Newspapers / Person County times. / Oct. 1, 1936, edition 1 / Page 5
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> a'■ lalP HpHB «**’* > ,£'£%&** ' 3 "' Mlmj, k, JiHHi p»i?ne «5? “" . . • i\Hil Hfiikifl ;' •*: - . *: ' k' »'•' ’Hi CHANCELLOR HITLER DEMANDS THE RETURN OF GERMANY’S LOST - c ?:L ch w Ch r^ ,or d r nded * e « ««:o..l«l possetsione of Germany and. indS b, ‘ ,U . u Y"' Her ' '" ‘ hf ,ormer «he Treaty of Versaill^: “Germany," 1. cfied. “wiiL never reUnnni.'h Wer<S a Po ortioned T; -/* - cofomal demir d » qn ™ “ er ,nßlslance on a eolation of her i.." !• ' '"'■ ' - ■ ' : : ' ■: w. >% ' \ s\ . ? ’ 4S) nevvh week ' A BATH-ROOM INTRUSION BRINGS QUICK RESENTMENT Every day this English trainer takes his big charges for a dip at the seashore. When he tried to join them at their ablutions, however, one of them tossed him shoreward with a flip of the trank. PERSONALS Mr. H. J. Hester and Miss Frances Hester spent Wednesday in Green ville, N. C. where they carried Miss Huldah Hester to enter E. C. T. C. Mr. Victor Satterfield and Mes dames Joe Gussy and W. K. Moore spent several days in Charlotte this week buying merchandise. Mr. O. T. Kirby spent a few days this week in Charlotte on business. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walls and daughter, Nancy Lee, spent Sun day here with relatives. Miss Dorothy Warren, of King’s Business college, Raleigh, spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Warren. Mrs. George P. Mallette, of Con cord, N. C., sifflnt a few days here this week visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Pulliam. Mr. and Mrs. I. O. Abbitt and Misses Nina and Dorothy Abbitt spent Saturday in Lexington, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Carver and Misses Lottie Bailey, Ora Latta and Helen Latta spent Sunday in Dur ham. Mr. L. T. Heffner, of Maiden, N. C., spent several days here this week visiting friends. Miss Maria Garrett, of Durham, spent the week-end here, visiting relatives. Miss Naomi Blalock, of Willow Springs, N. C., spent the week-end here visiting relatives. Mrs. Dave Gilliland returned to her home here Sunday after under going an operation at Watt’s hos pital, Purham. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Crowder, of Henderson, spept Sunday here visit ing relatives. Mr. Bernard Whitfield, of Dur ham, spelnt the week-end visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Whitfield. Miss Mary Jones, of King’s Busi ness Collegfey Raleigh, spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Jones, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Jones, of Statesville, N. C., spent the week end here with relatives and friends. Miss Priscilla Wilson, of Elon College, spent the week-end here with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Bowen, of Durham, were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. W. H. Harris. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Long, of Bur lington, spent Sunday visiting in 5 the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. ■ Foushee. > Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Malone spent . Sunday visiting relatives in Farm : ville and Williamston, N. C. I • Mrs. A. A. Couch, of Durham, is spending a few days here visiting ; Mrs. B. B. Strum. Mrs. R. M. Beasley and Misses 1 Delia and Bea Beasley, of Apex, . scent the week *fjnd here visiting Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Strum. s Mr. Phillip A. Terry was a Dur > ham visitor Saturday. TWO SPEAKERS AT CENTRAL SCHOOL Rev. West Present on Sept. 21 and Rev. Lee on Sept. 28. Both Talks Enjoyed. During the past two weeks Cent ral school has been greatly favor ed by having two visitors to con duct the devotional exercises for chapel. Each visitor brought very , worthwhile and inspiring messages. On September 21, Rev. W. F. West came for his first visit this fall and everyone was delighted to havte\ him for he always brings some good message in the form of an object lesson and even the small children were able to understand and appreciate its meaning. By the use of the parts of a small ] clock he taught a wonderful lesson j of cooperation. May we think of the parents asj: the works, the child as the face, i and tHq teacher as the hands of a! great clock. If there is perfect co- j operation of all the results will be glorious. Last Monday, September 28, Mr. Lee, pastor of the Brooksdale Methodist church was with us, and in his usual efficient way, brought teachers and pupils a very impres sive lesson on “Obedience as the Means to Complete Happines and i Success.” He urged all to fully and completely love and obey parents and teachers in every