Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Nov. 4, 1943, edition 1 / Page 3
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ABtTnnnity ha« a great to show our boys in armed forces that we’re be hind them IbO percent and that while they are flghtihg at the front we are working at home to keep pace 'with our production of Jiandicapped. ,war materlar’, Mr. T. W. Earl. ‘ ' manager Wood and Mtnd Depgrt- meat, North Carolina Pnlp Com pany, Plymouth, N. €., said today. “We may not ^haye the hhge war plants that you find in large manufacturing, cities”, he con tinued, “but We do have an essen tial war indsstry that is just es Earle said: Many to on Axis in of,t6e *»nt% clfle. But t®t'doeoa*lf mAa: .^ eaa’t hara a hand .th:.-rWl]lnlnc«r and shortenii*T-4ha ■’war. country needs ^Wry rnim. jioma of them for fighting, but the ma jority to keep the combat troops supplied with supplies In good condition and on tlme_. “That’s where pulpwood comes In. Without tbe thousands of mil itary products into which it Is made, our boys would be aererely With an abundsBce of it, our boys will be able to do their Jobs effectively and quick ly. They^wUl lick the Axis ind be home ^ner If we do not fal ter.” Reciting the slogan of the newspaper pulp wood drive for November 11 to December 11, Mr. ■. . KUien -ni.ec>tun m on ajHi, imam' StaldsviBle-elTMi North CaiwllW ioctober 10, Aoeotdlng. to bean-hay this fait. wow’-trtNMMl. Kv fTAJSfV «>A/«aivAd llVfftfhar fmTii h-A IM. Important to the war effort as the j "Cut a cord of pulpwood for production of planes, tanks, and I every local boy In the armed guns. wood. It’s the cutting cf pulp- 1 IN THf ADVENTURES Of wm VALERIE HOBSON WALTER MU-fiLYMS JOmS service means more than Just an appeal to patriotism. It Is an op portunity to back up that boy ■with supplies, equipment, and food. It may even save his life. “Few people realise how Im portant a part pulpwood produds play in the daily life of a fighting man. He gets his food protected from spoilage or contamination in water-proof, and weather proof paperboard boxes or multi-wall sute oraggg was'uta^ by HSgry B. CaTdwelf' ot^fireflBSboro. -. .and Raleigh, muster, at Its 16th an nual oonvenllon bars "yestsrday to “begin now to' Lrtjf create l«bUo sentiment for Afpoatwar program based on the ChrleUas-prlnclplea of justice and. brotherhood"' “The future'Psade “Of',ouf na tion and the other natlona of the earth will depend upon otvr wil llngness to dedicate the victory to God”, said Caldwell, who also is State farm labor commissioner. •‘For In Him alonS can be found the way to true happjness, peace and security”. Of wartime responsibilities, tho. speaker, said that in addition to buying more ■bon'ds and paying more tuxes, tentative production goals for this State Indicated North Carolina farmers would bu expected to increase milk produc tion 6 per cent; eggs 4 per cent, hay 14 per cent; wheat 2 per cent; peanuts 14 per cent; soybeans for beans 30 per cent; sweet potatoes 23 per cent; fresh vegetables 104 per cent; processed vegetables 12 per cent; farm gardens 5 per cent; bags. He gets his shells, hand ■ fiue-onred tobacco 2!> per cent. LIBERTY TODAY AND FRIDAY grenades, and other ammunition in paperboard cases. And be fires them with smokeless powder made of pulpwood. “If he is wounded, his life may be saved by the blood plasma transported In and protected, by paper boxes. His wound may be treated from first aid kits that are almost entirely made of pulp wood products. His life-sustain ing supplies may be dropped la his Isolated outpost by parachutes made of paper. Or they may be i dumped by a warship or merchant ' vessel in the sea, to be carried in i by the waves or the tide, to him I on a remote Isle in the South Pa- i.oific. ‘Tf our local boy is a flier, be may have a vest made of pulpwood fibre or paper designed to pro tect him from sharp drops in tem perature. The bombs that he is preparing to drop on German war plants or Jap bases is not only fir ed by powder made of pulpwood ^ but it is protected in transit by fibre rings made of the same ma- p.nd hurley 77 per cent: lespedexa 13 per cent. War Fund Helping Homeless Russian %ho would have sineu 19, had'hMA a' thnMbxaariQr(^i»tBtti>i£^fi IB ait}# • to l^tiTniUI- SBge received hjr his father front the War Depgitment. ■* Young Chi been 26 on I in the army sUiee'March l; 1987 He received W|k'hMlc training hJC Fort Bwgg Bennlwe; jrfo4N!f Qa., and wbnK’o^wseaa *A4«f.' 8; 1942. He wtfl’: vtatloned. first in England and thbn In Africa; ' Private Cheek was a native of Yadkin county, bom October’ 19, 1917. 