Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / March 21, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO SIGN PINE | : Mrs. Robert Benton and son, Bobby, are spending a few days with her aunt, Mrs. Annie Blanchard. Mrs. W. B. Blanchard is improving. She recently underwent an operation at Lakeview Hospital, Suffolk, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Blanchard, Julian and Rochelle Blanchard attend ed the show in Edenton Saturday night. Miss Eddie Mae Blanchard is spend ing sometime in Suffolk, Va.. as the guest of her cousin, Miss Elsie Briggs. Mrs. Jimmie Dail, after being very ill for some time, is now able to sit up. C. W. Ward has purchased a new Chevrolet. Mrs. O. M. Blanchard is impreving after being ill for several days. 0. M. Blanchard, W. B. Blanchard and children visited Mrs. W. B. Blanchard at Lakeview Hospital, Suf folk, Va., Sunday afternoon. W. B. Blanchard has purchased a new mule. Lois, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Davis, is improving after a recent illness. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ward and chil dren were in Edenton Saturday even ing. f" MACEDONIA Mrs. Leon Halsey spent Saturday night with her sister, Mrs. Otis Eason. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Francis and his mother, Mrs. W. T. Francis, called on Mr. and Mrs. George Hassell Sunday | afternoon. Curtis Forehand and Elton Davis, spent the week-end in Portsmouth, | Va., with friends. Mrs. Kate Emminizer, Mrs. Martha Small, Mrs. Asa Griffin, Mrs. Tom Hassell, Misses Martha Williams and Merle Emminizer spent Saturday in Elizabeth City. The many friends of James Hassell will be glad to know that he is im proving. Mrs. Martha Hollowell, Mrs. Alice Hassell and Mrs. Earl Ashley called on Mrs. George Hassell Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilder, Miss Eva Nixon and Mr. Elton Jordan called on Miss Christine Hassell late Sunday afternoon. Perlie and Everett Ashley attended the Fiddlers’ Convention in Ifcrtie on Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Harrell called on Mr. and Mrs. George Hassell Sun day night. ( YEOPIM i \ J Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Barrington spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Beasley. Mr. and Mrs. B. Thach, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thach, from near Yeo pim Station, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Daven port. Willie Marvin Copeland spent Sat urday night with Willie Lee Brabble. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Barrington, Miss Margaret Beasley, Mrs. Ida Lassiter and Mrs. Henry Mansfield visited Mrs. Walter Davenport Sat urday night. Misses Etta Mae Hurdle, Nancy Davenport and Elizabeth Jethro, and Mr. Earl Outlaw spent Saturday in Elizabeth City. Mr. and Mrs. Antone Davenport, Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Barrington and Miss Sarah Margaret Harrell visited at the home of Mr. J. E. Brabble on Sunday evening. Mrs. A. S. Hollowell and daugh ter, Frances, of Edenton, spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. John Baker. Mrs. W. E. Jordan spent Thursday with her daughter, Mrs. Tom Good man, of Edenton. Miss Etta Mae Hurdle, of Edenton, spent Thursday night with Miss Nancy Davenport. — riif Mrs. Jackson Member Os Beauty Council Mrs. H. C. Jackson has been desig nated a member of the American Beauty Council in New York City. The purpose of the American Beauty Council, which is purely a non-commercial organization, and its national membership, is to create hair fashions and modes through the exchange of ideas of its members, that best harmonize with the requirements of prevailing style trends. For too many years Paris, London and other European centers have la bored under the assumption that they represented the style arbiters of the world. One of the primary motives behind the American Beauty Council is to prove that our own creative genius in the art of the coiffure transcends by far the abilities of beauty culturists and hairdressers in other lands, and to help make Amer ica the fashion and style center of the world. Only two beauty specialists in each city or community are privileged to become affiliated with the American Beauty Council, and to serve as its representatives in the expression of its ideas and ideals. 