Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Oct. 18, 1941, edition 1 / Page 5
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1^'*--5r Ms ’isres’T'" ►I . ..“¥■ mst . I -J S, Edwards, of Ronda,‘|>^ mss Ntell Robssoau, who is ,^t- North Wtlkesf'Oro rlsttor*^''”a»>.,>ni ot wo a: Harry T, Kertey spent''the -»,'hd with Mr. ‘'Kerley in fiston-Salem. tendfitg' St. Marys School at Ra ^ leigh, was h^e for the week-end j with her parents Judge and.^rs. J. A..Rousseau. and Mrs.'Dm t^dsley nt the week-end with relatives Winston-Salem. a. Fred Rash', of Lenoir, ent the weekend with Mr. and ire. Spencer Richardson. Attorney T. R. Bryan, ^ of Wilkeaboro, and Mr. Garfield Ly on, of Cherry Lane, Alleghany county, were business visltora'^to| various places in Virginia the lat-' ter part of the week Miss Helen Bumgarner, of Ireensboro, spent the week-end her mother, Mrs. J. M. Bum- trner. * Dr. Hobeit S. Moore, who is spending sometime wiyi his daughter, Mrs. Robert More house. on the Brushies, is expect ing to return soon to his home in Providence, Rhode Island. Miss Ruby Pearson was in New, City last week buying me?^ an^ise for the Spainhour-Syd- ire * fork and Mrs. Palmer Horton ■pent last week at Pawley’s Is land in S. C. as guests of Mr. and frs. W. B. Somers. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smithey, of MMlkeshoro, spent Wednesday night in Boone with Mr. and Mrs. George Childers. Mrs. Childers, the former Miss Mildred Smithey. is their daughter. Miss Jaunita Rorie visited her tome in Wadesboro Sunday, ."he Jras accompanied by H. .Merrill IVlles. Mrs. Barney Church is recover ing from a tonsil operation per- lormed Saturday at the Wilkes liorpltal. ( Mrs. Earl Meadows has resum ’d her position at Carter-Hubbard 'ublishing company after an ab- jcnce of about three months. ^ ' Mrs. Gray Holcomb arrived to- Hj4Ay from Winston-Salem on a Bitto her parents, Mr, and Mrs. |E. R. W’rlght. of Mr. Ralph Dunoan has return ed to the city after spending sev eral days last week in Ashville in the interest of the Carolina Mountain Telephone Company, of which he is president Mrs J. Pendley and Mrs. R. F. W’hitmore. of Durham, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Fletcher, of Purlear. Mrs. Pendley, mother of Mrs. Fletcher, remained for an extended visit. Mrs. C. B. Lomax spent the weekend at Xewland with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phil lips. She went over especially to attend the funeral of Mr. C. L. Jessee. Rev, and Mrs. A. L. Aycock motored to Polkton Thursday to Miss Betty Ellis, daughter I ,Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Ellis, of | take Mrs. Aycock’s mother. Mrs, Boone, was the week-end guest Bettie Beachum. home after a f pf Miss Nell Hubbard home in Wilkeshoro. at her Messrs. James Harvel and At- r^ell German and Misses Char- Harvel. W'anda Kerley and ITna Myers attended the fair in 1V inston-Salem Friday night. visit here for several days with the A.vcock'.s. .Miss Margaret Hall has re- I'tumed to her position in the of- hfice of the National Farm Loan Miss Rebecca Hayes, daughter of Judge and Mrs. Johnson J. Hayes, returned to her home in Wilkeshoro Friday after under going a successful operation for appendicitis at The W'ilkes Hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wendland .Association after spending a week and son, Elroy, and daughter, Es- • ter, of this city, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lovin, of Pulaski, Va., spent ^it her home at Waynesville. Mrs. Grover Staley and Piiother Mrs. R. L. her Staley, of Sunday at Fort Bragg with Mr. and Mrs. (Wendland’s son, Gilbert, — ' and Mrs. iWendiana s son, uiioeii., Jifr'noke. Va.. spent the '»eek-end is ji .member;of T'harlie Byrd on Hin-1 . anioa i with Mrs eh. iw Street. armed forces. