FAGE SIX THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY, HERTFORD. N. C, FTJ3AY. JUNE 11, 1SS7 1' BELVIDEItE NEWS . Weekend ' gueets of Dr. E. S. White and sisters were: Mrs. Elsie White Mundenhall of Los Angelas, CaL,'Mrs Lillie White Cartjand of Chattanooga, Tenn., Mrs. Mary Ann White Johnson and Miss Cora White of High- Point. bn. T- E. White and two little gone, Leigh, Jr., and Clarence L, of Norfolk, Va., are spending sometime with Mrs.' Julian T. Chappell and family. MfS L. J. Winslow and Mrs. H. P. White, accompanied by Mrs. J. J. Raiford and son, Cecil, of Ivor, Va., attended the graduation of their niece, Miss Virginia Davis Raifora, at the Richmond Medical College, Richmond, Va., Tuesday and Wed nesday of last week. Roads Bureau Reports Ways To Kill Weeds A recent report by the Bureau of Public Roads of the United States Department of Agriculture describ es methods used by State highway departments in eradicating weeds along roadsides. Machine mowing, most generally used, often must be supplemented by hand cutting or by use of chemi cals to kill weeds not reached by the mower. Highways of modern design, with slopes that can be reached easily by mowers and side ditches that can be mowed over, make ma chine mowing more effective. Burning is used mostly to dispose of cut or killed weeds. Various che micals are particularly adaptable for use along guardrails, around culvert headwalls, and in other places not readily accessible for cutting. Improvements undoubtedly will be made in present methods of weed control and new methods will be dis covered, say highway engineers, but effective control is possible with the methods now used. Regardless of methods used, they say it is import ant that eradication be thorough, for small patches of undamaged weeds may re seed large areas and offset work done. Besides being unsightly, roadside weeds may hide highway warning signs, shorten vision, and hinder drainage. Control of roadside weeds directly benefits farmers. Seeds from uncontrolled roadside weeds are carried to adjacent fields by wind, water and birds. Passing au tomobiles carry seed to distant points to infest new areas. The Bureau of Public Roads re gards weed destruction as part of a permanent roadside - improvement program. CENTER HILL Mr. and Mrs. George Ellis, of Newport News, Va., spent Saturday night with his mother, Mrs. Ida Ellis. Mrs. Jesse P. Byrum and Mrs. Otis Ellis called on Mrs. J. S. Turner Saturday evening. Mrs. R. O. Furry is spending this week in Richmond, Va-, with her daughter, Mrs. Ray Carter. James Cale and Mr. Stallings, of Newport News, Va., spent the week end with Rev. Frank Cale. Paul Cale, of Crozet, Va., spent a few days last week with his brother, Rev. Frank Cale. Hallet Perry, of Newport News, Va., spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Perry. Worley Lane, of Asheville, is vis iting his sister, Mrs. J. I. Boyce. Mrs. .Hemby Lane has returned from a. visit with Mrs. Jesse Asbell, in Edenton. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Smithson and son, of Edenton, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Lane. Miss Marian White spent Sunday night in Edenton with Mrs. Rufus Smithson. ' Revi R. E. Walston, E. B. White, Jr., Misses Marian White, Lois Lane, Melba Chappell, Camilla White and Lillian Turner attended a Young People's Rally at Zion M. E. Church, Gates County, Thursday night. Rev. R. W. Bradshaw, of Durham, spent Thursday night with Rev. R. E. Walston. ' Rev. R. E. Walston, E. B. White, Sr., and E. B. White, Jr., spent Fri day afternoon in Washington, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Winborne, of Cross Roads, visited Mr. and Mrs. Tim White Sunday afternoon. Miss Blanche Leary, of Edenton, is spending sometime with Mrs. Tim White. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley White, of Woodland, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Boyce. Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Parker, of Sunbury, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Boyce. Miss Louise Perry, of the Holland school faculty, is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Perry. Miss Selma Jordan and Miss Tom mie Goodwin are in Gates County helping to nurse Mrs. N. W. Weeks, who is very ill. Miss Beulah White has returned from E. C. T. C, Greenville, to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tim White. Mrs. J. N. Boyce, Mrs. Oscar Boyce, Mrs. Cameron Boyce, Misses Myra and Ruth Boyce visited Mrs. J. G. White Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Bateman visited Mrs. W. F. Cale Sunday af ternoon, j Mrs. J. S. Turner and two children, Robert and Peggy Anne, spent Sat urday afternoon in Edenton with her sister, Mrs. Richard Copeland. