Newspapers / The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, … / June 26, 1936, edition 1 / Page 8
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Conservation Of WiM ; Iife Very Important . " College Station, Raleigh, Jane 25. .'Florid and " Georgia have been added to the territory of George B. Lay, -rodent control leader, at N. C. (State College, i was announced to day. ' , With Virginia and the Carolinas already in hla field. Lay's work will now cover five states. His head quarters will remain at State College, Raleigh. The work is conducted by the bu reau ofblological survey of the U. S.' Department of Agriculture in co operation with the State College ex tension services of the five states. ; Although he will be concerned sjtJf,flfyly rodent control work, the ureau has instructed him to give considerable emphasis to the conser vation of wildlife, Lay stated, i The conservation of wildlife, he said, is becoming more important, in view of the fact that as the country's population becomes more dense, wild life has a tendency to die out unless .given special protection. Much of his work in the future "will be concerned with promoting rodent control campaigns and wild life conservation work, although he will not be able to give as much per sonal supervision to the campaigns and conservation work as formerly. Lay plans to prepare written in structions that will serve as a guide to individuals taking part in control campaigns and conservation work. BETHEL NEWS Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Perry and son, Dewey, Jr., spent Sunday with Mrs. Perry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Chappell, at Belvidere. Little Miss Barbara Ann Benton, of New Hope, is visiting her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Keaton. Thomas Phillips, of Miami, Fla., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Phillips. Mrs. Birdie Beasley and her son, James, of Norfolk, Va., spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Perry. Mr- and Mrs. J. M. Sutton and Miss Elizabeth White, from near Hertford, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Ward Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Matthews, of Norfolk, Va., spent the week-end with Mrs. Matthews' parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Keaton. J. H. Mansfield and children, Ruth, Louise and James, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ward and little daughter, Kathryn Anne, spent Sunday at Ocean View, Va. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hobbs and two sons, William and Wallace, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Butt, at New Hope. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Long, W. P. Long and daughter, Miss Evelyn, went to Currituck Saturday. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCEMENT The following announcement will be of interest in Hertford: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Munford Biggs announce the marriage of their daughter, Eleanor Rudisill, to Mr. William Lloyd Hoffler on Fri day, June 12, 1936, at Lynchburg, Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffler are at home at 4518 Grote Avenue, Richmond, Va. Mr. Hoffler is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hoffler, of Hertford. VISITS MOODY INSTITUTE J. P. Trueblood, evangelist, Route 2, Hertford, visited the Moody Bible Institute when in Chicago this week. MUSIC HATH CHARMS BUT A BANK NOTE CALMS. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION . Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of John Coleson, Sr., deceased, late of Perquimans County North Carolina, this is to notify all - persons having claims against the es tate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Hertford, Route 3, on or before the 24th day of June, 1937, or this notice will be pleaded in r . bar of their recovery. All persons ' indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 24th day of June, 1936. JOHN COLESON, JR., ; "Administrator of John Coleson, Sr. " June26 jly8,10474,31 4 FARM FOR SALE f About 48 acres,, located n Bert- v mvjvv ' va aiuamfV vei t nnd known as Will Everett Farm. ? H. B. WINSLOW Hertford. N. Ct ; Everyday Oiohiiit LZIckb BY VIRGINIA FBAN03 Semember when you leanied to drive a car-tow yon watched and silently rehearsed the operations of starting, of shifting, and of stopping as explained by year patient male lusliuctocf At first pethsps, yon rather won dered at the number ot things you thought yen had to remember: but when yoo vkioned yourself gliding W v? "V r Vft 4 The thrill of learning to cook on a now eUctric rang ! jquattoi only by the thrill that comet with homing to use any how thing that U pretonted to you. smoothly down the