HAWKINS CHAPEL Mr. and Mrs. Baldy Greene and children visited in the home of Mrs. W. E. Lewter, of Roanoke Rapids, Sunday afternoon. Miss Laura Pearson spent the week-end with Miss Esther Hawk ins. Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Fowler and daughter, Helen, spent Sunday in the home of Joe Moonie, of Heaths ville. A number of young people en joyed a Christian Endeavor Social, in the home of Mrs. Irving Hawk ins Tuesday night, February 21. Games were played and refresh ments were served. The social was enjoyed by everyone present. Budget Director Representative L. W Douglas 0f Arizona is the new director of the Budget in the Roosevelt administra tion Announcement of his appoint ment was received with favor in Washington Bill Regulating Fees Ratified By General Assembly Raleigh, Mar. 7.—House Bill No. 561, repealing an earlier act which fixed the fees allowed for clerk of the Superior Court, register of deeds and sheriff of Halifax coun ty, and providing for employment of a court stenographer by the county commissioners, was rati fied by the General Assembly last Thursday, becoming the law on March 2. E. D. Kellerman of Montesano, Wash., who lost his sauerkraut cut ter, advertised as follows: “Keller man kan’t kut his kraut kause some kussed kritter keeps his kraut, kutter.” White House Housekeeper Mrs. Henry Nesbit, neighbor of President Roosevelt’s family at Hyde Park, N Y., is the new house keeper at the White House Mrs Nesbit successfully managed a co operative market at Springfield, Mass at one time. TOWN TALK Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wilson, of this city, attended the Inaugural in Washington, D. C., Saturday. Mrs. L. J. Meade and son, Larry, attended the Inauguration at Washington. Mi-s. E. W. Wright attended the inauguration at Washington. D. L. McKnight, of Durham, was a business visitor in the city the first of the week. Mrs. Florence Morgan of Sev ern, is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. H. T. Davis. jj ILLUSION: In India, the fakirs present a spectacle to tourists. Two lovely performers break bottles and lamp chimneys before the eyes of the audience,and throw the jagged pieces into a box already filled with broken glass. They step barefooted into the box and do an Oriental dance in the glass without in jury. EXPLANATION: The performers toughen their feet in a strong so lution of alum water and thoroughly rub them with pulverized resin before they appear. They throw the freshly broken glass around the edges of the platform. The glass on which they actually do dance is very thick, heavy, and filed or ground so that the sharp edges are rounded off. The girls just pretend to dance on the sharp glass. Souice: "Magic Stage Illusions and Scientific Diversions” by Albert A. Hopkins, Munn & Co., New York. Copyright, 1933, B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Zts tun to tt Zooztz> ... ITS MOST TUN TO ZnOTF One of the tricks of cigarette advertis ing is to pretend that“HeatTreatment” is an exclusive process, making one cig arette better than any other. EXPLANATION: All cigarette manu facturers use heat treatment. It is a routine process of manufacture. The first Camel cigarette ever made was manufactured under the heat-treating process. Every one of the billions ol Camels produced since has received the necessary heat treatment. Harsh, raw tobaccos require inten sive processing under high tempera tures. The more expensive tobaccos, which are naturally mild, call for only a moderate application of heat. Heat treatment never can make cheap, in ferior tobacco good. It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. This is the most important statement ever made in a cigarette advertisement. Weigh its words. Consider what it means. Then try Camels. Camels are fresh ... in the air-tight, welded Humidor Pack. _ JVO TRICKS CflMCLS ..JEST COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND