Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Oct. 12, 1944, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
tael oil b«^9K OftroM ikvdgaUag ot tlrouthppt th« „ W»4 today i 31. L. WfO}*, of the ,. of W«r raeo'«Qd B^hn|i ,. tmnmiMag that rati^u i«d tsr enfnnt season must nhtU Anfust SI, 1945. The i44-ff heatlBf season heyan %»• CtetttMd conserratton of fuel **How. at tne bMl^ninK the heating season, when are nil, oil dhonld be used carefully", Mr. Wells said. “Householders sboaid not be wasteful. The last days of the heating season may be the ooldest”. at FIRST INN OF A c OV9 -''666 USE Cold Pnpafatioas as directed Tkc 'jSmEF SAVES se% OR MORE MANY USERS SAY Burn Wood Suild but one fire a season Enjoy Continuous 24 Hour Heat • No fire* to build on eold momiagf. • Ramoro aabea S llnet monthly on arerafe. • Orer MM ratailed ia one locality. Writ* far ASdrcf* of Your Nmroot Doakr DEALER TERRITORY OPEN Ashley Antematie Wood Stove Co. Cohimhia, S. (X OPA this year Is prorJfH®* **> each fuel ;oll user 4 boi||:Iet-^ "Batlofi Ohl^dajr apd pejlvery Becord”—irttH If you did not rerolY# youip Yop obtain ope from your fpel o}l dealer or from the War Price and Rationing Board. "This booklet should be kept handy and used as a guide”, the board chairman paid. "It contains yaluablb Information showtof how much oil sbould haVe hepn humed at hpy time during the heating year”. “This ration calimdar Is easy to use", Mr. Wells continued. “All that Is needed is,to know the per cent of the heating season that has passed. This information can jbe obtained from the local board or from this newspaper, or from fuel 0.1 dealers. It will also be announced weekly over the radio. After this Information Is at hand, a householder should figure out the amount of oil he has already burned during the current season. Compare this figure with the to tal which the booklet shows should have been burned at this particu lar percent of the season. “It the chart shows that too much oil Is being burned, cut down immediately. If, on the con trary, a surplus Is shown, the householder shouldn't get care less. That extra oil should be saved for the time when It will be needed for the unseasonable cold days that are sure to come. “If a householder also burn.s fuel oil to heat water, his ration includes oil for next summer’s hoi water heating. This should be kepi in mind and the necessary coupons earmarked. If this isn’t done, next summer may bo one of cold water exclusively. “Householders who deposit their coupons with their dealers should keep careful delivery rec- ord.s. Help out dealers by keep ing track of the number of gallons Mrs. Ernest Saner, of Boomer ^ - Hff4n»Aa r^llla HT11I0 onH SV delivered, the number of coupons still valid during the period amount of oil burned and ...» . . .u . amount remaining In the tank. Oil spent the week-end at t e r in tanks should be allowed to run spective homes In Boomer, low before reordering, bo that the Iv vv 1 CM I U V • * At 6» o\J « « m dealer can supply householders Honed at Kelly Field, Texas, with as few trips as possiblA When orders are placed, they should be for as much as the tank will hold, coupons allowing. The western pine beetle de stroys 2,800,006,000 board feet of timber each year. mikhiowabt cnmi4Sr* T&e'IAAlM‘Missionary Circle 5 ie\ with Mrs. Paul Turner Thurs- ay afternoon at 2:80. The presi dent led fhe dfvotlonhl. inm period was hHOf. •■The hort- ess served iefreenmentB at the close of the mating. W I O. OQtCLK—^ The W. I. C. Clyp}o met Sunday afternoon with Miss Ida Jean Witherspoon. The president, Miss PensacoU Alexander, presided. The “Upper Room” topic was dis cussed. The hostess, assisted by her small sister, served a delici ous chicken supper at the close of the meeting. About 16 teenage girls were present. SUNSHINE BAND MEETING— The Sunshine Band met Sunday afternoon at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Bessie Denny. Plans were made for a fall picnic. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH— The service at The First Bap tlst church Sunday morning, Oct. 8, was conducted by Rev. Theo dore Peoples, of Goldsboro. Rev. Peoples’ text for the morning service was “Broken Nets” The evening subject was "One Step Too Far”’ ' 1 KEVIVAD TO CLOSE— The revival at the First Baptist church will close Friday evening. Rev. G. W. Todd, of Smlthfleld, has been the able speaker for the two weeks services. The official board wishes to thank the public for Its cooperation during the re vival. The department 4^-MOtpe vehi cles has authority tft suspend the license of any operator or chant- tour, without preliminary hearing, upon showing by Its records or othw. satisfactory ovldenoe that the liceneee has been oonvloted of Illegal transportation of Intoxi cating Uqnors, Attorney General Harry HcMnllan ruled today In a dlgeet ot opinions. ■ ' - However, the nfllng stated, the department shall afford the li censee an opporinnity for hearing to be held In the’eounty in which the licensee resides, unless the de- partment and tlie licansee agree that the hearing may be held In some other county. V BOOMER NEWS— Pvt. Connie Howell returned Sunday to Fort Devens, Mass., af ter spending a few days at home. He Is the son ot Mrs. Jane Howell of Boomer. Mr. John Henry Ferguson, ot Coojjer, West Virginia, spent the week-end in the home ot his fath er, Mr. Arthur