IP IT IS NEWS ABOUT PERSON COUNTY, YOU’LL FIND IT IN THE TIMES. VOLUME XI PUBLISHED EVERT SUNDAY & THURSDAY NEGROES INVOLVED IN LOFIIS AFFAIR GIVEN FREEDOM Grover Cleveland King Sentenced to 30 days on Boads. Ijjjiding that William A. Loftis, 54, Person White man whose body was Sound Friday morning at the home of Mary King, one of his Negro tenants, “came to his death through natural caus es”, members of a six man cor oner’s jury Monday morning readied an agreement and order ed the release of the King woman who had been held in Person county jail as a material witness since she reported Loftis’ death early Friday morning of last week.. Also absolved of blame in con nection with Loftis* death was Grover Cleveland King, young Negro man who was said to have beep engaged in conversational dispute with Loftis at the time the white man suddenly dropped dead oh the parch of the King cabin Thursday night. King, who had ben detained in jail since Friday night, was how ever tried Monday morning be fore a justice of the peace on a charge of disorderly conduct growing out of the dispute. Sen tence of thirty days on the roads was imposed upon King for this offense. At the Monday hearing which was the second session of the cor oner’s jury, it was again brought out that Loftis had no wounds of any kind on his body and that there was n oevidence of ftrnl play. Mary King stuck to her story that she called Mr. Loftis to her house Thursday night to quell a dis turbance created by Grover Cle veland King and that the white man suddenly fell dead, as pre "viously related. In a telephone conversation af ter the Monday session Person County coroner, Dr. A. F. Nichols, expressed the opinion that death may have (been caused by heart failure. o Helena Debaters Win On One Side Helena afirmative debating team, composed of Nancy Tillett and Lawrence Rogers, won over the negative team from Creed moor in the Helena school audi torium, Thursday evening, March 28. The judges for the debate were Messers.. B. B, Knight, Fitz Davis and J. B. Currin. Helena negative team compos ed of Violet Starke and Paul Gar rison, lost by a two to one decis • son to the Hurdle Mills affirma tive team at Hurdle Mills on the sane evening. o Troop 49 Holds Regular Meeting Troop 49 held its regular meet ing in the basement of the Com munity house this week, with 23 Boy Scouts present. The meet ing was opened with the Scout Oath, foUriwed by the roll call and short patrol meetings. Frank Whitt then led the boys in several songs. For a short time Dr. Robert Long, the scoutmaster, led in a discussion |cf overnight hikes and m trip to the World’s Fair. The meeting was dosed with the Scoutmaster’s benediction. This program was in charge of Clyde Whitt’s patrol. o o Speed was the major cause of highway deaths in North Caro lina last year. IraonMtms CUBS IN ACTION i J ■ i ' ' i-niai 'I —— J Zip and go . . . that’* the life for a CUB (0-12 year*). Many such happy, ..neighborhood-centered activities fill the CUBBINO RTtgrMl ts the Boy Scouts of America. Plans For Reorganization Os "Cub Pack” Discussed William R. Tilley Rites Will Be At Residence Friday William R. Tilley, 74, respect ed citizen of the Mt. Tirzah com munity, Person county, died Wed nesday morning at 11 o’clock, at his residence, after an illness lasting one year and three months. Death was attributed to the infirmities of age and compli cations. Funeral services will be con ducted Friday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the residence by Elder Lex Chandler, who will be assist ed by Rev. O. L. Riggs. Interment will take place in the family ce metery. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Miss Beattie Cates; four sons, W. C., Clarence 0., and Fred W. Tilley, all of Person county, and E. R. Cates, of Colum bus, O.; four daughters, Mrs. Les sie Clayton and Miss Gertrude! Tilley, both cf this county, and Mrs. Lelia Garrett and Mrs. Myr tle Ryan, both of Columbus, O.; three brothers, Joseph and James Tilley, of Bahama, and John Til ley, of California; one sister, Miss Bettie Tilley, also of Bahama and seven grandchildren. Behel Hill P. T. A. To Meet Monday j The Bethel Hill Parent Teachers association will meet Monday night; April 8, at 7:30 in, the school. auditorium. A very interesting program in the ‘Social Life of Boys and Girls in the Community” is being pre pared". In addition a play by the seventh grade entitled “Our trees” will toe presented. Another very interesting fea ture of the program will be a thirty-minute motion picture in technicolor. This film “Tulip Time at the World’s Fair” presents many beautiful scenes from the tulip gardens at the fair. Officers far next year will be voted on at this