KAMni fOCOniKIX., Editw:'?\ itu t. TlKyin: Gaye ihn^ Ibr Air 6te 1^%«Bor h»r two alsten, Mrs. Mdt^ MftdnUa saA Miss Doris flMihainson, botk of IXarbain, Mnk'8. T. Tsylor *svb a pretty •wty «t htr borne on H Street b(Ms«Bdsr OladloU «nd •tbior Mianner Dowers mode a oolorfnl setting tm the gnests at S tables of bridge and one of vook. A deesert course nreceded •lay. In bridge Mrs. James McCart- aagr won the top score prise and la rook Misti Prances Green was tha winner. Miss Green also held tha trareler's prise. &nor gift for Miss Nacham- aon was a cosmetic set and for Mrs. Madadia crystal. Ifiss Mary Jo Pearson Entertains Friday Night A trio of visitors ena a bride went extended a pleasant courtesy Friday evening when Miss Mary Jo Pearson -entertained at a des sert bridge at her home on Sixth street. The prize for scoring highest in the game, which was PlajM at four tables, went to Mrs. Wiliam Prevette. Honor gifts were presented to th^visitort, who were Miss Eliz abeth Thten, of Statesville, guest of Miss Pearson; Miss Elizabeth Carter, of Wadeaboro, guest of heri sister, Mrs. William Pre- votte; Miss Frances Howell, of Greensboro, guest of Mrs. Shoun Kerbaugh; and, also Mrs. Hay den Hayes, the former Miss Carrie Virginia Butler, of Tabor City. Mrs. Forester Entertains For Mrs. Cranor Mrs. F. C. Forester was hostess at a delightful dinner party at her home on D Street Thursday evening, honoring Mrs. W. T. Cranor, of Detroit, Michigan, who is on a visit here with relatives and friends. A three course dinner was served at seven o’clock, after which rook and bridge were played at three tablec. Mrs. Cra- nor was remenzbered with a gift. FareweD Dance' Fh* Miss Faw mixed summer flowers. John Kendall assisted the tesses in serving punch. Mrs. hos- ,CP deeper ea^ ofSoul w^fi nt, and aui wftfi 'our inwe‘, oi^r gad. Mir SMred . lbtfno^ (worfr iS' stren^fal heal®; eigajll^’ to 1^ porteMfch . treedpat.,!:^ia^|i^jft^ ^d of hap- plnest Si'IMiiaiisa ■» u».«ad 'f iyji.ioM to #vl(i^! thlrtr g^>i*; ii child pjt, ttod tfnd of tluiii AAOWy lehlld singe in-th*-%natlSa| ■'God 1« onr are';#rht^Bted by His pi^ht, bad »U our Wi^itg .derive .&bm Him, *hd. we ari^^'eiidoifed . with them inly--by our Mahi^ '^, ., , We pledge allegiance ’‘‘tio the truths that have been revealed to us in our most intimate personal experience; that-we are all mem bers one of another; that whatso- .T,ivi7 - ■•■M V Miss Evelyn Faw, of North Wllkeehoro, who leaves Saturday to return,to her home after spending the winter here studying at King’s Business eolldge, was honored last night whea hff roommate. Miss Mildred Kendal, entertained at an Informal dance at Kenwood lodge. About 50'or 60 yonng people were there for dancing from 9:>0 until 1 o’ clock. At Ihe door the hostess, hon- oree and their e''corts greeted guests. Miss Faw was with John Hawkins and Miss Kendall was with Clarence Mills. Covering the ceiling. almost completely were great cldatem of bright colored balloone, and a- bout the room stood bouaiets of *yer we sow ^e shall reap; that Mrs. Harry Pearson Entertains At Bridge * ”^n enjoyable party of the week was the one given by Mrs. {truth. Harry Pearson at her home on Kensington Drive Wednesday aft ernoon when she entertained at ( dessert-bridge. A color note, of yellow and white was emphasiz ed throughout in the decorations, place cards, and refreshments. Four tables were arranged for play in which the high score prize was won by Mrs. Jay Joaee. Sec ond high went to Mrs. Larry Madalia, of Durham, who was a houseguest of her sister, Mrs. S. Taylor. Out of town guests were Mrs. Madalia and Miss Doris Nacham- son, of Durham, another sister of Mrs. Taylor, and Miss F-liaabeth Carter, of Wadesboro, who was here visiting her sister, Mrs. Wil liam Prevette. tnen do not gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles; that the word is only, a word until It is made flesh, and that neither in this mountain nor In Jerusalem