PAGE FOUR *f SPORTS rs «. TIMES 14 Up- to-the-Minute Sport News Solicited ■■——i——« mmm SPORTS SLANT Golf Is Out Since the fellows cannot get their cars for pleasure driving, it looks like golf is out for the time being. The golf course here is about five miles from the city and there really is no such thing as walking to it. Some of the fellows have said something about getting a wagon to haul fifteen or twenty out there about once a week, but so far all of this is taik and nothing has been done. The golfers want to play bad enough to do most any thing and they may figure out some way to get there about once a week. In the meantime the members have voted to continue paying their dues just as tho they were getting the full benefit of the course and in that way they will have a nice course to go back to when there is a little more gas on hand. Work on the course has continued all the winter and a large number of improvements have taken place. Some who have not been out this winter will hardly recognize a few places that have been cleared up or improved in some fashion. If we can get to the it “•" 1 ’'> — e( j ons and all of the members will be glad that they kept it going. RUTLEDGE NAMED TO COURT PLACE Prentiss Brown Nominated To Succeed Henderson As Price Administrator WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. President Roosevelt nominated Wiley B. Rutledge, 48-year-old Kentucky-born Democrat, to sue- Talace theatre MOTION PICTURES ARE I YOUR BEST ENTERTAINMENT '! : 'J2 :! “Comfortably Heated By Coal” Thursday-Friday, January 14-15 Marlene Dietrich, Randolph Scott, John Wayne, Samuel S. Hinds, in “PITTSBURGH" Men of Steel!! Women of Fire!! . .They forged a nation’s Power! Born of its black veins .. bred of its fierce flames..the Stokers Miners, Millionaires! Pittsburgh’s wildest era!! Minitures “ACTCA” Paramount News “The Eyes ] And Ears Os The World” j j Special Morning Show Friday! , 10:30: Afternoons Daily 3:15- ; 3:45; Adm. 10-30 c; Evenings j Daily 7:15-9:00; Adm. 15-35 c. -h Saturday, January 16th ] Johnny Mack Brown, Tex Rit- | ter, Fuzzy Knight, Jimmy Wake- ■ ly Trio, in | ; “TENTING TO NIGHT ON THE OLD CAMP GROUND” i Hot on the Trail of Renegades!! Cool in the smoke ic.f Battle!! Flaming 45's blast the way to new ‘rontiers .. on the trail of the cverland mail!! Episode No. 8 of “Junior G-Men Os The Air" (Satan Fires The Fuse) with The Dead End Kids and The Little Tough Guys. j Terrytoons “The Mouse Os Tomorrow" 1 Afternoon 2:30-4:00; Adm. 10- 30c; Evening 6:45-8:15-9:30; Ad mission 15-35 c; (Box Office Opens 6:30). SPECIAL 11:30 SHOW Saturday Night and Sunday I Regular Shows, January 16-17th Gloria Jean, Donald O'Connor, lan Hunter, Louise AUbritton, Frieda Inescort, in “IT COMES UP LOVE” I The Swing-hearts tapping their every tip top hit! Gayer! Grand! er! Greater than ever before!!! ..Color Cartune “Air Radio. Warden’’ I Color Cartune “Air Radio ' Victory Short i— “Night Shift” Box office opens 11:15; Picture 11:30; Adm. All Seats 35c; Sun day Performances; Afternoon box office opens 2:30; Picture 2:45; Adm. 10-30 c; (One Per-j formance Only); Evening box office opens 8:45; Picture 9:00; Adm. 15-35 c; (One Performance Only). ceed James F. Byrne? as an As sociate Justice lef f'E Supreme Court, and former S» ".ator Pren- I tiss M. Brown of Michigan to I succeed Leon Henderson as Price Administrator. Both appointment? had been expected and early Senate con j firmation is anticipated after ! routine hearings. There may be j some Republican opposition to 1 Rutledge, however, since he will be the seventh Democrat on the nine-man bench. GOP chieftains had hoped Mr. Roosevelt would j name a Republican to restore j the court to some semblance of j political balance. Rutledge,,, former Dean of , lowa Univei&ity |avr School, now is an Associate JusJjgeu-oL the District of Columbia Court, and is the first Supreme Court candidate the President has drawn from the federal judiciary. He is the eighth Roos evelt appointee. In case of the two Republican jurists, one of j them, Harlan F. Stone, was ele- ! vated to Chief Justice by the ( President. Stone’s Republican colleague is Justice Owen J. Ro berts. | The White House had let it be i known indirectly that both Rut- . ledge and Brown would be chosen. Brown w'as selected soon after Henderson's pre-Christmas resignation. The Senatlcr was de- | seated for re-election in Novem-j ber, largely because he had en- j gineered Senate passage of the 1 administration’s price control and farm bills. t i Patriotic Picture j i Shown Monday At Kiwanis Meeting “America Can Give It”, a me tion picture with patriotic theme was presented at meeting of, Roxboro Kiwanis club Monday at Hotel Roxboro by the attend ance committee, R. H. Shelton, j J. A. Long, Jr., and B. B. Strum. J. J. (Dick) Woody, newly in stalled president, presided. Spe cial guests included: W. Reade Jones, R. Glenn Stovall and Gordon C. Hunter, of Roxboro Rotary club, and Reade Gentry, J. W. Greene, T. T. Brown and H. T s Mozer. Brief talk was made by Mr. Stovall. Other Kiwanis officers are: i vice president, Dr. J. D. Brad sher; secretary, J. Brodie R'iggs bee; treasurer, Bert Dark, ser geant at arms, L. C. Wilson; di rectors, S. M. Ford, J. A. Long, Jr., Rev. W. C. Martin, who is also district lieutenant governor, J. D. K. Richmond, B. B. Strum, retiring president, and E. W. Cunningham. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES <£ A MESSAGE FROM MR. J. P. MORGAN %> | . 't i 'i'-c'-e. !. <-■<- fflioi-t. £■( C-M*. **“ ' I > p <> > < r f /■ T r ; ■ *»*-*.« J. 'V- S [' OL’KA (sC, . {*?&***■ !/&••' - ft'- l 4 'HU Id-t**,, ' : ' ' S'' ' ' , - ------ WBS 6J3 A U. S. Treasury Dept. SAFE INVESTMENT: Americans wlio are looking for a good, safe investment, as well as a means of helping the Government to win tl>e wur, can well heed the above statement about War Bonds from J. I*. Morgan, one of the nation’s leading bankers. “Nowhere in these days,” says Mr. Morgan, “can a safer investment be found for savings than U. S. Government bonds and of all the issues the war savings bonds seem to me the most advantageous.” j New Potato | Variety Gains In I ! Popularity i i The Sequoia variety cf Irish j potato, developed by N. C. State i College horticulturists and made I available to the public only a- I bout two years ago, is rapidly creating a place Her itself in North Caorlina farming. Tested side by side with other |of the older varieties commonly grown in this State, the Sequoia I has consistently outyielded its | competitors, according to re- I ports of qcunty farm agents. One of the most outstanding I examples of the superiority d!f the new potato comes from a CPfedmont county where 19 farm i ers tested the Sequoia in com petition with the cider, widely grown Irish Cobbler. Reporting on the procedure carried out, O. F. McCrary, northwestern district agent of the Extension Service, said each of the 19 growers in the demon stration planted 10 pounds of the Sequoia and an equal amount of the Irish Cobbler. The two varieties were grown' on the same type of land, withj the same kind and amount of i fertilizer, and the same kind oL cultivation. Accurate records) were kept and turned in by 15 of the demonstrators. The records showed that the total yield cf the Sequoia pota-: toes was 2,462 pounds and the! total yield of the Irish Cobbler! only 1,638 pounds. This was an! increase in yield of 824 pounds | in favor of the new variety, or 50 percent better than the Irish 1 Cobbler. Because of its excellent yields) and its resistance to diseases and ; insects, the Sequoia will be planted by even larger numbers; l.f North Carolina farmer this year, McCrary said. Miss Grafton Has Praise For Patrol i For Quick Action i Mtss Ernestine Grafton, tri county librarian, who has resi dence in Raleigh during week | ends and who arrived here Tues day for her January stay in Per son County and Rjcxboro, feels better now—after recovery of her coupe, stolen during the week-end fijcm a Raleigh gar age. Charged with the crime and now subject to FBI investigation in Petersburg, Va., where they were apprehended, are two men and a red-headed woman, resi dents of Massachusetts, who had been South to