Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Dec. 17, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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BETHEL HILL HONOR ROLL Students having their names to appear on this roll have done su perior work for the third school month. First grade, Miss Marie Woody. Samuel Dickerson, Frances Parham, Rosy Lee Puryear. First grade, Miss Emma F. Lyon. James Nunn, Alvin Wilson, Lovel ien Dunn, Mary Grinstead, Rosa V iccillia. Second grade, Miss Emma F. Lyon. Ira Lee Bowes. Irwin Davis, Harold Holt, John Whitt, Gerald Wilson, Essie R. Jones, Frances Langford, Margaret Milton. Nancy Nora Todd. Second grade, Mrs. W. R. Hayes, M|ary Wiley, Snowdean Melton, Doris Clay, Madaline Winston, W. T. Walters, Jr. Third grade, Mrs. W. R. Hayes. Ruby Robertson, Margaret Carswell, Lorraine Nunn, Nannie Sue Wilson, Burley Dunn, Billie Rudder. Third grade, Miss Lucille Woody, Janette Owen, Gladys Walters, W. M. Woody, Jr., Frances Yarborough, Mary A. Whitlow. Fourth grade, Mrs. Marvin Glenn. Carrie L. Brandon, Margaret Clay, Helen Owen, Pauline Darroch, Elaine White, Bruce Perkins, Caro lyn Wehrenberg. Fifth grade, Miss Mabel Warren. Nat Whitfield, Dorothy Watts, John Holt, Pauline Paul, Nellie Lester, Leigh OBrien. Fifth grade, Miss Louise Steph ens. Eva Long, Isabelle Tingen. Sixth grade, Miss Ruth Stovall. Wiloree Woody, Christine Perkins, Gladys Dixon, Rubie Humphries, Arthur Murray. Seventh grade, Mrs. R. B. Grif fin, Janie Mae Carswell, Maggie Evans, Inez Gillis, Doris Hall. Eighth grade, Miss Ruth Starling. Carol Leigh Humphries. Ninth grade, Mrs. B. R. Craver. Raymond Lester, Mary Crutchfield, Allene Dixon, Myrtle Lester, Alma Seamster, Frances Whitfield. Tenth grade, Mr. W. A. Hough, Jr. Jennie Crutchfield, Willie Mae Evans, Emily Gravely, Louise Hall, John O’Briane Elvin Tuck, Virginia Wilmouth. Eleventh grade, Mr. A. G. Bul lard. Nellie Gravely, Huldah Hall, Alice Humphries, Elisa Wehrenberg. Improvement Roll The following students have made a marked improvement in scholar ship for the third school month. First grade, Miss Marie Woody. Thelma Hubbard, Alice Gentry, Es telle Long, Ira Gentry, Dorothy Wilson. First grade, Miss Emma F. Lyon. Marshall Blanks, Alfred Carswell, Leonard Davis, Archie O’Brien, Mary Langford. Second grade, Miss Emma F. Lyon. Edward Ramsey, Evelyn Shanko. Second grade, Mrs. W. R. Hayes. Frances Hubbard, Mary Watts, Eu nice Carver, Walter Long, Ben Ow en, Arthur Seat, Patrich O’Brien. Third grade, Mrs. W. R. Hayes. Emma Pugh, Edith Walker, Eli Cox, John Wilkins, Erward Tuck, James McCormick. Third grade, Miss Lucille Woody, Cecil Gentry, Bradley Hubbard, James Melton, James Sullivan, T. G. Wilburn, Jr., John Woody. Fourth grade, Mrs. Marvin Glenn. Mary Woody, Louise Viccillio, Edith Cox, Marjorie Stegall, Ester Solo mon, Nellie Solomon, Ruby Solo mon, Harry Brandon, Aldan Dixon, Robert C. Jones, John Murray, Bernice Wade, Rudolph Tuck. Fifth grade, Miss Mabel Warren. Sue Owen, Dolian Harris, John Poole, Leigh O’Brien, Nathaniel Call, Owen McCormick. Fifth grade, Miss Louise Steph ens. John Hubbard, Jr„ Lennie San ford, Ernest Wilkins, Elizabeth Vic cillo. Sixth grade, Miss Louise Steph ens. Aubrey Sanford, Irell Lee, Guidance. . Through the ages His emissary points onward to the light which leads to everlasting peace. Man follows, leaving earthly fruits by the wayside in the knowl edge that there is no food more divine than that on His table. Woody’s Funeral Service Is a sanctified starting point for that eternal journey. ❖ WOODY’S FUNERAL HOME “Friendly Service” PHONE NO. 2 Ambulance Service Anywhere Anytime r * mnTkH jr MM ™ f I ■ |»J: 3 — 1 1 lJ ©NEWSWEEK t FAMOUS LONDON LANDMARK DESTROYED BY FIRE At a lots, including valuable contents, of $10,000,000, the Crystal Palace was totally destroyed by London’s greatest fire in a century. Originally bnilt in Hyde Park as part of the Exposition of 1851 at a cost of $6,750,000, it was later removed piecemeal to its last location