-wl' Amy Fcmned xmtn IN tHg ,,.URCH hfflarufhuiltr' 'kttty-one foreign countries and ing It 10,000 communities throughout the tinue to maintato United States wfli Join together on of seryfce to i»tie»^ de^u« Dt. February 16 in observance of the Irvil Abell of LOTis^e, Chairn^ annual World Day of Prayer, be- of the Bt»rd of ^rats rf tb ing sponsored by the United Coun- American cil of Church Women. “That we announcing that resets tte CTth should shlhe forth the praises of annual pspiW Standardteattmi Him who called us out of darkness survey show 3.162 appw^ hos- into His marvelous light” is the pitate m tte-UniW States and theme of this year’s program, pre- °a pared by four British members of the 3,»11 hospitals rf and the World Day of Pray-T Com- over under survey in 19W The mittee against their background of approved hospitals are lisW m blitz and blackout. “We f«l very the annual Approval Number of strongly that our Christian living the Bulletin of the College just needs overhauling, that something published. in the nature of spiritual educa- Wilkes Hospital is on the op tion is essential, if we are to take proved list. Up the task ahead to which we are Commenting upon the 1944 sur c^led as part of the world church” they say. Gen, L. H. Brereton, U, S. army (insert), has been appointed ler of the First Allied airborne army. Photo shows him as air- invasion of Holland and Germany was being planned. His troops are shown as they were landing behind the German lines their recent invasion of Nazi strong positions. mrn|.Pariof JUs. Get Qiick Reulte : ‘ 1945 IS HERE! AND AT ITS BEGINNING WE WANT TO PAUSE AND SAY: Thank Yon, Customers and Friends For the Generous Patronage You Have Extended Our Shop During 1944 and All Prior Years We appreciate your goodwill, and throughout 1946 we hope our service will merit your con tinued patronage. May 1946 bring each of yon JOY, PEACE, GOOD HEALTH AND EARLY VICTORY WILKES BARBr't SHOP W. J. Church, Prop. HOTEL WILKES BUILDING “The appropriate attitude to ward the world organization now being called into being through Dumbarton Oaks is neither dis couragement nor laudation”, says Dr. Georgia Harkness, Chicago theological educator. ‘Tt offers far less than one could hope in se curing the rights of nations and colonial peoples, yet it is a begin ning on which to build. /Secretary Hull, in emphasizing the tentative character of the plan and the fact that it is being niade available for study by governments and people, has set before us a challenge to build into it what needs to be there ‘for the healing of the na tions’. If the churches do not speak, there will be less of worM collaboration and justice”. Cooperation of the Chicago Board of Education with the staff of Marcy Center, Methodist set tlement serving in a congested ewish section of Chicago, has as sured a day nursery badly needed by the community. According to Wallace Heistad, head resident, the need arose from the increas ing numbers of young mothers who have entered war work. Unable to finance the enterprise independ ently, the Center sought the co operation of the Board of Educa tion. The nursery is expected to accommodate forty-five youngs ters. V ALLEN* THURSDAY - FRIDAY What about our lost lovod ones, our ravaged homes, jeur ruined lives? WHO IS GOING TO PAY... AND HOW? See it all la THE SUPEO-SUOCK SEHSATION OF THE $CaEEN...A DAOINO FEAEIESSLY POOODCED BY THE MAKERS OF HITLER'S CHILDREN" The United Council of Church Women, Mrs. Harper Sibley, of Rochester, N. Y., president, is u^- ng President Roosevelt to appoint a special commission, representing Congress and various national groups, including some bodies of women, to study proposals for our peacetime conscription and other related matters in the field of na tional security. They are urging also that Congress change the present immigration laws so as to permit the admission of Orientals, especially Indians, on an equitable quota basis. QUESTIONS cult to obtain. Entertains Buddies War difficulties have hospitals what grea*^f«|tanre am be placed np«i prnoand abi, communitiM ih 43i^c tines, nife .. : coii- JMILC. , ' W' vey. Dr. Malcolm T. HacEachern, Associate Director and head of the Hospital Standardization Depart, ment of the College, states: “Meeting the Minimum Stand, ard and earning approval are long time accomplishments of himdreds of hospitals. For others, newly established, or aroused by chang ing circumstances to the desirabil ity of attaining approved status. Hospital Standardization is a new ly appreciated force, notwithstand ing the fact that it is 27 years since the Hi’s* Approved List was issued. Demands for surveys have been far above normal in these war years. All hospitals are discover ing that the public has been quite generally impressedj^ith the safe ty factor gained in choosing an approved hospital for diagnosis and treatment of disease and in jury. In order to have the sense of security that an approved hos pital affords, the people of most communities are willing to con tribute time end effort through volunteer service and other sup port, to raise the standards of care. During the strenuous war period our representatives have rarely found closed wards, closed wings, or closed hospitals, but have discovered instead that the medical and nursing staffs and other personnel employed in hos pitals have cheerfully accepted the challenge of the times, and, like onr men and women in unifom, have griven themselves unsparing ly to devoted service. They have further discovered that the com munities are ‘standing by* in the same patriotic spirit”. The 3,152 hoepitate vm %he W44 Approved List compare with 89 on the first Hrt published in 1918. The requirements which the Am erican College of Surgeons con siders fundamental to good hos pital care, and upon which, there fore, it bases eligibility 'for ap proval, are summarized by Dr. MacEachern as follows: 1. Modern physical plant, as suring the patient safety, comfort, and efficient care. 2. Clearly defined organization, duties, responsibilities, and rela tions. 