Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / July 2, 1942, edition 1 / Page 7
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vjvy .- 'v %^GE,SEV ^ ^ * Altliottgh etfUten lm&bn« h»» :rAr il!***®'** tW«r,.v«»»tw«a«n it boomisf at th« rate ot 112% ♦ yw- ^AlMfOIUpn^Tra’S NOTICE aa AdaiWatra- Andy Alexan- couniy, N. C., ^ — persons having ciauns against said estate to pre sent them to the undersigned, whose address is North WUkes- horo, N. C., duly verified, on or be fore the 4th day of June, 1943, or this no^a will be plead in bar of their right to recover. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 4th day of June, 1942. JOHNSON SANDERS, Administrator of the estate of Andy Alexander, deceased. 7-9-6t (t) 'More than 800 planta are apv NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust executed by Stanley Wheeling and wife, Bessie Wheel ing, on February 1, 1939, as re corded In the office of Register of Deeds for Wilkes County in Book 185, at page 481, to secure the indebtedness therein men tioned, said Deed of Trust having been given to J. I. Myers. Trus tee; and, the undersigned having been appointed Substitute Trus tee. under an order of Court which has been signcfd by the Clerk of the Superior Court ot Wilkes County, which order is now on file in the office of Regis ter of Deeds for Wilkes Coun'y, in Book 195. at page 524; and. 1 WHEREAS, default has been made in the payment of the In debtedness therein set forth, and demand having been made on me: I win. THEREFORE, on Mon day, July 20. 1942, at the hour ot ten (10:00) o’clock, A. M.. at the courthouse door in Wilkesbo- ro, N. C.. offer for sale for cash to the highest bidder the follow ing described real estate: BBGIXXlxr, at a stake on the West corner of ,T and Fifth Streets and running South 62 degrees 33' West alone the Xorth side of J Street 5 7 5-7 feet to a stake: thence Xorth 27 degree.s 27’ West parallel with Clarence Davi.s’ line 140 feet to an slley; thence North 62 decrees 33’ Kkist along the South side of said alley 57 5 7 feet to Fifth Street; ’henc’ South 27 decrees 27’ East alone the West side of Fifth Street 146 fee* to the beginninc: containing S.276 square feet, more or less. Being Tx>t Xo. 1 in Block Xo. 134. as shown on Troedon’s Man of the Town of Xorth Wilkesboro. X C, This the 15th day of June. A. D.. 1942. A. H. CASF.V. 7-9-4t (t) Substitute Trustee NOTICE OF ArPUCATIOX TO (>BERATE MOTOR VEHICLE CtRRIER AND DATE OF HEARING THEREON. .As lenuirt'd by Section 3, Chap ter 136. Public Laws of 1927, no tice is hereby given that applica tion has been made by the Wilkes Transportation Company for a Francliise Certificate, authorizing k-lhe operation of motor vehicles for transptu'tiniT passenffer?^ froiii lers Creek to Parsonsville. via old North Carolina Highway No. 60, now a county road, to I’urlear. an i continuing over a county road to Par.siinsvillc. and return over same route, and that the Utilities Com mission will hold a hearing on the said application in the Office of Commission, at Raleigh, N. C., on Wednc.sdav. .July 8. 1942, at 11:00 A. M. XORTH CAROLINA I TILI- TIES COMMISSION. By: R. 0. Self. Chief Clerk. 29-2-6' Names of persons to whom per mits, to purchase new tires and to secure recapped tires have been released by the two Wilkes rat ioning boards for the past two weeks. For board area number one permits were Issued to the fol lowing: New truck tires—Bud Landon Lippard. lumber dealer, two; Carl Chapman Ferguson, lumber deal er, one tire and one tube; Wil liam Conrad Wilson, lumberman, one tire end one tube; Larkin Hackett Shepherd, furniture worker, two tires and two tubes, James Sampson Osborne, lumber dealer, four tires and tubes. Cornice C. Crane, lumber dealer, two tires: Walter Anderson, lum ber dealer, two tires and two tuibes; Clyde Thomas Eller, lum ber and poultry, two tires and two tubes; Dali Parks, lumber dealer, two tires and one tube; E. P. Inscore, lumber dealer, one tire end one tube; Thomas Wiley Ferguson, farming, One tire and tube; Xoah Howard Chambei-s, lumber dealer, two tires and tubes. Truck recaps—William Conrad Wil.son. lumber dealer; Barney Clanard' Johnson, carrying pas- senger.s; Pre.sley Elmer Brown, lumber dealer: Ja.sper Elbert Hamby, lumber dealer: Silas Solomon Johnson, lumber dealer: Lensey Austin Minton, poultry dealer: William Andrew Jennings, farmer: Branson Benton, farmer: Henry Presswood, farmer; Wy att Eugene Carlton. farmer. Ralph Diuine Church, trucker: Montgomery Mathis. farmer, ;,indsay Mansfield Jarvis, farmer; Virgil McKinley Church, luinher dealer. Xew passenger tires — Walter Monroe Irwin, deputy U.S. Marsh al; Aiiie Roscoe Foster, police man; Coyd Cignar Anderson, far mer; Thomas Haywood Brook- -liire, farmer. I’assenger recaps — Ben Dan Basic, taxi driver; James Coy Wells, factoiy worker; Johnson Eugene Caldwell, fac'.ory worker: Tarnce W.iLer Hamby, factory worker; Waiter Monroe Irwin, deputy marshal. Kellie Wyatt, farmer, purchased an obsolete type tire. Wilkes Itinml '.1 For week Itefore last. Wilkes rationing board two issued the following tire purchase permits: New tires -Jenkins Hardware, one tire, one tube: Ta1 ,L Pear son, one tire, one tube; Tam Sta ley. two tires: Fred AV, Absher, 'me tire; Monroe Owens, two tires, two tubes; Reid Royal, tbiee tires; Ralph Joiifts Frazier, one 'ire. one tube. Retreads — Glenn IKincy. Er nest Arthur Andrews, Wilkes 1 Baking company. Coca-Cola Bot tling I'ompapy. Mont K. Miller. (’, L. Cibsun. Forester Beverage company. V tPPKTIZINO KKCL-XS FOR .lAOKI) Al’l’KTriFS TiiiicK Miininer reciiH’s, sug gest ol menus for the week, and timl-- Utf busy hoii-ewives will b- fouiwl in every issue of The .