fhall men worship the Father, hut {hey that worship Him must worship Him In spirit and In We believe the.ie words and others prayed by men for thous ands of years, to be no mystic revelation of a world after death, hut scientifically precise truths about the relations of men on earth. And we pledge and swear to each other that we shall make iHls kingdom come on earth, ae it is in heaven. We swear that we shall take "the Christian idea, upon which SERVICE BY PUBUCA'nON NOTICE NoiUi Carolina—^Wilkes County: IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Wilkes County versus Belva Calloway and husband, Calloway. ^e defendants above named the time, celebrated her sixth birthday with a delightful party on a recent Saturday afternoon at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Wheeler, in Kannapol is. After favorite games, tempting refreshments were served by the honoree’s grandmother, M r s. Frank Sparks, and Mrs. Viola Gardner. .attending were Elaine Wheel er; her mother, Mrs. J. Everett Wheeler: Pauline Lolittle, Jim- will take notice than an action en titled as above has been commenc ed in the Superior Court of JVilkes County, North Carolina, (for the S irpose of foreclosing a tax certi- eate and sale of land), and the defendants will further take notice . that they are required to appeaiV Gadrner, Norma Gra>, Don at the office of, the Clerk of the'ald Dean Wheeler. Barbara Superior Court of Wilkes County i Mills. Billy Anne Plyler, Can*lin6[. wiuiin 80 days from this date and Lawlings. Katherine Shinn, D. Wi answer or demur to the said com- ^ Biggerstaff, Jr., John Bigger- plaint as required by law or the Walter Milam, Cecil Bigger- plaintiff will apply to the court Gardner. ior the relief demanded in said. ’ ^ complaint. I „ , This the 1st day of July, 1940. | Reading tr.e aos gei you mor 8-1 ^ C. C. HAYES, C. S. C. «v leas mon-«r: trv i- r K C H N I C O L O R W«| . SENSATION Liberty I Thursday-Friday ib»» ontoi fton' T#ck\r»‘ n»oo dor«i heofW itiar* even death to the iteeW ,na thrt foHoe' to very NOW MiftTMIll KMUIfU , iMie ITIlf I WEDNESDAY BOB HOPE MARTHA RAYE ANDY DEVINE “NEVER SAY DIE” lOc A.?A this nation was founded, out of the churches where it is enshrin ed and from under the bushel where it has stifled, and set It up on a candlestick on our common table, where It will give light to all the earth. ihKdlievirij^HgKF iOp thtfjsp^ #hleh qidteMneth. Wer ehall f. eye towkrd . objee- .'th^Uve^^'ieali^.VtisI^ to the fuUeat nsistinK ^ or- iflsatlonli^' lint ‘•o-ordliutiul all, i them Into the,eM^ce^f the* on aim.' ihaU move disregard of all v«Med in B, Dnanelid. econo^iki or iRimfou. We s!|im teco|nis^-\he dlftee^eea of abfflty in meh, ^ Ineguaiitleh ordained in natui^ hVli we ihsdl seek to lift the less. «i Vef «)i?he#' lev«1'‘and^ to e'nnoUe tte iriore glfi^.by thei' crown of aePvWe, an^ wh ,^alt recogjaiA. that in dse''thing IB Are' eqttil, Hiat alUmnaf'eat and ahhiterad and clothed, and Jive & a BQ0ie& they can . trait,;! ’ Fhr aiullitloh of monetary epcceea. wh 'shalT eoibirtRhML;, 0»e ambttloir 'of' fame; the' desiretd be' thouaftt well of by masltiird, and to hand on'to one's children the heritage of a hmHnous namh, • • • , ' We are the children of Eur ope, and Africa.and Asia. We are the new world. We swear and pledge each oth er that we shall build on this con tinent the new world. We swear that on this soil we shall make living reality and use of the re ligion that came to us from Asia, of the slumbering, innocent vital ity, which came to us from Afri ca, of the manifold talents and gifts that have come to ns from all the races and nations of Eur ope. We swear that we shall be the hoepitable synthesis ot that deatblees attachment to freedom which is the glory of the British; of that humane dignity which is the- ornament of the French: of that mystic imagination which is the gift of the Slavs, of that ro bust and truculent poetry which We pray that we ahall he for given our trespasses as we for give them that trespass against us. We stretch our hand, there fore, to each who will join us, re gardless of what he has hitherto Elaine Wheder Olebrated Sixth Birthday Elaine Wheeler, who makes her home with her grandparents, . , . j. Mr. and Mrs. B. Frank Sparks,1 bWtevwi n*» tix thla JBp»ept..Gon-|^ easily *5.