person Qlmmig (Himes r a PAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE J. S. MERRITT, Editor M. C. CLAYTON, Mgr. Published - Every Sunday And Thursday Entered as Second Class matter •t the Postoffice at Roxboro, N. C., under the act of March 3rd., 1879. —Subscription Rates— Oar year $1.50 Btx months 75 Advertising Cut Service At Dis posal of Advertisers at all times. Bates furnished upon request. Mews from our correspondents should reach this office not later than Tuesday noon to insure publication. THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1937 Better business conditions have been given as a reason for dropping 3,780 persons from the relief rolls in this state. This sounds very good and the same better conditions are evident in the county. There is i some relief work going on in Person County. There always will be. Relief has been, going on since this world was inhabit ed, but not until recently did Uncle Sam take such a big hand - in it. It will be hard now to get away from relief. We have an idea that relief agencies are here to stay and certain people j will always be on relief. Right now almost anyone can get a job of some kind in this county. The building boom con tinues and it is a problem to secure labor of any kind. Peo ple appear to be tired of living | in rented houses and they are I using their money apd what they can borrow to build. There was a large amount of opposition to the Courthouse annex that had been proposed ' by citizens of this county and a few of those who opposed this | idea appeared before the com ) missioners on Monday of this • week. After the spokesman ex plained, or set forth, the views ; of those who opposed the plan ■ the commissioners voted to de i fer action for the time being. It r may be that the project will be considered at a future date. Right now you can find any number of people who are a gainst anything that might have i a tendency to increase the tax rate and these people do not mind coming out in the open ! telling you what they think. Taxes are hard to pay and tax collectors will tell you that ta*es_4je hard to collect. Newspaper clipping printed for the public. ZiOu Angeles, June 22.—John Barrymore and Elaine Barrie, after an ardent exchange of kisses at a railroad station to said that they are re conciled again and that she will dismiss her intcrlocutiory den eree of divorce. . ."I love only John,” the dark eyed New Yorker said. ..“We are very, very happy,” added Barrymore. Comment—“ Haven’t we had enough about this match?” Next Tuesday the people of this county will vote for control ; stores or against control stores. ; A good guess is that the elec tion will be rather close. The fact that Wake county voted for ■the stores may influence the e lection in this county to some extent. There has been little activity on the part of the drys and Per son county stands a good chance L ®f ending up in the dry column. \ Dr. B. E. Love was elected president of the Sixth Council or District of the Medical So ! ciety of Nortty Carolina ytes terday when this society met in Roxboro. This is a distinct honor to Dr. Love and also to Roxboro. Dr. Love has been in i active practice in Roxboro for a number of years and has won } the admiration and respect of the people of this city and coun ' ty. He is prominent in his , chosen field and is also a civic ! leader. He is interested in ! everything for the betterment '■ of this county. His election to this high of ! Cce means that he has won the respect of the doctors of this district and this must mean much to Dr. Love. We offer our sincere congra- J' filiations. y Londoners Ride Buses Again After Strike \ flßait -■ - < *%■■■■. { I I • i ] BffiWwiiilPiMmWl mVBHEETnmiHkA' IBV ' i . liBIH J S ER IMBwamWII _____ , LJ I ■■ JEL Long queues form at the London Bridge station as the first buses appeared on the streets after a month long strike recently, thus ending one of the most unpopular and unsuccessful walkouts in' the history of the British trade union movement. Dear Editor: I should like to pass along the following facts in regard to repeal and liquor control. Says Rev. M. A. Adams, director of temperance education of the United Dry Forces of the state: “The repeal of the 18th. Amend ment to the Constitution of the United States has been a failure. It has not done the things that the advocates of the repeal claimed it would.” “Arrests for drunkenness have in creased under repeal. South Carolina has had repeal for three years. In Spartenburg in 1932, the year before repeal there were 479 arrests for drunkenness. In 1936 there were more than four times as many. In Wilson County, N. C. there were 485 arrests for public drunkenness the year before repeal while the