IF IT 18 NEWS ABOUT PERSON COUNTY, YOU’LL FIND IT IN THE TIMES. VOLUME XI Three Smithfield Lawyers To Speak On Control Issue Barristers. Will Come Here From Recent Battle-Ground of Johnston. Greer Will Fol * low. ABC Advocates Make No Announcement. Borrowing oratorical support from Johnston county, where op ponents of the legalized sale of whiskey less than two months ago reversed a policy of control instituted in 1937, Rev. W. F. West, chairman of the Person County Dry forces, today announced the selection of three distinguished Smithfield attor neys as speakers at a county wide mass meeting of Person county Dry advocates to be held at the court house in this city on Saturday afternoon, August 10, two weeks before the election of August 24, in which Person voters will again be asked to vote upon the problem of alco holic control in the county. The three Johnston barristers invited to speak at three o’clock in the afternoon are Frederick H. Brooks, Winfield H. Lyon and A. M. Noble. Mr. Lyon accredits himself as a previous advocate of control, who has since changed his mind, while the other two speakers are judges of courts in their county. All three are re garded as persuasive speakers who will clear the way for I. G. Greer, superintendent of the Mills Home orphanage, Thomasville, who will, as previously announ ced, speak on behalf of the United Dry forces at a meeting to be held in Roxboro high school audi torium at three o’clock in the af ternoon on Sunday, August 18. On Sunday morning before Mr. Greer speaks in the afternoon, ministers in both white and Neg ro churches in Person have been asked to deliver sermons appro priate to the occasion. A spokesman for the local unit; of the United Dry forces said that | other details of the campaign in the county would probably be an nounced next week, while advo cates of the control plan reported an increasing interest in the es tablishment of the ABC system, which missed being set up here 3 years ago by less than 25 votes. It was reported last week that a distinguished control advocate from the Piedmont section of the state had agreed to speak for con trol at a meeting of control ad vocates to be held here before the voting is done, but no additional information concerning the speak er or the date selected was ob tainable today. Books for the registration of transfers and of voters whose names are not now on the lists were opened last Saturday and will remain open through Satur day, August 10. Efforts to obtain a question and answer estimate of control and anti-control sen timent in the county are not con clusive but indications are that the division of opinions is almost as clearly drawn as it was in 1937, though control advocates are claiming more adherents. O' REUNION HELD Members of the family of the late Mr. and Mrs. George Hay wood Jones held the first of what is planned as a series of annual reunions Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jones, near this city. In addition to those members of the family residing in Person county, a num ber of guests frpm elsewhere in the state and from Georgia and South Carolina were present. o SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Bums of Lamar street, this city an nounces the birth of a son on Wednesday, July 31. |frson|Minies EVERT SUNDAY & THURSDAY Mrs. Harris Dies At Durham Home Funeral services for Mrs. Sal ly Johnson Harris, 59, of Durham, widow of A. T. Harris, and mo ther of Mrs. W. Rainey Hawkins, of Roxboro, were conducted this afternoon at 4 o’clock by the Rev. Sidney R. Crumpton, assist ant pastor of Duke Memorial Methodist church. Burial was in the new annex of Maplewood cemetery at Durham. Mrs. Harris died Wednesday morning at 8 o’clock at Watts hospital. She had been critically ill since Friday. A. T. Harris, her husband, died July 17. She was ill and confined to her bed at the time of his death. Surviving are two sons, Luttie T. Harris and Turner Lee Harris, of Durham; two daughters, Mrs. Hawkins, of this city; Mrs. Gladys Royal of Durham; one sister Mrs. Lula of Durham; two grandchildren, Ronald and Billie Hawkins of Roxboro. Active pall bearers were Frank Belvin, Garland Gunter, James Wilson, Leon Mabry, R. J. Broad well and Elmer T. Gale. o COMMERCE BOARD MEETS TUESDAY Directors Authorize Ap pointment of Committees. Ballots Will Be Mailed. Meeting in regular sesion Tues day night at the Chamber of Com merce office members of the Board of Directors of the Roxboro Chamber authorized the appoint ment of a nominating committee to name nominees to the board, it being the custom to present the names of 15 members to the membership, with the nine high est nominees elected as directors. It is expected that the list will be sent out