Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / May 6, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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j PUBLISHED THURSDAYS The Danbury Reporter H. E. PEPPER Editor and Publisher 1,. VANCE PEPPER Business Manager Issued Thursdays at Danbury, N. C., and entered at the Danbury i as second class matter, under act of Congress. National Advertising Representative New York : Chicago : Detroit : Atlanta : Phila * . ————— Danbury, North Carolina, May 6th, 1943. Rationing Reports show that many mer chant* are contused about how to count and how to group the point rationing stam) s they collect from their customers and pass on to their suppliers. The correct procedure is very simple. To ai-.i Merchants, the OPA lias issued the following guido: Senaratc all stamps that expire on a single date: 1. By color. 2. By denomination. Blue stani|i h example: All (I, H and J blue sunups must be spent by June 111 or tit posited by Jan.? 2(i. 1. Keep those stamps from all others. 2. Place 1 point stamps in a separate envelope. 3.Place 2 point stamps i n a separate envelope. •. 4. Place 5 point stamps in a separate envelope. 5. Place 8 point stamps in a separate envelops. Place blue stamps of fn? salhe point value only in the same en velope. Check the color. Check tht uenomination. Caution: Not more than 500 stamps may be placed in one envelope. Suggestions for small stores: If you put only small numbers of stamps in each envelope you can care for small orders quickly. Red stamps: All E, F, G, H, J and J red stamps must be spei.t by June 10 or deposited by June 20. Bear in mind the fact that red atamps dTEer from blue stamps. Red stamps have a weekly begin ning date for use by consumers, hut a number of them have the same expiration date. Place all that expire at the same time iu envelopes in the same way as de-' scribed for blue stamps above. Seal each envelope firmly. This protects your account. Write on the front of each envelope. j 1. The commodity which the stamps buy. 2. The point demination of the stamps. 3. The number of stamps in ! the envelope. 4. The total point value of all stamps in the envelope. ' 5. The name and address of the business. EXAMPLES BLUE STAMPS: Processed foods I ' 2-point stamps 100 stamps Total —2OO points John Doe Grocery ' 511 Main Street CenterviUe, N. c. RED STAMPS Meat , 4-point stamps 180 statnps • , • % I Death Of Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Co* Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Cox, aged j 68, died early Tuesday morning after a heart attack at her home j Kernersville, Route 2. Surviving are her husband, S. L. Cox of Kernersville, Route 2; eight sons, George Cox, Walter Cox, Charlie Cox and Dillard Cox ! of Kernersville, Route 2, John j Cox of Pinnacle, Route 1, Robert | L. Cox oi Walnut Cove, Route I,' Private Jesse A. Cox of the U. S. Army an I Chester Cox of Greens- : boio; three daughters, Mrs. Flora Hicks ol Wcstfield, Route 1, Mrs.; Ida Haigewood of Winston-Salem, > Route 7, and Mrs. Nannie Sheltou of Stokesdale; four brothers, Johnny Essick of Kernersville , Route 2, Eli Essick of Jamestown and Lee and Charlie Essick ol I Pilot Mountain. Route 2: one sis !ter, Mrs. Paulina Joyce of West- ,field; and 22 grandchildren. ; Naval Recruiter To Be Here May 7, 8 A Navy reci uiter will be in Danbury at the Postoflice Friday and Saturady. May 7th and Bth ' to enlist men for the United' I States Navy, j If you're seventeen years old. jor between the ages of 38 and 49,! it will be your privilege to voiun teer for the Navy. Don't hesi tate. Investigate the Navy today while there are still openings for you. Remember, see the Navy Recruiter in Danbury at the Post office on May 7th and Bth. Don't j delay. Join the Navy today! — _ > Fulton to Washington —Ray to Danbury Joel H. Fulton, Jr., who has been chief clerk of the Triple A here for a year or more, resigns, and goes to Washington to accept a position similar to that 1 . led here. j It is stated his place here will 1 ;be taken by young John Ray of j , Walnut Cove. 1 I - j The ancient Greeks and Romans painted signs on walls in public places as a means of spreading news. Sister's suitor-Junior: It's cruel to tell you, but your sister prom ised to become my wife at the party last night. Will you forgive me for taking her away? Junior—Aw, shucks! That's what the party was for! Total—4oo points J. H. "Batt Market 414 Water Street • ' Macob, Gfc. • • « • THE DANBURY REPORTER Fellowships Available i At State College For Woman Graduates Raleigh, May 4."