IP IT IS NEWS ABOUT PERSON COUNTY, YOU’LL FIND IT IN THE TIMES. ; \ VOLUME X PUBLISHED EVERY SUNDAY & THURSDAY ROXBORO, NORTH CAROLINA Tm!Pt:n . v r[ ,„ DT , IDV n ’ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1939 NUMBER TWENTY-NINE KIWANIANS HEAR TRIO SPEAK ON CHILD WELF ARE Program On Under-Privi leged Children Features Meodames Wagstaff, Vick-, y ere, Dr. Allen. llbee speakers Monday night told the Kiwanis club and Person County officials, who were their guests, just what is being done in the county to care for under privileged children. Mrs. T. C. Wagstaff, superin tendent of the department of welfare, Dr. A. L. Allen, assis tant district health officer, and Mrs. G. C. Vickers, president of the Person County P. T. A. coun cil were the speakers, and guests of the club included members of the Board of County Commis sioners, the Welfare Advisory Council, the Board of Health and all physicians and dentists in the county. Lieutenant Governor Jasper B. Hicks of Henderson also met with local club and made a few remarks when recognized from the floor. Each speaker outlined briefly just what his respective organi zation has done and is doing to care for underpriviliged child ren in the county and made re commendations for work in the future. Musical selections by a quartette composed of S. M. Ford, Billie Montague, J. B. Riggsbee and T. C. Sanders were also a • feature of the program. Monday night’s session was in '.v charge of Drs. H. M. Beam and ft It M. Hedgepeth, members of | the Kiwanis Committee on un derprivileged children. President D. R. “Jake” Taylor presided. Former Roxboro p Woman Is Killed 5 r In Auto Accident i. 6 Friends here Tuesday learned K that Mrs. Ed M. Davis, former t Roxboro resident, had been kill ed in an automoblie accident en ■ route from her home in Lexing . ton, Ky., to Louisville, Ky. Mrs. Davis operated Davis Drug company here after the death of her husband. Prior to coming to Roxboro she taught in the city schools of Durham. I Leaving Roxboro, she took / graduate work at the University f of North Carolina and taught in sf the Chapel Hill schools. She had L been living in Kentucky for sev r . eral years and was connected | with the University of Kentucky k at the time of her death. |. ‘ o I Allen Discusses I Milk At PTA Meet | f ' fe" - Discussing milk ai “the % most perfect fgod but also thg fc greatest natural medium for I' spreading disease,” Dr. Albert L. ft: Allen, Person County health, pt gsTficer, spoke to members of the Plane Indian school P. T. A. E, Tuesday afternoon. K: Also appearing on the program J. B. Snipes, assistant coun- K.ty agricultural agent ll,,.Approximately 60 Indian par— K&itts were l ' on hand for the meet- Sf ing and heard Dr. Allen explain IS different diseases may : i|be spread in milk, including tu *. berculosis, the typhoid group, Elpfearlet fever, diphtheria, septic ' Bprn throat and the new malta - M|ever (undulant fever.) ffcisßte health officer directed sev j§/ «nl remarks to dairying in gen- W" ewiljmd advised the use of Grade all times. lives by selling ' I” - ' —Stevenson IrrsonMimes Topsy - Turvy Frank Balek, 12, Chicago youth, sees everything upside-down. He originated his own method of writing by beginning at the bottom, in the lower right hand corner, and writing from left to right. Not only does he read and write in this manner, bnt objects are also visually upside down. He is in the fifth grade, and averages 85 in his studies, which indi cates that his visual defection does not impede his educational progress. CivilfService Men Interview Postmaster Applicants Here 14 Local Applicants, Busi ness and Professional Men Questioned. Interest in" the 14-sided race for the local postmastership warmed up considerably this week with the appearance in Roxboro of two civil service investigators getting a line on the applicants and sounding out public opinion. W. E Salisbury, field examiner for the Civil Service commission, and E. J. Taylor, postoffice in spector, were the gentlemen con ducting the interviews in Rox boro which will finally culminate in the selection of a permanent Campaign Workers Are Now Off To Good Start SEVERAL RUNNING