Refugees to Canada From British Isles Grade Fields, famed British comedienne who has .been entertaining Tommies at the front, s. cv. n am-: some of the British refugee children brought to Canada. Right: Crown Princess Juliana of the Ncth"-1 mi's holding one of her children on train at Halifax, while F. E. H. Groenman, Netherlands minister to Canada holds her eldest child. The royal party will reside temporarily at a vacation resort in Canada. Farm and Home Week Will Be Held Last of This Month State College To Be Scene Os Activity For Worth while Rural Program. Raleigh, July 4 A five-day program packed full of education, recreation and entertainment is awaiting rural people who attend Farm and Home Week at N. C. State college, July 29 - August 1. Dr. I. O. Schaub, director of the Extension Service, and Miss Ruth Current, State home agent, said this year’s program is expected to strike the best balance between instruction and entertainment in years. Reports from every section of the State indicate a record-break ing attendance this year. With AAA committeemen scheduled to attend, the enrollment may reach 2,500. In years past, attendance has averaged between 1,500 and 2,000. Joint sessions of men and wo men will be held each of the five days except Thursday to begin each day's program. Following this session, the two groups will break up into separate meetings where they will receive instruc tion in a wide variety of subjects. For instance, women will be given their choice of classroom work in the following subjects: clothing, foods and nutrition, food conservation and marketing, health, home management and house furnishings, home beautifi cation, horticulture, hospitality, 4-H leadership, music apprecia tion, preliamentary procedure, poultry, recreation, and libraries. On the other hand, the men will study poultry, forestry, the AAA program, cotton, tobacco, bee keeping, horticulture, crop rota tion, legumes, and other farm sub jects. Each evening will be turned over to recreation. Included on these programs will be games, contests, music, group singing, and square dancing. Complete details on the con vention may be obtained from Darn M. Paul, State college, Ra leigh. o More Workers Are Added To U. C. C. i Raleigh, July 4 Twenty -four workers were added in June and 26 were added as of July 1 to the personnel of the State Unemploy ment Compensation commission, 29 of these in the Unemployment j Compensation Division and 21 in the Employment Service Division, all from the register of those who had passed the merit examinations and were on the waiting list, Mrs J. B. Spilman, Commission vice-chairman, announces. The additions are to take place of workers who have resigned during the year or more and whose places were left Vacant in a lax period. A gradual increase in work due in part to seasonal layoffs in plants of the State, ne cessitated the additions, Mrs. Spilman said. ‘Congresswoman’ ■' /"'• aA—y'’ , Margaret Chase Smith, wife of the late Rep. Clyde Smith (R.j of Maine, being sworn in to fill the vacancy left by him. Mrs. Smith is the eighth woman in congress. Truck Accidents Cause of Deaths Raleigh, July 4 Three fatal accidents in North Carolina last month called attention to the dan ger of riding on the back of a truck, Ronald Hocutt, Director of the Highway Safety Division, re ported this week. Accident records for June Show that a 33-year.old woman, a 36- year-old man and a 15-year-old boy were killed during the month as a result of falling off or being thrown out of trucks on the rear of which they were riding. “Riding on the back end of and on running boards of pas senger vehicles is a practice which should be discouraged by : everv driver in North Carolina,” said Ronald Hocutt, Director of the Safety Division. “The danger of someone fall ing off or being thrown off a moving vehicle if they are riding on the running board or outside the cab when the vehicle strikes a hard bump or swerves unexpect edly is obvious,” he added," and the most effective means of com batting this highly dangerous practice is for every motor ve i hide driver to refuse to carry any passengers for whom they cannot find a seat inside.” “Drivers who permit passengers to ride on the outside of their i cars or trucks are at least mor ally responsible if persons so rid ing should suffer some mishap.” DR. R. J. PEARCE EYES EXAMINED MONDAYS ONLY Thomas-Carver Bldg. Crowd Expected For Farm Event Raleigh, July 4 Farmers from 30 counties will attend the 35th. annual field day at the Piedmont Test Farm at Statesville, July 18, to hear prominent agricultural and industrial leaders and inspect the “march of progress” in farm research, Commissioner of Agri culture W. Kerr Scott announced here today. Odus M. Mull of Shelby, indus trialist, farmer and legislator; Harry B. Caldwell of Greensboro, master of the State Grange Mrs. Rosalind Redfeam of Wadesboro, Anson county home