^? ?
I The Pilot Covers
I Brunswick County
I NO. SIXTEEN ~NO~i
first Davis Men !|
Came Thursday,)
I More Will Come
;.( Osborn b. .ught First
Group Oi, Davis Conval
escents To Southport On
Thursday On Field Trip
,!Ay BASE BOATS HERE
poR CAMP DAVIS MEN
rjfort Being Made To ArI
range For Boats That
I Would Enable Return
ed Soldiers At Davis
To Visit Island
I And Fish
In one of the big
a group of men
to Southport on a j
I sorj' field triP from Camp
Br?"s p' Thursday. The trip
;35 arranged by Sgt. Merton B. ,
: ami was intended for the '
reation of men who have been !
>rseas. were wounded or sick, t
-who are now convalescent.
y?t. Osborn came down a
. "le of weeks ago to arrange <
.v'this and future trips. Owing (
J i delay in delivery of tele- '
bmm. various guides, who were
s contact the party on arrival 1
?. did not show up until late.1
is men were able to see very;
lit except a few boats un-1
siag shrimp and a few points!
if interest. However, they met!
several people who did all they1
kM to make the trip a pleasant j
w ar.d all in the party declared I
were returning on future <
tr.ps of the same sort.
Tlie least that could be said of
Sis first tout is that it showed
potentialities for trips of this
being made interesing for .
convalescent at Camp Davis.
With established contacts now!
;a:e with local people and with
i shrimping and other com- ('
nr. al fishing just getting un-1
>way. it is believed that a
interesting schedule can
be maintained for future visits
fee the soldiers.
is.. Osborn, who in company t
ivr ali who wet? in the pwrtv, r
s heen overseas and wears u
v? Presidential Citation Ribbon., c
a. that it is hoped to get a a
i' at or boats, owned by the a
inry and now based on New
Rh'-i to Southport. Having f
here, future parties could t
; down, go out fishing and r
" visits to Bald Head Island, I
vtich is owned by Frank O. F
5-mill of Charlotte. The Ser- F
wr.t said he was reasonably c
of being able to get these 1
rats here for the above pur- c
| s
With the initial tour having 1
made it is honed to eet 0
I~"E< on i tegular schedule in I
! ^011 time Several local resi-ic
/ ' Mrs. Helen Bragaw, Post- F
tiler L. T. Yaskell, W. B. ' >
pah. an-i others, have already
piunteercd to act as guides, j
owing the men around on fu-1 i
tore trips. Any other South- '
who would like to join up
a little volunteer guide's ortaxation,
to assist in showing
fibers of such tours around, j
' get in touch with Mr. [ i
fcz.ah who is the local contact
when such parties are due.!
.
r
Brief News
ij
Flashes
L.
i <1
\krivls home h:
m. m. Hoscnbaum. Captain, j
s- Army Medical Corps, ar;~v~l
home last Friday after two
*ars tn England. France, and
many He has 30 days leave
at the expiration of that
h. will report to Ft. Bragg,
r lurther orders. His wife and
r- son have remained at their .'
Shallottc while the
?ctor was away.
, BIVEN DIPLOMAS ,
Barbara Fayc Adams of
and was given a diploma in
Mrc at the commencement
erciscs at Duke Summer
last week. At the time
I T.vood Swain of Shal- j
-iven a decree of Docter
?f Medicine.
, '-i nvm licenses
> Brunswick county |
both white, were mar-;
'r~ the month cf June,:
i!"5 to the marriage lice-1 j
f- i-:-u<. : by Hegister of Deeds
1 Walton. Withe the S. CI ,
laws as they were, ,
.lave often passed without
l'e-.-nsc-s being issued here. .
couples securing licenses j
^ " the past months were:
Burr of St. Paul, 1
A.maretta Bennett and '
^a'Ph Gibson of FreeVa
to Lena Chadwlck |
r **** ? I
I
1 TH
12
In Pacific
mmtsm hr
ft.
Coast Guardsman J. C. Fil noth,
Seaman first class, whose
ivife is the former Eula Mae
Smith of Southport is serving at
in advanced base in the central
Pacific area with a construction
letachment unit of the Coast
Giuard. His home is in Dallas,
Texas.
