Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / April 22, 1943, edition 1 / Page 5
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^ . ■' ■- 'a/-"*’' '■ f V ,'r \t ■' ‘ ■*®**^'•’“‘Wll'fcsi.C?’"■■■ »- - ■■■i'.r- *' '. • V-.V.-)w4mwraw»li.ii..rf—W ^ -‘A.' Local Nows AJbout A. ;Woodrrf Ro»8* idt7« witli har aiatar, ttlia liwpiMft Itey, ot Roaring Blyeri /Mra.-Ray is v^ ill* lier m*aj trends 'vtll regret to learn. ^ €lafk, of Banner is rl^tins Aar sister, Mrs. J. t. Hnbbtod in Wllkdsboro. R. It. ^ellbom, a well known dtlssn ot WUkesboro. con- t^Dttaa to be Tery ill at his home. I'' Ur. aaS Mrs. W. H. Elledge and ^Mr; Ctflmmbns Wells, of Ronda. were -rlsitors here today. 'p-: Mr. W. A. Payne, well known ^.eitisen ot the Summit community. /? was a Tieitor in this city today. Miss Elizabeth Jennings, ^ Pores - Knob, visited Mrs. A. r., Poard, Jr., in Lenoir today. of Harry Barker, ot a visitor to this city ' Harry Summers, of Mor- was in the city Tuesday visiting relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Xoah Greenwood have returned to Baltimore, Md.. after a week’s vacation here with friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Church and two children, Betty Gray and Dan. and Mrs. Harry Pearson were vis itors in Winston-Salem Tuesdoy. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Harris, Mrs. E. T. Hackney and Mrs. W. K. Newton were visitors to Charlotte Tuesday. Mrs. C. B. Spicer, Jr., who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan D. Anderson, has re turned to Oxford, Miss., to join her husband. TOKIO SOYBEANS for sale, a good grade at right 1 price. I. E. Pearson, kw*Tenth Street. 4-22 i Ellzabethtop, Tenh., was here this week looking after business af faire. ' 7i' ^ Mrs. Bessie R. Grayson, Rr.lai^ Mrs. Bill GrayW. U*- J«y- tison and Mr.^ BUner Stanley, Ist ‘ Baltimore, M4.,-kstve arrived to spend Bastte id North >WUkelr Mr. A. B. Carlton, of Asbury Park, N. J., was a guest of Mr. end Mrs. R. C. Meadows at Pores Knob Tuesday night. ' Mr. and Mrs. Carr Dancy, Jr., and daughter, Virginia. Sue, have returned to Baltimore, Md., after a week's vacation with friends and relatives here and In Ashe county. Misses Margaret and Jennie Parlier. Mrs. R. C. Jennings and Mrs. Earl Meadows, of Pores Knob were visitors to Charlotte Tuesday. Mi.ss Kate Ogilvie, 'who has been teaching at Thomasville, has returned to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Ogilvie, of Oakwoods. Mrs. Chloe Segraves, who is working in a war plant in Char lotte, visited her daughter, Sylvia, and her mother, Mrs. Chas. D. Bumgarner, over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde E. Welch .•^pent the week-end with Mrs. Welch's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Anderson, of this city. Mr. Welch is to report for navy duty Tuesday. Mrs. R. Don Laws returned to her home at Moravian Falls Fri day following a serious operation at Davis Hospital in Statesville. While very little improvement is noted in her condition, friends will be glad to know that she is holding her own and hope Is held out for recovery. boro. Miss Peggy Somers has return ed to Winston-Salem where she. Is staiBP No., 1 JB, 194*. N0.'8i beeoi&6 good tof .l ppundT eeffee April *« .laatwnn®, Hny 30, 1948. • MEATS AND FATS — ^ “E” vrtU b«(iOihe No expiration date 'B' a patient of Salem College aftet^' 4ia# been set for stAj^s "B”. spending several days In' 'Wllkes-j boro with her parents, «Mr, apd Mrs. W, B. Somers. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Plet^co and son, T. C., liave returned to the city from a visit in Columbia, S. 0., with rdattves > and friends. ■While in Columbia- Sunday T. joined the Lutheran church. C. