*•' Mrs. Lawrence Whitaker ol
Enfield entertained over the
weekend for the following War
renton guests: I
and Mari
A. Graham, C. S. Sco:t ...
Scott, and C. M. Stancil oi Ch; -
pel Hill.
Mrs. A. A. Williarps entertain
ed at a luncheon Saturday tv;
Miss Stephine Moore cf Juu. v -
ka, house guest of M • W. 11.
Dameron. Mrs. Holt and Mrr
Dameron were also guests of
Mrs. Williams.
The Lions Club enterta:ned th
Tobacco Board of Trade an!
buyers on Friday evening at
their regular meeting head in th
Hotel Warren.
Friends of Mi and Mrs. I.
B. B< Idoe gave then
wan \ '■* and a haver a * • >
Sate: ay ev . ,
Speck ' n
grove oi
The 1' y<
the Wa it n V.'.
enterta;.ie
Grali .
Board of T u
reception on Vue.
the h
S. Jones, which was tastefully
decorated in white and green
flowers and lighted tapers.
Punch, cakes, salted nuts, and
mints were ser*?d to around
forty i’.sts. The table bore
whit2 and green appointments.
I’ use guests of Miss Sarah
\ p.c y Burton are Misses Mar
ta: . C ;iT and Joan Kearny Fil
in ' all of Bracebridge, near
T arbor o.
Mrs. Jimmy Harris left Fri
day to enter the University of
North Caroima. D. Harris, Jr.,
umed his studies
at Campbell College, Buies
Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Stain
back and Miss Elizabeth Hester
\ U'trd Mr. ; ;:d Mrs. Harold Nuu
and Mr. Ta ton Grissom in Ral
eigh on Sunday.
M ss Nan y Lloyd ana Mrs. M. j
Per y attended a wedding in
onion last week where Miss |
1<- d was one oi the bride’s at
v Co d <21 Mdler of New
• : My. :u r sister. Mrs
M. P. Bur well. Sr.
!’■' ■ • Joe N. L lie has as her
. Mrs. Fred Noble
• age. N J., and Mr.
J ■ Fleming oi Louis
Bust weekend Joe
i Ci: 1 vi \ Point was
h‘dr weekend guest.
I M . E. B. Rogers of
B i Mr. \vB P. Conn. Jr.,
' - •- • '■university, vvasn
ngw.n, D C., were weekend
guests oi Mr. and Mrs. W. P.
Conn and Miss Peggy Conn.
Miss Elizabeth Hedgepeth left
Sunday to enter Greensboro
College, Greensboro.
Richard Hedgepeth spent last
week in Jacksonville, Fla., with
friends. Leaving there, he re
turned to N. C. State College
where he is a senior this year.
T. F. Stallings of Durham was
a recent guest of Mrs. P. M.
Stallings
Mr. and Mrs. William Shugart
and children of Halifax were
visitors here Sunday. They arc
formerly of Warrenton.
Jeff Terrell and daughters.
Joanne, Carol and Eleanor, of
Berlin, Md.. are house guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Rodwell,
Sr.
Mrs. R. D. Allen has returned
to Buffalo, N. Y., after visiting
her brother, M. P. Powell. Mrs.
Allen is the former Miss Hope ,
Powell, oi Warrenton.
Bennie Powell has entered
Gar inor Webb College at Boiling
Springs.
Roy Powell left Thursday to
enter N. C. State College.
Miss Ruby Harris has acepted
a position as secretary for Dr.
Woosley Dean of Economics at
the University of North Carolina.
*& Ticket Still Valid
NEW YORK (U.P.)—The New
York, New Haven and Hertford
Railroad is looking for a man
who passed a 1917 ticket on one
j of its trains for a ride. It wants
| to give him a cake for being so
thrifty in saving the ticket.
39 Nev?
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EARMAI^'S
BARRY-IRWIN STORE
Uptown Roanoke Rapids jj
BABY NEEDS
am s-a S pecialists to
give you
EXPERT ADVICE
on
WHAT IS BEST
TOR YOUR BABY
e
Cornpiete Line
of Ecby Needs
•
Baby Pants • Baby Sheets
Baby Powder • Baby Oil • Baby Cream
Nipples • Cotton • Baby Food
ROSEMARY DRU£ CO.