120 ACRES TERRACED The new terracing outfit being op erated in Alamance County under the supervision of the farm agent has been used to terrace 120 acres of ero ded fields to date. ; HELPFUL HOUSEHOLD HINTS FjiF MaL.. HjH- 1 ■ IHi IPMraji fej The Georgian Shell Design. lirKEN you study the lighting of your living room, do so with a new and unprejudiced eye. Jast because you have always had a ceiling fixture here or a wall bracket there, doesn’t mean that you always must have. You will find that a change in the lighting of a room does more to freshen up the whole decorative scheme than any other single thing you can do. The Georgian period was a time | of marked graciousness and gen- I erosity of design. It has never i lost favor and even in this fast- I moving age it imparta a leisurely, spacious feeling to a room. The shell-design wall bracket shown herewith, created by Lurelle Guild illustrates this characteristic. It Colerain Neighborhood News Hon. Judge Francis D. Winston, of I Winton, visited our school recently. | We always welcome Judge Winston in our midst. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Smith, of Washington, D. C., are visiting Mrs. Smith’s mother, Mrs. N. G. Phelps. Mr. Smith is recuperating from a re cent operation for appendicitis. Mrs. Clarence W. Beasley has re turned home from Edgecombe General Hospital, where she has recently un dergone an operation. Her many friends will be glad when she can be out again. Mrs. Estelle White, Mrs. Lee Miller and Mrs. L. A. Perry attended the Woman’s Missionary Union held in Durham. Mrs. Perry also visited her daughter, Miss Peggy Perry, at Mere dith College. Mrs. Estelle White is spending some time with her son, Dr. Estus White, in Kannapolis, N. C. The girls of the basketball team entertained the boys’ team at Eden House Friday evening in honor of the boys’ recent victory in the ten-county tournament. Mr. Graham Harrell went to Nor folk, Va., last Thursday. Miss Connie Wynn is spending some time with Mrs. L. D. Perry. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Smith were dinner guests of Miss Ruth Clair Newsome Saturday evening. Misses Eloise Miller, Kathleen Mil ler and Doris Parker attended the Eastern Regional B. Y. P. U. meeting held in Washington, N. C. Miss Helen Phelps went to Wash ington, N. C., last Friday and return ed on Saturday. Mrs. Arthur Greene and Miss Nell Baker, of Ahoskie, visited their aunt, Mrs. Clarence Beasley, Saturday af ternoon. Mrs. N. G. Phelps, Miss Helen Phelps, Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Smith were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Brinkley on Sunday. Mrs. Eugene Holloman is in Duke Hospital, and is reported as getting on very well. Mrs. Hubert Askew, who is in Pro- | testant Hospital, Norfolk, Va., is re ported as doing nicely, and -will re turn home real soon. The many friends of Mrs. Hugh Dukes, who recently died at Lakeview Hospital, Suffolk, Va., will be inter i ested to know that her two weeks’ old 1 baby girl, who is with Mrs. Dukes’ ' mother, Mrs. Henry Wilson, is getting on splendidly. She is under the ex cellent care of Miss Christine Wilson, who is a post-graduate nurse of r New York Hospital, at present. Dates Set For Civil Service Examinations The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open com : petitive examinations as follows: Assistant credit union investigator, ; $2,600 a year, Farm Credit Adminis tration. Junior physicist, $2,000 a year. Op. tional subjects are: Electricity, heat, 1 mechanics, and optics. Chemist, and senior, associate, and assistant chemists, $2,600 to $4,600 a year. Assistant keeper, $1,320 a year, National Zoological Park, Washing ton, D. C. All States except Utah, lowa, Ver -1 mont, Virginia, Maryland, and the 1 District of Columbia have received lens than their quota of appointments in the apportioned departmental ser- THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1985. The "Brompton.” is one of the several hundred pure period designs in Chase lighis. Likewise the ceiling fixture, of the same period, has a cleanness of line which would enhance any room in any house. What the average householder forgets is that the lighting fixture can be removed and a new one Installed in a matter of minutes, and at less than the cost of recov ering a chair. Many studies made in the past year point to the tact that householders would like nothing better than to replace old fixtures, of which they are weary, with new ones of designs which never tire the eyes. This has not been possible until the present month. It is possible now. vice in Washington, D. C. The posi tions of assistant credit union investi gator and assistant keeper are not af fected by the State apportionment law. Full information may be obtained from the Secretary of the Uuited States Civil Service Board of Examin ers at the post office or customhouse in any city which has a post office of the first or second das£, or from the United States Civil Service Commis sion, Washington, D. C. TRY A HERALD WANT AD. ' ,1 SHAVE 15e HAIRCUT 25c 104 East King Street /’c//(n'c a//c? /ca///}'(' to //(■•/( t/j/ iii ifl/fk. ean *his be a H L Solid Steel "Turret-Top” Bodies by Fisher—the safest and most luxu rious bodies built today. 