PUBLISHED THURSDAYS The Da 11 bury Reporter !(. E. PEPPER Editor and Publisher L. VANCE !'• Pl'i il Business Manager baued Thursdays at Danbury, N. C., and entered at the Danburv pistoflice as sccor.d CIPSS mutter, under act of Congress. National Advertising Representative ,r-i -J — '■ New York : Chicago : Detroit : Atlanta : Phila. Danbury, North Carolina, April 29, 1943. BOND DRIVE ENDS IS EXT SATURDAY MHS (iKAC.; TAYLOR ISSfES LAST PLEA TO STOKE.s CITIZENS TO (iO OYER TMJ TOP Daar Friend: The Second War Ix>an drive i i •a! "Offenses abroad atari Mia homefront with money air! Materials. Planes and tanks that battle the Axis today, the bomb;- j that blast Berlin and send Ja; ■hips to the bottom come from the homefront. So the Secon ; War Loan is an attack on th» Axis and the Japs." Our boys are ready to go. Ar« YOU ? j Put your dollars in active serv-j ice todav. The campaign ends | next Saturday, May 1. The boys "over there" ar:> J watchin. lo see what we do "over | ! here." Will we disappoint them?. No. Stokes county will not fail to back up her fighting men. All Treasury Securities are :r.W ■ w : w. •■•-.v.- . ~, [ —' *■ .-, | I iSn Hfch. * WTt ■ ft I . ■ ./■ ■: ...: ■ • ■• ■ ■ - '-'''' ; ff Yi 'il MAGNIFY— The buying power of your nickels and dimes does seem magnified when you invest in gas and electric service. Why. an ordinary nickel will t*"st dozens of pieces of bread, make hundreds of icp cubes, nrovide gal'ons of instantaneous hot water, give you hours of radio listening pleasure, or percolate cup upon cup of delicious coffee. Yes. if you divide your electric service cost into nickels and take a moment to think of the cooking, the cleaning, the refrigeration, the iron ing and washinor. the radio entertainment, the lighting and other services now regarded as commonplace, we think you will agree that your gas and electric nickel will take on new value. REMEMBER, TOO, THE BEST WAY • TO MAGNIFY YOUR NICKLES * AND DIMES THESE DA YS IS TO PUT THEM IN VICTORY, BONDS • DUKE POWER COMPANY available in this drive. io to the bank or postoliice in your county, and invest in Victory today. Remember that currency is ? promise 011 the part of the gor t rnnient to pay WITH INTER EST. "Bonds are like Mwoy twice blessed. They btcas those who slay at home, and those who go i to the front." When the story is told of old, lot it be found on the record* that Stokos wont "orer-tho-top" 011 the homefront, just as her boys went "over-the-top" on th.» battlcfront. "They give their lives; will you lend your money? Yours sincerely, GRACE TAYLOR, I 1 ■ Chairman War Finance Committee Stokes Cty. ! Printing of the country's new ! all-purpose ration books will take ! 87,000 pounds of ink, 7,500 1 pounds of paster, half a milliou pounds of boxing. THE DANBURY REPORTER TOBACCO PLANT SHORTAGE AT KING r " ' •• • - WAR BOND SALES ADVANC ING IN KING—OTHER NEWS j I (By E. P. NEWSUM) I Take care of your War Bond obligations and when you be come disaoled they will take , care of you. King. April 29.—Norman Whit.- . has returned to his home in Nor folk, Va., after a few day's vis.. . visit to relatives here. Considerable complaint U honrd among farmers about the i shortage of tobacco plants. Evangelist Fred Garland a? Roanoke, Va., is holding a revival. here. ; M Grace Taylor, chairman , of the Stokes County War Ki nar.ee Committee, of Danburv, was here last week in interest of her work. She was well pleased with the sale of war bonds at the i • King postoflke. Joe Pulliam of the arrnc i forces is visiting relatives here. Pulliam is stationed in Pennsyl vania. j Paul Tuttle of Germanton un derwent a tonsil removal opera ; tion in the Stone-Helsabeck I Clinic Friday. Mrs. George Yelverton of Washington, D. C., is spending a ; few days with her mother, Mrs. , Virginia Pulliam, on Broad St. .1 The stork, while still on the I job, has a light report for last i week. Here it is: to Mr. and j j Mrs. Otis Edwards, a son, and to Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Ray Smith, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Kennis Pulliam of Knoxville, Tenn., are visiting relatives here and at Mount Airy. | Winfrey Gordy, who has been confined to his home on soutn I Depot street by illness, is able