Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / July 24, 1944, edition 1 / Page 3
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•fm ■tu'. • "Home 111 inuia’ia , ^oin ( eu;uiy-e«ixs new lech i ii.m inu.nph based on the Saturday Evening ^i’ost serial, “The Phantom Filly”, by George Agnew Chamberlain, comes to the screen of the Allen Theatre on Tliursday with its rousing story ol noofs Hashing in the sunlight, hearts throbbing in the moonlight and romance shining with the love light of youth making dreams come true. Boomer Home Club In Regular Meeting The Iloonur Home Demonstra tion club held its regular meeting *at the home of .Mrs. Vick Walls Monday. July 17th. with nineteen members and two visitor.^ pres ent. The meeting wa.s called to order by the president. Mrs, J, M. Ger man conducted the devotionals. The secretary gave a report of :lie county council meeting. The clnb sold 16,050 worth of bond.s dur ing the recent drive. Mrs. Greene gave a very inter esting discuss:.in on “it's Good Business To Keep Well”, j -Mrs. Arv'il Smith won the prize given for the best suggestion on how to improve our club. At the close of the meeting Mrs. Wall, assisted by her daughter. Miss |Hassie Wall, served delicious re- . freshraents. I The ue.xt meeting will be at the home of .Mrs. Ralph Swanson i August 21, at 2; SO.—Reported. Arrested In Wilkes For Taking Money Off Sleeping Man I Because of a nation-wide im provement in egg prices, the War ' Pood Administration has discon- Itinmu! buying current receipt 1 shell eggs. I Renoir, July 21.—Sheriff Felix I Parlier returned from Wilkes 1 county early Wednesday morn ing with Early Green, of Lenoir, I who is alleged to have stolen the I sum of .?191.00 off the person of Simon Pritchett in Lenoir last I week-end, and went on a spending spree in Wilkes, buying a 1926 BUY MORE WAR BONDS ! Model T Ford and some liquor. Just Received! RYTEX STATIONERY Only ^i-00 Box RYTEX—Tweed Weave _ . .White RYTEX—Deckle Edge Vellum, White RYTEX—Post-Haste Blue and Gray RYTEX—Cinema . . - Brown RYTEX—Varsity Cloth — Gray RYTEX—Flight . _ - = Blue RYTEX—Print-Write White SINGLE AND DOUBLE SHEETS PRINTED (per -box) $2.23 Also V-Mail & Air Mail Stationery (Paper and Envelopes) And Several More Styles Come In Early For Choice Selection! CARTER-HUBBARD PUB. 00. North Wilkesboro, N. C. The sheriff said Green did not show up tor work Monday and Tuesday and it was learned that he had paid a hundred dollars cash for the automobile, a onc- seated model with a folding top. It was then that Pritchett had him indicted tor the alleged removal of the cash from his pockets while they were both asleep in a car on a Lenoir street. The sheriff said that he, to gether with deputies Bill Piercy and E. P. Simmons, found Green and another man who is known as a dealer in whiskey, both asleep in the Ford car on Elk Creek, in Wilkes county. The sheriff said that the other man and the li quor were left in Wilkes county as it was out of his jurisdiction, but Greene, having been accused of a felony, together with the car and the balance of the money, was brought back to Lenoir. The sheriff said that Greene would be tried for the felonious charge at the next Tuesday ses sion of Recorder’s Court. BUY MORE WAR BONDS NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR . PARDON OR PAROLE Notice is hereby given that ap plication will be made to the Com missioner of Paroles and to the Governor of jNbrth Carolina for the pardon or parole of Calvin Groce who was convicted at De cember term ctf 1948 (Wilkes Coun ty Superior Court on the crime iusault with deadly weapon, and was sentenced to the common jail of Wilkes county to be assigned to work on the roads under supervi sion of State Highway and ^blic Works Commisison for a term of not less than eighteen months and not more than two years. All persons who oppose the granting of said pardon or parole are invited to forward their pro test to the Comonissioner of Pa roles, Raleigh, N. C., forthiwith. - This July 21, 19^. CALVIN GROCE. By C. S. Groce, Father. 7-31-2t Louis H. Clements, manager of the Salisbury office,of the Social Security Board called attention today, to the fact that wages of employees who are 66 years old or over, should not be overlooked when an employer makes out his quarterly pay roU tax return. “Under the original Social Se curity Act”, said Mr. Clement “the wages of a 65-year-old worker did not count toward his retirement benefits: but in 1939 the law was changed and siheo that time, every worker, regardless of age, must be given credit for all wages re ceived in a Job covered ty the So cial Security Act. In order for the worker to get proper credits, the employer must report the So cial Security account number as well as the name and wages of the employee concerned”.