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Jernigan spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Byrum. Mrs. Carrol Byrum and her son, Paul, were supper guests of Mrs. R. 0. Furry Saturday evening. Mrs. J; S. Turner and her two children spent Thursday with her sister, Mrs. Joseph Hollowell, of Sunbury. Wilford Turner worked in Ward's Shoe Shop, Edenton, Saturday. Miss Lois Lane spent Friday night in Edenton with Mrs. Rufus Smithson and attended the banquet given by the Rotary Club. Uncle Jiiii Says You can't grow a good corn crop on a place where the topsoil has been washed away. soft conns -CALLOUSES 7- ue ta far from ttioss intanse traabbina whan Moon's Emarald OM Is (a raadily obtainable at any wail ctockad drug store. Tuva or thrae application and a 15 minutes most of tha pain and soreness has disappaarad and aa for soft corns and cannulas a few applications sack nieM at badtima will soon loosen thai up so tnay past off aaslly no cutting. No mattar how dlscouraasd you are If you have not vat triad Moona's Bnarahl Oil than you have samathlns to learn. Moono's Emcrsld Oil b gusrantasd te ivs you full satisfaction or monav back. ROBERSON'S DRUG STORE Mr, .. and , Mrs. "J,' C, Dail, 'Mrs. Lloyd Chappell, Vernon Jordan and Roy Parks went to Durham Thurs day. Mrs. Dail " was examined by specialists at Duko Hospital. " - Miss Elizabeth Eason, Miss Ger trude Jackson and Miss Daphne Ward, went with other club women of the county to Asheville this week. Mrs. D. SakowiskI spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A: L. Hollowell. : v. , N. C. and E. J. Ward, off Edenton, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. H. N. Ward. D. T. Ward, Jr., a student at Wake Forest College, is Spending the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. T, Ward. Ryland club women are going to make an effort to buy the Ryland school building when it is offered at public auction soon. In view of the fact that the community has no other available building for club meetings, Sunday School, or other community gatherings, it seems that this movement should not be left to the club women alone, but that the men of the community should come forward and buy the building so that a community house might be available at all times for any com munity use. While the desire for a club home is most praiseworthy, the opportunity afforded the children, as well as the adults to attend Sunday School, is much more to the point. Ryland community has had the re putation of doing things, now let's see this done. OHM. YOUR HAIR IS A FRIGHT! HERE, USE MY FOM-OU Wive, mothers, sisters they're often forced to point the way to hair health to their men folk I For women know that a healthy head produces handsome hair! And that's why women everywhere ore pointing to Fom-ol, the remarkable foaming oil shampoo which first nourishes the scalp, then takes the dull, parched hair and brings it back to growing health. Fom-ol is so economicali, a little goes a long way. Ask your druggist for the regular. 50c site: Or, write for a generous trial bpt, He. enclosing 10c to cover packing and Dosto. ;- FOM-OL Mere) tfsM tree fjaieirti a CL0VIS,NW MEXICO COWBOY BOXER REFUSED TO FIGHT UNLESS He CAN WCARHK BOOTS ,-7) - LAUGHS FROM THE DATS NEl MKC IT rKEE-fOR-rUX ' imtWtit Four Club Members To Attend National Camp Four of North Carolina a . out standing 4-H club t members have been selected to represent this State at the national 4-H club camp to he held in Washington, , June r 17-23. , Selected from ' among 42,000 club members over the - State, 1 the ' two boys and two girls will be guests of the U. S. Department of Agricul ture along with ' delegates- from Outer outtea 01 uie uuiuu. While in Washington they will be given special training in t leadership and will be taken on tours to various government departments and other places of interest, said L. R. Harrill, 4-H club leader at N, C. State Col lege. - . North - Carolina's delegates are Ray Morrison, Iredell County; Gra ham Penny, Johnston County; Alice Falls, Cleveland County; and Mary Lily Foard, Iredell County. Morrison has made a record in cot ton and corn projects, but is best known for his dairy calves. He has probably