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Church have returned to their home in Win ston-Salem after a visit here with’ Mr. Church’s mother, Mrs. Martha Church, and brothers, Messrs. W. J. and I. T. Church. Rev. Finley C. Watts, a widely known Baptist minister of the Purlear community, is very ill at the Wilkes hospital. Many friends hope for him eorly recovery to normal health. s^mps A. B. c, «a4 D will jj# ibod 'tbrongb April M, processed foods . ■ Bluo stemP'P, B. *ad F wHl re main good throttgh April 80. • V All retailers and wholesalers of meets, faU, etc., must keep a rec ord of their sales of foods sold on Red.Stamps during the week of April 8B to May 1. This record will be the basis for establishing the allowable Inventory when re tailers and wholesalers register at the 1 Rationing Board offices be tween May 3 and 14th. Both re tailers and w>olesaler8 must take an Inventory, IN POINTS, of Red Stamp foods at the close of bnsl- *nes8*Msy 1, 1943- V Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hauss spent the week-end in Newton with Mrs. Hauss’ people, and while there Mrs. Hauss was taken very ill with influenza and had to remein there. Make your dollars fight. “A WORD TO THE WISE IS ALWAYS SUFFICIENT”- THIS iS A TRUE sAtEMENT—AND WE KNQW THAT WE ONLY HAVE TO REMIND THOSE 1VHO MAY HAVE OVERLOOKED PAYMENT OF THE APRIL ASSESSMENT TO THEIR BURIAL ASSOCIATION THAT IT IS NOW DUE. EACH MEM BER KNOWS THE STABILITY OF HIS ASSOCIATION, AND ONLY THIS RE MINDER IS NECESSARY TO CAUSE EARLY PAYMENT IN ORDER TO PROTECT THE INVESTMENT WHICH HAS ALREADY ACCUMUI-ATED TO EACH INDTVTDUAL MEMBER’S CRED IT. REINS-STURDIVANT Mutual Burial Association jir. and Mrs. E. E. Eller and Miss Emma Eller are leaving to morrow to spend the Easter holi days in Salishur/ with Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McCulley. Mrs. Mc- Culley is the daughter of Mr. ard Mrs. Eller. J. P. Crysel, Kin Wopdie, Jackie Jones, Irene Waddell and Hazel Church were luncheon guests of Little Miss Peggy Royal at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Royal, on highway 421 west of this city Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Kilby, who ore making their home at Middle River. Md.. while engaged in war work in Baltimore, are here for a vjsit with relatives and friends. Mr. Kilby is a son of Deputy Sheriff and Mrs. H. C. Kilby. Anxiliory Louise Vyne Tait, of North Wilkesboro, who has been stationed at the Third Training Center ot the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps at Fort Ogle thorpe, Ga., has been assigned to the 84th Post Headquarters Com pany ot Fort Bennipg, Georgia. It is a Privilege to Be Among the First to Present a Great Attrac tion! The Saturday Evening Post Serial Was Astounding . . . The Book Was Tremendous . . . The Picture Is Breath-Taking! HELEN MacINNES' ( -ASSICNMENTinBRinANr •'ll Every Moment Of It Throbs With Suspense And Danger! PRESENT A FRENCH HERO and new M-G-M STAR PIERRE AUMONT Awarded the Croix de Guerre For Heroism as a Tank Commander in the Battle of Sedan. Mr. L. T. Barn-rd. well known resident ot the Cricket commun ity, returned to his work at the Meadows Mill Company this week After recovering from .severe in juries sustained in an automobile wreck near Danville. Va„ a few days l>efore last Christmas. iRed stamp gdod April 86. Navy’s Seabees Asking For Men Lieut. Charles J. Dietrich, a representative for the, Navy’s See- bees, navt.l construction battal ions, -win set up a temporary sta tion in Winston-Salem April 23 and 24 it was announced by Chief Specialist J. T. Stephenson, Chief Petty Officer in charge of the Winston-Salem Recruiting Sta tion. The Seabees were recently open ed to men of draft age, and for an indefinite period, men be^ tween the ages of 18 and 38 may enlist in the Navy with petty of ficer ratings. The procedure for enlistment in the Seabees is practically the same as before the curtailment of voluntary enlistments. Applicants qualified in almost any phase of construction should visit the re cruiter, bringing three letters of recommendation. The letters should describe the experience an-1 ability of the applicant, rather than his moral character. It found eligible In all re.sp>3Cts. the applicant will be guaranteed a petty officer rating in the Naval Reserve, and will be given a let ter which should be presented to his draft board. This will clear him for his Navy assignment, and his enlistment will he Immediate, under regular Selective Service procedures. V Mr. A. Caudill, who Is en.gaged in war work at the Norfolk Navy Yard, was called home this week on account of the serious illness of Mrs, Caudill nt her home at Hays postoffice. Mrs. C. J. Hau ser. of Winston-Salem, and Mrs. Robert Andrews, of