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Teen-Age Tattler By WINIFRED HARRISS I p,„rk and orange were the colors; the Legion Stadium was the nlare V'tuYdav night was the time; and football was the reason. Yes, ft - Y our first home game. Before the eyes of thousands of specta f tu-m d out for the initial encounter, the Wildcat team chaik d'un anofhet Min wHh a final score of 26-6 over Laurinburg The ho vs were reallv on the bail out there with co-captain Jimmy Piner ,ile first'touchdown for the home tOM-n. Irvin Gore and Bubba Svkes brought the score up to twenty points for the Wildcats. Laurin Y,, , j made a touchdown which made the score 20-6 and Jim Gib son^made the final touchdown, for Wilmington making the score 26-6. Tlie whole team just did a grand job and here’s hoping that we' can pail another Min next week when the Wildcats meet Charleston (l .-re on Saturday. Our first conference game will be played against p'Yhy Mount in the Smokey City on October 4. The student section was dotted with the I3.milia.r orange and black hats and the students put themselves all out in veiling. On the home bleachers yelling harder than anyone else for around were Pat Howe, Jack Baldwin, Charlie Harrington, and Jere Freeman. I saw Johnny Symmes wandering around out there wishing right along with Wed dell Harris that they could both be playing for NHHS once more Johnny and Pat are home from The Citadel until September 30. Melrose Straughn was praising the picture of Fritz on the program ind missing not being in the cheer leading section. The ROTC band displayed their new band uniforms for the first time on the field Saturday night and they sho’ did look good. Incidentally, if you happened to hear the band on the Teen Age Merry-Go-Round Satur day morning, you’ll know what a grand job they did. Under the di rection of Lt. Lacock the ROTC band is rapidly gaining more and more fame in North Carolina and around. A talented bunch of high school students, the band has pre sented its pleudid music in numer ous places. Henry and Tanky Meier, both past drum majors, RELIABLE Watch Repairing B. GURR, Jeweler 164 N. Front St once more fell back iijto that posi tion and led the band Saturday night. Donald Edwards, better known as Turkey, arrived home last week from Fort McClellan, Alabama. Turkey’s leave was delayed be cause of sickness but now that he’s home, it sho’ is good to see him here. A graduate of '46 from NHHS, Turkey was commander of company A and under his captain ship the company was chosen as the best of the year. Turkey will be here until October 4 when he will again go back to Fort McClel lan. The staff of the Hanoverian has already begun its year's work in getting together material for the annual. Editor-in-chief is Virginia Hatfch. Virginia is an outstanding student and all of us can count on a good Hanoverian with Virginia as its head. Serving with her are Mary Reynolds, business manager; Patty Southerland and Franklin Graham, assistant business man agers; Managing Editor, Jo Anne Snead with Betty Lou O’Master as assistant. Other editors are fea ture, Shirley Berger and Nancy Winningham as assistant; Lorraine D’Lugin, club editor and Kathryn Hunter as assistant; Sara Kay Jordan, art editor; Tommy Mara ble, photographic editor with Mil dred Thomas as assistant. The typists are Catherine LeGwin and Alita Bryant; the junior representa tive, John Crowley. Announcement has finally been made of the ROTC officers for the coming year. Cadet Lt. Colonel Neal Partrick will be battalion commander with Cadet Major Al bert Beall serving as executive officer. Cadet First Lieutenant Ed Pitts will be adjutant and Cadet Second Lieutenant Albert Rhodes as supply officer. Company com manders are to be Bobby McKen zie for Company A, Allen Lanier for Company B, Eugene Ensley for Company C, and Richard Galphin for Company D. To act as platoon leaders are Cadet Second Lieuten ants Bobby Wilson and J. C. Price, Company A; Rex Willis and Bobby Haas, Company B; Jimmy Spivey, Sonny Blalock for Company C; and