Newspapers / The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, … / July 10, 1936, edition 1 / Page 9
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THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY. HERTFORD, N. C FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1936. PAGE KOUS WINFALLNEWS Bev. J. W. Dimmette, : Mn. Dim- mette and their family spent Mon ' day in Nerf oik, Vs. ftewell Dimmette, of New Bern, spent the week-end with Lis parents, Bev. and Mrs. ' J. W. Dimmette. Bill Dimmette, : of Ireemont, f was the week-end guest of tdativtat here. Mrs. MJ M. Dellman, of Yak, Del, arrived Friday to visit .her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bagley. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bagley spent ' the week-end with Mrs. Bagley's pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Eli T. Bjrum, in Rocky Hock. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Winslow and son recently spent several days iu nrjtii u i t n AJBosae.,,.,,,, Hiss (Jeiesta Ckxlwin spent last week with Mrs. D. L. Barber. Miss Martfaret Williams, of Nor folk, Vjl, Is visiting. Miss Mary Eli zabeth White. - . . Mias Gertrude Baker, of Virginia Beach, Va., is the guett of her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Baker. Mrs. A. R. Winslow, Sr.,. has re- turned from Virginia Beach, Va., where she was the guest of her . daughter, Mrs. Garland Atwater. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Daughtry and Woodrow Daughtry, of Greensboro, and Mrs. E. B. Daughtry, of Bayboro, are visiting relatives here. Mrs. W. G. Hollowell spent Sunday and Monday in Elisabeth City with Iher mother, Mrs. W- D. Miller. Mrs. J. ' M. Matthews, Mrs. J. E. Powell and Mn. J. D. Sumner are visiting their father, J. M. Hollowell, who continues very ill. Carlton Matthews and J. D. Sum ner, of Norfolk, Va., spent Sunday with J. M. HollowelL Mrs. Walter Barker and children, Bill, Jack 'and , Audrey Bell, of. Eli sabeth City, spent Sunday with Miss es Audrey and Myrtle Umphlett Maurice Pike, of Norfolk, Vs., spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Pike. J. V. Roach, D. B. Trueblood, Kenneth Miller and George Roach went to Ocean View, Va, on a fish ing trip Monday. Mr? and Mrs. Sam Hill and son, Sam, 9t-, of Norfolk, Va., were guests of Misses Annie and Eliza White Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Al Sawyer and Bobby, and James Powell, of Ports mouth, Va., viBited J. M. Hollowell Sunday afternoon. Miss Gladys Ward spent last week in Norfolk, Va., visiting relatives. LAUGHS FROM THE DAY'S NEWS! IS CHAPANOKE NEWS Mrs. G. W. Alexander left Sunday for Dallas, Texas, where she will visit relatives and friends for sev eral weeks. Mr. and Mrs- Alberto H. Ros and John Rufus Wilson, of WeeksvOle, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wilson. Miss Ruth R. Wilson is spending the week with Mrs. John Wilson, at Weeksville. Misses Waverly D'Orsay and Ger rie Griffin were in Elizabeth City Saturday night. Carey Quincy left Sunday for Charlottesville, Va., to work in a D. Pender store. Mrs. Z. W. Evans and Mrs; B. W. Evans and children of Chowan Coun ty, spent Tuesday with Mrs. J. C. ilson. Miss Alcesta Whitehead has re turned from a visit with relatives in Eden ton. Mrs. Daisy Perry and Mrs. W. H. Elliott were in Elizabeth City Tues day. Mrs. Albert Cheatham has return ed to her home at Roanoke, Va., after a pleasant visit to her daugh ter, Mrs. Johnnie Bray. Misses Doris Baker and Hilda By rum were visitors in Elizabeth City on the Fourth. Mrs. J. C. Wilson and little son, Calvin, were in Elizabeth City Sat urday. Marshall Baker, of New York, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Baker. The W. M. S. of the . Woodville Baptist Church will meet - In Eliza beth City Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Ralph Mercer. Miss Waverly D'Orsay has return ed from Nags Head, where she spent the past week. ' v Those visiting in the home of Mrs. Bertha - Whitehead Sunday were: W. F. Howell,, Mr. ..and Mrs. J. C. Howell, Mr. and, Mrs.;Wayland How ell and little daughter, Eleanor, Fay, "fritV.ftiOM S NOT FAQ OFF !! NEW5 ITEM!- PERHAPS WELL BE IN FOQ tOME SMOCKS WHEN IT DOES ARRIVE. Traveling ground America Sgy.r.WJWtMiiiMWiiAmai;MW niMiniiii - H 1-TA11T.I II II INVENT f.-.MIM P ' (television; Nyl krj I guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Creecy Saturday and Sunday. Miss Evelyn Long, from near Bethel, spent the week-end with Misses Eunice and Madge Long. Miss Cornie Lee Ward, of Bethel, joined them for Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harrell spent Sunday with relatives at Ballahack. Julian Long, of Bethel, was the Sunday guest of Howard Long. Mrs. Claude Long and Miss Mary Lane spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. S. L. Long. All Used Cars' That LOOK Alike Are NOT Alike HELLO BUDDY Who Do You Reckon I Am? PEP is my name and I am the new salesman for Dollouell Chevrolet Go. Here Are Some Good Buys In USED CARS 1935 Chevrolet Master Coach not so hot $335 1934 Ford V-8 Coach a dandy for $295 