meeting. —io Former Roxboro Citizen Gets Honor J. D. K. Richmond, former Rox boro citizen and native of this county, has been re-elected vice president of (the South Boston, Va. Tobacco Board of Trade. Mr. Richmond buys tobacco on the South Boston market for Rey nolds Tobacco dotnpany. Prior to his moving to the Virginia city he bought on the local market. Open Meting On Program Os Scouting For Younger Boys Will Be Held This Month. Plans for a discussion meeting relative to reorganization of the Roxboro and Person “Cub Pack”, a unit of Scouting designed to in terest boys of pre-Scout age, were considered this week at a session of the re-organization committee and it is exipected that the re-or ganization program will be pre sented to parents and boys inter ested in the project at an even ing gathering to be held later in the month at the Roxboro Com munity house. Cubbing is a relatively new part of Boy Scout work, and in Roxiboro it has for the past two years been under the direction of William Pickering, of the . Col lins and Aikman corporation, and prior to that time, under C. A. 1 Harris. A significant phase of “Cub Pack” work is the close coperation expected between 1 leaders of the work and parents 'of the boys participating. Meet ings are held once each month, attended by the leaders, parents and boys. It is announced that under the plan of reorganization the local pack will be sponsored by a committee representing the. men of St. Mary’s and St. Edward’s Catholic church and that the cub pack leader will be Joe Ellis, Jr., of the Perccn county division of the Dan River Soil Conservation project. Mr. Ellis is a member of Roxboro First Baptist church. Members of the sponsoring committee are William Pickering, Gue Deering and George W. Kane, all j:f whom are actively inter ested in Scouting. It'was pointed out that meetings of the cub pack will not be held at the church but at some convenient central loca tion or in the homes of parents of the boys. Exact date Her the discussion meeting will be announced later and it is hoped that many parents and boys will attend. Members 'cf the reorganization committee present at the meet ing held this week were Clyde Swartz, Thomas J. Shaw, Jr., and Messers Pickering, Deering and Ellis. ~.. - o DATE ADVANCED Announcement was made yes terday that presentation date of “Spring Fever”, Roxboro high school senior play has been ad vanced from April 26 to April 19. o— “The Friends thou hast and their adoptions tried, grapple them to thy soul with hoops of 1 steel —Shakespeare ’ . DAWES ELECTED JUDGE OF PERSON RECORDERS COURT Unanimously Elected Mon day At Regular Session Os ( County Commissioners. Acting upon recommendations presented Monday morning by the Person Bar association through a committee representative of the association, members of the Per son county Board of commission ers, in regular session, unanim ously elected R. B. Dawes, Rox boro attorney and' former mayor, as judge of the recorder’s court. Mr. Dawes, who subsequently said that he would accept the po sition, will serve as judge until January 1, 1942, filling out the unexpired term lof Judge W. I. Newton who died last week. Thb commissioners also decided this morning that there was no vacan cy of the ofice of judge pro-tem, in view of the fact that S. G. Win stead, of this city, was duly ap pointed to this position in the first Monday in January this year, and that since this office had been previously filled, the bar’s provisional recommendation as to the appointment of Jule B. Warren as judge, pno-tem should not be adopted. No action was taken upon the Bar’s recommendation that there should be an increase in salaries paid to the judge and the solicitor, it being the opinion of oommis skxners that the question of sal aries should be deferred until the setting up of the county budget for the next fiscal year. For the remainder of the present " fiscal year salaries will remain as they hve (been. First session of the county court with Judge Dawes as presiding officer is scheduled for Tuesday, April 9. O—: Song-Play By Miss Lisette Allgood To Be Presented Here “Music Festival in Songlandia”, the libretto of which has been prepared by Miss Lizette Allgood, young Roxboro resident, who is maw a student at Meredith col lege, will be presented on the ev ening of Thursday, April 11, at Central school auditorium here, according to announcement made today by Mrs. Sam Byrd Win stead, of the city school music fa culty, who will direct the pro duction. Plot of Miss Allgood’s “song play” is said to be similar to that of Wagner’s “Die Miestersingers” and in the course of its presenta tion opportunities for including folk-songs, classical music and dances from