Along The Way With the Editor— Roxboro is full of nice places with suggestive names such'as “Cninch Road”, “Lightning Bug Alley”, “Gallows’ Hill” an<j # ‘lSlugar Hill.’, Each name, to local inhabitants, has a meaning extending far back into the distant past when the City was a village, but the newest and most swanky place hereabouts is “Kitten Hill”. John Gentry, who lives there, blames the rest of us. He says we are hard-hearted citizens, folks without the shadow of pity in our misguided souls. The place is full of kittens, blind and helpless and mewing, with once and a while, loud yowls from tomcats and mamma cats. But the kittens are not born there, John says. That is where we come in. On the outskirts of the outskirts of Roxboro, down below Ca-Vel and off to the left, the place is close enough to be a convenient spot for an easy evasion of feline responsibilities by us folks. George says we take the infants there and leave ’em. This would be alright with John, but he claims he and his neighbors have enough by natural and on the spot birth-rates. Besides, “Kitten Hill” is really “Bullock’s Town”, not for Dick, not for Will, but for rotund George 8., and much more digni fied. bate news Bulletins DEPARTMENT WARNS AGAINST OVEN CANNING The United States Department of Agriculture, according to D. W. Ledbetter, Roxboro electrical dealer, has issued warnings against oven-canning, it being reported that new type jars are not suited to this method. Citizens who have pre-war type jars may, however, continue to use the oven method. WORK OR FIGHT GROUP MEETS The Person County “Work Or Fight Committee” held a L-pecial meeting Saturday morning. The purpose of the meeting was to review a list of names turned over to the committee on people whose employment is considered doubtful. Some of the names submitted were listed as working part time, but not the full 35 hours a week as out lined by Governor Bruoghton. Marine Carried to Safety : -3? U. S. Marine Corps Phot* Four jungle-fighting; Leathernecks are pictured as they carried a wounded comrade through heavy sniper fire to a dressing station behind the lines of a Southwest Pacific battle zone. NEW WORK OR FIGHT AND LABOR ORDERS GET COUNCIL APPROVAL Raleigh, August 7.—Three War Proclamations were made law at Raleigh this week, bringing to 5 the total of emerg ency charges in State laws since adjournment of the 1943 General Assembly in March. Rate High For Interest Charges On War Loan Camp Butner, Aug. 7—Seven months old W. Price Wright 11, whose father ;s in the armed forces serving at Fort Knox, Ken tucky, is making his home for the duration with his grandpar ents, Colonel and Mrs. James W. Troutt at 1208 Glendale Ave., in Durham. Recently, the youngster nego tiated a loan from his grandpar ents to cover the balance due in bis current War Savings Stamp book which he purchased to aid ip building the “Shangri-La”, the mystery ship. ‘The terms of the loan”, said the coionel, were for a period of 100 years with interest at the rate of 100 percent of love and .. _ V *. i War Proclamations 11, IV, and V were approved by the Council of State at a meeting held in Raleigh. They were drawn up and announced last week by Governor Broughton, and texts of the proclamations were placed before the public Tuesday for inspection. The. proclamations, made law Under authority of the Emerg ency War Powers Act passed by the 1943 General Assemble and effective only for “temporary duration”, modify certain pro visions of the State’s labor laws concerning working hours for women and minors; put “teeth” into the Governor's ‘Work or Fight” proclamation against idl ing; and “effectuates’ a law pass ed by the 1943 General Assembly permitting 15-year-olds to obtain drivers licenses. Labor Law Changes. War Proclamation HI permits: 1. Women to work 10 hours per day but not more than 46 hours per week, with one and (turn to page four, please) - ... PERSON TIMES VOLUME XIV PUBLISHED EVERT SUNDAY AND THURSDAY ROXBORO, N. C. SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1943 NUMBER 86 * - ■ - - - Reginald Rogers Car Strikes Hicks Girl At Longhurst Rainwater To End Training Rs Chaplain Popular Former Roxboro Minister Expects To Visit Here After Completing Training. The Rev. R. W. Rainwater, a former pastor of Grace, Ca-Vel and