1934 Chevrolet Master Coupe extra clean $335 1935 Chevrolet Master Town Se dan $495 1934 Chevrolet Master Sedan $475 1934 Plymouth De Luxe Sedan for only $375 1935 Chevrolet Coach $475 1935 Chevrolet Truck long wheel base $325 1935 Reo IVt ton Speed Wagon will stand the "gaff" $395 1932 Ford Truck $ 99 Let Us Care For Your Car Bring in your OLD CAR: swap it for a NEW CAR TRY AND YOU WILL BUY THE NEW CHEVROLET A car you will be proud to own Hollowell Chevrolet Company Phone 115 : Hertford Photo One Lin HIGHER THINGS IN LIFE jMTE"E :j a L. idge on the highest -stc- " rd K-ug9 railway in the wj:!:J -1. Ce.;:ral Railway of Peru whUli a EC -da the three-mile high ::.3u:;i.:s behind Lima, the capital ci.y. The main line connects Callao, tha port, with Huancayo about 300 miles distant and has several short branches leading to interesting min ing towns and Indian villages. As this amaslng railroad ilgxags Us dlzsy way up the mountain sides it skirts the very edge of steep preci pices, circles around twenty-one switch backs, dives through sixty five tunnels and crosses gorges thou .sands of feet deep on sixty-seven afferent bridges; and at La Gima, the topmost point on the line, it .achieves a height ot 15,805 feet Although this highest point is but 100 miles in a direct line from the coast, the train circling round so that it never makes more than a 4 per cent grade requires 7Vi hours to cover the distance. The road which in many respects Is consid ered to be the world's most wonder' ful railway is a striking monument to the skill and perserveranes ol Henry Melggs, an American engi neer and financier. The ascent is one of the experiences of travelers Peru on the weekly cruises from Nj xorc a ventanie rouer. which presents some ot striking scenery in the gether with cloie-ups of the costumed Indians who dwell mountain Tillages. thrilling TisS wu w inn th e tom ymttk Misses Syble and Alma Howell, Mr. and Mrs. John White and children, Marian, Mildred, and John, Jr. ; Walton Whitehead and his friend, Warner Williams, were week-end guests of Mrs. Bertha Whitehead. Miss Louise Wilson and Susie Mae Wilson spent Thursday in Eli sabeth City with Mrs. Frank Wilson Water Hemlock Is Worst California Poison Planl San Francisco. i"he research workers on -: the Federal Writers' project, who are compiling an eight-, volume guide book of the . United States, nave completed the, list of poisonous plants! in California ' The most poisonous plant In the taw, for both man and . beast, they re port,, is the water hemlock. It also is .one of the most alluring from the standpoint of fragrance. . ; i HOPEWELL NEWS Ambrose Long left Saturday with the 115th Ambulance Company from Edenton for Camp Jackson, Colum bia, S. C. Miss Eloise Long, of Elizabeth City, spent a few days last week as the guest of Misses Madge and Eu nice Long. Little Miss Mary Earle Dail, of hTorfolk, Va., is visiting her sister, Minnie Ray, at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, George Dail. Little Miss Dorothy Norman Still man, of Norfolk, Va., is the guest of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. O. C Long. j . Beverly Creecy and Harold Mal colms left Monday for Miami, Fla., after a visit to Mr. Creecy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D.-Creecy.' -' ' Mr. and Mrs. George Cadilac and children, of .-Norfolk, -Va., were the UP the beanstalk WHEN Jack climbed the beanstalk, he got a new conception of his needs. No longer would just a hen do, but a golden-egg hen. No longer just a harp, but one that stood by itself and played. He didn't know what he wanted till he saw something better than what he had . . . though he labored hand over hand to get hold of that point of view. Advertisements give you a high point of view without any climbing at all. They spread world products before you servants to serve you, con veniences to please prices low because so many thousands are using the same. They give you a new conception of what you'd like to own. No longer will a watch or food chopper do but the most highly improved watch or food chopper. No longer just a radio but one of purest transmis sion. They make you change your mind about what you started to choose, and choose something more pleasing at no higher price. They help you see the whole field of satisfying wares. They lift you to fresh joys. READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS HONEST FACTS ARJD EN THEIR NEWS 1 II 3 mi -Ii . ii . . ,i l rr, ,. ., ,, f ' -i -- , V ) ii ' .ii.' ,i , - ' -l ,!. ii . . an ' J?J.lvY SPECIALS - AT SIMON'S Men's Wash Pant3 :u jMen's Good , t?i v "j i w (! i k. i-n a frit?1 M " kTa ?" v- sr.' r.rA FSnri V .XVIr filrfa -Greatly Reduced snsfoli i tie fo-iin" Men's IlcaTyvWpglit Overalls ' ,lj Ladies' Rayon Silk Panties ECc Men's New Polo Shirts SUlc cr Cotton Ladies' White Shoes and Sandals Ladies'. Fast Color Wash Dresses Ladies' Good Silk Dresses OECQ Ladies' Pure Silk Full ' , Fashioned Hose ' C2c 4Cc 4Qp
The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 10, 1936, edition 1
9
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