THURSDAY, OCT. 28, 1943 THE NEWS - JOURNAL. R.1FFORI). N. C. PAGE FIVE Persecuted "We Are Buying War Bonds-Are You?" v. - yt W - Ji , 1 I . v $1 L' ,1 1 r X . . ',, .,y, i i : S ;( i ,wA 3 t "? -7 A 'T i I.- (r. ..... &M?jfji4 if 3 'MmV'l . Fl'. Crl Funk. 26. rin-n-at', 1 1 t h riffht eye and susta' :1 a fr.? lu od left knee in Sicily. II- h i i buying War Bonds regularly. He wi'l return to civil life a sonn as hp is discharged from llalloran Hospital, N. Y. I V j r V 'i Pvt. !n :n I-Pvinson. Bil'lmorr, was sl.urlc bv Blirmicl in tile lnft shoul der at I'aierma. The fingers of h's l"ft hand are paralyzed. Whrn his fa hpr asked If he needed anylh'ng, h's son replied: 'Buy War Bonds." His father bought S1.5C0 worth. Pvt. Tho-nas DcMirea, Tren'on, N. J., lS:h Infantry Patrol, was wounded by rhrapnel at Kl Guitar, Africa, and now must wear a special brace for his left knee. He won the Purple Heart. He buys War Bond regularly and urges you to. .. lv ' i.., ,... . ., U . Pvt. Donat Cariier. Perry, N. II., suffered a fracture of the lr? above the knee in Sicily when struck by an 88 mm. shell. He wan held prisoner for two days by the Germans, trav eling In a tank. He Is a regular pur chaser of War Bonds. Pvt. William E. Morris, Long Beach. Cal., is above draft age but has seen three years of service. He lost his left leg below the knee in Tunisia, lie wears the Purple Heart and Good Conduct Ribbon and continue his War Bond purchases. j-C gin: t wasn't so long ago that Mary was playing with dolls. Now she's playing with fire, and is perilously close to the flames. The war has done this to Mary. Her father's reserve comr.iission was called up and he went back in the army. Her mother, partly for something to fill the empty hours, partly because she wanted to make with her own hands some of the weapons with which her husband would fight, got a job in a war plant. Mary was too young to get in the WACS or the WAVES or the Nurses' Corps. She was too young to get a job in a factory. The older girls looked down their noses at her when it came to invitations to the parties for service men. "To much of a kid," they said. Too much of a kid, eh! She'd show them. So.. .she is showing them. She's nose-diving toward trouble. She's out on the town. She's flirting with trouble that can wreck her whole life. There are millions of youngsters like Mary, both boys and girls. They are the war orphans who are sending the JUVENILE DELINQUENCY rate up to heart-breaking heights. You will help to keep fundamentally nice kids out of trouble when you give to your local united war fund campaign. That is one of the wise ' things about this fund. It is a sensible development to bring order into ' the raising of money for necessary war agencies and local agencies as weO, It includes USO, China Relief, British War Relief, Russian Relief and others. It is combined with appeals for Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and other agencies which help the home front to function properly; to aid the local sick and destitute, to keep fundamentally nice kids out of trouble. The dollars you give to your community's war fund, and through it to the National War Fund will go further than any other dollars you ever parted with. Their charity will begin at home; it will go to camps here in America; it will travel around the world. Give. Give generously. Add up your total gifts then double that totaJt Give once USO United Seamen's Service War Prisoner Aid Belgian War Relief Society British War Relief Society French Relief Fund Friend of Luxembourg Greek War Relief Association Norwegian Relief Polish War Relief ' Queen Wilhelmina Fund Russian War Relief United China Relief United Czechoslovak Relief United Yugoslav Relief Fund Refugee Relief Trustees United States Committee for the Care of European Children National War Fund HOKE COUNTY SOLDIERS CENTER The United National War Fund Committee Of Hoke County Gratefully Acknowledges the sponsorship of this advertisement by The News-Journal Jean Bmokfl aptly expresses the mood of "The Seventh Victim." in her make-up an shown herewith, she playing the title role in thi new spine-chiller him from KKO Radio. She is hounded by a group of Devil worshipers, whose see re U she has betrayed. Tom Conway id featured as a psychiatrist. If - ' PAUL MALLON Gives you tin: plain facts about the DOMESTIC SITUATION Read his famous column NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS IN THIS PAPER GIBSON THEATRE LAURINBURG Program Week Beginning October 28 Thursday Friday Nelson Eddy Susanna Foster Claude Rains in Phantom of The Opera Saturday Good Fellows Cecil Calloway Helen Walker Also: Chap. 5 THE BATMAN Sunday - Monday - Tuesday Princes O'Rourke Olivia DcIIaviland and Robert Cunimings Wednesday Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case Lionel Barrymore and Vann Johnson Also: Pete Smith Specialty 7th COLUMN Thursday Friday November 4-5 TOP MAN Donald O'Connor and Susanna Foster CitiTi' i in FIRE CALLS Phones: 2291 if no answer, Cal! -2631

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