'A Surviving Include the father; four brothers, Gaither Cheek of tbe navy, Reece Cheek of Hanes. Sherrlft Cheek of Winston-Salem, and Willie Cheek of Thomasville; and four sisters, Mrs. Tlshle Zim merman of Hanes, Mrs. ZlUa Wil kins of Elkin, Miss Hessle Cheek of Raleigh and Mlss Jettle Cheek of Cycle. ■V Truck Operators Violating Rules Delivery Service Although the Russian armies urging all truck operators and the have recaptured more than 300, 000 square miles of their own territory since July 1943, the lil>- regulations. MEN UR6ENTLY REEDED in Critical War Plant Good Wages. Transportation Furnished. Living Quarters Guaranteed. COMPANY REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE .AT U. S. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 309 9th Street, North Wilkesboro, N. C. November 8 and 9 From 9:00 A. M. to 4:30 P. M. All applkants must be available in accordance to War Manpower Commi.'ision Ehnployment Stabilization Regulations. CHESTNRT EXTRACT WOOD GOES TO WAR Fi’om Chestnut wood comes the Ex- •.^■tract essential to the tanning olgQPd,, shoe leather. Our Soldiers still fight on their feet and need the best shoes that can be made. Our Armies must be supplied! The 0. P. A. Office has made ceiling price of $10.50 FOR 160 CUBIC FEET of Chestnut wood, delivered to the mill by truck, and that price is being paid by Wilkes Extract Works North Wilkesboro, N. C. who will take Che.stnut wood in any quantity every day ex cept Sunday. Tan Bark will have very good market this coming year. Information given by: .F.REOKER, ASHEVILLE, N.C. Care Langren Hotel eration of this land brings Increas ed problems in civilian relief, ac cording to a report received to day by T. E. Story from the National War Fund. ' “Russian War Kalief. a mem ber agency of the National War Fund, reports that as the armies of liberation sweei) on they find famished and tortured citizens who have been under nazi domi- notion”, Mr. Story said. “Millions of refugees are striv ing to return to their homes in liberated areas, and need assisr- anee in personal rehabilitation and re-establishing their homes. “The Russians have been s.i :- cessful in preventing the spread of disease, such as occurred dur ing and after the close of World War I, but it has been an uphill, if heroic battle, and one In which an organization like- Russian Wan Relief Is' of incalculable assis tance. The Russians are setting up crude hospitals and clinics as fast as they free the country, -•American drugs, surgical inetrii- meiits. bandages and other ma- terinl have helped stave off the wholesale outbreak of epidemics. “The food situation ii these d" va.stated and recaptured areas 're mains critical. At, the height of their occupation, the Germans controlled 7 per cent of Russian territory -s a whole- -hut lb per cent of Russia’s agricultural lands. Included was the famed black earth belt--the world’s most productive acreage. “Here is a problem which Rus sian War Relief is helping to solve by sending seeds abroad, to plant the earth first scorched by the Russians, then trambled by its rightful owners. Grain, forage and' vegetable seeds are economi cal. concentrated forms i of food aid to the embattled peoples of the Soviet Union. “The men. -j-omen ond children pouring back into the liberated areas of the Soviet Union need personal effects: ahd people re „„ ^ ...c turning to their homes have lit- Lodge and was, given a beautiful tie more than a liare minimuth of funeral by them and another On ..I j/,^11.', .*11, ttt . _ B Numerous truck operators are violating the new ODT delivery restictibns which went into effect on October 11, Wm. D. Lewis, dis trict ODT manager, warned Wed nesday. • Many of the violations were un intentional, he pointed out, in general public os weU as to fami larize themselves with the new A spot check In numerous com munities disclosed violations were particularly prevalent on Sunday, Mr. Lewis said. Virtually no Sunday deliveries are permitted, Mr. Lewis empha sized, ‘except ice trucks and cer- t«in other carriers who have been exempted hy general or special permits. A recent check by ODT repre- sentative.s, however, disclosed that many truck operators were found to be hauling men.’-ers of their families to visit relatives, or to ’picnics: others were found driv ing their trucks down to tlje of fice to look over the books, and many laundry, and ice cream trucks were in operation. The recent curtailment of de liveries ^eans in effect that with certain exceptions, streets shall be cleqbTff^an wholesale delivery vehicles on Sunday. The exceptions include ic? trucks, which may deliver daily, vehicles delivering certain perish ables or essential items and trucks loaded to capacity moving from a single point of origin to a single destination to a single consignee, 'iitch capacity loaded trucks mov ing from one point to another may deliver on Sunday or any other day. The diastic new regulations were Issued to preserve vehicles and tires for essential uses and all truck operators were urged oy Mr. Lewis to cooperate in the program. ■" ' •V oraqn, tjlib' •» > nlng to .cut h ^jitrcrsion; ditch Oreqn, oY iwr fhm to Arthur J. Holbrook Passes In Idaho Arthur J. Holbrook, the young est son of the late Joshua N. Hol brook, was born at Traphlll on November 21. 