Florida and were apparently looking for away to get North in a hurry. The car, undamaged, was re- PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO. N. C. visiting Mrs. J. H. Fuller for a few days is her daughter in law, who before her marriage to T. Sergeant Raymond Fuller at Fort Eustis, Va. was the form er Mi ss Charlotte Thomas, daughter of First Lieutenant and J Mrs. J. H. Thomas of Langley : Fields Va. Sergeont Fuller is in j Africa. | Miss Holt And Mr. Greene Wed In Private Rites Miss Delma Holt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Andrew T. Holt, of h- |Atd liam jdseph Gres ne* of Roxbbro, were united in marriage Sun day at noon, January 10, at resi dence of the officiating minister, the R:v. J. N. Bowman, of Pro vidence Baptist' church. The bride is well known in Roxboro and was educated at Roxboro high schcol, while the bridegroom, a graduate of Hel ena high school, was in the U. S. Marine Corps until he was in- \ jured in an accident about a | year ago. He is now with : Greene’s jewelry company. After a brief wedding trip the , young couple returned to Rox- i Irero. At home at the W. J. ! Greene residence. covered Sunday night by the ! State Highway patitcl, working in conjunction with the Virginia ' patrol. Library papers, books ! and pamphlets in the back were | untouched. Gasoline that had j been consumed was replaced by j Raleigh garage. Garagemen ex- j plained that they thought Miss ! Grafton had requested the driver | of the trio to call for the car for j her. | Miss Grafton, for her part is loud in praises of efficiency of the North Carolina and Virginia Highway Patrols. I Ministers Will Support Fund For Paralysis i Person County Ministerial as sociation at January meeting held Monday adopted a resolu : tion recommending that church es in the association participate in the Infantile Paralysis Found ation fund campaign by taking up special collections and went on record as favoring united work in church evangelism. Speakers were W. Wallace Woods, Paralysis Fund campaign | chairman, and new; president' of ) the Miniteriasl association, the Rev. J. N. Bowman, Os Provid ence Baptist church. Among tHcse commending the theme of the president’s address were * the Revs. J. H. Shore, W. C. I Martin, R. W. Rainwater, E. C. Maness, R. W. Hovis and Rufus J. Womble, the last named be ing the association secretary and publicity chairman. Unable to attend were the Rev. W. F. West, now ill at Duke hospital, and the Rev. F. B. Peele, ill at his home here. 1 State College Answers Timely Farm Questions QUESTION: How do peanuts compare with soybeans and cot tonseed as a producer of vege table oils needed,in the Wjir v'ef fort? . ■ ANSWER Pleasure for meas ure, the peanut is the heaviest yielding of the principal oil crops. | says Dr. E. ft. Collins, Extension agronomy leader of N. C. State | College. According to the U. S. i Department of Agricultiye, the i average oil yield of the peanut crop over the past five years has i been at the rate of 226 pounds to l the acre as compared with 167 j pounds for soybeans and 72 pounds for cottonseed. However, J cottonseed is ordinarily regarded as a by-product' of fiber produc tion. QUESTION: How much silage SON BORN Private and Mrs. Carlton James, of Roxboro and Camp Blanding, Fla., announce the birth of a qcn, Roger Wayne, on Thursday, Jan. 7, at" Communi ty hospital, Roxboro. SALE OF LAND UNDER DEED OF TRUST I By virtue of the powers vest ed in me in a certain deed of trust executed on September 27, 1941, by Ge|crg? Trammell and wife, Person County Registry, Book 9, page 576, default having been made in the payment of the I bond secured thereby and the | holder thereof having requested ! that the power of sale be exer cised, I will on FEBRUARY 6, 1943, at twelve o’clock, noon, at the court house cfcor in Person County, North Carolina, sell at public auction for cash the fol lowing described lot of land sit uated in Personi County, North Carolina, viz: Lots Nos. 27 and 28 lof the Woody and Wilborn Sub-divi sion, on the west side of Wil born Avenue, having a total frontage of 50 feet