Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Sept. 4, 1941, edition 1 / Page 5
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SDAl l*^r #»de Osborne, of 1^.' . mt Ibe iMkl weeti^'rid barentii. fct MoOi^dy.' Haiel Freese, of Moores- ► a house«uest of lilss Bea Ifrey this ifeek. |r. R. H. -- — , Green, of Cling- Is crUioally ill at the Wilkes ” il. He is a brother of Mr. Green, of this city. son -was born at the Wilkes pital Wednesday to Dr. and R. C. Ray, of West Jeffer- Ir. and Mrs. Paul Gilliam, of l^ville, Tisited Mr. and Mrs. Gilliam at Hays during the k-end. trs Jessie Gilliam, of Win- im, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. . J. A. Gilliam. Irs. Ivey Moore spent several last week in Johnston City, visiting with her sister. Mable Hendren. Ir. and Mrs. Stokes Hunt Jit the week-end holidays in Iderson vLsiting in the home lev. and Mrs. B. C. Reavis. kr. and Mrs. Fred McNeill, of |a.1elphia. Pa., spent Tuesday Wednesday with Mr. and B. F. Bentley. |r. and Mrs. Carl W. Steele J sons, Ralph and Harry, have |rned to the city after a vaca- trip to Ocean Drive, S. C. W. C. Grier returned to Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Baldock, of Mrs, Ralph Duncan spent last Roanoke, Va., spent the ^week- week in Mount Airy, a guest offend with Mrs. Baldock's parents. Mrs. W. B. Partridge iMr. and Mrs. Melvin Kenerly spent the week-end at Manteo, where they saw a presentation of “The Lost Colony.’’ Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Duncan. Mrs. Baldock was formerly Miss Nel lie Duncan. Miss Florence Gilreath has re turned to Greensboro, where she is teaching, after spending the summer at her home near Wil- kesboro. Miss Jo Anna Marlon and Mr. Raymond Basciangelo, of Ard more. Pa., spent from Sunday until yesterday as guests of Mi.s.s -Margaret Cassel in Wilkesboro. Mr. Jimmy Fowler, of Flush ing, New York, was here several days the first of the W'eek visit ing with his grandmother, .Mrs. C. Holcomb. O Mrs. Tuesday Sue Turner returned .. . from a brief vacation with her husband at Norfolk and other point.9 of interest on the Virginia coast. Mr. and Mrs. John Osborne and family, of Alexandria. Va.. spent several days with relatives at McGrady, North Wilkesboro and Moravian Falls. Miss Kathleen White returned to her teaching position Monday at Salisbury after spending the summer here with her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph White. It Rev was announced Frank J.' Daers, today that of Charles ton, W. Va., who was scheduled j to preach at the Advent Chris. tian church at Boomer Septem ber 5, will be unalile to until a later date. come Rfr. 'Thomas H. McNeill and family left Tuesday for their home in Welch, W. Va., after vis iting his t.’ther, Mr. I. H. Mc Neill, and oiher relatives here. Before going home they went to Roanoke Rapids to visit relatives of Mrs. McNeill. Miss Nell Rousseau left Tues day to enter St. Mary’s College at Raleigh. She was accompanied there for the day by her parents. Judge and Mrs. J. A. Rousseau. Mrs. 0. T. West and two chil dren and Mrs. Mag Church, of ... Winston-Salem, were guests of e here the first of the | -Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Church .Mon. from a two weeks visit in I day. York City with her si.-ter. I Kate Finley. She wcs ac-! D- Needham janied home by Miss Finley.■ Reamon. will spend a couple of weeks !M iuston-Salem. visited in the with her parents, Mr. and ‘’f Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Bea- J. R. Finley. • during the week-end. I ! II II M 11 I Rev. and .Mrs. J. F. Fletcher, I of Kendrick, Va., have taken an apcrtment in the home of their 'daughter. Mrs. W R. .Absher, and will spend the winter here. .Mr. S. P. Mitchell, of Ports mouth. Virginia, spent the week end here with Mr.s. .Mitchell and their son, Phil, who are visiting -Mrs. Mitchell’s parents, Mr. and -Mrs. J. R. Finley. • Mr. Lomax Crook left Sunday for Mars Hill where he will be in school for the coming year. He was accompanied there by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Crook, and Mifis Mary Evelyn and Charles Crook, who visited in Asheville on their way home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Chipman and two children, Sara Lou and Edwin, and Mr. and Mrs. John Kerbaugh and daughters, Dorris and Ruth, motored to Ridgecrest Sunday to hear Dr. George Truitt preach, and in the aiternoon went ti^&sheyille and Montreat before ewning,4iome. Robert .Montgomery is starred at the Allen Theatre beginning Mon day, with II ve!y Evelyn Keyes appearing as