PINNER jtT.HP.AV_ .tiihiiav ?in"er L Stanley given "J Sunday turned into a full ,1aa:'-r.teur-.-n. Among those ' ? u:v M' and Mrs. Shel ^niey. S.':.i!lotte: Mr. and '"j; a Low is and family, '. j 0 M'. atul Mrs. H. M. J;,i s n. Southport: Mr. ,!rs. c. N" Puncan. Tabor r Vrs. t ?? Hughes, Keith yv Mr an i Mrs. O. L. Stan ji- Stanley. Miss Jeanette at his home Stanley and Miss Orbie Ann Stan ley. Ash. YISIT ASSEMBLY j A group from Southport Bap-' tist church, headed by the pas-! tor, the Rev. H. M. BaKer, visit-1 ed the Baptist Seaside Assembly Grounds at Ft. Fisher for a pic- ] nic supper and mid-week services Wednesday. About twenty persons made the! trip, including the following: Miss Annie May Woodside, Mrs. W. G. j Butler, Mrs. E. H. Smith, Mrs.! SERVICE our motto ASK. FOR WHAT YOU WANT. If wo don't have it, we will get it for you. The of our business has been due to satisfied fus ODELL BLANTON General Merchandise SUPPLY. N. C. GROCERY NEEDS Whether you are a member of one of the1 isv farm families in our community, or fcether you are a vacationist spending a few ,vsin Brunswick, you will find our store a! iodplace to trade?and we will appreciate: mr business. R.GALLOWAY General Merchandise SUPPLY, N. C. W. F. Jones, Mrs. Robert Carson, Misses Anne, Rebecca and Kath erine McRacken, Mary Elizabeth Lupton, Gloria and Delores Hew ett and Latitia Hickman, Elliott Hickman, Harold Spencer, Hubert Livingston and the Rev. and Mrs. Baker and children. PERSONALS Mrs. Jack Hickman has return ed from a 10-day visit with her sister in New York. Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Marsh of Macclesfield are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wescott anrt other rel atives here. ' Misses Ann Horner and Rachel Garrison, of Burlington, have been the guests of Mrs. C. C. McCuis ton at her cottage at Caswell Beach. Mrs. Grace Jones, Mrs. Eloise Chapman, Miss Lula Marie Swan and Miss Loraine Hewett return ed last week from a trip to Phil adelphia and other points of In terest up north. Mrs. W. S. Wells, Jr., will re turn home Friday from Colum bia, S. C., where she went to attend the graduation of her bro ther, Eugene Savedge, from the law school of the University of South Carolina. George Gregory, Sr., Miss Christine Gregory, and Nick Gre gory, of Pittsburgh, Pa., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Gregory, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Wilson, of Atlanta, Ga. have returned home after spending two weeks - here with iMatives. Mrs. Victor Bartels, and son, Richie, returned home Friday af ter spending two weeks in Salis bury, Md., with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Follett. News From Dosher Memorial Hospital Clyde Galloway, of Bolivia, en tered on Tuesday as a surgical patient. Mrs. Sadie Cumbee, of Winna bow, entered as a surgical pa tient on Tuesday. George Whatley, of Southport, spent from Tuesday until Sunday as a medical patient. Henry F. Mintz, of Bolivia, was a medical patient from Tuesday until Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Reynolds, of Bolivia, announce the birth of 'uyTEX /4n,-? IA8Y POWDER *17^ Soothes '?# BCRN SKIN 79c wr? . 8A3YOIL and cleanses "to SORN SKIN 79c ?wtex ? CREAM Wtsand refreshes ."?"?hy.pak. gift $2.49 / Keep Your Baby Free from irritations EVERY mother knows how difficult it is to keep baby free from the discomforts of skin irritations. But now, thanks to scientific research, there is a brand new and effective answer to the problem. Playtex Baby Oil, Powder and Cream do miracles for a baby. All three soothe and protect new-bom skin! They antiseptically guard against diaper rash, chafing and chapping. Rich with lanolin, Playtex Baby Oil and Cream are dclicately scented, as is the Powder itself. We predict that mothers will reach for these remarkable prepara tions for their own personal use! Mail and phone orders filled. SHALLOTTE TRADING CO. HOBSON KIRBY, Prop. SHALLOTTE,* N. G. Festival Entry TOOCOA (COZY) POWELL, daughter of Attorney and Mrs.. Walter H. Powell, Sr. of White-1 ville, who has been selected by1 merribers of the Whiteville Post) of the American Legion as their representative in the Sixth An nual Tobacco Festival for the tri county area of Columbus, Bruns wick and Bladen. a son on Wednesday. Miss Mazelle Ludlum, of Ash, entered on Wednesday as a medi cal patient. Hugh Gray, of Supply was a medical patient from Thursday until Saturday. Tom Tyler, of Southport, en tered on Thursday as a medical) patient. Mrs. Berlyn Lancaster, of Sup ply, entered as a medical patient on Thursday. Mrs. Mamie Cumbee, of Supply, entered on Thursday as a medi cal patient. Lacy Tripp, of Ash, was a med ican patient from Thursday until Monday. Mrs. Hazel Willetts, of Bo livia, entered on Friday as a medical patient. W. R. Mintz, of Wilmington, was a medical patient from Fri day until Sunday. Baby Dewie Lovette, of Sup ply, spent Friday until Monday as a medical patient. Mrs. LeMay Hayward, of Golds boro, entered as a surgical pa tient on Friday. Nj. M. Barnhill, of Southport, entered on Saturday as a medi cal patient. ,' Mrs. Susan Evans, of Supply, was a medical patient from Sat urday until Monday. Mrs. Elfride McKelthan, of Bo livia, entered oh Sunday as .a lttedifcal patient. Albert White, of Ash, entered as a medical patient on Sunday. War Hero To Be Buried la Tabor Body Of Robert C. Byrd Will Arrive Wednesday And Funeral Services Will Be Held Wednesday TABOR CITY, Aug.^ 2?The body of Robert C. Byrd, .Who was killed in military service- during the war, will reach here Wednes day and will be kept at the Lew is Funeral Home until the hour Df the funeral. The last rites will be held at St. Paul Methodist Church on Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock with the pastor, Rev. H. F. Sur ratt, and Rev. J. F. Coble offi ciating. AMUZU THEATRE SOUTHPORT, N. C. Admission?9c and 25c Two Shows Nightly? Starting at 7:30 Except?SATURDAY? Three Shows Starting at T P. M. Thursday, Friday, Aug. 5-6? "ESCAPE ME NEVER" ERROL FLYNN and IDA LUPINO ALSO?Selected Short Saturday, August 7? "SIX GUN LAW" CHARLES STARBETT SMILEY BURNETT Also "POWER BEHIND THE NATION" (Extra Special Short) Monday, Tuesday, Aug. 9-10? "WHERE THERE'S LIFE" BOB HOPE, SIGNE HASSO Also?"Wigwam Whoopee" C#rt. Wednesday, Aug. 11? "SECOND CHANCE" Kent Taylor, Louise Currle KENT TAYLOR and LOUISE CURRIE ALSO?Chapt. 2? "Adventure? Of Frank and Jessie James" COMING "T H E MACUMBER AFFAIR" Gregory PECK, Joan BENNETT Stabilization Members Need Cards To Be Eligible For Parity Prices If Original Is Lost, Duplicate Should Be Obtained Im mediately From L. T. Weeks In Raleigh; Parity Prices Available Without Card "Farmers are .urged to have j their stabilization cards with | them at sale time or they will' not be entitled fo the parity pri-! ces this season until renewing I their membership," according to J Dave S. Neilson, sales supervisor of the Whiteville tobacco mar ket. At a recent meeting held in , Lumberton to familiarize the J warehousemen, supervisors, and other interested parties, of the changes in the Flue-Cured To bacco Stabilization Corporations policies for this season, It was learned that farmers must be more careful with their member ship cards if they are to be granted parity prices. Neilson stat ed that if a farmer did not have his card at the time of the sale of his leaf he would have to rejoin the stabilization corpora tion by paying another $5 for membership, unless he obtained a duplicate from Raleigh before selling. . The memberships that were issued last season were good for three years if the farmer still has his membership card. If not, he! must appty to the stabilization of-1 fice in Raleigh. Any grower who has misplaced his card may re ceive a copy of the same by writ ing to L. T. Weeks, Box 1672, in Raleigh, North Carolina. A new membership card will be issued for $1 from the stabilization's of fice in the capital. I "If any growers who expect