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whitesides, kwho have been residing in Wilkes t-oro. have rented the home of .Mr. anil Mrs. I. 11. McNeill. Ji.. in this city. .Mr. Walter Winkler, who has a position at a Nrval air base in [V'rgini:!, spent the week-end with I'liis mother. Mrs. J. E. Winkler. 1 near the city. Miss Peggy Soniers. student ot Salem College, spent the week- ciul in the AYilkeshoros with rel atives. Miss Somers the daugh ter of Mr, and Mrs. W. B. Somers wl',0 ; re now- residing at George town, S. C. PAOB FTVE auim nine of • lie more teain. «4 toNP# the Jmrf htwfte g*me for ± y M w w iivww SjevHtjuntafia- Xioic^elw»l FWdey c;; • V -■':h cow* stapiititi Robert Cummings and Deanna Durbin supply the romance in' Universal’s gay dramatic come dy, "It Started With Eve.” Charles Laughton is co-starred with Miss Durbin in the unusual production which was directed by Henry Koeter. Joe Pasternak was the producer and the large supporting cast includes Mar garet Tallichet, Guy KfUiee, Walter Catlett, Catharine Don- cet and Charles Coleman. “It Started With Eve” opens at the Allen Thursday. ft^^^iftpeuMtion ComnflMfefi- iUirtrthnted the ^^^ning and through June 3d: nine dlvt- MdjSs is which Is booed on'bfficlal reports, of the State governmental agencies han dling the funds. Unemployment compensation, as may be expected from .its na ture. furnishes the largest of the nine Items, amounting in three and one half years of payments, to 118,800,896.48. The second In amount is Old Age Assistance, help for the needy who have passed 6,5 years of age, which was $14,434,442.32 in the four years since these payments started. Aid to dependent ebUdren, al for four years, amounted to liite dlffeiWMe in the teams Mineral Springs having ani ^ " of heavy and fdht nsen .... into, the game^agatot ^ilkesboro’s light and indx- “11 with few reeerves. and Foster were' tl^ stars for the visitors with ifentTy scoring three touch downs and Poster powerful as the plunging back. ‘ Wayne Gentry and Joe Hunt were North Wilkesbo.ro’s leading ground gainers. CAl Lgrate*. . Co. Mrs. Eugene Rountree (the former Miss Jettie Miller), of Kinston, Mrs. E. G. Suttlemyre (the former Miss -Y....'. C Miller), of Hickory, and Mrs C. H. Pugh (the former Miss Minnie Miller), and Miss Dorothy Underwood, of Gastonia, visited relatives and friends in Wilkesboro yesterday. Among 'those attending the E- lon-Lenoir-Rhyne toot-ball game in Hickory Friday night from this city were: Misses Nellie Gabriel Mildred Williams. Beatrice Pear son, M-rcella Pendley, Mr. and Mrs. Rill Carrington, Messrs. Richard Deans. Conrad Kilby. Andy Shook, Mike Hunt. Paul Haigwood. M. W. Green. Jr., Ira Lee Baker, Charles Day. Jr., Presley Myers, and Attorneys Eu gene Trivette, Allie Hayes. F. J. McDuffie. Elon won the game 14 to 0. WITH THE CHURCHES Hot Espionage Secrets Told New York. — Defense secrets, some of them too hot for the ] considerable numbers, eyes and ears of a federrl court . Wilkesboro Methodist Calendar For Week Wednesday: 7 p. iru, Mid-week meeting, followed by choir prac tice. Next Sunday: 10 a. m. Church school; 6:30 p. m.; -'^outh Fellow ship; 6:30 p. m. Evening service. Sperial Notice! The mid-week service on Wed nesday evening will be something special. A fine program of special music and congregational singing has been planned. The Woman’s Society will serve refreshments. Our plan is to make this into a rally meeting in preparation for launching into the new year which is just around the corner. Your presence wiH help make this ser vice succe.