2. Triple- Seeled Hydraulic Brakes— the finest brakes money can buy ... sealed against water and dirt. 3. Speedlined Styling—the new Silver Streak design that makes Pontiac the most beautiful thing on wheels. 4. Completely. Sealed Chassis—fully protected from water and dust. 5. Silver-Alloy Engine Bearings— twice as durable as the ordinary typo. CHAS. H. JENKINS MOTOR Q. EDENTON, N. C. ■, Jalfca-,- 1 7 T7" —sfc Tai SUNDAY DINNER SUGGESTIONS By ANN PAGX TXB beet news possible for the opening of Lent is that salt water fish is plentiful and moderns' v priced Eggs too, are popular substitutes for meat and their price has declined ten cents a dozen in the prist week. Ihe third most popular Lenten food Is cheese —and Its price Is low in pro portion to its excellent nou-ishlng gualities. Meat prices continue to nse with no iope of lower prices for from six months to a year. Regardless of re ligious practice fish, eggs and cheese ire good foods to choose because they are among the cheaper foods at present. Oranges, grapefruit ar 1 strawber ries offer the best fresh fruit values: and green peas, beans and cauliflower he best green vegetable values for his week. Here are three menus made up of teasonable foods adapted to different judget levels t Low Cost Dinner Pan-broiled Chopped Meat iaked Potatoes Green Beans Bread and Butter Lemon Snow So't Custard Tea or Coffee Milk Medium Cost Dinner Pot Roast of B. of Mashed Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Bread and Butt:r Jellied Fruit? Tea or Coffee Milk Very Special Dinner Fruit Cup Roast Chicken with Mushroom Stuffing New Potatoes Greon Beans hredded Lettuce FYene.h Dressing Rolls and Butter Strawberries Cake Coffee Milk LARGE CROWD PRESENT AT PROVIDENCE CHURCH RALLY A large crowd Sunday afternoon attended the rally at the Providence Baptist Church, when special music was furnished by Jim Daniels’ Baptist Sunday School orchestra. Quite a few white people were in attendance. Dr. J. W. Se|ig OPTOMETRIST Will be in his office on the third floor of the Citizens Bank Build ing. Edenton— FRIDAY, MARCH 29 8 A. M. to 1 P. M. v - BAYVIEW 1 iRBER SHOP | ERNEST L. WHITE, Prop. Barber Service That Pleases : SHAMPOO 35c : MASSAGE 35c Edenton, N. C. j • 6. 10-Second Starting at Zero—quick starting in any kind of weather. 7. Even Greater Eoonomy— no matter what car you now drive, Pontiac’s economy will be a revelation. 6. No Draft Ventilation—the genuine Fisher Body Ventilating System. 9. Knee Action—the Be Luxe Six and Eight provide the tried and proved jolt-proof Knee-Action ride. 10. Luggage and Spare Tire Compart ment—ample room for all your luggage and protection for your spare tire. METHODIST MISSIONARY CIRCLE MEETS MONDAY . '".in i *" i Circle No. 1 of the Woman’s Mis sionary Society of the Methodist Church met Monday night at the home of Mrs. B. F. Britton, Jr.,«on Queen Street After a brief busi ness session interesting games were played, after which refreshments V |3» J7.J ■/; y ->f fejSl ANC (kT ' k p ki C E YOU CK N! AFFORD TO PAV ■ MITCHENER’S PHARMACY EDENTON, N. C.. I , 1 /,/, f I Gates, N. C., April 4, 1934. /Jtf/ | | Robertson Chemical Corp., £ Norfolk, Va. » /Jrvf £ //// ♦> ♦J* Gentlemen: /Jnrf ♦♦♦ X I tried a field test this year. I nwj | £ bought 3-8-3 of field crop from /Jfa/ X your agent of Robertson’s fertiliz- {Jw X x er. Then I bought two competitive W £ i brands of fertilizer. I tried them FHE FERTILIZED WITH | X side by side. I could tell to the BETTER INGREDIENTS X £ row that Robertson’s took the lead. FROM SEA-SOIL AND £ £ I put 300 lbs. of Robertson’s 3-8-3 MIMES! X x under one acre and made me seven rje . £ y barrels of corn. So you know 1 m £ X must praise Robertson’s goods. £ £ (Signed) J. H. JACKSON. ' £ X ___— FISH £ .... | BIRD GUANO MEAL NESIA.MURIATE OF POTASH J* Robertsons!^' 4 Fertilizers The Better Ingredients Fertilizer «► PROVEN FORMULAS FOR EVERY CROP ’’ « ► t Edenton Feed & Fuel j j £ Agents <► X | EDENTON, N. C. PHONE 204__ * * >.;..;.-x~x--xx~x~x~x~xx~x~x~X“X~x--x~x~x~X“X~x~x-x-X"X"X--x-i A Gmerut Mu«n Value <z£d&e4LcS&ea4L « Pontiac SIXES AND BIGHTS H the Eight (tubject to change without notice ). Standard group of accesiories ■■ extra. EaxyGMU.C. Time Payment,. PONTIAC MOTOR COMPANY, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN e were served. Those present were:: Mrs. Harry Smith, Mrs. J. W. Cates, Miss Lou Brown, Mrs. George Ever ett, Mrs. J. Edwin Bufflap, Miss ; Betty Moore, Mrs. E. W. Spires, Mrs. i Wayland Moore, Mrs. T. J. Bell, Mrs. i T. B. Williford and Mrs. Claud Jones. The Circle will meet again next - ! Monday night with Mrs. E. W. i Spires.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1935, edition 1
2
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