LOCAL GIRL SCOUTS TO OBSERVE 25th BIRTHDAY On March 12th of this year the Girl Scouts celebrate their 25th an niversary. It was just a quarter century ago that Juliette Garden Lawe formed the first troop. That was at a tea part in Savannah, Ga. And now the camp-fires of the Girl Scouts burn in more than fourteen thousand American places. There are nearly four hundred thousand members. There are 14,251 troops of girls between ten and eighteen years of age, and 1,734 Brownie packs of girls between seven and ten. In more than four hundred places there are “Little Homes,” headquarters maintained by local and national Scout organizations, and there are three hundred and fifty regular camps where the girls and their leaders go in summer for weeks of hearty outdoor living. Of the fifty-two badges that a Girl Scout can earn, twenty-two are for outdoor doings, such as swimming, gardening, the obser vation of animals. There are e leven badges for household activi ties;' nine for cultural interests such as dancing and art, and ten for miscellaneous achievemtns. Many a community will long re member the good work that the Girl Scouts did during the floods of last spring, and many a park and playground blooms with shrubs planted by the Scouts. The Girl Scout organization in Roanoke Rapids is still quite a baby. Scouting was started here with a group of twelve girls in the fall of 1936. Now they have organ ized and registered troops with approximately seventy-five Scouts. This week saw the beginning of the fifth troop for Roanoke Rapids or ganized with Mrs. Bill Harris as captain. In keeping with International Month (February); Girl Scouts of Troop II presented an attractive display of dolls dressed in peasant costumes of France, Germany, It aly, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Den mark, Norway, Holland, Scotland, Hungary and Switzerland at the Parent Teacher meeting on Wed nesday afternoon which was en joyed by all present. Booklets de scribing the country and its people accompanied each doll. The entire display showed careful preparation on the part of the Scouts. Displayed also was a collection of fifteen attractive “Remembrance Cards” for all occasions which the Scouts are selling. OLDEST HOUSE IN COUNTY BURNS UP Birthplace Of Local Man On Fire Three Times y Said to be the oldest housti in Northampton County, the birth place of M. D. Collier of this city and of his mother, the old Horace High place on the Lawrenceville Hoad burned to the ground early Sunday morning, after being on fire three times during the night and morning. At 8:30 Saturday night the house caught fire but was put out. Fire broke out again just after mid night and the Roanoke Rapids Fire Department answered and put out the second fire. Fire broke out for the third time at 4:20 Sunday morning and this finished the house| The local Department a gain answered the call. The house, occupied by Mrs. High and a son, is about a mile from Camps Store. Little damage was done when the Fire Dept, answered a call Monday afternoon in the dryer room of Roanoke Mills No. 2. The fire in cotton was soon under con trol. f poLKS SL/RB ARB 1 \ »TAm"TO OUR j ^Jgg^k **** EXTRA VALUE WINS MILLIONS TO "SLOW MASH" BOTTOMS WM .. Now at Lowest Price We’ve Ever Quoted! THE whisky sensation of the country—that’s Bottoms Up, made our Slow Mash way that takes , more time and more grain! Now jf find out for yourself how much smoother and heartier Bottoms Up is>//& and why already millions call for it.i(W Try Bottoms Up today. Expect a'^^ big extra value at the price. 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