THE PERQUIMANS WEZKLY, KEHTFOSD, N. a, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1936 PAGE FIVE i 4v r 3. Mule Exchange New " "Hertford Enterprise 5 A ' new-1 business eaterpnze Cis . launched in Hertford this week,: the Wilson Mule Exchange. The firm, which is composed of T. W. Wilson, of Hertford, and his brother, , Frank M. Wilson, of Elizabeth City, opened for business on Wednesday in the etables owned ,by W. G. .Wright, on ; Church Street." , " - - " oW. Wilson, who is the general manager of the new firm is vice president of the Hollowell Chevro let Company and is also a partner in the Farm Equipment - Company re cently established in Hertford. Frank M, Wilson, who is promi nently identified in the business life of EUzabeth City, where he lives, has dealt in mules and horse for several years in that city. He was for1 a number of years associated, with his father, the late J. C Wilson, of Per quimans, in the mule and horse busi ness. '. 1 1- ''The two brothers returned on Tues day from Atlanta, where they made their initial purchase of mules, a car load arriving in Hertford on Wed nesday. 3ere'$ Our Gkrlsimas (Plan to help, you give) thai SPECIAL GIFT ear Let u (wlp jroa uli tb.t VERY SPECIAL PERSON UPPy tKi Cbrutnaa. Han't what joo do. Cobm ia BOW and aaUet ria fin gift oo of tba maqy new HaafltoM .wa . ara. showing, for xaapU. Caa'l afford tit? Yet, y aaa, Hamilton prices now Ugm aa law a $37.50and if yoa pj a oVpotit am, and perhaps aa&ar aaaa, WU put jour leles tioa awda and bold it for joa until fut Ufera CTwiitmai. CAM PEN'S JEWELERS Edenton N. C. Do vou look 9 ; if you've lost the (ptrit iof :youth you can find it again quickly aad' naturally with CWroLIf you hair, li drab and unlnterettlng or streak :rJ edith gray, Clalrol will impart, . natural color or change Its shade 'gradually i . secretly ... quickly, v Don't think of Instant Clalrol and . Progretsivejciairol a common, oId-faklond hair dye. Clalrol doei whaykothlng'else can! In one ilmple treatment Clalrol ahanv poovcconditlon ajnd TINTS. your beautician or write now . for . FREE booklet, FREE advice -on care of hair and FREE beauty analyst c 1 Dcvtrly. King, Cliirol Ml Writ 46th $ N. Y, C FREE Stni FREE booll.i, idric and aailytif J u- 1 1 -. ! . , 1 i L dry. , .i.,.t . i ."urftdrlolls i 4 v, 1 k" I : r; my? 1 v- PREHISTORIC CITY FOUriDJtfARIZOM Discovery of Ancient Pueblo (K't.Ig Reported. T . ..y. New york.-i-The .discovery of an, ancient . hill, city and fort of the prehistoric Pueblo Indians on Black Mesa, Arizona, by the Rainbow Bridge-Monument Valley scientific expedition was the most significant find of the expedition, according to Dr. Charles del Norte Winning, field director, who returned recently from Arizona. . : The Rainbow Bridge Monument Valley expedition numbered thirty college professors a n d ; museum Jtechniciana and forty undergraduate-and " graduate students ' repre senting almost every university in th"country. It is a co-operative enterprise;- each representative shar ing' equally the. expedition's ex penses. Ansel F. Hall, chief of the field division of the national park service, was supervisor. City Difficult to Locate. Black Mesa, ' which lies south of the Painted desert in Arizona, was referred to by the Indians on the Navajo reservation as the "Big House." There were consistent re ports of the city's existence among the Indians, but for the past four summers the expedition could not locate the site. "There is a great possibility that Black Mesa has been the cross roads of Northern and Southern migration. The pottery and archi tecture unearthed there show defi nitely a fusion of two distinct cultures," Dr. Winning declared. Dr. Winning is a professor at New York University's School of Com merce. Actual excavation was not started during the past summer because the rainy season was about to set in at the time of