Kinston, daughters of Mrs. Oaudill, have also been at their mother’s bed side this week. While Mrs. Cau dill shows some improvement now. her condition is yet consid ered quite serious. Springfield News Of The Past Week e.T., Fred JGL ^bbtpi |9diii«wR)t - M iin« dt- 9lomM bt ltlidi 8ek^: tFddiUltion ■viU l)d>iiNieBied^ An ikterecting eommeneeineat program will he earrlOd oat and tha pnlillo baa a cordial intitotion to attend. ‘ X. hisses hs Cdba Mn. C, W. Stout, of'DeLand, Florida, passed away at the home flf K«(, daughter, Mrs.. GarGeld Evans, at Holguin, Cuba,. April tltb>' after .ftn Illness of several months. ‘‘ She is survived by her husband, C. W. S^ut, and the following children: Colin >Bou- chelle Stout, DeLand, Fla.; Mrs. Garfield Evans, Holguin, Cuba; Mrs.. J. W. Qarretson, DeLand, Fla., and 'Rev. Thomas Lenoir Stout, of Charleston, W. Vo. Al so six sisters survive, Mrs. Fin Messic, Hickory; Mrs. Dave Scrogga, St. Peterhburg, Fla.; Misses Clara, Francis, Btbel and Ann Bouchelle, DeL>and, Fla. She was a daughter of Captain Thomas Bouchelle. The Stout family once resided at Moravian Falls and have many friends in the county. Mrs. Stout was an outstanding Christian worker. Her missionary vision and Interest have reached "into the uttermost parts.”—Re ported. V Armbrust Assists In Blair Funeral Rev. J. H. Armbrust, of Mon roe, a former pastor of the First Methodist church .here, vas in North Wilkesboro Sunday and as sisted In conducting funeral ser vices for Fmnk P. Blair, Sr., prominent local citizen and pioneer business leader who died Saturday. Rev, Mr. Armbrust and Rev. A. C. Waggoner, now pastor of the First Methodist church, conduct ed the service, which was held at the residence. Burial was in the Baptist cemetery. Mr. Blair’s son. F. P. Blair, Jr., found following his father's death a letter written by his father in 1939 requesting that Rev. 'Mr. Armbrust assist in conducting his funeral. SevehlMn .ywt ol|.,^ kuve’^'oppurMiiiity faofel ib« xndi^ mdm ' MartbalJ F. Ford. FW^‘b^U»r,. flrat '^larf^'irfn keAltt Wilkesboro on ApriU^bt.' 3^7 > ih 80 to aid. an M4^tk«n-XMr- old iken tai ttlaking aoiiiUoif*^, 7^ bnlisUnent in tko Navy, f {« must b* seventeen yearn otdf you innii^ have year parent's ^.eohant, Md yon mtiat be In good heaitt. "Att now—before you reach your 18^h birthday. Enlist In the Navy to day, ‘ , All men between the atea of 18 oa aeon wa Bofaiftb*- '"'Th* ihiFylt .buota for .irolbMi vrUe Irlak to Iota the WAvittlJlt^llfail raotilcted blttMI|ilfllkiona abonld be to Withy ' "■ " wttfdb .tor'aaamw ..viS. L.’V. d^^Bl«lcewQK^' k &r It SemMr Ctiitt.Lii^ ^ The name (ff. Ben/Blakewood was taadveftantty’fMU»d from the list of iwilmM f)f hHih S«kOOl'M!%«b: Creak to thlst aewqmpeb^Rmoay, J9«. who bos ■* ~1 indnate t ytm wtth th|» i^Saatoier of th* eto* on Fri day nbfht ' “Kitchien-Tc§ter/ Ried Band “Ehri^d Floor” Include CHEERIOATS PANTY-WAKT BREAKFASTS CANT LICK THE AXIS NEW! —s H A P E ! ’ -CRISP NE8S1 —TENDBRNESSI corn in “PUFFSD FLAKES” Stop! Wait!! Had Your m WHEATIES T 0 da y MUler&Long Telephone 162 Resolution Concern ing J. T. Prevette, Deceased Among the women from (he local Presbyterian church at tending the Winston-Salem Pres- bytcrial held in Winston-Salem Monday and Tuesday of this week were Mesdames C. D. Coffey, Jr.. •\rchie e.gilvie, Dan Carter, John Leyshon, M. A. 'Vickery. Paul Cashion. and Miss Janie McDiar- mid. Those going down for the day Tuesday were Mesdames C. C. Faw, J. B. McCoy, F. C. Fores ter. Gordon Finley, and W. J. Bason. The Presbytery wes held at the same time and Mr. M. A, Vickers attended as a delegate from the local church. Claude M. Tyler Tornado Victim « assignment in BRITTANY 99 THE CAST: Pierre Aumont Monday Tue^ay Susan Peters liberty ^lairyl Hiekiji^Eh Sarah Padden • Richard Whorf Margaret Wycherly AND OTHERS Claude M. Tyler, who married Miss Nell Hart, of North Wilkes boro, died this morning, four o’clock, in a Tiarboro hospital from injuries received Monday afternoon when a tornado struck Roxobel, his home town. Funeral service for Mr. Tyler will be held Friday afternoon. 