Page 4 New Stamps To Be Valid Friday Total Of 50 Points Will Be Good Friday; Will Be Good Until Sept. 30 RALEIGH, May 29.?Five new I blue stamps, worth 10 point; each ... a total of 50 points I?and five new red stamps, alsc worth 10 point each totaling 5( points, will be good for buying processed foods and meats anc fats, respectively on Friday June 1, Theodore S. Johnson OPA Distiict Director, announced J today. liie uvu new uiuc ?l^5| jjsasswsFiJ wi?ini """ "* n|Hc^ 9i fioM For many years we have world what a fine place its great natural resourc* able factors for economic truth a goodly land. But of all the assets pi favored region, the most people. Representative ol America, the people of th self-reliance, energy and i demonstrated their capac: AIR JEG N / s 2 Per Ce 194! DURN E |D1, El, Fl, G1 and HI. I The five new red stamps are IV2, W2, X2, Y2, and Z2. } r The red and blue stamps vali-arf dated on June 1 will be good j through Sunday, September 30, . , 1945' Go , Five red stamps ?Y5, Z5, A2, Fr( B2, C2 and D2?and five blue j stamps H2, K2, J2, L2, and M2 tor ' ?will not be good after Satur- Su 5 day, June 2. Mr 5 As announced earlier, sugar j > stamp No. 35 will not be good tie: ' after June 2, but stamp No 36 al > will remain good for five pounds 1 1 through Friday, August 31, he ent explained. al. I J 1 Mrs. Charles Hewett has re- am turned home from a three weeks Fr< > visit to friends in Conway, S. C. Ma l> BREAD WE E been telling the progress and civic 1 the South is; of ticularly reflected :s and its favor- developments ot n : growth. It is in A land of abundi sessed by a people assessed by this the South gives pi valuable are its things for the fi : the best that is friends and neight e South by their a better communii ntelligence have one of Seaboard's ity for economic the future. LINE RAILWAY jjlfc uy Mora WAR BONDS! [OTICI AVI . r\ .1 nt Miscount by payin: j CITY TAX IG THE MONTH OF I R. WEEKS TAX COLLECTOR mrnnTi-rriMMir I / Winnabovv News Mrs. Tyler Potter and little son ; visiting her sister, Mrs. To- . Lewis, in Columbia, S. C. Ur. and Mrs. . T. James of Idston, visited Mr. and Mrs. I ed Roach this week-end. I kfrs. S. L. Purvis of Wilmingi spent Saturday night and [ nday here with her parents, ; . and Mrs. Henry Rogers, ^acy Dawkins has been a pa- , at at Dosher Memorial hospit- , for the past week, tfrs. Theo Osborne is a pati- 1 ; at Doisher Memorial hospit- ] ( dr. and Mrs. A. P. Henry, Jr. ] lounce the birth of a son, ink Preston, on May 12th at 1 rion Sprunt Annex in Wilming- < _ - JI - i .. ? " i1 - .. if Ir ' I I c I AT aetterment. This is par- j. in the extra-ordinary Jo ecent years. int natural wealth, pos- E of vision and integrity, t omise of even greater uture. To assist our v iors in the building of ty will continue to be principal objectives in s r r | ' t i !. ^ f li i i !( ? g your ES JUNE j i? I THE STATE PORT PU ton. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lewis of San Diego, Calif., announce the birth of a daughter, Sharon Louise, May 19th. BOLIVIA NEWS Leon Leonard, M. M. 1-c, is spending a 21-day leave here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Leonard. , Mrs. Arthur Knox has returned to her home here after spending the past several months with ler aunts, Mrs. N. B. JBarcliff in Penns GroVe, N. J., and Miss Dlive Galloway in Philadelphia, Pa. " Mrs. Harold Wrey Lewis of Wilmington, is spending a few iays here with her parents, Mr. tnd Mrs. J. Oscar Knox. Loyd F. Cox, E. M.' 3-c, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Cox, is now serving in the. South Pacific i board an LST. His brother, Grover Cox, S. M. 3-c, is also Ln he South Pacific aboard an L. 2!. I. Both have been in the Na?y for- the past two years. PERSONALS Mrs. Hugh D. Harvell and jaby, of Wilmington, spent last veek with Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Harvell, near Bolivia. Miss Marie Moore, daughter of dr. and Mrs. Wallace Moore, has eturned home from W. C. U. C. Mr. and Mrs. Will Sellers Dais and son, John Carr Davis, lave moved back to Southport rom Louisiana, where they have >eeh living for the past three 'ears. Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Pierce* are 0 arrive at Shallotte from Boson today to spend a week with elatives. Mrs. Pierce is the ormer Miss Emma Neil Lewis, laughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. rewis, of Shallotte. Mr. Pierce, vho is serving in the Navy, is 1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank ierce. Mrs. E. G. Mallison and laughters, Little Misses Gilliam, jarolyn and Helen C. Mallison, f Genafly, N. J., are spending . month here with Mrs. Mallion's mother, Mrs. Helen G. Iragaw. Skippy Stiller is visiting rclaives in Salisbury. Miss Wilma Burnett spent th? reek-end at Wrightsville Beach vith Miss Marion Frink. Mrs. I. B. Bussells left Monay for Raleigh to spend som? ime with her brother-in-law ana ister, Mr. and Mrs. Baxter )urham. Lt. and Mrs. Davis Herring nd little daughter, Mary Louise re spending sometime with Lt. lerring's people at Fayetteville. Yom there they will go to New 'ork, where Lt. Herring will report for assignment to duty. Pat Shannon, who has been rorking at the shipyard in New rork for several months, is spendig this week at home with his nother, Mrs. H. M. Shannon. Mrs. Edwin Clemmons and two hildren, of Supply, are spending he week here with Mrs. Maxine richer. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Taylor and Jiss Annie Moore Harker, of Norfolk, Va., have been spending wo weeks- here with relatives. James Wolfe left last week to ake a job with a dredge In Nornil. um, Mr. and Mrs. James Ferger and tiildren and Mrs. Bostic, of Orton, re spending two days with ricnds in Goldsboro. Mrs. Maxine Fulchcr, nurse in he office of Dr. L. C. Fergus, has >een on a two week's vacation. Vith her son, Agnew, she spent cart of the time at Morehead Sty, Beaufort and Jacksonville. Miss Melba Hehudaughter of AMUZU THEATRE SOUTHPORT, N. C. Thursday, - Friday, June 7-8? Irene Dunne - Charles Boyer "TOGETHER AGAIN" Mao:?CARTOON Saturday, June 9? 'STRANGERS IN NIGHT" William Terry - Virginia Grey Mso?SELECTED SHORT Monday - Tuesday, Juno 11-12? Humphrey Bogarl- Lauren Bacal! "TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT" Alio?CART OOX Wwtnewlay, June 13? "MEET MIS5 BOBBY SOCKS" Bob Crosby - Ljun Merrick .Alio?FOX XEWS' COM1N Ci:? "MRS. PARKINGTON" ammmm?mmmmmam ** *0 -i * ot, southport, n. c. 'Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Lehue, ofjp ' Shallotte, left Monday for Wash-!w i ington, D. C.', where she is em-! cl , ployed by the F.'B. I. She is a tl graduate of the Shallotte high rr school. t". }Ui J ' : ? : W IN THREE COUNTRIES' 'ti 1 Miss Arnette Stanaland, daugh- ^ ' ter of Mr. and Mrs.' Walter M. Stanaland, of the Calabash sdc- a| tion, has been serving overseas U1 with the WAC for the past 21 months. Durihg that time she is said to Have served in three s< different^ countries, N6rth Africa, hi Frartce and Germany. Miss Stana- jj land, one of .the first Brunswick, tt giils to. enter service; has been 01 promoted several times but the w paper his rip information' as to _ her present rating. * \ * o ' ? EARLY MELONS , ; ' The first watermelons from Florida or deorgia arrived here on May 30 {his year. This da'te for melons shipped in* is "exceptionally early: Some of the; hoi'ne grown product Will be on the market ih ariothef1. ten days, arid that* will also be exceptionally c-arly. ' , ' . - v v (vacation jl'.ble school Miss Louise Adams of Wilming-! ton will begin a two Weeks vaca- j tion Bible School at'the Bolivia Baptist church, beginning June 25th. In connection with this a vacation Sunday school course I will be taught at night during j the second week. ' | It is hoped that all of the I youth who are in reach will atj tend these services regularly. For I the nieht services, the old as welli ; as the young are invited.' : HOME ON LEAVE Commander Landis Brown, of j j the Navy Medical Corps, is at, I home on leave. He has been nerv- j ing in Navy hospitals in New j Guinea for nearly two years. Entering the service soon after I Pearl Harbor, he was stationed j at Caswell for a time and later in California. ILL AT HOME j Mrs. H. 