in Sooth eastern London. GOOD EGGS PRODUCE GOOD CHICKENS Some poultrymen are more opti mistic than businesslike in their methods. This is especially true of those who assemble all kinds of eggs, good or bad, for hatching purposes, said Roy S. Dearstyne, head of the State College poultry department. “You can’t get more out of your incubator than you put into it,” he declared in urging poultrymen to Bernice Sanford. Sixth grade, Miss Ruth Stovall. Carolyn Gravitte, Lonnie Pugh, William Shotwell, W. B. Humphries, Jr., OlKe Gentry, Calvin Btaswell, Lambeth Gentry, Gladys Poole. Seventh grade, Mrs. R. B. Grif fin. Melvin Wilson. Eighth grade, Miss Ruth Starling. Carrie Wilson, Wallace Oakley, Wingate Rogers, L C. Tingen, Jr., James Buchanan. Ninth grade, Mrs. B. R. Carver. Lawrence Tingen, Lonnie Shotwell, Delma Davis, Muriel Gentry, Ruth Hall. Tenth grade, Mr. W. A. Hough, Jr. Beryle Dixon, Nellie Evans, Christa Fox, R. B. Pixley. £v*L 4. 'vv;: „' Kp^ l^aKMßg@sgffsfe : : : : : a Feeling 9 \ ./' A bank account at Xmas time provides that certain satisfying feeling that makes you know that Santa will not miss your home this. year. It’s real insurance for a happy Christmas as far as material things go. Perhaps it would not be a bad idea for you to start an account for your children at this time of the year. Let them keep it and some day they may be proud of the account that Santa started. SI.OO Starts One The Peoples Bank Roxboro, N. C PEUSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. CL be more careful in selecting eggs for hatching. Hatching eggs should come only from high quality, healthy, vigorous birds. They should be normal in shape, have well calcified shells, and weigh more than 23 ounces to the dozen. They should be gathered several times a day and stored in a warm place to avoid chilling, he said, ds eggs that have chilled too much will not produce chicks. A temperature of 40 to 60 degrees is best Hatching eggs should not be kept in storage for more than seven to ten days, he added. The incubator should be careful ly cleaned, disinfected, and tested before the eggs are placed inside. Likewise, the brooder and brooder house should be cleaned and tested before any chicks are putt in tt> grow. Dearstyne advised that the brood er should be started in operation at least 24 hours before the arrival of the chicks, so as to give it time to become evenly warmed through out. Destroy subnormal or cull chicks. Do not brood more than 300 chicks in one unit, and allow a square foot of floor space for every two chicks. Watch the temperature closely; overheating is worse than a slight chilling, he warned. SOIL CONSERVING PAYS DIVIDENDS That a complete soil conservation program is practicable and will pay dividends has been proven on the farm of E. W. Wagner of the Groometown section of Guilford County. Prior to January, 1935, Wagner’s farm was being worked in truck and row crops very conductive to erosion on his sandy sloping land. An erosion control program adapt bale to the farm was worked out, including a crop rotation plan, strip cropping, retirement of steep land to pastures, contour furrowing, ter racing, and forest management, all of which Wagner has been adhering to very closely. An area of two and one-half acres on a 20 percent slope, set asidje for permanent hay crops, produced 8 tons of hay this past summer, it was reported by James M. Parks, of the Soil Conservation Service. Since Wagner has increased his livestock from 2 to 9 head, he is in creasing his hay and pasture acre age still more. He also produces pigs for market and cultivates a fi acre field of tobacco annually. Most of the crops are to be grown on the bottomlands in a definite 3-year rotation. Com to be grown on the uplands will be alternated with close-growing crops in strips. Barley is grown as a substitute for com and Wagner has 18 acres in lespedeza annually. Wagner al so grows Austrian winter peas, vetch, crimson clover, and rye for erosion control and to increase the