THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1941 cL tfceie/qi PEOPLE YOU KNOW Spending Thanksgiving day here with Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Pox are Mr. and Mrs. W. Mur ray Linker, Jr., the latter their daughter, who is a senior at Westminister Choir college, Princeton, N. J. In Raleigh for Thanksgiving is Miss Katherine Cooper, of Rox boro high school faculty. t Here for the holidays is W. C. Bullock, Jr., of the University alt North Carolina, Chapel HilL In Roxboro for a brief visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Gardner, is Corporal Guy W. Gardner, of Fort Belvoir. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Oakley are their son and daugh ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Cledith Oakley, of Raleigh, who arrived here yesterday with their chil drett In Roxboro Tuesday was Ed win Hamlin, of the Joumal-Sen tinal, Winston-Salem. Mr. Ham lin was formerly City Editor of the Times. Mrs. Coy Day and her daugh ter Sybil are spending the week with Mrs. Day’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Carter, in Weldon. Mrs. R. L. Wilburn is spend ing Thanksgiving with her daughter, Mrs. Carr Timberlake and Mr. Timberlake in Durham. In Chapel Hill for the Thanks giving season is Mrs. A. S. de- Vlaming, who is visiting her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Flynn. s 4 **' •••“•• • ; li - Crowder-Painter Vows Revealed Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Painter, of Roxboro, are today announcing the marriage of their daughter, Beatrice Love, to James Ander son Crowder, on Saturday, May 3, 1941, at Dillon, S. C. Mrs. Crowder is secretary to R. B. Dawes' and is a graduate of Helena High school and King’s business college in Raleigh. Mr. Crowder is the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Crowder of Virgilina, Va. and is a graduate.of Oak Hill High school. He is employed at Collins & Aikman Corporation. At the present Mr. and Mrs. Crowder will make their home with the bride’s parents. WE GIVE THANKS Today Patronage So today Thanksgiving Day we wish for you the best in life and hope that prosperity and happiness will always be yours. LEGGETTS DEPT. STORE Miss Merritt, Os Greenville, Weds Joseph Loyd Horton, Os Farmville In a formal evening ceremony performed in Jarvis Memorial Methodist church, Greenville, which was of great interest in the bride’s home city, in Roxboro and throughout the eastern part of the state, Miss Mary Jamieson Merritt was united in marriage with Joseph Loyd Horton, on Wednesday, November 19. The bride, who is the only daughter of Mrs. Robert Connor Merritt and the late Mr. Merritt, of Greenville, is a grand daugh ter of Mrs. Mamie Merritt, of Roxboro, and has frequently vis ited here, while the bridegroom! is the son of Mrs. Joseph Loyd Horton and the late Judge Hor ton, of Farmville. Those from Roxboro who at tended the vows, spoken at 8:30 o’clock before the bride’s pastor, the Rev. A. T. Grant, and who af terwards attended the reception given by Mrs. Connor Merritt at her residence, included: Mrs. Mamie Merritt, her son, J. S. Merritt, uncle of the bride, and her daughter, Miss Sue Merritt, aunt of the bride. Also present was another aunt, Miss Eglantine Merritt, of Durham. Other members of the Roxboro party in attendance were Dr. J. Dewey Bradsher and Arthur Bradsher, the bride’s uncles, and her cousin, Fletcher Winstead. After their return from their wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Hor ton will live in Tennessee, where Mr., Horton is on the tobacco market. RoxbOro members of the family returned to this City Wednesday night. Mrs. Horton is a graduate of St. Mary’s, Raleigh, and of Greensboro college. Spending the holidays at her home in Wilson is Miss Louise Darden, secretary of the Person School board. In Winston-Salem for" Thanks giving are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Crowell and son, Clyde, Jr. What is the size of a destroyer in the United States Navy? The modern 1,800-ton destroyer is from three hundred and fifty to three hundred and eighty feet long, thirty-six feet wide, and has a draft of fifteen fetet. FARM INCOME HIGH North Carolina farm income this year continues above the 1940 level, reports Dean I. O. Shaub, director of the N. C. State College Extension Service. Mrs. Gentry Has Party For Recent Bride At Home Hostess at her residence here last week was Mrs. Charles F. Gentry, who entertained with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Evard L. James, who was before her recent marriage, Miss Clarie Gentry, daughter of Mr. and Ms. Thomas H. Gentry. About 12 friends of the hon oree, who