Newspapers / Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, … / Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1 / Page 13
Part of Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
BAKERY CAFE OPENS LARGE NEW DINING ROOM _ . y*_ -----— Big Gain In Floor Space And Tables The Bakery Cafe announces the opening of another addition to their uptown restaurant this week that gives them a considerable gain in both floor space and table room. A new dining room, equipped to serve 26 guests brings their seat ing capacity to 70, and is located Just behind the counter space. Mrs. D. W. Ethridge, proprietress of the restaurant, has seen the place grow from a small lunch room, established in 1933 to its present size. Today the Bakery Cafe is one of t he best, most mod em equipped restaurants in East ern Carolina. Twelve full-time employees are engaged in the work of preparing and serving meals, sandwiches and drinks to their many customers, and the cafe oc cupies a total of 1,800 square-feet of floor space. On a recent inspection tour, state health authorities awarded the Bakery Cafe a sanitary score of 96, making it a Grade “A’ cafe. This sanitary score is one of the highest ever awarded in Eastern Carolina. One of the principle reasons for the expansion at the restaurant is the large number of school children who daily eat their lunch there. The place specializes in sandwiches and light lunches, tho several months ago, after an addition in floor space a full-course menu was offered. This serving of regular meals proved to be so popular that other additions have had to be made in order to keep apace with the ever-growing list of custom ers. The new dining room provides ample space and facilities for a private banquet or party of 30 peo ple, and Mrs. Ethridge will cater to this class of trade, she an nounces. If reservations are made in advance, the new dining room will always be available for private luncheons for a group of people. Music Directors At Greensboro Annual State Contest To Meet April 21-23 Our directors of public school music, Miss Virginia Smith and Miss Helen Russ with Mr. R. L Martin, our orchestra conductor, and Miss Kent Bentiy, piano in structor, left early last Friday, Oct. 30, to attend a meeting which had to do with the annual music contest in Greensboro. This meet ing lasted until Saturday at noon. The representatives returned late that afternoon. The meeting was planned for April 21-28, 1986. Dr. Hollis C. Dann, Music D., Professor of Music, head of the department of music at Cornell U niversity, and the author of the Hollis Dann Music Course, was there to aid with the arrange ments. He has directed the Festi val choruses for the past several years, and it is hoped that he will again direct it this year at The teachers helped to select the numbers which will be sung at the spring contest next year and also helped to classify the schools as to classes—A, B, and C schools. Miss Bentiy is planning to enter some pupils in the piano contest this year. Since our school has not been represented by a piano stu Keep a G~xl Laxative always in your home Amemf the necessities of home a a good, reliable laxative. Don’t be without one! Do your best to pre vent constipation. Don't negloot it wh«! you feel any of Its disagreeable symptoms coming on. . . "We have used Thedford’S Black-Draught for 11 years and have found It a very useful medicine that every family ought to bavo In their horns," writs* Mja Perry Risks, of Bolton, Teas*. “I Oak* Black Draught for biliousness, constipation end other die —>ere a good laxative or purgative fa needed* I have always found Slash Draught greet good results.” i BLACK-DRAUGHT # f Butler Brown Is Now Sales Representative For Citizens Agency Butler Brown, well-known young Roanoke Rapids man has accepted a position as sales representative for the Citizens Realty and Insur ance Company, specializing in life insurance, and assumed his new duties November 1st. The local insurance agency is district representatives for the Jef ferson Standard Life Insurance Co. of Greensboro. Friends of Mrs. "Fanny" Man ning will be delighted to know she has returned home after spending some time in