boulevard in your handsome, new, shiny car, wav ing and nodding nonchalantly to your pedestrian friends, you were fervently determined to master that "low, second, high" technique! Then, when you did "take it out alone,1' and found that the car reacted easily to your well-memorized maneuvers, vou Rained the confidence of a Barney Oldfield. And you've been drivinar ever since I Isn't that the case when learning to use all new things? You approach them with an adventurous, some what shaky attitude; then when you discover Just how easily they oper ate, and how convenient and enjoy able is their use, you wonder how In the world yon ever got along with out them. 8o ifs the "new" which makes life interesting, and ifs the whole-hearted acceptance of new things which makes for ctal progress. Symbol of PregMM In the field of modern cookery, the new automatic electric range Is the symbol of progress. It is the range of die present age the range which makes cooking scientific, sale, simple, and successful Homemakcrs who have been brought up" by cooking on old wood stoves and temperamental kitchen ranges might eye the mod ern electric range with an Tm too SNAPSHOT CUIL I "Off -Guard" Patient and etrateglo stalking of the subjects until they were "off guard" netted these Interesting snapshots. , ; 4-l,,;'i "PAKINQ snapshots of people when they are not aware that they are about to be "sho t," thereby catching them with natural expressions and in unposed positions, is often called "candid" photoijaphy, but we of The Snapshot Guild like the words "off guard" photogiaphy as more truly descriptive. "Candid" Implies there is that kind of expression on the face of the subject and it may not always be there, but there is no doubt that for a natural expression he mist be "off guard" at ths moment the picture Is made, which is also Just what the professional photographer waits to capture in making a studio portrait. "Off-guard" photography is lots of fun, but there are Important points about It that need to be observed to get satisfying results. You can't "shoot" thoughtlessly j without re gard to the direction and strength of the light, nor can you forget that exposure and focus are Just as im portant as for n premeditated pose. Nor ' Should you overlook ' back ground. This means that if you are going to 'catch your subject una wares, you may have to . do some , strategic stalking for the right jpo ' aitlon. I :' Supposing, for example, you want . ft picture of Grandpa outdoors amus , 'lng one of the eLUJrcn. first, ob (Nrn the latest? c tie fcu pad ft i eld to learn" look, However, no one la too old, or too busy to team to cook electrically. When yon pur chase new electric range, yon don't nave to lean to cook all over nfal ArnndnMJ lrna Iim Mm family suffered the first time). Aside from learning how to operate a few simpie swucuea, au you nave to learn about cooking on tine new mm i . Servant is to expect perfect results every single time. You may need to get accustomed to having so much "spare time but youH surely enjoy producing real cooking miracles. For example, how would you like to prepare a complete oven meal for baking (using, of course, your own trusty recipes and cooking secrets"), place this meal in the oven, go away, for the afternoon, come home and , find it deliriously cooked and ready to serve? That is cooking by "proxy a bit of convenient cookery magic made possible by the "chefs brain," or timer dock, and the well-insulated, heat-controlled, moisture-controlled electric oven. The electric oven is also resnonsible for one-step hmeat roasting and baking, the new method of starting meats ana cams to bake in an unpreheated oven, i Many Miracle Featares ' Other miracle features of the elec tric range are the thrift cooker, die large 6-quart kettle installed in the top of the range which cooks foods to a delicious doneness economical ly, slowly, and wiucrtreauiring at tention during cooking; the calrod surface unite which nave fast meas ured, electric heat and the quick, smokeless broiler nan which actual- far broils foods in such a way that the fat cannot moke, burn, and . patter over tne entire oven. Photography where it will come from when you take the picture. Then, set your lent aperture and your shutter, speed ac cordingly. Watch your subjects from a distance with your earner -con- . cealed. Be patient but alert for an in teresting situation to develop. When you see the picture you want to take, locate the spot from which you are going to take It Then, unless yours is a fixed focus camera,, measure with your eye the distance from that spot to Grandpa- and - the , youngster, set the pointer at the right mark, and, keeping .the cam era behind you until you get there, stroll up and