Newspapers / Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, … / Sept. 7, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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TEACHERS ARRIVING THIS WEEK High School Students Busy Registering Yesterday And Today t - % EXPECT 3,000 Roanoke Rapids Graded and High Schools will open Monday ■with an expected enrollment be fore the first month is over, of nearly 3,000 students. Yesterday and today, High School pupils were busy register ing and planning their schedules for the coming year’s work. The main High School building, quiet all Summer, is now teeming with activity. Sixty-one old teachers and five new ones will be on duty Monday morning. A few arrived in town the first of the week, with the majority of them expected here by tonight, as each train and bus yesterday and today brought them back for their year’s work. The new teachers are: Miss Otelia Vaughan, Roanoke Rapids. Mrs. Thelma Daughtry, Roanoke Rapids. Miss Elizabeth Dover, Oak Ridge Miss Alleen Charles, Grifton. Miss Lucy Mayfield, Norlina. Teachets who were here last year and are reporting back for duty are: Irene Gordon, Virginia Forbes, Marjorie Chapman, Katherine Hall, Helen House, Rebecca Price, Carrie Lee Arnold, Mae Hampton Keith, Amanda Tillman, Margaret Woodbury. Katherine Reid, Martha Spivey, Josephine Carty, Ruth Dean, Velma Boykin, Cassie Carty, Betty Oates, \ Virginia Gates, \ Mary Lowder, Thelma Garris, Marjorie Cannon, Ruth White, , Lillian Mitchiner, Hazel Cotfb, Clyde Johnson, Le Grand Elliott, Juanita Taylor, / . Elizabeth Tait, Mary Hix, Eunice Kimbrough, Mary Blalock, Omara Daniel, I Margie Caldwell, ^ Sara Cannon, ; Frances Sharpe, Susan Womble, j Hazel Whitehurst, 1 Henrietta Price, I Aline Cannon, Carrie Smith, Mary Cannon, ’ j Sarah Gurley, j Ada Edwards, j Delphie Harris, | Vernie Eddins, 1 Evelyn Tillman, y Ruth Chapman, • s R. G. Knight, A C. W. Davis, (Supt.), Clara Hearne, (Supv.), Olivia Rook, (Nurse), Graham Peyner, * Hart Sheridan, Martha Craddock, Cranford Hoyle, Charming World’s Fair Retreat J Down by the old mill stream it’s still peaceful and quiet, even to j the heart of the busy Chicago World’s Fair—A Century of Progress, I Thelma Wellbaum, of Dayton, Ohio, pauses in one of the many beautiful gardens of the Horticulture Building to rest a moment in her tour of the Fair’s many interesting spots. ■____. FOR DEPARTING STUDENTS Saturday night, Misses Marga ret Dunning and Ella Lee Taylor entertained a number of their friends at the home of Miss Dun ning on Roanoke Avenue, with a party in honor of a number of boys and girls that are to leave for school soon. Dancing was enjoyed by those present, with a two act comedy farce by Jimmie Shell. At 10:30 refreshments were served to Misses Pauline Brewer, Ella Brown, Virginia Akers, Essie Mat kins, Hilda Hines, Virginia Tay V>r, Yates Brown, Paul Matthews, Johnnie Bounds, Edwin Akers, Graham Lynch, Zeke Webster, Calvin Brown, Graham Shajl, Jimmie Shell, Fred Mills, Norman Speight, Ootchie Acree, Fleetwood Sullivan, Jimmie McNeil, Cecil Pendleton. Mrs. Tom McNeil and son, Don ald, have returned to their home in West Virginia, after visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Srnest Bidgood and daughter of Portsmouth, spent the week-end with Mrs. W. H. Jones. Thomas L. Martin, Martha Carson, Virginia Biount, Virginia Smith, P. A. Reid, J. M. Smith, Ruth Alligood, (Sec’y), Jennie Walton, Thomas J. Cheek, Evangeline Pendleton (Piano). TOWN TALK 1 Mrs. Charlena Hart left Wed nesday for Washington, D. C., where she will spend some time. Mrs. Robert Loy and son have returned home after spending some time with relatives in West ern North Carolina. Miss Sybil Williams has return ed to her home in Fayetteville, af ter visiting Mrs. Clifton Grant. Y. N. Underwood and Payton Keele spent Saturday in Scotland Neck. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edwards, and children, Mrs. W. T. Edwards, and son, Lewis, visited Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edwards in Rich Square, Sunday. Mrs. W. C. Karney and daugh ter, Sadie, and grandson, Burton. Use This Laxative made from plants Thedford’s Black-Dbaught is made from plants that grow In the ground, like the garden vegetables you eat at every meal. NATURE has put Into these plants ah active medieine that stimulates the bowels to act — just as Nature put the ma terials that sustain your body into the vegetable foods you eat. In Black-Draught you have a natu ral laxative, free from synthetic drugs. Its us^ does not make you have to depend on cathartic chemical drugs to get the bowels to act daily. Now you can get Black-Draught in the form of a SYRUP, for Children. TYPEWRITERS, ADDING MACHINES BOUGHT, SOLD AND REPAIRED General Typewriter Exchange 114 North Washington St., Rocky Mount, N. C. of Burlington, visited Mrs. O. F. Bray Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carlisle and daughter, Marjorie, spent Sunday in Oak City with Miss Ellen Pur vis. Carson Mills spent the week-end in Torboro. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Britton and family spent Sunday at Slagles Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Cutler and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sykes and children spent Sunday at Slagles Lake. James Lewis Coley, George Hol oman, Ollie Acree, Winefred Pierce spent Sunday at Coleraine. Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Leonard and Allen Jones and Charlton Col ey spent Sunday at Slagles Lake. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Archer and son, Robert, spent the week-end at Fitzhugh, Va., with Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Archer. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hitchens are Mr. and Mrs. John Logue and children, Johnny and Donald, of Wilmington, Del., and Mrs. Arthur Carmean and daugh ter, Jean, of Philadelphia. Miss Myrtle Lipscomb and Hu bert Wirtz spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Dick Hyman at Wrightsville Beach. Mrs. Bernice Riggan is visiting relatives in Wilmington and Phil adelphia. Misses Emma Lou Windley and Madeline Davis, of Belhaven, were the week-end guests 9f Miss Blan che Davenport. | THE BLUE EAGLE [ Good-luck to General Johnson Chief of the N. R. A. Who thru the fields of industry Biazes a new highway. We like his strong straightfor ward talk He told us at the start That in the N. R. A. campaign Each man must do his part. All Parties blend—as all true men unite to save the State From coast to coast the slogan rings Sign! And co-operate. i The women who for equal rights Have fought with tongue and pen Now bravely sign on dotted line As loyal as the men. The N. R. A. knows neither sex, Nor race, nor cult, nor creed. It has scant room for critics and No place for graft or greed. I All hail—the bold Blue Eagle God speed him on his way And guide his flight from gloom and night Up-to the dawning day. —Tom Meacham, Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Sherfield, Misses Daisy Teele and Vashtie Kennemur are visiting in Ashe- , ville. Mrs. P. W. Day and daughter, Mary Louise, have returned after visiting Mrs. E. M. Bidgood in « Portsmouth, Va. Misses Doris Mae and Helen Margaret Hedgepeth have return ed after visiting Mrs. J. E. Grant in Emporia, Va. WHY HE CHANGED HIS BRAND I NOTICE SO MANY MEN IN THE CLUB HAVE CHANGED TO CAMELS! I AM ONEOFTHEM I FOUND THAT CAMELS ARE BETTER FOR STEADY SMOKING. Charnel's coitti&rTorfrcucas never <jetaw ijcrur Id&rveA.. fHai&r "tire yeur last DANCING LESSONS TAP, BALLROOM, NATURE AND TOE FALL TERM OPENS NOW REGISTRATION Next Tuesday and Thursday, Sept. 12th—14th From 4 P. M. to 6 P. M. Gladys Steinberg’s DANCING STUDIO Located: 932 Roanoke Ave. PHONE R-571-1
Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, N.C.)
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Sept. 7, 1933, edition 1
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