>sful and effective. Next Sunday night our evening service will be in cooperation with the Masons who vdll be present in 1 u -pjjg 3^p snatched from German spies, were introduced in evidence at the trial of IB men cha.ged with espionage conspiracy. They included; C. K. Proctor, head of the Oxford Orphanage, will deliver the ser mon. The Young Ladies’ class will meet on Tuesda.v evening at 7:30 $5,787,642.38, while aid to the blind, for the same period, was $1,315,413.50 In North Carolina The only division of the'five “ma jors” In which figure’s are not available Is old age a'ntf survivors insurance, which In dUe time,, will b’seome one of the largest', if oot the largest, In -the entire pr©7 gram. "in the five minor «, ’services’’. $6,396,p88.42 „^ has been distributed In ■* tWa-^ ttatis through June 30, ipiL The dat» of beginning and ambuhts In these divisions follow: ^ Maternal and C!hlld fealth. Ser- vices, February 1936, $1,106,- 781.32. Services to Crippled Children. February 1936, $905,091.31.' Child Welfpre Services, April 1936, $265,580.55. Vocational Rehabilitation, July 1, 1936, $562,324.48. Public Health Services, Febru ary. 1936, $3,555,310.76. The federal government initiat ed the Social Security program and has made large contributions to the amounts distributed In this state as well as to the costs of administering the iprpgram, Mr. Fletcher points out. A break-down of the sources ot iu net OftJ |Uf6de6rl>6(f >' f />?; ' fv... ' J'.»»'■ ■B’-.’’ SH£RW(fV WILLIAMS PaiNTS } • ■ ;.iut Farmers Payinf 1941 Crop Loans NOW YOU CAN BUY ■i tist church of Wilkesboro as well as the otjier chun^es are joining , afvnmima- Tdttp ^ sunned of Mrs. J. K. Menefi'c. of Lenoir. bedside. .,lrs. W. T-. Wilson, of Hiiiitiiig- I ton. West Virginia, is here vi.sit- (ing in the home of Mr. and Mrs. ^R. W. Cwyn. Mrs, Wilson is a former resident of North Wilkes boro. I toction of Industrial issued for a few >'■ B- Facilities.’’j 1. officials. scores of shipTards on the east, west : ml gulf coasts and a list of hundreds of naval craft under i Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Shields, of coiistruetion — from J.’i.000-ton High Point, spent the week-end battleships and an aircraft car- here with Mrs. Shield’s sister, Mrs. rier lo fast torpedo motorboat.s I: L. Crook. On Sunday the and s-irf landing craft. ■Shields and Mr. and -Mrs. Crook! An unexplained dirgraip. Pm- student at Mars Hill t ollego. .All ihe children of Clerk of i Court and Mrs. C. (’. Hayes ex- icept Mr. Hill Hayes, who is in I school at Mars Hill, gathered at their home Sunday for a birth day dinner in honor of Mr. and I Mrs, Hayes. His birthday anni- Mr. Fred Hubbard. Jr., who is 1 very was October !Uh and Mrs. taking a course in business ad-. Hayes on October 10th. ministration at the I’-'iversity of Carolina at Chapel H.l . ^ children and Mrs. Ester El- important uses, spent the week-end here with jjr and Mrs, E. (). ' In presenting the new sub stives. Sanford and in the stance, identified only as formu .A comprehensive survey ofjat the home of Mrs. Joe Barber, tion of the amounts supplied of this $46,200,000 distributed/In North Carolina, as follows: Unit ed States, $14,000,000, or 30.3 per cent, plus administrative costs; State ot North Carolina Repayments by members of the Winston-Salem Production Credit Association during the first two weeks of the tobacco sales have been very gratifying, L. E. Fran cis, Secretary-Treasurer, report ed today. One hundred eighty- two members have repaid their loans In full and 267 other mem bers have made partial repry ments. The total collections for the year are $46,942.41. , During the year the assoclatior- flnanced the operation of 641 members in the amount of $152,- 45(^, Mr. Francis said. Since the association .began operation in 1934 It h^s served its 1100 mem- bere. in |be, amount of $958,313. It ntis eAabllshed a reserve of ,$17^638.22 and has experienced no losses or, charge-offs during the entire'period. The asjsociatlon is chartered under the Farm Credit Act of 1933 and makes loans to farm ers and stockmen for general ag ricultural purposes. including the purchase of fertilizer, feed, food farm machinery, an,! livestock