iMpjlS NEWS ABOUT ptaSON COUNTY, YOU’LL FpM) 4t in the times. f i w Vw xn published every Sunday & Thursday Sunday, December 22, mo number nine |?tews Os The [News 1 VIEWS OF NEWS— i|’Ai>JIJOF|N T MENT FAIL IF,' f:*’ Washington, Dec. 20. —Admin- istration leaders abandoned nope of adjourning the lingering 76tn JGohgress and arranged to connn (*-Hein session over the holidays by 4t series of three-day recesses. * . House leaders had planned to '*offer an adjournment resolution r today if the prospects for its suc cess were good. They then learned i that at least one Republican mom - ber could and would block a re quest for unanimous consent to adjourn. O’ i Senate Majority Leader Aiben W. Barkley joined house leaders in deciding that any attemot to K adjourn this session sin die would if be futile and that no such effort “< would be made. ..*•» . O f* AW ASKS AID GAINST FORD ra, Detroit. Dec.—The C. I. O. Un-it- Automobile Workers appeal : %d to President Roosevelt for fed- L’ Iferal intervention to “dissuade” the Ford Motor Company from krTts provocative efforts” to ‘pro- a strike in its plants.” | Michael F. Widman, Jr., head of l the union’s campaign to organize [ Ford workers, charged in a tele r gram to the President that 110 L Ford workers were fired Wed- in “open and arrogant i ■ violation of the labor laws. ’ fk o t WESTERN UNION CLEARED | OF CONSPIRACY CHARGE Chicago, Dec.—The Federal L Court threw out an indictment I’ charging the Western Union Tel t egraph Company and 11 individ- L uals with conspiracy to violate [ the lottery laws by sending horse r racing results over interstate I boundaries. The charges were dropped Lwhen Judge William H. Holly f sustained a demurrer to the in- I dktment returned in April. Most f of the individual defendants were f associates of M. L. Annenberg, l former Racing News magnate, Pt.ow serving a prison term for in- L come tax evasion. o I LOCAL WOMAN TO SHARE I IN NEW YORK ESTATE E * Durham, Dec.—Under the will F e s Owen B. Winters, advertising f executive, filed for probate in L Surrogates Court in New York, | Mrs. -Richard Eastman of 2108 [ Club Boulevard, Winters’ daugh- I ter, ifuamed a legatee. Mrs. East [ B left the income from one | third dtthe residuary estate with I that share of the principal to be I pH to her when she reaches the | age of 30. 8 V" Eastman will receive in I addition one-sixth of the residu fe ary estate at the death of Louise Hl3. Winters, wife of the testator. Hr I COLLEGE SETTLES ANTI- B■ AMERICAN CHARGE 14 ■ 1 ~~ Dec.—A $2,500 claim Kggpdot Commonwealth College— K.adbtvlcted of anarchy, failure to the American flag and of Eilfwlnyinr the hammer and sickle ■UpOtJet Russia—was settled to- If feßSsssaining property of the ijprrnrr resident labor school was at auction. The sale brought il&jeStimated $1,200. A sale ear .week of livestock and Equipment netted $4,000. A ptufe-made up of mor# .than p::f,®toßpbi|Bes was sold to a min- Iftsnn^dimes Moving Against Italians in Egypt i Newly arrived British reinforcements in Egypt leave camp in Cairo for a route march, part of the training they receive to accustom themselves to conditions of desert warfare. After a long quiet on the front in west ern Egypt, the British have retaken Sidi Barrani, which they lost in October. Masonic Officers To Be Installed New Year’s Eve C. A. Harris, re-elected as Mas ter of Person Lodge 113 at a meet ing held this week, today announ ced that installation of all officers chosen will be held at the Ma sonic Hall here on the evening of Tuesday, December 31. Those to be installed with Mr. Harris include: N. H. Fox, senior warden, re-elected; O. C. Hull, junior warden; W. R. Gentry, secretary; W. H. Harris, treasur er and C. A. Bowen, assistant treasurer, both re-elected, as were J. W. Green, senior deacon, D. R. Taylor, junior deacon, end Meade Sparrow, senior steward. Also elected and to be installed are Dr. B. A. Thaxton, junior steward, and A. S. Hassan, tiler. Committees for the year will be announced later, Mr. Harris said. MANYTEACHERS TO BE AWAY IN HOLIDAY SEASON High School Faculty Mem bers Leave For Homes, Many Out of the State. Roxboro high school faculty members leaving during the week for Christmas vacations include Supervising principal and Mrs. H. C. Gaddy, who will be with Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Chandler, Route 