to be out on the street again. Mrs. J. M. Alley of Fort Bragg is the guest of relatives here. | Coy Preston of Clio, S. C., of King, is visising rel atives and friends here. I There is decided improvement jin the condition of Mrs. Hester Love, who has been quite sick at her home on Pulliam street for several weeks. Mrs. Edwin White and children > are spending a few days in Wash ington, D. C., where they are the guests of relatives. And that's the news from here. ' . i Death Of Mrs. Robert Kiser In Moore County Mrs. Robert Kiser died at her home, five miles out of Carthage, 1 at 10 o clock Wednesday morning ' on April 21. ' Mrs. Kiser, Miss Eliza Kiser be- 1 fore marriage, was a native of 1 Stokes county. The family of Robert Kiser moved from near Danbury in 1918, to Moore coun- 8 ty. J Survivors include two brothers. 1 E. W. Riser, Summerfield, and S. J H. Kiser, King; and one sister, 1 Mrs. J. C. Kiser, Rural Hall. Funeral was near the home. . i The first child born in an air- ' C plane was delivered to Mrs. T. W.:' ■vans flying over Miami, Fla., in !' M* , i« News of i OUR BOYS i Willie N. Bennett, son ef Mr. I and Mrs. J. L. Bennett of Dan bury, entered the army in Febru ary, 1942. He is now in England and has been promoted to corp oral. ; 1 1 ' i Dewey, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Corn of Sandy Ridse, entered the navy January 2G, 1943, re ceived basi; training at Bnii -1 ridge, Md. lie lias been promo; rd to eoaman second clasp, Russell, son of Mr. and Mrei. Nick Stevons of Lawsonville, ia 1 .stepped up to private first class. Received his training at Camp White, Ore., entered the s»>rvic\ in Octobar, 1942. Wallace, son of Mr. and Mr* N. A. Stevens of Lawsonville, has been advanced te pfc. Wallace entered the service in March, 1942, receiving his basic trainia,; at Fort Crockett, Tsaaa. Sam L. Robertson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Robertson of Lawsonville, has beea promoted to pfc. He entered the army in February, 1943, received his basic training at Camp Cook, Cal. James Lesly Martin, son of Mrs. J. G. Martin of Lawsonvillo, entered the army in May, 1941, and was trained at Fort Meade, Md. He has been promoted to pfc, is now stationed at Fort Ben ning, Ga. ! Ruskin Holder of King, in the r.avy since Jan. 22, 1943, has been promoted to seaman first class. He received his basL' j training at Bainbridge, Md. j Private Jasper Davis, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Davis of ; Walnut Cove, is a prisoner of the ! Japanese in the Philippines. James F. Mounce of Walnut Cove, aged 17, enlisted in the navy at Winston-Salem Monday. R. F. King was here today from j Flatshoal. His son John hae been upped to sergeant. He is in the service in Kansas. Kenneth 10. Gordon of Pinnacle has been promoted to pfc. He is now stationed at New Orleans, en tered the army Dec. 19, 1942, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Gordon. Leonard M. Gordon of Pinnacle, ao n of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gor don, has been promoted to corp oral. He is a graduate of Pin nacle high school, entered the army Dec. 20, 1942. Private first clas 8 Rupert Fulk, son of Ernest and the late Mrs. Fulk of King, has recently been promoted to his present rank. He is at Camp Robinson, Ark., entering the service in 1942. Technical Sergeant E. S. Long, son of Rev. and Mrs. E. A. Lonjr of Germanton, is spending fur lough •Wth his parents. He is p radio operator in the army air I oorps in Alaska. H« enlistee! Aa | The Price You May Charge For Tobacco Plants Important News For All Farm°r« 1 1 i The Danbury Stokes County Rationing Board hands you this ( ruling by the Office of Price Ad ministration: I. EFFECTIVE DATE: This , regulation became effective Apri . ■, 1, 1913. 