Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Jan. 1, 1945, edition 1 / Page 1
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t —— 11 11 ; 1,1 *OF ALL THE TROUBLES, GREAT OR SMALL, THE GREATEST ARE THOSE THAT DON’T HAPPEN AT ALL. —KVP. A- VOL. LXIV. Larger Plant For • Locker Expected To Be Approved Heavy Fighting •In Italy Seen , By Person Man Hurdle Mills Soldier With Regiment That Took Mt. Battaglia In Italy And Held It Seven Days | Against Continuous Counterattacks. .With the Fifth Army In Italy, Cpl. Hugh J. Cates, of Roxboro is a meHtber of the medical unit in the 350th Infantry Regiment, which recently took Mt Battaglia in northern Italy and held it for seven days of almost continuous German counterattack and close-j B quarter fighting. The 350th, a unit of the HBUI j “Blue Devil” Division of Lieutenant I General Mark W. Clark's Fifth Army, was ordered to occupy the mountain and reached its objective only a short time before German infantrymen apparently acted on similar orders. The 350th got thee first and greeted the Germans with ' intense fire. It was the start of the week-long ferocious battle. P Clouds hugged the mountain top, concealing advancing Germans un til they were within a few yards of the defenders, and much of the fighting was done at a range of 50 yards. Six Germans were killed within the castle that mark; the peak of the mountain. Attacking two or three timer, daily, the Germans were supported by intense, accurate concentre cions' fcOf artillery fire. In three morning ifn'rfa.thrtiiiaeti. flamethrowers. One counterahack femporarily denied the crest to the 350th, but the doughboys regained the dominant ground and continued to hold it. _ Brigadier General Paul W. Ken dall of Palo Alto, California, commanding general of the 88tli Division, described the stand of the 350th as •magnificent" and paid fchigh tribute to the “courage and aggressiveness displayed by every Aan in the regiment." -It rained continously, and auto matic weapons were repeatedly choked with mud. These were cleaned wdth all manner of im provised devices, including the un dershirt and dress scarf of the reg imental commander, Colonel J. C. Fry of Washington, D. C. Later j I as the dense artillery concern rata- Btions on the 350ths mule-borne on the approaches became ■ highly eijJctivc, the defenders ic ■ lied heav*y on the weapons and V ammunition of the fallen. There ■ were many of them When a f heavy machinegun section dwindled f to four men, not enough to carry Bte guns and ammunition, one of ■ the survivors ran buck 1000 yards K to the rear, gathered 19 replice- Iments and returned to form a new wplatoon. Heavy weapons companies iired j light machineguns, rifle company j weapons, swarmed the crest to build up an impenetrable curtain of rapid small arms fire to fend off the j swarming attackers. One member of the 350th, uniden tified, stood up on the crest to get an extraordinary field of fire down the slope, killed 24 Germans with #an automatic rifle and two oiher.s with hand grenades. Almost the entire siege was fought at range permitting use of hand grenades by both sides, the Ger mans throwing potato mashers up hill and receiving fragmentation grenades in exchange. Three direct hits on the castle were scored by German artillery in one morning alone. |j)k 0 , Motor Club To Open Next Week Office of the Carolina Motor club, now closed for inventory, will be open again for business on Monday, January 8, according to Mrs. Lloyd Moore Crumpton, manager. The office, which is in the Tar Heel t Chevrolet company building, closed on Saturday, Dec. 30. Motorists will have uhtil February I, to secure their plates, according to Mrs. Crumpton. o While men’s work shoes went up 135/per cent In price in Worii Wai I, the rise in the present coqUirt . has been only 58 per cent, actffrd f tag to reports. . A L m J. W. NOELL, EDITOR Leasburg Road Site Selected. Building Backers An nounced. Person County and Roxboro reezer-Locker plant, plans for .. hich are now awaiting Govern ment approval, is expected to have a capacity of 350 lockers, instead of 300, the number previously plan ned, according to announcement made today by Gordon C. Hun ter, executive vice president oi People's Bank and personally in terested in assisting with the pro ject, which lias been discussed here since last Summer. The necessary sixty percent of rural subscribers has been secured and applications are still obtainable, according to Mr. Hunter, but citi- j zens who wish locker space and j have not yet signed for it are urged J to do so at once. It is thought there will be little or no difficulty j in obtaining a go-ahead govern ) inent priority for the structure, : which may be completed by this j Summer. Site for the building has already been secured on property near the Leasburg road, close to the Prison camp, and near the plant of Rox boro Coco-Cola company. Officials who are backing, the construction of the building and who will be ex pected to select operators and man agers, include D. L. Whitfield, of Hurdle Mills. Wharton Winstead and John H. Merritt, Jr . both of Roxboro. Particularly active in promotion of the Locker project have been members of the Person Grange, of which Errol Morton is master. 