Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / July 4, 1940, edition 1 / Page 5
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JOBO, i I.VW C. A. Dimrastte-, of Honda, bnsineu Tioitor to tbo elty Joyce Hitch, of High Is yjisltlng Miss Frances In this city. [Miss Beulah Folger, of Rural lall, spent k few days last week fuh Miss Laura Pennell. I Mr. and Mrs. Hunter B. Keck ad son, William, of Greenyllle, I ^ C., are here this week yisiting Lflends. Mrs. R. G. Finley and daugh- Betty Owyn, haye returned p-om Georgia, where they spent ' few weeks with relatives. ; Mr. Allan Poe, of Lenoir, Is yisiting in the home of Mr. I^d Mrs. George Forester. He is niece of Mrs. Forester. UMr. H. H. Burgess, of Obids, county, visited his dnugh- Mrs. J. M. Crawford, in this If this week. and Mrs. J. P. Rousseau, of Inston-Salem, have been visiting bre this week and attending |Wth Wllkesboro’s 50th anni- Prsary celebration. L. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. ^illls WHson, of Huntington, W. ^ve been visiting in this or. W. L. Wilson is a form- Jenl of North Wilkesiboro. l^Little Misses Julia and Rebia pits, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. A. Felts, underwent tonsil ope- lons Tuesday at the Wilkes ^spital. [Miss Sallie Webb, of Oxford, as a guest over the week-end of rs. J. C. Smoot and Miss Lizzie [isle, at the Smoot Cottage on Brushy Mountain. ‘ Mrs. D. B. Smoak, of tjalfabaryi is here visiting her k. daughter. Mips Eleanor Bmoak. Mr." W. M. Deberry, of 'ifayettp- vHle,"" is here on a visit with Ster^ family. Mr. WilllSim CoWleet arrives this week and is yisiting his sto*' tqr^ Mrs. T.. B.-Jinnley,.-Ip. • tja* city. Mr. and Mrs. John W. White and children and Mrs. J. ^ W^ White left today for a visit with Mrs. Thad Jones at Kenansville, N. C. m "S Mr. Billie Myers, of Welch, Wi Va., passed through the city this' week returning home from Char lotte where he visited his lather. Dr. John Myers. ’ ;.A, Mr, and MnL'Faul Hubbard, Of Hazard, Ky., vdslted Mr. Hub bard’s parents, Mr. and Mry., W. R. Hubbard, at Moravian Fahs^ the first of the week. Mrs. J. B. Hall and son, J. D. Hall, and Miss Ann Hall Lowe returned home Tuesday After spending a week in Knightdal'e visiting Mrs. Hall’s daughter, Mrs. C. L. Robertson, and Mr. Robert son. Dr. and Mrs. Rufus Morrow, who have been studying at Yale' university, spent two weeks _ in this city with .Mrs. Morrow’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Faw, and' left yesterday to spend the snm-. mer in Mexico near Mexico City. „ , Rev, P. G. Gerrtoon, Jr., who waa .ipeomtly received'into the Prea^ery of Wlnston-Baiem. On'Snn^y evening, June 80, Rev. Watt M. Cooper had one oif the prlnclpnl ports 'In the installation service in which he became pastor of the George W. Lee Memorial Pres byterian church of Wlnrfon- Salem. Rev. Mr. Cooper is a member of the commission re cently appointed by the Pres bytery. 2: British Princesses Stay In Seclusion London—The war has upset the royal routine for initiating Prin cess Elizabeth to public life as to Britain’s Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hub- heiress presumptive bard, of Wilkesboro, sperseveral j throne, days last week visiting points of [ Neither fourteen-year-old Kiza- interest in Virginia. They feturn- |beth nor her cight-year-old sister, ed home by way of Manteo where j Margaret Rose, are seen in public these war-clouded dajs. Palace tendenta an toak^^I^^iig 8|^’ ciea operating |iif$Sig|^idtioB.with the State'Board of" Ch’aritiea'and Public Welfare, State sdection agency. ’Enrollment b opfo to jSia. net employed iitid of vrork who are between the' agee of 18 and 25, ana ho npplfeaat will now be eoccluded from aelec- tion because his family is not ,Sir. need of the allottment te be tmi home eadi'raoBtlh" Siw stated. He quoted J> HcEhtee, nati onal corps director, to the effect that the greatest field rf service for .the CCC lies in training large numbers of skilled and semi-skill ed mechanics 'with elementary en gineering experience.