PAGE TWO f°etafl?fo o Tondon X DON BISHOP ' . Iu LONDON The roan who knows more, > Americans in London than anyone, it is generally agreed, is missary and canteen of the Ameri can Embassy. Stricklaijd’s “ther home” is Dunn, AN, C. His Southern accent is easi- V,..spotted in all the British accent -curiously seems to dominate BWwiJ£.,’Jlis Southern hospitality serves as a beacon to attract all Attgricags. especially Southerners. «WISL*jST GAVE HIM JOB BypSldand is, managing the ser vice* at 'the Embassy because he , dld ; “BACh" a good job of feeding TKbusands of invasion troops ih \m. months before D-Day in Eu -1 *£og& . Thf.. late Ambassador John wmant gave him the job when, becaUSe of drastic food rationing in England following the war, it was found for the United Statute take care of feeding its employes. The dinJpg‘room and other ser- operated as a co-opera tive, membership open to em ployes State Department and ; appended services and the Lon don, .representatives of the Ameri- ' “ W*n press.' co-operative is operated at ■V- .. ■ „| t , mi-" 1 }; *■-> Insulation serves you so many ways. It reduces ~fyf! bills, cuts dawn on outside noises, adds to ’d - ycAir safety because it is fireproof . . . and | makes your home more comfortable, prevent- A from walls and ceilings. Phone for | "free estimate. im POOR & MILLWORK I Company I PHQfIE 2124 DUNN, N. C. j ftst Drive" Americas faverHeW^f \kJJ */r* of en&ne • ' V9V asriou y,4 y te ‘ yf ayttrv&vy sau^FwwMpneos 1 ! MAP**? 4v tyt tmrtuctt m£pf \ youu *&> _ most txpeA&ve cabs!"^ r. XTORDQMATIC DRIVE IS TWO DRIVES L * TdOINCfSI AUTOMATIC DRIVE OF A4L **"*»*' * ■**’»* *' W M, I tetter yet... n |1 WITH FORDOMATIC DRIVE 1 t*','rr' ' I than other automatic drived I" J " I Fordomatic is two drives in one. .. 1.1 ' smooth flow of power a I itnu Eggi j- 1 AxiMnotK Mtfconitol Ovary />/*j the savings of having the exact - ■„,. no expense to the Government. When Winant awarded the job to Strickland, he could say only, “If it goes, you’ll get paid. If it doesn’t; we’ll sec that your fare home is ’ paid" At the end of 12, months Strickland had cleared a consider able profit for the operation. Strickland was interviewed for the job by Winant on the day he was'to have sailed for home fol lowing the war. “I've never had as many knots in my stomach as I had then,” Strickland recalled. However, the project offered a n interesting challenge and he decided to take it. After two and a half months of preparation the dining services) opened for business Nov. 20, 1915 i One thousand meals, the maximum I possible with present facilities, are ; served each day. Food comes from i America, including precious beeif! and pork which are. in very lim- j ited supply in Great Britain. ADVISED ARMY PERSONNEL The War Department sent Strickland, then technical seigeant. 1 to England in 1943 as one of 13 : specialists to advise Army mess personnel already here on how to store and prepare frozen foods and other supplies sent from America. He was assigned to the North ern Ireland Base Section, where i j WHILE THEIR CARRIER STEAMS UP the East River, eleven hundred crewmen of tire TJ.S.S. Oriskany spell out j | j a challenge in living letters on the flight deck. Every man aboard the vessel has volunteered to donate blood 1 to the armed forces. Challenge reads: “Hi New York... Oriskany Can Do 100%—Can You?” (International) j' he spent 18 months moving about I from one division to another is suing the instructions. , When the invasion juggernaut got moving, Strickland was detail ed to run the mess service for thg i marshalling yards in Northern Ire land. He directed the serving of three million meals in nine days. “That's pretty good feeding,” said Strickland in characteristic understatement. “And all the. meals were hot, too.” As D-Day approached, he was j transferred to Southampton to I continue the same vital duty of serving hot food to troops headed for the shores of France. He set up 835 field stove units and had two battalions of men washing pots and pans. Strickland was about to moie on to France after the bulk of the troops had landed there, but be fore he could go to Paris to get set, the Army decided He’d best Stay in Great Britain and prepare to do the whole thing all over j again in the opposite direction, i The tide of war was moving suffi ciently well that the Army was now thinking of its redeployment of troops to the Pacific. GOES INTO REVERSE Once again Strickland found himself at Southampton once again serving 35,000 meals a day. But this time be had German prison ers of war to wash the pots and pans. f He finished this job, the war | I ended, and he was ready to go l back to North Carolina or to New THE DAILY RECORD. DUNN. N. QL Social Security And The Self Employed (Beginning January 1, 1951, over 4 1-3 million self-employed per-1 3bps were brought under the Fed- 1 eral old-age and survivors insur-, ance