to j sell during the first week on any market do not have their mem bership cards they must obtain them before they sell and pay the $1 fee for re-issue, or pay $5 and join again," stated the su pervisor. The Whiteville market will open on Tuesday, August 3, and all growers are urged to have their membership cards with them in order to avoid any un lecessr.ry delay in their sales onj he local market. Immi grants admitted to the ] iJnit'ed States rose from 38,119 j in 1945 to 108,721 in 1946. Abraham Lincoln's parents had between 700 and 800 acres of and when he was born. si: Over 5 million Maytags sold ? far more than any other washer. Come In ond plots your order now ROBINSON'S. SOUTHPORT, N. C. ' If fertilizer for a tobacco crop I contains too much nitrogen, the | crop may be large but the leaf | may be rough and of poor quali !* _ _ The average output per man hour in the United States has In creased an average of 18.5 per cent a decade in the last 30 years. LUBRICATION... THAT'S THE SECRET OF THE LIFE OF ANY CAR OR TRUCK ! . . . and that's our business. Let us take care of this important detail for you regularly. - WILSON ARNOLD U. S. No. 17 Supply, N. G. CATHOLIC INFORMATION Must We Believe Our Priests "I can subscribe to most Cath olic beliefs," a Protestant gentle man recently remarked, "but I'll be darned if I'll believe them be cause some Catholic priest tells me I must." Must! What slaves that word makes of us; but are we not willing slaves when it is truth we must believe. The school child must believe j that there is such a place as In dia?that there was such a per son- as George Washington?that there will be an eclipse of the moon on a stated date. So also must you and I, not because we have discovered these things for ourselves, but entirely on some body else's say-so. But religion! Haven't we soul freedom? Can we not believe as I we like? Well, hardly. If we! are thinking men we must believe | in- an intelligent, creative God. If i we are Christians, we must be-| lieve in humanly inexplicable mysteries?a Trinity of a single Divinity?a Virgin Birth?a Man who was God?a Resurrection from the dead?an Ascension In to Heaven. We could not discover these things for ourselves. We J must believe on the say-so of some person or some book. And so with the Catholic and (lis priests. The priest doe$ not, ind cannot, create religious truths; but he teaches them with the same God-given authority with which the Apostles taught and converted the world 1900 years ago. "Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations . . . teaching them to ob serve all things whatsoever I have commanded you, and lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.'Amen" (Matt 28:19-20, King James' Version). And that is just what the Cath olic priest has been doing for nearly twenty centuries?teaching ill nations all things whatsoever Christ commanded; and so he will continue to do, with the promise of Christ being with him, even to the end of the world. Must we believe our priests? We must! Por us it would be" unintelligent to do otherwise. If It's anything Catholic, ask a Catholic! For further Information on this subject write for a free pampfet to P. O. Box 351, Whiteville, N. C. Pd. Adv. Furniture Sale 10 PERCENT REDUCTION All Sofas and Upholstered Chairs... Breakfast Sets!! New Shipment CLOTHES CLOSETS $49.95 & $54.95 WASHING MACHINES HOT POINT Washing Machines with Automatic Timer. THOR Automatic Washer with Spin ? Dryer .... THOR Washing Machine With Wringer. Other Outstanding WASHING MACHINES . . . INCLUDING MAYTAG - SPEED QUEEN - APEX We Invite You to Come In and Inspect Our Appliance Line! A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD Any ITEM YOU DESIRE EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME Linoleum ? Radios ? Small Kitchen Appliances ? Sinks? Hot Point Water Heaters ? Speed Queen and Hot Point Ironers ? G. E. and Proctor Irons ? Paint ? Bicycles KING'S ELECTRICAL SALES CO ' SHALLOTTE, N. C.