Newspapers / The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, … / Nov. 1, 1935, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY, HERTFORD, N. C, FRIDAY, NOV1 3ER 1, 1935. PAGE FIVE tlie Back To Work Washington, D, C. The Pr ssident predicted that ,2,000,000 person? would be transferred from direct relief to work ' relief payrolls- by December Apparent' substantia- ltion: Controller General McCarl ap proved wt-A projects totaling si,, 500,000,000; Secretary of Labor Per kins reported industrial employment : in September at highest"; level since November 1930; wita"p&yntb leading August tydtpMMjM. a-wSk;Na-'tional Youth. Administratipn ;discIosf ed plans, to give, local governments .. funds for. putting 94,000 young peo pie to worlc. ' s , v;i'1 Teaching Driving ' - - State College, Pa-Last year's toll of auto accidents mounted to 86,000 Americans killed, 1,000,000 injured, promoted the National Safety Coun- ,' cil to suggest safe-driving courses in schools. The local high-school, aided by Prof. Amos E. Neyhart, of the Easy To Control -Sodium fluoride is . recommended as ari insecticide to rid a house of cock- roaches.. fWrMWU &Q$n0ty - Dust the fluoride on places where the roaches run, 'said Dr. B. B. Ful ton, research : entomologist at State College. When they ' lick the dust off their feet, it poisons' them, Since young roaches - are likely to hatch from eggs ' already v laid, he continued, the dusting should be re peated every few : weeks until they disappear. -; - If the roaches continue to infest a house,-tt is evident that they come from some source where at least some t, thejiadwftrnolasshed- oy tne oust, ?;;; .:. viowes motas . cannot live in a Wgh": tempetattae.1.-H fr fabrics ' aSt tread outdoors ... on a warm, sunny day; Dr. Fulton- continued, they will soon develop a temperature fatal to the moths and eggs. , Saturating clothes' with dry. clean ing fluid and: then putting them out in the sunshine to dry is recommend' ed in cool weather. After they have dried, they may be stored by tying them up in paper or muslin bags. The simplest treatment for moth mechanical engineering department LTZ"nTLTrS vx ucuruy outve vuiege, hub uuueu such a course,' costing students who (..take it $10-$12'for use of car, gaso if fi and oil. f None of Professor Ney hart's earlier students ever have had . an accident : The .Aged Gather Chicago, Ill-Hitcfa hiking, or by train, busses, planes . and . steaming flivvers, 4,000, gray-haired old men and women' gathered to listen to Dr. Fw&li -Everett""'! oVend Expound ! his M$200-a-moBth-for the-aged" doc- WAnAltrjli Ta mi Ym , W aSMWVlSOa fWU-UVU collected in membership fees and the ("sale of books, pamphlets and buttons. Of this 115,000 went to the Doctor and Executive Secretary Robert E. Clements. Enemies claim that the two pocket $2,000 a week profits from their propaganda paper, "The Townsend Weekly," that Townsend fflan petitions bear only 7,000,000 names. "Let me admonish you against insidious propaganda within your ranks," cautioned the father of the plan. The Nobel Prize Breisgau, Germany Dr. Hans Spemann, zoology professor at the University of Freiburg, has occasion to thank the altruism of Alfred B. internal and external. Infected birds Nobel, Swedish inventor of dynamite, who remorsefully left $9,000,000 for ty years ago to provide annual awards for outstanding research in medicine, physics, chemistry, litera ture and world peaces This year's $42,000. grant in medical research goes to Dr. Spemann for microscopi cal tissue transplanting on embryo salamanders that may solve the mys tery of cancer. "What can I do with so much money?" bubbled the excited doctor. Boss's Ups and Downs Zlin, Czechoslvakla In , the huge Bata Shoe Factory's new administra tion building,, the manager's office is built in an elevator shaft of its own. He presses a button and lands at any I floor where his advice is needed. ? Coal: $250,000 A Ton Vineland, N. J.