5, Monroe, and Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Tilley, who will go to 409 Pickens Court, Rock Hill, S. C. Others to be away during the holidays are Mr. and Mrs. George Wirtz, who will visit his parents, North Race street, Princeton, In diana, and Mrs. J. Leo Rabon, who with Mr. Rabon will be in Asheboro. Also going to South Carolina will be Miss Mattie Lee Rogers, of Abbeville. Miss Kath leen Soles will be at her home at WHiteville, while Miss Helen Melton will be at Hendersonville, Route 2. Mrs. Madaline C. Trow bridge will be at Davidson Col lege, Davidson. Miss Ida F. Davis will be in Burgaw, while Mrs. William Har ris m, will be in Dobson. Glenn Titus will be at 1035 - 9th street, Charleston, Ulinios. Those remaining in Roxboro for the holidays are Mrs. A. F. Nichols, Mrs. B. G. Clayton, Mrs. Lawrence N. Rynd and Miss Rox annah Yancey. County Superintendent of Schools, R. B. Griffin, with Mrs. Griffin and their small daughter, will be in Raleigh with members of Mr. Griffin's family. i ■ Saturday Busy Day In City Roxboro saw one of its busiest days in years yesterday. At one time during the afternoon the sidewalks of Main Street were so crowded it was a task to walk. All stores reported a nice busi ness and bonus money was in ap pearance everywhere. Monday and Tuesday of this week are also expected to be good selling days, and stores, will* re main open at night. Largest Bonus Given Employees Employees of Collins and Aik man corporation, plant E. at CV- Vel, near Roxboro, Friday after -j noon received with their weekly salaries Xmas bonus checks of $25 each, highest bonus ever paid at this plant, according to resi dent manager, S. M. Ford. Pre vious high was S2O, .while .last year’s holiday bonus .was .only $5.00 The $38,425 bonus was dis tributed to 1.537 employees, exe cutive officers not participating. Officials of other mills in this area declined to make public statements in regard to bonuses. Along The Way With the Editor Dear Santa: Just a few more requests and we are through for this year. We hate to bother you at this late hour, but these boys are in need of a few things and so we pass our requests on to you. Bring R. B. Griffin, our education superintendent, about three new shirts. Commencements will soon be coming around and the two that he had last year will not be enough for this year. He needs at least five shirts to take him through the commencement series. He would also appreciate a new can of shoe polish. We hope that this is not asking for too much for Mr. Griffin. Bring H. K. Sanders a new Agricultural Building. That man wants one as bad as any kid wants a new train. We know that buildings like this cost a lot of money, but H. K. wants that building something awful and if you could give it to him now you sure would save a lot of time and trouble. See him for the details. Bring-Dr. JV D. Fitzgerald a nice new electric train. Bring one that has a whistle and lots of things that go up and down. Put all the extras on it that you can afford. He wants that train and we are sure that he can operate it after a certain length of time. Bring him a red one if you have it in stock. Please bring John Brewer, our Olive Hill farmer and warehouseman, another pair of shoes. John goes to church ev ery now and then and needs an extra pair. He is a hard work er and sometimes he gets his shoes dirty. Then he needs an extra pair for a change. Bring size 15 and make sure that they are winter shoes. He doesn’t need any for the summer tflne. Now Santa, if you can’t bring all of theie things we won’t, fault you, but we hope (hat you can. < ; fsSb:.'’ '• •’ Wade and Wade Make Front Page Charlie Wade, popular Roxboro police officer, who has been with the force for a number of years wants all his friends • to know that he has never wittingly been guilty of forgery and that he has never, except in official capa cities been in jail. Policeman Charlie’s “troubles” started Thur sday when a Negro man, Norman Wade, alias Charlie Wade, attemp ted to cash a ch£ck taken A froqa the office of a tobacco company with intentions of passing it at a bank by forgery. Even the forgery port went wrong, because “Norman-Chariie” signed his own name on the line where the forged signature of his employer should have appeared. “Charlie-Norman” is now in jail, but it did not take two minutes for gossip to twist the story, greatly to temporary detriment of Charlie, the policeman. RABONS HAVE MOVED Leo. Rabon, assistant to J. Y Blanks, Person county FSA sup ervisor has been transferred tc Asheboro, N. C. where he will be FSA supervisor of Randolph county. Mrs. Rabon, who has been tesyching in Roxboro, will also move to Asheboro. HAL KEMP WHO WON FAME AS MUSICIANDIES Tar Heel, Native of Char lotte, Had Won National Reputation. Madera, Calif., Doc. 21.