this week or next and that balloting will be concluded shortly afterwards. Also named at the session wa3 a committee to pass on the relia bility and worthwhileness of ad vertising, especially such advertis ing as is brought in from outside of the city by promoters who wish cooperation with local merchants. It was pointed out that local resi dents frequently have cause to investigate reliability of such promoters. By direction of the Board, Wal lace W. Woods, secretary of the Chamber, has been requested to confer with City Manager Percy Bloxam and other interested per sons regarding improvement of bus routes through the city and the establishment of an adequate bus terminal. o Numbers Go To Farm-Home Week At State College Person county attendance at the annual “Farm and Home” week at the North Carolina State college division of the Univer sity of North Carolina, Raleigh, which will come to a close Friday night after a full week of pro grams designed to be of benefit to North Carolina farmers and their wives, was estimated at be tween 15 and 20, among those pre sent being Miss Velma Beam, Person Home Demonstration ag ent, Mrs. Claude T. Hall and Misses Christine Barnette, Mabel Moore and Ruth Whitfield. A number of local people were in Raleigh for one or more of the evening sessions. Democratic Nominees Plan Campaign Strategy f -1 & , < bf »f im ■ ■■ v '■' b Bf Sk Bm W 31111 Iwi % rl % m lilil ililll 'i mk r ' • jmUl B S M Hk m ‘ wife : Unlike Republican presidential and vice presidential nominees Wendell L. Willkie and Sen. Charles L. Me- Nary who had never met before, their selection as the party’s 1940 standard bearers, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry A. Wallace, the Democratic candidates, have been closely associated in the past seven and a half years. President Roosevelt and Secretary of Agriculture Wallace are shown above conferring on strategy for the coming campaign In which the President will seek a third term. * Barber Al And Vera Dixon Put On Free Show At Clinic In the spaciousness of the au ditorium of the Person County Training school for Negroes, Dr. B. E. Fassett, of Durham, Dr. R. A. Bryce, Negro physician, and Dr. A. L. Allen, director of the Person unit of the tri-county health department, assisted by nurses of the department were re moving the tonsils of Vera Dixon, twenty-sixth and last patient at the Wednesday Kiwanis tonsil clinic for Negro children. Gathered in small groups around temporary beds and cots filled with boys and girls in var ious stages of recovery from ton silectomies and accompanying ether fumes were parents, nur ses and attendants. One of the at tendants, Al Pulliam, local bar ber, stood leaning against the auditorium piano. The work of the day was over. The doctors, all but the one who was watching Vera, started putting away kniv es and medicines. Suddenly, Vera stirred in her sleep, opened her mouth and be gan to sing. Doctors and nurses more used to etherized cursing than melody, looked on in aston ishment. The only person in the room who showed real presence of mind was Barber Al Pulliam. Instinctively his fingers sought the keyboard and it did not ma.- ter at all that Vera's rich sop rano voiced the words of a haunt ing spiritual: “Don’t You Feel Like Your Time Ain’t Long?” In six minutes the concert was over, but Dr. Allen, in charge of the Wednesday morning clinic, says it took twice that time to assure the singer that she really didn’t have long to stay in the clinic and was in no danger of leaving this troubled world. Church Camp Has Good Program Rev. and Mrs. L. V. Coggins, whose camp for young men and women, conducted at Clement Baptist church, came to a close on Saturday, reported Monday that total enrollment at the camp reached 109 and that 55 boys and girls attended classes. Those assisting with the camp program and classes included. Rev. and Mrs. K. D. Stukenbroke, I Rev. and Mrs. H. C. Millican, Miss Lucille Davidson, Mesdam es R. L. Wilburn and Maurice Daniel, Misses Ruth Sims, Nina Rogers, Shirley Brooks, Ella Thompson, Helen Graves, and Louise Rogers and Mrs. Sims, and Billy West and Jarvis Adams. 1 J.M. WALKER, JR. SPEAKS AT CLUB Presbyterian Minister Talks On Race Relations Speaker at the regular Mon day evening dinner session of the Roxboro Kiwanis club held at Hotel Roxboro was the Rev. J. M. Walker, Jr., pastor of Roxboro Presjbyterian church, whose , theme was “Christian Democra cy” as exemplified in better race relationships.