discovery. Walls of a protective fort standing three to twelve feet high and running two to three hundred yards in length were found. In addition, clearly defined walls of approximately one hundred rooms and much archaic pottery were unearthed. "A further study of the grounds which the expedition will carry out next summer will undoubtedly give significant information as to the life of the people living at the time," Dr. Winning said. Artifacts in Abundance. Unusual artifacts were found in great abundance in a burial ground of the Twelfth or Thirteenth century at the base of Black Mesa. The site is located a few miles from Kayenta, a trading post in North eastern Arizona. "Twenty-three burials have already been studied and considerable data on Pueblo cultures on Monument Valley have been found," the field director pointed out. Pottery jars in large numbers also were found in the burials. Many of them appeared to have been filled with food. The Pueblo Indians burled food and certain im plements of war, "believing they would need them in the next world." A large water jar, the -most im portant piece of pottery found by the expedition on the trip, is esti mated to be more than 1,000 years old. The jar, pieced together from more than thirty fragments, is well preserved and its decorations re veal the art of ten centuries ago. The artifact is now being studied by. Charles , Amsden of the South western' Museum of Los Angeles. J Well preserved skeleton, remains of a human being who lived in the Arizona cliffs more than 1,500 years ago were found. They were located in the cist of a Pueblo Indian dwell ing. The skeleton, probably male, was pierced by a email wood ehaft. The skull of a phyposaur, a prehistoric.- animal somewhat like the crocodile, '. which existed in the southeastern United States many millionsvof yearsjago was un earthed.. Tropical Headlight-Fish .m , Wanders Too Far North i. Boston-A deep sea fish equipped with its own lighting-system to at tract " food has been brought here by the trawler Ebb. v A 1 The fish, a twenty-pounder three feet long,; was Caught at 140 fath oms, off Qeorges bank, A short arm extends above its eyeless head and long tentacles drop from the-arm. A bulb-like tip on the tentacle near the mouth gives off .a phosphor escent gleam. Officials of the bu reau of. fisheries were surprised -that the fish, a tropical variety; has been caught so far north. First Girl Boiri iKr"' i r.. Four Generations Atlantic , City, N. J. Dale Thompson, granddaughter fit former Mayor Joseph Thompson, broke a family record which has existed for 78 years. She is the first girl to be born on the pat-; ernai tree of her family in four generatic;!; ; Former Mayor Thompson was one of two brothers. He had two sons, William and John,;, William had two sons, Charles and Wil liam, Jr., and John had two sons; Joseph and Jolm,t;J,r:.r;,!,4.;. Charles and his wife had two sons," before daughter Dale . ar rived and .broke .the cycle, ALL THE WORLD'S IN;TUNE IS " '- SHUT ' UP A, When Clark Gable makes love to Marion Davies, it's something all the world has been waiting to see. Here they are, as they give the people who wrote the love books a couple of lessons, in "Cain and Mabel," feature picture at the Taylor Theatre, Monday and Tuesday. Henry; Ford Presents New JK-ff ....L j l W Ax -ill ; -!