Ferguson. He also visited in the home of Mr. and Misses Ollie, Eula and Sylvia the Howell and Marine' Barnes, who the hre now at work in Danville, Va., re- As the nights begin to get cool er, close up the back and side ven tilators of your poultry laying house, says' C. F, Parrish,'Exten sion poultryman at State. College. Austrian winter peas must be seeded early, especially where the land is to be planted in row crops next spring. • Mr. and Hrit.MMvjId 1^. pf Statesvaie„ lci/:Aad '||i|;9. Luther Fe^ta duftegi.t^ ^'Mias Genlete”''McCBlter^ .wlm has been Yisltlng irpta^ee in Greensboro, letnnie^ to.her home here. ' Hra. Roy -Colema^ ud hnif father-in-law, Mr. Jfoth Coleman, visited Mrs. Colpmaq's hpsbnnd. Pvt. Roy Coleman, who is station ed «t Camp Croft, S. C., daring the week-end. ' Mr. and Mrs. Jones Miller, of Deep Gap, were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Luns ford Sunday.- •V ^fuatly pit - The feeding value of gronnd wheat for, fattening hogs com pares well with that of yellow shelled com, results from an ex periment at Gie Mountain Branch Station show. V The addition of calcium arsenate to standard blue mold sprays is effective in reducing flea beetle populations in tobacco plant beds. I Cpl. Linzie Davis, who Is sta- spendlng an 18-day furlough with relatives in Wilkes county, States- He is accom panied by his wife. He Is a grand son of Mrs. Mary Hayes, of Boom er. A cord, of seasoned hard wood I will give as much heat as a ton lof coal, and leave about one- quarter the amount of ashes. That’s one of the things I en joy most—giving kids the proper amount and the proper kind of light for the best work. It helps a lot if you make a regular practice of cleaning reflec tors. shades, and bulbs with a soapy rag as a regular part of your house cleaning. DUKE POWER COMPANY ADMINISTBATOB’g NO'nCE Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Mrs. L. L. Turner, late of Wilkes county, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersjghed whose address is North Wqkes- boro, N. C., duly verified, on or before the 21st day of September, 1945, or this notice will be plead in bar of their right to rwover. All persons indebted to said es tate vrill please make immediate settlement. ■nils 21st day of Sept., 1944. ll-2-8t(T) L. L. TURNER, Administrator of the estate of Mrs. L. L. Turner, dec’d. EXECUTOR’S NOnCE North Carolina, Wilkes County. Having qualified as executor of the estate of J. O. Brewer, de ceased, late of iWilkes county, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased, to exhibit them to the undersigned at Pores Knob, N. C., on or before the 26th day of September, 1945, or this notice -will be pieced in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 25th day of Sept., 1944. F. G. BREWER, Executor of the estate of J. 0. Brewer, dec’d. ll-3-6t(T) NOTICE OF SALE .OF LAND As commissioner appointed by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Alleghany county, North Caro lina, in special proceedings enti tled ‘‘Mrs. Hattie Edwards vs. W- P. Alexander and others”, I will offer for sale at public auction on the premises in Rondh, North Car olina, on the 26th day of October, 1944, at 1:00 o’clock, p. m., the following described lots in the Town of Ronda: Being lots 16, 16, 18, 23, 25, 27, 29, 36, 36, 37, 38, 39 as shown by the map of P. C. Forester’s Sub- Division of the J. W. Boyd prop erty in Ronda, N. C., said map be ing recorded in the Register of Deeds office of Wilkes county. Said sale shall be for one-third cash and the remainder in two equal installments due in three and six months after date of sale. This September 25, 1944. .L. E. EDWARDS, 10-19-4t(T) Commissioner ADMINISTRATOR’S NO'nCE Having qualified as s^inistra- tor of the estate of S. B. Gray, deceased, late of Wilkes couhly, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at North Wilkesboro. Route 3, N. C., on or before the 26th day of September, 1945, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of tljeir recovery. All per sons indebted to eaid estate will please make immediate payment. This the 26th day of Srat~ 1M4. E. H. OLAi% Admr. of S. B. 13-2-4t(T) Gray, _de^ CHOOSE YOUR NEW FALL MENCHANDISE ... AT.. Newest Styles • Highest Quality HEWT0N’S| FALL Coats - Dresses Bright New Fall Colors ... All Sizes . . . in— Ladies’ All Wool Coals »24-M to »49-95 Other Ladies’ New Fall Coata. to Misses’ and Children’s Coats.. LADIES’ NEW FALL DRESSES . $7-95 to $9.95 In all the wanted styles and shades WASH DRESSES, splendid assortment All-Wool SWEATEES FOR A .DIES, MISSES D CHILDREN ’2-98 To S6.S0 Ladies’ HODSE dOATS ’S-95 YouTl Like These! $2.98 and $4.49 Ladies’ Outing Gowns And Pajamas $1-98 To $2.49 Buy War Bonds MEN’S ALL-WOOL SUITS Newest Fall Colors; Sizes 35 to 42 $24-50-$27-50-$29-50 Men’s Leather Jackets.. $9.98 To $22-50 Men’s Hats . .$1.98 to $5.00 Men’s Sweaters: $1.69 up A good variety of sizes MEN! SEE US FOR YOUR •WORK CLOTHES* Matched Suits $4-47 Work Pants $1-98 up WorkShirts ... .. $1.65up Work Gloves 78c up (With Leather Palm) CONTRIBUTE TO THE UNITED WAR FUND AND COMMUNITY CHEST! S DEPARTMEHT STOR Horth Wilkesboro, N. C. W. R. NEWTON, MANAGER Locuted In Building Fbrmerly Occupied By Pre^e’s GIoae^CM Store, *B* Sireef p'.'w,' 'AlviirAi
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 12, 1944, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75