fertility of his soil. There is a complete erosion con trol program on the Wagner farm, said Parks, and it is paying big dividends, with no greater amount of labor made necessary on the part of the landowner. o Advertise in the Times For Immediate Results FORD advances into 1937 with the LOWEST PRICE IN YEARS , and new operating economy The ADDITION of a new 60-horsepower creates an entirely new standard of engine to the Ford line for 1937 brings modern motoring economy! yon a new, low price and gives yon a The “60” engine, available in five choice of two V-type 8-cylinder en- body types, is built in exactly the same gines. 85 horsepower for maximum body size and wheelbase —to the same performance. 60 horsepower for maxi- advanced design with the same com mnm economy. fort and convenience as the “85.” And The 60-horsepower V-8 engine was it delivers V-8 smoothness at speeds up originally developed for use in Eng- to 70 miles an hour, land and France, where fuel costs are Two engine sizes—but only one car high. It has been proven there for two and one purpose—to give you more years with brilliant success. miles and more satisfaction for Now, brought to America, it your money in 1937. FORD BASE PRICES FOR 1937 9 A OA AND up 4toU Taxes, Delivery end Handling, Bumpers, Spare Tire and Accessories Additional • e • AUTHORIZtD FORD FINANCI PLANS $25 A MONTH, after usual downpayment, I buys any model 1937 Ford V-8 Car from any Ford dealer anywhere in the United States. Ask your Ford dealer about the easy payment plans of the Unirersal Credit Company. FORD MOTOR COMPANY Expert mechanics for all makes of cars. Drive yours down today for inspection. BETHEL MfiX FUTURE FARMERS DEFEAT BAHAMA The Bethel Hill Future Farmers basket ball team defeated Bahama Future Farmers 25 to 8 Wednescay afternoon at Bethel Hill in the first of a series of games sponsored by the Durham Person County Associ ation of Future Farmers of America. Robert Young was high score man Bethel Hill while A. Fowler led the visitors. James Pentecost and Willie Tingen wiere outstanding on defen sive for Bethel HilL The lineup follows: Bethel Hill (25) Bahama (8) Pixley, 2, RF A Fowler, 5 Yuong, 10,LF Laws, 2 Pentecost, 10, C Clayton Tingen, 2, RG L. Fowler, 1 Fox, 1, LG Hunt o THE DIXIE BLACKBIRDS AT HARMONY SCHOOL “The Dixie Blackbird Minstrel” will be presented at the Mt. Har mony School on December 18th, at 7:30 p. m. SPORTS AUTHORITY J‘ mm T Gould {btlow} “I LIST CAMELS as one of the necessi ties on the trail,” says this famous ex plorer. "I’ve found that smoking Camels H| ' ' is a great aid to my digestion." mHHHBPhBhHHHhHR CAMCLS COSTLIER TOBACCOS Person Motors, Inc. “Buy a Personized Used Car.” Ben Wade George Lowe Henry Gates Depot Street raURSDAY, DECEMBER I7TH, 193® ■ - ” ” ” v’A v. y r’" ■ This minstrel is under the direc tion of Sarah Hawthorne, represent ing the Wayne P. Sewell producing, Atlanta, Ga. There will be plenty of snappy songs and catchy jokes for all. Be sure to tell your friends about it. Come and enjoy an evening of fun. FORD FEATURES FOR 1937 APPEARANCE— Distinctive design. Headlamps in fender aprons. Modern lid type hood. Larger luggage space. New in teriors. Slanting V-type windshield. BRAKES— Easy-Action Safety Brakes with “the safety of steel from pedal to wheel.” Cable and conduit control. About one-third less brake pedal pressure required. BODY— AII steel. Top, sides, floor and frame welded into a single steel unit. Safety Glass throughout at no extra charge. COMFORT AND QUIET— A big, roomy car. Center-Poise comfort increased by smoother spring-action with new pressure lubrication. New methods of mounting body and engine make a quieter car. WE BUILD FOR Roxboro and Person County With all Work Guaranteed. No Job Too Large and None Too SmalL GEORGeT KANE Roxboro, N. O. We have all kind# of auto parts and accessories. Pay us a Visit.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 17, 1936, edition 1
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