Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Nov. 10, 1944, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f t to. f J( . i et Co. W tt'4LL'.( '3 . tt a. 4. civ: Mr::i implln's Cr:'jr i y F.loro v k . 3, r;. c DIAMONDS ' 7ATC:.l:3 " MATCH ASU JtMEUJ I r rAiRi o v - . , ,B N U H A A I U . f 6a!?n, a' certain Marin platoon m gtvm t . t . ? out a ip pocket whrch-was Impeding- the ad it , 4 , hmI fchy, quiet Noraum Araenanlt, aa lt j i t i froia Lowirnoo, Him, wm a member of ihta U I.- . t ) e J wen Imbedded m a deep erevtee ta the fata e a ., i-ft ei. tying fat a prone position, they opened ap 9 Ce 1". u.-. 1 a t ." i av ( and Us u tealrs t?at . Seas ponUoa, . ' carbine, sttuv. i tj l . i the aet that 1 f m-t.i L j 1 t . Jir;LA Ai.ik-1 V7laia J". Hf&ey Jr.'a TIiJ lit f.d a fr it 1 1 (4) Twenty feet oat ta the tidewater, Anenanlt stood emf and ' t$aa pumplnf bullets into the ererlee. Fifty enemy can turned kia ftra and hundred of enemy bullets went slnftaf tewavd him, t-&iinf H the surf aboat him. (5) While Anenanlt carried eat tfrm aarit,' ono-man manenrer, his buddies scrambled front behind the beeldor. On by one, they began to creep ta safety atop the eiur, while the Japs concentrated their fire an Anenanlt. () Out of aaunanitlon, Arsyanlt sloshed through the water ts the Marines sKU behind tie bC- : I Won ella as he could ar3 v 1 1 (7) With all the men a f; ' lira. Ordered to eeme bar'i M for the beach, Jap bsTete V 1 -had been cleaned out, Marines f hero's carbine sprawled a t'-e e ettea to fcaow prove. Miner ij. 1 1 li t tuti jsancse a s'sniia ar, j i & v.iena uia"---j , Hit fr? card. Warvi" t- units of we Ad s A. 1 ; -r's f -X carrier U-1 t tomei at iJ oyer y r ' e. L a t In. 1 ! at "It nes, SC? V fcw.t t iry tar; ts of a ,.iios in the days - I : in the right ur: i i jit t tarborjand ar- nounced his resignation from, his ' Turkeys for the hoidays' have office, of festive October 3d and already been shipped to service- gave no reason for his action. He men and women in the more re-1 has held the office for two or motg war theatres, reports USDA. j three years, havine suceeded Mr. i nntrol nv th sola nt .-1 .. i u wj. I ----- i r ioyu xway, wno iieiu uie lor a number or years, his suc cessor has not been appointed. I Lt4 V..OM C::;!i Czzrt ihsctrock - PoinU Tile Terra Cutto ripes Glass Lime .Cement Crick , Plaster Alphclt Shintes And All Kind of Kill ZoaVmj critical repair parts for track- r t n r-.- laying tractors has been relaxed .1 I . f T i , by the WPB. Csu Ue V-.l fc-l - D. F. GRADY H!fJ. ' MAGAZINE COf I'EST ' The Sophomore Class of the B. r. Grady High School in a recent magazine contest sponsored by The Curtis Publishing Company, sold over $1,000 worth of maga- over C300 worth won First Price, , Bulova Wrist Watch. War Bonds and third prize winners respect ively. - The commission received by the class will be used for the Sopho more and Senior Banquet and the Building fund.. : The Class was divided Into two teams. Coolidge Turner ' was cap tain of the "Reds,'' and Margaret Jean Harper of the "Blues.1 Climaxing the exciting race, the Heds" gave the "Blues", the win- '"V'rArZJT hing side, a weiner Toast at Max- SiwJWd wu' Mill, Thursday night. Oct lace andEvelyn Kornegay. second . M and 'students were Dresent. During the recent War Fund Drive our class exceeded our go a) of twenty dollars. Our Class Officers are: Wilbur Eubanks, Pres.; Gaynelle Stanley Vice-Pres.; Elizabeth Grady, Secy. Margaret Jean Harper Reporter. The Sophomore-Senior Banquet chairmen is Alice Rogers and Cool idge Turner, and is sponsored by Mrs. A. Davis. - NAVY WANTS AIRCRAFTMEN Th Navy is in need of combat alrcrewman. It was announced re- cZZv. our a f7V I cii&smiu-MuvtspmiMiirCl v 11(1 uu. LJ Li li-.. ji-jLili , 'tvdy Was Oi the "Bandwagon" Sweet potatoes must