'V. Cox, one of the I best known ladies of the Bolivia community, is very ill at; the home of her daughter, Mrs. A. F. Jones. Mrs. Cox is 91 years old. RETURNS FROM HOSPITAL 1 Jerry Leonard Danford, nine year old son of Mr. and Mrs. J.; W. Danford of Bolivia, has returned home from a six weeks stay in the James Walker hospital in Wilmington. He was seriously injured about the head, legs and arms when he was struck by an automobile driven by Sheriff C. P. Willetts. The Rovin' Reporter i Continued from page one) shop. We went around again this last Saturday. All doors were locked. We finally found Mr.. Reynolds on the street and ask- [ ed him the caune of the locked i doors. "Oh," he said,somebody or 1 other must have gotten mad and I complained to the O. P. A. in I Raleigh. They ordered the shop i locked up for 30 days until they j could get around to make an investigation." Mr. Reynolds did not know who had complained. Or what it was i all about. He stated that the O. j -y~y % \ks m Evei fun*-ha\ here ? , Sha HOBS . A. ceiling price on his wof as $3.00 per hour. That h larged $1.60 per hour and tha lis hardly covered the cost o laterial, labor and machinei sed in the shop. So far as h as . personally concerned vaca on was alright but he. hated i lat his farmer, fishermen an mbermen friends would be ur ale to get their repairs mad ntil the O. P. A. got around t aking their investigation. We understand that th icond Brunswick man to giv is life towards avening Peai arbor was the oldest son o lis useful blacksmith. Two mor ' :his sons are in i service ant ithout any prompting from Ilin iii LOJ WttH l///h. r\v I ////'/ There is a Let's go on wit to blast Japan i W Bjmi [J i i ?*/*. ryoodys canning more th; re a well-stocked1 larder and everything's economyillotte 1 ON KIRBY, Prop. WEDI> k we can say that with the work' e he has been doing he has per,t sonally done more than his bit if towards winning the war. y e ELEVEN GRADUATE - AT BOLIVIA SCHOOL it (Continued Fron?, Page One) d Lillian Rabon. i- Troy Henry, who ranked first e in scholastic average, received 0 the valedictorian's medal; Bethea e Danford, who ranked second, was{ e awarded the salutatorian's medal.' 1 Troy Henry also* received the f best-all-round medal. Medals were e also awarded in the departments I, of Agriculture, Home Economics, i, and Typing. Eddie Howard, AgIR UN jyti JP \m m ; Is For Th % Of Hea long, hard job left for 01 h it?on to Tokyo. Buy 1 out of the war. ACCAMA1 : AND TRUST COM! rnwmmmmmi an ever these days ? so join come Winter! All the essen priced ! 'rading C SHALLOT 1esday, june 6, 1945 riculture, Vara Lee Gore, Home Economics, Vara Lee Gore snii Frances Lesh, Typing. Following a forty-five minute Class Day program, tne Piincipal, Glenn M. Tucker, presented the awards and diplomas. In presenting these tokens of high school accomplishments, Principal Tucker delivered a brief address on the topic "Culture and You." "athletes foot itch"" KIM. IT FOR.33c IX ONE HOCK, if not I>U-as-.i j ... Sue .back. Kill the germ. you kill - . Itch. Ask any druggist for this i? ... . ful funlcide. TE-OL. Made v. : per cent alcohol, you feel it PENT. TKATK. REACHES MORE CHI; APPEY FUU, STREXC.TH f.,t sweaty or smelly feet. ToUav : . WATSON'S. ' :X . v ' fv' / ' eSons ven! iir dollars to do. War Bonds now N 'ANY IWMTWP.fP, bliiMiMMt _jz w 1 p i I i ( ' i ! * J i i i N 5 * d ' i the t tiais II e ,0. I r

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