UP FOR FIRST HONORS S6OO In Cash Awaits Best Vote-Getter— s4oo In Cash For Second Best And Good Cash Awards For Other Live-Wires. NEW WORKERS LISTED THIS WEEK Most of the Candidates are getting a good start and any one could jump to first place with a few subscriptions. All in terested, eager workers will make a determined drive for all subscriptions possible this week, as the biggest vote offer of the Campaign will end Saturday, February 11th. Who will lead in votes next week? If your favorite Can didates are not in the lead, help them this week. The 300,000 Extra Vote Offer can place them on the winning list. BIG DROP IN VOTES AFTER SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11th. List of Candidates in The Times “Cash Offer” Campaign and Percentage Votes accepted for publication: Name Town Votes Mrs. Coy E. Day Roxboro 55,000 Mrs. C. E. Stewart Roxboro 57,000 Miss Nannie Willie Cushwa.. Roxboro 57,000 Mrs. Matt Dickerson Ca-Vel 56,500 Mrs. Lillian Qay Woodsdale 30,000 Miss Mary Emma Strum Roxboro 51,000 •Miss Lucy Gray Chandler ... Leasburg 56,000 Miss Margaret A. Jones Roxboro .' 54,200 Mrs. Byrd Long Bushy Fork 56,000 Miss Lena Buchanan Rougemont 80,000 Miss Ruth Lunsford Timberlake ... 48,000 Miss Anne L. Vickers Allensville 20,000 Miss Nan Owen Semora 20,000 Mrs. Belvin Barnette Roxboro 20,000 Mrs. lola Thomas Gwyn .... Semora ’54,000 Wheeler Carver Roxboro 52,000 A. G. Adpock Roxboro, Rt. 3 '20,000 Mrs. S. D. Clayton Roxboro, Rt. 3 45,000 Mrs! J. W. Morgan Roxboro 40,000 Mrs. Carrie Lee Williams ~. Allensville 20;000 Miss Aurelia Long Hurdle Mills 20,000 J Entry Books Open for a Few New Workers Who Are Not Afraid of a Little Competition Enter Now! All Candidates are requested to make" a cash report to Campaign Office each Wednesdy and Saturday, or have report in mail bearing postmark of that date. A WINNER NEVER QUITS A QUITTER NEVER WINS! • , ' ; V:‘ ■■■■.,'" % - . . , t : : J postmaster to succeed K. L. Street, the present acting post master. The candidates, 14 strong, have been interviewed personally at great length as one part of the investigation program to ascer tain the applicant most fitted for the position. The other part con sists of interviews with represen tative business and professional - alqpg' Roxlftflro £ streets in order to get a cross section of public opinion on each candidate. No indication of when the fin al selection will be made known (Continued On Back Page) Bradsher Rites Held Yesterday At Hurdle Mills Robert H. Bradsher died at his home in Hurdle Mills Tuesday morning at 6:30 o’clock. He was 73 years old. Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the home by Elders George Hill and Floyd Adams. Interment was in the family cemetery. Pallbearers were I. J. Rimmer, Odie Bradsher, Ira Bradsher, Cal vin Rimmer, David Rimmer. Floral bearers were nieces. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Lula Blackwell Bradsher; 12 children, Mrs. Daniel Wilson of Schley, Mrs. O. C. Hawkins of Hurdle Mills, Mrs. F. L. Moore of Hurdle Mills, J. H. Bradsher of High Towers, Mrs. J. R. Porter field of Burlington, George Brad sher of Lemon Springs, Mrs. H. T. Porterfield of Roxboro, C. R. Bradsher of High Towers, Mrs. Claude Hawkins of Burlington, Mrs. Felix Wright of Hurdle Mills and Mrs. Claude Parker of Hurdle Mills; and a brother, Alexander Bradsher of Whitsett. ————o Helena Juniors To Present Play Tomorrow Night Tomorrow night at 7:45 o’clock the Juniors of Helena High school will present a comedy en titled “Moon River Rancho.” The Cast of character are as follows: Doc Kennedy - Veterinary of the Ranch - Earl Hill. Samantka Jane Carson - The Cook - Eliza Jones. Calamity Carson - Her Son - Raymond Timberlake. Bayne Trevors - Foreman of the Ranch - Melvin Miller. Curly Fisk - Horse Forman - Ronald Hicks. Beatrice Havens - A friend of Jerry’s - Rachel Mooney. Jerry Sanford - Two-thirds ow ner of the Ranch - Nancy Tillett. Gene Hampton - Third owner of the Ranch - Wilson Crabtree. Mary Scott - A novelist visiting the West - Pearl Cash. Inez Holcomb - A friend of Jerry’s - Ruby Hall. Phyllis Taylor - A neighbor hood girl - Mildred Rhew. Mr. Gregory - Triangle-H