IT’S TRUE! By Wiley Patian /^eRHEHNE .>«>. ■—l / °? W KRSUADED W UAL WflC# f ■ K* ARMAIS fe ENTER MOTION 1 HCTURES . SHE LOVES \_, SEVENIk^ so^h^ * i ■ V ' Mill BORN C£ „*. AUGUST !<■. "tv ra .sa* takes a TU)G-iniL£ walk everv morning before E209 VW . GOING TO THE STUDIO / SU«. IS EXCEUfNTLy « ” CAST Uv HAL ROACH'S -MERRILY WE LIVE". ET| New York, N. Y. —IT’S TRUE! that a blanket insurance policy in the amount of $1,250,000 indemnifying the Hal Roach studios against loss through illness or death of six of the ranking principals in “Merrily We Live” was issued by Lloyds of London through their American representatives! It is the largest policy of its kind written in recent years. Olive Hill Honor Roll The pupils making the honor roll for the sixth month are: First grade: Sibyl Ann Winstead, James Ramsey, Harold Nunn, Chas. Howard, Jr. Second grade: Christine Oakley, Mary Elizabeth Evans, Ada Sue Clayton, James White, Jr., Roberta Winstead, Myrtle Walker. Third grade: Lawrence Evans, Cornell Blanks, Emma Clayton, Malma McKinney, Thelma Oakley, Arista Rudder. Fourth grade: Ida Sue Oakley, Rosetta Terrell, Mildred Duncan, Cornell Carver, Isabel Walker, Ann Munday. Fifth grade: Garland Blanks, Mary Thelma Oakley. Louise McKinney, Official Agents For The H. T. HEARNE ENGRAVING COMPANY Os. WINSTON - SALEM, N. C. Engraved Wedding Announcements Engraved Invitations Engraved Visiting Cards Or Anything In The Engraving Line This line of engraving is one of the best that can be bought and the prices are very reasonable. We have a large book showing many samples and correct forms. Drop in and look at this line. All orders treated with confidence TIMES PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C * Moriah News Misses Christine Day and Louise Clayton of Ai spent last Wednesday night with Misses Julia and Ila Clayton. Miss Nancy Clayton spent last week-end with her sister, Mrs. J. P. Day. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ashley had as their guests last week-end, Mr. Wiley Clayton, Misses Myrtle and Polly Clayton, and Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Clayton, all of Garner, N. C., and Mrs. Neilous Eakes and her son, Mai com, of Morrisville. N. C. Miss Garnertt spent Sunday with Miss Millie Garrett. Misses Julia and Ila Clayton spent last week-end with Misses Chris tine Day and Willie Louise Clayton at Ai. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Brooks, of Oxford, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Day and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ewell Wilkins, of Angier, ;N. C. also sgent Tuesday nighit with them. Little Tinnyline Hill, the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Hill is confined to her home on account of illness. Mrs. Nancy Bowles is very ill at her home near Moriah. Mrs. Cornelia Alexson, of the Tar River Community is seriously ill at her home. Mr. Clyde Bowles of Moriah, is confined to his home on account of illness. DIAL 4501 FOR NEWSPAPER SERVICE. Margaret Long, Mary Ann Howard, David Lee, Randolph Dunkley, Ce cil Carver. Sixth grade: Elsie Foushee, Pat tie Sue Clayton. Seventh grade: Elease Carver, Mary Frances Harris, Harret Bre wer, Alma Carver, Esther Seamster, Frances Cridlin. Beetles Found In Tobacco Plant Beds Multiply Rapidly In Warm Weath er And May Become Serious Threat This Year Flea beetles have been found in tobacco plant beds of practically ev ery tpbacco - growing county in eastern North Carolina. Multiplying rapidly in the un usually warm weather this season, the beetles have become a serious threat to the tobacco crop this year unless they are brought under con trol. Dr. Z. P. Metcalf, head Os the State College department of zoology and entomology, has offered the following suggestions for controll ing this pest: Dust the plant beds with 1% rot enone dust at the rate of half a pound to each 100 square yds. A dusting machine is necessary to get satisfactory results. The dust may be blown down through the canvas covers over the plant beds when the cloth is dry. The dusting should be repeated every three or four days until the beetles have disappeared. If thtey show up again, th dusting should be resumed. Blue mold is spreading over the tobacco belt, but on warm, sun shiny days, growers who lay back the canvas so the sun will shine dir ectly on the plants have found that this helps control the disease. Sunshine is the enemy of blue GET READY FORA GOOD CROP THIS YEAR iiMifl'rrrMlililliP ——~—— -■ I IIIJ --- 1 • J -- . ' .. .. WSSU: In a short time you will be putting your fertilizer in the ground and you will be looking for results. We have the fertilizer that will give you what you want. For prices on the warehouse floor use ROBERTSON’S FERTILIZER See us at our storage in Roxboro, Boatwright fac tory just off Depot Street or at Bushy Fork. FRANK WHITFIELD ROBERT HESTER Roxboro, N. C. Bushy Fork, N. C. mold fungus, said Dr. Luther Shaw, extension plant pathologist at the college, and so far this season there has been plenty of sunshine. Spraying with red-copper-oxide cottonseed-oil spj’ay and applying nitrate of soda lightly to the plant beds are other blue mold control measures favored by growers. Farmers in the vicinity of Sylva, Jackson County, are using undried bagged limestone at the rate of 1,- 500 to 2,000 pounds an acre this sea son, reports Howard Clapp, asst, agent. BE GOOD TO YOURSELF DRINK 7-UP- . ■ mi r"T™""ZSSSSSSS * * 7-UP will be good to you and what a happy combination that will make! Summer is about here and that calls for a case of 7-Up in your home. 1 f T-TJP 1 Dealers l Bottling Co. J Dealers DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA. SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1938 CIRCUS READY TO START Sarasota, Fla. The big circua is about ready to start its 1038 season, the yearfs sensation being a 500. pound gorilla which travels in an air-conditioned glass cage designed to maintain the temperature and humidity of an African jungle, as they are, few of the species ever long survive the American climate. In 1938 more than 500,000,000 money orders were issued.