THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1943 Oxford Looks At Abattoir Situation ' i Citizens Os Granville i Discuss Compromise Ac- j tion Os Commissioners. f In Oxford, as reported from the Oxford Public Ledger, the 1 following Abattoir situation ex ists: Under terms of an ordinance 1 which the Board of Ccmmission ers of Oxford adopted at a called meeting last month, retail meat dealers in the fire .district (business section) may, upon conforming with regulations of the State Board of Health, slaughter livestock and prepare the meat fcr market, in their places of business or in such places as they may prepare with in the fire district for the slaugh ter operation. The ordinance was adopted af ter Mayor T. C. Jordan, Jr., cast the deciding ballot to break a tie that developed when the six Ox ford City Commissioners voted. As a result of the action per mitting cattle to be brought into the business district and slaugh tered, the board eliminated an offer by H. E. Harris, submitted to the board through the Gran ville Health Department, to erect and operate cutside the limits of the Town an abattoir in which Tie would slaughter under con tract the livestock purchased by retail market operators in the county. Mr. Harris had said he would be unwilling to put the required capital in such an enter prise unless he could serve all meat dealers. During the meeting, Health Of ficer Norwood told the members of the Board that such enterprise in the heart of the business dis trict, and within two or three hundred yards of a majority of the food stores in the city, with its attraction for flies, would con stitute a new health hazazrd. Drawn-Out Fight The action of the Town Board came three days after the matter had been deferred at a Tuesday night meeting to permit attorneys Sweet Com at Best Grown In Victory Gardens I l, MAKE SUCCESSIVE if JL plantings about J" TEN DAYS APART TO J ' I ENJOY A LONG _ JL. SEASON OF SWE";T FIRST PLANTING SECOND PLANTING THIRD PLANTING * » * ** * * * * SQUARES 5 ™ * N * * * * THAT each FibegLl ffry&zzSzZ' kernel has its * CORRESPONDING Since we eat only the seed of sweet corn, discarding the rest of the large plant, the yield is small for the space occupied. Many gar deners are willing to make a sacri fice in order to enjoy even a small amount of this superlative food, which only heme gardeners can en joy at its best In markets, since it is impossible to get sweet corn in less than a day after it has been picked, half its sugar has been turned to starch, with correspond ing loss of flavor. A patch ot sweet com in a space fifteen feet square in normal weath er should yield ten dozen ears. This is approximate, of course; each stalk bearing at least one ear, and some of them bearing two. For the gardener who wants the finest sweet com rather than the largest ear or heaviest yield, suc cessive plantings of Golden Bantam will give the greatest satisfaction except in locations where disease resistance is required. The sea son during which a sowing of this eom is at its best is ten days at most; so not more than a 10 days’ •upply for your family should be sewn at one time. Hybrid sweet corn has both ad vantages and disadvantages. It gives, a larger .ear, and thus a heavier yield, coupled with a short er season, and not quite so deli cious a flavor. ' Mqst hybrids are disease resistant, and more vigor ous than Golden Bantam, but they require mpre room and richer feed jlW b SOW thry or four strains, ijp. Yes, in away. The modem magic ot electric power. The magic that makes it pos sible for a gill’s sKm fingers to lift mountains of metal, or set great wheels in motion—just ,by pressing a button or pulling a lever. Women are able to work beside men on sent a younger daughter to the 1 store to get Jesse Baker to come i to the house and get some wood so she could wash. When Jesse arrived, the little girl testified, her mother asked him how he felt, and he said: “Mighty bad.” Mrs. Baker then suggested that he take a dc-se of soda, and gave him the lye. He drank part of | it and then said: “You’ve given I me something to kill me.” ! Baker went out into the yard • 1 “hollering.” The girl said she heard her mother say: ’ | “I reckon that’ll get him.” ( j Lonnie Strickland, on whose | farm the family were tenants, ! testified that he heard the man crying out and found him in the yard, his mouth bleeding, and , that Jesse told him Lizzie had 1 given him something she said | was soda, but that it didn’t taste like soda. | ! Louise Hair testified that Jesse went to the store, told him that he and Lizzie had had a quarrel at the breakfast table and show -1 EADACHE^ After hours of anxiety, a headache is the last straw. But it quickly yields to Capudine, which also soothes nerves I upset by the pain. Capudine is liquid. No waiting for it to J ml dissolve before or after tak rea^sr Quick. Use V? on^y M directed. 10c, 80c, 60c. IjJPSi capudine ! America’s roaring production lines because electricity does the heavy labor. America’s war production is the greatest in the world largely because America has the world’s greatest supply of electric power. And Amer ica's electric companies under business manage ment provide over do per cent of all that power at low pre-war prices! Call that magic, too! But the experienced men and women of the electric companies take it in stride. All in the day’s work! All part of knowing the job. Their proved skills were ready when the war came, so that kSTV UP THIS WOMAN'S POWfff BY BUYING WAR BONDS I ’ ed him a knot on his head where |he said she had hit him with a piece of stove wood. Dr. D. E. Best testified that he attended Jesse at the Goldsboro hospitaj, and that a specimen from his stomach was found to contain lye. The defense offered no wit nesses, and had no lawyer until the court appointed Hugh Dortch. Mrs. Baker appeared nervous during the trial and broke down and cried when the sentence was pronounced. The entire trial con sumed about one hour. I I ! When Norway joined the Al lies, the United Nations gained more than 1,000 Norwegian mer chant ships, manned by some 25,- 000 experienced sailors. YES! WE HAVE GOOD CAES USED CARS GOOD ONES Os course you can’t always get a new car these days, but if you are looking for a good used one, we have it. Many makes and models. Tar Heel Chevrolet Co. [ On January 1, 1943, there were (25 million A ration books for passenger cars in the hands of consumers, 6,400,000 of the B books, and 3,600,000 C books. I BUY BONDS TODAY! \ - \ J We sell Eye Glasses to Sat isfy the eyes $2 00 to SB.OO THE NEWELLS Jewelers Roxboro. N. C. now we Americans are producing far nxMfei power than all the Axis countries Politically enslaved, the despaliijftj workers of Germany, Italy And Japan cart / begin to compete with free people. But electricity has helped pendent Americans to step up the Wmmkl manpower —and woman-power—tremtmkMkf CAROLINA POWER k COMPANY PAGE SEVEN