\ni- eiican Wts-kly, Hie big inagazine lislrit)u(el with The Ualtiiiioi'- Sunday American. On stile at all The modern soldier stands at the apex of a pyramid, a human pyramid. He Is placed there by the arms and hands and backs' and shoulders of the many who stand beneath him, the many who supply> him with food and cloth ing and weapons and ammunition. Probably everyone has seen some version of the human pyra mid. it’s part of the routine of circus gymnasts. Soldiers some times form pyramids to surmount high walls and it Is In this man ner—'but on a vastly greater scale —that we shall top the wall of victory. We have been reading a great deal recently of the tremendous air raids with which our British allies smash and smash again at the strength of our enemies. In connection with one of them, the first great raid on Cologne, the British pointed out that while 6,000 men—pilots and bomhadl- ers and navigators and machine gunniers — manned the 1,000 bombers sent over Germany, an army of fully 10,000 Additional soldiers had made the raid pos sible. These were men who nev er left the ground — mechanics end meteorologists and staff ofli- cers and all the others who make the complex organization necessa ry before a single squadron may take off in flight. Now this striking fact is as true of any other combat forces as it is of the Royal Air Force, behind every fighting man stand others who serve his need. EverylKHly Has a Pait Nor is that the end. The end, the bottom, the Iiroad base, is made up of everybody at home. A bomber flies because ore has been Oiig from the earth and refined into aluminum, beainse skilled men have taken this aluminum and fabricated it into wings and fuselage, because other skilled men have made guns and bombs out of steel and still other skills have produced powerful engines and nnoonnily accurale instru- metus. -A bomb'or flies bacause its crew has been fed by the labor of the farm and its crew clad in tile produce of the field fashioned into clothing by the labor of the factory. The stock of the soldier’s rifle traces back to lumberjacks in hardwood forests, its steel bar rcl to the virgin iron of the Mo by scraping the bottom of the barrel shall wsi have enough for victory. This was true • some monthe ago—today It Is a matter of pressing, immediate, continual need. Unless we get in the sensp furnaces will grow cold, and cold furnaces can lose wars. Song to Be of Destruction The U. S. A. Is going to have less melody so that our aviators may sing a song of destruction over Germany and Japan. A rec ent WPB order stops manufacture of almost all' musical instruments in order that more guns may be fired, more bombs dropped. The 15,000 tons of war materials which went Into pianos, saxo phones and other mnusloal instru ments in 1940 would have sup plied the Iron for 11,500 6-ton ar my trucks, steel for 83 medium tanks, brass for 49,000,000 rounds of .30 calibre ammuni tion. copper for 800 155-mm field pieces, aluminum for 40,000 aircraft flares. We’re going to get along with out any new carving sets, pen and pocket knives and manicur ing scissors. WPB diclded they weren’t necessary in war-time, ordered their production stopped after June 30. WPB also cut and sharply, manufacture cf ta bleware and other cutlery. Here’s what the saving means in terms of metals and materials 'badly needed in the fight for freedom—6,000 tons of iron and steel. 2,000 tons of stainless steel, 600 tons of copper alloy and smaller amounts of nickel chrome, hiibber and plasties. Now Allies Help Us The U.S.A. has put more mate- rkils and finished prodnct.s into the United Nations pool than any other of the democracies, because we have had more to give. We’ve sent and are sending vast quan tities of weapons and supplies to our Allies in the form of lend- lease shipments. Now, however, the adventure in cooperation is working iioth ways I—we’re getting help from these allies as well as giving it. Lend- lease Administrator Edword R. Stettinns, Jr., the other day dis "furnishing them,with at aw i' 41on Drive progT&m . . . WPB and Winding their cam pa j ^ special committee inv«tl- Qroat Britain al80|^|jjg posalbiUtiea of cargo over much military j planes for swift, long-range trans 'equipment to ut;. including a com-jportatlon .... All typewriter plete gun factory. \ production will early next ■ ^ert to coal. If they can . . . WFD Russia hart sent us valuable autumn when enough tyiwwrlterB has ruled you can’t get new tele-(’- land,, plies and that has turned rd-:^ thi^a^ool original ngtan^ ' _ . Ha**’. Of a lifvw not to ittiil %p aiff thiftr|ga*6iln« qnoU hut to' try to stay' .under. It if posalble'' A'.'