I m l ? l ^ - ?' fy' - ? ? ? ?? The Journal-Patriot Has Blazed the Trail of Progress In the "State of Wilkurlal was in Baptist cemetery i -?? v Support the V. M. C. A. Council Camporee Boy Scouts Will Be May 17 and 18 Number of Wilkes Patrols To Take Part in Cam poree In Watauga Boy Scout patrols who won blue pennants in the district camporee here are planning to participate in the Old Hickory council camporee to be held May 17 and 18 at Elks Knob, which is located seven miles off high way 221 near Meat Camp post office in Watauga county. Registration and first inspec tion will be from nine a. m. to 11:30 a. m. Saturday, which will be followed by lunch and work on camp site. Patrol visitations will be from three to four, with games from four to five o'clock. After supper will be other recre ation. Sunday morning after break fast will he assembly at the flag pole, . church service, hike and lunch. Final Inspection will be at two p. m. Baptist Pastors To Meet Monday May meeting of the Wilkes Baptist Pastors' Conference will be held Monday at Reine-Sturdi vant chapel. The program will open at ten a. m. with devotional by Rev. J. Glenn Huffman. Rev. C. J. Poole is on the program for "Mes sage From Fraitland" and the sermon will be by Rev. L. T. Younger. In the afternoon Rev. W. N. Brookshire will conduct the hom iletical study. All ministers are invited. Mrs. H. C. Landon, Jr., Mrs. D. J. Carter and Miss Jane Carter, spent Monday and Tuesday in Lynchburg and Charlottesville, Va., where they visited Miss Sue Landon, a junior at Randolph Macon College, and Henry C. Landon, III, senior In School of Medicine at the University of Virginia. They also visited friends at Sweet Brier College in Virginia. Mack T. Miller Joins Engineering Staff Of Underwriters Group Mack T. Miller has Joined the engineering staff of the South Eastern Underwriters Association and entered fire promotion en gineering training at the Associ ation office in Albany, Georgia. Miller, born and reared fn North Wilkesboro, North Caro lina, served three yearB in the Army Air Force, ending his ac tive duty as a First Lieutenant. He was awarded the Air Medal with four Oakleaf Clusters for missions, as Bombardier-Naviga tor, and his B-17 Group, the 3 81 st Bombardment (Heavy), received the Unit ? Citation and two Oakleaf Clusters, for service over Europe. He graduated from the Eighth Air Force Radar Nav igation School and their High Al titude Bombardment course. He and fifteen other newly em ployed engineers will attend a school at the Association Head quarters, in Atlanta, during the week of May 19. This school will provide orientation with respect to the fire insurance industry as a whole, and will include a de tailed review of engineering phases of fire protection and fire inspection and report work on automatic sprinklers, electrical systems, and fire loss investiga tions. BIRTHS A son was born Monday at the Wilkes hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Charlie B. Brown, Jr., of North Wilkesboro route one. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Willard Billings, of Cricket, are parents [ of a ^daughter born'Sunday at the Wilkes hospital. A jaon was born May 6 at the Wilkes hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Odell Monroe Jones, of North Wilkesboro. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Thomas Love, of North Wilkes boro route one, a daughter on May 7 at the Wilkes hospital. Born May. 9 at the Wilkes hos pital, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Larry T. Minton, of North Wil kesboro. A son was horn Tuesday at the Wilkes hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Elmer Parlier, of Pores Knob route one. ? A eon, Dennis Wayne, wasj born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Fra zier, of North Wilkesboro, Route 1, May 8 at the Wilkes Hospital. Mother and son are doing fine. iA daughter, Linda Gale, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lbve, o f North Wilkesboro, Route 1, May 7, at Wilkes hos pital. Marriage License During the past week license to wed .were issued by Troy C. Foster, Wilkes register of deeds, to the following: Joe D. Elledge, Hays, and Betty Dancy, North Wilkekboro; Herbert S. Oulley, Baltimore, Md., and Charmio Shumate, North Wilkesboro; Walter Foster and Thelma Card well, both of Buck; Harold Prest wood, Lenoir, and Delia Honck, Todd; Bruce Sexton, Grassy Creek, and Bonnie Lorene Cau dill, Silas Creek; Haley Justus and Galdine Carlton, both of Boomer; Joseph Carl Combs, North Wilkesboro route three, and Melba Lorene Chambers, Cycle; Dillard Church and Mia Mae Osborne, both of North Wil kesboro route one; Philip E. I Weatherwax, Hampton, Va., and! Jane Josephine Perry, North Wil kesboro; Ray Parks and Ruby Morrison, both of Roaring River; Blane Bennett and Joilene Greer, ] both of Lansing. | Lt. Spicer Graduate Constabulary School With Headquarters Constabul ary School Squadron, Sonthofen, Germany. ? First Lieutenant Cyril B. Spicer, Jr., of North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, was recently graduated with high honors from the United States Constabulary School in Sontho fen, Germany. His scholastic av-, erage of 94.9 placed him third among the 57 officers and 499 enlisted men who. composed the school's twelfth class. - The basic course completed by Lieutenant Spicer and the other courses offered by the Constabul ary School are planned to give additional training to members of the occupation forces, officers and enlisted men, who are ex pected to become leaders, in structors, and specialists in their respective units. Lieutenant Spicer is assigned to the 11th Constabulary Regi ment and has rejoined that out fit in Regensburg. The lieutenant's wife, Mrs. Bessie Lee A. Spicer, resides in North Wilkesboro. SCHOOL LIBRARY LIGHTING PROJECTS UNDER WAY; NEW CAR TO BE GIVEN JULY 4TH B ?' v. xsQrtn wiixesooro JUons Club I bus completed the first in a series of school library projects for Wilkes county schools. Acoording to a survey granted the club without cost by engi neers of Duke Power company, the entire project for all tl^e high schools in Wilkes will cost ap proximately $2,000. The survey showed that Wilkesboro library had the worst lighting facilities and the club's project began there and will be carried to oth ers as a major objective in pre venting blindness and defective vision among students. Money for this project and oth ers carried out by the club is rais ed by different activities. The main project in the past has been the annual horse show, which will not he held this year due to lack of a suitable location and the club instead will give away an automobile on July 4 at the office of the Wilkes Chamber of Commerce. Paul Cashlon and W. D. Jester are heading that com mittee. W. O. Absher, club president, announced that a 1947 Chevrolet town sedan had been purchased by the club from Gaddy Motor company and will be given away. Ladies Ni^it Friday Annual Ladies Night banquet of the Lions club will be held Friday evening, May 23, seven o'clock, at Elkin Y. M. C. A. Gus Travis, of the Charlotte Observ er staff, will be the principal speaker. Henry London, III, Medical Graduate Henry Landon, III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Landon, of this city, will receive his degree as doctor of medicine in June at the University of Virginia, Char lottesville. He has already com pleted his work and is now spending some time at his home here before going back for graduation. Young Mr. Landon is the first graduate of the local high school to complete the course in medi cine. On July 1 he will begin his interneshlp at Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston Salem. Robert Gambill Opens Law Office Robert M. Gambill, clefk to tbe tax writing Ways and Means committee * in congress from 1945