I LOCAL NEWS of TROOP ACTIVITIES of \ INTEREST to SCOUTS and SCOUTERS ■ The postponement of the Decem ber Court Of Honor was decided on, after attempts to locate a suitable speaker had fallen through. Plans had been completed for the Court, but last minute in teruptions forced the District Ad vancement Chairman to postpone it. Plans are nOw being completed to hold the Court of Honor du ring the middle of January. It is the hope of the District committee that the Court held in a down town church during the morning devotional hour. It has definitely been decided that the Court will not be held until after the next Board of Review, scheduled to be held the first Wednesday in Jan uary. It is hoped that those Scouts who have not met the require ments for advancement will he able to do so at the next Board of Review. Make plans now to at tend the Court of Honor and Jan uary Board of Review. a* ^ Jc * sk It is a real loss to scouts and scouters of this district in having Don P. Tillar, Vice Chairman of Halifax District and member of the Camping and Activity com mittee, transferred to New York City, on a temporary assignment. It is understood that Vice Chair man Tillar will be located in New York for the next several months. Mr. Tillar has been one of the most active scouters of this dis trict, and it is hoped that his du ties in New York will be such that he will soon be able to return to the city. * * * * * The City-wide scrap paper drive scheduled for December 23, is re ceiving city wide publicity. Roan oke Rapids has not done as much about the shortage of scrap paper as it could or should. It is hoped efforts of the Salvage Committee will meet with success in the scheduled drive. Plans call for Scouts to ride the city trucks and load paper. Trucks will leave the Municipal building at one o’clock and canvass the town. Scouts are asked to assist people in tying and placing the paper on sidewalks, where trucks will pick it up. This is the first of regular monthly scrap drives which will be con ducted in the city. ***** As Christmas draws near, and the end of another year is rap idly drawing to a close, it is proper that we have a message from the Council office. Following is a message from Scout Execu tive Gaskins, of Wilson: GREETINGS FROM THE COUNCIL OFFICE As we draw toward the close of another year, as once again the Christmas Star sends its message of hope throughout a weary and war-torn world, it is well that we who are Scouts should pause and think a bit on things which lie very close to the entire body and RETONGA ENDED MY SEARCH FOR RELIEF It’s A Joy To Be Able lo kat, Sleep And Feel As Fine As She Does Now, Declares Durham Resident. Tells Of Her Case. “Retonga gave me the relief I had been trying to find for two years, and I don’t hesitate to give it my heartfelt public endorse ment,” declares Mrs. Bertha Par ker, well known resident of 1825 Bynum St. Durham, N. C., in join ing the hundreds of well known Carolina men and women prais ing this famous gastric tonic and Vitamin B-l medicine. Discussing her case, Mrs. Parker happily stated: “Food just seemed to lie in my stomach and cause so much gas that I often felt like my breath ^ would be cut off. I became afraid co eat, and my appetite dwindled away to where I never felt hun gry. My nerves were upset, and I had to take such strong laxatives they seemed to weaken me all over. Everything I tried to do seemed drudgery. “I never dreamed any medicine could give me the relief that Re tonga did. I eat heartily without distress, that tired, rundown feel ing, contstipation, and nervousness also are relieved, and I feel so much better and stronger that I enjoy every minute of the day. Retonga is the grandest medicine I ever saw.1’ Thousands praise Retonga. Ac cept no substitute. Retonga may be obtained at Rosemary Drug Co., ‘‘The Rexall Store” [Adv.1 Spirit of Scouting. Never before in the history of the world have those factors of the Scout Oath taken on so signi ficant a meaning. Remember how we promised, in those early Ten derfoot days: to do our best, to do our duty to God and our Coun try; to help other people at all times; to keep ourselves physically strong, mentally awake, and mor ally straight? And, isn’t it true that in every Scout meeting we renew our pledge to that Oath, and promise to keep its truths alive throughout our entire ex istence? The Scout of today is the Man of Tomorrow, and tomorrow the whole wide-world is going to need men who live and practice the ideals of the Scout Oath and Law, and whose motto is “Be Prepared.” Your Scout training is “prepared ness” in its broadest sense, pre paration to serve others and to play your part in the great game of life. Saturday, we celebrate another Christmas, the birthday of the Prince of Peace. For many of us who have not felt the press of war it is a time of merriment and laughter. For many others it is a time of sadness, and wonder that such things should be. Fath ers, brothers and loved ones are. fi/vUiivwv i»-i f Ann! rm "WotlV I have given their lives, many have been maimed for life, that we who today are free may have that heritage of freedom which is ours. Today millions of Scouts and former Scouts are in active serv ice on many fronts. On the land, on the sea, and in the air, they are Doing Their Duty to God and Their Country. Are we doing our part? Are we keeping the Faith with our old comrades of camp fire and hike? We, who have not heard the steady roar of bombers overhead, who have not listened for the clank of tanks, and the tread of marching feet, who do not know the rain and the mud and the strench of the battle field? Let us ask ourselves these questions, honestly, as Scouts should. Then let us highly resolve to enter into the coming year with a full determination to Play the Game to its fullest; to enter into whatever asks we are called upon to do in the True Spirit of Scouting, to back up our comrades in the battlefield with all that is in us. Let us moreover, in the true Spirit of Christmas, come to a full realization that the World of To morrow will be a better world in which to live IF we use the bles sings which are ours today to make us fully prepared to carry out our duties in that world. «,WWWVVWMWWWWW GALA NEW YEAR'S EVE I DANCE Sweet and Swing Music by — I JIMMIE CANTWELL 1 and his "DOWN BEATS" I 10 'til 2 | FRIDAY J December Come and Make Merry in thes Good Old "Pre-War" Mew Year's Eve Fashion at this Dance! $ SPONSORED BY THE Roanoke Rapids Business And t Professional Women's Club armory: ROANOKE RAPIDS, N. C. Script: $1.10 Spectators 55c* WWWVWWWWWWWVWWWWWVWWWWWWWWg: ;fere’ll aluiaqs be a fhriahnas =j] Barbarians from across the seas would, if they could, banish Christmas forever from the earth. But there’ll always be a Christmas! May the V- 1 1 ■1 —Christmas season of 1943 find you in the midst of a good old-fashioned Yule celebration. Merry Christmas from all of us to all of you. \ IE PAUSE, on the Eve of Christmas, 1943, to contemplate how much we owe the per ennial character of our customers. With gratitude and pride we scan the list. Some of these customers have been with us for more than a quarter of a century. To these old customers, to new ones, and to potential ones every member of this organization now joins in wishing “Merry Christmas.” | JOHNSON’S CABS