THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1941 SLEEPS THROUGH AUTO, TRAIN CRASH—UNHURT NARROWS, Va., Sept. 11.—The sedan driven by Jesse Phillips of Dublin, Va., stalled on a railroad track—and there was a train com ing. Phillips and his passengers— Robert Blake, Emily Bower, Mar gie Lineberry, and Wilma Bry WELCOME TO THE OPENING OF THE ROXBORO TOBACCO MARKET We Hope You Will Be Happy with Your Sales on Your Home Market. Come in to See Us While Here. :'-iSiMTOi -2 if u '"*> il.'ff^WsxXaKß& Our Prices On Furniture Are Very Reasonable. You Always Save at PITTARD FURNITURE COMPANY New Furniture. Good Used Furniture Main Street Sell Your Tobacco For The High $ Spend Your Money Wisely - and - Always Have A Little Enjoyment Our Tobacco Market opens September 16th and We Hope that You Will Sell Your Crop Here. Bring Your First Load Here and See How You Like It. • For Your Entertainment We Have Booked an Outstanding Array of \ Pictures for the Fall and Winter Months. You Will Enjoy an Evening at either Theatre. Come and Bring Your Family. Palace and Dolly Madison Theatres ... .i, “Motion Pictures of Distinction” ant—got out and pushed, but they couldn’t move the car fast e nough. A fast freight train hit the car and carried it 175 feet, demolish ing it except for the rear end. There Phillips found, unharmed, Howard Perdue of Pulaski, Va., who slept through the excite ment. Phillips woke Perdue and told him what had happened. Labor Editors Back Foreign Policy Os The President NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—Fifty two out of 55 of the Nation’s lead ing labor editors polled by the Fight for Freedom, Inc., support the Administration foreign policy in opposition to the isolationist stand of John L. Lewis, former President of the Congress of In dustrial Organizations, the Labor Division of the interventionist group announced today. Three of the 55 labor editors agreed with Mr Lewis, it was found, while the rest declared that a poll of trade union members the county over would prove that only a handful agree with Mr. Lewis’ views. “If John L. Lewis or anyone else believes the Western Hemis phere is not threatened by Hit ler, I believe the facts prove oth erwise,” Hugh Cfiulthome, Edi tor of the Electrical Union News, United Electrical Workers, Local 201, Lynn, Mass., declared. “Pres ident Roosevelt does not go far enough for me.” The editors polled were from Alabama, lowa, Ohio, Massachu setts, New Jersey, North Caro lina, Indiana, Illinois, Mississippi, New York, Kansas, Washington, D. C„ Minnesota, California, Penn sylvania, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Georgia. o HARD WINTER AHEAD BETHLEHEM, Pa., Sept. 11.— Weather Prophet Herbert S. Bickert, who relies on the Au gust “apple sky” for his informa tion, predicts 33 snowfalls this winter. PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. Ayres, Barrymore On Screen In Kildare Thriller Dr. Kildare has a tragedy, a great problem, and an adventure in the field of symphony music in “Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day,” latest in the popular Dr. Kildare series, with Lew Ayers, Lionel Barrymore and Laraine Day, at the Dolly Madison today and Friday. As usual, a notable guest star appears, this time in Nils Asther, noted Scandinavian star, who has appeared opposite Gar bo and many other screen charm ers. The story deals with the prob lem presented by a famous or chestra conductor who is grad ually growing deaf. Ayres and Barrymore grapple with the problem and find a solution. It brings in the story of the ro mance of the older doctor, who loved a musical composer, and in the climax Asther, as the con ductor, conducts the dead girl’s symphony. For this Barrymore’s own compostion, “Tableau Rus se,” recently played by a number of symphony orchestras, is play ed. Barrymore also plays parts of his own music on the piano. He took time out from milk ing the cows at intervals to count the ball-shaped clouds moving by during the month. Chicago Club Names Most Heroic Family CHICAGO. The last thing that Mr. and Mrs. George Cas cino ever expected, surely, was to be singled out of the several million Chicagoans as the city’s “most heroic family of 1941.” But that honor has come to them through the discriminating Union League Club which on August 27 handed them an impressive parchment and saluted them as "a true American family.” • SSIS a Week Goes Far Tlie Italian immigrant couple ate the recipients of the Club’s first family-life award. Their achievement is recorded in the lives of their five children, all doing well in their vocations and professions, all excellent citizens. But the remarkable thing, to the Union League Club, is that this achievement has been “wrought in an adverse environment and with the least of material advan tage.” The Union League got interest ed in this family through one of the Boys’ clubs it operates for under-privileged youth in the blighted areas of Chicago’s West Side. The Cascinos co-operated with the Club from its start, and their youngest son, Anthony, has been employed by the Club for a long time. The sls a week he earned helped keep his family going for a long time and play ed its part in his own and his brother Joseph’s college educa tion. For Mr. Cascino has never earned much. Coming to the United States from Italy as a youth, he worked as a street lab orer and at other similar jobs. Later he got more skilled work at a machine, but pay was un certain because his company was near bankruptcy. Mrs. Theresa Cascino helped by finding work in factories when she could leave •her children. She brought her mother from Italy to keep house, but finally gave up her work outside fUe home because she, felt her children needed her to All Roads Lead To Roxboro and there’s a Welcome tobacco in Roxboro this year. We think that we have a good place to sell. Remember that there is always a Welcome Sign on Our Door and we are always glad to have You Visit us. FALL SEEDS Rye, Oats, Barley, Wheat, Crimson Clbver and Vetch, adapted to this section and thoroughly reclean ed can be bought at a saving. We Can Supply Your Farming Needs Farmers Mutual Exchange Next to Community House. ». J. R. JONES, Mgr. run the household, not in the Italian way of her mother, but according to American customs. Children Have Excellent Records The neighborhood in which the family lived was one which sociologists say produces delin quents. But the five small Cas cinos came through unscathed morally and mentally. All have made excellent rec ords. Angelina, the oldest, was a supervvisor of stenographers at Western Electric Company un til she married. Dominic, retard-1 ed in his education by illness, \ nevertheless 'has been able to 1 make his way and is an em-! ployee in a shoe factory. Joseph, Sell Your Tobacco - in - DANVILLE The World’s Best Tobacco Market Opening TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th 4 Sets of Buyers, 11 big well-lighted warehouses, lead er in prices through the Season. Patronize this market. Begin with Opening Day. Danville Tobacco Association J. Pemberton Penn, V. P. Paulett. President Sec’y-Treas. ; next in line, is a surgeon on the 1 staff of the Illinois Research Hos pital. Michael has a B. A. degree in accounting, a position with a Chicago mail order house, and is soon to get his Master’s degree as a result of night courses. An thony, the youngest, got his B. S. degree from Lewis Institute and has submitted his thesis for a Master’s degree from the School of Business Administration at Northwestern University. Mrs. Cascino’s genius for fin j ancial management is apparent. For during part of the time her ! children were getting their ed j ucation, the family of seven were | living on $95 a month.