-rGeorge Duggan's eyes bulged when he shook a State Emergency Relief cKeck for $250,000 out of an envelope in which he ex pected to find $12, covering a ton of oal he had delivered to a home on relief. "Ill take it in dollar bills," he told the startled local bank teller as he nonchalantly shoved the check through the wicket.. . After the mix up had been cleared up, Duggan got $17-12 for his coal, $5 for his ex penses in returning. the wrong check. the house on a warm, sunny day and drench the fabric with dry cleaning fluid. Allow the furniture to remain in the sun until dried. Sodium -fluoride, mixed with eight parts of wheat flour to one part of fluoride, is an effective control for silverfish, Dr. Fulton added. Place the bait in the attic, basement, clos ets, on shelves, behind books, the space unde the. bathtub, and any other place 'where' the insects niiy be. Bad For Poultry Overcrowding the laying birds in fall and winter robs them of their vitality and makes them susceptible to disease. Roy S. Dearstyne, head of the State College poultry department, recommends that the birds be given adequate housing facilities, with plenty of ventilation, but no drafts. The colds and roup from which many flocks suffer during the fall months may be traced to inadequate ventilation, he said. As cold weather approaches, he continued, it is advisable to check the birds again for parasites, both should be treated at once. Birds to be used for breeding pur poses should be blood tested for pul lorum disease. When requested, the State Department of Agriculture will send aft. expert to make these .tests for poultrymen. Winter grazing crops should be sown in October, Dearstyne said, to provide a source of green feed for the flock during the winter. A mix ture of Italian rye grass and crim son clover makes a good winter crop for this State. ' '" ' . - He also stressed the importance of keeping accurate records on the flock. Records are essential to the development of a profitable poultry business, he declared. Records help poultrymen ascertain which birds are good producers and which are falling down, on the job. They show the cost of operation, 'and whether the poultryman is making a profit They help him find weak spots in his system of management. Crop Rotation Increases Productivity Of Land Crop rotation is nearly as effective as farm manure and; complete-com' '. mercial fertilizers in maintaining and increasing soil productivity, as based on experimental : yields of wheat, corn and oats, taken collectively. (-. When rotation and the use of com "mercial fertilizers are practiced to gether the one practice adds to the LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF SALE UUnder : and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Perquimans County, made in the Special Proceed ing entij edJA Blfmcfcard vs Mrs. Corrie Ej e tMhe under aimed cfimmlssibner will, on the 30th day. of Ifoveniutir, ' 19aiaTlgt)'c1tttrrr M ' . tick Tnr H Ail no rtAnti fn H01. ford, NJSC, highest Bidder for a8h$Hjarty described follow 'LingToti the East side of Frog Hall Road com mencing at a cedar post on said road, thence running ' an easterly course across the field to -;ia mark cherry tree at the end of a ditch.'. Thence falong said ditch a straight course to William S. Blanchard's . line , in the center of the swamp,' thence along said Blanchard's line down the center of the Bwamp to George Jenning's line, thence up a branch along said Jennings' line to said Frog Hal) Road, thence along said road to first station, estimated at 40 acres, be it the same more or less and known as a part of the; Stephen Skinner tract of land. . r , ' This 24th day of October, 1935. ,-, . CHAS. E. JOHNSON, v - Commissioner. offer - for sale to the benefits of the other. A proper rotation is the basis of intensive farming .and of profitable land utilization; it provides an effec tive means of meeting the problem of food production; it permits of farmr ing with livestock; it provides rest for the land; in that leguminous and other renovating crops are alternated with those of an exhausting nature; it permits of clean cultivation and weed control and it creates other productive soil conditions. Colcre&Touth . Giveit :i t Five to Twelve Years :! (Continued froui Page One) was found not guilty by the' jury. ; , The case against' Melvin Colson, charged with reckless driving, was continued ; until the next term of court. Charlie Brown, colored, charged with larceny, was paroled with judge ment suspended until the next term of court Brown was the driver of the truck which was used to haul the meat stolen from the smokehouse of Joseph Winslow, Bagleys Swamp farmer, last winter, for which crime two other