first year after repeal, there were 689.” “In Washington, D. C., drunken ness increased 48 percent under re peal from 1932-35. Women drunks increased 53 percent.” “The National Life Insurance Co.’s report shows that under repeal drinkers under 30 years of age in creased 178 percent from 1932-1936 while drunkenness from 30 to 45 years increased 102 percent and drunks over 45 years increased 125 percent. These facts can be proven.” Please note especially the increase in drunkenness among young peo ple. “For the fiscal year ending June 30, 1935, two years after repeal, the population of federal penal institu tions increased from 12,201 to 15,- 417, the largest in any year to date. For the t\yo year period ending De cember 31, 1935, the population of state and federal prisons increased 7.718. Major crimes in Canada in creased 77 percent after repeal while felonious assults increased 91 per cent and violations of the liquor laws increased 92 percent. Crimes against children increased 115 per cent with minor offenders increas ing 153 percent in Canada under repeal.” And yet there are those who say that conditions could not he any worse. Shall we or shall we r.iot profit by the experiences of other sections and instead of lending our influence to worse conditions, join a fight to better them. Again I say, the more whiskey people have the moi’e they will drink. The easier we make it to get strong drink, the more we will have. It seems to me that anybody could see this if they are capable of rea soning any at all. I have said be fore and I say again that a prohi bition law cannot within itself do away with all strong drink but it can be an aid just as other laws aid in keeping down crime. I don’t see why a law to prohibit sales of liquor couldn’t be just as effective and reasonable as one to prohibit bootlegging or drunken driving, and I don’t see but that the prohibition law was just as effective as the other laws in force concerning liquor.” Rev. Dr. Daniel A. Poling, widely known author, lecturer, and educa tor, has the following to say con cerning the success of repeal: “Repeal is the greatest social suc cess of the decade because it has fail ed to do anything that it promised.” “Advocates of repeal promised a decrease in consumption of alcoholic beverages, a decrease in lowlessness, a billion dollars in revenue. Not only have these promises been unfilled, but the counterpart of the saloon has returned, minors are allowed to buy freely, and slaughter on the roads has increased.” He quoted a Cleveland traffic officer as saying that “of those killed in Cleveland in traffic accidents during the first quarter of this year 58.7 percent were found to have been imbibing alcoholic beverages.” If the above is the result of repeal in section* where it is effective, how can we expect to make conditions any bet ter in our county by legalizing li quor? Personally, I’m sure it won’t PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. First Lady in Role of Godmother ' _ jin mi jsdtfHL mre a" W; • jfl K 'T . k . Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, holding baby Eleanor Ruth Armstrong, and Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, former U. S. minister to Norway, with baby Robert Furman Armstrong, pictured during the recent christening cere mony of the twin children of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Armstrong, Jr., at .Washington, D. C., at which they served as godmothers. Standing be tween them is Mrs. John Nance Garner, wife of the vice president. The Armstrongs are Washington newspaper correspondents. be done and I hope and trust that control will be voted down. Inciden tal, I’ve yet to hear of the place where it has been controlled. It would seem from the above that it came nearer being controlled under prohibition than it has under repeal. lola L. Day Rougemont, N. C. CHILD MARRIAGES LEGAL IN 9 STATES % - New Hampshire’s Minimum Age Is Highest—2o For Boys And 18 For Girls Washington, June 20.—A nation wide survey revealed today that boys of 14 and girls of 12 may be legally married in nine states. Those common-law marriage ages apply to Colorado, Florida, Missis sippi, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Washington and Idaho the children’s bureau said. Legal minimums for marriage in the District of Columbia and 39 states which have raised the com mpn-law standard vary from 16 and 18 for boys and from 14 and 16 for girls. New Hampshire’s minimum is highest—2o for boys and 18 for girls. Most statutes impose additional restrictions by requiring consent of parents or guardian until a child reaches a specified age—usually majority. Judicial consent is re quired in New York for girls under 16 and in Vermont for boys