Newspapers / The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, … / April 10, 1936, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f . THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY, HERTFORD, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1936. PAGE SEVEN Funeral Held Friday For Mrs. Winslow s E. Funeral services for Mrs. Virgie Lamb Winslow, 25, who died at her home in Bagleys Swamp on Thurs- day, were held at the home on Fri day afternoon with the Rev. Mrs. Bertha Smith White, Friends minis ter, conducting the service, assisted by the Rev. Howard Yow, pastor of the Piney Woods l'rieniis Church. Pallbearers included Wilbur Lamb, Washington D. C. Alton B. Parker, of Richmond,-Va.; Edward Winslow, of Gates County), Wallace 1 Winslow, of Whaleyville, Va.; James H. Winslow and Walter C. Winslow. Mrs. Winslow is survived by her ' , husband, Hubert Winslow; her pa f rents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lamb; two Bisters, Mrs. Alton B. Parker, of Richmond, Va., and Madeline Lamb, of Belvidere; and one brother, Wilbur Lamb, of Washington, D. C. BALLAHACK NEWS Rev. A. A. Butler, of Hertford, fill ed his regular appointment at Great Hope Church Sunday morning. Miss Selma Rogerson spent Thurs day afternoon with Mrs. Joe Perry. Mrs. A. R. Stallings, who returned recently from a Norfolk, Va., hospi tal, is improving, v We are sorry to report Mrs. C. S. Layden very ill with flu. Mrs. A. J. Parrish called on Mrs. J. E. Perry Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Percy Rogerson and little son visited her mother, Mrs. A. R. Stallings Thursday. Mr. and MrHugh Harrel went f-"to town Saturday afternoon. Mrs. C. S- Layden and daughter, Miss Mary, spent Wednesday with relatives in Hertford. Preston Rogerson and Joseph Perry were in Rocky Hock Sunday afternoon. The two small children of Mr. and Mrs. Graham Perry are ill at this time. Mrs. Lydia Dail, who has been very ill for some time, is slowly im proving. Mrs. J. E. Perry and Mrs. Joe Layden were in Hertford shopping on Wednesday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. Robert Walston, of Center Hill, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Perry Monday. Among those from this community attending the farm meeting Thurs day were: C. A. Perry, John Roger son, Percy Rogerson. A. J. Parrish, J. E. Perry, Joe Layden and Archie Lane. Mary Ruth Lane and Alfred Lane 4n iare jmpxov. "7-. i'-.TVAIJI iter being quite ill r . ' ' ' 1 mZZ OTT RETURNS Miss Ruth Elliott, who is a student at N. C. C. W., Greensboro, spent the spring holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Elliott. HOME FOR SPRING HOLIDAYS Miss Joyce Stokes, who is a stu dent at Greensboro College, is spend ing the spring holidays with her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Stokes. ON SICK LIST Billy Blanchard is on the sick list this week. : rlmmmjmBArs news; " ' ; llliZ f SP HE'LL WBER n' ... - ri HETiwGesftfcM DIGESTION effy&rrfcO JL ' pHysiciAW NEWS VTtM sV L.P jj p mm IFfflPttfiBflzsff Locally Made For Local Conditions The S outhern Cotton Oil Co. Hertford, N. C. COTTONSEED MEAL and HULLS SOY BEAN HEAL PEANUT MEAL WHITESTON NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey Winslow and children, Dolan and Gale, visited her mother, Mrs. J. A. White, at Winfall Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Winslow and children, Mary Leland and Adalia, of Hertford, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Winslow Sunday Mrs. Hannah Chappell and little son, of Chappell Hill, spent Saturday night with her sister, Mrs. John Lassiter. Mr. and Mrs. Worth Winslow, of Norfolk, Va., spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wins low. . Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jay White and children, of Elizabeth City, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. White, Sunday. ' Misses Merlee, Mae Edla and Lois Asbell, Gutherie Jolliff and Emer son Asbell, of Belvidere, visited Miss Clarissa Winslow Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Charlie Baker and James Baker are improving. They have both been very ill with pneumonia. TO SPEND EASTER HERE Mr. and Mrs. E. G. McMullan and their little daughter, Edwina, of New Bern, expect to spend Easter with Mr. McMullan's mother, Mrs. W. T. McMullan. HERE SUNDAY Miss Katherine Lawrence, of En field, and R. D. Elliott, of Ahoskie, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Elliott on Sunday. f r 1 w -Y x Do you look ur Hair Tells Your hair tells your agel Iff your hair it drab or streaked with gray you look older than your yean. ! Clairol will help you to look your young est by Imparting natural cofor to 'your hair or by changing its shade so gradually " . so secretly no one will know. Clairol does what nothing else canl Only Clairol shampoos, recomStiont and TINTSI Ai!f your beautician or write for FREE Clairol booklet, FREE advice oh the care off hair, and FREE beauty analysis. Write NOW on this coupon. " " " - . frteti&x Vita; CtaM, - 1 AMM 13Wt4MitlrMtNwYfcair . .'T nMuminneuMMiH - f-' Mil Uvfn mn4 Mil mriyth. Sm. -Well, it didn't seem like 4 miles !" (It's true! That V8 Feeling 1 makes the miles go Easier! J V, Ob & tymfkamj OiitKil, tmmdmjt 9 P.M. CBS, WMmj mm NBCBlw NMwwk,9aOM M JUM, 47"OU know as soon as you take the wheel of a Ford that X you've hit on something different. You're driving a car with a V-8 engine, and a chassis like no other in the world. You get an edge on city traffic. You cover the open road more easily. You hold the road on turns and bad going without having to poke along. You have power to spare on the hills. You actually cut your running time without boosting your top speed! Yet driving a Ford V-8 is delightfully easy. Riding comfort is like nothing you've ever experienced in a car so nimble. And you save money, every mile. Owners report gas mileage on a par with less powerful cars; and no extra oil needed between regular changes. Terms as low as $25 a month after down-payment, under new UCC a month plans. $510 and up, FOB Detroit. Borrow a ear from your FORD Dealer today for yourself! get that A7 2ZE Msh foir a (D)DironstiraftiiiD (Sfin sa ippiflfl "RflttB)ff (S SALES Hertford. SERVICE North Carolina i4 V 1
The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 10, 1936, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75