Prevatte Resigns,
K i-l-1
i ruiK nppuuiiuu
County Attorney
bounty Attorney Resigns
To Accept Post Of City ,
Attorney To Which He 1
Was Recently Appointed ,
__________ I
VIRS. LOU H. SMITH
RE-APPOINTED NURSE
Sew County Attorney Will ,
Shortly be Released From
Service With The '
Coast Guard 1
i
At their meeting Monday the <
Kiard of county commissioners
{appointed Mrs. Lou H. Smith 1
is county health nurse for the
urrent year. Mrs. Smith was i
,)so reappointed as county quar- 1
ntine officer.
E. J. Prevatte, who has been '
erving as county attorney for j i
he past two years, tendered his, ]
esignation, which was accepted. I <
dr. Prevatte was recently ap- > j
ointed city attorney for South- ;
ort and his resignation was in
irder that he might accept this
Eist named job. On motion of 1
ounty commissioner J. N. Sowell,
econded by commissioner A. P. '
f.uss and made unanimous by the
hairman, S. B. Frink was ap- 1
lointed county attornty to sue- j1
eed Mr. Prevatte. The salary j1
aid Mr. Frink will be the same j
is that which Mr. iPrevatte has i
ieen receiving. . j'
h
County Nurse
Urges Action
Thildren Must Be Vaccinat- j,
cd Before Entering School
In Fall; Nurse Or Doctor
Can Do It
Mrs. IjOU II. Smith. County,i
Yurse. leaves County on July]
1th to be gone for a month or|
ive weeks. Mrs. Smith advises
hat all parents sec that their
children are protected against
liphtheiia and smallpox before
ntcring school in Septembor.
rhe last law on the smallpox j
accination reads as follows: Secion
130-183 "All children in!
Jorth Carolina are required to [
>e vaccinated against smallpox1
>efor c attending public, private!
>r parochial school."
All children must be protected
igainst diphtheria before enter-'
ng school. Mrs. Smith expects (
o be in her office on August ,
Continued on page two
I
Wife Plans To
Return To WAC|
Voting Soldier Now At
Home With Wife Who
Was Discharged From
WAC Because Of Being'
Under Age
Pfc. Gollie M. Bellamy of ShaliotU
has been spending a 30
lays leave with his wife, who has
seen living with her parents near |
Bolivia.
Private Bellamy was wounded
in the Normancty invasion on,
June 6, 1944. After a short stay,
in the hospital he returned to
duty and was again wounded, |
this time more seriously, in
France on July 13, 1914. Since j
(Continued on page 2)
E ST j
A Gooc
Spaces today"5
Sgt. Redwine Had
2 Horrible Years
In Prison Camp
In''OW. Instance He And
Fellow Prisoners Were
Marched 100 Miles Without
Food Or Water;
Many Died
FREED BY RUSSIANS
BEFORE BERLIN FELL
Was With Russian Army
For A Month As It Pushed
On To Take Berlin,
Praises Treatment
They Accorded
Him
Weighing 35 pounds less than
he did when captured by the
Germans in Africa on February
14, 1943, Sgt. Ruffin Redwine
arrived at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Redwine,
near Shallotte, last week.
For two terrible years, two
months and a few days, he was
held a prisoner of war by the
Germans. He was liberated by
the Russian armies at Stalag IIIA.
Luckenwalde, Germany, 37
miles south of Berlin on April
22nd, 1945.
Sgt. Redwine was with a Field
Artillery Battalion. The entire organization
of some five thousand
men was surrounded and
captured by the Germans in
Nortft Africa, They were at first
confined in prison camp in
Africa and from that point they
were forced to march 100 miles
without either water or rations.
"Hundreds of the men," says Sgt.
Redwine, "fell out from exhaustion
on this trip. Those of us who
got through never knew what
became of them. We supposed
they were left to perish where
they fell."
Before being placed in the
camp in Africa the prisoners
were confined in railroad box
cars, 60 men to a car, for three
lays without food or water. During
this time they were let out
inly once to relieve themselves.
Many of the men became deathly
-sick and some died.
After being moved from Africa
to Germany, Sgt. Redwine and
bis fellow prisoners were fortunate
in not being shifted from
camp to camp, as were the inmates
of many of the other
prison camps. It was a joyous
lay to him and to his fellow
prisoners when the advancing
Red armies reached the camp
where they were confined and
liberated them. Since the Red
Army was then bound for Berlin
ind to finish the war, the
liberated Americans and other
pnsuiicrs iiuciaitru ai 1-in m , 1
ivalde were allowed their choice
of going to the rear or marching
with the Russian armies.