on said Ave nue. Reference is here made to i plat of the said Woody and Wil- i borne Subdivision for more de- ' tailed and perfect description of | said lots. Said plat is of record j in. the Person County Registry in Plat Book 1, at page 101. This January 6 1943. L. P. Woody, Trustee. Jan. 14-21-28 Feb. 4 should be fed to a dairy cow each day? ANSWER: John A. Arey, Ex tension dairy specialist of N. C. State College, says that cows will consume about 3 pounds of sil age per day for each 100 pounds of live weight Or to state it an other way, a 1000-pound cow will eat about 30 pounds of sil age during the day. Silage should be fed liberally during the win ter months. Many good feeders mix their grain ration in the manger with this- silage. QUESTION: Are barley, wheat and rye good feeds for work stock? ANSWER: Oats and corn are the standard rations for and mules, according to L. I. Case, Extension animal husband- \ man of N. C. State College, but he says that barley, wheat andj rye can be fed to workstock if the grain is crushed and ground.! Wheat and rye should be fed in 1 limited amounts, he said, and they should be mixed with oth- ' er feeds to prevent digestive dis- j turbances. Cottonseed meal is' often used as a protein supple- 1 ment, but a safe rule is not to j feed more than one pound of cottonseed meal per 1,000 pounds liveweight of the horse or mule. QUESTION: How many lights are needed in the poultry house to “extend the day” and increase; winter egg production? ANSWER: The rule, says the! Extension poultry office at State j College, is to provide cne watt of light for every five feet of floor space. This means that a 20 x 20 foot poultry house needs 80 watts of lights. Two 40-watt lamps will do the job. The Ex tension poultrymen suggest that K ‘Hint CASCADE TUNNEL IN WEST ft EW WASHINGTON, COMPLETED ‘One foist four all-steu freight Ffflfl" "TTFj’T T |iH| DISPLAY FOR THE PAST 14 ' AT GREENVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA. THEY WILL FURNISH ABOUT 75 TONS UuAILROAD TRANSPORTATION FIRST OF SCRAP REACHED THE CITY Os WASHINGTON, THE NATION'S CAPITAL, FROM BALTI MORE ON AUGUST 25TH 1835, ASSOCIATION OP AMERICAN k fin o AOS (24i ' —iit - . ... . . . tm-mmj—r & On the Safe Side I When a member cf your family is sick—get on the safe side—call your doctor. When he leaves a prescription, play safe again, call on us. Each year finds our prescrip tion department filling more orders. There must be a reason. We carry a complete stock of drugs and two registered druggists are here to fill your doctors orders. I Thomas & Oakley Walgreen Agency Drug Store THURSDAY, JANUARY U, 1943 the lights be placed high enough so that people can walk under them easily. The light should be directed downward evenly over the house. Poultry hbtise light ing normally results in each hen producing 4 to 5 more eggs per month during the short days of winter. QUESTION: How much grain | should be fed dairy qcws during the winter? ANSWER. This depends, ,»ays John A.' Arey, Extension dairy - | man of N. C. State College, on I the quantity and quality of roughage available, and on the percentage of fat in the milk I produced. Grain should be look | ed upon as a suplement to roug hage. If the cows receive all the i gccd quality roughage they will ! consume Without waste, a Jers ey or Guernsey should get' 1 slightly more grain than a Hol stein or Ayrshire. For instance, a Guernsey or Jersey producing 20 pounds of milk daily needs about 6 pounds of grain per day, whereas a Holstein or Ayrshire producing 20 pounds of milk daily needs about 4 pounds of grain. QUESTION: How many pounds of edible meat can be expected from various types of meat animals? ANSWER: Animal husband men of N. C. State College re port that a hog dresses out a bout 75 percent of its live weight. In other words, about 188 pounds of edible meat is obtain ed from a 250-pound hog. Beef dresses out 53 percent of its live weight, veal 61 percent, lamb 47 percent, and chickens from 65 to 75 percent. Lard from a 250- pound hog will average 25 to 30 pounds, or 10 to 12 percent of its live weight.