the cost of repairing buildings, o' building fences: the payment of labor costs in connection -. with farm operrtions; and yje ^a:j- ment of indebtedness already in-* curred In the farm business- The Association has its head- q'aarters in the Trade Street Branch Wachovia Bank Build ing, Winston-Salem, and em braces the following counties: Al- leghanii, Ashe, ^Caldwell, David son, Forsyth, Stokes, Surry, Wa- tapga, .yilkes, and^ Yadkin. Paul J. Vestal of Wilkes county, is presiddht 'Of the board of direc tors. 9ikAm»>uixA moit y oucfaohie deserves the best paint money can buy. Here’s your chance to get it—and save money, too! Make the most of it now— SWP paintrf house* in our Sherwin-Williams Paint and Color Style Guide. AVhen a Champagne Bath was a Girl’s Initiation.’’ Mary Nolf.n, with Miss Frances Somers as asso ciate hoste.ss. Annual Conference convenes at Wins’.on-Salem on the evening of October 20th. This is just a week away. MTiy not plan to attend some of the sessions? MRS. ROOSEVELT WILL PAY GREENVILLE VISIT i^GOO 000. or 16.4 per cent, al- the former ‘■Hubbles’’ Wilson, so'plus administering costs: 100 celebrated Follies bea.Ky, gives N. C. counties, $6,300,000. or her intimate confessions of her 13 6 per cent; N. C. Employers rise to fame and her desperate subject to UC Act, $18,300,000. fight to re-create herself from the or 39 6 per cent. drug-shatti^red wreckage. Begin ■ the first chapter in The American Use the advertising columns o j Weekly, with Sunday’s Washing- 'his naper as vour shopping guid’ ton Times-Herald, now on sale. Buy Now. Prices Higher Next Spring. CARLTON’S HARDWARE PHONE 109 FOR PAINT AND PAINTER I i|^) Sher win-Williams Paints Announce Substitute For Aluminum Detroit. - - The United States i Rubber company announced last [ ■week ilie development of a new non-mctallic material designed to replace sheet aluminum in many 1- Mrs. Kenneth I.,owrance and little daughter. Mary .Miller, who have been spending two weeks in Washington with Mrs. Low- rance’s p.'rents, -Mr. and .Mrs. J, H. Leckie. returned to their home near .Mooresville yesterday. Mr. Lowrance came up and ac companied them home. Relief for Miseries of HEAD COLDS •APut S-porvo** Va-tro-nol up eacH nostril. It (1) shrinks swoUen mem branes, (2) soothes irritation, and (S' helps clear cold-clog- geo nasal passage. PoUow complete dl- reettons In folder. wH'TKO'MOL home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Sikes la C-102. company officials .said near Broadway during the week- it was made of fibrous an i end. They were accompanied, berUike '"/'•edien^s and that^ex- home Sunday by Mrs. Julia Nich- ol.s. of Purlear. who had spent two months with her son and daughter, Mr. E. O. Nichols and Mrs. J. L. Sikes. Willkuns Motor Company T H. WILLIAMS, Mgr. bear frame SERVICE Good U»ed Cars, Trucks and Tractors • EASY TERMS - Will Pay Cash for Late Model Wrecked Cars and Truck* iplete Body Rebuilding •k and Acetylene Welding ’PHONE 334-J Mrs. Carl Coffey and brother Mr. Blair Gwyn, spent the week end at Chattanooga. Tenn, going out to see Mrs. Coffey’s son. Carl Gwyn Coffey, a student at the McCrllie School and who was op erated on for appendicitis last week. Mr. Coffey is getting along nicely. They were accompanied there by Mr. Robert Wood Finley who went with them to attend the Davidson-Sewanee football game Saturday at Chrttanooga. cept for small amounts of f’lb- ber consisted entirely of non- strategic materials un.affected by priorities. ^ German Clothes Ration Reduced pjafiin.