Most of the liberated prisoners,!
all who were physically able,
elected to march and fight. All
who asked for arms were outfitted
by the Russians, and
fought on with them to Berlin.
Interviewed at Shallot te Saturday,
Sgt. Redwine said, "We
received the finest treatment
and the utmost consideration
from the Russian soldiers. I was
with them ai little over a month.
They were in the field to take
Berlin and finish off the war.
Naturally, they had no time
to stop and treat us as guests.
(Continued on Page Four)
Returns From
6 Years Service
Young Waccamaw Township
Man Soon To Receive
Honorable Discharge
After Long Service
Cpl. Hampton E. Leonard, son
of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Leonard
of Ash, has returned from overseas
and is now at Fort Bragg,
awaiting the honorable discharge
to which he is entitled by reason
of his service.
Cpl. Leonard has been in the
army six years and for the past
thirty-one months has been serving
overseas. He fought the battles
of North Africa, Sicily, Belgium,
France and Germany and
? -HI 4 .. a/.?,lnk
came tnrougn wiuiuuu a
or bruise. ?
Last Thursday Cpl. Lcoijard obtained
a 24 hour leave from Fort
Bragg and rushed home to see
his parents and other relatives
for the first time in several
years. He was accompanied by
two friends who were overseas
with him. They stopped at the
home of his sister, Mrs. Bennle
Russ, at Longwood. His mother
was there alone, the rest of the
family being away at work. It
was a happy reunion between mother
and son and the happuiess
increased within a short tie when
Continued on page four
\TE
1 News paper Ii
Southport, N. C., V
Home From
NEW YORK.? A view
| helicopter showing the Trans
j Mary as she sailed up New 1
ing more than 14,000 U. S.
battlefields. This was the shi
Day.
Curing Tobacco
In Full Swing
(Farmers Up Against Trying
Period With Tobacco
Crcp Ripening Fast And
Labor Supply Short
Tobacco growers of Brunswick
county are now passing through
the most trying period of crop (
production, the cropping, curing:
and grading of tobacco. The situ-1
ation is calling for the utmost
exertion from all classes of avail-!
able labor. Men, women and1
children are working from dawn j
to dusk and in many cases the j
men, and also many women, are,
laboring through the nights, j
watching the tobacco barn fires |
and maintaining such even tern-1
nnratnres as the StaLTCS of curing I
may require.
j "It is a busy time for us, you
lean take that from me," said
one grower who had to be in.
town Monday, much against his \
j will. He was called in as a wit-1
| ness in court when he woultl:
'have much preferred staying at!
home and helping with the to- (
bacco.
| Next week, with more and
'more of the crop ripening and no|j
extra labor being available, the j i
tobacco growers will face an even I
j worse situation. There is much i
(work ahead between now and the l
I time wehn all of the 1!?45 crop I
(will have been harvested, cured 1
jand sold.
\v. BTkezuh_ _
| Fishing piers at the parious t
J beaches along the Brunswick J
coast would do more than any-p
thing else toward attracting at- 1
tention, bringing new people and
holding the interest of those who
already know the good fishing J
and bathing along the Brunswick i
coast. There should be fishing I
| piers at Caswell Beach, Long
' beach, Holdcn's beach, Shallotte 1
Foint, Seaside and other places. '
They would pay the owners for
the money expended and be of ]
enormous am in me general development.
The end of the war should see
the beginning of a general deve-'
lopment, especially in farming, in'
J the coastal sections where there j
is now much unused land. Bruns-i
jwick, with its great uncultivated
areas, much of it have rich agricultural
soils, should. prove es- '
peci&lly desirable to r.ew home- [
i
{ \
P0R1
i A Good Coi
Wednesday, July 4th,
The Wars
from a U. S. Coast Guard
i- Atlantic liner S. S. Queen
fork Bay, June 20th, Carrytroops
back from European
p's first visit here since V-E
Reports On 7th
Due On The 7th
It is certain that Brunswick
county made its overall War
Boml quota, with some to
spare, but there" still ' ovists
doubt if the folks on the
street and in the homes?
those who buy or should buy
"E" Bonds?made good. There
Is a ]>ossibility that the "E"
quota is still short.
County Chairman LeRoy
.Mint/, stated Monday that war
bond issuing agents had until
Saturday of this week, June
7th, to make their final report
on the sales. This means that
"E" Bonds can still be bought
this week and be counted in
the 7th War Loan.