3. Carefully selected governing 4. Competent, well trained su- T o m# T perintendent responsible to the Yes. L G. McLean, „ T .1. 4. f board with complete and supreme Question: Is the root of the pokewned plant of any medicmal ^ value ? Answer: Yes. u li. MCL«an, VnA-j associate horticnltmist at State Oi|anized medical staff of Collie, reports this plant is of competent physicians and medicinal value and that the drug g companies have a strong market Adequate diagnostic and for the dned, sliced root of this „tic facilities under compe- spec.es. The root IS poisonous and supervision. of highest medicinal value when g Accurate, complete medical T-MINUTE war news daily Net an the entertaiamcBt tar- Bisbed the 01 Jeea come* fNMB ala|« and ecreca start. Oeiy. IHi* Cafth rie, PhOadetphla, deea Ut ahara with aecordien eoloa near Fralne- hoie, France, to keep iv the morale ef hia everaeat baddka. While hun- ireda of troopera have jrivea their aervieea to the USO to entertain Uie ■niform forcea, the vialta ta iaetaM ■■tts are rather rare. Meet aaMa Hava bmlfli b OK8Tflgbflii0 ioow^m^ jbwaAtpfrMV 30 . HR thence aovtii.If to a itakeT lS^eiMf abi^^ 9 iStm wedt 114 feet ta i. fh«^ sou^ 4 doi. eAU lilt to ^ forke'of ’U^tntti#; th«p horUi 94 d^. teat IIT Ibm to a stake m the east prteg of the Btiutch: north 26 deg. east 264 feet: to a stake in the breneh; iu»& 39*' dun eAst 812^ feet to a stake . Tn Qie branch; sooth M deg. east 88 feet to a saiaafnu on the bank of the branch; north 69 deg. west J04 feet to a stake 6 1-3 poles from an ivy at the branch; noi^ 29 deg. and 80 min. west 23x feet to a stake; north 12 deg. east 138 feet to a stake; thence north 6 deg. 30 min. west 189 8-4 feet to the point of the beginning, containing 11.3 acres, more or lees. Magnetic Tteci: “ »tfl^ J9§ ‘W eenuRy 79 deg; epst ICrpolit io a a 'ftiner itedlt 18 j • teUt If W a tted 90 feel east 1m 9^ to t ateke ^ o S’irdn ^ 56 H dJ^^les dig, west 28 pofea an ivy at ^ mr^g}/ thence' sog|^.,M deg. west e l-8^>ples to akta]|#lat.the [qxnch; tiie^e north wist 14 |dea; -thence norUi 7 deg. dsst 7 1-3 poles; north 6H deg. viest 11% poles to a stake; thence south. 76 deg. east 8 feet to the 'beg^nnin^ containing 4.7 acres, more or less.., Third Tract; Beginnirik on a stake the west margin of Highway No. 18, a northeast corner of Lot No. 12, and running south 87 deg. and 1() min. west 316 feet to a stake on the east margin of Fair- plains drive, the northeast corner of Lot No. 36: thence northward ,J43W!S- -lifMr: sf BiiiL mm: feit to a «tak« Mfbm: aoaUl )4U fast tea aooUt 77 dsg. 159'fsat to «a»sjtonpfdl.9m ay aiBeKrtorti.'^ 35 deg. 16 rate. 4^ ItOli font to >> a stake in the dHdi on the wwt ' margiii of Hig!twtor No. 18; toaOi-' : ward with highway on welt nmr- gia 14.9 feet to toe point drW finning, haiag Lots Noe. 22, 28,. 24, J5, 28, 27, 28, 29. 30, 81, 32. 88 and.94 as skown.in the Dooshtoa Kvisun Map, Sis deed d N. A. Wyatt Slid wife to E. E. Banguesa, recorded in bod; 203, at 7mWlh’6Kf a - 1-224KH CHAS. G. GHiREATH, Commissio 666 Cold Pnpaiatiotu a$_dinti0d gathered in the fall. McLean ai- for re- so reports that in the ^Vringthe followup, young shoots are edible as long as ^ Regular group conferences they are not mor ^an 4 to 6 administrative staff and of inches m gro^h. One must reviewing ac- careful not to have any po^on of the root. If the ^nt is to be used ^ scientific ef- as a “green”. The young shoots are parboiled and the first water 10. A humanitarian spirit—^the i^^.-ald^. After that, they are consideration being the very delicious imd add much to ^y ^ J ^ meal when tasty greens are dilfi- While men’s work shoes went up 125 per cent in price in World War I, the rise in the present con flict has been only 68 per cent, ac cording to repoite. I During cold weather, care must be exercised to see that hogs butchered and hung up to chill are not permitted to freeze. A frozen carcass must be thawed out before ! the meat is put in cure. ' NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of ai^^er of the Superior Court of Wilkes county, made in the Si^ial Pro ceeding entitled "L E. Story, 8^ ministrator of E. E. Bau^ess, de ceased, vs. Hennan Bauguess, et al, the same being No. ——- upon the Stoecial Proceeding Docket of said (Jourt, the undersigned Com missioner will, on the 30th day of January, 1946, at 11:00 o'clock a. m., at the Courthouse door m Wilkesboro, North Ckrolina, offer for sale to the hlg^tet bidder for cash, that certain tract or Mirel G# land lying and being in North Wilkeaboro TownaWp, in Wilkes ii"- /I laid All Of Us Wish All .Of You A Victorious NEW YEAR AND ONE FILLED WITH JOY AND HAPPINESS! For Your Mdst Generous Patronage In the Past We Most Sincerely Say: “THANK YOU” IT’S ALWAYS A PLEASURE TO SERVE THE CAR AND TRUCK OWNERS IN WILKES AND NEARBY COUNTIES, AND WE HOPE TO HAVE THIS PRIVILEGE THROUGHOUT THE NEW YEAR 1945 DICK’S SERVICE STATION TeitkamI DICK’S recapping SERVICE ■Miancl Ti|i.l»,i 141

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