I Ow Job Is to Save fcaS Dollars g Buy I / War Bonds | Hll Every Pay Day I VOLUME XIV Leader of Woman’s Field Army Coming to City This Week Mrs. Geo. Marshall Os Mt. Airy Will Be Speaker * I State Commander Os Organization Interested In Fighting Cancer Will Be Here Thursday. Mrs. George E. Marshall, of Mount Airy, state commander of the Woman’s Field Army, an or-' ganization interested in the cur tailment and control of cancer,' will be in Rcxboro Thursday fori conferences with a group of in terested citizens. Particularly interested in hav ing Mrs. Marshall come here are members of the Roxboro unit of the Business and Professional! Woman’s club, of which Miss Barbara Bloxam is president. I According to Miss Bloxam, 1 Mrs. Marshall at,, noon on Thurs day will bei guest at a dutch luncheon to be held at Hotel Roxboro. Many of the members of the club 'will be among those-j attending, but the luncheon will be open to both men and women and all who are interested in at-i tending are requested to notify 1 Miss Bloxam as soon as possible,! certainly by Wednesday mom-! ing. The Woman’s Field Army has for years sponsored educational programs on the nature and treatment of cancer, now re garded as a disease that can be checked,' if not completely cured by early diagnosis and prompt treatment. --■ < I JAMES BLALOCK, MARINE SERGEANT, GETS SILVER STAR | Son Os Mrs. Laura Bla- | lock Os Helena, Gains j Recognitioni In Pacific. | r Jpmes J. Bla'ock, master gun nery sergeant in the U. S. Mar ine corps, in which he has served for twenty-six years, made head lines last week because he re ceived the silver star medal for capturing eleven Japanese sin gle-handed in recent operations in the Pacific area, but to his mother, Mrs. Laura Blalock, of Helena, Person County, the an nouncement carried with it more than recognition of her son as hero. It was the first word she had concerning him in nine months, figt. Clayton, who has many kinspeople in Person County, comes c’ose to being the Coun ty’s most daring hero so far in World War 11. He has a brother, 1 Fletcher Clayton, of Durham. | Sgt. Clayton received his med- 1 al at Camp Elliott from Major General Holland M. Smith, com manding the San Diego area Fleet Marine force. Sharing honors was Captain Robert Hag gerty, of New York, in the Mar-, ine corps only 26 months, who also received the silver star.' Citations mentioned “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in ac tion on Guadalcanal”. Blalock Made his captures in “two dar ing sorties.” His residence is in Durham. PUBLISHED EVERY SUNDAY AND THURSDAY ROXBORO, N. C., SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 1943 Street Rites ! To Be Held iHere Today Norman H. Street, Prominent Resident, Dies After Long Illness. Noiman H. Street, 62, of Har | ris street', Roxboro, for many ' years a prominent resident, died Friday night at eight o’c’ock at his home after a long illness, j Funeral will be held here Sun-j , day afternoon at three o’clock at Roxboro First Baptist church, of which he was a member, with 1 interment following in Burch-j , wood cemetery. j ‘i Rites will be in charge of the Rev. W. F. West. I ! A native of Person County, he' was a son of the late Mr. and ■; Mrs. Tom Street and for thirty five years was connected with the Post Office department here 1 as a rural mail carrier. 'j Immediate cause of death was' 1 a stroke of paralysis, although! \ he had in recent months suffer-, 'j ed from a heart condition. '' Active in civic affairs, he was ■ a member of the Baptist church ': choir and of Roxboro Rotary i club. 1 (Survivors include his wife, the 1 former Miss Edith Bumpass, of ! the home: cne son, Thomas H.j ' Street, of Roxboro, one sister, Mrs. Sallie Morris and one, 1 brother, Kendall Street, both of ”, Roxboro, and one grandchild. I He wculd have retired from! , the postal service this month and I left the service in November be- I 1 j cause of ill health. 