70-80,000 G. I.’s On Rotation List TV- _ Army is returning a total of 70,000 to 80.000 men every month from overseas, but only about 22,000 of the total are coming back undtfr the rotation plan. About 8.000 are being returned for temporary duty in the States. The remainder represents sick and wounded soldiers, and men brought tack for operational reasons. The information came from Sec retary of War Henry L. Stimson. in reply to a letter from Senator Guy Cordon (R> of Oregon. The Senator had received several peti tions from relatives and friends of personnel of the 41st Division, which has been in the Pacific thea> ter of operations more than two years . The petition pleaded that the 4ist be brought home, with regiments , having the ; ( longest combat service given preference. Mr. Stimson wrote that he saw no way in which one unit could be singled out for return without set ting off a series of similar trans fers which would "severely dam age" the war effort. o Send Letters In Projectiles London, Dec. 31 —Letters* from British prisoners 'of war in Ger many are being 'sent to England i in German V-bombs, it was reveal i ed today. After a recent attack on England by the V-bombs, ] a leaflet marked •from a prisoner! of war post" and containing two jphotpstatic let’era was found in one town. One was froni a sergeant to bis wife and the ot/her was from a sol dier to relatives. On the top #nd back of the leaf let was printed;: "Finder is Requested to cut out or copy letters printed here and trans mit to thy right address so that they ftftgf be received as early as possible.” Jury Call Heard By Fighting Seabee Asheboro, Dec. 31.—Mrs. James Miller of 423 Silver Ave., notified her husband when she saw his name listed in a newspaper as having been placed on the list of jurors fob next court session. From an advanced Naval base in the Pacific, Navy Seabee James Miller, shipfitter, 3c, USNR, replied that he wasn't quite sure how he could get back to Asheboro in time but, “if they need jurors that bad, I guess Hi be willing to .serve.” i Miller, former High Pfnnt and Wilmington Shipyard welder, also . was a popular radio entertainer ■ over WMFR, High Point, ftfore he I entered the service. lr I - ®he CourutstEtmesi OPA Inventory Reports Will Be Required Here Person Offices Makes Re quests That Blanks Be Filled And Turned In. The Person OPA office, which last week moved to new quarters in the Kirby building, next door to its old stand, today issued a statement re garding inventories required as of December 31. to be filed by Janu ary 7. The statement reads as follows: It will be necessary for all Retail ers, Wholesalers and Institutional Users (hotels, boarding houses, safes, etc.) to report their inven tories as of December 31, 1944 of sugar, processed foods, and meats fats to the local Ration Board by January 7, 1945. Bulletins and inventory balance ; sheets for use will be mailed around I January 1. All inventories are to be figured on the basis of point values as set forth in the new point chart. No. 21, which should be in the hands of tile trade by the last day of this year. The notice from the District Office states: "We cannot stress too greatly the importance of prompt action in the above matter as certain future ad justments are going to depend on the information contained in these inventory reports.” No allotments to Institutional Users will be issued until this inven tory is made as of December 31, 1944 and filed with local Boards. Persons, firms and institutions not receiving bulletins and inventory balance sheets through the mails in the next few days are requested to call the Person OPA office. o Lost Colony To face Revival Green Hopes to Resume Dra ma at Fort Raleigh in Summer If War Permits Raleigh, Dec. 31.