Relief At Last For Your Coul, OreomuMon relieves promptly be- | mom it bom right to the seat of the trouble to hern loosen and expel pwm laden phlegm, and aid nature to aoothe and heal raw, tenden, In flamed bronchial mucous m&m a pottle of CTKriiiniilon with the un dgwtandlng you paust like the way It quickly allays the cough or you axe to hat* your money back. v CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis i / I Use Ads. For Results) CARD OF^^HANKS We wish to express our many thanks to everyone for the kind ness and sympathy shown us dur ing the bereavement of our be loved son and brother, Raymond V. Bller. May God bl^ss you all. MR. AND MRS. PERCY C. BLLER AND FAMILY. Keep us on the spot, weigh our methods and see if we are wrong. The best way for yon to do this Is for yon to visit the store regular and compare our prices. On an average you find them lower. Lots of new goods coming in now. They are easier for us to buy.—The Goodwill Store. i-24-2t Air Force To Increase Aviation Training The U. S. Air Force will in crease its aviation cadet training program from three classes to eight classes a year, beginning in April, 1949, to permit more effi cient use of aircraft,. personnel, and instruction schedules. While the annual enrollment will be. larger than for any prev ious peacetime year, the size of each class will be reduced. The next class, beginning April 4, will initiate the expand ed progVam. It will .be limited to approximately 600 cadets. Class es of similar size will follow at intervals of approximately six weeks. In the October, 1948, class—the last under the March July-October class system—1,300 students were enrolled. Men accepted for Air Force aviation cadet training must be between the ages of 20 an^ 26 1-2 years, with two years of col lege education or the ability to pass equivalent examination, and must possess high moral, physical, and personal qualifi cations. The aviation cadet program provides 12 months of flying, academic, and military training. Graduates receive pilot's wings, a commission as a second lieuten ant in the Air Force Reserve, and assignment to three years of ac tive duty. Outstanding graduates imme diately receive commissions in the Regular Air Force. All other graduates have an opportunity while on active duty to qualify for one oft the Regular commis sions offered each year by the Air Force. For further information con cerning this . program contact your U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting representative wh0 is at the Town Hall, N. Wil-' kesboro, Tuesday through Fri day every week. o CARD OP THANKS We wish to take this means to thank our many friends and neighbors for their kindness and sympathy during the illness and death of our dear husband and father. May God bless each and every one is our prayer. MRS. I. J. LOVETTE AND CHILDREN. PUBLIC PULSE This «• . column open to the public tor free expression. Thm Journal-Patriot does not as sume any responsibility for ar ticles printed under this head ing, and neither endorses nor condemns them. Please be as brief as possible. MISS RUTH UN NTS Y WRITES ABOUT ROAD To Editor The Journal-Patriot: Since Governor Soott is & farm er (he has been known to be "dishonorable" enough to milk cows) and has promised to re habilitate country roads, some of which are as bad as in 1860, he says, perhaps he will do some thing about a ridge road in Anti och township. Citizens living on it have petitioned the commis sioners and nearly everyone else and written papers to no avail. I believe the reason nothing was done to better this road was from two fallacies: the commis sioners and others believed (1) that there was no such road; and (2) that I lived on it and that work on it would benefit me and me alone. There is suc^ a road and I do uot live on it. There are several roads leading in a somewhat parallel direction i. e. from the old 60 to 421. One road goes by Antioch church. One goes by Jim Mastid's and Rev. J. B. Ray's. And one is Berry's Lane. No doubt the road in question is con fused with one of these. But this is a road between the Antioch road and the one going by Jim Mastin's. This one leaves the road by Jim Mastin's at the foot of the hill below Mrs. Cothren's and goes ihto a gravel road com ing by Ranse Staley's near the old Garner place above Roosevelt Love's. The mail carrier says it is the most thickly populate^ sec tion on his route «and has the most mail boxes to be foun^ in the same distance, not