was recipient of a number of attractive gifts, en joyed bingo and other games un til late in the evening, when light refreshments were served. This was the first of several parties to be given for Mrs. James. CARD OF THANKS Members of the family of the late C. C. Garrett, Jr., wish to express to countless friepds and neighbors their sincere apprecia tion of the kindness and sympa thy shown during their recent bereavement. Also deeply ap preciated were the beautiful floral tributes. THE FAMILY Present Weather Ideal For 1941 Peanut Crop Heavy rains 10 days ago re tarded the movement of peanuts in Northeastern North Carolina Counties, but for the most part the weather has been ideal for picking and curing, B. Troy Fer guson, district farm agent of the N. C. State College Extension Service, said today. Farmers are busy threshing, and considerable stock is moving to market. The wide range in quality of stock offered is result ing in a wide range in the prices offered by buyers, Ferguson said in quoting a special report of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The November crop report of the department indicated a slightly larger production than the report issued October 1. For North Carolina, the November report showed 285,000,000 pounds, a drop of 86,000,000 pounds from last year’s revised figures. The market for shelled goods in the southeastern area is stronger and prices higher than earlier in the month. Both offer ings and trading are light. PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. Japanese Exodus on West Coast 4, r A There was weeping in “Little Tokyo," Los Angeles, as hnndreds ol Japanese who have lived here for years boarded busses for San Fran cisco, where they’ll sail back to Japan on the S. S. Tatuta Maru, victim! of the international crisis. Photo shows the Japs sadly waving farewel! as the busses left. GREATEST DAIRY NATION IS U. S. DECLARES HAIG Milk Largest Source Os Cash Income For Farmers Os America Raleigh, Nov. 19.—Within less than 50 years, the production and utilization of milk have so in creased in this country that now the United Staates is the greatest of the dairy nations, Fred M. Haig, Professor of Dairying at N. C. State College, said today. Not only is milk the nation’s most widely used food, but it is also the farmers’ largest source of cash income and the basis of an industry which for service and volume has few equals. Approximately 25,000,000 dai ry cows are milked daily on three-quarters of the tounjtry’s 6,000,000 farms, creating an an nual income of $3,500,000,000. “In North Carolina,” Haig said, we have made steady pro gress in dairying, especially dur ing the past 15 years. Still, there are far too, many farms in the State without a single milch cow. The lack is most general on to bacco and cotton farms.” While these farmers should continue to produce their main money crop, the State College professor pointed out, they should add a few dairy cows as a side line. On thousands of these farms, sufficient feed for five to ten cows could be grown with out interfering with the produc tion of regular cash crops. Haig explained that an aver age farm 'cow will produce 600 gallons of milk annually con taining 232 pounds of butterfat. At 25 cents a gallon, this milk would be worth $l5O yearly. The manure from the cow is worth S2O, making a total income per cow of $l7O. Where a market for milk is not available, either sweet or sour cream may be sold to cream eries. If sold in this manner, the butterfat is worth 30 cents a pound or $69.50 annually. To this must be added the value of the skim milk left on the farm for use as calf, chicken and pig feed. Valuing this at $25 and adding) the S2O worth of manure would mean a total income of $114.60 from the cow where crea mis sold instead of milk. WANT ADS PIGS FOR SALE—I have a fine lot of young pigs for sale at my home on the Virgilina road. Kitchen Harris. 4t t-s 11-30 f COUCH fl 4 DUE TO COLD mTEAHYPUTO PIECES Buy a bottle of MENTHO-MUL SION, the scientific preparation which in a FIG Synfp base deposits 9 medicinal ingredients in your sys- • tem to help expel tickling phlegm, soothe irritated throat passages and help case nervous tension. Ingredi ents of MENTHO-MUL.SION are listed on the label and your own doc tor can tell you its merits. At drug gists. Satisfaction guaran teed or money back. 60c & sl. - _ - Relieve styffy mm dM to coM with Mentho-Muislon /WBjp /l.ncA mm end threat droet and PIBM / rIHJI \ breathe more easily. Ash J yenr druggist. L>-'PI W MENTHD-MUISION| U-Boat Photo •- : » ■* ' I —. .. -y' : ■' After sinking a British freighter, s U-boat surfaced and photographed a few of the survivors. Here