-Twenty fel lowships valued at approximately ; $1,200 each are available at N. C. State College for selected young women who have graduated from college recently or will graduate in the class of 1943, Prof. L. L. Vaughn, dean of the School of Engineering, announced today. The fellowships were provided by Pratt and Whitney Aircraft, of I Hartford, Conn., to give thr ! young women a special cours? I | preparing them to become engi i neering aides in ' the company's • Hartford plant, where the famous ; Wasp and Hornet engines are ! built. The course will last 48 I , i weeks. i Under the plan, each fellow will receive tuition, books, fees, room, ! board, laundry and an allowance !to cover incidental expenses. Women completing the coursy • satisfactorily will start work *n a salary ol' $l4O monthly on a 40- : hour week, with time and a halt for oveitime. At the end of six j months they will be eligible fo - ; a raise. As engineering aides, they will assist engineers in a vital part of the victory effort. Later, they will be integrated with the war development of Pratt and Whitney in the rehabilitation of • the world's airlines. Dean Vaughn said the course* will commence with State Col lege's regular summer session June 16 and will end June 1, 1944. The course of study, de signed specifically for graduates of liberal arts colleges, will in • elude mathematics, physics, ! chemistry, engineering, drawing, mechanical laboratory, metallurgy and industrial engineering, i Qualified young women were in-: vited by Dean Vaughn to write for further information to Prof. 1 R. B. Rice, of the Department of! Mechanical Engineering, which 'la sponsoring the program. The only school ia the South j selected for the fellowships, i State College was chosen because jits graduates in mechanical engi neering have proven their merit as successful engineeers with Pratt and Whitney. Other schools participating jr. the program are Minnesota, Wis consin, Illinois, Ohio, Syracuse, Bucknell, Connecticut and New Hampshire universities. Pratt and Whitney Aircrat has been beveloping the training pr.>- gram since the war emergency began. ' A fellow, while Bingle, was in the habit of going to a certaiu restaurant and ordering honey for his waffles. After he got mar ried he took his wife to the same restaurant, ordered waffles, and not being served honey too with them, said to the waitress: Wbere's my honey? Waitress—Oh, she doesn't work here any more. Fathers who did not marry off their children before they were! 18 were fined la Canada's early l days. ' News of OUR BOYS ! • I Mr. and Mrs. Dan Cardwell j (Mr. Cardwell was reared in Dan bury) have been notified that their son Staff Sergeant Reginald T. Cardwell is now in North Af rica. He e*tered ttie army it Sept., 1940. Pfc. John DeWitt Vern*» of I eastern Stokes has been promoter j to hia present rank. He is sta tioned at Camp Breckenridge, Ky„ j and is married to the former Miss I i Avageme Hodge of JSttndy Ridge, i Lt. Clilord K. King of Camp! Stewart, Ga., has recently been transferred to C*mp Davis, N. C., | where he is attending the Anti aircraft Artillery School. Sergeant Raymond M. Sisk, soil i of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Sisk oi'j Danbury, has recently won his present rating. He has been in the army five months and is now nt Camp Davis, . , u Private Theodore E. Tuttle, son Mr. and Mrs. li. W. Tuttle oi Walnut Cove, is spending a 19- day sick ieave with his parents j after having been on duty in India, for nine months. Private Tuttle has been a patient at Halloran General Hospital, staten Island, N. Y., for the past two months. Odell W. Hill, son of Mrs. Min- Jnie Hill of Walnut Cove, has been I promoted to staff sergeant. Is i stationed at Camp Breckenridge, jKy., has been in the army six j nonths. Private Morris Yarborough. who has been in the army for the past 7 months, stationed in Texas, i has been honorably discharged from the service due to his age, and is at his home at Piedmonc ■ Springs. Pfc. Posey Rhodes, formerly of Beckley, W. Va., but who is now stationed at Semour Field, Golds boro, wa s here Tuesday visiting ■ his brother, Hollia Rhodes. Pfc. James E. Bullin is a son of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Bullin of. Walnut Cove. He has recenth been promoted to his present rat ing, is now stationed at Marine Barracks, Charleston, s. C. Recently promoted to pfc. is Henry M. Duggins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Duggins of Walnut Cove. He volunteered in the army June 16, 1942, now stationed near Naahville, Tenn. Pfc. Paul E. McKinney has just been upped to his present status. He ha 8 been in Hawaii since May, 1942, was trained at Fort Bragg, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. McKinney of Pinnacle. Lester Bullin i 0 a son of Mr "d Mrs. S. J. Bullin of Walnut Cove. He ha„ recently been pro m ° te d t0 Pfc. Entered the amy ( AUg. 11, 1941, now at CamjN jHton. California. *en .f Mr. U j The Army Buys Fighting Foods i The Quartermaster Corps ha* 'definite standards for army raeni3 1 according to Mary I. Barber, ! Food Consultant to the Secretary iof War. The food provided is j called the "Army