Man - Raymond Gray. The admission will be 15c and 25c. o “Nurseries of character should be strongly garrisoned with virtue.” —Mary Baker Eddy State Still Seeking Humane Death Law With almost the quite despera tion of a man trying to find an easy way to kill a dog, North Carolina is groping for “humane" modification of the law which dictates that first degree felons shall die. The search probably began back in 1910, when the state a bolished hanging and turned to electricity as its tnode of execu tion. It was resumed in 1936, when hydrocyanic gas replaced the electric chair in the little cubicle just off death row at cen tral prison. . It continues now in the cur rent session of the general as sembly. One move —a move which prison officials said would have been backward rather than for ward was halted early this session when an unfavorable committee report apparently kill ed a bill which would have abol ished the gas chamber and brought back the electric chair. 300,000 Extra Vote Offer On S3O Subscription Clubs Ends Saturday February Nth. Speaker xjSftKiSifoyXtfy.- * W I ™ Dr. Francis C. Wood Dr. Francis Wood, of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania Medical school, addressed North Carolina doctors at a weekly meeting last evening of the Post Graduate Course in Medicine which is be ing held in Durham. His subject was “Clinico-Pathological Con ference.’’ Several local doctors are attending the series, one of which is held each Wednesday night. Person County 4-H Clubbers Will Broadcast Representatives of Person County 4-H clubs will participate in the Farm and Home broadcast over radio station W. P. T. F. in Raleigh Saturday from 12:30 to 12:45, according to announce ments here this week. This portion of the program, it was revealed, will be a playlet written to show how farm boys and girls become more useful members of the family because of their 4-H club training. In carrying out club projects, it is shown, they learn to share the responsibilities of the entire fam ily as well as keep acounts on their own projects as they carry them through to completion. The group presenting the broadcast includes Berkley Crumpton, Rachel Brewer, Ca rol Leigh Humphries and Pete Pridgeon. And close observers think that i the general assembly may lessen I the severity of the state’s law through a bill yet to be intro duced. This measure, embodying recommendations of Governor Hoey, would permit judges and juries, in their discretion, to im pose life sentences rather than the death penalty in first degree con victions. Such a step, it is believed, would make a law conform more nearly to the current practice of commuting to life imprisonment the death sentences of persons convicted of the “lesser” two of the now capital crimes first degree arson and first degree burglary. Prison records show that no one ever has been executed in this state for arson, and very few for burglary, even though first degree convictions of these crim es carry mandatory death sen- Death is also prescribed for fences. Extra-Vote Offer Now In Effect Gives Work ers Unusual Opportunity To Amass Votes Early In “Cash Offer” Campaign. Votes Drop Decidedly Alter, 11th. Interest Increases As Campaign Gets Under Way— Entry Books Still Open For Anyone Wishing To Make Extra Cash Out-of-Town Candidates May Mail Reports If Postmarked Wednesday or Saturday. £ \ TOBACCO ACREAGE PROCEDURE GIVEN Rules For New Farms Un der Soil Conservation Program Revealed. Washington Procedure for establishing flue-cured tobacco acreage allotments under the 1939 soil conservation program for farms on which tobacco is grown in 1939 for the first time since 1934, was announced here by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. The total acreage allotment for such flue-cured tobacco farms in 1939 will be limited to not more Ithan 8,800 acres, or one per cent of the 1939 national acreage allotment for flue-cured tobacco. Each farm of this type is re quired to meet definite conditions in order to qualify for an allot ment. Old tobacco farms already are capable of producing annually, under normal conditions, over one-third moje tobacco than the present world consumption of A merican flue-c«red. The new to bacco farm allotments are design ed to take care of the limited number of cases where the farm ers have lost the farms which they had previously operated or are just beginning the operation of farms on which no tobacco has been grown in recent years. The procedure for establishing new farm allotments for 1939 specifies the following six con ditions to be met by the appli cant for allotment: 1. That he file an application for an allotment with the county agricutural conservation com mittee not later than Feb. 18. 