his romantic lead, in Columia’s “Here Ccmes Mr. Jordan.” fascinating new comedy with Clande Rains, James Gleason, Eldward Everett Horton, Rita Johnson and John Btaiery. .Alexander- Hall directed the film which was pro duced by Everett Riskin. Only Few More Days To Apply Fpr Grants Of Aid For Fall Farm Work ^ H^^^aklng time ig here and Sept. 15th Closing Date For Applications Lime, Phos phate and Seed C. Jennings, of Pores KtiSSri^^nt to Greensboro Tues day and was accompanied home austrian winter by two daughters. Misses Bea ana Dorothy Jennings. Miss Bea Jen nings has held a position in Greensboro for some time but will be at home at Pores Knob until October 11. when she will be married to Lieut. Karl ^ H. Hemmerich at Orlando, Florida. Mi&s Dorothy Jennings bad been spending three weeks with her in Greensboro. Mr. Will Greene, of Dari''ille, Va.. has been here this week vis iting relatives and friends. Mr. Greene was called here on ac count of the serious illness of his brother, Mr. R. Harvey Greene. J, M:.ss Irene Parsons left today to assume her duties a.s a mem ber of the Roanoke Rapids school faculty. Miss Parsons graduated la.st spring from IV. G. U. N. C. in Green.-boro. Mr. William Hale Jones, son of Dr, and Mrs. W. F. Jones, left last Friday for Port Wayne. In diana, to enter the junior cla.s.4 in Aeronautical Engineering at Indiana Technical College. The most truly^ delightful people you ever met!. Mr. Richard Johnston, flying cadet at the Air Corps Basic Fly ing school at Macon, Georgia, spent the week-end here with his parents. .Mr. and Mrs. A. B. John ston. tOMES 1 Mi^.J01^0AN ROBERT MONTGOMERY Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Eller and daughter. Patsy, spent the week end at Natural Bridge, Roanoke and other -points of interest in Virginia. They returned by way of the Blue Ridge Parkway. with CUtOEUIB-EVaTIUTES Mr. R. T. Minton has returned to Vidalia, Georgia, after spending few days with relatives here and near Millers Creek following the death and funeral of his fa ther. Mr. Decatur Minton, of Mil lers Creek. Must Do Our Part, President Says pnday-Tuesday lUR ACADEMY-AWARD STAR .Mr. and Mrs. Eatl Meadows, of Pores Knob, announce the birth of a daughter. Sarah Elizabeth, at the Wilkes hospital Wednes day morning, September 3. Moth er and daughter are getting along nicely. Misses Orpha and Mozelle Be- shears. daughters of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Beshears, of Walsh, are re covering from tonsil operations performed FViday at the W-ilkes hospital. w»ih MURPHI^ • inwKr n t- MARSHAf Bwrfl*** MERRPjTH », MW« a* • *» ***“^ “* Sun ood 5cr#»n Ploy bv Po«l Jornco Mr. and Mr.9. Andrew Church and two daughters. Iris and Mary Jane, and Mr. Frank Brinegar, of Beckley and Coal City, W. Va., were week-end guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Church in 'Wilkesboro. m A TEN MINUTE GOLF lesson with RAIG wood National Open Champion Miss Ann McGlamery. of this city, who has been taking a course at the Davis Hospital in States ville, graduated as a trained nurse this week, and will ta ke a position with the Wilkes Hospital on the tenth of this month. Hyde Park, N. Y., Sept. 1.— Reminding his fellow Americans of their constant reatiness to fight for their rights. President Roosevelt declared today that "we must do our full part’’ in conquering “forces of insane vio lence" let loose by Adolf Hitler. “There has never been a mo ment in our history.” he said in a broadcast Labor day address, “when Americans were not ready to stand up as free men and fight for their rights.’’ The .'fundamental rights of Americans, established -by their forefathers on the field of bat- tlje. are threatened, he warned, “by Hitler’s violent attempts to rule the world.” The President sPoke of the in creasing war production of the nation's throbbing industries but asserted that “our American effort is not yet enough.” He hinted at additional steps to guarantee delivery of weapons and war equipment overseas but did not mention specific methods. Scorn.'