor Hodges. Other mem bers are provided by statute. The 1959 General Assembly au thorized the appointment of an eighteen-member commission, fif teen members to be appointed by the Governor, with the Mayor of Bath, the Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of Beaufort County and the Director of the State Department of Archives and History serving ex officio. Governor Hodges announced ap pointment of the following mem bers of this Commission: W. Harold Butt, Charleston, South Carolina; Edmund Harding, Washington; Grayson Harding, Edenton; Mrs. Ernest S. Ives, Southern Pines; Mrs. Edmund T. Knott, Washington; Mrs. John W. Labouisse, Durham. Mrs. Fred W Morrison, Washington 16, D. C.; Rev. A. C. D. Noe, Bath; Dan M. Paul, Raleigh; Honorable Wayland J. Sermons, Washington; Mrs. Os car Smith, Norfolk, Virgina; Mrs. Wilton Smith, Bath. Mrs. Mary Fowls Sterns, Raleigh; Mrs. Rachel Tankard, Bath; and Hon. Lindsay C. Warren, Washington. LIONS TO FEED NEEDY OIILD The Belhaven Lions Club voted to provide lunch for one needy school child for the year when they held their regular meeting on Thursday night at the River Forest Manor. Delma Tolan, president, presided. Jesse Spruill, of Washington, N. patented SIEGLESR WmjlßrM POURS 4 TIMES MORE HEAT OVER I||||tffnrlj THE FLOOR than ever before! The revolutionary', new Siegler sends the air right through the heart of the fire twice to give you a houseful of amazing SUPER Floor Heat! Here’s real furnace comfort in every room, without costly m pipes and registers to install. You save the high cost of wasting heat on the ceilings and out the chimney, because Siegler’s patented Inner Heat Tubes and built-in Blower system pours all the heat over your floors. Don’t make the mistake of W"* buying a heater without Inner Heat Tubes or a built-in Blower system. Every Siegler Home Heater has them. That's why a Siegler pays for , Mdg|y| itself with the fuel it saves. And only Siegler gives ■ you a ■W»4giM MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Mi Sisqien, PSrf|frH|3nH patented Mforced-air OIL HOME HEATER Come in for a FREE hot demonstration! F. L. V OLIVA HARDWARE CO. Belhaven, N. C. C., former Deputy District Cover- 1 nor, showed a film on the trucking t industry and made a brief talk. ' 1 BULLDOGS SCORE THIRD WIN ’ The Belhaven Bulldogs won thedr i third straight victory of the sea son when they played Elm City on i CONCRETE BLOCKS AT FACTORY PRICES Serving Coastal Carolina JARVIS CONCRETE PRODUCTS CO. Phone 40*1; J. H. Jarvis, Jr., Owner ENGELHARD. N. C. EYEGLASS ZKwKwP | SERVICE S> ligMß A ~ Ridgeways c\\ yAZj OFTICIAHZ ( | Ml Ev»»’ ***• •** F1 ” ** ' 1 y FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2. 1959 their opponents' field on Friday afternoon, September 26. The Bcore was 34-14. Touchdowns were made by Jimmie Russ, Eddie Griffin, and W. D. Paul. Coach Chapin’s team will rest this Friday, but Friday, October 9, will see them facing Chocowinity on the Belhaven field at 8:08 P. M.
The Coastland Times (Manteo, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1959, edition 1
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