Sample Copy Box Holder P. O. or R. F. D. VOLUME TWENTY-IVVU KUAIMUMi KAflUB, IN. t._xntKBUAi, UU1. l, iTOb NUMBER THIRTEEN STILL ROOM FOR LIVE WIRE WORKERS IN CITY AND COUNTY DISTRICTS There is still plenty of opportunity (and will be until Saturday night) for some good live-wire workers to win the automobiles in the Herald Cir culation Campaign just getting under way. The two new 1937 model cars, a Pontiac and a Chevro let, one to be won by a city worker and one to be won by some person living outside the city, are awaiting new owners. The surface has not been scratched. The only mark so far has been in the main business section of Koanoke Rapids. The thousands of prospects in the mill villages, in oth er towns and on the rural routes remain to be cov ered and signed up. This week is the last week hundreds of old subscribers will receive their Her ald until they renew. Also this week, copies are going to 1,000 additioharjE>eoj?le in this trade terri tory who will thus become prospects when they see what they get for their money. 28 pages of local news, 8 pages of famous comics, 8 pages of special feature-magazine section, and once a month 12 pages for the farmer and his family in roto gravure. That is the 1937 model Herald. Below are listed the names of those nominated in the HERALD’S Circulation Campaign to date, and the votes credited on their nomination cou pons. Because the name is listed below, does not mean every one is an ACTIVE worker, in fact only a very few have made a report of subscriptions, and are Candidates in name only. All not making a report by Saturday, Oct. 10th, will be dropped from the list. There is plenty of room for more workers, and we expect several to realize what a splendid opportunity the Herald offers them, and enter dur ing the next few days. DISTRICT NUMBER ONE (Winner of District to receive 1937 PONTIAC or CHEVROLET) Mrs. Scott Lassiter, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Miss Mabel Williams, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. W. S. Batton, Jr., Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Miss Irene Turner, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. Ivey Mohorn, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. Paul Woodruff, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Miss Fannie C. Harris, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. Loftin Moody, Roanoke Rapids —-5,000 Mrs. T. B. White, Roanoke Rapids-1-5,000 Mrs. T. M. Jenkins, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Ralph Knight, Jr., Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Miss Mabel Fitts, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. Lewis Johnson, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 Mrs. J. L. Langston, Jr., Roanoke Rapids — 5,000 Mrs. Bertie Cole, Roanoke Rapids-5,000 DISTRICT DUMBER TWO (Winner of District to receive 1937 PONTIAC or CHEVROLET) Mrs. Edward D. Hales,iSeaboard-5,000 Miss Martha Hawkins,;rWeldon-5,000 Miss Susie Belle Kee, C umberry-5,000 Miss Lillie Mae Floyd^ |Halif ax-5,000 Mrs. E. K. Veach, Aurvlian Springs-5,000 Miss Allyne Faucette^ R. F. D. Littleton-5,000 Miss Macon Floyd, Camp’s Store-5,000 Miss Ella Parks, Tillery-5,000 Miss Mildred McDaniel, Enfield-5,000 Miss Mammie Stansbury, Airlie-5,000 B. C. Hamlett, Hollister-5,000 W. I. Barnes, R. F. D. Littleton-5,000 Concession Reported In Near Murder * f It was reported here today that the four Negroes, captured yester day, charged with killing another Negro and robbing the dead man’s father, have all confessed to the murder and robbery. The crimes took place between Roanoke Rap ids and Emporia on a side' road near Fountain Creek. > A posse of North Carolina and Virginia officers late yesterday captured four Negroes suspected of slaying another Negro and wound ing his father in a country store holdup near Pleasant Hill, N. C. The four escaped yesterday morn ing after robbing Aldas Smith, 60 year-old Negro storekeeper, of $40 and fatally sh^ting h)s 24-year - old son, Billy. Lawrence Wyche, nephew of Smith, was arrested with .Joshua Graham on railroad tracks near Pleasant Hill. A short time earlier police had captured Hilliard Bardin and Willie Leake, and jailed them for questioning at Halifax, N. C. The four were transferred to the jail at Emporia. Va., after Wyche reportedly confessed that he shot his uncle, and charged Bardin fir ed the bullet which killed the store keeper’s son. The two victims liv ed just across the Virginia line. Police said Wyche went to Smith’s store about 6 a.m. and asked him to open it for a pur chase. When his uncle complied, Wyche and his three companions allegedly overpowered him and took $40 in cash. one* in vjTizzara, or Greensville County, Va., and Sher iff J. C. Stevens, of Northampton County, led the posse which cap tured the Negroes. Wyche, who was a nephew of Smith’s wife, seemed to be the ring-leader, according to police. He had lived on the place for about two years and the other three as sailants were strangers. Smith went into the store with Wyche and Leake and when he turned aro' ’.o give them back change, Leak had him covered with a pistol. They forced him to his house and he got away from them, jumping in the house and slamming the door. But they fired at him hitting him in the shoulder as he fled. The wound is not se rious. Bardin and Graham were in the house at the time and when they heard the shooting outside, they killed the younger Smith, who was asleep. It is thought he jumped up when he heard the shots and was shot and killed without ever knowing what was happening in the house. The tour then robbed the store but could not get their car, stolen from Quantico, Va., running and abandoned it and the loot. The gang separated, Bardin and Leake coming out of the woods and catching the Richmond-Rocky Mount bus. J. Winfield Crewe Sr., who was on the bus going to Wel don, became suspicious and report ed the matter to the Weldon police who followed the bus and arrest ed the two Negroes between Hali (Continued on Back Page) Breaks 5 Generation Chain With the death of Mrs. Betty Inscoe, 9fi, Hali fax County’s oldest person, who died here last night, a chain of five generations was broken. In the picture above Mrs. Inscoe is seated at the left, her son, D. A. Inscoe, 75, is seated at the right. The baby is Hattie Pearl Reid, 3, Mrs. Inscoe’s great great-grandchild. Standing are Mrs. Clyde Inscoe Reid, 23, her great grandchild and F. L. Inscoe, Mrs. Inscoe’s grandson. So, when this picture was taken less than two years ago it represented moth er, son, grandson, great granddaughter and great great granddaughter. There is now another great-great grand daughter, Patricia Ann Nicholson, 3 months old. Oldest of the family now living and probably the oldest living person in Halifax and Warren C ounties is Charles Riggan, 94 year old brother of Mrs. Inscoe, who is in Roanoke Rapids today. Mr. Riggan is hale and hearty at 94, with a twinkle in his eye as he tells about his dancing days of years gone by. Two weeks ago, he attended the funeral of Mr. Sterling Carlisle, who was 92 and the oldest person in this county. Mr. Riggan likes to talk about the War Be tween the States. He was in for four years and fought from Richmond to Gettysburg. He was wounded twice, one time when struck by shrapnel he was reported dead. -\ He said they thought nothing of marching 20 miles in a day and going into battle on the same day. Last year he attended the Confederate Re union at Shreveport, La., wants to go back this year to the Reunion at Jackson, Miss. f ( 15,000 HERALD READERS THIS WEEK . l . 't.SI ___j