2. That he has grown tobacco for two years or more during the past five-year period. 3. That he live on the farm, (Continued on Back Page) first degree murder and rape, but even in these cases, com mutations by the governor fre quently rob the lethal gas cham ber of its victims. The current discussion of capi tal punishment has reminded of ficials and newspapermen of the winter of 1935-36, when the sta te was installing the first gas chamber to be used east of the Mississippi river. When they think of that win ter, they usually remember two frightened dogs and a cocky lit tle Negro who was proud of the fhct that he had known Joe Louis and fought with him when they were; children living in Birming ham. The two dogs were used in an experiment with death by which North Carolina sought to perfect a “humane” way to kill people. The gas chamber had just been installed, and officials wanted as (Continued On Back Page) ' * THE TIMES IS PERSON** PREMIER NEWSPAPER A LEADER AT ALL TIMESL The great EXTRA VOTE OF FER which is in effect in the Per son County Times “Cash Offer** campaign until February 11th. gives the real workers an op portunity seldom offered early in the campaign. Usually the big gest EXTRA VOTE offers or in ducements are made later in the race and they are given at a time when subscriptions are harder to find. On Basis of Results The awards will be made strict ly upon a basis of results the can didates secure during the cam paign. “Results count” is a time worn slogan and it applies forcib ly in the “Cash Offer” Campaign. This is purely a business propo sition wherein men and women enter into competition with each other on the same basis and the results obtained decides the size and nature of the reward. The importance of being earn est in everything one does; whether it is at work or play in order to obtain the most gratify ing results is an exemplary idee that fits nicely into the policy that members adopt to advantage. Hap-hazard methods lead one on and on, and though one may seemingly accomplish things, one never attains an ultimate end. , A systematic canvass of your closest frineds will bring best re sults. Then after you have seen your best friends and acquaint ances you should spread out t» new territory, so to speak, and make a canvass of other fellow's friends and acquaintances after once you begin enumerating them. Everyone is a prospect, for they all read newspapers. It is surprising with what ease and how quickly you will be able to send your vote total soaring and place yourself in the race for the big awards. Biggest Vote Offer 300,000 extra votes will be al lowed on each S3O “club” of sub scriptions turned in by Saturday, February 11th. This is positively the very big gest EXTRA VOTE OFFER that will be made, and those who do their best work now will have much to be thankful for when the votes are counted. Out of town members should bear in mind particularly that all subscriptions that are mailed Sat urday and bearing a postmark to show that they were mailed that day will be accepted by the cam paign department to apply on the big EXTRA VOTE OFFER. A very decided drop in the number of extra votes will be made af ter Saturday, February 11th. Now is the time for all earnest work ers to put in their best effort NOTE—AII candidates are re quested to make a cash report to the campaign manager on each Wednesday evenings from 3 to 6 o’clock and on Saturday even ings from 3 to 7 o’clock. If you cannot call at the office, in per son, be sure to mail your sub scriptions or send them in by someone. _o “Books and friends should be few and good.”