Negroes are now serving tejms. in the penetentiary.. Brown had served three months in jail awaiting trial at the April term of court, He was out on bond and after coming to .court on the first day, went away and did not show- up on the day of trial. He was appre hended, however, and brought back to jail, where he has been confined for the past six months. Sheriff J. E. Winslow and the other officers gave Brown a good name and said he had been a model prisoner, recommending judicial clemency After hearing the State's testi mony in the case of D. Wesley Mor gan, charged with giving a worth less check, Judge Harris stated to counsel that he would direct a ver dict of not guilty if the defendant would pay the remainder of a certain repair bill in connection with the giving of the check. This was agreed upon. John Ivey, colored, charged with possessing intoxicating liquor and with transporting, was found guilty 01 possession oy a jutj ana was sentenced to the roads for six moptns. - Ivey's case was appealed from Re corder's Court. The defendant had previously been found guilty of as sault with a deadly weapon in con nection with some trouble over a woman, and had been ordered to leave the State for two years. After leaving the State, Ivey came back to Perquimans, and the officers who went to investigate found on his per son a bottle containing liquor. The case against Cora Chance, charged with disorderly conduct and trespass, was remanded to be tried before G. W. Chappell, Justice of the Peace. Curzey Alexander, colored, charged with non-support of two of his six children, was ordered by Judge Har ris to pay three dollars each week toward the support of the children, who are in the' custody of their mother. Theodore Sikes, colored, was tried for selling liquor. Judge Harris di rected the jury to return a verdict! of guilty, and sentenced the defend- j ant to six months on the roads, sentence to be suspended upon pay ment of the costs of court- Report of Grand Jury The report of the Grand Jury, which was read to the Court follows: We, the Grand Jurors,,. or the above term beg leave to make the following report: ' fa i We have acted on all matters that have come to our knowledge and have reported same to the Court. We have inspected the Court House and find it in good condition with the exception of a leak in the roof. " We have visited the office of the Clerk of Court and find the records well kept and the office in good con dition. ! We have visited the office of the- Register of Deeds and find it in good shape, but recommend having some of the records re-indexed. We have visited the County Audi' tor's Office and find it in good condi tion. We have visited the Prison: Farm and find it is kept in a good, and san itary condition. We have visited the County Home and find 'that it is kept in good condi tlon. but find it in need, of the' fol lowing repairs: Back porch steps badly in need of repairs; back of colored inmate home needs new roof ; shingles rotten and is a-fire teaty; House back of inmate home to need of roof, shingles rotten; Smoke bouse also needs new roof; corners of porch floors are rotten and In need of repair; metal roof on both buildings are rusting and need paint ing. 'We find that there can be enough timber cut on the property to take care of the above repairs and recommend that this be done. We have visited the County Jail and find the floors, walls and toilet in good sanitary condition. The bedding is dirty and ragged. We recommend that the nest blankets be washed and others be replaced by new ones. We find School Busses numbers 1, 8, 6, 6, .7, in good shape in every re speft. We find No. 2' has one bad tire and that ten children have to stand.t, We find No. 4 has fair brakes and ten children have to stand, other wise in xood condition. We find No. 8 in good condition but seven chil-i dren have to stand. We find No. 9 in good condition but eleven children have to stand. We find that No. 29 has bad lights and horn, ten children have to stand, otherwise in good con dition. We find No. 30 in good con dition but twelve children have to stand. We find Colored School bus No. 1 has only fair brakes, otherwise in good condition. We find Colored School Bus No. 2 in bad condition. It has been called to our attention that the School at New Hope with 105 children on