1019 Roanoke .V/e. Dial R-360
. JESSICA PAZ is chosen ‘‘Miss Iced Tea" because she was born July 2, iced tea anniversary.
li’iilllLLili.—I'l i— M iIII rlHIIIIIII1 n ii llill U*i J -r .auv.yaawr:am< ■!■■ n —swiiiiiiwi, ^
INltNSE HEAT o£ blasts and fire at Inglewood, Cal., leaves storage tanks crinkled, shrunken,
Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Martin
visit-.•d Josie E.liot of Rich Squ
are Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Rawlings
and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Spivey
spent Sunday afternoon in Rocky
Mount.
Miss Beale Grant of Norfolk
was the weekend guest of Mr.
and Mrs. E. B. Grant.
Mrs. Clyde Odam of Cunwav
and Mrs. F. R Barrett spent
last Thursday with Mr. and
Mrs. R. R. Barrett.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Boone of
Norfolk and Mrs. J W. Edawrds
of Seaboard were Monday night
guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. R.
Barrett.
Miss Emily Boone left Thurs
day for Meredith College, Ral
eigh, where she has enrolled as
a freshman this year.
Dr and Mrs Charles Sykes
and children of Mt. Airy were
guests a few days as‘ • k with
Mr. and Mrs. B L. .os.
Prehistoric Ritual
Murder Uncovered
BRIGHTON, England (UP)
— Scientist have uncover
ed the strange story of the ritual
murder of a woman by savages
35,000 years ago, before the last
ice age.
Her skull was found buried
ceremonially under hundreds of
tons of rock in a cave near
Whaley, in Derbyshire. Pyg
mies appeared to have scooped
out the inside of the woman’s
head and eated the brain, acc
ording to A. L. Armstrong, who
unearthed the remains.
Armstrong, in realting t h e
story of the “Mysterious Lady
of Whaley," said her skull had
been pierpcd by spears and she
had been beheaded.
“The woman lived before the
last ice age and she may have
been a chieftainess or a witch
doctor," Armstrong said. “She
had ben beheaded and her skull
was buried in a box formed by
rock slabs.
der.”
Armstrong added that the
skull had live squared holes, pro
bablv made by a bone or stone
spearhead and the bone of the
skull was splayed inwards.
Sir Arthur Keith, one of the
greatest living authorities on an
cient man. said the woman was
aged 50 to 55. Her skull had
been broken into 68 pieces and
was restored and photographed
after six months.
The rest of the woman’s body
was not found.
Crow’s Bold Kidnaping
Of Duck Thwarted
LANSING, Mich, (U.P.)—The
shouts of four Michigan conser
vation officers saved a young
hen mallard duck from kidnap
ing by a big crow.
The four men, Arthur Leitz,
Jack La Fear, Charles Bowen
and Bert MacGregor, were load_
ing forest fire equipment near
the Gray Creek swamp when
they were attracted by the
squawking of a mallard duck.
Frightened by shouts of the
men, the crow dropped its prey
The mallard was found with
one foot and one leg broken,
but when released later manag
ed to fly away,
Robin Has Lots Of Luck
But Most Of It’s Bad
CAPE ELIZABETH. Mo. (1J -
P.)—Things have been tough for
Mrs. Joseph II. Johnson’s pet
robin.
While the bird still was re -
cuperating with a broken \\og
and injure# leg received in a
collision with an automobile, a
boy hit it on the head with a
croquet mallet. Mrs. Johnson
pried open the unconscious
bord’s beak and administei
ed water and later juicy worms
Within a week, the invalid hoi
bled onto a road and was struck
by a truck. A neighbor placed
the apparentl^ntly dead bird be
neath a tree and went for a shov
el to bury it. Whn she returned
the “corpse” was very much a
live, though in a staggering con
dition.
Well on its way to recovery
for the third time, the bird now
faces a critical housing problem
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson are Flori
da-bound for the winter and un
able to find anyone to care for
the robin.
Bug Barometer Says
Bad Winter Ahead
BANGS CORNERS, O. (U.P.l
—The operator of a “bug bato
meter” predicts that the coming
wintr will be a tough one.
Mirs Eunice Merton, who out
does the weathr bureau for cor
fidont long-range forecasts, says
nature already has put up the
storm signals.