duty request ed of them and in that way he as sured of success in every phase of life, and through this success will certainly come complete and full happiness. If we stop to think we will agree with Mr. Lee in the fact that abso lutely no degree of happiness can be ours through disobedience. Every hearer enjoyed and appre ciated these helpful lessons brought by these) two friends of our schools and we are looking forward to their next and continued visits. PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. Mrs. H. L. Umstead will leave to morrow for Richmond, Va., where she will spend several days. o Pests who paste advertising stick ers on windshields and litter auto mobiles with circulars will be sub ject to fines ranging from $2 to ?50 under the provisions of an ordin ance re passed by the city commission of Chattanooga, Term. o Ivan Jones of Allerton, 11.1, sifter divorcing his wife hired her as a cook and housekeeper on a written contract guaranteeing her a week ly salary. —o Judson Waltou, 58, rural mail car rier of Spring Valley, 0., boasts that in his thirty years of service he has outlasted 60 horses and 19 automobiles. High Tobacco Prices WKSSR&fajBm It is GREAT news for everyone that tobacco is bringing higher prices this year. It means increased prosperity for all and to many tobacco growers it will mean an opportunity to enjoy the comforts and conveniences of CHEAP ELECTRTC'ITY, which rural electrification is rapidly making available to farm homes. As rapidly as possible, and circumstances permit, the service facilities of this Company are being extended into various rural communities, thus opening the way for thousands of rural homes to enjoy the many and varied uses of CHEAP ELECTRICITY. Carolina Power Gr Light Company ELECTRICITY IS CHEAP ENJOY MORE OF IT LEAF FREE FROM NICOTINE IS MADE German tobacco dealers state that there is practically no nico tine-free tobacco left from the 1934 crop, and that the 1935 crop now undergoing fermentation will not be available until late in 1936. Prices obtained for nicotine-free to bacco averaged between RM 1.00 and RM 1.20 per German pound. The German pound equals 1.1 American pounds. —o Morris Saches of St. Louis was freed from a speeding charge when he complained that the policeman had to borrow his pencil to make out a summons. ;- *J §gfr>: w r £> \K\\ h v* hi U HARVARD’S 3UOTH BIRTHDAY lames Bryant Lunant, I’resnlcitt an 1 host to visiting scientists from all over >!:? 'va'-Vi. You Cannot Down Facts And it is a fact that the Roxboro tobacco market year in and year out has officially averaged with the highest. And another thing; Wilburn & Satterfield does not play second fiddle when it comes to quality merchandise. Good Clothes* Good Shoes, Good Hats, Good Shirts and just the kind of thipgs you love to wear. It will pay you in the long run to sell your tobacco in Roxboro and trade with us. TRY IT. WILBURN & SATTERFIELD IT WILL PAY YOU TO TRADE WITH US TRY IT. CANDLING IS USED T 0 DETECT EGGS NOT GOOD FOR FOOD Makes it Possible to Detect Eggs Containing Blood Spots. Candling consists of holding an egg at an angle of 45 degrees, large end up, and twirling it before a light which is placed behind so that it will shirts through a circular opening; an arrangement that vir tually constitutes a candle, states a writer in the Los Angeles Times. [ By looking at the egg toward this | light, working in darkened quart ers you can determine the interior quality. You can check the size of eggs unfit for food. The air cell, the shadow of which you can see when candiing, is an air space usually found at the large end of the egg. It is about the size of a dime when the egg is cooled. Since the egg shell is porous, evap oration occurs inside the egg and the air cell increases in depth as, the contents of the egg decreases i.i JI volume. o Renew Yoilr Subscription to the j Person County Times CHEAP ELECTRICITY brings to the rural home, as well as the urban home, a new era of BETTER LIVING, making possible the enjoyment of such conveniences as Electric Cooking, Water Heating, Refrigeration, etc., at a cost much less than that of old-fashioned methods. * CHEAP ELECTRICITY brings to the farm a practical means of modernizing operating methods —of saving time, labor and money and of increasing the produc tiveness of c-ffort, reducing operating costs and pro moting larger profits. CHEAP ELECTRICITY brings to the rural home, as THURSDAY, OCTOBER IST, li'36 Y ARDLE Y Bv Aanninimimt 72 Shopping Days Before Christmas Thomas & Oakley Druggists Pay Your I Telephone Bill || By The 10th
Oct. 1, 1936, edition 1
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