1 I I I , Birthday Coming ! j Up, And Maybe j Party With It Pvt. T. C. Wagstaff, of this ! City, now stationed at Camp Swift, Texas, has a birthday in two weeks. He hopes that by I that time the Camp Swift mumps and measles quarantine will be lifted. Officers say that 1 if no more cases develop in T. C.’s barracks he may be able to ; celebrate by that time. It rea’ly does not matter, ex-' r cept that Wagstaff, a former edi tor of the Rcxboro Courier, for weeks has not had an opportuni ty to leave camp and cannot I even go to a motion picture show on the Post. Army quarantine simply means working and eat ing and sleeping . . . and wait ing to see if you will be the next •one with mumps and measles. So far, T. C. has escaped. I SELECTEES HOME 1 Young men in March group of the Person Selective Service unit, who returned Friday from Camp Croft, S. C., report that about thirty out of the gr oup were inducted. A few are re , maining several days longer for final check-overs. Those who 1 have been accepted will be here! until about the middle of the week. 7 Jesse Rogers, a patient at Watt’s hospital, remains about the same. I PERSON WALLACE WOODS PRESIDENT - ELECT OF ROTARY CLUB Other New Officers Chosen At Regular Meeting. W. Wallace Woods, executive secretary of Roxboro Chamber i of Commerce and for many years a civic leader here and a mem ber of Roxboro Rotary club, is president elect of the Rotary club, having been chosen at a session held Thursday night at Hotel Roxboro. Woods will take over his club office in July, succeeding W. Iteade Jones, present president.- Other new officers, chosen at the same meeting, are Dr. John Fitzgerald, vice president; Ray Parrish, secretary, re-elected, and Ernest Lunsford, treasurer. New, directors are Clyde Short and T. T. Mitchell. Woods, in, addition to being! president-elect, is the club’s song leader and his wife i 3 pianist. Present officers, in addition to I Jones are: Henry Gates, vice president; Parrish, secretary, and I R. Glenn Stovall, treasurer. Other nominees in the election run-off were W. W. Morrell, Dr. George W. Gentry, Fred Masten, George M. Fox, Jr., Tom Bennett and Henry Gates, with Woods j winning over Morrell for the ' presidency. } NEW PLAN FOR I FARM GAS QUOTAS I BAS APPROVAL Hall And Thomas In ! Agreement Over Divi sion Os Farm Applica tions. I In order tc make sure that farmers receive adequate but ! not excesive supplies of gasoline j for cars and for farm equipment I for 1943 production, the Person | War Price and Rationing Board is not taking any more new or renewal applications for farm gasoline, but they will be taken by Township AAA Committee- 1 men. This is a new plan recom mended by the State War Board j and being put into effect by C'aude T. Hall of the Person USDA War Board and Philip L. Thomas of the Rationing Board. The new plan is expected to cause saving of gasoline, as the, applicant will not have to come to the Person Rationing Ofice at all. Undier this new plan farmers j will make their application di rect’y to their Township Com-', mitteemen who in turn will mail, the application to the County J Farm Transportation Committee and this Committee will make a recommendatiin to the Rationing Board. The application will include quotas for passenger cars for! farmers, according to Mrs. San-! ders McWhorter, of the Com munity Service Committee. HAS BIRTHDAY W. T. Buchanan, of Allens ville, last week observed his' 69th birthday at his home, where dinner was served to members of the family and several guests, among them Sheriff and Mrs. W. T. Beasley, of Oxford. XS FAYETTEVILLE Mesdames A. P. Clayton, O. Teague Kirby and Ivey James returned from Fayetteville, where they visited Mrs. J. M. Foushee. TIMES Progress Os Sun And State To Be Shown Soon Progress of the Spring son: effective Monday morning, Roxboro and Person school children will begin classes at 8:45 o’clock, one-half an hour leatflier than they ftavfe been accustomed to for the past several months. Schools here operate on Standard War Time but dur ing dark winter months they strike a compromise with na ture and Mars by moving schedules forward. Person School Board, which meets Monday morning, will gather at 10 o’clock, late enough to conform to accept ed war-time. Presiding over the quarterly session will be W. R. Wilkerson, of Bushy Fork, chairman. Meeting will be in the Board of Education I Building, Chub Lake street, , and biggest Job will be rati fication of the ninth month j plan for Person schools, re- j eently adopted by all of them ! in conformity with provisions | enacted by the 1943 General | Assembly. New Values ln| World at War! j Discovered Dr. Gaines, Os Washing ton And Lee Tells North