roll has only two teachers. We recommend that this be taken up with the proper authorities. The Clerk of the Superior Court. reported to us as follows: All minors, in the knowledge of the Clerk have guardians, and their accounts are in good condition. Administrators accounts in good shape with the exception of accounts for Estate of H. T. Shannonhouse. W. T. Shannonhouse, Admr., has not filed account since 1925. Geo. W. Chappell, J. P., docket in good shape and proper report made. Fred Evans, J. P., and Durwood Barber, J. P., no cases tried and only verbal report made. We recommend that the County Commissioners forthwith furnish the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court with the bookcase and filing cabinet, as recommended by the April 1935 Grand Jury. Respectfully submitted, D. J. PRITCHARD, Foreman. ( Insurance - Real Estate Attorney-at-Law Office Facing Court House Suare ! OLD INDIAN HEALTH TONIC PROTECT YOURSELF INSIST ON FOR LIVER, KIDNEYS, BLOOD The Unfailing Remedy for Laziness and a Drowsy, Tired Sleepy Feeling It takes the place of Calomel without any restriction of habit or diet while taking. It positively will not make you sick, gripe or nau-. seate you in the slightest Way like calomel pills and most all the vari ous kinds of liver medicine. There are very few people in this world today who feel so well that a few doses of this medicine would not make them feel a great deal better and give them a new lease on life It makes the eyes bright, clears up the complexion, quickens the senses and is a most wonderful tonic and appetizer. Relieves a bad cold or cough in one "day. Relieves la grippe in one day. Relieves fever in one day. Relieves weakness and tired feeling in one day. Relieves pain in the neck, side, shoulder, back or hips in one day. Relieves bad headache in two hours. Relieves sick stomach, belching, gas on stomach in three hours. Relieves the worst case of drunkenness in six hours. Relieves bladder and kidney trouble. Relieves rheumatism, giving quick relief from pain. Relieves female diseases and women's troubles. Five or six doses will fix you so yuur work will not tire you one particle, and you can do your work with ten times the ease. It will work a quantity of bile from the system that is as black as any ink that you ever saw come out of any ink bottle. Does not gripe a particle or makes you sick in the slightest way. Manufactured by THE WALKER MEDICINE CO. Atlanta, Ga., U. S. A. 35 THIS COUPON Worth Thirty-Five Cent: J35 This Coupon, if presented at once with only 65 Cents in Cash, is good for a $1.00 bottle of OLD INDIAN HEALTH TONIC. After using a bottle strictly according to printed directions on it, if you do not think it is worth more than you paid for it, you can bring the empty bottle and we will refund the 65 cents. Eat or drink anything you wish while taking it. THIS COUPON GOOD AT ROBERSON'S DRUG STORE HERTFORD, X. C. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS J iwn Win Own ; TT nm oan Assoaanoii) x Hertford mnldin ' Will Of fir1 Its 30th Serieof-Stock- SajturdayivNovember 2,; 1 935 " j Money loaned, to lift inortgages, make re pairs and pay taxes on homesf V ' Subscribe for stock and.take advantage of. 'this, opportunity to save money; , . I -t inTPOIlDBUIK&iLOAN: mi A. W. Hef ren ' . . PRESIDENT 5 f W. H. Hardcastle (gimallntty IFDdl Savta For The IHItmewwe SALTED Soda Crackers 1 Pound ROSEDALE NO. 1 YELLOW CLING Peaches cans 29c ALASKA PINK Salmon Per Can 10C Ocean jSpray rtfi Cranberry Sauce. JilpC Fluffo Salad Oil 2 Cans 35c - KELLOGG'S Com Flakes 2 Pkgs. 1L3C BORDEN'S TALL Evaporated Milk 3 Cans 17c MAXWELL HOUSE Coffee Pound 2,7c Virginia Apples Per Peck...... Malaga Grapes 2 Pounds. Lettuce, Large Heads ZSmS&Z 'Grapefruit &5c "TSachrrn .5. Juicy Florida Oranges Per Dozen 2OC Fancy Lemons Per Dozen SSC Celery, Fancy Stalks -r 2 for. Bananas TTO 4 lbs.... - No. 2 Tomatoes 4 Cans WASHBURN'S Pancake Flour Pkg. LIBBY'S NO. 2 COUNTRY GENTLEMAN Corn, 2 Cans EC Sunbrite Cleanser 3 Cans..:.. 22C Octagon Soap 5 Bars .1(55;' 103 YEARS OF SERVICE QUALITY MERCHANDISE ONE PRICE JvS BIL(SIHIAIIlE) & (CCD). "BLANCHARD'S" SINCE 1832 1. v. VK.t 6 V"" SECRETARY-TREASURER Nov.l,8,15,22;f ; , ,
The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1935, edition 1
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