Dick Hanson and William Murphy for Company D. Cadet Staff Sergeant Leis Hackler will be operation sergeant and first ser geants will be Jack McCarley, A; Ebe Codwin, B; Henry Blake, C; and Charles Alexander, D. Cadet Technical Sergeants are Jimmy Page and Ronnie Walker, A- O. K. Pridgen, Lynn Kirk, B; Emory Holden and Billy McEachern, Company C; and Henry Trulove and Bobby Davis for Company D. Well, this makes all the news for right now. I’ll be seeing ‘ya, and to you French students and Mr. T. Brown, au revoir! Johnson and sudan grass resem ble each other except that sudan grass leaves are broader and more numerous. Sudan grass is grown tor fodder, while Johnson grass is commonly found as a weed. EDWIN D. CLARK M. M. (EASTMAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC) Announces The Opening Of A Music Studio For Instruction in PIANO ORGAN THEORY First Presbyterian Church—3rd & Orange Dial 6688 PORTRAITURES COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY • BOB HODGKIN Studio at 103'/i Princess 6627 —Telephones— 2-1331 (drained to (Beautify - - - - Mrs. Elizabeth B. DeBose has returned from the Southeastern Beauty Show where she received SPECIAL HAIR STYLING from "ADOLF of NEW YORK" See Mrs. DeBose GRACE'S BEAUTY SHOP 125 1-2 Princess Si. Phone 6836 soc GLADYS TAYLOR, SOCIETY EDITOR_PHONE 2-3311 BRIDE OF YESTERDAY—Mrs. Robert Albright Little, whose wedding was solemnized yester day afternoon at Grace Methodist church. Mrs. Little is the former Billie Daniel Sidbury, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. James Buren Sidbury of Wilmington. I " I Miss Rorison Fetes Billie Sidbury And Her Wedding Party Miss Margaret Rorison enter tained Monday in honor of Miss Billie Sidbury and Robert Little, whose wedding took place later in the afternoon at Grace church, with a luncheon at 12:30 o'clock. The Rorison home at Oleander was decorated with white dahlias and tube roses. In the dining room the long satin ribbon decorations suggested a brides train at the ’ end of which burning candles in old silver bracket candle sticks. Enjoying Miss Rorison's hos pitality were the guest of honor. Miss Billie Sidbury and Robert Little, and members of the wed ding party, Miss Bibbs Holmes. Dr. Rowena Sidbury Hall of Ra leigh, Miss Emma Trask, Walker Taylor, III, James F. Robertson, Jr., James Buren Sidbury, James Irving Corbett, Jr., Dr. James Buren Sidbury and Mr-. Sidbury. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Little. PERSONALS Jane Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis of Riverside left on Monday to ent^t Eastern Carolina Teachers’ college, Greenville. Mrs. R. F. Walker has as her guests Mrs. J. R. Thomas and Mrs. Sheldon Scoville of Orangeburg, S. C. Howard Ganister, accompanied by his father, John Ganisler, who has been visiting him at his Car olina Beach home, left last even ing for Pittsburgh, Pa., where they were called on account of the death of his brother Frank Ganister, who died early Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Rinaldo B. Page have moved to their home in Oleander after spending the sum mer at their home, Villa Mar guerita on Harbor Island. Billy Gooch of Williamsburg, Va., and Miss Eleanor Rose Flan nigan of Athens, Ga., arrived yes terday afternoon to spend a short time with Rye Page, Jr., at his Oleander home. They will leave, .this week for Athens, Ga., where Rye and Billy will resume their studies at the University of Georgia. I 1st. Lt. Jack C. Griffith, son of | Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Griffith. 