Flowers Begins Fifty-First Year of Service to University Trinity College And Duke Professor Becomes Presi dent In Exercises Held Monday At Noon Durham, June 1. —When Dr. Robert Lee Flowers was inducted into the presidency of Duke Uni versity this morning the ceremony was of double significance, for not only did it formally place him in the university highest office but it rounded out his fifty years of continuous service to the instution. Ever since Trinity, now the undergraduate college and nu cleus of the university, spent 1801-92 as its last year on its original campus in Randolph county, 90 miles from Durham, Dr. Flowers has been close-to every phase of the university’s development. And now, he is beginning his university presidency at the start of a new aspect of the university's life, its participation in various national defense programs, in cluding the Naval Reserve Of ficers Training Corps. Himself a graduate of the United States Na\Aal Acadiemy, Dr. Flowers during the next few months will have unusual satisfaction in giv ing much attention to the unit that four years hence will pro duce its first class of naval en signs. Born on November 5, 1870, at York College Institute, the son of George Washington and Sarah 'Haynjes flowers, Robert! Lee Flowers was the eldest of seven children, six sons and a daughter. ? £ When, the judge says,"* 10,000 damages T It’* a happy thought to think of us if you’re insured. T HOMPSON INSURANCE AGENCY Roxboro, N. C. BJ U N E Be Strong and Healthy Our Rich Health Building <||| MILK Is Good For You % “** Tm Lack of Vitamin B in the daily diet, causes lack of appetite and loss of weight. Milk is rich in Vitamin \ «S^pjjß B—and that’s why you need it daily: at least a pint, jaßl preferably a quart. Grownups need the benefits of . piIAUr 9QOI for daily delivery of milk, inUilL LJLI cr eam, buttermilk, butter. We are happy to serve you the best every day. Order an extra quart of milk daily during Dairy Month. Roxboro Dairy Products Co. Grade “A” Guernsey Milk ' A. C. Fair, Manager Saw Dream Come True As a youth along the banks of the Catawba River, which later in life he was to see harnessed and the source of hydroelectric power serving a great region, he yearned to have a part in the building of something great and perm-anent in his native state, something that would become a monument of achievement. His dreams have come true. iPalf iot that he was, George Washington Flowers sought to equip his eldest son for service to his country, and after an ele mentary education in the public schools of the community and at the Taylorsville High School, Robert Lee Flowers entered the United States Naval Academy in 1887, having received an appoint ment from the Eighth Congres sional District. As a midshipman his service was excellent and he soon took a place of leadership among his class mates. Graduat ing in 1891 after having fulfilled all requirements for a commis sion, he was granted a discharge from the Navy in order that he might return to North Carolina and assist in the building of the progressive educational program that was first taking shape at that time. President John Franklin Crow ell has recognized the ability of the “dapper young naval officer” and asked him to join the faculty of old Trinity, then in Randolph County. Combining the i firmness necessary to a success ful teacher, with a courtly manner, he soon won the respect of students and the confidence of his colleagues. His connection with Trinity began in the Fall of 1891 and has remained unbroken. Coming to Trinity at a time when the dynamic young Crowell was instilling new ideas of edu cation in the -.institution, Dr. Flowers fitted well into the pro gressive plan of the president. At first an instructor of Electrical Engineering, he later devoted his time to Mathematics, and reveal ed himself as an authority in this field. His innate ability as a teacher enabled him to carry the most backward students in to the intricacies of “math” to such an extent that they were soon keenly interested in the subject. In 1900 Dr. Flowers received the master of art degree from Trinity College, and in 1927 re ceived the honorary degree of Dictor of Laws from Davidson College. Married in Durham. On June 22, 1905, Dr. Flowers was married to Miss Lily Virgi nia Parrish, the daughter of Col. and Mrs. E. J. Parrish of Durham. Their home on Trinity campus has long been one of gracious hogpitality and unsurpassed charm. They have two daughters, Mrs. Lenox D. Baker of Durham, and Mrs. Thomas F. Huey, of Anniston, Ala. The service record of a man such as Dr. Flowers is naturally leplete with incidents concerning his leadership, his ability, and his personality. Joining the insti tution about the time it was preparing to move from Ran dolph County to Durham, Dr. Flowers helped to assuage the recalcitrant conservatives who felt that Trinity should remain on its traditional site. Young and enthusiastic he soon enlarged his already wide circle of friends to include those benefactors who made possible the building of new Trinity at Duke. When Bishop Kilgo took charge at Trinity in 1894, Dr. Flowers was found to be a capable as sistant and helped put through many plans cf the president. The trying days of the institution as it sought to establish itself firmly in an industrial community were marked by the enthusiasm and hard werk of the young math professor. Upon the inaugration of Presi dent Few in 1910, the Trustees sought to work out a better plan of organization for the admini stration of the college, and turn - ed to Dr. Flowers. The office of the Secretary to the Corporation, embodying close contact with the public, the proper recording cf faculty proceedings, and aid to students, was given to him to handle in addition to his growing teaching responsibilities. The attendant growth and organiza tion of this phase of college work reflects his handling and the help to and gratitude of students and alumni are indicative of his successful administration. When in 1923 the Office of Treasurer became vacant, the Trustees turned to Dr. Flowers to take o\Jer theise responsi bilities. Year by year expansion has brought additional burdens and responsibilities, all of which have been handled in the same quiet manner, successful in the proper coordination of the vari ous elements that entered inljo the problems, and in such away as to win the admiration of all with whom he dealt. PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. Joying A CHEVROLET! WHY PAY WHY ACCEPT