**^f*5®^ Roaring River, Route 2, much ot sclous of our own is the characteristic of the Lrlsh; of that superb sense of work and order which is the talent of the Germans; of that furious love of justice which is the mission of the Jews. We shall say to the English among us: temper your pride; to the French: widen your sympa thies; to the Germans: relax your stubbornness: to the Slavs: rea lize your dreams; to the Irish: forget past wrongs: to the Jews: abandon your fears, which are Innumerable errors we hold against no man his previous actions within the law; we we'come to our fellowship, to our comradeship, to our great endeavor, those who have been conservatives, or liberals or radi cals, those who have been com munists and tho.’e who have been ganee; to the'Negroes: give ns your innocent faith in life and God. * • • We swear that the time shall never come when Americans will flee in fear from fellow Ameri cans; when terror will be a hor ror worse than war; when re- Nazis; we welcome all the races jvenge will be visited by neighbor of this nation of races. We wel come the rich who care more for this cause than for their riches, and we welcome the poor for whom the democratic ideal shall be made a fleshly reality of work and bread aiid freedom and brotherhood. For we, too, are prepared to cast off the old man, and be renewed. * * • . We know only one enemy; those who preach hatred amongst brothers, those who incite creed against creed, race against race, shifting class against shifting class, nation against nation. We shall free speech into an instrument of discussion amongst free, reasonable and affectionate ! men and women. We shall cleanse it of its abasement into an instru ment of internecine wai. We shall free assembly into an open forum, where all may pre sent their views according only to the rules of human courtesy and the right of differences to be heard from every floor. We shall free the press into an instrument for the dissemination of honest information and open, responsible criticism. Instead of an instrument of sensationalism, gossip, agitation and anonymous propaganda. We shall free individual citi zens from the impertinent pryings ot the press and establish for them the right of privacy In their homes and their personal rela tions. We shall free the collective conscience into the impelling IMjwer of a new society. We shall make real the prayer, “Give us this day our dally bread.” To that end we demand that the resources of this nation, of this soil upon which' we all live, whether in public or In priv ate hands, shall be recognized as communal wealth and be Jully mobilized to the end that every I child shall ibe fed, clothed and •educated according to his abilities and according to the communal need: that every man and woman shall have the necesaHties of life, consisting 6f decent food, clotli- ing and shelter, proyidud they are willing tothat-they shall i>e fr»i m ttil^, clioii» -^ work, ‘hut encouri^w‘and assisted Ih retraining, U their choice lies ^ an overcrowded field. In Hfct-htfltfpi**”* 9f this go# upon neighbor for differences of past or present opinion. We shall hold fast to the con cept of law. We shall tolerate no retroactive “justice,’’ which is only, persecution. We pledge allegiance to our God and to the nag"which file? in His cause, with its firmament of expanding stars, its stripes of brave red blood and clean white purity of motive We swear that wherever men suffer from any cruel humiliation on this globe that flag shall be for them 'the symbol of faith, hope and charity. We swear thai never shall it be a symbol