Wilkesboro has a trading radres of 50 miles, serctbg 100,000 people in Northwestern Carolina. W X ■' The Journal-Patriot Has Blazed the i rail of Progress in the State of Wilkes" For Over 44 Years Vol. 44 No. 36 W Published Mondays and Thursdays ~ NORTH WILKESBORO. N. C„ Monday, August 14. 1950 Make North Wilkesboro Your Sh< pping Center Tennessee Fruit 1 Growers On Tour In This County By CARli E. VANDEMAN Assistant County Agent The Brushy Mountain Fruit Growers were hosts to a group of Tennessee fruit growers on j: Sautrday, August 12th. The Tennesseans visited several orchards ■ in the eastern part of their own state on August 10 th and 11th and spent Friday night at Boone. The tour of Wilkes and Alexander County orchards started ^his fine orchard owned by Mr. miles west of North Wilkesboro. This fine orchards owned by Mr. N. S. Forester, Jr. has a good crop of peaches and apples this year. The peach crop was saved from severe damage by heating the i orchard several nights with burning oil. The growers from Tennessee are interested in finding out more of the details of this heating operation. The next orcfc vrd visited on the tour was the Green P Oaks Orchard owned by Mr. Clarence Fletcher and is located just off the Hunting Creek road (high' way No. 115.) After lunch the tour continu| ed to the top of the Brushy I Mountains where a good many orchards were seen, depending on the time available. The tour proceeded by way of Moravian Falls across the mountain at Kilby's Gap to Alexander County. Visits were made to the Little River Orchard, owned by H. T. Gryder of Taylorsville, and the Milstead Orchard near All Healing Springs. All fruit growers and others interested in seeing these fine orchards were cordially invited an^ t- participated in this tour. « The summer meeting and picIt.' nic will be held as usual by the ^ Brushy Mountain Fruit Growers 1 on August 16 at the Lowe's Orchid ard at Kilby's Gap. More details t later. _ V Mrs. Avery S. Hayes Died On Sunday 13 Mrs. Avery Smith Hayes, 64, passed away at her home in Moravian Falls, Sunday, August 13 at 10:40 p. m. She had been confined to her bed for the past 12 years, i Mrs. Hayes suffered a cerebral f hemorrhage Sunday at 1 a. m. She was a member of the First Baptist \ Church of North Wilkesboro. : The body will lie in state at the church from 1:30 until the hour of the funeral which will v be held Tuesday, August 15th, at | 2:30 p.-m. at the Moravian Falls Baptist church. Interment will be P^"at Moravian Falls cemetery. Surviving are her husband Avery S. Hayes, six children: Alber R. Hayes and William H. Hayes, of Wilkesboro, HowanJ L. Hayes, Columbia, S. C., Kathleen E Hayes, Mrs. James R. Scroggs, Walter E. Hayes, Moravian Falls. Also surviving are 5 grandchildren. one sister, Miss Laura Brown and one brother, Ed Brown. SURVEY OF YOUTH PROJECTS TO BE CONDUCTED IN WILKES Somers Reunion To Be Held On Sunday Reunion of the Somers family will be held Sunday, August 20, at Union church in Somers township. A picnic dinner and other in- j teresting program features hare been planned for the occasion. All I members of this influential north-1 western North Carolina and their 1 friends are invited to attend and enjoy the day together. Dr. GambillElkin Civic Leader, Dies Dr. Ira Samuel Gambill, almost 64, widely known physician, died unexpectedly Saturday at his home at Elkin of a heart attack. Dr. Gambill retired from active practice about three years ago due to a heart condition. He had received treatment both at hospitals and at his home. Funeral service was held at 11 today at First Baptist Church. The Rev. Howard J. Ford, pastor, and the Rev. Walter C. Guth, pastor of Elkin Valley Baptist Church, officiated. Burial was in Hollywood Cemetery at Elkin. Dr. Gambill was born in Wilkes County in September, 1886, son ot William B. and Elizabeth Brown Gambill. He received his preparatory education in Wilkesbo'ro schools and Oak Ridge Acadeqiy. He was graduated from the North Carolina Medical College at Charlotte in 1912. He first practiced at Doughton and later at Dobson. During the five years he was located at Dobson he serv- j ed as Mayor and as chairman of, the Surry County School Board. I He organized Surry County's first public health department. Later he located at North Wil-j kesboro. He was a member of the staff of Davis Hospital at Statesville before going to Elkin in 1924, He was a member of the North Carolina Medical Society and the Surry-Yadkin Medical Society. He I was a member of First Baptist Church of Elkin and the Masonic Lodge. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Nancy Gentry Gambill to whom he was married April 4, 1920; one son, John M. Gambill, a senior at Western Reserve Medical University, Cleveland, Ohio; one daughter, Nancy Carol Gambill, a junior at Elkin High School; two foster daughters, Miss Thelma Gambill, a student nurse at Martin Memorial Hospital at Mount Airy, and Miss Betty Gambill, supervisor of nurses at Duke University Hospital, Durham; four sisters, Mrs. T. H. Higgins and Mrs. R. L. Higgins, both of WinstonSalem, Mrs. R. A. Shropshire of Germanton and Mrs. C. P. McNeill of North Wilkesboro; and one brother, A. L. Gambill of Sophia, W. Va. Physicians from Elkin and this vicinity were honorary pallbearers. FLASHERS WIN 2, LOSE 2 IN BASSETT-GALAX SERIES North WilkeBboro Flashers since Wednesday night won two and lost two games, thus gaining one full game In the race for fourth position and a playoff spot and getting one game nearer both fifth and fourth places. Mount Airy Graniteers will be here Tuesday night and Radford will be here Friday night. North Wllftesboro will play at Elkin Saturday night and Elkin will be here Sunday afternoon. In Bassett Friday night North Wilkesboro lost a close game 6 to 5 when Bassett scored a run In the bottom of the ninth. Thompson was the losing pitcher but a costly error allowed Bassett to tie the score after North Wilkesboro had a two-run lead. Here Saturday night the Flashers' power was evident through two games as North Wilkesboro won 8. to 2 and 17 to 2 in two slugging games. In the first game 4[ike Scheer held Bassett to six its and had only one bad inning, the third. He struck out seven batters. Bob Wright was the hitting star for North Wilkesboro with two singles and a double. In th® second game Jack Wllliams, big left bander, went all the way for North Wilkesboro an