many nations is pro vided. More than one hundred school children are expected to be in the production, which will be presented at 8 o’clock in the evening. Choir Will Sing Friday Evening Because of a change in sche dule, the appaearance of the Ben nett College choir, tof Greensboro, at the Person County Training school for Thursday evening, April 4, has been postponed until Friday evening, April 5. The choir will be directed by the dis tinguished composer, Dr. R. Nath aniel Dett o SHOWS IMPROVEMENT Victor Satterfield is reported to be much better after a severe illness c f two weeks duration. ZEBV. MORTON DIES AT HOTEL Well-Known Hotel Clerk Dies In Sleep Early Ibis Morning. Zeb V. Morton, 37, night clerk at Hotel Roxboro, was found dead in his room about 11:30 o’clock this morning, Mr. Morton, who had been suffering from a cold and a sore throat, had con tnued working although he had been unwell for several days. He was last seen early this morning, shortly after mid-night, when he retired to his room to go to sleep. Death was attributed to a heart attack. Discovery of the body was made by a maid at the hotel, who knocked on the door, obtained no response and then entered, for the purpose of morning cleaning. Mr. Morton, who was the son ■cif the late Mr. and Mrs. Zeb V. Morton, of this county, had been in delicate health almost all his life. Only dose relatives surviv ing are an uncle, Stephen Moore, of Person county, and three aunts, Mrs. C. T. Stephens and Mrs. Nannie Timberlake, of Semora, and Mrs. Lundy Bowles, of Pet ersburg, Va. Mr. Morton had been connect ed with Hotel Roxboro for about two and a half years and prior to that time was employed at the Palace theatre. Funeral arangemants are in complete, although it is expect ed that the services will be held tomorrow. o COMMISSIONERS VOTE TO ASSIST LOCAL HOSPITAL Person Commissioners Vote To Assist Hospital By Con. tributing To Debt Fund. Provisions for incorporation in the Person county 1940-41 budget of an appropriation of $2,500 to be contributed to Community hos pital’s debt fund was made Mon day by the Person County Board of commissioners, of which Phil ip L. Thomas is chairman. The action was taken by the commissioners following the ap pearance before the board of a hospital finance committee com posed of J. W. Noell, Flem D. Long and Reade Gentry. Members of the committee pointed out that the present indebtedness of Com munity hospital is slightly in ex cess of $21,000 and that the Duke endowment has recently offered the institution a conditional grant ■cf $12,000 to be used in partial cancellation of this debt, the pro vision being that the remaining sum necessary to clear the debt shall be contributed by citizens of the town and county. It was also pointed out that with the appropriation from the commissioners budget $2,500 and a hope for appropriation from the city council of $1,500, the amount to be raised by private subscrip tions would be $5,000. It is ex pected that a campaign to raise the last mentioned amount will not get underway until after the matter of a city appropriation will be presented to the city council, although it is the hope of the hospital board and the finance committee to complete the local raising of funds by September. The county commissioners also considered the requests, present ed by a delegation of representa tive Negro citizens, that the coun ty appropriate sufficient funds to pay pars of the monthly salary of a Negro Home Demonstration ag ent, but action; was deferred un til the budget is matte up. THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1940 Golf Club Rules Regarding Membership Fees Announced Proctor and Petty Chosen As Finals Speakers At School Ocmmenoement speaker at Hurdle Mills school will be Mr. A. M. Proctor, of the department of Education, Duke university, who will deliver his address Fri day evening, May 10, at 8 o’clock in the high school auditorium, while the baccalaureate sermon will be given at the same place on Sunday, May 5, by the Rev. D. A. Petty, pastor of Brooksdale Me thodist church. The Rev. Mr. Petty will deliver his sermon at 8 o’clock in the evening. Both Mr. Petty and Dr. Proctor are known to many Per son dc.unty residents and it is ex pected that they will have large audiences. At the Friday evening finals graduation exercises will be held, culminating with presen tations of diplomas and awards. o Dr. McDonald To Be Main Speaker At Helena Finals Speaker at the finals, Thursday evening, May 9, at Helena school, Person county, will be Dr. Ralph W. McDonald, of the Extension Division, University of North Carolina, of Chapel Hill, accord ing to announcement made today by R. C. Garrison, principal, who said