—The Board of Trustees of the Roanoke Island His torical Association has unanimously approved and authorized the execu tion of a contract between the as sociation and the National Park Service providing for coninuance of "The Lost Colony." The play, written by Paul Green,' was presented each summer before the war at the Fort Raleigh site on Roanoke Island. Author Green, who was present at yesterday’s meeting, said that he is revising the script of the drama and hopes that it might be possible, if war conditions permit, to resume the production in the summer of 1945. Officials of the association living in Manteo were delegated as a spe cial committee to supervise and manage the property ajjd to handle claims for insurance resulting from damage caused by a hurricane last September. , The following new trustees were named to fill vacancies on the board: M. K. Fearing, Manteo; Mrs. Richard J. Reynolds, Winston-Sa lem; and J. Spencer Love, Greens boro. o Plant E Loses Labor Decision Richmond, Va., Dec. 28.—A peti tion of the National Labor Re lations Board for enforcement of its order against the Collins and Aikman Conxnation was granted todoy by the Fourth United States Circuit Court of Appeals. According to the NLRB, the cor poration had violated the National Labor Relations Act at its mill near Roxboro. N. C. Alleged violations included sur veillance over activities of employes and discriminatory dis charge of Arthur Hanks, an em ploye, because of union activities. In granting the petition and en forcing the board's order the ap pellate court held that there was substantial evidence of the board's findings in the violations. o Deposits Advance Annual stockholders meeting of Peoples Bank to be followed by a meeting of the Board of Directors, will be held on January 18, at which a report will be presented showing deposits, as of December 31, at $5,769,441.08, an increase in deposits of about a million dollars over the same date in 1943. ROXBORO, NORTH CAROLINA cMapsui, Meia r lfea>i <7a All! Joe Ellis, Jr., To Leave This Week For Saint Croix Soil Conservationist Takes Job At Christiansted, St. Croix. Joe Ellie, Jr., since May a resident of Roxboro in charge of soil conservation, will leave this week with hT family for Saint Croix, one of the Virgin Islands, where lie will be' chief in charge of soil and water canservation. The new position, according to Mr. El lis, is considered quite a promo tion. Main part of the program will be devoted to water conservation. Tlie Ellis family will have resi dence at Christiansted. chief town of the Island, where the year-round climate approaches that of June in North Carolina:. Successor to Mr. Ellis in Rox boro has not been announced, but the work will be continued under C. A. Neal, conservation aide, who will maintain his office in regular quarters in the basement of the Post Office building. With Ellis will go liis wife and three children, two sons and a daughter. It i$ expected that they will remain in Saint Croix at least two years. Ellis' work is under the United' States Department of Ag riculture, . It has been known for some time Ellis was contemplating the change, but he would make no official an nouncement of it until details con nected with moving were cleared up. It is expected that the family will go from Miami by plane Ellis is a native of Randolph County and he and Mrs. Ellis have been active in civic affairs and with First Baptist church. Saint Croix is one of three islands bought by the U. S., from Denmark. o Hester’s Gather At Home Here Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Hester, Jr., and their little son, Stewart, of Danville, Va., M-Sgt. Randolph T Hester of Boise, Idaho, and Miss Catherine Hester of ECTC spent the Christmas holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Hester, Sr. N. H. Hester, Jr., of the U. S Maritime Service has just returned from the Europian ETO. Mr. and Mrs. Hester have two other sons in service. Charles Stadman Hester. Petty Officer 2-C in the Pacific and George William Hester, Weath er Observer in the Army Air Force, at Selfridge Field, Michigan. ——o Doubts Voice As That Os Hitler London. Jan. I.