SECTION "B" SECTION nB" DIAL R-326 ALL DEP’TS THURSDAY, AUG. 20,1942 SECTION B—PAGE 1 TO FEATURE BIG SHOW & FREE ACTS Plans Perfected For Biggest Show Yet To Be Staged By Lions Everything is in readiness for he biggest show yet to be staged >y the Roanoke Rapids Lions 31ub as their Sixth Annual Mid Summer Festival date draws near. The show will open next Monday light on Roanoke Avenue, and vill last for six full nights. The W. C. Kaua Shows will give the liions by far the largest midway ittraction ever to exhibit in Roa loke Rapids, and at present indi ;ations point to the fact it will >e the biggest outdoor amusement irgamzation to appear in this sec ion this year. Clayton Gurley, chairman of the :ommittee in charge of promoting his year’s exhibition, is no novice it the task, having successfully nanaged the first Mid-Summer festival to be staged by the local :ivie club some five years ago. It 9- 3aid his committee is running smoothly and everything is in •eadiness for this year’s exposi ion Several radically new departures vill characterize this year’s show, :hief of which will be that there vill be no advance sale of tickets o the gates this year. Admission o the gate will be by tickets, >ut they will be on sale only at he showgrounds. Adults will be edmitted for the nominal sum of ,5c, while children’s tickets will ell for only 10c. All of the gate admission price joes to the Lions Club to be used >y them in their blind and wel are work. The festivals, all of irhich have been highly successful rotn a financial standpoint, have letted the club in excess of $6, *00.00 in profits since they were tarted here five years ago. All >f this money is spent locally, enabling them to examine thou | ands of children for defective | yesight and to provide hundreds j >f pairs of glasses for worthy |ases whose parents could not Riave otherwise procured them. I Tie Lions Club Festival brings f he only outdoor show organiza Sj iontion to exhibit within the city l imits, and because of cancellation I 'f dates of Fairs in this and the urrounding territory this year, it irill be one of the few large hows to be seen in Eastern North larolina. Always a “high-spot” f the season’s entertainment, the ^estival bids fair to outstrip all ■ther events of its kind this year, ’he Kaus organization was book d earlier in the year. They will xhibit a high-class aggregation of .hows j,and attractions and will 'nature at least seven new, mod rn rides. In addition to the carnival at raction, the “American Eagles”, , high-class company of circus tars, will appear nightly on the aidway. This company of acro bats is said to be one of the most xciting aerial attractions of mod ern time's, and comes to the city firect from Steel Pier, where they iave been appearing all summer. £ is said they open their act with tricks and difficult routines usual ly reserved for the closing “punch’'. Among many other difficult feats the “American Eagles" perform awe-inspiring and hair-raising stunts, including somersaults and blind-folded routines on bicycles backward without a net beneath them. The “American Eagles” are cir cus stars from “way back”. Born and raised in an atmosphere of “sawdust and spangles,” they have acquired the polish that is pos sessed only by performers of long years of experience. It is said that they will present the most sensational array of aerial routines ever to be seen here. Ever mindful of the fact that free cash prizes have a lot to do with “getting a crowd” the Lions have literally “doubled up” this year, and Monday thru’ Friday two cash prizes of $25.00 each will be awarded nightly, the first to be given at 9:30 and the second at a time to be announced at the showgrounds. The grand cash prize, which will be awarded Sat urday night, will be $100.00 in cash. Full details will be an nounced on the Festival grounds. Good, clean, moral shows of the very highest type have always characterized the Lions Mid-Sum mer Festivals here and this year’s exposition will not be an excep tion to this steadfast rule. It ha3 invariably been the policy of the local civic club to secure shows that offered a maximum number of rides and educational side shows, as well as the highest type of concessions, and in securing the Kaus shows they have again accomplished this feat, according to advance reports. “This may be the last Festival for the duration,” Chairman Gur ley said in commenting on the attractions booked here the first of the week, "so we are determin ed that it will be a good one. We have never let the public down, for we are grateful to them for their generous support which has enabled us to carry on our blind and welfare work, and we are de termined to give them the best Festival we have ever presented this year.” Robert Coppedge Graduates From Army Air School Chanute Field, 111., August 20 Private Robert N. Coppedge, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Coppedge, 426 Henry, Roanoke Rapids, was graduated recently from the Cha nute Field school of the Army Air Forces Technical Training Com mand. While at Chanute Field he was trained in various technical op erations vital to the maintenance of the country’s fighting planes. Farmers To Be Paid For Using Cotton Bagging Cotton farmers who wrap their bales in cotton bagging henceforth will receive payment for seven pounds in addition to the gross weight of their bales, the National Cotton Council announced today. Under agreements completed by the Council between mills, trade associations, and cotton exchanges, all trading rules governing the buying and selling of cotton have been amended to compensate the seller for use of cotton bagging in place of burlap, jute or other ma terials. “These agreements,” according to Hugh M. Comer, cotton mill eexcutive ana cnairman of the t Council’s committee on cotton bale covering, “reverse the former pro cedure under which the farmer was penalized for use of his own product. They indemnify him completely for the difference in weight between cotton bagging and jute bagging, and remove the last obstacle to the adoption of cotton wrappings for cotton bales throughout the entire industry.” Mr. Comer said that serious shortages of jute and burlap for use on cotton bales had made it imperative that protection be giv en to farmers in time for the movement of the current crop. In recognition Oi such shortages, the Department of Agriculture has subsidized the manufacture of suf ficient cotcon bagging to cover four million bales, or approxi mately one-third of the 1942 crop. Under previous practice, the dif ference in weight between these cotton coverings and the heavier jute would have resulted in direct cash loss to farmers in excess of $5,000,000. Mrs. Howard Hancock and daughter, Neil, visited Mr. -and Mrs. Raymond Gentry in Norfolk last week-end. MERRITT ENTERTAINS Mrs. R. E. Merritt was hostess to the South Rosemary Demon stration Club Wednesday evening. Enjoying Mrs. Merritt’s hospitality were Mesdames R. L. Powell, M. E. Faison, T. B. Turner, Mary Edgeridge; Messrs. R. E Merritt and T. B. Turner; Misses Erma Powell, Anne Powell, and Amelia Jenkins. Sandwiches, cake and iced tea were served. The electric generators oa a big U. S. battleship or carrier could fill the electric power require ments of a city the size of New ark, N. J. Such warships have power plants generating an output two-thirds as great as that of TVA’s Norris Dam, .. .You can spot it every time NY housewife can tell you that in wartime you have to put something extra into housekeeping to make a home bright and cheerful. And housewives know that ice-cold Coca-Cola, sparkling, refreshing, helps to brighten the most important part of home ... the people in it. For Coca-Cola has a unique, extra something that sets it ^ apart... a finished art in its making that gives it unmatched taste-appeal... with an unmistakable after-sense of refreshment. ''.vSK That’s why no imitator can copy it. That’s why Coca-Cola has the quality and delicious goodness so widely recog nized and welcomed by all. * * * v \ Wartime limits the supply of Coca-Cola. Those times when :¥ \ >’ • / ■). you cannot get it, remember: Coca-Cola, being first choice, is the ■K s. ? \ first to go. Ask for it each time. No matter how short the supply, *' t^>C c,ua^‘ty Coca-Cola will not be changed in any respect. I Families working on war schedules add an extra burden to the job of housewife. In such homes, ice-cold Coca-Cola brings spar | kling refreshment to I lighten the task. The best m is always the better buy! H BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY WELDON COCA-COLA BOTTLING WORKS, INC._