excepting the Cranberry vicinity which is almost a town. Mr. Eugene Jones, who works for The Journal and Sentinel, says the map shows it is a well drained road. If the map does, it is misleading. It is not drained at • all. The side ditches are not open. The right of way is not cut off. It is sometimes scraped. A tiny bit of gravel was put on the slick hill near Mrs. Cothren's last winter. No other work has been done on it since the days of WPA and very little then. Nobody expects it to be made in to a highway^ (It ought to be passable because of the numer ous citizens living on it. Nobody lives "on the road I live on but me. It leads from the ridge road under discussion to the old 60 and thence to Delia plane. Working it and building new bridges would be beneficial to the community. It is a semi public road and in the days of the star route old Mr. Bill Gray used to carry the mail over it to avoid even muddier roads until he was reported and stopped. But I do not expect anyone but me to work this road or build bridg es on it; and I am neither physi cally nor financially able. Some maps show my road which is a mile long. But most maps show my house on the creek without a road and looking as if I rode through the air "on a very fine gander." But on the thickly populated ridge road there are usually im passable mudholes at Joe Love's former home, at Monroe's Smith ey's mail box and at Rose Love's. It is dangerous for the inhabi tants because doctors, ambu lances, undertakers, veterinar ians, can seldom come over the road and the mail carrier has to use a jeep. Those living on this one and a half mile of road are Roosevelt Love, Arthur Love, Luke Sale, Monroe Smithey, Mansfield Parks, Miss Dorcas Mathis, Prank Sparks, Gertrude Sale, and Mrs. Ada Cotfren. My1 mail box 1b also on It. RUTH LINNlSY. Raymond V. Ell Obituary Is uiren Raymond Vaughn Ell^-, aon of of Pur 925. sftrve his 1 Mr. and Mrs. Percy Ellej lear, was born July 12J, He was called to country June 20, 1944 He entered oversea; November 14, 1944; dild In ac tion on Iwo Jlma March age 19 years and 8 m<mths. service 12, 1945; parents Jlkesboro; Baltimore, J Christine, and Ken-1 was kind |he family to Ray ly woven attracted people. 1 her when ry for his armed nt as a He Is survived by h and the following brothers and sisters: . James Eller, of W| Raynard Eller, of Md.; Edward, Max, Helen, Rex, Nancy Sue neth Eller, of the homeJ Raymond was a gold, moral boy. He filled his plate in the home as an obedient soil to his parents and all As he was a twin broth mond, they were clos together in a way that much attention of thi They w©re always toge at homejand in. the seifdce, until death separated them. We cherish his mem service rendered in trie forces c|f our governrle good soldier. iHe wis loved by all Jwho knew him, anjl will be missed by his many friends. We trust that in that awful conflict iin which he died, that his hop^ and faith was in Jesus Christ. ! * i Funeijal service was held Sun day, Japuary 2, 1949, at Mt. Pleasant Baptist church. Rev. A. W. Eller was in charge of the service, j Assisted by Rev. J. A. Parsonsl; also Rev. Billy Bum garner, ! vfho was Raymond's Chaplin I while in service. Full ^ni^itary honors were ren dered. ! Pallbearers were: Alfred Par J_i GAU BLADDER SUFfUttS FIND CURB FOR MISERY DUI TO LACK Of HEALTHY DILI Supply R11I11I Hero — Safhrm Relele* New relief for gslThlsdder n(mn lick ing healthy bile i* Man today in announce which sets with ment of a wonderful pi with remarkable affi agonizing colic, stomach and gallbladder misery 4m to lack at healthy bile now tell of remarkable results after using this medi cine which has amazing power to stimulate (low of healthy bile CALLUS IN is a very expensive medicine, bat considering results, the $3.00 it costs is only pennies per dose. 6ALLUSIN (caution, use only as directed) is sold with full money back guarantee by RED CROSS PHARMACY BRAME'S DRUG STORE Mail Orders Filled Bone, Shelmer Blackburn, Gene Bumgarner, Cears Church, Ed win Church, and Boyce Moore. Many beautiful flowers were carried by cousins and frien.ds.— Contributed. FOR EXPERT JEWELRY AND WATCH REPAIR i —- SEE — WRIGHT'S MEN'S SHOP TAKE A BUSINESS COURSE Accounting or Secretarial. Ap proved for Veterans. Apltea tions accepted now for Mid Winter term enrollment Write for free pictorial wit ^togoe. Clevenger College BOX 789 Telephone 714 NORTH WILKESBOBO, H. C

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