1812 Church sereet, has returned to the University of Cincinnati, Cincin nati, Ohio, where he will continue his studes. Lt. Griffith is now on terminal leave after having serv ed four years in the Army Air Corps a; navigator, nearly two years of which was spent in the Pacific. Miss Nancy Jo Cheek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Cheek, has left for Greensboro, where she has resumed her studies at Woman’s college of the University of N. C. Little-Sidbury Wedding Vows Spoken Yesterday Afternoon The wedding of Miss Billie Daniel Sidbury, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. James Buren Sidbury, of Wilming ton, and Robert Albright Little, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Little, also of Wilmington, took place yesterday afternoon at 5 o’clock in a ceremony solemnized at Grace Methodist church. The Rev. J. A. Russell, pastor of the church, performed the cere mony which was witnessed by a large gathering of society, The vows were spoken before a background of smilax, palms, ferns and center arrangement of white chrysan theums and burning candles. Miss Agnes Chasten, organists, presented a program of wedding music. Dr. Rowena Sidbury Hall of Raleigh, the bride’s sister, attend ed her as matron-of-honor. She wore a gown of white jersey fashioned with extremely full skirt and draped neckline. She carried an arm bouquet of red carnations in the center of which was a pluster] of tiny white pom-pom chrysan themums. The bridesmaids, Misses Marga ret Rorison, Gibbs Holmes, Emma Trask and Juliette Robertson wore identical gowns made on the same lines as that of the matron-of-honor and their bouquets were of red! carnations tied wdth matching saHn! ribbon. Fred E. Little, father of the bridegroom, attended his son as best man. Groomsmen were Jap.cs I. Corbett, Jr., Walker Taylor, III, James F. Rqbertson, Jr., and James Buren Sidbury, Jr., brother of the bride. Miss Sidbury entered the church with her father by whom she was given in marriage. She wore a beautiful gown of ivory satin fashioned with dropped-shoulder neckline outlined with a bertha of rose point lace, also worn by her mother and sister at their weddings The skirt was full and formed a court train over which her veil of Princes lace fell gracefully from a coronet caught across the back with a band of orange blossoms. She carried a white prayer book, used by her mother and sister at their weddings, on which was an orchid showered with tuberoses. Mrs. Sidbury, the bride’s moth er, wore a gown of plum color crepe trimmed in sequins and a corsage of white tuberoses. Mrs. Little, mother of the bridegroom, wore a gown of black with design in pir.k and a black hat. Her corsage was of tuberoses. Mrs. P. R. Al bright. grandmother of the bride groom, wore periwinkle blue with a flower hat and a corsage of white tuberoses. Immediately after the wedding a reception was given by the bride’s parents at the Cape Fear Country club. The ballroom of the clubhouse where guests were received was beautifully decorated with srhilax, palms and arrangements of white autum flowers. The mantel, at the south end of the room, was bank ed in smilax and white gladioli, chrysanthemums and dahlias. The bride's table, laid with an exquisite imported Venetian lace cloth, was centered with a silver epergne hold ing white chrysanthemums, dahlias and tuberoses, at one end of which was the wedding cake and at the other end a large silver compote filled with individual bridal cakes. Green and white mints in silver compotes were used at. intervals along the table. Following the re ception the young couple left for a wedding trip. Mrs. Little wore for travel a smart brown gabardine suit with matching accessories and the orchid from her prayer boox After a wedding trip they will re side in Pittsburgh, Pa. The bride is a graduate of the local schools and Emma Willard school, Troy, N. Y., and this past June graduated from Mt. Holyoke college in Massachusetts. Since the announcement of her engagement the bride has been entertained by the following: Miss Mary Belle McCarl. Mrs. Whit T. Benton. Mrs. J. M. Gregg and Mrs. Thomas Gregg, Miss Emma Trask, Miss Willa M. Dickey, D.\ Rowena Sidbury Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Little, Dr. and Mrs. James F. Robertson, Misses Mary and Lillian Bellamy and Miss Margaret Rorison. Symphony Society Names Field Representative For Membership CHAPEL HILL, Sept. 23.