&Vk ...,-ai3esasSLkliu&0fy THI3 UNUSUAL camera shot shows Henry Ford (right) and Edsel Ford with their newest product, the Ford V-8 for 1937. The picture was taken at Dearborn during the newspapermen's preview of the new car, which excited unusual Interest because of Its completely new appearance and the advent of the 60 horsepower V-8 engine, giving a choice of engine sizes to American n'?r!rts. Crop Insurance Crop insurance was advocated in the recent campaign by both candi dates for the Presidency, and seems destined to become the next interest ing development in farm legislation. In The Progessive Farmer we find this explanation of the most favored plan as it would apply to cotton: "The plan most favorably regarded by Secretary Wallace calls for the payment of both premiums and loss USED CARS j j i: v -fc L-- j : Before 4iccepting a USED OAR we figure on what YOU want. Our, care are mechanically perfect, clean, powerful and snappy. There "are thousands of happy miles in these cars. Terms. IMe Sevrolet Truck, 157-in; Wheel Base, ,t 6take,Body :.. $475 .1929 1 Model A Ford i ;... $69 19S5 Master Chevrolet' Coach $450 1936 Master Chevrolet Town Sedan :..$550 1936 Chevrolet Pick-up ..$400 1930 LaSalle Coupe $75 1935 Chevrolet Sedan $475 r Drive in and let us go over, your car. A few dollars spent today may save many dollars tomorrow. Let XJs Care For Your Car uTRY AND. YOU ft NEW CHEVROLET 'A car you will be proud to own Hollowell Chevrolet . ; Company " I Thbiie 115" j ' Hertford ' lif es in kind. That is, the cotton farm er would pay his premium in cotton and receive cotton to cover his losses. "As present the plan calls for the payment to the farmer up to 75 per cent of his average yield over a six year period. For example: "If a fanner made 120 bales of cotton during- a six-year period or an annual average of 20 bales, he would be insured against an annual loss of anything less than 75 percent of 20 bales, which is 15 bales. ..... f- - - - 9 For Service WILL BUY THE '41 , "Skeptics say that 60 percent of the average, production is the high i est protection that can be given with out -loss to the government. Others say that six years is too short a per iod upon which to base calculations. Secretary Wallace's answer to these objections is that even if the govern- I ment does lose money on crop insur ance, it will be cheaper than relief. "Another objection is that crop in surance would discourage sound farm practices, the farmer depending on crop insurance rather than good seed, fertilizer, etc., to make an average yield. However, inasmuch as the farmer would be insured up to only 75 nercent of his average vield. there ! would still be the incentive to go ahead and make the best possible yield. A farmer would hardly be satisfied with 15 bales when good farming is likely to bring him 20 or even 25 bales." CARD OF THANKS We take this means of expressing to our friends our grateful appreciation of the many acts of kindness at the time of the death of our mother, Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Trueblood. For each thoughtful act and each expression of sympathy we are most grateful. THE FAMILY TAYLOR THEATRE EDENTON, N. C. WE HAVE THE SHOWS PROGRAM FOR WEEK Thursday Only Regular Admission News Cartoon Friday Only Katharine Hepburn Herbert Marshal "A WonanRebels" News Comedy Saturday Harry Cary Hoot Gibson Tom Tyler "The Last Outlaw" "Fighting Marines" No. 7 Patsy Kelly Comedy Monday and Tuesday answw to th mil i lions wno t ai- wmn wntitad la SM ( f a . ( Marion in th arms m uiai uaiej wuiu ' ' Jj ' MRI0H DAVIES CLARK GABLE CJAE1I m MABEL ALLEN TeNKINS ROSCOE KARNS WAITER CATLETT DAVID CARLYLE ROIABT CAVARAUOR DtnctodbrUOYD BACOM-Mulc IrAct by Harrr Wanw & AlDubta fw fcM. rum -A CimwiMm titra Cartoon News Wednesday Barton McClane June Travis "Benial;iger,, Act ' Comedy Major Bowes ft ,v BANK NIGHT i if 1,000 Laughs 5 v4 Set to Music! k-V't And 12 great k'f; H starssct logio fJp-V you the time Ssei jofyour life! i Y NMIeftWM VassiesiTe fheaallWae ) Vetoes la. I Overcoat Offer! FLEECES in SOLID COLOR and PLAID . . . $17.50 '5 Vrh i i Raglan Belted and Semi-Belted Warm up to the idea of getting one of these warm overcoats now. They're excellent values, in a va riety of good looking styles. ALL REGULAR AND EXTRA SIZES J. C. BLANCHARD &CO. "Blanchard's Since 1832 ,. HERTFORD, N. C rt1 4 iK ( i' 4

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