—Hal | Kemp, 36, orchestra leader, died j ♦oday of complications that Jo-' veloped from injuries he suffer-1 cd in an automobile accident Wed - ] nesday. Death , was caused by pneu - m nia. His physicians announced yesterday that his condition was grave, and he was. placed in an oxygen tent. The bandleader lived in Bov-] erly Hills, llis wife was. at. his bedside. One. of Kemp’s lungs was purie-l ♦tired and several ribs were trek- 1. en. when his car and another col lided near here. Yesterday pneu-1 mania developed in the injured | lung, and spread to the other. | The tall, angular musician from' the University of North Carolina won nationwide recognition with his orchestra which broadcast regularly over radio hookups and had appeared in moving pictures. He married Martha Stephen son, then a 19-year-old New York debutante at Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 13, 1939. The previous year he was di vorced from the former Bessie Slaughter of Dallas, Texas. Kemp was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Kemp of Char lotte, N. C., and attended the Un iversity of North Carolina. “He married the former Bessie Slaughter of Dallas, Texas, about nine years ago. They were quiet j ly divorced in Chicago in July 1938, after an amicable decision to separate. In January, 1939, he married debutante Martha Stephenson cl’ New York, Their marriage was the culmination of a society-swing romance. She was widely known in New York’s case society set A daughter was bom to the Kemps in New York last July. o ROTARIANS GIVE CHRISTMAS TOYS Large Number of Toys Will Be Given To Children In The County. Next Meeting January 2. Members of the Roxboro Ro tary Club brought two bushels of toys to the meeting Thursday night when the club met at Hotel Roxboro. The toys have been turned over to Mrs. T. C. Wagstaff, head of the Person Welfare Department. They will be distributed to needy children over the county prior to the time that Santa Claus will arrive, Thomas R. Bennett, president of the Roxboro Chemical Corpor ation spoke to his fellow mem bers telling them a few interest ing facts about how fertilizer is made. | The Rotary Club will not meet! on December 26, but will hold its usual meeting on January 2, stated G. C. Hunter, president of the club. o CORNELIUS VANDERBILT DIVORCES THIRD WIFE Carson City, Nev., Dec.—Cor nelius Vanderbilt _ Jr., divorced his third wife, the former Helen Warner of Clarksburg, W. Va., yesterday. The scion of one of America's best known families cited that they had been separated for three years, sufficient grounds for di vorce in Nevada. Mrs. Vanderbilt had failed in a previous attempt to secure separate Maintenance. License Plate City, Better In SI.OO BILLS CIRCULATED People in Person County must love SI.OO bills. On Fri y of last week the Peoples Bank had 13,000 one dollar bins, iutn followed a few bon us payments over the county and .by the time the bank clos ed Saturday, they had paid out all of their SI.OO bills. The bank paid out enough j dollar bills for every man,.wo man and child hi the county i to have three and a little more. | j find if they did not get them j fit was r.o fault of the bant.. j ; College Students I Come Home For I Yule Vacations • I College students now at home for the holidays include: Miss Peggy Ford, William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va., Misses Grace O. Clayton, Frnaces Winstead and Mary Hester Austin, from Greens boro college; Misses Lois Picker ing, Rachel Fox, Annie S. Bar rett, Helen Hall, Rachel Fox, Peg j gy Brooks and Jessie Wilson, fromj Louisburg college; Miss Mary] Sievers Woody, from St. Mary's, Raleigh, Miss Louise peele. Greensboro college, and Misses Nell Breeze and Rose Whitfield, Elon college. Ybung men wher are here for ! the holidays include: Bob Whit ten, of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, W. C. Bul lock, Jr., also from Chapel Hill, Ned Thomas, Lawrence Clarke, 111, and