Longhurst Methodist church es, who is now with the United Stateis Navy and in training as a Chaplain at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va., is expecting to be graduated from the training school by Septem ber 26. Rainwaters, who says that he likes the Navy’s training pro gram, although he can only speak of it from the standpoint of the Chaplain's school, expects to come to Roxboro for a visit as soon as he completes his course. The second minister of his charge to enter military service Rainwater, a native of Rocking ham, came to Roxboro a little more than a year ago from Duke University as Successor to the Rev. T. Marvin Vick, Jr., who is himself now an Army chaplain and has been in service on the West coast. Present pastor of the Charge with which Rainwater was con nected is the Rev. W. T. Medlin, Jr., to whom Rainwater Isends good wishes. He also asks to be remembered to friends in his con gregations and in Roxboro. Nothing New On Fathers Says Board Person Board Has No New Information 0 n Drafting Os Fathers. The Person Selective Service Board today reported that no in formation concerning the draft ing of fathers has been received | here that differs from informa tion which been released by the Associated Press from Wash- I ington and Raleigh, but it is un | derstood that reclassifications j may begin here and that general carrying out of the new army orders is expected. The Board at the same time said that Sam Cameron, a Ne gro, whose last known address was 106 Henry street, Durham, has failed to appear before the Board here where he is rgister ed, and that his name is to be sent to the FBI unless he con tacts the Board within three days. Persons knowing Cameron’s pres ent address are requested to no tify the Board. Names of Person and Roxboro youths who in July became 18 years of age and thereupon reg istered for Selective Slervice are as follows: Euliss Cameron, Ernest Hudson Denny, Ben Dolian Winstead, James Archie Winstead, William Alvis Nelson, Joe Clifton Turn tine, Sidney Lee Featherston, William Reuben Norvis, Bruce Robertson, Wallace Robertson, Joe Thomas Long. (Turn to page four please) \ Mrs. Griffin Better Mrs. R. B. Griffin is much, better following an operation 'for appendicitis; She is a pati ent at Community Hospital. Reginald Rogers Now Under Bond, With Trial To Take Place Tuesday. Father Saves Daughter By Pulling Her Back Quickly. Miss Glenna Mae Hicks, 17, of Roxboro, daughter of Albert Hicks, also of this City, suffered head injuries and body bruises of an undetermined extent Fri day night at 11:10 o’clock when she was struck by a car said to. have been driven by Reginald Rogers, 23, of Person County. The accident oocurred near the Longhunst Post Office when Miss Hicks and her father, cotton mill employees, who had just finish ed on the second shift, were crossing the highway to go to some steps to wait for a car. Rogers, who afterward): took the young woman to Community hospital, admitted to investigat ing officers that he was driving at a rather rapid speed, going in direction of the Collins and Aikman plant. State Highway patrolman John Hudgins, who with City Police went to scene of the wreck, said that Rogers has been placed under a S2OO bond, pending out come of the girl’ls. injuries and that he probably will face trial Tuesday in Person Recorder’s Court on a charge of careless and reckless driving. There were a number of eye witnesses to the accident and in the car with Rogers were sever al companions. It is reported that Miss Hicks and her father had almost crossed the highway to the left and that Rogers’ car swerved to that side. Quick action by the girl's fath er in pulling her back is thought to have kept her from receiving more seriouis. injuries. The acci dent is the only major one to have occurred here in six days, a week significantly devoid of court cases of any type. | Rites Held For Gloria A. Tanner Os Charles Street Funeral for Gloria Ann Tan ner, three months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David A. Tan -1 ner, of Charles street, Roxboro, | was conducted Saturday after noon at four o’clock a tthe home, with the Rev. J. N. Bowman, of Providence and Ca-Vel Baptist churches, officiating. Interment was in Burchwood cemetery. The child, who died Thursday