—To anyone who has heard Adolf Hitler's voice for years, as I did, his early morning performance awakened grave doubts whether the man at the microphone was tile Fuehrer, according to Louis P. Lochner. If lie was, Hitler is a totally changed man. The delivery, while imitating the Hitler of olden days as far as pronunciation was con cerned, was apathetic and complete ly lacking in the old Hitler passion and consuming fervor. At no point did the speaker reach the peaks of oratorical fire which used to move the masses. The speech itself seemed to be a blending of earlier Hitler utterances, with pet phrases of Propaganda Minister Goebbels. ■ Rob seling ;an to heard His' v had Mast iusc I HOME FIRST, ABROAD NEXT MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1945 Gen. Reade Has 98th Birthday Gen, William Franklin Reade, of Mount Tirzah, commander of the North Carolina division of tlie United Confederate Veterans, obderved his 98th birthday Thurs day at his home with a quiet family dinner attended by his sons and daughters and grand children and other family mem-. bers. Gen. Reade only surviving Con federate veteran in Person coun ty, lias recently improved after being somewhat ill a few days be fore Christmas. Country Editor Gains Attention For Farm Leader Story Based On Work Done By Broom, Former Coun ty A (sent. Raleigh. Dec. 31.—North Carolina agriculture and the work of county agents has been given a boost na tionaly by an article from the pen of Roland F. Beasley of the Monroe Journal ill the magazine, “Free America." The story was based on the 37 years of work in Union County by T. J. W. Broom, veteran county agent of the State College Extension Service: who last year was honored as "Man of the Year in Agriculture" for North Carolina. Beasley pictured the many changes that have ocurred in his section since suply merchants com pelled the farmer to plant cotton and give a mortgage to cover his needed supplies; with the more cot ton planted, the better the financial risk. He quoted the growth bf lespedeza production, cattle raising, dairying, and better methods of marketing. Cotton yields have increased from about one-third of a bale of cotton per acre to more than a bale and the quality of the lint lias greatly improved. Warehouse facilities have been greatly... increased. Farmers have been assisted in controlling disease and insect pests. There ft a.: been a revolution in the social life of rural communities, through the leadership of the home demonstra tion agents. Archbishop Sworn In As Regent Athens Dec. 31.—Archbishop Da maskinos Was sworn in at noon to day as regent of Greece and to night Prime Minister George Pa pandreou and his Cabinet handed in their resignations to give tlie aged clergyman a free hand in forming a new government that will attempt to heal the wounds of civil’ war in the strife-torn country. (Damaskinos already has suc ceeded in forming a new government, according to a Cairo radiobroad cast relayed by the Belgian Leo poldville >radio.' Although Papandreou’s govem men has designed, under Greek constitutional law it will retain its actual governing powers until a new Cabinet is sworn in. It was c?VU£d that Damaskinos, opposed right - iE Hie Greel^^^Hßw'orUi. a dark didates lt ' $2.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE Hold Rites For Barber Who Dies In This City Garvic Reddick Howard. OI Aulander And Ahoskie, Dies In Roxboro From From Heart Attack. » Funeral services for Garvie R. Howard, 37. who died in Roxboro Thursday morning, wore held from Coniiarista Baptist Church near Aulander, Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock by the Rev. Lonnie Sasser cf Murfreesboro, and interment was in tlie Parker Cemetery. Mr. Howard was a former resi dent of Aulander and Alioskie, where lie worked as a barber. He had worked in Roxboro as a bar ber for the past three months. Surviving are three children. Dal ton. Bobby and Barbara Ann How ard of Ahoskie three sisters, Mrs. J T. B. Morris of RoXobel, Mrs, Wil liam Beale of Aulander and Mrs. Emmet Miz/ell? of Windsor. t Howard was found dead about three o'clock Thursday afternoon in his room at the W. Radford Gentry residence, where lie had been ill for about two days. Sheriff M. T. Clay ton and .Coroner Dr. A. F. Nichols were summoned, Death resulted from a heart attack, probably about 10 o'clock Thursday morning. The body was removed to Woody's Funeral home, where the remains were kept until Saturday morning, being then taken to Aulander. Mr. Howard was a cousin of Russell Sanders, of Longhurst, and had worked at White’s Barber Shop and at the Palace Shop. Lights Go Out In Hammerfest .Most Northern City In Nazi 1 Grip, Has No Lights. London. Dec. 31. Tlie lights have gone out in Hammerfest. Only tlie | fading glow of the fires Started by German S. S. demolition squads, and the occasional rosy flicker of 1 the Northern Lights, remained to ; break the Arctic darkness which' has now descended upon the most northerly town in the whole world. This once proud “City o' Light," ; Where some 4.000 Norwegian;, with tlie aid of modern natural science 1 and with the spirit of pioneers, had 1 conquered nature's, realm of cold and darkness and built up a flour ishing community of