agent and Hr. I. E. Miles, director of the soil testing division, State Department of Agriculture, will be the speak ers. A crowd of 4,000 farmers and their friends is expected. D. S. Coltrane, assistant to the Commissioner of Agriculture, will preside as chairman for the day. J. Wade Hendrick, assistant director in charge of the Pied mont Test Farm, will supervise the tours of the experimental plats on the farm. Miss Anne Tucker of Statesville, Iredell county home agent, will be chairman of the womens pro gram in the afternoon. A matt rss-making demonstration will be presented as a feature. Contests will also be held in the afternoon under the super vision of A. R. Morrow, Iredell county agent, assisted by J. W.! Pou and Dave Redfearn, assistant Iredell county agents. F. E. Miller, director of thej test farms division of the State j Department of Agriculture, will, be chairman of the central com-' mittee for the event. Specialists of N. C. Experiment ■ Stations and State College Exten sion Service, State Department of Agriculture and U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture will explain the research program and experi ments at the farm. o Bud worms are causing consid erable damage in Craven county tobacco fields, according to Paul M. Cox, assistant farm agent of the N. C. State College Exten sion service. ~S\ an overstaffed chair ?ff Have you fireintuanc* ? 0 THOMPSON INSURANCE AGENCY Roxboro, N. C PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. FARM QUESTIONS ANSWERED « Question: What percentage of soybeans can I add to the ration for my hogs without injurious ef fects? Answer: Recent expriments at this station have shown that as much as fifty percent of the ra tion may be soybeans for pigs! from 61 to 100 pounds in weight. When the pigs reached 100 pounds the ration was changed to corn tankage containing 13 percent cottonseed meal and this was con tinued until the animals were slaughtered at 230 pounds. Out of 153 hogs used, 148 or 96.7 per cent of the chilled carcasses grad ed firm. Question: Can seed Irish pota toes from the early crop be used to plant the late crop? Answer: Seed from the spring crop of such varieties as Cobblers, Early Rose, and Bliss Triumph may be planted for the late crop if the seed are sprouting, but a better plan is to secure seed pota toes from last year’s crop which have been kept in storage. It sometimes takes three or four weeks before sprouting begins even if the seed are covered with hay or straw and kept moist un til sprouting occurs. In any case, plant only those seed which have sprouted. Question: What is the best time to cut com for silage? • Answers: The proper time Id cut corn for silage is when the grain is denting and the shuck slightly yellow. This stage of ma turity is reached about a week or ten days before the corn is ready to cut and shock. If cut earlier the nutritive value of the silage will be lowered and the acid con tent often increased to an object ionable level. If the harvesting is delayed beyond the proper stage of maturity the crop will not con tain enough moisture to pack and keep well in the silo. If sorghum is used for silage this crop should not be cut until the seed in the head are firm. Fresh Vegetables DAILY Snap Beans, Peas, Lettuce, Cabbage, Butter Beans Corn,Cucumbers, Tomatoes Coffee Fresh Ground i 2 £ jfcalJ C» Fruit Juices ££££?’ FRESH MEATS Hamburger lb. 15c Pure Pork Sausage lb. 15c Skinless Franks lb. 20c Sliced* Bacon . lb. I7£c Pork Chops lb. 18c Veal Chops lb. I7jc Sliced Country Ham Sergeant & Clayton FINE GROCERIES Reader’s Digest Has Article On “The Lost Colony” Manteo, July 4 The current Reader’s Digest, popular monthly magazine which publishes conden. sations of articles of lasting inter est, features a story on “The Lost Colony,” the Paul Green historical drama now playing its fourth summer season at the huge Wat erside Theatre here, in its series entitled, “Traditional Ceremon ies in the United States.” Condensed from the leading article in the June issue of “Holland’s: The Magazine of the South,” the material reprinted in The Reader’s Digest concerns the historical development of “The Lost Colony” as a community cel ebration of the historic events on the very site of the original col ony sent over by Sir Walter Ra leigh in 1587. “The Lost Colony” is a non commercial venture sponsored by the Roanoke Island Historical as sociation. Paul Green, noted nat ive Pulitzer Prize dramatist, wrote the drama gratis and sole ly for presentation at the birth place of the Nation. More than 250,000 have seen it during the past three years, and 100,000 are expected before the season clos es, Sept. 2. o NEAT Morris Yoder, Lincolnton, Route 2, believes, like many other Lin coln County farmers, that the ap pearance of the farmstead is part of a well-balanced farm program Anew simple, process now widely used on trans-Pacific ships, will keep bottled