Carolina Educators That William James Was Right. i I RALEIGH, April 2. The destiny of America for the next century will depend upon “whether education can sound again the c’arion call to social responsibility and social obligation,” Dr. Francis P. Gaines, president of Washington and Lee university, told mem-: bers of the North Carolina Edu cation association here yester-' day. i ‘lf America is to be safe and j strong, and if America is to throw her weight into a world that is safe and strong, “Dr. Gaines told the 2,000 delegates, “the education of America must produce generation after genera tion of youth who, in peace not less than in war, will- understand and wi’l serve the social ideal.” The Lexington, Va., educator quoted Prof. William James, who (Turn to page four please) * Along The Way With the Editor Quite a few of our readers know Erwin Stevens, publish er of the Caswell Messenger in Yancey vile. Any way, whether you know him or not you will enjoy reading the ad that he ran in the ‘Messenger” last week. Here ’tis: WANTED Owners of wandering hound dogs, bird dogs, feist dogs, starved dogs, crippled dogs, and just plain dogs to Ikisep them off my premises. For the past two years about six such animals have been a constant nuisance by trampling my garden, making holes under my chicken fence, eating chicken Red, turning over garbage can, and fighting noisily under my bedroom window about 2 o’clock in the morning. Neighbors are also pestered by- same dogs. Have exhausted available sup ply of rocks, but have little stronger medicine in form of two boxes cartridges and borrowed rifle. If owner expects Fido to come when he calls, I would suggest he start calling at once. Am ready to open second front against these pestiferous, per verse, pestilential, pusillanimous perfurbers of the public peace. Erwin D. Stephens, Yanoeyville, N. C. Person Editor’s note Dear Steve, please lend me your rifle. Several hundred dogs have been turning my garbage can over. - / COUNTY April Pay Checks For Person Teachers to Include Increases STORM SIGNALS FOR NEW DEAL UP FROM SOUTH Many Political Observ ers Predict Revolt May Come In Deep South. NEW ORLEANS, La., April 3. —(Storm signals for the “new deal” are flying in the sunny southland, with much opposition to a fourth term for President’ Rooseve’t. Interviews with many Demo-j crats in southern states, promin ent' politicians and rank of file, reveal a consensus that a titantic struggle over selection of dele gates to the 1944 Democratic na tional convention is now in the making. The south, of course, is all out for winning the war, but the be-' lief seems to be widespread that there is too much bureau cracy, too much regimentation in domestic affairs and a by-pass-! ing of economic needs of this part of the country. | Suggestions are varied on what to da politica’ly, but the discon tent seems to be so substantial that when the southern delega tions go to the national conven- 1 tion they are expected to be vo ciferous in their demands. Leaders said that a few weeks ago, when the fourth term boom! was launched by President! Roosevelt’s chief supporters, it was generally conceded the “sol-, id south” would meekly say! (Turn to page four please) i Robert L. Sims Former Resident Dies In Georgia i i Robert L. Sims, of Lincolnton, Ga., father of Miss Ruth Sims of ! the Bushy Fork School faculty, Roxboro, died Friday morning at Lincolnton, Ga. A former resi dent of Roxboro, he moved to Georgia about two years ago. Survivors, in addition to his daughter here, include his wife, four sons, three of whom are in military service, and two daugh ters. I Miss Sims left at ones- for Lin colnton, where funeral services were held Saturday. He had been in i’l health for several months. Ryan To Be Conference Headliner Person Welfare Group Will Be Among Those In Attendance. CHAPEL HILL, April 3.—Dr. W. Carson Ryan, head of the de ! partment of education of the I University of North Carolina,! I will be one of the principal I I speakers at the 31st annual meet-j ing of the North Carolina Con- ( ference for Social Service atj Winston-tSakm April 20-21, it ! was announced by Dr. Roy M.