Northampton Club Visits Mills --0 PLEASANT HILL CLUB VISITORS Pleasant Hill Women’s Club, Led by Mrs. Demmick, Looks Over Mills Here -_o By DAISY CALDWELL, (Home Agent.) Home demonstration leaders of Northampton County are conduct ing some interesting recreation meetings this month. All the clubs devote August meetings to recreation. Pleasant Hill Club had one of the most enjoyable of these meetings, planned by Mrs. E. C. Demmick, leader. Club members and their fami lies met at the cross roads, the leader having seen that there were cars enough for all. The Dem mick car led the way to Roanoke Rapids and down the river to the paper mills. Mr. Medlin, yard su perintendent, who has once lived in Pleasant Hill, had secured passes for the party and was wait ing to conduct it through the plant. “This is no place for heedless folks,’’ thought the home agent as she walked gingerly along the cat walk by the huge vats of boiling acid, and heard a workman tell what happened to a man who carelessly fell in, and watched the huge steel jaws chew up pine trees as easily as the well trained child chews corn flakes. Pleasant Hill folks are not heedless and they had left the children at home, so there was no cause for worry. Mr. Medlin explained the pro cess of paper making and showed each step from the time the logs were unloaded on the yard, in spected, cured, and fed to the “hog"; how the “black liquor” and the “white liquor” are made, in cluding the burning in the “hell hole,” and the resulting product is used to dissolve the pine chips; how the mixture is “beaten” and then picked up by revolving rol lers and passed over an endless series of hot cylinders covered with wool felt, till it finally came out as shining brown wrapping paper. From the paper mills the party went to one of the large Roanoke Rapids cotton mills. The size of the thing was impressive - acres of whirling machinery. Under one roof the party was shown the whole process of cloth making: cleaning, dying, carding, spinning, warping, filling, weaving, finish ing, packing. Looking over the huge rooms, one is impressed with how much machinery and how few people are there. One of the party who had worked in this mill ran around the rack and took care of bobbing spools, and thread with a pre* ision and speed that was uncanny ‘“That was my job,” she rer .arked, “each of these machines has takes tV nlar-' of four girls.” After the visit to the cotton mills the nerty drove to nearb' LaJr - Thomas and enjoyed a bout tuui picnic lunch. In the after noon games and stunts were en joyed in the pavilion. At 4 o’clock we went back to the picnic tables for a watermelon cutting, and then home again. Lasker Club gave a picnic sup per in the grove near the school house. Mrs, R. E. Peele was chair man of the committee in charge. Fred Nelson, who is noted as a UP AND DOWN WITH THE t;he Avenue £ her name. V ‘K _€_V-tiT-_ Miss Mildred Balrifcv is spend ing a few days this week in En field, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. McLeod of Ra leigh spent the week-end here with Mrs. V. C. Daughtrey. GO BY BUS CARE-FREE TRAVEL WITH STOP-OVERS & LONG RETURN LIMITS ONE ROUND WAY TRIP RALEIGH $2.20 $4.00 ASHEVILLE _.6.55 11.80 ROCKY MOUNT _ LOO 1.80 NEW BERN 3.00 5.40 WILMINGTON _ 3.30 5.95 VA.-SOUTHERN COACH LINES HUDSON SODA SHOPPE ROANOKE PHARMACY There is an_ TJfotnwn for your firing job It will pay you to learn how much better Iron Fireman can fire your furnace or boiler at your home or business. It will cost you nothing to get the facts. It may be costing you hundreds of dollars not to have them. Please phone us. Home Equipment Co. Nextdoor: Imperial Theatre Who likes BANANAS? Everybody? THEN TASTE r* 'avu&L BANANA ICE CREAM