won more prizes than any other calf club member of the State. Morrison calves have won the grand championships at the State Fair 4-H calf show three successive years. Last year he was awarded the Ca meron Morrison four-year college scholarship for his excellence in calf club work. Penny has excelled in corn, tobac co, baby beef, and pig projects. He won the grand championship of the State Fair 4-H judging contests in 1936. Active in club work, he has shown leadership ability. Miss Foard, now in her seventh year of club work, has made unusual records in clothing, food conserva tion, home beautification, gardening, and room improvement projects. Her furniture .exhibit von first prize at the State Fair. 'Miss Falls, completing1 her' fourth year as a club member,; was presi dent of i the Fallston Club in Cleve land County when it was awarded a banner for the best Individual club- record in the State for 1936. Club Women On Tour To Asheville Sixty women, ' representing home demonstration . clubs of four conn- ties, Perquimans; Pasquotank; Cho wan and Gates, left Hertford early Wednesday morning for a - trip to Asheville and other points in Western North Carolina. ' Miss Gladys Ham rick, home demonstration agent for Perquimans, who is in charge of one of the three specially chartered bus ses, announced that fifteen Perqui mans women were making the trip. They include Mesdamea T. A. Hurd le, S. T. Perry, Mary Hayman, Mat tie Barclift, Nixon Hollowell, J. M. Fleetwood, L. G. Turner, Neal Spruill, Charles White, V. N. Dar den, John Lamb ahd Misses Eliza beth, Hollowell and Gladys Hamrick. The party expects to arrive home on Friday. Strip-Cropping Helps In Soil Conservation Farmers in the Huntersville area of the Soil Conservation Service report that they are finding it much easier to establish rotations where strip-cropping is practiced, x accord- ' ing to John C Shiver, assistant soil , conservationist. '! ' - k n ' Width -of the strips' is -dependent upon the slope of the land and, re-. quirements of the r individual, farm er Shiver Baid. , On gentle slopes it is considered good: . practice to , lay off the strips 20 to 80 feet wide and on steep slopes 40 to 60 feet wide, i ,ii ...i.. lii '.tin' ', Hertford Students ' ; Return From School - Hertford girls and boys -are. re turning from the various schools! and colleges,' among ' them being Prue Newby,- Joyce Harrell and Jean White, from E. C. T. a, Greenville; Miss Louise Payne, Guy Newby, Her--nan Ward and Edgar - White, from the University of , , North - Carolina; Robert Hollowell, Dan Sharpe and Bill Jessup, from Duke University; Ruth Elliott and Mary . Wood Koonce from ,the Woman's College ' of the University of North . Carolina, Greensboro; Lillian Blanchard, from Sullins College, Va.; Francis Jessup, from Oak Ridge; Al Ward and Rob Morris from. Fork Union; Patricia Stephens, from Atlantic Christian. College, at Wilson; Ona Mary and Creighton Stephens, from Elon; Hen ry Stokes and Claude Brinn, from Louisburg; Tim Brinn, from Marion Military Institute, Ala. -It Fill THE TANK ONCE and drive all day! 1 1 '! E HERTS f WW-mHErH)(N, J IPsA jj S,) WITH HIS BOOTS OM - TsHOUtOHVB -t- I IZ buAING BOllTg I I NOW UP WITH fi i I OURWOMT, V YJyOS ' 22-27 MILES PER GAUON a'l'HB 60-horepower Ford V-8 it writing: renuuk-, suSle mileage records on AmeriouiroM, PriYt s owners and fleet operator alike report average of from 22 to 27 miles on s gallon of gasoline. . You can fill the tank, of your Ford W md drive all day 300 to 400 miles without top ping again for fuel. Besides costing lest to run than any Ford car ever built, it sella at the lowest Ford price in years. That's double economy t The "60" delivers V-8 smoothness and quiet at speeds up to 70 miles an hour. It is built into the same roomy body as the famous 85" -with die same modern features of comfort and depend ability that make the 1937 Ford V-8 unques- tionably THE QUAI ITY CAR IN THE LOW-PHCE FIELD. rOBOTI rncEt BEGIN AT $529s OiSTtsra fKlsrr. x TrantalttlM tiKH itsiissiFiMttiBtcan This arlsa Is isr (h s 60-korsspswsr Caaps, Uhs ; , sratsd sbsrs, squipptd with boat sod rsar baav an, spsra lira, kora, wlndshltld wlpar, ssa visor, . fiart ssmpsrtsisa sad an tray. s , r rT ' " 1 t v ' v ' SO A MONTH, altar anal Ams-asr-sat, bays say sm4I 1937 Ford VB C frwa say Ford o Jr uywfam ia tha Ualtsd Stslas. , ' Ask yoar Fard dsalar absat tha assy aaysssnt situ si tha Uai Tarsal Crsdit Cmpsay. a" ' I '. I'J-.r 1 , Jl ", , La' c I m s 7,