Ration. " To laid in making up this "ration", lists of foods are set up us guides for the purchasing fyjent to foi j low. These include foods neces sary for complete daily meals. Milk and its products, buttei, cheese and ice cream, are found jon every list, along with meat and jftsh, cereals, eggs, fruits and veg letables. Master menus are made iup for months in advance from - ■««.. I the available products. These master menus are put out each month and in every case at least a half pint of fluid milk i together with additional milk in | concentrated forms are included I for each day. Butter is specified i i'or each meal at the rate of 7 I 'pounds per day for each hundred | men, oi- more than double the av ! ernge rate of butter consumption Jby civilians. In addition, dairy II products are being served fre jquently during the month in th; ■ j form of ice cream, cheese, cocoa s | made with milk, and in other i! ways. _ r ' : j "The superior food values oi j j milk including calcium, riboflavin i and proteins are important fac ), tors in maintaining our armed ! forces in better condition than ' any previous war," states Mrs. i -1 Ethel Austin Martin, Director, i Nutrition Service of th'e National s Dairy Council. "Intelligent use , and distribution of the best avail : able food supplies to the Army is l proving an important factor in , Mrs. Robe Hooker of King, has ; recently been advanced to seaman , second class. He entered the I Navy February 26, 1943, and was trained at Bainbridge, Md. fil«»(• v «» Howard Glenn McKinney, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E., McKinney of Pinnacle, has been promoted to pfc. He entered the army Nov. ,17, 1942, received training at Saa ' Antonio, Texas. Corporal Raymond Duggins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Dug gins of Walnut Cove, has notified hia parents of his safe arrival ov erseas. He volunteered Feb. 20, 1041, was trained at Camp Bland ing, fla. ♦ AT FIRST SIGNOFA^^m^^B 6*6 TABLETS. SALVE. NO)! DROPS ft ** aer for Ga* w Smack, (¥&>J !»««■■«>, "lltriial \ tj 'fl After" and Celd Dtatreaa? I I "*J It not. whr not? Plaaiaai. i prompt in action. effective, i Thirty casta and Uitr MK.IS NERVINE DOR relief from Functional Nap * voua Dlaturbaneaa an eh aa Bleep 1 l»a»nm. Crank 1 ncaa, KldUbtlhr. II Nervosa Headache and Naneaa la , dlcaatlon. Tableta W# and TM. ' 1 Liquid 2i« and lI.M. Baad dlrao l tiona and Me on!." aa dlraetad. ASlis LF. Y Anti^^V^m Pain fill often raiianrai «-d ■ Haadaeba. Maaralar Faiat \« er r«»ti«aai MaMkir 1 Patau —l* Or 114, IK /"wA' ' forUM. CM tbara a» ramt /T£-X [ , dnt iMt, Bead dbeatfeaa f*y \d Thursday, May 6, 1943. Mrs. Verda Hall, 69, Passes Away Sunday 1 Mrs. Verda Hall, aged 69, of Lawsonvlile, Route 2, died at her home Sunday following an illness of four days i Survivors include the husband, H. A. Hall of Lawsoimile; one daughter, Mrs. Bill Martin, Rural Hall; five sons, C. C. Hall, High Point; Carter and Edwin Halt, Lawsonville, and Richard and Dennis Hall, both of Bassett, Ya.; 1 two brothers, T. L. Hart, Law-, sonville, and C. M. Hart, 'iville, Va.; and oix grandchildren, ■. I * Card Of Thanks I I ' I wish to thank the members of . i • the King Observation Post for 1 their heroic work in manning our . ■ ■ post in all kind of weather, day 1 and night during the period we I i were activated. I also wish to '.thank (lie citizens of King and ! the surrounding community for '; llie many ways in which they ': helped to make our work more I I enjoyable. r . - • THEODORE NEWSI'M, Chief Observer, King Ob ! servation Post \ l i . ; i'| keeping our fighting forces in top j orin." * " /j STUART ;| THEATRE Virginia I a Friday and Saturday, May 7-8 : "DOWN RIO GRANDE WAY" Chas. Starrett—Russell Hayden j —Also— l "BROOKLYN ORCHID" ; Vm. Bendi.v—Marjorie W'oodworth i ■ Sunday and Monday, May 9-10 "JACKASS MAIL" 1 Wallace Sftrry— Alarjorie main ' Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday, May 11-12-18 i "CROSSROADS" Was. Powell—Hedy Lamarr ALSO NEWS j Keeping house, helping take care of tha family.—yoo would realize that business girl* an not the only ones who seme timee get Headache and Tired Aching Mjiscles, We home girls often work just as hard and have just as many Headaches, Juat aa many Stomach Upsets and get juat aa Tired. About a year ago, I first used ALKA-SELTZER I find that it eases my Aching Head, takes the kinks out of Tired. Aching Muscles and brings relief I when I have Acid Indigestion. The family says I ana a lot easier to lire with since I hare known about Alka-Seltzer. Have you tried ALK A-SELT ZER? If not, why don't you get • P«iage today? Large £ack£s ft*. 9nmD package 90*, also by the glass at Soda Fountains.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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May 6, 1943, edition 1
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