* .Appeasement Once more he scorned the doc trine of appeasmeent. Appeasers and nazi sympathizers, he assert ed, have asked him to become a modern Benedict Arnold, to be tray a devotion to freedom, churches and country. This was his reply: “This course I have rejected I reject it again. “Instead. I know that I speak the conscience and determina tion of the American peo-ple when I say that we shall do everything in our power to crush Hitler and his nazi forces.” While his' words were as far- reaching as any he has uttered in public discussions of the ex plosive international situation, •Mr. Roosevelt left for his listen ers to determine just what he meant by doing “our full part” and “everything in our power” to destroy the nazis. September l.l has been -sat as the closing date for applications for grants of aid to Wilkes farm ers to be used in seeding crops this fall, Lawrence Miller, secre tary of the Triple A in Wilkes, said today. This applies to -phosphate, lime, crim.son clover seed and peas advanced with payment tc- be deducted from soil program payments, Mr. Miller said. Applications for this type of aid necessarily have to be filed some time in advance in order that the materials may -be obtain ed and distributed in time for use, Mr. Miller said. Plan To Draft Girls Detailed By First Lady 26 Seek Places ' On Grid Squad Twenty-six boys have reported for practice on North Wilkes boro high school’s football squad.^ S. H. Franklin is the new coach, having succeeded Jack Massey, who was called into ser vice in the army. A number of veterans of last years team have reported for practice but the ,*qiird also con tains several inexperienced mem bers. Graduation took some of the starting lineup of last year’s team. A Pharaoh dines. A page of ' By r. B. (Conaty Agent) fanners are inquiring (proper stages in cutting order to make tie gtiViltyiof hay. ,,, should 'be cut when you c^n save the most leaves, because the leaves contain most of the nutritions. 1. Lespedeza s-hould -be cut in early bloom or when 12 inches high, which-ever occurs frlst. To leave It longer results in loss of the lower leaves and in a poorer grade of hay. Lespedeza Is very easily cured and may be stored in a barn or shelter or stacked a few hours after cutting. 2. Soybean,? should be cut when the pods begin to form and before the stalk gets too tough and dry. By cutting early you save more leaves and get more proteins. 3. Cowpeas should be cut when first pods begin to turn brown. Waiting until later will result in more peaS and s poorer grade of hay. Cow’peas and soybeans sre harder to save than Is Lespedeza, therefore, it requires more work. Cowpea and soy-bean hay should be left on the ground a day or two after cutting then stroked on racks or poles. The racks can be made out of poles or strips. Nail three poles or strips together at the top then spread the rack at the bottom and nail strips around the 3 poles about 1 foot above the ground al lowing the ends of the pole** to extend a few inches beyond the poles, putting hay upon the racks will allow the air to circulate in the center of the stacks thereby drying it out from thq Inside as well as the outside. Mattie Bishop Is - k tit’ —Atitpi JBastera' > tb^'Care for iHeu^e 'eallad XipoB . by the goTennujitf , , yesterday to gk along’In ' teiaber'With 16 per cent li^ gahoHne' than’, they burned Jnly.’^- -.-.-V ■ > Announcing the ' gas cnrtall-' ' ment program for Septanrb^,T4iM;^ office of petroleum co-ordlnatM’;' said that theilO per cent or^raU, reduction in gasoline dettreHao’;-' to retail outlets, enforced dnttegi” the last two weeks In Angut, would be continued. , Ralph k. Davis, acting c»-' ordlnator, said, however, that commercial) ’ -‘'agricultural and emergency ’-vehicles, would get their full needs so that spreading of the remaining supplies woul amount to a 15 per cent curtal ment for private motorists. “We must protect our resen supply of gasoline,’’ Davis salt “so that iwe-will have a suppl. on hand when winter approaches and fuel oil shipments to the Eest Coast must be increased." Meanwhile, Davies endorsed a move to obtain reduced rail rates on oil movements from producing areas to the East. He said in a statement that the railroads, in. conjunction with the oil Industry transportation committee for the Atlantic Seaboard, “can render a real service by obtaining rate ad justments and faster car handling which will make the use of tank cars economical.” -Mow your weeds! (Mow your weeds! HAY FEVER AGONY -- * -- cnurcii iitrai i*j remarkable pictures in full color Hattie Bishop, age 4 8, resident „i 1 community who died of an informal royal banquet on the banks of the Nile 3,400 years ago, show'ing the kind of food ancient Egyptians liked. See them on the front page of The Ameri can Weekly with -Sunday’s Wash ington Times-Herald, now on sale. Well-Known Druggist Certifies Medicine Sleepless nights — tormenting days caused by agonizing Hayfew symptoms may now be banished forever. Sniffling, sneezing and Claimed By Death 'JJJ.'Sr'STb'TiSJ: FRAS. No ugly, costly gadgets needed — np fussing — no bother. Some have: reported results ^ tounding, amazing, unbelievable. No matter what treatments have failed you before, no matter how dir-coiiraged, come get our recom mendation. Victims who ha-! cases just like yours today enjoy ease and comfort for the first time in years. Banish the dread of pollen time. Get POTASAFRAS today. Sold here exclusively by Red Cross Funeral service was held to day at Arbor Grove Methodist church near Millers Greek for of Tuesday night. Surviving are one sister. Mrs. Lela Nichols, two sons, Stewart and Roland Bishop and one daughter, Faye Bishop. Ads. get attention—and results. Pharmacy. (adv.) Mrs. J. R. Triplett Funeral On Tuesday - Friday We are glad to state that some improvement is now noted in the condition of Miss Rosemond Doughton, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Bain Doughter. Rosemond is a patient of the Wilkes Hospital, -nd has bsen critically ill during I I I I I I I I I tha past aveek. 1.EN Funeral, service was held Tues day at Lewis Fork Baptist church for Mrs. Mary Charlotte Triplett, age 75, who died Monday at her home in that community. Revs. Ed Hodges, Henry Smith and Grady Minton conducted the ser vice. Surviving are her husband, J. R. Tri-^lett, and the following sons and daughters: Thomas L. Triplett, Freemont, Va.; H. G. Triplett, Spokane, Washington; R. H. Triplett, Parsonville; Mrs. IC. C. McNeill, C. S. Triplett and J. R. Triplett, Purlear route one. New York.—Mrs. Franklin D Roosevelt yesterday offered further ex,planation and defense of her widely-discussed sugges tion that it might be of value to conscript girls betiteen the ages of 18 and 24 for a year of train ing and service. Writing in the current Liberty magazine. Mrs. Ro&sevelt said there seems to be a slight mis understanding” and declared that she never suggested tliat all worn en be conscripted, nor that girls be placed under military disci pline in camps as are boys. Mrs. Roosevelt said she -believ ed the girls of the country might be - divided into these three groups: “The fir.st, or the extremely privileged group which has all the education and training that it desires and may i)Ot be going to use it either to earn a living or to volunteer in some active form of service. “The second group, which may have both education and a fairly comfortable home, but which must plan their training with the thought of .earning a living in the future. "The third group of girls, who through economic difficulties or geographical location, are lacking in educational opportunities and are apt to grow up facing a dearth of jobs or dead-end jobs because they can not fit them selves for any skilled work. "It is o.bvious that for this last group a year of training, paid for by the government on the same basis as the draftees in the army are paid, would -be help ful.” , Mrs. Roosevelt said that for the first group, as for the sec ond, there was comparatively lit tle advantage to he obtained from the angle of better training. Questions Answered By State College Question: When should fruits and vegetables be selected for fairs? Answer: September Is the be ginning of the annual season for fairs, so farm families should be gin now to get their horticultur al exhibits in readiness. Fruits to be exhibited should 'be picked -nd handled with extreme care. Keep in mind the fact that the best fruit for show -purposes Is found near the top of the tree. Don’t pick the largest apeclmens but tl^e which are typical of the variety. Then wrap each In paper and pack snugly. Vege tables for show should he free from -blemishes, clean, and fj^ly matured. FOOD SAVINGS •V-3 Your Patronage Is Always Appreciated JUNKET Dromedary Date Nut Bread, 2 8-oz. cans.. 25c Quick Fudge, 3-4 lb. pkg.... 19c 1-4 pound package Wonder Tea 15c Jello, pkg 6c Ground To VVa 1 Ik'H Customer. Lowest Prices — Buy Now As Prices Are Advancing. Post Toasties and Kellogg’s Com Flakes, pkg.... 5c C. & E. Grape Juice, qt 25c IOV2 oz. Can Franco-American Beef Gravy 10c Can Campfiell Cream of Potato Soup, 10y2 oz. 10c 24 pounds Queen of West Flour. 88c Best Flour For The Money FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IN OUR MARKET TIRJNDER JUICY Beef Roast, lb. 20c Ground Beef, lb. 18c Round Steak, lb. 30c Pork Chops lb. 30c American Cheese, lb. 33c Bologna Sausage, lb. 20c Dried Beef, 4 oz. 15c Armour’s Star, Rimd-aBdi'SHaed' - Bacon, lb. 35c G. P. Store “B” STREET and Market NORTH W^^ORO
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Sept. 4, 1941, edition 1
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