program. This is the last of mx arlicigs written by Stanley B. Earl, Field Representative of the Social Security Administration, ex- i planning many of the self-employed provisions or the Social Secr-ity Act Amei'canents of 1950.) VI. Action and Responsibility of] the Self-Employed. The Social Security Administra tion. assumes responsibility for maintaining the earnings records of all persons assigned a social: security account number card. However, certain- obligations rest 1 with every self-employed person whose work is covered by the: mended social security law. Unlike other workers covered by i the social security law, the in- 1 dividual who works for himself ■ does not have his earnings reported York, where he had worked prior to tire war. Then Winant called. ; He has settled down as a more j or less permanent member of the 1 American colony. He married Miss Rita Emden of London. by,someone else; unlike the em ployee in a job covered by social security, he does not share the tax with someone who withholds and remits his portion for him. He must report his own earnings and pay his own tax. * Before the time he files his 1951 income tax return early in 1952 .the self-employed persons alreday have social security account number. This account number distinguishes his account from the social security accounts of other people who have similar or identical names. Many self-employed persons alreday have social security cards. Others have had a card at one time or another, but have lost it. If a self-employed person has never had a card, or has lost his card, he should get in touch with the local social security office. Or he can obtain a blank A ft -9 • “ ” «l: ■- n - .-£• \ v Vl *i Ir/1 JJi ® I^l \ W " • MJf-WMf MR nimSWM & jn &%$. % j V - ir ft-. • • ft ar A .. . —I -js-™-..—■■ VAIIIBI '•* wnlaßfkrlill # W,UUI J WH ' ■ 1 t ~ " 'it...' , ift' 9 sI % 1■ | Jj »sl■& tJ ij ■ Ijl •ft jjß 1 jßtt £ £ in today ' 11 f t who Is also an ordaoi•) mtnlstor , are holding a two weeds’ revival 1 meeting at thg ehurcji. ;f The mseting which began Sun day, November I,' will continue : through Sunday, November 25, , with services each evening. The song service is led by Leonard A. 1 Strickland. j The New Zealand church was established about fifty years ago S and has a membership of abproxi- I mately ,100. The Woman’s Mis -1 sionary Society of which Mrs. Mar j shall Sutton is president, is active- The Young People’s Organiza tion of the church, organized about j nine months ago by Rev. Butler, form at the nearest post office > and mall it to the aocial security ! office. Each wage earner or self-employ- ! i ed persons should check on his ac- 1 count at least once' every two or three years by writing to the Social Security Administration, Baltimore,' Maryland, and asking for a state-1 *nent of his account. Errors may' occur when the account number. iis omitted on the report, or a wrong number is shown. If an error is detected the local social , security office will Help to get it corrected. The self-employed person who makes complete and accurate re ports, who checks regularly on his. record, and who advises his family about his social security protec- j tion, can be reasonably certain the correct amount of benefits will be. 1 paid when entitlement is estab ' lished. By treating his social] ' security account like an Insurance, i policy, he can be more certain of j ' a. measure of economic security in old-age—payments to himself, 1 and his eligible wife and young i children —and provision for his ' survivors at the time of his death. , (Informational material about 1 the social security program may be ' obtained free of charge from the i social security field office located' ’ in the Building, Fayette ; ville, North Carolina). f MONDAY AFTERNOON,NOVEMBER 19, 1951 Linden Student. A Home Economics bazaar was staged by students at Bast Caro lina College recently under the leadership of Grace Giles of Lin den. Several hundred buye>s were present to select purchases from a variety of hand-made articles. Hopig EConpmips students had prepared a dot* book, which went oh sale at this bazaar.' Low costs meals are given special attention in this W page jslaj,eographcd vol- ; —— ——r* h*s an cweftPtat of thirty and jffo Vforgip 1$ president. returned from a visit to relatives in Gainesville, Ga., and Pensacola. Fla. They were accompanied to Georgia by Mr. Burgess’ mother and aunt/ Mrs. Ralph Burgess and Mrs. Pearl Peck who spent some tune with their sister. Mrs. Hattie Chambers in Cornelia. Ga. I mill ' ' HOO t LIVESTOCK MMKIT “ 1 Mile North on Highway 301 j OPEN ■ "*». 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p. nf. Mm TOP PRICES PMOm'fm » UO^gfl'^^r DSia which prhtail a nonuiar far I chase with letnm. P 1 . • - . ■ ft w A ft 9 ift . 1 ftHs ft k ■ vu i ft ecoß uac CAR!-TRUCK) NAYLOR-WCKPf ' DIAL tun i FajettevUlc Bfj Own IMIWRI ■■ ilH>»^W!MeMi