—Two field representatives of the North Carolina Symphony Society who will direct the renewal member ship campaign now being conducted in various sections o'f the state have just been appointed by the society, it was announced here to day by Dr. Benjamin F. Swaiin, Director of the State Symphony Orchestra. They are Albin Pikutis, former secretary-treasurer of the Sym phony society and a graduate of the university, and Charles New comb of the Farmers federation in Asheville. Mr. Pikutis will serve as field representative in the eastern part of the state and Mr. Newcomb in the western After graduating here in 1938, Mr.' Pikutis studied music at Columbia university and-the Eastman School of Music. After serving in the arm- ; ed forces, he has been teaching! and was associated with the Stanley Works of New Brittain, Conn i Mr. Newcomb's services to the I Society are being lent through the courtesy of James G. K. McClure president of the Farmers feder-’ tion. He was formerly associate" with the promotion departments Westinghouse, Inc., Mansfield Ohio, and Station WGAR cieve' land. Charles Worth At Presbytery October 2nd. The group conference and day of prayer of the woman’s auxiliary of Wilmington Presbytery will be held on Wednesday, October 2 at St. Andrews - Covenant Presbyterian church, 15th and Market street, Mrs. P. R. Smith, chairman, has announced. The Rev. William C. Bennett, as sistant pastor of St. Andrews-Cov enant, will speak on Stewardship at the morning session and the Rev. Charles W. Worth of Wilmington and Kiangyin, China, who is on the survey committee sent to the Orient to evaluate the condi tions on the mission field and has recently returned to this country, will be the speaker at the afternoon session. All women are cordially invited to attend. Supper Honoring Briba I Couple, Cape Fear Club Mr. and Mrs. Fred E Little and Dr. and Mrs. James F. Robertson entertained with a rehearsal buffet supper party at the Cape Fear club on Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock in honor of Miss Bi-lie Daniel Sidbury and Robert Albright Little, who were married this afternoon at Grace church. Guests included the wedding party, out-of-town guests and close friends of the bridal couple. YWCA Business Club To Meet For Supper The first supper meeting of the BlueTriangle club for the f a 11 v ill be held at the YWCA this even at 6 p. m witn Miss Elizabeth Clarke, president, in charge. The program of the evening will be given by the delegates to the Southern Business Girl’s confer ence Misses Lois Cooper, Johan na Duls, Catherine Davis, Ann Johnston and Dorothea McDowell. Miss Clarice Sv/ain, chairman of the program committee, will pre sent plans for club meetings for the rest of this year. All members are asked to bring books for the BookExchange and guests as prospective members. Any business woman who is in terested in joining this club of the YWCA is cordially invited to at tend. Camp Lejeune Dance Evening The weekly dance will be held on Thursday evening at Marston pavilion at Camp Lejeune. Music will be furnished by the camp or chestra and dress will be informal. One hundred local junior hostes ses have been invited to attend and are requested to contact their respective hostesses as soon as pos sible. Southside Baptist Society Plans Day Of Prayer Program The Southside Baptist church Woman's Missionary Society will I have a day of prayer program for state missions on Thursday after noon at 3 o'clock in the church. The Sunbeams and G. A.'s will also have a program at this time. BIRTHS DAVID FREDERICK SOUTHERLAND Mr. and Mrs. D. Truman South erland announce the birth of a son, David Frederick, September 2, at Marion Sprunt annex. Mrs. Southerland was the former Sue Stroup of Bessimer city and Wil mington. CAROL MERLE LASSITER Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wood Lassi ter, Jr., announct the birth of a daughter, Carol Merle, September 18, Winston-Salem. Mrs. Lassiter is the former Sara Byrum of Win ston-Salem. Acts AT ONCE to relieve mmetm SMMfsjx Prescribed by thousands of Doctors! pertussin is scientifically prepared to act at once—not only to relieve such coughing but also to loosen tickling phlegm and make it easier to raise. Safe and mighty elective for both old and young. Pleasant tasting! Any drugstore. ^PERTUSSIIK | CLUB| and dates to remember TODAY 2 pm. — Executive committee of Lake Forest P.