- To emphasize his ■ point Mr. Walker quoted a num ber of poems by John Charles McNeill, Mr. Walker was intro duced by Ben Brown, club vice , president. Members of the club voted to contribute the sum of SIOO to the . Community hospital debt fund. Later in the evening several mem bers formed a pool and contribut . ed an additional $1 in the name of the club, making the total con tribution of the organization slOl. Special guests were J. B. Sni pes, former member of club, now a resident of North Wilksboro, and Ted Sherman, house guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Long, Jr. Program next week, at Oak Grove church, will be in charge of Ralph G. Cole and Gus Deer ing. Williams Child i Dies Monday i Person County Coroner, Dr. A. . F. Nichols, reported Monday that Thomas Milton Williams, 2 mon ths old son of Mr. and Mrs. Van der Williams, of Helena, died late Sunday night or early Monday morning at their residence as the result of suffocation. Parents of the infant said that the child was apparently in good health Sun ; day night and that they found ‘ the lifeless body about five o’- : clock Monday morning in a bed 1 occupied jointly with an older brother. 1 Dr. Nichols expressed the 1 opinion that suffocation was in duced by coverlets on the bed ’ i which covered the child. S Funeral services were conduct ed Tuesday afternoon. o R. A. BULLOCK BETTER I R. A. (Dick) Bullock, who has I I been confined to his home for| l! several days on account of an p illness, is reported to be much im j proved-. PUNS FOR CHEST DISCUSSED HERE Social Agency Executive Committee Ponders Ques tion of Community Chest For Roxboro. Discusion es possibilities of the formation of a community chest organization to meet the combin ed needs for charitable and social ■ agency funds in this city was ! held at a called meeting of the ex ecutivecommittee of the Person ■ and Roxboro Council of Social i Agencies yesterday afternoon. Presiding over the session was the Rev. T. M. Vick, Methodist 1 minister and president of the • Council, who was authorized by the committee to name an inves i tigation committee composed of Wallace W. Woods, secretary of ■ the local Chamber of Commer ce, Rev. J. M. Walker, Jr., Mrs. > R. C. Hall, Mrs. T. C. Wagstaff ■ and J. D. Mangum. Mr. Vick was instructed to in ■ form the committee that a full - report as to the desirability of ! the establishment of a Commun ■ ity Chest here will be requested. 1 At the executive sesion yesterday, which was held at the court • house, it was pointed out that ' the multiplicity of calls made up > on local residents for contribu t tions to charitable and social wel ■ fare could be materially reduced • by formation of a community ! chest and that money spent for ’ such purposes could be more ec onomically invested. Under the Community Chest plan funds for operation and sup port of such organizations and institutions as the milk fund, the hospital, special welfare cases and health cases, the Red Cross, . and Boy and Girl Scouts are col t lected with the understanding • that no additional calls for funds ■ will be made during the year. : Members of the Social Agencies r council said yesterday that they > will be interested in having an ! expression of public opinion as » to the practicality of organizing -a Roxboro Community chest. 1 o - GRIFFINS AWAY I person county si^perintendent • of schools, R. B. Griffin, accom panied by his father and mother, ; Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Griffin, and - his aunt, Mrs. H. B. Williams, all l of whom are residents as Raleigh, left Roxboro yesterday morning • for Cullowhee, where Mr. Grif fin will attend the Thursday through ’ Saturday annual con ference of North Carolina school superintendents at Western Caro s lina Teachers’ college, that city, r Mr. Griffin and members of his i party will return via Charlotte, - where they expect to spend the week-end. THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1940 Commsisioners Not Expected To Engage Assistant Agent “ONE DOLLAR TO ANOTHER” Nathan Lunsford, chair man of the Board of Direc tors of Community hospital and treasurer of the debt fund drive now being con ducted for the institution, thinks civic club rivalry is a great thing. Last week he smiled all over himself when the Roxboro Rotary club, of which he is a member, voted unanimously to contribute the sum of SIOO to the hospi tal debt fund. On Monday he smiled a gain when the local Kiwanis club, not to be outdone, con tributed a hundred dollars and added a pool of one dol lar, thus putting the Kiwan ian gift in the lead. This morning Mr. Lunsford opened his mail: the Rotary club check was for $lO2. MRS. B. R. LONG PASSES AT HOME NEAR TKJSCITY Prominent Greensboro and Roxboro Resident Dies After Illness Os Several Weeks. Funeral Held Today Mrs. Delma Noell Long, of Greensboro and Roxboro, wife of Dr. B. R. Long dentist for the City Health Department, Greens boro, died yesterday morning a bout 7:30 o’clock