of ter ror and oppression. We swear that we shall defend this new world in the making— with the universal service of work for our youth; with the universal service of defense against ail who would destroy us before we are reborn, and in the certain convic tion that when this nation stands united in such a faith and work ing in such a reality it will draw all nations of men on to it. • » • Who are we? We are the com ing American revolution, born last in a revolutionary world. The light which we shall shed Ip flickering isolatediy In millors of hearts. We are groping our way toward each other, and we shall find each other, very quickly. Who will be our President? No one whom we select, but he who selects us. “I dreamed in a dream,” said Walt Whitman, "that I saw a city invincible to the attacks of the whole of the reet of the earth. I dreamed that was the new city of Friends.” * • * —Written on the opening day of the Republican convention, libt by myself, hut out of the Cries of unknown Americans who pour out their longing and faith in let ters and .ask' me ^ to -articulate their hopes for them. And ■ writ ten out of weirds spoken to. me in Europe by men who look to A- merlca ae the last hope./Written in the' year of Our Lord 1940. UBT WORM WALK Elmer—Ma, that apple I. Just ate had a worm In it and I ate that, too. > Motlw^—Hota drink this irat- er and* wash K down. ge«,«;Ma, let Uia ..-ijr-- Ray Milland and Patricia Mori- son team for* the first time in “Untamed,” Paramount’s mighty Technicolor draq^a of the North Wods, which makes Its local how on Thursday-Friday at the Lib erty Theatre. Akim Tamiroff is also in the cast. Baptist aT aI?SlJ6B' cApreb here pn have been sojd urjfo) _ biro. foyV ylsarB, cooking satwactton to tike ptir- chaSers. says Mr. A. X Wlbitttng* ttin, manAiek of Markdown Fuf- nltnrs Co.;. iF this city!.' _ Each year ^theiises'llie.sale of tfee revival will begin at’^^ - ZMaks A ^ - — ^ -a _ 4 A ^ aX. aUi 10 anA?t|e fSooMds fivvai sat* %itt*t>e nsed> teword. ttl )^g paiiiltng of the chpreh. ^ It 4iae also been annonneed and more Home Enterprise ranges, due itoi^matiy con^boUng facts, saeb^ Aifh idnaUty; projp* er eohatmctlon for .-baking a^. bookteg perfection, ot jSar . sign, and last Ibnt not lesliit, .the prices at which thegr are sold. Mr. Wtalttini^n nrges anyone Interested In a range to ^ the Home {Urterprine and get all the facta which liave made them so popnlar among housewives «t this section. A liberal trade-in siloWr ance Is made on dd stovea Read the firm’s Bd in this issue of The Journal-Patriot, then go see i the ranges. ' ' RE-SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior eonrt of WOkas county, made in the qiecial pro ceedings, entitled, Dave Stewart versus Mary Stewart Church, Marvin Stewart and Bessie Lee Stevnurt, the same being No. 84 S. P. No. 4, docket (d mm poort the undersigned commission ers having sold said land on thj^. 2nd day ^ July 1940, and an adf* vance bid having been placed' up on the same the undersigned com missioners will offer fnr sale to the highest bidder for cash on the 5th day of August, 1940, at the hxHir ci 1' o'clock P. M. at the courthouse door in Wilkesboro, ■ ■■ ' I North Carolina, offer for sale for Employing for Its 'background ’ cash to Uie highest bidder the fol- the impressive grandeur of the mountains and forests of the North-Canadian Rockies, and co- starring three of Hollywood’s most popular personalities—Ray Milland, Patricia Morison and Akim Tamiroff—Paramount has contrived an exciting and com pletely entertaining triangle drama In its motion picture ver sion of Sinclair Lewis’ intriguing story, "Mantrap,’* which has been brought to the screen under the title, “Untamed,’’ at the Liberty Theatre, Thursday and Friday. Eye-Filling Scenes Enhanced by gome of the most eye-filling Technicolor it has been this reviewer’s gtiod fortune to see reproduced on the screen— with especial applause for a bliz zard