1884. He went from Traphlll to Kansas in 1912. then to Dubolet Idaho,, where he lived untirhir death, October 9. 1943. He was sick only a short clothing. The Germans stripped time. He waa an honest, upright those who stayed behind of th^lr man und livedTUy tAe Golden Rule. __ ... _ll — . - 1?viarl,2k He wa.s a member of the Eagle lull a ixxixr uiiiwtiiuti* lUnerai u.> tuoiu '• Particularly urgent is iqdge of which he was a member. the need for shoes, children’s kSir ”' lUann nients and warm knitted, l^y ^j which can also see‘service .wRh j trie-“ - -- ’ 'of liilc Red ' ^ .the men and women 'Arro-y,-—- ’ '' j “Whatever it is that we con- Itribute out of our abundance to • these brave allies is a meagre re- Iturn for the value we have receiv ed in the form of Russian suc- I cesses on the battlefields”. i British fishermen have found that bait of different colors at tract different fish. When Captain George of the U. S. Army recently visited the AVolf Clnb Pack of MMlfshire. England, he promised to send an American Indian, to visit them., and the boys were thrilled. terial.” Mr. Earl recalled that the onlv apparent attempt made by the Japs to bomb the mainland of thi United States in'this war was the dropping of a bomb in the vast pulpwood producing areas of Ore gon. “If the Japs want our timber so badly, we ought to oblige”, he said. “But let's give it to them ' in the form of bullets, bombs, and 'shells. One wajr we can* pay our respects to the Japanese and Ger man warlords is to cut & cord of pulpwood for every boy In the service and thus give them a double-barrelled discharge from America.’* two battle-lines'—the fighting front and front” land of Cam to from the hill- that dat&^^'fhe crops on the lowland. S.»»* ’ Doyle Slonestreet”' of State Road, has requested the. Tri-Creek Soil Conservation Dlstiict to stake and assist him in terracing a 12- acre field on his farm. Mr. Stone- street says the heavy rains last summer washed his land so badlv that he has decided to do .some-' thing about it. ■V Belfast, Northern Ireland, ■will extend its “holHays-at-home” fetes for the duration. to •009 day to ta. m iHmi tUa war k CM TOO V «adMht9y ao9.lo aMaHMk WMik Wiiro* and- Bad -> Crois »' tad man comfort tfm'dw prmsBt streanoai tboM penait Bdl-iUit Imi He "waa^ buried at Dubois. Idaho ,iWtq.He8t. He made mduy Js dur.'ng .h^ at^ on eatth and he wa* A ftHb:nL‘hardwork ing mau.'.-'^ He leaveo one brother, Walter E. • Hollvrook. of Dockery: two sisters. Mrs. Lillie Joines, of Sparte; and Mrs. Maggie Thorpe, of Roaring River; besiefes a gre.at number of relatives to mourn hU passing. Life to .Arthur has been an en joyment, yet there had fces_ thorns mi.xed with roses, but there had been thousands of roses for every thorn. He was consci ous of his passing and we hove all assurance he was ready for the final exchange. May Heaven comfort his bereaved loved ones. —Reported. •V. ’’’■ 9250 W.\R BOND FOR low-point dinner If you- are a housewife getting the most from your ration points here is your chance to help other homemakers prepare appetizing wartime meals and win a $25u ■War Bond for your recipes. For deUlls turn to the November 7 th issue of The American Weekly, the Kg magaiine distributed with The Baltimore Sunday American. On sale at all newwsaUnds. SINGING IHHTi^oiTONS— , The Biblical. Recorder ,glves; this one about Uo choir dlr^tor in practice: ‘‘The sopraaqa wfll keep silent until we come to You Get Lower Prices At The HOME Because It’s A Super-Market! Duke’s MAYONNAISE Pint Enriched Pillsbary Flour 5 lb. Pkg. 10-Pound Bag Red Baud Fleur Plain FRSSH— ROTABAGAS, lb. 5c n - ■ . .Large White— Onions, lb. 8c Large Stalk— ' Celery ..13c CALIFORNIA EMPEROR— GKAPES, lb 15c Fancy Yellow— Pound . Honey Dew- Each ^uash, IQc I Melons 49c FLORIDA PINK MEAT- 6BAPEFRRIT, each - ■ k C0FFEE-(G6ldCup).lb. 25c N. B. G. Premium CRACKERS Pound Pkg. HONEY BRAND 5 Red Pts. PARTY L0AF-12-0Z. can 36c LIBBY’S STUFFED— OLIVES-2oz.bot.. 18c GIANT SIZE--. ^- : OCTAGON SQAP-^3 for - 14c 3 5 HEXAGON IODiZED-2- ' BLEACH Quart SAL T-- 24-cz.pkg 4c POST BRAN- I \/»5 1 oIvAIn-— . J FLAKtS-14-oz.pkg. 13c Meat Deparlmefll VEAL CUTLETS, “AA” grade, lb. 46t LAMB CHUCK ROAST “AA" grade, lb. 33c CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS, lb. - 37c PORK LIVER,' (unblemished) lb. 23c SIRLOIN STgAK, ^AA" gr«d» . — 43c CURED HAM, ?*»• u.'i£&
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1943, edition 1
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