3:30 in Roxobel. The storm did heavy damage to the business section of 'Roxobel. kilting at least . six persons and Injuring several others. Mr. and Mrs. George Hart, of this city, are in Roxobel to attend the funeral and buriak services. V Mrs. Mnjor Caudiil spent Mon- dey night with Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Caudill. Miss Marie Blevins spent i>it- urday night in (he home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Blevins and fami- ly. Rev. Arthur Gambill and Rev. Uriah Hanks conducted Prayer meeting in the home of Mr. C. D. Blevins Saturday night. A kirge crowd attended the service. Mr. and Mrs. Banner Walker, of I Winston-Salem, spent the week- iend with Mrs. Walker’s uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Caudill. Sunday school has now begun at Walnut Grove Baptist church and everyone Is invited to attend. Mr. Arnold C. Brown was a bns- iness visitor in North Wilkesboro Saturday. Miss Marie Blevins spent Sun day night with Mr. and Mrs. 0. F. Blevins. Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Blevins snent Saturday night with Mrs. Blevins’ father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Gorman Blevins. We regret to state that Mr. and Mrs. James Blevins have left onr community and moved to North Wilkesboro. We are very sorryvto sUte that Mr. Clyde Handy has been very ill. He is now improved, friends are glad to learn. Mr. Clyde Blevins spent Satur> day night with Mf. and Mrs. C. D. Blevins and his grandmother, Mrs. Theo. Blevins. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bell of Wlnston-Solem, visited his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bell, over the week-end. The following Resolution wa.s unanimously adopted by the Board of Directors of The North western Bank, North Wilkesboro, in their meeting on April J6, 194.3: "WHEREAS. J. T. Prevette, onr deceased friend, stockholder, di rector and member of the execu tive committee" of The Northwes tern Bank passed to his reward at his home in 'Wilkesboro, Saturday, March 27, 194 3, and WHEREAS, our friend has ren dered valuable and unselfish ser vice to the bank since its organi zation. THEREFORE, be it resolved: Th?t we desire to record in the permanent records of this Bank onr profound respect for our former friend and co-worker. 2 That we tender to his widow and family our deepest sympathy in their loss of husband and father. That this resolution be copied upon the permanent records ot| this Bf;nk and a copy furnished the family of our deceased friend. R. A. DOUGHTON, President. D. V. DEAL, Secretary. Lexo J. Earp Dies In Portsmouth, Va. Cafe Be Closed On .. ^ SB Piperl|,J[top: I*, Cafe, cafe will be jclotnj^nnday morn- ins, Apri^ 2btli, in order,that he may attend' the Easter serrlce at the Greek church In Charlotte. Tke Princess will be open Sunday errening to serve the' public usual, Mr. Plperii Btates. Funeral service for Lexo J. Barp, 31, who died Monday even ing in Portsmouth. 'Va., was held today, 11 a. m., at Liberty church. Mr. Barp, a former resident of the Moravian Falls community, was found iktotl room MonV y Ha bed not been ill- - his job SundajS as '"ii. He was a son of Mr. and MrA M.iA. Barp, fof|Barlr of Morarian Fniiii and who now live et Granite Falls. Hla wife, the former Mlaa Joyce Hendren, >1^ been maktof her home in Wllkeaboro while hej^i was In Portsmouth. D. A. R. Meeting Rendezvous Mountain chapter ot the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet Tuesday, four p. ra., with Mrs. C. H. Cowles at her hoine in Wilkesboro. Mrs. J, __ H. "Whicker, Sr., and Mrs. Claude Doughton will be as.soclate hostesses. V Miss Rousseau Is Society Officer Greenaboro college - students have elected 1943-'44 officers of the Emerspn literary society as follows:, president. Miss Margaret Jon HMdln. iBoone; *vlce-presi* dent. Miss Helen Gthbs, Blkln^ recording secretary, Mlss- Inek ' Bleasants, Groaosboro; cor re- ^ ^joading - seeretafy; / Mlis>''Rutir ^ KidOA. Raleigk; uttamm • Misa- Ytaton' Cltver,' Sanford;: critic,' Miaa^ Jane Murphy, ' Loatahuzs; eonafir, Miss Neila Sousseotu, North .imjcMboro; cluatlaln, Min Meta ‘‘ ‘Wadeshora: aoeompoalat, Nell Ward, Veeksrille.
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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April 22, 1943, edition 1
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