under 18 and girls under 16. Fifteen states with minimum statutes permit exceptions for cer tain cases when both judicial and parental consent are obtained. Marriages of children under the legal minimum age are declared void by some states. In other states they are dorisidered voidable and may be disaffirmed by the child either before or when he or she reaches the legal age. The report calls “apparently er roneous” the belief that marriages without parent’s consent are void or voidable. Children’s bureau of ficials said,the weight of judicial authority is that such marriage is legal if the boy or girl are above the minimum marriage age. o Persons who travel with cameras pass their time fussing with them in stead of looking at the things they travel to see.—Charming Padlock, playwright EDGAR LONG MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH SUNDAY, JUNE 27, i 937 9:45 a. m. - Church School 11:00 a. m. - Morning Worship 7:15 p. m. - Epworth League 7:15 p. m. - Intermediate Div. 8:00 p. m. - Evening Worship Monday 4:00 p. m. - Circles 1,2, and 3 7:30 p. m. - Circles 4,5, and 6 Wednesday 8:00 p. m. - Prayer Meeting Friday 6:30 p. m. - Person County Young Peoples’ Union at Allensville church 8:00 p. m. - Men’s Prayer Meeting. The Circles of Mary Hambrick Missionary Society meet as follows: Circle No. 1- Mrs. Mollie Hatchett. Circle No. 2 - Mrs. Evie Newman. Circle No. 3 - Mrs. A. W. Clayton. Circle No. 4 - Mrs. R. H. Shelton. Circle No. 5 - Miss Mattie Hatchett Circle No. 6 - Miss Ruth Newton. A hearty welcome to each of the services of the church. B. P. Robinson, Pastor... o FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH God give us men, determined, brave and strong- Who stand for right and dare to smite the wrong, Whole-hearted men - unselfish, fear less bold- Whose love of truth outweighs the greed for gold, Devoted men, who think and prey and plan How best to serve and help their fellowman. While selfishness misrules, and greed and lust Entrice and drag their victims in the dust, Send up a prayer, again and yet again, With faith unfailing still - God give us men!. 9:45 a. m. - Bible School 11:00 a. m. - Preaching - Subject: “By What Authority Doest Thou These Things?” 7:00 p. m. - B. T. U. 8:00 p. m. - Preaching - Subject: “Spiritual Emancipation.” A cordial invitation is extended to aIL W. F. West, Pastor ■ O'- It is estimated that one-third of the college students in the District of Columbia have federal govern ment positions, working for Uncle Cam in the day and attending classes kt night Friday and Saturday Two Big Days of Selling Come in and make a final purchase from us. Friday and Saturday will be the last selling days of Harris & Burns. Our store will be closed Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday For Inventory. When it is re-opened Thursday, July Ist., it will be by BURNS, GENTRY & STRUM who will succeed us in the clothing department. They will, no doubt, give you bet ter service than we have ever been able to, as they will concentrate on mens and boys wearing apparel. But we shall greatly appreciate a call and purchase by you Friday or Saturday and assure you as always full value for every dollar you spend with us. Assuring each and eveiry one of our appreciation for all the favors they have shown us and wishing for you the very best things to make your life comfortable and hap py, we are faithfully yours, Harris & Burns WANT ADS QUALITY COAL Central Service Station Phone 137 8-13-ts WANTED: Highest price paid for White Oak Timber, buy any amount. Write R. F. CROTTS, Roxboro, N. C. 6-17-3TP FOR SALE—.Porcelain lined 751 b. refrigerator - Cheap. Billy West 6-24-2 T Paper Napkins pk. lOc Wax Paper roll lOc Sandwich Spread qi 25c Salad Dressing qt. 25c Ham-Naise 8 oz. jar 25c Mayonnaise pint jar 27c Peanut-Butter 2 lb. jar 35c Vienna Sausage 3 for 25c Potted Meats 5 c Round Steak lb. 30c Fork Chops lb. 27c Weiners lb. 22c Veal Chops lb. 20c Veal Steak lb. 30c Sausage lb. 25c Beef Roast lb. 17c IT PAYS TO TRADE WITH Sergeant & Clayton FINE GROCERIES PHONE 23. AND PHONE 24 THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1957 RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT We the members of the adult Sunday School Class of Concord Church, wish to pay tribute to our beloved member, Mr. S. C. Tillman, who was called to his 'Heavenly Home June 9, 1937. While Mr. Till man hadn’t been able to be with us often for the past two years, we fell his interest and prayers. There fore be it resolved, first, that al though we feel keenly his passing we bow submissively to the will of our Heavenly Father. Second, that his Christian life has been a benediction to us. Third, that we extend to his family our heartfelt sympathy.