at the Long's summer home on the Leasburg road, near Roxboro, after an ill ness lasting several weeks. Mrs. Long returned from Duke hos pital, Durham, only last week. Death was attributed to compli cations. Although she has been in ill health for several years, Mrs Long, who had been a resident of Greensboro for 17 years, re turned to her home here each summer. A native of Person county, she was the niece of J. W. Noell, editor of the Roxboro Courier, and the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Noell. Survivors include her husband, Dr. Long; one son, Billy Noel Long, both of Greensboro; one sister Mrs. S. Arch Jones, of Rox boro, and a brother, John A. Noell,of New Orleans, La. Final rites were held at the Leaaburg Road residence this afternoon at 3:30 o’clock, by the Rev. W. F. West, of Roxboro First Baptist church, of which Mrs. Long was formerly a mem ber. Interment took place in Burchwood cemetary, Roxboro. Pall bearers were D’Arcy Brad sher, W. H. Harris, m, Page Har ris, Noel Jones, Charles Reade Long, Franklin Long and H. D. Long, Jr. Q First Service To Be Conducted First service in the new Ca-Vel First Baptist church, near Ca-Vel circle, will be held Sunday, Aug. 4, according to the pastor, the Rev. J. N. Bowman, who has an nounced that the program, in cluding laying of the corner stone, will begin at 10 o’clock in the morning. At noon a picnic luncheon will be served on the church grounds, with members of Ca-Vel Methodist Church and Providence Baptist church assist ing. The pastor and a number of , others are to speak at the servi i ces which will continue into the afternoon. THE TIMES IS PERSONS PREMIER NEWSPAPER, A LEADER AT ALL TIMES. NUMBER FORTY-ONE No Financial Provision Now Made For Employment Os Successor To J. B. Snipes. Reports that no successor to Assistant Person Farm Agent J. B. Snipes would be chosen at any time in the near future were today confirmed by Philip L. Thomas, chairman of the Board of Person County commissioners, who said that other members of the board were in agreement with him, although he and they were high in their praise of the work here executed by Mr. Snipes. Mr. Snipes, who announced his resignation on July 9, will this week move to North Wilkesboro, and as Farm Agent for Willces county will reside in that city. He assumed his duties in Wilkes more than two weeks ago, blit has until recently spent his week ends in Roxboro. Official action deferring the se lection of a successor to Mr. Snip es was taken by the Commission ers of Person at an extended session of the Board on July 11, two days after the Assistant Form agent’s resignation. At this meet ing, according to the minutes of the session, members of the board reconsidered a previous recom dation as to increase of salary for the assistant farm agent and went on record that no “set-up” be provided for an assistant farm agent in the 1940-1941 budget. This budget now stands as adopt ed. According to Mr. Thomas cer tain portions of Farm Agency work previously allotted to Mr. Snipes will be added to the pro gram already being carried out by County Agent H. K. Sanders. Exact details for the revised schedule have not been worked out, Mr. Thomas said, although it is expected that more of routine detail will be handled by the of fice staff, thereby releasing Mr. Sanders for Four-H club work and farm supervision formerly handled by Mr. Snipes. It has been learned that sev eral aspects of the Farm Agency and Home Demonstration pro gram for the county may be dis cussed at the August meeting of the Commissioners on Monday, but Mr. Thomas and Commissioner F. T. Whitfield declined to make statements in regards to the fu ture prospects for employment of an assistant farm agent, although it is thought that they and Com missioner D. M. Cash will ultim ately again make provision for the employment of an assistant. Regarding the fact that tenta tive selection of a new assistant had been made immediately af ter Mr. Snipes’ resignation, they had no comment to offer. Mr. Sni.pes, who first came to Person county five years ago this fall, received only part of his compensation from county funds, salaries paid to him and to Mr. Sanders being partially derived from Federal and State funds. o JOE IS BACK Joe King, formerly of Roxboro, but recently of Whiteville, N. C. has returned to Roxboro and is now with King’s Palace, local case and dancing center, on tha Durham road. Joe requests that his friends • come by to see him. I " ■ ; AT CHURCH i Elders E. L. Cobb and R. H. I Baswell, both of Wilson, will ■ speak tonight at Roxboro Primi tive Baptist. The service, accord t ( ing to announcement from Flem - D. Long, prominent lay member ; 1 of the church, will begin at 7:30 o’clock.