be harves ted now. or producers may suffer a heavy loss from the first light freezes. , - i ; Stocks of canned evaporated milk shows a moderate decline. i WALLACE ev. YC i .IH YOUR BUSINESS 1 I -I TS 10tf AND WEU f ew . v i BOSTON, MASS-Protesting eommunist interference m the com Inc presidential election, these pickets struttad their stuff in front ol Symphony Hall while Comrade Eari Browser, Communist leader, wai addressing- the premiere of the musical revue "FJJ.B, Bandwagon.' The picketcers were members' ef Women's political dubs-who had mad futile attempt to have the shew banned. cently. Men of 17 are elgible te apply. Successful applicants are rated as 3rd Class petty Oficers, and are awarded ''Aircrew Wings" "No. Just a single kiss." -"No, that he gave the maid." "That you gave your husband T" NOTICE TO DMLIQTJENT TAXPAYERS OF MAGNOLIA! ' To had better see Jake Home and settle your back taxes at onoe r bm or my lawyer will Jump on yoa with? hetk feet VV.E. DELANGA, 12-11 at. T They also become entitled to the Dlkllf Mill MAYOR 50 percent flight pay supplement, for which all naval flyers are eli- BcciKirn I ACT lArcV gible. Those interested should get i-' m loucn wiia uuei Petty Officer, J. W. Brown, in charge of the Wilmington Navy Recruiting Sta-1 uun. Mayor Tom Davis last week an- Penalty My dear, what a IavpIv onati It must have cost a fortune." AT FIRST SIGN OF A r-l fN V 0 wfifili USE pold PnpaioUqnMjujJtnctfi, 4 There's a crisis fa the making! - - .. - - V" J . " If stocks pile up in fertilizer plants end agents' ware houses, the stream of supply will choke up. They must move fast or the lack of man-power will cause a para lazing shortage. " - Take the Chilean Nitrate situation for example. To supply the quantity needed for 1945 crops, many car goes must be unloaded each month at each port, then moved out by train and truck for immediate allocation. It must move out of agents' hands as fast as it moves in. If not, the choke-up starts and works back to the ports, even back to the ships. ' -iy there's a threats ne d shortnge of nitrogri, -i tt hrr1y infrrsiM war nffHs. Unless you help smash the bottle-neck by t:.'-l"z your citrate as soon r i it is offered, the shoctaje t i:l tecome acute. Thous t 'i cf tons will pile tp at ortitor on the docis i i C! " Tl:e only flacc C 12 c i ir.lrate dots yoa i y 3 ia on your crcjs.jQt rs row. ..while you r.lt e3 swff rfeh ts tVy t j t le fcjrn srshi tZts ' ..'J,mf OTfily OhM XWrongVfay! tSQAXIn CnstozzTsVxth 3ackedhrkod. Service I Hardware and Farm Implements - AUIS-CHALttlSS TCACT02S ELECTRIC WELDING, PAINT8, EOOFIVO. NAIL8. STOVES, HEATEE3. PLOW GEARS, HAKNXSA, FARM MACHINERY, PARTS AND REPAIRS . ' 1 .wrl Cc.t.3 to Sea Us i C:rr HArDv;; cc.v.?any Wc" :3r N. C. f 1 , 1 I Fee? heat prices and complete Job a Mesnsmeata, see or write)' Rev. H. J 7h!ay BeoUvBe, N. C AttemiLion ' , ..." - 1 - . . WE ARE BUYING Scrap Tobacco ' Bring or send your Tetweoo aad your Salea Oaod, We are a Registered Tobacco Dealer and are prepared ta properly enter your poundage on year alee Card. N. L.v'Dau tey REGISTERED TCHACCO DZALEZ3 DATJGfITRT8 WAREHOUSE CLINTON, N. O. OOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOCOOCOCCCww .1 W XJt W 1 J We riva hcn:r fo t!-:? n?n who vcn Vc:! ! Vrr I. V.'a rVo went to hener cur l.vr.JrrJj cf yc.rj r.-.rrs, c .a f :.-j a firester wcrf fcr l.:J.:r i:kc$, ll.s fri.J;.-.i c? C V...IJ. i V hc,-3 i'.zzi rr.zn v"l tt:a Li c ' 'a f 3 f Sferiiu Arr...:Ic3 i.'.n il.U ether cr.a 2 j , ' 1 f ; i (;. . a r.'.;r fw Tirts - U:r J Tl.rj - C r!: Kite, pt H tt W lit I ft. w a , i cur r.: evri....3 v. 3 c- 3 it li'ir-"--' i':i T.V :rr.r.-.;:vj l.ri r f.r i . ) c ) r i i. :...! I l i in r I f a
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1944, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75