The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 02, 1945, Image 5
FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1945
THE NEWBERKT sui*
m—
RED CROSS QUOTAS
Ward
Ward
Ward 1
Ward 2
Ward 3, No. 1
Ward 3 No. 2
4
5
Oakland
Special Gifts
City schools and teachers. .
Organizations
Helena
College
Colored
Business committee
Prosperity
Little Mountain
Pomaria
Peaks
New Hope Zion & Pressley
Mt. Pleasant
Maybinton
St. Phillips
Jolly Street
Johnston
Mt. Bethel Garmany
Hartford
Silverstreet >
Chappells
Bush River
Kinards
Jalapa
Whitmire
Long Lane & Beth Eden ..
$ 200.00
400.00
225.00
800.00
200'.00
1300.00
500.00
3750.00
400.00
50.00
10.00
150.00
900.00
2000.00
1000.00
500.00
300.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
40.00
150.00
40.00
40.00
76.00
125.00
250.00
225.00
250.00
40.00
50.00
3700.00
40.00
Home Demonstration
By ETHEL L. COUNTS
The week of March 3rd to 11th is
a time when 4-H Club members sre
called on to rededicate their heads,
hearts, hands and health to victory.
The war tempo has speeded up, the
production of war materials is on the
increase. Many deferred farm work
ers are being drafted which means
fewer left on the farm to raise the
food that is badly needed. This
critical situation presents a chal
lenge to the remaining members of
every farm family. During this
week we should check up on the ef
forts they have made and pledge and
anew with particular reference to
the 4-H goals.
This is an opportune time for
friends to encourage young people
in planning constructive ways of
helping to take the place of those
in the armed forces by producing
needed food supplies for our fight
ing men on all fronts.
Farm boys and girls have helped
produce or we would not be as far
along in the war as we are today.
The vegetables grown have made it
possible to bring vitamin-rich food
to our service men in all comers of
the world. The job ahead calls for
the full use of everyone’s resources.
It will be a gigantic task. It can
be done with the spirit rural youth
has manifested in the years since
the war began.
WANT ADS
FUL - O - PEP - FEED—Start your
chicks off right with Ful-O-Pep-
Starting Mash. Give your laying
hens a trial sack of Ful-O-Pep
Laying Mash. R. Derrill Smith,
Wholesale Grocer, Newberry, S.
C. 2t
TRESSPASS NOTICE—All hunting
or otherwise trespassing on the
lands of Mrs. Pat Mitchell or Mrs.
Claude Summer is expressly for
bidden and will be prosecute under
the law. 31-3t
BUYING PECANS—All sizes, any
amount. Market prices. R. Der-
rill Smith, Wholesale Grocer. New
berry, S. C.' 2t
BUYING RABBITS—All sizes, any
number. Market prices. R. Der
rill Smith, Wholesale Grocer, New
berry, S. C. 2t
LOST—War Rationing Book No. 3
issued to C. A. Force. Finder
please return to the War Rationing
Board or C. A. Force at R. M.
Lominac) Hardware on Main St.
WE WILL BUY—Your burlap sacks
or any kind of old rags, also scrap
iron and other metals. See W. H.
STERLING.
TRESPASS NOTICE — Trespassing
any form—hunting, hauling wood,
fishing—is strictly forbidden, on
the lands of the undersigned and
any violation will be prosecuted.
Signed: H. O. Long, B. O. Long,
J. G. Long, A. P. Werts, T. Blair
Boozer, Gv.y Boozer, J. H. Bow
ers, S. L. Porter. tfc
AT FIRST
SIGN OF A
ic
O'*®
“666
Cold Preparations as directed
LOANS
ON
REAL ESTATE
AUTOMOBILES
AND
PERSONAL PROPERTY
NEWBERRY INSURANCE
AND REALTY CO.
NED PURCELL, Manager
TELEPHONE 197
Exchange Bank Building
Newberry is Askedlo Raise $18,000
in the Drive now Under Way
The Red Cross is at the Side
of YOUR Boy
Reserve All You
Can out of
Today’s Pay
Envelope*
OVER THERE AT HOME
A SURGICAL DRESSING’S life begins in a Red Cross workroom
and ends in a medic’s little jungle clearing in the Philippines, in
these pictures. More than two billions of these dressings have been
made by Red Cross volunteers, in all parts of the nation.
Someone Will
Call on You
Be Ready!
Newberry
WILL
do its part.
AS TROOPS were unloading in an early invasion of the Philip*
pines, this Red Cross field director set up a coffee and doughnut
anteen and with the hot java and sinkers cheered fighting men only
a few hundred yards away. Bullets flew as the coffee brewed.
.
V '
* i*
«
;
x 1
1
a , 1
JUNIOR REIr CROSS gift boxes help wa>-racked children over
seas forget the horrors they have seen. These American Junior Red
JCross members of Whittier school in Flint, Mich.,work by production.
line methods to fill their quota of boxes.
KANSAS CITY TO THE MIDDLE EAST by way of the American
Red Cross. These pants and the shirt came from Red Cross volunteer
sewing rooms in Kansas City, and are being fitted on a pleased little
Yugoslav refuge by a Red Cross civilian relief worker.
This Message Made Possible by the Following Firms:
J. DAVE CALDWELL
Real Estate
SQUARE GROCERY STORE
Frazier Lominack
LIPSCOMB MOTOR CO.
Studebaker Sales and Service
C. D. COLEMAN
Pure-Oil Products and Accessories
GILDER & WEEKS
The Right Drug Store
CAROUNA REMNANT CO.
FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO.
HOME FURNITURE CO.
W. H. DAVIS & SON
STOKES* DRUG STORE
T. ROY SUMMER
WELLS THEATRE
BLEASE & GRIFFITH
BOWERS INSURANCE AGENCY
RITZ THEATRE
SEARS ROEBUCK & CO.
NEWBERRY MONUMENT CO.
‘ JOHNSON-McCRACKIN CO.
NEWBERRY CREAMERY
NEWBERRY INS. & REALTY CO.
REAGIN’S SHOE SHOP
G. B. SUMMER & SONS
COCA COLA BOTTLING CO.
L. A. WILSON
W. E. TURNER
SOUTH CAROUNA NATIONAL BANK
B. C. MOORE & SONS
MAXWELL BROS. & QUINN
R. M. LOMINACK HD WE.
FENNELL’S JEWELRY STORE
T. M. ROGERS & SON
THOMAS & HOWARD
CARPENTER’S
WHITENER LUMBER CO.
ODORLESS CLEANERS
a
SMITH’S CUT RATE DRUG STORE
DAVIS MOTOR CO.