Washington, D. C. She is now recuperating after be ing quite sick for several weeks. dent in several years, the entire student body looks forward to that contest with much interest. ENFIELD Ur. and Mrs. E. A. Smith of Enfield announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Annie Mavis Smith, to Mr. Joe H. McGwigan, of Enfield, on Wednesday, October the fourteenth, nineteen hundred and thirty-six; in Emporia, Va„ Mr. and Mrs. McGwigan are mak ing their home in Enfield. Miss Mildred Lee McDaniel and Miss Alice Mae Sexton were joint hostesses on Thursday aiternoon at the home of Miss McDaniel, honoring Mrs. Joe H. McGwigan, a recent bride, of Enfield, who for merly was Miss Annie Mavis Smith. A beautiful display of miscella neous from their friends present was presented to the bride, after which a sweet course was served. Mrs. Collins Cuthrell was hostess to the Junior Contract Club at an enjoyable party on Friday evening. Halloween decorations and tallies were used and the color note of orange and black was repeated when refreshments of golden glow salad, sandwiches, stuffed dates and tea, were served. Halloween covers and napkins were used and burning candles in black holders centered each table. In the con tract progressions Mrs. Max Meyer made the high score and was a warded a lovely relish dish. Mrs. H. C. Futrell captured the cut prize, a dainty cream pitcher. The prizes were attractively wrapped and tied in orange and black. Enfield Bride Honored Mrs. Joe H. McGwigan, a re cent bride, was honored with a miscellaneous shower on Thursday afternoon given at the Hut by the Senior Auxiliary of the Methodist Protestant church and members of the Sunday School class of Mrs. Eli Bellamy. Mrs. Bellamy welcomed the guests upon arrival and presented them to the reciving line compos ed of Mrs. R. A. Jordan, Mrs. E. A. Smith, mother of the bride, the honoree, her sister, llih Audrey Mae Smith, and lira. Ruby Pier son. Mrs. Myra Mann directed the way to the bride's book presided o ver by Mrs. Egbert Barnhill, dress ed in a Halloween ooetame. Toasts were given to the bride, her moth er, and the groom. Lttle Owen Holt BeQamy pre sented the bride an express wagon filled wth many attractive and use ful gifts from the friends present. Delightful punch and wafers were served during the afternoon. Dr. Morris C. BARFIELD Graduate Naturopath, Chiropractor, Physlotheraphy PHONE R-685-6 HOURS: 10 to 12 A. M. 2 to 5 P.M.; 7:30 to’ 8:30 A.M. Days Here-Monday, Wednes day, Thursday & Saturday. WHY is it that no other motor oil in all the world can deliver the performance of GULFPRIDE OIL? Because only GULFPRIDE starts from the finest Pennsylvania crudes . . . is refined to the same point as other fine motor oils . . . and is then further refined by Gulf|s exclu 1' sive Alchlor process! ^ This process is the most efficient ever de ll veloped—the fruit of 15 years’ research by m Gulf scientists—men who stand behind every 7 Gulf product f Read the facts on this page. Then drive f into any Gulf dealer’s—and replace your old summer-worn oil with GULFPRIDE now. (Above)-MANY WORLD'S RECORDS on land, sea, and in the air have been set with GULF PRIDE OIL. Racing drivers, fliers, speedboat pilots swear by it. Proved in the toughest competition, GULF PRIDE will outwear, outlast, and outperform any oil you ever used in your carl ™THE ALCHLOR PROCESS removes all sludge and residue. Proof: we took 6 of the finest Pennsylvania oils we could bay and put them through the Al chlor process. It removed 20% waste from already highly re fined oils! Be wise—get GULF PRIDE—the only oil that has this head start. (Left)—4 TIMES AROUND EARTH. A man drove his automobile on GULFPRIDE OIL 100,000 miles—without ever needing a repair, with out ever having the head off the motor, without ever adding one drop of oil between drains. Expect great things of GULFPRIDE—you’ll get them! 7 " I SEALED CANS ONLY Let us Drain and Refill YOUR Crankcase with GULFPRIDE WHITE’S SERVICE STATION Washing - Polishing - S imonizing - Greasing 900 Roanoke Avenue . Roanoke Rapids, N. C.
Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1
13
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75