Stanley Brothers
Doing Fine Work
Colored Farmers Of Shallotte
Community Doing
Fine Cooperative Work
On Farms They Own
When they brought * their big
?rain combine, pulled by a large
lcavy duty Farmall tractor to
the Reynolds Blacksmith shop for
repairs on Saturday, a reporter
for the pilot was moved to ask
the Stanley brothers about their
farm machinery and farms.
(Continued on Page Four)
??????
WING
Reporter
seekers who are interested in
farming and at the same time
want to be near good hunting and
fishing.
Former County Fire Warden
Dawson Jones has us all wrong.
He came in Monday and made
limsclf about the umpty fourth
man to bawl us and the paper
out, allegedly for negleeting North
Wcat township. He asked us to
kindly remember that Norah West
pays more taxes than any other
township in the eounty. "Yet,"
said Jones," wc are treated as
jf we are not a part of Brunswick
county. We are getting fed
up with it." Ia may be true,, as
Mr. Jones alleged, claimed and
deposed, that the paper has not
given North West as good news
service as it has been given some
other sections of Brunswick. This,
however, has beer, entirely due to
Continued on page two
r pil
nmunity
1945
Fiser Ra
Big Docket Up /
In Court Monday
Eighteen Cases Heard Or
Were Continued At This
Week's Session Of Brunswick
Recorder's Court
A big docket, involving cases
called for varied offenses, was
awaiting Judge John B. Ward
and Solicitor J. W. Ruark at ]
Monday's session of the Recorder's
Court. The Minute
docket shows the following mat- |
ters and the disposition made of
them.
Morton Holden, assault with
deadly weapon, continued to July
9th.
Perry M. Spivey, speeding and ,
no operators license, $15.00 fine
and costs.
Charlie Royal Waddell, carry- v
ing concealed weapon, $25.00 fine ,
and costs. (
Edward J. Beskie, speeding,
judgment suspended on payment .
of costs. \*li<
Alex Porter, no operators license
and passing traffic on v
curve, continued to July 9th.
Murphy Blackman, no chaffeurs
license, judgment suspend- '
ed on payment of costs.
Harvie Olden Johnson, improper |
lights, judgment suspended on 1
payment of a fine of $5.00 and j
costs. '
Charlie Carney Stewart, speed- 1
| ing, $10.00 fine and costs, fine 1
! remitted. 1
Sidney Holden, assault, con- '
tinued to July J6th. i
Mildred Evans, assault with
deadly weapon, continued to *
July 16th. <
Ethel Evans, trespass, con- 1
(Continued on Page 3) (
T nn M HP
iuu iiiuui iiaiiua
For Masonboro
New Hanover Lads Wallopped
For Fourth Sffaight
Time Sunday, Coming
Back For More Today
Before the fine battery work
;of Hanna and Webb and general-;
; ly good support of the whole I
team, the Masonboro Baseball!
Club met its fourth defeat of the
year at the hands of the Southport
Coast Guards here Sunday
! afternoon. The score was 13
to 0.
Hanna has pitched his team,
mates'to victory in all four of
I the encounters with Mason-1
boro. In the last three games,
two o f which were extra inning
affairs, he has allowed only
two hits. Blackie Webb, behind ^
the plate, has given him able
support.
Smarting under the repeated'
defeats by the Southporters, the|
Masonboro boys are returning j
this afternoon, the 4th of July,'
for a fifth game. Hanna and
Webb are again scheduled for
the battery work for the locals a
and a bang-up good game is ex- }
pccted as Masonboro, with an
eye to vcngenance, is said to be,
reinforcing its team for this 5th t
game with some tip-top players.
jThc affair is being staged at '
the old base ball park at 3:30'
this afternoon.
!
Farm Committee j:
Is Discontinued j
a
Farm Transportation Orga- s
nization Discontinues Op-|r
erations After June 30th j
d
The Brunswick County Farm a
Transportation Committee has for j c
the past two years been serving j
farmers ill the county in connec-' t
tion with the Office of Defense '1
Tiansportation and Price Admin- t
aeration in nanunng applications c
for off-highway gasoline, trucks f
and tractor conversions from steel
to rubber. This program was de- 1
signed in an effort to eliminate
any holdup in the wartime food
production job and beginning July
1 all functions of this committee
will be handled by the Office of
Price Adminstrution and the Off- .
ice of Defense Transportation. It
is hoped that the efforts of all
will, in the end, accomplish that
which we look forward to most?