afternoon in Watt’s hospital, Dur ham, after an illness of two days with colitis, is survived by its parents and one sister, Phyllis Olivia, all of Roxboro. Greensboro relatives of the Tanners on Friday morning call ed the Police Department here seeking information. They were undr the erroneous impression that the person dead was Tan ner’s mother. The call was re ported by Officer Sam Whitten, Jr. who supplied correct in formation. INVITATION COMES Members of the Clayton fam ily of Van Meter, lowa, who an nually hold their reunion in that City in August and who regular ly extend an invitation to the Claytons in Person County and Roxboro, will meet this year at the H. C. Clayton Estate home, according to Bertha Pitzer, se cretary. NOW BETTER , Miss Eunice Bradsher, who has been a patient at Community hospital, is much improved and is spending the week-end with her brother in South Boston, Va. Ensign Umstead, Roxboro, Has Adventure On Plane NEWS-GIRL HERE UKES NEW JOB OF CARRYING PAPERS Miss Jacqueline Abbitt, a ’teen-aged Roxboro young wo man, is that newest personage, a “news-girl”, and what is more she has a down-town, business district route with forty-five customers each |af ternoon, and she likes it. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Collin Abbitt and a grand daughter of Mir. and Mrs. I. O. Abbitt, Miss Abbitt took over the job several weeks ago when Heedley Kynoch, Rox boro circulation manager for the Durham Herald-Sun pap ers, was driven to something like desperation because of the shortage of news boys here. Miss Abbitt says frankly that she likes her job and in tends to keep it. She has a Scotch grandmother and may be that is whene her canny business sense comes from. Anyhow, she is rather proud of being a young pioneer. Mrs. Whitt Now Assistant To Army Chaplain Mrs. Mildred A. Simmons I Whitt, of Roxboro and Winston j Salem, Who is a member of the J Womens Army Corps and is now ! stationed at Big Springs, Texas, | is a chaplain!? assistant there at | the Bombardier School, said to !be one of the largest training j centers of its type in the nation, j Mrs. Whitt’s husband, Pvt. John Franklin Whitt, is at Fort Bliss, Texas, and her brother, Pvt. J. C. SimmorH? in the Army Air Corps. Mrs. Whitt, a grad uate of Woman’s College. the University of North Carolina, at Greensboro, is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Simmon?, of Efird (street, Winston-Salem. Elmo’s White Suit And Ski Shoes Set Him Apart In Army Son Os Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Mitchell Praises Friendly Western Folks Briggs Will Be Speaker Here On Wednesday The Rev. Dr. John E. BHggs, of Washington, D. C., a Person County native who is now visit ing here, will speak Wednesday night at eight o’clock at the prayer meeting service of Rox fooro First Baptist church. He will also speak Sunday morn ing at Clement Baptist church. Prominent for many years in the ministry in Washington, Dr. Briggs spends a part of each year in Person County and is remembered by many friends ’here. GETS PROMOTION Andrew W. Yarborough, of Maxton, with the United States Army, a son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Davis, of Roxboro, has been promoted to rank Os Corporal. He and Mrs. Yarbor ough are expected here this week-end for a visit with mem bers of their families. Roxboro Young Man Runs Into High Adventure When Transport Plane Falls Ensign Wiley logan Umstead, 22, of Roxboro and Berk ley, California, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Logan H. Umstead, of Roxboro, formerly of South Boston, Va., has just come through a thrilling adventure, forty-two hours of bobbing up and down on the ocean waves in a crippled transport plane that was repaired on the spot and then completed its journey to Honolulu. Raughters flt Rotarg Club Gain Approval Four Generations In Har ris Family Center Os In terest. With four generations of Rota rian Bill Harris, Sr.’s family, in cluding his son, the Lieutenant Governor, R. L. Harris, his granddaughter Betsy (R. L.'s daughter) and his great-grand daughter, Marguerite (two year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Harris, lll).among the members and special guests, Rox boro Rotary club on Thursday at Hotel Roxboro held its annual “Father-Daughter” night. Program