milk fresh and sweet for periods as long as three months. WANT ADS NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS OF PERSON COUNTY I will for the next month con duct a clinic for the county and state to vadcinate all dogs. Price 50c. Time: each Tuesday, Thurs day and Saturday morning from 9 until 12 o’clock. DR. O. G. DAVIS • 6-20 t-s ts Buffalo ! Mineral Water 5 gal. *1 TEA Bed Seal l lb. 25c President Visits 4-H Boys and Girls m | igm rrriMi]ni’ 1B& '"w Mmn(<‘% iii r i i j :; t nt Franklin l>. Roosevelt is here shown visiting with one run dred and seventy boys and girls from forty-three states encamped at the fourteenth annual parley of the 4-H clubs. The 4-H club members ate evidently, keenly enjoying this visit with the Chief. Josephus Daniels. United States ambassador to Mexico, is sitting in the car with the President Ex-Tea Planter Now In Movies John Sultton, who left an Eng lish college to manage a ranch in South Africa, and who served for a while as a tea planter in India, is today the principal of Hollywood’s most unusual success story. “I had no thoughts of a drama tic career, until I traveled half around the world to California and decided to live here,” Sutton explains. Year-around polo, tennis, golf and other outdoor sports he lov ed, made Sutton eager to settle permanently in California. So when a director suggested that he work in pictures, Sutton promptly accepted. Today, after displaying un puestioned acting talent in “Eli zabeth and Essex” and “The In visible Man Returns,” Sutton holds a term contract at Univer sal. His latest screen role is in Universal musical “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Baby,” DOLLY MADISON ADVANCE PROGRAM From Thursday, July 4th Through Saturday, July 6th. Motion Pictures Are Your Best Entertainment Thursday-Friday, July 4-sth 1 Broderick Crawford - Peggy Moran - Johnny Downs in ! “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Baby” (First Run) They won’t give you anything but FUN! It’s a musicalulu of laughs, lovelies ... and the swingiest story of the season! Melodears and Musical Mob-] sters ... in the fun frolic of ( the season! Our Gang Comedy: “BUBBLING TROUBLE” Fables Cartoon: .. “Practice Makes Perfect”.. Special Morning Show Friday \ 10:30; afternoons daily 3-15- ! 3:45; Admission 10-30 c; even- 1 ings daily 7:30-9:15: Admis sion 15-30 c Saturday, July 6th Jack Randall with Louise Stanley, in “The Cheyenne Kid” (First Run) Episode No. 10 of the serial “Drums Os Fu Manchu” (Drums Os Doom) with Henry Brandon-William Royle - Robert Kellard-Gloria Franklin. Popeye The Sailor; in “ONION PACIFIC” Afternoon 2:30-4:00; Admis sion 10-30 c; Evening 7:00-8:30 -9:45 Admission 15-30 c. NOTICE TO OUR PATRONS Please take notice that effect ive with Monday, July 1, 1940, the New Federal Government Defense Tax became effective •and our Admission schedule has beep changed in accord ance with the Federal Law. To-wit: Palace—Matinee 10-30 Evening 15-35 c; Dolly Madison —Matinee 10-30 c; evening 15-30 c. THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1940 now showing at the Dolly Madi. son Theatre with Broderick Crawford, Peggy Moran and Johnny Downs. toc«CK ,g|A jk N v r > 7 7 666 PALACEraEATRE ADVANCE PROGRAM From Thursday, July 4th Through Saturday, July 6th. Motion Pictures Are Your Best Entertainment Thursday-Friday, July 5.4 Don Arrieche-Eugenie Leor.t ovich - Mary Beth Hughes - Alan Curtis, In “FOUR SONS” The heart of a mother cries out ... as armies march, em otions clash, men hate and fight and die ... today, “My 1 Sons are all I have! What right has the world to turn them against each other?” A drama of Timely Greatness! One of the Truly Great Pic tures of Era! Fitzpatrick Travel talk: "Seattle, Gateway to the Northwest” Lantz Colored Cartoon: “100 Pigmies And Andy Panada” No Morning Show; Afternoons daily 3:15-3:45; Admission 10-30 c Evenings daily 7:30-9:15 Admission 15-35 c Special Shows Sat. July 6th ; Joe Louis vs Arturo Godov I (Champion) (Challenger B—Furious punishing rounds at Ringside! Should the bout ' have been stopped? Goday says “No”. Godoy took more than any other man has taken in the ring since the “Dempsy. Willard Fight”—Was he rob bed? Exclusive, official, mo tion pictures direct from the ! ringside. Extra Added Attrac j tion: Renfrew of the Royal Mounted “FIGHTING MAD” with James Newill Morning Show 10:30; Admission 10c-30c Night 11:30: Admission all seats 35c (Positively the only showing Balcony reserved for colored) Saturday, July 6th Gene Autry - Smiley Burnette - Lucile Browne, in “Tumbling Tumbleweeds” “Where sparkling eyes and flashing guns add zest and danger to gay adventure.” Episode No. 6 of the serial “Terry And The Pirates” (The Scroll of Wealth) with William Tracy-Granville Owen - Allen Jung Terry-Toon: “Hare And The Hounds” Afternoon Admission 16-30 c; Evening 7:00-8:30-0:45; Admission 15-35 c. (Box office opens 6:45)