Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / July 21, 1938, edition 1 / Page 7
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Civilian* Welcome Rebel iEnflf to Caetellon I |§ ft r R f^^jjjffi^B"'> ?3*Bll^*iB fj^gj.... > /y|. , ( , yis& |jp*Br wtm.. . jM&jssjj/h*’ ••*•■■ %{^3^ | w^Bp|/.- WISH:»:*» %7MHb w, . - - -• - mKPJW,/■ ~ ~HBIWi l > a .*• JM j^m*7 ■ v-' : '£■•7%- »^y v -*.♦>-§ HhSoJe *L'. «* v^;x>.*=A..:.vSv, . .J 6 ®. c,vU ‘*“ Population welcomes soldiers of Generalissimo Francisco Franco as they arrive in'( asteltoi do to Flana, key position In the present insurgent drive on Valencia. Shortly afterward, 3.000 civilian lefugeo from the provinces poured into the city, adding to its food and housing problems FARM QUESTIONS ANSWERED i ■ — ■— — Question: How long can to bacco be held after curing be fore it is marketed? 1 Answer: This depends upon the condition of the tobacco and the care exercised in handling. As a general rule, tobacco should be marketed as soon after cur ing as is practical. After the weed has been left for a few days! in the pack house and then “cooped” to allow the leaves to straighten out and undergo any changes neqelssary for the im provement in color, it should then be graded and marketed. If graded tobacco is held over, it should be repacked at least once a day to prevent mold in case the weed has a little too much moisture. Question: Is it wise to operate on a chicken with an impacted crop? Answer: No. Most farm birds are low priced individuals with egg production as their main function for returning a profit. Any operation, no matter how careful, would stop this pro duction for several months and the bird would be an economic loss for that period. Then, too, the incisions made usually heal slowly and in many cases the bird dies before regaining heal th and production power. For a heavy, pendulous crop, it is best to destroy the bird so affected. Question: How can I prevent horns from growing on my dairy calves? Answer: The development of I IPS TRUE! ~ Ey Wiley Padan I SERVES Ai A COIOWK IN THE GUINEAS ARMy / -- \H3BCSu H&NT FEEN HURT PI AN AUTO ACCIPENL^^^^ ftettVt/Zd-GyKEEFE,™ LAWYER, PP.GCEEDS To DAMAGE HER SHOES SO AS TO GET THE fRO.'ER EFEcCT tin S2ENE For, METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER'S "jfi CHASER". * ssDJcmiß m m m yu a e rja Hew York, N.Y.—“IT'S TRUE! that Nat Pendleton, who won a world’s championship in amateur wrestling while, in col lege and was later Olympic champion, is also an expert at police jiu-jitsu,” says Wiley Padan . . .“Nat, who was born on an lowa farm, is six feet tall.and weighs ”00 pounds, is considered one of the film colony’s most graceful ballroom dancers!” • ' horns can be prevented by ap plying caustic soda or potash to the horn buttons when the calf is from four to eight days old. Clip the hair from over and a round the button, wash and thoroughly dry clipped (surface and then apply the solution with a caustic stick. The stick should be moistened on one end and rubbed carefully on each horn button two or three times, alter nating between the buttons un til there is a raw place about the rize cf a nickel. Do not rub un til the spot bleeds. Care should be taken not to use too much moisture for if it gets in the eye it will cause blindness. Keep animals under shelter if there is a chance for rain. 0 Textile School Keeps Abreast Os New Methods Division Os N. C. State Col lege Has Nearly Tripled En rollment In Last Few Years Raleigh.—Continuing to keep abreast of modern improvements in the textile industry, the Tex tile School of North Carolina State College has completed in stallation of a large number of newt-type machines designed to prepare the student for better service when he takes his place in industry. Prof. T. R. Hart, veteran mem ber of the Textile School facul ty, said today the addition of 14 recently-installed loofrns, coupi led with the new looms and winding equipment purchased last year, gives the State Col lege Textile School “a weave PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO. N. C. room unsurpassed by any other institute in America”, New equipment also has been added to the knitting, dying and yarn manufacturing departments, he reported. Figures released by Prof. Hart reveal the Textile School has en joyed its fastest growth during the past decade. In this period the school has been nearly 100 Advertise to Offset f High Overhead Costs.... Every business has its days when business is at its best and reversely so, when it is at its slackest. It is these slack days that gnaw and eat at the week’s balance sheet. Regardless of the volume of business on these id ays the overhead remains the same. Rent is no less on a Wednesday than it is on a Saturday. Wages for the clerks remain the same, profits on merchandise are no greater. Yet this day must go on in the routine run of busi ness. OFFSET THIS SLACK DAY Advertise, Stressing Values. Perhaps the volume will not be as great as on Saturday, but sales will increase, offsetting the cost of advertising, plus a satisfact ory margin, in addition to making every day a profitable one. * Telephone 4501 per cent, successful in placing its graduates in jobs. x Since the first textile diploma was awarded in 1901, State Col lege has conferred degrees upon 662 textile graduates. Over 500, or approximately 78 per cent, of all the living graduates are now filling responsible positions in nearly every phase of the textile industry in the United States and a half dozen other countries. In only two years has the Tex tile School failed to place all its graduates by commencement, Prof. Hart reported. The term just ended, with the largest graduating class in the history of the school, saw three-fourths of the 68 seniors placed in jobs before they received their de grees, and inquiries from manu facturers indicate the remainder will be situated in a short time. Enrollment in the Textile School has nearly tripled in the last few years, rising from 135 students in 1931-32 to 372 in 1937-1938. The enrollment of resident textile students is the largest in America. The more than 600 textile plants in North Carolina “aver age from one to a dozen jobs to which college men might aspire,” declared Prof. Hart in stressing the opportunities in the textile field. 0 DIAL 4501 FOR NEWSPAPER SERVICE ALL FLYING RECORDS BROKEN Paris, France—Fastest long distance flight in aviation his tory ended when Howard Hugh es, 33-year-old milionaire flyer, landed his Lockheed plane here in 16 hours, 38 minutes from New York, just half the time of Lind bergh’s famous solo flight four teen years ago. The plane carried a crew of four, was powered with two 1,100-horsepower motors, and its flight was at the terrific average speed of 218 miles per hour. It carried so many ad vancements in flying aids that Hughes was asked by U. S. of ficials to permit no close inspec tion of his instrument board by foreign technicians. He set off after a brief rest to continue his flight around the world and ex pects to be back in New York by the time this dispatch appears in print. o FOR NEWSPAPER SERVICE DIAL 4501. DR. R. J. PEARCE EYES EXAMINED MONDAYS ONLY Thomas - Carver Bldg. - LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” ■■ PPppF •*y- This scene is from the newest of the "Judge Hardy Series" with Mickey , Rooney as Andy Hardy. One can see that the title is certainly not mis - j leading. We find with Mickey, Ann Rutherford, Judy Garland, Lana Turner. - -i THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1939
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 21, 1938, edition 1
7
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