- With the CCC operating and maintaining the largest group Of mechanized equipment in the country, 63 central repair ^ops will be in operation by the fall in which unemployed youths can learn, to repair trucks, power shovels, pumps, graders, genera tors and compressors under a full time instructor. they witnessed a presentation of the play, “The Lost Colony.’’ iMr. and Mrs. Hunter Keck and »n, William, of Greenville, N. C., ave been visiting friends and liatives here this week and at- ading North Wilkesboro’s 50th tniversary celebration. (Mr. and Mrs. Often Boren and io small daughters, Sallie and an, of Greensboro, are here biting with relatives. Mrs. Boren ithe former Miss Madeline Call, Wilkesboro. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dula, of Wilkesboro, have had as their guests recently Mrs. Dula’s motb- er, Mrs. Frederick Noell, of Hills boro, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Craig, of Hillsboro, Miss Polly Lea, Dur ham and Greensboro, and Mr. R. P. Cauthen, of Raleigh. iMrv.and Mrs. C. F. Handy, of fimond, Ky., and Mr. Lawrence Idy, of Elkin, are spending l>lr vacation at the home of the Irsnts of the Messrs. Handy ear Dehart postoffice. I Miss Josie Lee Roten, who ■lids a position with the Grey- 9und Bus Station in Lenoir, is Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Henderson, of Wilkesboro, Mr. W. A. Jen nings, of Pores Knob, and Mr. Ray Hendren, of Gilreath, are at tending the annual convention of letter carriers in Rocky MoAbt this week. Mrs. Henderson is at tending the auxiliary convention and is on the program for an address. Drs. Paul and Varina Taylor Warren and t’wo sons, Bonner and OeSha, of Huntsville, Ala., and .Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Taylor and Isiting friends in this city and ’family, of Youngstown. Ohio, are bending the 50th anniversary spending sometime here in the llebration. "home of Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Tay- R^, S. 1. Watts, a well known laptist minister of the Boomer ( pmmunity, underwent an appcn- icltis operation Tuesday morning t ifce Wilkes Hospital. Many hope for a speedy recov- lor, parents of Mrs. Warren aad Mr. Taylor. They also plan to at tend the Taylor reunion in Mt. Holly Sunday, July 7, at tbe home of Dr. Ben Taylor. Ads. get attention—and reaulta for less money. Try it, sources Bay that like England’s other boys and girls, they are "somewhere in the country.” ^ 'The Princesses’ visits to Lon don are rare, usually short shop ping tours and lunches ■with their parents, King George VI. and Queen Elizabeth. Because of air raid hazards they never stay at Buckingham Palace. In seclusion they are carrying on their usual studies. There are no court functions and fewer “ex tras,” such as dancing. Elizabeth is said to be studying geography intently and showing keen interest in news of the war. She gave up study of German re cently and started .Spanish in ite place. Both children knit, save tinfoil and are kept to regular food ra tions. In turn, they have rationed their dogs. Queen Mary, too, is living in the country, but she makes occasional public appearances such as visits to hospitals. Princess EHizabeth’s last public apfiearance was at her birthday ■party in Windsor Castle April 20. Queen Elizabeth is one of the busiest women in Ekigland. She mpkes almost daily trips to hospi tals, benefits and meetings or ser- idce auxiliary units. I %AI1TED I YOUR OLD STAPLER of dq-e. ot ConcfUici\, REWARD I 250 • mnRKlU€LL Xjfetime JTAPLE-MAXTEK STAPLES 2t»7« PINS for tompororf^ TACKS •^mko-ApurT farTaciUaf n Truly the “Matter Stapler” for light medium and heavier work — Sturdy steel throughout — Will staple the most difRcuH job with a quick easy stroke. Uses 3 sires staples — 1/4" leg, 5/16" leg, 3/8" leg. Staples, pins, base detachesio a "pffy" for tacking into wood. 1,000 assorted staples FREE. LIFETIME guarantee. VsMJSiwa $2.50 "trade-in” on any stapler regardUss of age, make or condition. Carter-Hubbard Pubiyung Co.| N. C. Says Ford Flooded By Many Threats New York. July 2.—Henry Ford "has been flooded with threatening letters’’ since his re fusal to manufacture plane enf glnes except for American defense purposes, it was stated today by Choliy Knickerbocker, society edi tor of the New York Jounial- Ainerican. .\s a re.^ult, Knickerbocker’s story said, police of fashionable Southampton are considering a possible call on the FBI and oth er Government agencies to guard the Ford family on July 13 when the motor wizard’s grandson, Henry Ford II.. will be wed to Anne McDonnell. Anne’s parents, the James Francis McDonnells, have com missioned a private detective agency to send a force of plain clothes men to the ceremony, the story said, but the Southampton police "probably will request ad ditlonal help in throwing protec tion around the Ford family.” Dearborn, Mich., July 2.—A spokesman for the Ford Motor Company today denied reports circulated in New York that Heniy Ford had been threatened and that the FBI would be asked to guard the Ford family on July 13, when Henry Ford II., the mor tor magnate’s grandson, marries Anne McDonnell. The spokesman said: I “Since Mr. Ford made his an- j nouncement regarding the manu facture of planes for American defense we have received hun dreds of letters praising his stand and only e very few .. criticizing it.” - ^ LARD The outlook for lard appears to have some hopeful spots -because large Buyiag progtam^ pi^R^ ^ ,tke Burpli ■for hteamU * *-w.. • BobSawjwr •J ft: f .' •- ■■ f - from StiOTs-Sdii^er CdDpny Cincimiati Soyiwf Byrnes as saying that;ia national emergmcy nqeessitatllig.A | gs^emt draft, {^yoiAiui #Ith *ib^ [ ehanical-and cooking’experieobk m' tbe CCC Tnight as Die reeul|' ^ I aneh^ troinisg be' assigiil^ 'ff tidtii • combatant activities r%%er_.th^ to combat work"^^ a^oxiiikt IN OUR ESTABUSHMENT Wb^Ier In Race For Nomination July 6-8^9 He’ll be ready to show yoa[ Ae sea- ft'Ji ’. ’v’ . ..V St. Louis, tuly 2.—U. S. Sena tor Burton j£. Wheeler (Demo crat) of Montana, in St. Louis to address a “stay out of war” rally, declared today that he will be-a candidate for the Democratic nom ination for FYesident at Chicago convention, in mdd-July, whether or not President Roosevelt de cides to seek a third term. Wheeler, one of the most for midable opponents of President Roosevelt’s “aid to the Allies,” was interviewed at a local hotel in son’s finest fashions in suits and top coats, tailored to your individual Remember the date. measure. Marlow s Men’s Shop ‘New and Correct Men’s Wear” is cheap when hought summer SIZE PRICE 6.00—16 $2255 6.25—16 $24.w 6.50—16 $15.27 7.00—16 $27.29 other Sizes Proportionately Low. 6.00-16 WITH YOUR OLD TIRE All Prices,TQ[ith . Your 01^ Here’s a bargain based on tbe tested mileage and safety of America’s finest tire. And each of these .■^isk Safti-Fligbts is doubly guaranteed by Fisk and us. -Don’t miss this great buy! Come in today! FAMOUS See Yeur ■ /i. - J -ii; I
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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July 4, 1940, edition 1
5
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