1 Tl COMMODITY COVERED: ' Tltis regulation covers fluc-curcd " j tob. cco plants or seedlings of U. jF\. types numbers 11 (a), 1 1 , (b), i 'l2, 13, p.nd 14. I nr. MAXIMUM PRICED: The ■; maximum price which any seder ' of the *IKJVC named plants may ■ [ charge shall be at the rate of 1 $3.50 psr thousand plants. This maximum price shall include all I ' 1 charges by the seller for prefer . i iug the pJantß for delivery a»-i 1 i I for transporting them to the buy ' ! »« 5H • ■ TV. BVAMON: Anr Method. ,whether direct or indirect, for ; ; evading this regulation is forbid-; ! den. Specifically, sellers are for bidden to require that buyer* give '! or agree to give as part of the ipurchpse price of tobacco plants ' any interest in the tobacco to be ! i ! produced from such plants to the seller or to any person de signated by him. 1 V. RECORDS: Sellers of tobac 'l l co plants are required to make j and keep available for examinn ; tion by the OPA the same kind } of records relating to prices _; charged for tobacco plants an j they have customarily kept. These * cords are to be reserved » as long as price control remains i in effect. ' 1 A I'IIKIOUS INCIDENT Recently witnessed was an act 1 seldomly if ever seen. A cigarette smoker was finish ishing his fag with a last drag, then casually tossing it away. Later being disturbed by its smouldering, he turned to stamp it with Hf s foot when he observed the butt had actually landed on end and had burned practically up with the ashes intact. ril, 1041. H 1* Private Robert H. George, of Wesflfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. George, is in England. En tered the service May 11, 1942 was trained at Fort Bragg. AT FIRST Hk TAW' 666 TABLETS. SALVEMSE DROPS ONEIAI DAY K1 VITAMIN JskTAIUTf K?1 THINK ot it! Your min imam daily requirement* PWTjr of A and D Vitamins or of Joi B Complex Vitamins, In one KLIA A. % If pleasant tablet. Remember TjJffX \ the name ONE-A-DAY (brand) Vitamin Tablets. | y\f NbKVIN^I m n 0 TENSE ntrrct make I Ton W»k»fot. Cranky, RaatlaaaT Dr. MUlca Narrlna KtFt7 >*//« halpa to kaacn N.rroui Ba/JOy t Tenalon. G«t It at jroar drag V 1/VI atore. Road direction! and J I um onlr a* directed. ASka-Seltzer 01- WHEN Headache, MM. /& ealar FaJae sr SISpM »i I Nwralcte, DUna after I x ; If rata, Cm aa Stomach,« \ V" "Horning Afur" ItMHrn with roar worV or aitoU /) | \ yoat fun, far Alfca-geltaar. jj l | Thursday, Apr. 90, 1543 Beer License Payable Before May I—Stokies1 —Stokies Has Twenty-one Joints i State and local licenses to sell beer at retail are due and payable on or before May l. Figures, compiled by the Brew ing Industry Found:'tion's Nortli Carolina Committee, disclosed that the State Department of Rcvenua licensed 21 retail outlets in Stokes county during the cur rent tax year. There were 4,714 outlets licensed for the entrie stale during this period. Retail beer dealers pay several different licensoa — $22 to the fed > cral government, $5 to tho State, $25 to the county, and $l5 to the municipalities. The county tax is $5 and the municipal tax $5 «| for dealers who sell lieer only for consumption off ths prensisea. |Tha 1943 Legislature sruM thesn reductions. -■»•"! " t North Carolina's retail boar dealers paid more thaa SSTS,MO in license fees duseng Mis 194* : tax year. j LOST—Black and fens hinl I d-jg. Finder return to nnderaifn- I e.l and receive reward. BEN FRANK DAVIS, Danbury, N. C. Kenew Today for sl.o# ( STUART THEATRE Stuart, Virginia Friday apd Sat. Apr. 30, May 1 "RIDERS OF BAD LANDS" Cltas. starrett—Kussell llayden * • ' —Also— ; ; "WHAT'S COOKING?'' Andrew Sisters—Glorai Jean Snn.-Mon.-Tuesday, May 2-3-4 'YANK ON THE BURMA ROAD' Loraine Day—Barry Nelson A Wednesday and Thurs., May 5-6 "HER CARDBOARD LOVER" Norma Shearer—Robert Taylor ALSO NEWS f* WITH YOUR responsibilities, can you afford to let a Head ache, Muscular Pains, Functional Monthly Pains or Simple gia slow you down? Dr. Milea Anti-Pain Pills have boon bring ing relief from these common dis comforts for nearly sixty years. Countless American housewives consider Anti-Pain Fills almost as mueh of a necessity in the medicine cabinet, as is flour in the kitchen cupboard. They have Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills in the house, many of them carry these little pain relievers in purse or hand bag. They are prepared for these J minor aches and pains that some times occur in almost every family i —ARE YOU? Dr. Miles Anti- * Pain Pills are pleasant to take and do not upset the stomach. Get Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills ** at your drug store. Regular package 25 tablets 25*, Economy package 125 tablets Sl.OO. Read directions and use only as direc ted.