. And once more advises homo owneiu on the Atlantic Seiahoard and in the Pacific Northwest whose furnaces bum oil to con- data on building tanks and tech- will have been made to take care nical experts on explosives—^Aus- of Army and Navy needs for two tralia is servicing our forces in full years . . . The Office of Price the Far Bust. American warships Administration reminds you that are being repaired In British if you’re still looking for a war ports juet as British warshipc are rrtion hook or a sugar purchase repaired in American shipyards, cehtlficate the place to apply for i and American airplanes ace sup- it Is at your local War Price and phone service unless you^’re In war or essential civilian work and can prove that without the tele phone Installation you can't do your job properly . 0se ttie aovenUlng ednmoa e hio nan— vonr shopping gnidi eat not ;r J L Wvrm aad motben know that merely serving a large quantity of food is not enough to assure correct nutrition for the family. y r f J 'Fhrough classes, demon strations, and personal calls our Home Servi^ Sljccialists are belpii^ y^ solve nutrition prd>- lems at low cost. closed that the British are feed- BERTY W SHOWING extra — 'ime Don’t'Pay I THE COMMON DEFENSE” URZANl m ^test news sabi And the junkman's scrap heap. And in between are innu merable hands, each giving some- ihing and pa.ssing it along until tiiii'lly the (Ini.'ihed weapon reach es ilie hands of Hie fighter who stands at the pyramid's opex. II is because we n.nst maintain this human pyramid of total war tiecause we must support our fighting men On far-flung fronts with all we have, thal we have inougnrated the manpower moldl- izalion program. If we are to have more and better weapons for onr more and better soldiers and .sailors -and tha.’s what ri takes to win— then we miust see that everybody does a job of some sort and does the job for which he or she is best fitted. We’re mAking progress. A few days ago JVar Manpower Uomniis .sion Chairman Paul V. McNutt released figures if the United States Employment Service show ing that a growing army of phy sically handicapped men and women Is baking a place in the war production. “Performaiice records of handicapped men and ■yeomen who . have been hired in our war industries.” said .Mr. Mc Nutt. ‘‘show clearly that in many occupations they produce as effi ciently as the physically normal worker.” ('iin’l Waste ^laiuioyver We cannot afford to waste manpower nor can a nation flgiit- ing for the freedom of all permit discrimination against any group hecanse of race or color or creed. The Presidents committee on fair employment practice, which has iieen hearing complaints thal Negroes weren’t being trained to meet the shortage of shipyard worker.s in the Southeast, has called on educational authorities in Tennessee, Mississippi. .Alaba ma. South Carolina and Florida to get up tnaining courses for colored workers ‘‘in all major stiipyard occupations.” Fac> Sliortiigfe of Jlaterials Becau.se we are pouring every thing we have into the war effort we are faced with shortages in vital materials, shortages which, according to WPB's Division of Materiais, will grow more serious as the war progres.ses. This has meant and will continue to mean less and ie&i for civilian, wide spread sub'stitution, and an in creasing necessity for getting scrap metals and other materials back to the processing plants. That last necessity, more than ever before, indicates’ a spare- time job for each of us. WPB stresses the urgent need for ci vilian collection of senap, espec ially metals and old rubber. Only ing our troops Northern Ire Tliis is ju8l another of the many important side* of tKe contribution made by your Utilities Company to the Ci vilian and Industrial War Program. eDUKE: POWER COMPArvT Real Estate Soon To Be Advertised For Payment Of 194t County Tates If you have not paid your County Taxes for the year 1941, please do so at once. It will soon be necessary for me to advertise according to law all Real Estate on which the tax for the year 1941 has not been paid. Also to advertise, levy. and garnishee for personal and poll taxes for the same year. Come in and make payment now — you can save extra penalties and the cost of advertisiiui. C. T. DOUGHTON, Sheriff and Tax Collector of Wilkes County.
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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July 2, 1942, edition 1
7
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