fishermen and fur-traders, now lies empty, with every mark of civilized living wiped , out by tlie rough hands oi the modern barbarians. Before the Germans came, Ham merfest was the symbol of man's struggle to. subdue the most stub born forces of nature.. Far back in the middle ages Norwegian lish i ermen and seal-hunters, pushing steadily northward against tlie cold aiid fury of polar storms, had dis covered here on Whale Island a j small bay. 300 miles beyond the ! Arctic Circle which could provide shelter for their boats and a land ing-ground for their catches. Gradually, a regular fishing sta tion grew Up. Then in 1787 a lew I bold men resolved to found a pc i - manent trading station there, and j Hammerfest became ,i ‘chartered market-town " At first, only a handful of people were prepared to face the rigors of the Arctic winter in so bleak and remote a l settlement. But during the nine teenth century the fishing and whaling trade grew and flourished, especially with Russia. Then i:i 1891 came Hammerfest's proudest oay. Before any other town in Europe, before even tlie great capital titles of the south, it lit up its streets with a system of electric o - Hicks, Wrenn Kirby RqiMyJifiSF' Ro -1 ‘T.jfffyflgsyfoi Roxfttno was . 'had as Relations.' ::iß9|pßiSed the individual , V* may play In it. Planned for J Thursday, January 11, j s a joint ' meeting of the Rotary and Kiwanis chibs at which siieaker will be May Knott, of Burlington, who will come < here to assist with organization of ’ a Roxboro unit of CAP, the Civil f 'Air Patrol. t Also at Thursday’s Rotary ses- E sion were S-Sgt. E. T.Wrenn and Cpl. c Harry Kirby, soldier sons and neph ews of Rotarians, who made brief talks concerning experiences in Greenland and Chicago. I Elected by unaiUmous vote as a i Rotarian of tlie Year was Karl Bur- 1 ger, honorary , member and hotel s manager-operator'. j Indian Soldier Who Wears Silver Star Missing In Action Two Men From Here Listed As Wounded In Action And Another Is Missing. A( least two Person and Roxboro soldiers have within the past few days been reported as missing in ac tion and two more are wounded, ac cording to reports compiled today. One of the missing men is St. Sgt. Elmore W. Shepherd. 20. an Indian, gunner on a P-47 and son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shepherd, of Route I, Virgilina, Va., previously listed as winner of the Silver Star award and officially reported as- missing in ac j tion over Germany since November | 20. Also listed as missing in Germany ‘since December 8. is Pfc, David C. i Polly i Walthall. 30, of Roxboro. in |an infantry unit in Patton's Third Army and son of Mrs. Pearl A. Walthall, of Charles street. Roxboro. Pie. Walthall, before entering the service in December 1942, was with Plant E. Collins and Aikman. Reported as wounded are Pvt. Tal -1 madge C. Coates, 19, on Dec. 14, and Pvt. Richmond S. Frederick, Dec. I, both in Germany. Pvt. Coates is a soil oi Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Coates, oi Roxboro, Route 3, and has been ill sdi'viee about a year, while Pvt. Frederick is a son of Mrs. Stella 1 Frederick, of Roxboro. and a brothei j of. the late Lt. W. Rausome Fred ! flick. Pvt, Frederick, according to addi tional information received by Mrs Richmond Frederick from a Red Cross nurse, was shot in the neck by a rifle bullet and was removed from Germany by plane to an un named hospital. Members of the I family said today that they feel en i j couraged by the letter from the Red I Cross nurse, Sgt. Shepherd, who received tlie ■ Silver Star award in Septembe*,-i.« one of three sons in his family now overseas, Others are Pfc. Glenn . Shepherd, 26, with an infantry unit in Germany, and Ralph Shepherd, 1 22, now in New Guinea and Austra -1 lia. A sister is in defense work at Wilmington, Del. Sgt. Shepherd entered the Army in March 1942 and has been based 1 in England since March 1943. He and his other Army brothers all at-' ' tended High Plains school. Younger 1 children, including twin sons, are at home with the family. o l Rochefort Falls To Allied Arms On the Western Front, Dec. 31. Rochefort fell yesterday to U. S. First Army troops who stopped the Germans smash into Belgium and now are beginning to put on the squeeze from three sides. Rochefort is on tlie northern tip of the German salient. Americans had hammered the Germans back 11 miles to Rochefort from their deep est penetration which had reached within three miles of the River _ • Tlie situation waa unchanged to day along tlie front'although Gross- I deutschland troops, which are Ger , many’s