shoot It they look up at you before you get there, be non chalant and wait for them to resume their activity, or make some casual " suggestion: that will put them- "off -guard." You see, in order to be a good "off-guard" snapshooter," you ' '' have to be "cagey," and this cxercis. ing of strategy to prevent people ' from posing is part of the fun. v Of course, you must kflow the ca-' pablllties ot your camera. A camera with ultra-fast lens and shutter, plus .' supersensitive : panchromatic , film, greatly increases your ranes of op- portunlty especially for fast r"?n, "' but the ordinary camera, t-o, vitf make "off-guard" snapshots if tht ' movement ot the subject ia not too . rapid. ,," 'T T -' -r EL TO ' t 1 a asi nmn mini M ii r.'rn A'TT-, Guy Newby, Jr., has returned from tnp to Nags Head. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Nixon spent last week at Nags Head. Miss Annie Comer Davis, of Hunt ington, W. Va., is the guest of Mrs. Clyde McCallum.' Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Whedbee. Mrs. lywrwleifOTsVFrances Fowler and Miss Marjorie Hefren spent Sun day at Nags Head. Miss Gladys Hamrick and Miss Blanche Everett spent the week-end visiting at Chadbourn. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Spivey. of Richmond, Va., spent the . week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Roberson. Mrs. V. N. Darden and her daugh ter, Florence, nave returned from a visit to relatives at Greensboro; Mrs. J. R. Futtrell and her little son, Richard, Jr., have returned to their home at Rich 'Square after a visit to Mrs. FutrellV parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Elliott M. S. Elliott who holds a position in Fenner, California, is spending his vacation with his family in Hertford. Miss Ruth Robinson and Ben Rob inson, former Hertford residents who now live at Roxboro, spent the week-end with friends here. Miss Katherine Broughton is at tending summer school at Duke Uni versity. Mrs. T. J. Nixon, Jr., who under went an operation at a Norfolk hos pital last week, is convalescing satis factorily. Mrs. Walter Dail and her little daughter, Rebecca, former residents of Hertford, who now live at Mur freesboro, are visiting Mrs. J. E. Morris and Mrs. L R. Crawford, in Hertford. i Miss Winifred Holland, of Holland, Va., was a recent guest of Miss Pat Edwards. Mrs. George Paul, of Washington. N. C, was a recent guest of Mrs. J. G. Roberson. Mrs. Ralph E. White has as sruests this week Misses Hilda White and Edith Mathews, of Suffolk, Va. ..Uchanges afljmrum WHAT MAKES COOLERATOR SO REMARKABLE? ITS AIR CONDITIONED! SO NEW BECAUSE.. CoOLERATOR is air conditioned. Crystal-dear, taste-free k Cubes can be made m only five minutes - Keeps load naturally fresh, no mingling of food flavors, no drying out of foods, no covered dtshes Coolerator uses ke, but b a totally different - way; maintains tmiform cold temperature whether die lot cbnmber is full or nearly empty. Coolerator needs to be re-iced only once every four to seven days. There's a Coolentoe model for every domestic and commercial pur- pou, each one complete cnted Air Conditioning Dulux finish, beaudfid 1 J:ljJlVvb) I MRS. TOMMY MILLER AND MRS. CHAS. JOHNSON HOSTESSES The Rosa Powell Circln of the Hertford Baptist Church met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. T. E. Raper with Mrs. Chas. Johnson and Mrs, Tommy Miller as hostesses. - IBECAUE: !!Oe Can S l ii, ii m . r r i Ue 0o I 1. Metal is safer 2. Metal is better 3. Metal lasts longer 4. Metal looks better 5. Metal is more economical The wide experience t Workers is your assurance of a good job. And I we guarantee it! Gall I Guaranteed Job. Byrum Bros. Hardware Co. Everything In Hardware and Supplies Phone 4 1 -1 1- "' ?; . U;V: -' i? ' i'.'V,. , - ti r ' L f ' t ' t'r - -'fir with pat. "jJ srs. J js " - Chamber ( O I I (TST? 77 chromium TSoTT- V ASK FOR A TEN DAY FREK TRIAL Alter the business meeting and an intere8ting-progranv. n social hour was enjoyed, Dainty refreshments m.iaTsl.,vw ni.. ,'.--,!..-.,v: Members -attending-. Included the leader, Mrs. Chas. Johnson: " Me dames Tommy MiBer, W. E. Hofflerf Aioiiy rerry, a. u. oawin, js. w. Pennington, D. Spivey, T. E. Raner. V. A. Holdren, E. A. Byrum, Bill El. llott Mary Parker, George Chappell, ana una law, -. . P . Visitors were: Mrs. Monroe Hoffler. ' Mrs. . Thomas Tfllery, Mrs; Charlie Umphlett and her son, Thomas 'EsT:'' ward.-. . -. i'.'iwir;';;: ivtki': The July meeting will be held with Mrs. Lula Lane at her home. '- 1 u iop LeaCis! t CJitli etal 4 of our Expert Metal f us or write us for a I -A. e Edenton, N. C.
The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1936, edition 1
8
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