(a lasting peace.
farmers should take note that 1
jail problems that arise in the fut- 1
jure in connection with these pro- c
grams should be taken up direct-11
jly with the Office of Defense Tra- f
j nsportation and Office of Price c
Adminstration. The agencies will 1:
continue to render to farmers the1'
same helpful services that they
have in the past. j11
Members of the committee were: II
(Continued on Page Four1 1
?
,0T I
$1.50 PER YEA> PUBLISH!
ge In Ja
Now Surveying (
Caswell Beach
Development1
New Owners Of Valuable '
Nearby Beach Property
Started Surveys Monday
Morning
PROPERTY ATTRACTING n
GENERAL ATTENTION o
tl
Unusual Among Beaches In o
That It Faces Prevailing 0
Summer - Time South d
West Winds
c
While they do not expect to be- 0
;in anything like the complete J
levelopment which is their ulti- b
nate plan until the lifting of 8
var-time priorities, the Goldsboro '
nterests who bought the Caswell b
Carolina lands at Southport last b
veek are losing no time in set- b
ing about such development as
:an be done at this time.
On Monday a surveyor began f
vork on the tract, running off|1(
ine? and nreDarinsr for mapsi'1
;hat will give the new owners
nore concrete ideas of what they 0
lave and what they can do with S
t. Some building lots are already b
reing sold and inquiries are be- s
ng made about others. An- t
louncement of the purchase of n
;he property had hardly been e
nade before prospective buyers C
)f building lots began to mani- o
"est a keen interest. I
It is understood that the buy:rs
of the property would like to
eventually construct a hotel, 1
Davilion, and fishing pier, as part t
>f their plans for general im- s
movement. Lights from two d
sources, the Southport city c
riant and the REA are already t
ivailable. Two miles of paved o
-oad runs through the property, ?
vhich, with its east-west shore t
ine, is probably swept by more c
jooling summer-time breezes than I
iny other Jjeaqh along the At- t
antic coast. I
Caswell Beach, by reason of
'acing southward, is very unusual
imong beaches along the Atlantic a
:oast. Most of them face east- a
vard or northward. With Cas- 1
veil facing right out on thejf
>cean in the direction of the pre-1
... l J_ I
/ ailing summer wniua uie ucawi i
s unusually cool, pleasant and I ?
las a very wholesome freedom! ?
rom insect pests, j I
Storm Damages jj
Generally Small"
Hood Results To Crops1'
From Heavy Rains Appears
To Outweigh All f
Storm Damages lj<
Is
Reports from many well in-1 s
ormed sources ir> Brunswick
ounty are indicative that dam- ,
.ge to crops during last week's '
xccssivc rainstorm was slight,
rlany good farmers incline to
he opinion that the storm dani.gc
in various spots was far out- j
(alanced by the general good rc-Jg
ulting from the rain. ; j.
Along the coast below South- j ?
loit, especially in the Shallottc j
irea and west of tlierc, very! n
ittlc tain had fallen In weeks. ^
,"rops were suffering badly, rain a
vas needed in practically all sec-1 j
ions of the county. While manyip
armers could have wished for|y
ess than the damaging seven1 fi
ind a half inches which fell, all j
ee m to be now viewing the good j,
esults. ti
Some early corn was beaten
lown rather badly, but has been!
traightening up well. Most late |
tops were greatly benefited,
dost of the damage was to tolacco
and other crops growing on
owlands. With these lands unler
water for several hours the
rops growing on such places suffered
from scald.
v
Participated
In Battles"
. is
Lcland Man Fulfills Duty .