—Newspapers announc ed recently that Germany’s third Franklin D. Roosevelt’s visit, lo East Carolina Teachers collego al Greenville. Pitt coun ty, is definitely fixed for Novem ber 17. it was announced hy the' chairman of the entertainment committee of the college. Tlie first lady w,!! deliver an rddre.Hg in Wright anditorinm at 8:30 o’clock in Ihe evening. Stu dents and faculty are preparin.g to give her a royal welcome in which not only Greenville, but people of eastern Carolina, will join. The first visit of the first lady of the land could not be in a more fitting place as every coun ty in the eastern section of the state and .most communities are represented in the student body of the college. Winter Defense LUBRICATION... Program Get lighter, quick-acting lubricants that reach every working pairt immed’ately despite winter’s cold. ELECTRICAL... Get your battery set for heavy winter duty. COOLING SYSTEM... Willkie Urges Aid To China Prepare your »>oling systeiA to maintain efficient engine pperatmg temperature on winter days and to prevent the possibility of cost ly freeze-ups. New York.—Wendell L. Will- STE^NG... ed recently that uerma y acting as chairman of a unit lot ot clothing ration car s o e china relief rally in Madlsot A number ot womefi from the First Baptist church attended the Wilkesboro division meeting of the W. M. U. which was held in Elkin Thursday. Those going down were Mesdames L. A. Haus er, Bruce Waugh, Avery Whit tington, D. L. Lane, E. E. Eller, R. P. Casey, H. L. Keller. J. W. Mitchell, J. G. Chipman, J. T. Kerbs ugh, J. N. Shockey. J. I. Myers. W. K. Sturdivant, John W. Kincheloe, Chal McNeil, and R. T. McNeil, and Miss Nettie .Andrews. Mrs. George Johnson went from the Wilkesboro church. issued soon xvill provide I‘JO “points” lor 15 months as com pared with the previous 150 “points” for 12 mouths — a re duction of more than 35 per cent. The press said that the textile situation continues "tense” and, in order to provide troops at the front with sufficient clothing, the home front must make propor- tionaie sacrifices. The new cards will be the first to cover a 15-month period. A. G. Black. Farm Credit Ad ministration governor, has out lined a plan to prevent a specu lative boom in farm real estate at the present time. Housewife’s Almanack Will Cut Budget Costs Housewives who are trying to adjust their budgets to meet ad vancing costs ot foodstuffs will find the Food Almanack a helpful feature. New economy recipes and other money-saving suggestions make this feature Invaluable these days. A regular feature In THE AMERICAN WEEKLY, the big magazine distributed with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERI CAN. On sale at all newstands. teadinr tte aoa. cn too mor less money. Try it ed China relief rally in Madison Square Garden, asserted last week “no nation ever needed help more . , . No nation was ever more neglected by Its friends.” “Today,” he said, “the people of China look to us for some re affirmation of our historic friend ship. They know, and we know, that their battle is our battle. “For if they lose, the forces of totalitarianism will control the Orient and threaten os on our western shores as Hitler seeks to do on our eastern shores. Whereas if Japan falls and Hit ler is defeated, the hope of de mocracy in Apia and Europe will be revived and the continuanc.s of our own democracy . will he assured.” Steering control must be positive and right when you hit slippery winter pavements. One of the most popular hob bies of sailors i* the tj. S. Navy and Nava) Reserve Is that col- ENGINE TUNE-UP... Get your engine set to stand up to winter’s challenge. ^ BRAKES... Straight, sure stops are vitally important m winter driving. BODY AND FINISH... Protect your car against rough winter weather with a polish and wax job. GUDl MOim COMPINI lecting “^vers” lAttle- ships that maintam' their own | SERVICE DEPARTMENT post offices. .Several naval mag-j azlnes devote regular departments to stamp collections. ’Phone 112 Noitt Wilkeaboro, N. C. :p I 1 ii II '
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 18, 1941, edition 1
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