★ RATION DEADLINES Meats—Red: Q5-S5 expire Mar 31: T5-X5 expire Apr. 28; Y5-Z5 and A2-D2 expire June 2. FOODS.—BIue: X5-Z5 and A2-B2 expire Mar. 31; C2-G2 expire Apr. 28; H2-M2 expire June 2. VOL. LXIV. Horse Show Plans Progressing Nicely Plans for the first annual Kiwanis Horse Show are progressing nicely according to a statement by Kiwan ian J. J. Woody, director of the first event for the local club. The show will take place on Sat urday, April 7th, 1:30 to 8:00 P. M. and will take place at the Roxboro High School Athletic Ground. Entry blanks are now being mail ed out to owners of fine horses over the state and it is thought that a large number of people will bring their horses here and show them before the public. A suitable cash prize list has been made out and altho the cash prizes are not as high this year as the club later hopes to make them they are high Bushy Fork Grade Visits Places Os Interest Go To Jail. Water Plant and Courier-Times Office On Friday. The tenth grade of Bushy Fork High School spent a part of last Friday in Roxboro visiting places of interest in the city. Among the places visited were the court house and Jail, the water works and the Courier-Times office. This group was accompanied by C. H. Mason, principal of the school and Ed. Warren, prominent citizen of the Bushy Fork community. At the newspaper office they were shown how the linotype machines worked and how the paper was printed on the Newspaper press as well as other things of interest to them. Below is a list of those who made the trip to Roxboro: Lottie Hurdle, Cleo Solomon, El aine Long, Dorothy Long, Lottie Berry, Peggy Jane Warren, Carolyn Long, Mary Ruth Moore, Ruth New ton, Mary Frances Bowes, Ralph and Baynes Warren. o Ho Hew Clues In Long Case No new clues are available in the theft of the iron safe that was tak en from the North End Service Sta tion early Tuesday morning, stated officials over the week end who are interested in the robbery. The entire safe and all of its con tents were taken from the service station and carried away during the night. It has been reported that the safe had approximately fifteen hun dred dollars in it as well as valu able papers. O. W. Long, proprietor of the sta tion, has offered a reward of two hundred dollars for information leading to the arrest of the party or parties who stole the safe and is giving wide publicity to this reward in the hopes of getting some in formation in regard to the theft. Local officers are working on the case but have reported nothing yet to the public. It was evident that those who carried the safe away came in the back door but that they carried the safe out the front door. o Rites To Be Held For Infant Girl Funeral services will be held to day for Eliza Jane Vicks, five month old daughter of George Vicks and Annie Bowes Vicks of the Woodsdale community, who died at the home of her parents Saturday night about nine o'clock. Funeral services will be held at Pauls cemetery at three o'clock to day. Services will be at the grave side. Reverend W. G. Elliott will be in charge. o Kiwanians School Sextette Roxboro Kiwanis Club met last Monday night at Hotel Roxboro with Jim Long, the president, pre- j siding. Pledge to the flag was led by Tom mie Hatchett and invocation was given by Rev. B. B. Knight. The program for the evening was in charge of E. B. Craven, a past president of the club, who present ed Miss Fountain of the Roxboro High School music department who in turn presented a sextette from the high school. The sextette rend eted about- six selections that were enjoyed by thpge__nrcßent. J. W. NOELL, EDITOR enough to attract attention. It has been pointed out that the main thing that owners of horses are af ter is to win the honors in the par ticular class that they are entered in. Within a short time a list of the different events that are to be stag ed at this show will be run in this paper and at this time other de tails will be given. A number of local people plan to enter their prize horse. Several people here have horses that are rated good and it could be that a number of prizes or blue ribbons will remain here. DV. O. G. Davis has been named as veterinarian for the show. Schools Have About All Coal Necessary It. B. Griffin, superintendent of education for Person County, announced this week that the schools of the county did not have aal the coal that they needed for this school term hut that he had another car promised and that this car, if iUcomes cn time, will be enough to see the schools through the cold weather. Tar Heel Parents Seek Information On Long Lost Son Asheville, —Mr, and Mrs. Dirk Slikker of 9 Lake Drive. Enka, N. C„ tonight asked the newspapers of the country to carry an appeal on the fate of their son, Dirk Slikker Jr., last heard from in January, 1942, on Java, to communicate with them. The younger Slikker now 24. was a member of the Dutch Division -of the Allied Air Force, but the par ents have had no official report that he was killed, captured, or missing. Inquiry was been made through the Dutch and Canadian embassies in Washington, the ad jutant general, the State Depart ment, and the American and In ternation Red Cross—with no clue whatever obtained. The only information the Slikkers have received was a letter from a Dutch flier in this country to the effect that their son was one of six sent on a mission into the In terior about the time most of the Allied Forces were evacuated from Java to Australia, early in 1942. After serving in the American Merchant Marine, the young man joined the Dutch Division of the Allied Air Forces and trained at Princess Juliana Barracks, Strat ford, Ontario. In June. 1941, he sailed from New York for Java, and was stationed at the Kalidjati Airport near Bandoeng. He had expected to receive his pilot’s wings in December 1942, but his parents never learned whether he did. Greensboro College To Drop Spring i Holidays For ODT | Greensboro. —No Spring holidays I will be observed this year by the j faculty and students of Greensboro j College, according to Dr. Luther L. Gobbel, president, who has announc |ed that the college faculty, at a ! special meetipg on Thursday, vot | ed unanimously to comply with the j request of the Office of Defense | Transportation at Washington that Spring vacations be cancelled in schools, colleges, and universities which have auy considerable num : ber of students who live outside the community where the school is lo cated. u The Greensboro College faculty not only voted to cancel the Spring holidays, scheduled for the period from March 29 to April 3, but also declared the Easter week-end a "closed week-end,” which means that all resident students will be required to remain in Greensboro over that week-end and thus co operate in the nation-wide move :ment to conserve travel facilities | for the armed forces and war needs. R. L. Harris At Baltimore Hospital R. L.J Harris, president of the Roxbord Cotton Mills, is recovering from afi operation at Union Mem orial Hospital in Baltimore, Md. Mr. Harris has been a patient there for the past ten days >nd is ex pected to return to Roxboro at an early — To Sell Std —‘—WBm The Missionary' Sode! j|f§ Church will sel|.j Saturday, FetMjM ek at LcnhJ will take place at the inti w g. Clayton.