was in charge of Sid ney Marsh, of the Entertainment i committee and consisted of skits and musical features. Out of j town guest was Rotarian Hol | land McSwain, of Yanceyville, ! Caswell County Superintendent j of schools. Total number attend- I ing the affair was placed at sev enty. First skit was given by Rotar ians George Fox and Lee Um stead who, accused of always be ing impatient because their wives seemed to have difficulty in get ting ready for any entertain ment, were given an oppotunirty to see how much more prepara tion is necessary for women to dress for an occasion than it is for men. Each was furnished with a suitcase, containing var (turn to page, four, please). Says Travel On Trains | Really Problem. Particu larly Likes Camp Grant. Ski-trooper Traynham Elmo Mitchell, of Roxboro, a Private First Class with a medical de tachment at Camp Hale, Colo., and son of Mr. and Mrs. Trayn ham T. Mitchell, of Roxboro, is rather proud of belonging to one of the smallest but most distinc tly units in the U. S. Army. Less than a year ago Mitchell was interested in beginning a career an a tobacconist and ware houseman, following the business with which his father is connect ed. If anybody had told him that by this summer he would be liv ing in a Camp tucked ’way up in the Rocky Mountains close to such a once famous boom-town ais Leadville and closer still to the little hamlet of Dry Gulch, he would have laughed in their faces. And he ’would have laughed still more if he had been told that he would be wearing a white ski-suit and learning the art of combat on ski-shoe*. It’s sorter cold out there now, around (turn to page four, please) Umstead, as Second-Officer Navigator on the plane, got a good deal of publicity in San Francisco papers the other day, as did other members of the crew, but his parents, who had read a brief AP story and who knew Umstead was a Pan-Ameri can Airways navigator, did not learn until today, that he was on the stricken plane. An alumnus of Hampden-Sid ney college and a graduate of C. |H. Friend high school, South Boston, Umstead has come up in the service of his country the hard way. He volunteered on Dec. 11, 1941, four days after Pearl Harbor and was accepted by the Air Corps, undergoing rigerous training for about six months. Two weeks before he 'was to have received his com ! mission a final physical check up brought discovery of a previ ; ously unknown physical disabil -1 itv. ! Greatly chagrined, he was com -1 pelled to resign from the Air Corps, but he was determined j “to keep fighting”. After weeks |of treatment he was completely j restored in health, and ready for his new job as navigator—which |it turns out has just about as many thrills to offer as the Air Corps. j Mrs. Umstead, who is proud of | son Wiley, has another son, Sam,. ' who is in the Air Corps, how c ver and stationed in Arizona. Still a little shaken by the knowl ; edge that Wiley has been in such danger she can scarcely wait to relay the details to Mr. Um stead. a tobacco buyer, now on the South Carolina market. This is the story he will get, first told in the San Francisco papers: Like a great crippled bird, a naval flying boat with 19 men (turn to page three, please) Street At Camp Butner Has Name Os Lewell Huff Streets at Camp Butner are named for Army men killed in action in this war and onte of them, according to announce ment just received here, bears the name of a Person County native, Pfc. Lewell T. Huff, of Payne’s Tavern, a son of Mrs; Emma Huff, reported as killed in action in Africa, December 10, 1942. Huff, thought to he the first Person man killed in action in this war, was several weeks ago posthumously awarded the Purple Heart, the recipient being his mother. ——————— i Juniors’ Outing Members of the Junior depart ment of the Sunday school of First Baptist church, together with their teachers and leaders, had their annual outing last week on the lawn of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brooks, where a program of entertain ment was enjoyed and refresh ments were served in picnic style. OFFICE OPENS Mrs. Jesße Rogers, who has been in Portsmouth, Va., be cause of the iljneas of her fetfcer» v has returned to ftoafcorb and re-opened Motor dub office.

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