a lone survivor stsnds on s raft, looking hopelessly about him. PRESBYTERIANS (Continued from front page) lection of a place for baling and storing. Reports of successful troop ac tivities were submitted by scout masters and assistants and it was said ..that the annual -campaign for funds for the 1942 budget is progressing in satisfactory man ner, although several campaign workers have not yet submitted accountings. Brought up at the meeting, which was held in the office, of Dr. A. F. Nichols, was question of further ,use by troop 49, Dr. Robert E. Long, scoutmaster, of quarters now engaged by the troop in the basement of the Roxboro Community House- Board of Education building, Chub Lake street. Request for space now used by these scouts and by Roxboro Cub Pack has been made by the Person County Library committee, acting for the library, which also has quarters in this building and is in need of more space. Announcement was made that troop visitations, beginning next week, will be made by C. A. Harris, district president, and D. Clyde Swartz, commissioner. Presiding over the session, at j which Cherokee Executive A. P.' Patterson, of Reidsville, was present, was Mr. Harris, presi dent. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES Jjft] « $ i • 'fl 7 P i There's a spot mar lied for you Somewhere f Get your name on an ap- | plication for insurance ; before it’s on the hospital j record! THQMPSO" INSURANCE ACENCY Roxboro, N. C. i PERSON FARMERS URGED TO REPORT TO COMMITTEES Good Response Has Been Shown But Reports Must Be Made This Week Person farmers who failed to go to either of two tobacco allot ment and food for Defense meetings held in each township last week are urged to go to the home of one of the committee men not later than Friday of this week to fill out the tw' ( o forms and to get official notice of to- j bacco allotment. The forms are the Farm Practice Plan and the Farm Production Plan for 1942. AAA committeemen are listed' below by townships: County committee: C. T. Hall, B. G. Crumpton, B. A. Hhaxton, L. L. Long, J. E. Whitfield. Allensville township: G. C. Pulliam, Fred Davis, Bradsher Gentry, L. G. Oakley, T. K. Da vis. Bushy Work township: W. E. Hester, O. R. Horner, F. L. Moore, C. C. Oakley, C. W. Mc- Sherry. Flat River township: A. F. Hicks, J. O. Pearce, Burman Clayton, C. E. Ashley, R. J. Rog ers. Holloway township: D. E. Whit, M. R. Woody, J. Y. Humphries, S. M. Neal, H. V. Woody. Mt. Tirzah township: E. N. Til lett, Sim, Calyton, W. W. Peed, E. J. Clayton, A. D. Newton. Olive Hill township: W. L. Pleasant, J. B. Hester, John D. Winstead, Jr., James Winstead, L. T. Wagstaff. Roxboro township: G. M. Fox, Jr., G. R. Perkins, W; A. Wrenn, J. M. Long, T. J. Warren. Woodsdale township: Haywood Bailey, V. E. DUncan, R. D. Bai ley, J. R. Morris, J. F. Bailey. SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. Hester Cates, of Roxboro, announce the birth of a son, weight 8 pounds and sev en ounces at Community hospital on Wednesday morning, Novem ber 19. Mrs. Cates is the former Miss Odell Hamlin. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES Wishing You A Very for your many kind deeds toward us. Roxboro SHOE Store STLYE QUALITY FIT take to thank on this for the EASY PAY TIRE STORE GOODYEAR TIRES and TUBES Hotel Building YESTERDAY’S WINNER Winner at yesterday’s "Appre ciation Day” was Mrs. F. O. Car var, Sr. Is there any other method for a sailor in Uncle Sam’s Navy to earn money in addition to his regular salary? Yes, he receives permanent pay increases with each medal of honor he receives. If detailed as a mail clerk, he is given a raise. Divers, messmen, sound operators and sonic repair men also get pay increases. R!ay Lasley of Belews Creek in Forsyth County is using the money he won at the fair to help purchase another purebred calf, reports S. R. Mitchiner, assistant farm agent. Legal Notice ADMINISTRATOR AND ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE Having qualified as adminis trator and administratrix of the estate of William Alonza Harris, deceased, late of Person County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersigned on or before the 19th day of Novem ber, 1942, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Im mediate payment. This 19th day of November, 1941. MRS. ODELL W. HARRIS. Administratrix, LEONARD W. WILKINS, Administrator of William Alonza Harris. KEEP IT CLEAN Your watch deserves as much care as any delicate instru ment. A periodic conditioning will prolong its life. Bring your watch in today. Inspection and estimates free! GREEN ’S Main Street 1 — i ■ One Day! SERVICE Call Us—Phone 3601 SERVICE DRY CLEANERS