Ben Thaxton, from Wake Forest, Billy Garrett, of Camp-| hell college, Wiley Umstead, of I Hampton-Sidney, James Feath erston, Louisburg college, and Drewey Chandler, N. C. State School for the Deaf, Morganton o Roxboro Ready For Glorious Yule Season Christmas will soon be here and people of this city appear to be ready for the occasion. Mer chants have had a grand rush for the past several days and every one seems to be rapidly getting into the holiday mood. Homes over the city and many in the country are decorated in true Christmas spirit and practi cally every place of business has some emblem to remind one of Christmas. Every effort is being made to take care of the needy on Christ mas Day and Old Santa has promised to do his best to see to it that no one be overlooked. Generally speaking, all places of business will be closed on De j cmeber 25th and people will re i main at home to enjoy the Day of Days. Very few firms will ob serve more than one entire day, altKo employes may take two or three days during the week by working shifts with others. o DUCK SUPPER WHO WANTS ONE? POLICE WAIT TO FIND OUT Charlotte, N. C., Dec. 20.—City police picked up three big white fellows last night after a harum scarum chase and much wild con fusion. They were prowling about on an uptown street comer. And the cops said that if nobody claim ed the three prisoners today, the officers would have a duck sup per tonight - • ' ' ' THE TIMES IS PERSON’S PREMIER NEWSPAPER A LEADER AT ALL TIMES. Sales Slow In Person Area Miss Stanfield and Mrs. Carver Urge County aad City Resident to Bay Be fore January Ist. License plate sates since De cember 1, when 1941 tags were, made available to Person resi dents,, have totaled 1,512, to date according, to Miss Mary Stanfield, secretary of the Roxboro branch of the Carolina Motor club, who said that tags sold include those tor passenger cars, trucks and trailers. Information fru'i] the Roxboro City hall, where city plates arc on sal . nidr ates that only 129 such tags have been sold, a num ber far short of the quantity; ex pected to be role! before January 1. according to Mrs. Hattie C. Carver. : secretary, who . handles distribution of the plates. Last year, said Mrs. Carver, 310 city tags had been sold by Jan uary 1, and total number sold during the year has reached 634. No comparative figures on state tags were available yesterday af ternoon. Both Miss Stanfield and Mrs. Carver have requested that mo otrists secure plates as early as possible, as final date when 1940 plates may be used will be De cember 31. All persons who op erate cars with old plates after that date will be subject to cita tion for violation of traffic and highway regulations. It is expected that the Motor CluE office will be”' closed two days, Christmas day and the day after, for holdiays, but it will re main open on all other week days. EIGHT CUBSIN CHARTER GROUP Others Who Have Not Reg istered Requested To Do So In January. Registration of eight Cub scouts, minimum number required to form a Pack was reported this morning, folowing regular Satur day den meeting at the Roxboro Community house, with Rev. J. M. Walker as leader. Several new registerants were received, among them S. Clarke, Ronnie Thomas, W. D. Fisher, Robert Willson, Donald Long, Norman R. Tapp and Charles Stewart, with only one re-reg istration, R. B. (Sonny) Dawes, Jr. Cub Pack officials stated that fees have been paid by these boys and that their names will go in as charter members under the new charter. It is known that at least a dozen more boys have been attending will pack meet ings and it is hoped that they will resume affiliation with the group after the holidays. First January den meeting will be on Saturday the 4th. Boys have been asked to remember that the Pack meeting for that month will be held on Monday, January 20, and that a handicraft exhibition will be given at that time. Leaders have requested that these handicraft projects be worked on during Christmas hol idays, since first weeks in Janu ary will be taken up by school examinations. The charter form will be for warded to Scout Executive A. P. Patterson, of the Cherokee Coun cil, Reidsville at once in order that it may be entered as of this y«*ar. o American railroads carry pas sengers an average of 54 mites per dollar today, as compared with S 3 miles In 19W. . . - e.asaasS -• s&k L&s wk