| Brown, head of the division of j public welfare and social work of the university. ’) Mrs. T. C. Wagstaff, Person Director of Welfare, and mem bers of the departmental staff, in Roxboro, are expected to at-! i tend the conference. I Dr. Ryan will discuss “Educa | (Turn to page four please) MRS. T. T. HESTER DIES AT HOME NEAR ROXBORO J ! J Rites For Former Miss j ! May Morton Will Be Held i At Home This Afternoon •i | j Mrs. Theodore T. Hester, 53, ' the former Miss May Morton, a J prominent Person County resi ! dent died early Saturday mern | ing at the Hester residence, the | Leasburg road, after a heart at- I tack. j } Funeral will be held Sunday | afternoon at three o’clock at the - home by the Rev. F. B. Peele, of Lea’s Chapel Methodist i church, -of which she was a member. Interment will be in j. the Jack Hester family cemetery _ near the home. , An alumna of Greensboro col lege, Mrs. Hester was a lover of , flowers and enjoyed a county wide reputation for the beauty | of her garden. Survivors include: her hus | band. T. T. Hester, to whom she ! w T as married in November 1910,1 one son, T. T. Hester, her moth er, Mrs. W. E. Morten, all of the! home, one brother Errol Morton, j of Olive Hill, and a nephew, Er j rol Morton, Jr., of the U. S. j Army, Camp Cooke, California, and two nieces, Mrs. William) Joel Baldwin, of Roanoke and) Salem, Va., and Miss Jean Mor ton, of Olive Hill. R. L. Rudd, Jr., Os Navy, Here For Visit With Family Seaman Slecond Class Robert Lee Rudd, Jr., United States Na val Reserves, Bainbridge, Md., is spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Rudd, of Bushy Fork. Rudd, a 1942 graduate of Rox boro high school, was living in Burlington when he entered the Navy. He expects to enter radio training soon after he returns to Bainbridge. During the past Summer he was connected with the Farm Agency office in Rox boro. Buy DEFENSE BONDS.STAMPS NUMBER 51 Extra Sums To Amount To Nearly SIO,OOO Retroactive Increases And War Bonuses Re sponsible For Flood Os Cash For Educators. Two hundred or more Person County and Roxboro white and 1 Negro public school teachers will j get fat salary checks this week, j their first payments under the retroactive salary increases and : War bonuses provided for in the ! 1943 General Assembly, j R. B. Griffin, Person Superin tendent of Schools said today that total additional amount to I be added to the April checks for 1 teachers in the schools here is ' 'expected to reach SIO,OOO, and that at least $3,000 more will j represent the total) in increased j payments by end of the school ! year in May. Griffin, in pointing out the percentage basis on which in creases and bonuses are arrived at, said that teachers for the first time are gaining substantial in creases. The schedules are retro active, and this year, as provid ed by law, begin with the fifth school month, which explains j why the first payment, made j with the April check, is of such j large proportions, j Under the schedule, starting iat the bottom, those teachers who are paid in salary as much as S4OO per year or less, will next . week receive three-fourths ol . S3O (the half-year bonus) with i their April checks, while those . teachers making from $4Ol to i $899 per year, will get a similar - proportion of S6O, and those with - S9OO to SI,BOO, will receive a three-fourths part of S9O. Beginning with the September i 1943 term the increases and bon i uses will be paid on a monthly basis along with the. regular sal j aries, but payments for some teachers will be larger in pro ! portion becauslci majority are to be paid -on a nine month rather than a twelve month schedule, j The April checks, Griffin said, are now being made out. I 4-H Clubbers Will Be Offered Scholarships I " . RALEIGH, April 3.— L. R. Harrill, state 4-H club leader, tor , day said six one-year scholar ships to State college were being . offered to North Carolina '4-H c’ubbers who make the best re cords with tobacco, cotton, com, potatoes and gardens this sum j mer. The awards have been made possible from funds donated by the Plant Food Institute of North Carolina and Virginia, he said, to encourage the 4-H program and promote greater knowledge of crop production problems. Each contestant must keep sal accurate record Os iMthodL amount and cost of fertilizer used, the Md yield and total cost of producing the crop, tad eluding fall infarmstian on Mm/, costs. Chib mtnfbtrs who wfaft to qualify HMtS contact theft j county agents. 1