^ This Is particularly Important right now, because thousands 'of older men have gone back to work since the war began. They may retire after the ©mergney ends, and their retirement benefits will depend upon the amount of earn ings shown on their wage records. The law requires every employ er, subject to the law, to Include In’his quarterly tax report the name, account number, and wages paid to each employee—both old and young. An employer who does not have a Social Security ac count number for each employee who worked for him during April. May and June should obtain such numbers In order that this Infor mation may appear on his pay roll tax report for the second quarter of 1944. Social Security tax returns are audited by the Bureau of Internal Revenue, after which, the wage reports go to the Social Security Board; and there each Item of wages is credited to the proper account. Every insured worker has an Individual wage record hnd this record will be used, later, as a means of determining the amount of benefits that may be payable to him when he is old or to his dependents in case he should die. V- 0 m e n IN THE HURCH 'SHlanif\>ufler e$aU^’\)t ail ot!i«r peoiUtli, i^leed-ot claas, color, or ia^one of. ;the firat aerricMlu^ , tNT existed of onr,j»t»- lays Mrs. J; .D. Bragg, at St LotUBj MO., national prsaideat of the Woman's Society of Cbriatlan Servl^' of the Methodist eharch.' Sjiinimthetlo understanding-x of young people trying to estahliah’ homes, and the giving of sknrity to children during war daya# mre neceeaary services of the Christ ian home, she adds. V* During the first eleven months of its existence. Union Service Men's Lounge, at 229 Weet 48tb street. New York City, a coopera tive project with hostesses from twenty-three Metropolitan Metho dist churches, entertained 89,3b6 soldiers, sailors and marines. Lo cated in the heart of the Times Square area, the center offers a reception lounge, reading and writing room, game nook, radio, juke box and snack bar. Mrs. Frances J. McConnell is honorary chairman and Raymond B. North Is vice-chairman., Prominent vaudevlUe, stage, screen and ra dio artists appeared ut the Lounge’s first birthday party. Boys from all 48 states, England, Canada, Free Prance, New Zea land, Russia, Norway, Austialla, India, South Africa and Brazil, have registered. WO»kr an mfi^'ti^HcNnrttddtfor tbe SPUk* alag of ^Ibjoca of t^as frnlW,£ gad ysgilBfildi Utia iraaifflsri ^ Federal funds loaned for rural electrification, or set aside for ap proved loans, show an all-time to tal of slightly over 600 million dollars. ' f' — y . e —, WiMtNdeDiiry — Grade A — • RAW* MILK at • ALLEN THURSDAY aid FRIDAY THE HEARTBEAT OF AMERICA . IN EVERY THROBBING KISS The British have increa.sed food production from a pre-war total of 4 0 iiercent to a total of 70 percent of their consumption. We Miss Marla Rayoan, represent ing the Philippine Federation of Evangelistical churches (a group now hidden behind “the Iron cur tain” of the war), was one of a party of missionaries and national Christians that recently visited nine republics in South America, teaching teachers how to use the picture-syllable Spanish literacy charts developed by Dr. Frank Laubach for the instruction of il literate adults. supply about 10 percent of their The League of Presbyterian Women of Chile, which last year built four village chapels, held its nineteenth annual convention re cently in one of them—In the lli- tlo mountain village of Trupan. Sixty-three delegates representing 2.6 of the 33 women’s societies in Chile. No glass was available for the chapel windows, so oiled pa per was substituted; but so great was the crowd, looking In from the outside, that the paper soon disappeared. For the Trupan children the feature was a demon stration of the difference soap needs through lend-le-se. V- and water and clean clothes can make. ‘The establishment of Christ- There will he no holiday for home canning this summer, if we, , are to eat an well next winter as,‘^n homes in which every member we did last year.. family is taught an appre- IN EVERY THUNDERING T^: INDIANA BRENNAN-McCALllSTER-CRAIN GREENWOOD-HAVER Dir^tad by HENRY HATHAWAY ProchMd by ANDRE OAVEN LAST-MINUTE WAR NEWS DAILY Wherever they vent, they walked ... on guard at every step. Hardships taught our forefathers the virtue of self-reliance and the need for co operation. Thus, in the humble cradle of privation, the spirit of our Democracy was bom. Our enemies foolishly ignored the enduring influence of our Nation s heritage when they jeered that we were too soft to flght. Little did they dream that, almost overnight, free men could perfect the finest and best- equipped fighting forces the world has ever seen. So, today when good citizens see an A card on a windshield, they recog nize it as a symbol of what people can accomplish who have learned from experience to work together to attain a common objective. That same spirit will win this war—and in peacetime that same unity of effort will keep America strong and prosperous for our men and women now on the fighting front. • * ♦ In addition to aupplying the armed forces with glider and bomber fuse- » lage &ames, wing parts, gun turret parts and foodstuffs, Anheuser-Busch produces trnifj»rinlR which go into the manufacture of; Rubber .Alu- Mostfolks are snore tired than usttal when they finish each wartimeday. A bottle of golden, foaming Bttdweiser mimim . Munitions • Medicines • B Complex Vitamins • Hospital Diets'Baby Fooda*Bread and other Bakery producte»Vitamm-forti- fled cattle feeds •Battmiee* Paper‘Soap and textilee—to name a few. is a welcome companion in a tmh ment of relaxatum—and it makes tmple, wartime nseah ta^ betters B11 d w e i s e.r L O U.l I ” - • ifn' ^. 1..A-1
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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July 24, 1944, edition 1
3
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