“The woolly caterpillars are
dark from stem to stern,” she
says. “Hornets have triple-in
suiated their gray paper nests.
Mothr wasps are sealing twice
as many live spiders in t h e
mud incubator tubes to feed
their babies when they hatch.
For Miss Merton, those and
other portents speil out a cold,
dark and long winter,
caterpillars lor the first time
since 1917, and that winter
"things froze so-id i nNobember
and there never was a than t.H
February.”
Peel tomatoes and cut off stem
ends. Cut each crosswise in
I four parts, but do not cut
fish, meat o’* poultry salad for
a luncheon dish. Garnish with
mayonnaise and parsley and se
l rve on salad greens.
! through bottom. Spread toma
1 to wedges apart and fill with a
Nickel produced from an
old mine near Gap, Pa., wa» at
one time exported at all indus
trial nations, leading to man;
of the developments that gave
the metal universal use in me
chanical arts.
BUY IT/TRY IT/ ,
WITH THE NEW FLAVOR Ql&foytftr^
• %
BLENDED WHISKY
*188. *300
THE STRAIGHT WHISKIES IX THIS PRODUCT
ARE FOUR TEARS OR MORE GUI
*7V4% STRAIGHT WHISKY• GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
II PROOF
COBBS DISTILLING CORPORATION
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
A
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THIRD DEGREE
I Your laundry is treated
I with the same care at
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1 That's why the same
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.32 E. Littleton Fd
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Roanoke Rapidi
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i !
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3Ec’1.15 3£G’1.24 3’1.29 ,
Libby s \
CANNED
MEATS j
CORNED
BEEF HASH
’can" 33C
'
VIENNA
SAUSAGE
19c
POTTED
MEAT
*6 Size lr^
Can I jC
LUNCH
TONGUE
%!IT 27c
POTTED
MEAT
V* Size Q
Can 7 C
SUPER RIGHT MEATS;,
STEAKS, lb.99cl
CHUCK ROAST, lb.69c
PURE GROUND BEEF, lb. 59c
VEAL , ft
SHOULDER CHOPS, lb. 69c;,
VEAL I |
RUMP ROAST, lb.79c
LAMB LEGS, lb.79c
' WHOLE OR HALF
i FRESH HAMS ..79c ’
I THICK FAT BACK, lb ....27c,, *
f FRESH DRESSED POULTRY
\ * jl
SEA FOOD
j
Iona Fine Flavor
Peas . *Can* 10c
Pard
Dog Food .... ........ 2 Cans 27c I
Mild American
Cheese. u. 55c
Blue Streak
Rice. & 13c
Plllsbury Sno Sheen
Cake Flour.. s£ib 39c
Ann Page Grape
|am. 39c
Packer's Label
Tomatoes..'. 2 a.! 27c
Homestyle—Sandwich—Regular Pan
MARVEL BREAD
\Vi Lb.
Loaf IOC
Ocean Spray Cranberry
Sauce. 'S 19c
Iona Tomato
Juice.3 SJ 25c
Ann Page Salad f: (
Dressing. . ... Jar 35c
A 4c P Grapefruit
Sections. ’cin1 19e
Sunnyfleld Hour For S
Pancakes. m 13c )
Ann Page Blended
Syrup. ’!«?• 23e
Ann Page Gelatin Desserta
Sparkle.3 Pkga. 20c
Jane Parker Plain or Marble
POUNDCAKE
27c *
■
Calif. Seedless
»rapes, 3 lbs 30c
Bonum
Apples, 5 lbs 37c
PEACHES, 2 lbs. 25c
Fresh
BUTTER BEANS, 2 lbs. ..35c
Yellow
SQUASH, 2 lbs.27c
| Green
CABBAGE, 5 lbs.20c
CELERY, 3's, 2 stalks ..25c
Yellow
ONIONS, 2 lbs. .9c
ssssgssasnsaBBMMHMMMaiS
*
LUX TOILET
9 SOAP
2 L'S 19c
l LUX f
FLAKES
lit 34c
lux tfoiLrr
SOAP
2 5£ 27c |
RINSO
ig 34c '
- *
SWAN
SOAP •
b5 10c
SWAN I
SOAP
2 35c
ftvnpmpBeaessssJ•
♦vjini.-fVT.'