- T? n Topici Fund-Raising Campaign Begun by Junior Class By JAYNE FERGUSON At 8:30 Monday morning, Sept. ?, regular classes atarted at More bead High. There are 432 students enrolled this semester. We have nine new teachers, Mra. - Hopkins, Mis* Lewis, Mr. Rich ardaon, Mr. Mendenhall, Mr. Hill drup, Miss Underhill, and Mr. Davia. We welcome them and hope they will be aa happy here as we are. Orchida to the Juniors (or ex cellent work in the magazine drive! Their goal ia (1,200 and they have collected $134. 63 since Mon day. The drive lasts till the 29th. j The money is for the Junior-senior banquet and prom. This Friday night we play host to Swans boro It will be our third game. Have you seen our players in action? If not, plan to attend the game. They are really excel lent thia year and there's one this reporter thinka ia especially good. Have you aeen and beard the band lately? They can be aeen al most every day marching down Evana Street. We have four new majorettes. Linda Lockhart, Beth Mayo, Lor raine Hacker, and Bettie Davit. Returning from last year are Judie Cooper, Ann Sanderson, Barbara Guthrie and Suzanne Beck, all nnder the leadership of the head majortete, Douglass Ann West. We think they are the best yet. Here's hoping you'll enjoy Teen Topics as much as I enjoy writing it. Till next week, tint's all the news from your Morehead High reporter. Junior Churchgoers Choir to Moot Tomorrow The Junior Churchgoers Choir of First Methodist Church will open its (ail program at 10:30 a.m. to morrow. The children will meet in the usual place and will give their first number at the 11 o'clock wor ship hour Sunday. The leadership urges every member to attend. This choir has a membership of over eighty chil dren, as many as sixty have sung at the morning services during the last conference year. Parents are asked to have the vestments ready to use the coming Sunday morn ing. Lutheran Church Is Now 'St. Timothy's' The United Lutheran Mission at llavelock has selected St. Timo thy's Lutheran Church as its name. The Rev. Aaron Lippard, pastor, announces that services are at 10 a.m. each Sunday. Sunday School begins at (:45 a.m. (EST). The church is located on high way 70 west o( the main gate at Cherry Point. Renovation is under way to provide Sunday School classrooms and a sanctuary. Dr. John Eddins to Speak At Baptist Church Sunday Dr. John W. Eddins Jr., o( the Southeastern Baptist Seminary, Wake Forest, will be the speaker at the First Baptist Church, More head City, Sunday. The Woman's Miaaionary Society will hold a general meeting at 7:3o Monday night at the church and all members are asked to attend. Man Buys 31st Set Of License Plates For Model A Ford Oconto, Wis. (AP)? Albert Gillis recently bought his 31st set of auto mobile license plates for the car he purchased in 1929 for $600. Gillis has a 1929 Ford coupe in showroom condition. With more than 200,000 miles of driving ? the third time around for the mileage indicator? Gillis feels the car is good for another 30 years. A man who loves figures and keeps accurate records, Gillis says his Model A has used a little over 10,000 gallons of gasoline and 700 gallons of oil. It never has had a broken part. "Best dam car on the road," Gillis says. "They don't build them like that anymore." Christian Ministers Will Exchange Pulpits Sunday Under an exchange of pulpits program being conducted in Chris tian Churches all over the state, the Rev. Paul Parker of the Ot way Christian Church will speak at First Christian Church, More head City, at 11 a.m. Sunday. The Rev. J. W. Kunk, pastor of the Morehead City church, will speak at the Otway church. The public is invited to attend the ser vices. Attends Rally J. C. Harvell, Morehead City, council member of The Men of the Church, Wilmington Presbytery, attended the faU rally for Preaby terian men last night in St. An drew's Covenant Presbyterian Church, Wilmington. Sept. 19 ? Mr. and llrs. Clifton Piner and ton, Ronnie, and Mri. Piner'i brother, Eugene Edward*, have (one to Murfreesbcro, Twin , where Mr. Piner and Mr. Edward* will enter college. Ormsby Mann, superintendent of the prison camp in Albemarle, spent the weekend here with his family. He was accompanied by his aunt, Mrs. Nora Cox of Com cord. Mrs. Joyce Aristoff left Sunday for Indiana, where she will join her husband. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Hunnings and children spent the weekend here with his mother, Mrs. Idell Hun nings, at her home on Bogue Sound. Mr. and Mrs. Snowden Thomp son of Beaufort and Mrs. Viola Howard and son, Doug, visited Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Howard Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hill and children and Mrs. C. M. Hill went to Wilmington Sunday to take Mrs. Nora Cox, who will spend some time there with her sister, Mrs. Dora Ormsby. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Pruit and children, Carl and Anne, of Chin quapin spent the weekend at their home here. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Pittman of Morehead City were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Mann Sunday. Mr. Melvin D. Edwards is out of Cherry Point hospital where he underwent an operation. He will continue the Newport School band beginning the latter part of Sep tember. Mrs. Rena Edwards, Mrs. Ralph Fleming, Mrs. Melvin Edwards and Mn. L. C. Him attended the Missions Seminar at Centenary Church In New Bern on Tuesday. F. E. Weat and aon. Woody, i FLIT BUG KILLBRI WITH Alton IN I mtivwxcD^ Tht way to kin %OL CAN 89c Your To to I food bill is less when you bhop af COLONIAL STORES ? 335 FRONT ST. ? BEAUFORT ?1010 ARENDELL ST. ? MOREHEAD CITY