1n Fircroom Of Destroy- 3
er In Pacific
v
ABOARD A DESTROYER IN
TIE PACIFIC ? Arthur H. v
Trnmoo Ts 01 fivaman
, iivtuotT, ut.| ?x, iiiyuiaii, mob
lass,. of Leland, has helped I v
nalntain his ship's efficient per- j
ormance through four major I.
ngagements in the Pacific. He J/
s stationed in the forward fire-;
oom. 1
Since he came aboard this ship
n November, 1943, Thomas has 5
larticipatcd in the raids on the
(Continued on Page 2) v
HHHHH
V I
4
'
Most of The News
All The Time />jjj
lD EVERY WEDNESDAY
p Cities
jreat Superfort Raid
Leaves Wall Of Fire Devastating
Great Cities Of
Nipponese
LAST INDIES SPLIT
BY BARNEO INVASION
'resident Truman Makes
Personal Delivery Of San
Francisco Treaty To
Senate _ >
1
MANILA ? Australian troops
lade a successful major landing
n Balikpapan Sunday in the
hird phase of a triple invasion
f Borneo. MacArthur, in personal
ommand, said this secured the
omination of all of Borneo and
plit the East Indies, virtually
ompleting Allied tactical control
f the entire southwest Pacific,
ap resistance was aggressive as
augh infantry and tank troopers
mashed ashore in the suburbs of !
he Far East's greatest oil center
ehind most intensive pre-invasion ,,
ombardment yet unleashed in
his theater.
GUAM?The greatest wall of i
ire ever unleashed in warfare j
japed through four of Japan'a
-nportant industrial centers today
ursting from a record 4,000 tons >
f incendiary bombs. Nearly 600
luperfortresses showered fire
ombs with "good to excellent re- J
ults". The most clearly visible
arget was Ube, Japan's great
nagnasium-producing center. The
ntire waterfront was aflame.
)ther aerial blows west headed
n Kure, Shimonoseki, Kumamoto,
J be. |
WASHINGTON President
human truvels familiar path to
he Senate, this time as Ambas"-j""
4-lnofr ri'Q n f froti. _ )
auui iui iiaiivna uiab nuim *?w j |
lom from wars. The President <!
hose to deliver personally the j
reaty of San Francisco, a pact
if 50 nations outlawing war. The
Senate, eager to act on the treay,
dropped all other duties to ac- !
:ept the document from the Chief '
executive at 1 p. m. and hear
lis. 600-word talk ir^ behalf of [j
irompt ratification.
* *
WASHINGTON?Expected Senite
approval of James F. Byrnes
is Secretary of State will givo
Truman five cabinet officers of >j
lis own choice.
MACKINAC ISLAND, MICH?
Sounding keynote of the 37 annual
overnor's conference, Governor
lerbert B. Maw of Utah declared ij
he American public does not
/ant federal regulation of its life
/hen peace comes, Maw, chaii* t'
nan of the conference, led off
alf a dozen speeches dealing pri- \
larily with asserted agreement j
f states to cope with postwar
econversion. i ,
SAN FRANCISCO?Fires raged j
ive hours in Kure, Tokyo ac- 1
nowledged, in a broadcast today
aying fire-bombing cuperforts
wept over naval base city.
In AnnuaLTrip
To Old Home Town
*
-I
Mrs. James E. Wilson and MisT
laude Galloway, natives (if
outhport who have been residlg
in Washington, D. C., for !
lany years, have been spending '1
lie past week here t tile Camcla
Inn, and visiting old friends.
Irs. Wilson and Miss Galloway
re sisters, daughters of the late
,ewis A. Galloway, who was ';
ostmaster at Southport for 30 "
ears. Following his death his >'
amlly moved to Washington and
Irs. Wilson and Miss Galloway 1
ave since made yearly visits to
he old home town.
Ration Pointers j
PROCESSED FOODS (Blue
tamps): T2, U2, V2, W2, X2 jj
. . now valid . . . expire July 31.
Y2. Z2, Al. Bl, CI . . . now |
alid . . . expire Aug. 31.
Dl, El, Fl, Gl, HI . . . now
alid . . . expire Sept. 30.
Jl, Kl, LI, Ml, N1 . . . now
alid . . . expire Oct. 31.
MEATS & FATS (Red
tamps): K2. L2, M2, N2, P2 1
. . now valid . . . expire July jj
Q2. R2. S2, T2, U2 . . - . now ' |
alid . . . expire Aug. 31.
V2, W2, X2, Y2, Z2 . . . now W
alid . . . expire Sept 30.
Al, Bl, CI, Dl. El . . . now D
alid . . . expire Oct 31.
SUGAR: Sugar stamp No. 3#
. . good for' 5 lbs. . . expires
tug. 31.
SHOES: Airplane Stamps Ns,
, No. 2, No. 3. now good.
FUEL OIL: Periods 1, 2, 3. W
, valid for 10 gallons each. .f
GASOLINE: A-16 coupcnsU
alld June 22 through. Sept 2L