that another featured speaker will be the Rev. J. Winston Pear ce, recently chosen as pastor of the First Baptist church, Durham, who will deliver the baccalaur eate sermon. The Rev. Mr. Pearce, a native of North Carolina and an alum nus of Campbell college and Wake Forest, will deliver the sermon to the graduating class, Sunday af ternoon at 3 o’clock, May 5. Mr. Pearce received theological train ing at Southern Baptist Theologi cal seminary and at the Univer sity of Chicago. For mere than three years he has been pastor of First Baptist church, Nevado, Mo., but on April 10 will become pas tor of the church at Durham. Dr. McDonald was four years ago candidate for Democratic no mination as governor of North! Carolina and is a popular state figure, as well as an attractive speaker, and Mr. Garrison said this morning that he is very pleas ed to report that Mr. McDonald and the Rev. Mr. Pearce have ac cepted the invitations extended. o Hurde Mills To Give Senior Play The Senior class of Hurdle Mills school will present a play, “The Path Across the Hill”, Fri day, April 12, at 8:00 o’clock in the eveing. The charcters will be Ruth Conrad, a young school teacher; Helen Foushee; Walter Conrad, Ruth’s brother, Harold Horton; Grandpa Crawford, Ruth’s grandfather, Rose Whit field; Flo Gray, Ruth’s Frivalous cousin, Delma Clayton; Lutie, Ruth’s friend, Varonioa Hall; Grandma Davis, Lutie’s grand mother, Ora Murray; Dr. Jimmy Reed, Ruth’s friend, Clarence Hall; Robert Post, Ruth’s young boarder, Dallas Gates; Zuzu, Ruth’s Negro Qook, Nelle Breeze; and Salamander Alexander John Henry Jones, Zuzu’s admirer, Jack White. THE TIMES IS PREMIER NEWSPAPER A LEADER AT ALL TIMER NUMBER THIRTY-SEVEN Schedule of Payment Ar ranged So That Old and New Members Will Be Placed On Equal Basis. In a statement issued by How ard K. Strang, secretary-treasur er, member of the board of dir ectors of Roxboro Country club, incorporated, today said that it will henceforth be necessary for ■club members to take over main tenance of the golf course, it be ing pointed out that the course; at Chub Lake, is substantially complete as far as WPA is con cerned. Also, it was said, alterations to the club house are completed, with the exception of a few need ed further improvements which will have to be assumed by the club members. Citing these facta, the directors are of the opinion that the question of dues, tinder discussion for some time, is now more pertinent than ever and that some adjustment lof the due* schedule must be made if the club is to continue function as it should. With this problem in mind the directors have presented a plan whereby dues will be equalized. Under this plan any member who has in the past contributed $25 or over will be considered a “Paid-Up” membr and this a mount will be credited as a “Paid Up” fee, which will as of April 1, 1940, be required of all member* of the Club. Effective as of April 1, 1940 annual dues will be $25, payable quarterly. It was indicated that all members who have to April 1 paid more than $25 as dues will have the extra amounts prorated as payments on 1940 dues, but it was clearly indicated that those, members who have not paid in as much as $25 during the past year will have to contribute the addi tional sum necessary to make the paid-up fee now required of all members, although an arrange ment has out where by completion of the paid-up fee may be made by bojh old and new members on a quarterly basis. ** It is also anounegd that a daily green fee of fifty cents will be charged all non-members desir ing to use the golf course. In discussing the plans for fin ancial adjustments, as proposed above, members of the board of directors pointed' out in their statement that under the plan no attempt is being made or will be made to collect all back dues, but that all members Will resume payment, regardless of how much they have paid in to date. o Slaughter Child Has Diphtheria Carl Slaughter, two years of age and son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Slaughter, who reside in the southern section of the city near the Oxford-Durham highway, ‘is Person county’s second victim of diphtheria since the first of Jan uary, according to announcement made today by Person Health of ficer, Dr. A. L. Allen, who said that although the child has been, ill for several days, his condition is not regarded as serious. But disoovery of the case has prompted Dr. Allen to reiterate statements previously made as to the importance of parents seeing that all children over six months of age are given diphtluris anti toxin. The Slaughter child had | not been so treated, it whs mid, | although state law now require* ,J diphtheria innoculatkm. ■ Ja 4