said to be the first ever to be photographed in color—“Un tamed” is the type of entertaln- 'ment calolilatM to- p'/MS'wery type of audience, and has been expertly as well as sympathetical ly directed by George Archin- baud, from a screenplay by Fred erick Hazlltt Brennan and Prank Butler. Briefly—the story tells of the nervous breakdown of a young society doctor—^Ray Milland— who is ordered into the North woods to recuperate. ESngaglng Akim Tamiroff as his guide, Mii- and is hurt during a bear hunt, and is left in the care of Tami- roff’s beautiful, city-bred wife, Patricia Morison, while the ex tended hunt is continued. Chafing dislike.of the Women of the tiny against the sly glances and open conmunlty, and yearning to re- ^ turn to the social life she had • prevloiisly enjoyed, Patricia is strongly attracted to the young, city doctor, and both are dismay- ' ed when they realize that their, love is mutual. | Blizzard Thrilling Climax | Just as Milland is preparing to | return to his city practice, an j epidemic of streptococcus breaks! out in the, now, snowed-in vil- j lage. Milland starts off alone to the nearest town, fifteen miles away, through a raging blizzard, to get a’ necessary serum to com bat the disease. Patricia, fearing for his life, follows. Returning from the hunt, Tamiroff is con vinced .ty gossiping neighbors that the two have run away to gether, and starts after them, with murder in his heart. He finds them uncosneious and slow ly freezing to death in s deserted cabin, and, from this point the picture builds to a tensely dra matic climax. Combining great-scale advenr ture with an Intimate story of a woman rebelling against the code of ah Isolated community, the film offehs cumulative thrills that make it a must-see attrac tion. Not only the top roles are interpreted expertly, hut right down to the last character, the acting is superlative. OuUtandingly fine performanc es have been given, not only by Milland, Miss Morison and Taml-j roff, but also bA Jane Darwell and Wyiiam Frawley In featured roles, and the entire supporting cast. lowing Sescribied lands to-wit: Being a hous e and lot in the town of Wilkesboro, North Caro lina, bounded on the North by a road, on the East by the lot for- nterly owned by Mrs. R. A. Deal, on the Houth by an alley and on the West by a lot formerly owned by Julius Holler, now owned by FVed Shoemate. This deed covers the entire lot formerly owned by J. T. 'Welbom, and for further de scription see deed from J. T. Welbom. This the 22nd day of July,1940. J. H./WHICKER, J. P. JORDAN, 7-29-2tm Commissioners eSOWh on August ll sad that atit^ invited to attend, Tlipiday - Fridi^ m. VAYRE iOlllS ULMULLUY MREWTiM V WmcM hr UWX MttR A WA»mt atOA-fhO WMmiS fha— IMI fhr If OMk, IM • ta, ai Mgiri Jot **Yo«r EnterUinnient Center” ORPHEUM ll■lllllllll BE SATISFIED only with the BEST! HOME © EknanaSE Trade In That Old Stove Or Range FOR AN - yW V r Revival At Adley Now In ProgreM, Everybody is invited .to' attend' the revival which, is 4n projgress. under a brush arbor at Adley. i The arbor is near where the Ad* j ley publie school house used to I stand. The services are eonducted'i ijr .Rev.. Wpodrow Smith, pastor. ot the Paatecofltai).,. Holiieas^^ I /V».n ..a i.» 'I Oeafo aad\'4rf Sziob; CAST IRON RM0€ FOR WOOD OR COAL Eafh year witnesses the sale of*mbre and more' Mbq Enterprise Ranges, due to many contriht^ag ^ets, 'fiaA a high grade quality, proper construction- ior baldng and ing perfection, beauty of design, and ]a«t but not least; price at which they are sold., Anyone interested in a range should see the Hom^ En- . I terprise and get all the facta which: have made them so popular BRMmg housewives of this A 'libenl^fiMe-iir ' allowance is made on old stov«s..-r"'!Y.,s.;.-.'i»r KASY; TBRHJ5 GENERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE LIBERAL Discomcnroi^cASHb,' "5.1 Qoikltty FunUbum At M^4>owb Pvfe«a) TmMi StTMt North HaUrnfaris. N. C,