MORE? LESS? [11117" anoyquu choos* CHEVROLET' lEU^^^T7r» r^rTTT -, MS BTwirni yes gmSra yes cam yesJEJuj YES I.'IiBBtS yes H® SOi EYE IT -TRY IT- BUY IT! I TAR HEEL CHEVROLET CO., INC. Main Street Roxboro, North Carolina For some years Vice-President of the University in the business division, Dr. Flowers became acting president on the death of President Few on October 16, 1940. On January 29 of this year the university board of trustees elected him president of the university. Retains His Vitality. Retaining much of that vitality so characteristic of his earlier years, Dr. Flowers has been able to “carry on” and do the work that ordinarily men of less vigorous health would have brok en under. In addition to his vast responsibilities, none of which suffer for like of attention, he has been active in the affairs of the community. Local civic affairs have made large inroads in his time, but he has been able to do justice to all of these varied interests. As a director of the Durham Chamber of Commerce he has contributed much of wis dom and councel to the proper working out community problems; as a Rotarian he has fittingly lived the motto “He profits most who serVbs best, and has enacted the prestige of the Durham Rotary Club during his admini stration 'as president of that organization. He is also interest ed in, and whenever possible partakes of, the social life of the community and adds much to fraternal occasions when he can banquet with members of his fraternity, Alpha Tau Omega, and other societies and organi zations.. Following the death of James B. Duke in 1825, Professor Flowers in 1926 succeeded the Founder of the Duke Endowment on the Board of Trustees on that body. '"Being identffied with an educational institution of promin ence, and since his services have always commended attention, it is little wonder that he has been so frequently called upon for advice to other educational and university ' religious institutions. His active interest in the cause of Negro education is evidenced in his services as Trustee of the North Carolina College for Negrrs. Never forgetting the struggle of j the less fortunate, he has done | much in the case of the orphans of the state during his tenure as Trustee of- the Masonic Orphan age at Oxford. His connection with the Durham Yeung Men's Christian Association as a direct or has been of great value to the community. Since 1916 he been a member of the Board of i Education of the Methodist j Episcopal Church South, and of the North Carolina Conference Board of Education. As a mem ber of the General Conference of ! the Methodist Episcopal Church,! South, he is frequently in attend- j ance upon the sessions of that: body and has become a prominent churchman of outstanding ability. His active official connection with Memorial M. E. Church, Durham, has mantained all these years. Dr. Flowers also is a trustee of Greensboro College, the Metho dist Orphanage at Raleigh, Lincoln Hospital, the North Caro lina College for Negroes and is a director of the Durham Chamoer of Commerce and the Durham land Southern Railway. He is member of the North Carolina I Academy of Science, Phi Beta i Kappa, Omicron Delta, and numerous campus organizations, and is a Mason. —o I CONVINCING C. S. Young, a demonstration farmer of the Shoal Creek sec- Ition of Yancey County, has convincing demonstration that alfalfa can be grown successful ly in the county, says Farm Agent R. H. Crouse. o- IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES HUGH WALPOLE DIES IN LONDON Heart Attack Is Fatal To Prolific Novelist Who Saw Hitler Weeping London, June 1, —Sir Hugh Walpole, the British novelist who wrote almost a book a year from the age of 25, died of a heart attack early today. He was 57. He had been ill for a week at his Lakeland home, Brackenburn, near Keswick in the Cumberland mountains. He was known in the States not cnly by his “Jeremy” books and his “Herries” sage but for frequent lectujres, visits and a stay on the West Coast. In his novel “Roman Fountain,” published last year, Walpole re caled an occasion when Adolf Hitler wept. He met Hitler in Bayreuth in 1924 soon after Hit ler had served a prison sentence for the Munich beer cellar putsch and had written “Mein Kampf.” “I remember he cried,” wrote Walpole. “And that I felt his passion for Germany so sincere it seemed to burn through his ugly boots into the ground and thpti I liked him and thought him in every way tenth rate.” He wrote almost to the end. One of his main contributions I was the regular book review section of a London newspaper, j • It was an example of his dis like for inactivity and his joy in literary labor which he found comparatively easy. “I write as I breath,” he once remarked. And again, “I never . had any impulse but one, to put people down in words as I 3ee them.” Compared to that of most au thors, Walpole’s career was a bed of roses, yet a$ a fledgling writer he was not without discourager ment. , THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1941 “When I started as a writer everyone was against me. I was told I had no creative gifts at all; if I had any they were critical gifts. Everyone to whom I show ed my work told me it was shock ing. But I didn’t mind. There was never any question in my mind that I was going to be a novelist.” Outwardly the most placid and composed of men he was actually a person of great ex uberance. But he was meager of gesture and avoided pose. He liked to converse from a deep armchair, his soothing resonant voice giving the impression of 1 extraordinary repose. Some of his comment on writ ing: : “What I'm sure of now is that unless you have got the impulse very definitely I don’t think tak ing up the profession of writing should be encouraged... “My supreme piece of luck was in being completely fascinated by the work I was doing. I adore writing. If you can be absorbed in something you’re doing, find enough in it to live on, then I think you’re inevitably a happy man... “Nothing is worse for an author tha'n inactfvity unless it is too much work which drives | writers close to insanity.” o MATTRESSES ! | The two mattress centers in j Northampton County have turn led out 2,073 mattresses for low income farm families since the project was started, reports As sistant Farm Agent H. G. Snipes. o RESOLUTION The Jamesville 4-H Club in Martin County has resolved to Hold regular monthly meetings i during the summer so as to stim ' ulate more interest in club work, ■ says Assistant Farm Agent J. L Eagles.