finest, have' been identified in Field Marshal von I salient. German troops which attacked in tlie woods three miles north of Geilenkirchen yesterdav stayed on I their side of tee lines today. Some enemy patrol activity occurred along ‘ the sector fartiMgsouth. OffkvMp Fodrap™ o " JaßjmaK week of the General the inauguration o$ JPtgg Cherry will take to Ra- public officials, in- Lt. Gov. R. L. Harris, who, end* his term of office. Sen. Flera Dt Long and Rep. R. P. Burns. R. D. Bumpass will also be in Raleigh' again in his usual legislative capac ity. o Person Lodge 113 To Meet Tuesday Person Lodge 113 will meet Tues- . day night in the Lodge Hall at 7:30 o'clock for work in Second De gree, according to announcement made today. Master is J. W. Greene and secretary is C. A. Harris. Visit ors will be welcomed. o ( QUIET NEW YEAR ] A quiet New Year was observed 1 here last night, with little, if any t in the way of celebration and festlv- 1 ity. Btores are open today, although < some public offices, including the i Poet Office and Bank, are closed. i LET US NEVER DOUBT THAT A JUST GOD, IN HIS OWN GOOD TIME, WILL GIVE US THE RIGHTFUL RESULTS. —ABRAHAM LINCOLN NUMBER 9 New Rationing Means Revision, Chiefly Meals Housewives Urged To Destroy Invalidated Stamps. Housewives are urged to destroy all food ration stamps that have been declared invalid, the Office of Price Administration, said. Use of these stamps by consumers, as well as acceptance of them by retailers is a violation of rationing regula tions. OPA said. At tile same time. OPA explain- ' ed that reel ration tokens continue , good and housewives may use them 1 for buying meats-fats. Grocers ' will continue to give them to house wives as change for tile red 10- I point stamps. Blue ration tokens, however, have not been good since October 1 and, therefore, cannot be used for canned fruits and vegetables. They are no longer needed as change for the 10-point blue ration stamps used for processed foods because poiha values for these items are set - in multiples of ten. Ration stamps which were inval idated as of 12:01 a. m.. Tuesday, December 28. 1944. and which are not good for consumer use are: Red Stamps A8 through Z 8 and A5 through P 5. Blue Stamps A8 through Z 8 and Ao through W 5. Sugar stamps 30. 31. 32. and 40. along with all home canning cou pons. out standing. Stamps continuing to be good 1 end tliu.-.i soon to"'0(4 are: , * j Red gtumps Q 5. R 5 and S 5, which ; became good December 3. In addi- , tion. five mole reel stamps To, U 5, V 5. W 5, Xs—will become good on Sunday, December" *ll' ‘tj£|MSh| J Blue Stamps XB. YS, Z 5, A3 B 2 In addition, five more f£2 ! stamps —C 2. D 2. E2, FB, r» will become good on Monday, Js#* Sugar Stamp No. 34, which 4 came good on November I*. Afl ! other sugar stamp will become goes! on February 1. IMS. •»' ”3 Expiration datjes have not hewn set lor the stamps that still M - main good. Sugar stamp No. 34 remains jMHd lor five pounds {of sugar. All Owipr ■ coupons outstanding have j celled. Another sugar stamp id''-' ~ j for live pounds! will be veflqS-'d :i February 1. 1045. Meat*. Fats •f 1 j Red stamps <BS, 85, and SI »od , for ten points facn, ccutinue val. i. I Fixe new red it a nips will beT vali dated on Suit ..ay, December/is l. j New point vain rr meat wMybo- j come effectivf Decembgrllol, j when many cut of meat 4® be ]] .returned to Ul4 rationing. Imams- II ’ ed (joint value for butter was cf- ■ iective December 26. a ■ processed rgits* And V*S*-M*s Blue stamps X 5, Y 5, A AS ■ tod cS| * BS continue to be valid Qn\Jui-» uary 1. five new Mr •: ’stdadjjL will . be validated. Fiv canned f|se- a s tables have beer to thpjra \ i r values fW-irc ’ cessed vegetables were effective at 13:01 A. Jr- December 36 . Cl||Age.s *lsea oi fo<ids lU i£ °ff^a ait4 COMP ms good for four gal- J P Me valid through March i ' “C-4” and “4tn • qtr. y. ■coupons expire December Si, 13WU "'V ' •. ;- A *fcel Oil Pertajl' 3 CWipons, good lor 19 ; gallons per. continue valid >’ ear - In .! the Midwest aad Soutli, period 3 copons, are jgggpiid. Period 1 cqpjiMl continue valid ihroughont pMnMing year. Airplane atSM 1, 2 and i || in Rook Tlllflf nj|B||| valid iu- s ' * definipp. p Has Purple rfeart 1 Pvt. .1 lhnnle W. Walk err of thly J Cuv, now with m m France, has fa'tljtfcfjMßjQl tiruli. I Heart uw«ixg,• nrntrtilliigihl'•lMbttna- 8 tion rec( n' the pi husband of mgSc::: fg of Route twotH xbn , §1 son of J. .V. Wa ,- v * - *|j more Ga. W: ; o-c/'.,,.9
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 1, 1945, edition 1
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