-T. A. to meet in the school gymnas ium. Reception for tochers after business meeting at 2:30. All members invited to attend. 8 p. m.—-The Womans auxiliary of the Pearsal Memorial Pres byterian church will meet at the church. 3 p. m.—Seminole council, No. 34, Degree of Pocahontas will meet at the Junior Order hall, 21 1-2 North Second street. 8 p. m.—All members of the Wom an of the Moose, chapter No. 40. are invited to be guests of the chapter at an oyster roast. Meet at the hall for transportation. WEDNESDAY 3 p. m.—The East Wilmington Home Demonstration club will meet at the community center. This meeting was scheduled for last Wednes day but due to rains it was Maffitt Village P.-T.A. Meeting The Maffitt Village Pare n t Teachers association held their first meeting recently with a very large attendance. Mrs. Hunt, the president opened the meeting with devotionals, after which a talk was given by the Rev. Hollar of the Maffitt Village Presbyterian church. Mrs. A. V. Foskey gave a vocal solo followed by a piano selection by Mrs. B. A. Boyles. The new parents were given a welcome by Mrs. Thelma Daughtry, principal of the school. Mrs. Daughtry also talked on the plans for the school year. Chairman were elected for the various committees, and the time of the meetings was changed to the second Wednesday of each mon+ij. Refreshments were served by the hospitality committee. For Newspaper Service Dial 2-3311 GUIDES MILLIONS The name “St. Joseph” guides millions to aspirin quality, speed, economy. 12 tablets cost only 10c. StJoseph aspirin Postponed. All ed to attend. s J THURSDAY 2:15 p.m.-Members of the ... tive committee, other mutee chairmen*1 , representatives 0f ' ter Park P .T a u V at the school ' ‘‘ n 3:30 p. m.-Tht Wh-'c r circle of the Kings Da„th will meet at the h gh: Mrs J. \V DavR ^ Park Mr*, c. M. ' be joint hostess, J 3 p. m.-The Audubon Rome D onstration club wiU S“me “ FRIDAY 2:30 p_^ m.-Winter Park H Demonstration club meetatth'h0^^ 1: Mnrabk with Mrs j Chadwich as joint hostes A coffee tree prodi^b Ipounds of green coffee a sea“o. HEW TREATMENT CHAS pinworm Millions have suffered in .n.„ miseries of Pin-Worms^ . j '"th longer! Today, thanks ^suff« cally recognized drug » a treatment has been m-Tu 5 Ekly cC« drug is the vital in^a 9 .p®ible. j Pin-Worm tahlefs cetelop^i,!’’./?' ! tonesofDr D.JaynVS^tk'U . too small, casy-to-take P-W t.u . ! ,n ,a 5r«i!al way to remove Pj„ ^aH<,,s i relieve that tormenting rectal So if you SUSpcct Pin C • child or yourself, a.k ?™s ,ln J , package of JAYNE'S P-w'right5™ !o follow the directions ’5ht away' j It s ea=y to remember: P-W for Pin-Wr When something you've eate causes simple diarrhea, take soot) ing pepto-bismol. Recommends by many physicians. It is not laxative, non-alkaiine,pleasant-tas ing. Brings gentle relief - helps n tard gas formation. Tastes (ood an does good. Ask your druggist ft pepto-bismol when your stomat is upset. A NORWICH PRODl The BEAUTICIAN Opening In A New and Modern Home Todav At . . . 119^ PRINCESS ST. 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So if female functional monthly disturbances are causing you to suffer from pain, nervous dis tress and feel weak, restless, so cranky and irritable that you almost turn into a ‘she-devil'— on such days—this is something yqu shouldn’t joke about. Start right away—try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms, it's fa mous for this purpose. And don't forget — Pinkham's does more than re. monthly pain. This cine also relieves n 1 ,a1.i...: nervous tension. those tired-out, mean ' •" everyone’ feelings this cause. Taken rf thruout the month Compound helps t>UIi11 tance against such v very sensible thing to see if you, too, don't re® benefit! All drugstores. ofiydca C.CPvn&A&mb coSp®^1*1