Sbtie College Hints To Farm Homemakers By RUTH CURRANT <N- c. State College) Make the most of every crumb aud crust. Dress up your stale bread by using it in escalloped dish ee, in puddings or as French toast. For example, serve French toast just as you might serve waffles and top with a syrup or fruit sauce. Or, serve French toast for a main dish with creamed meat or vege tables. Remember, too. that dry bread cubes can be used in escal loped dishes and dressings, they will require a little added moisture. Such cubes also brown nicely for croutons. And, crumbled dry bread may be used instead ol" cracker crumbs. Make more one-crust and fewer two-rust pies; or use lattice pastry strips for the top crust A pleasing variation of the one crust pie is a cobbler, or a deep-dish pie. To make it, partly fill a baking dish with lightly sweetened fruit. Cover with dough and bake in a hot oven until the crust is brown. Or as another idea, bake pastry separately in little squares or dia monds and serve as a topping on sweetened fruits of various kinds. Add the pastries just before serving time, so they will be crisp. If you eat a peeled orange or di vide it into sections, you get more vitamin C than if you juiced it. Dust hangs downward, so when you brush walls, brush upward. That prevents smearing and streaking. An ordinary two-inch paint brush is just the tickct for whisking dust lrom a bric-a-brac, booktops. base board crevices, wood carvings and window sills. Save all metal jar tops this win ter, the War Food Administration advises housewives. Wartime sac rifices make every- jar and lid valu able either for canning or keeping food. Many one-piece screw tops on jars of coffee, pickles, peanut but ter and mayonnaise should be saved for next year's canning. Other lids and jars, not suitable for canning, can Be useful for jelly or marma lade, refrigerator dishes or dry foods. For future convenience save each jar with its lid on. One wooden landing barge re quires about 200,000 board feet of lumber. We're building plenty of these craft. ************* Can you Drive a Car? W/HEN YOU were a kid. did always peeler lo "go aiong" on every ride? And now. do you get a kick out of han dling the wheel like a man? Women with mechanical abil ity are needed in the WAC at once. Other skills are needed too. And untrained women can learn skills thai will be useful . all their lives. 239 types of Army jobs need Wacs to fill them. Get full details at the near est U. S. Army Recruiting Sla 6iion (your local post office will give you the address). Or write: The Adjutant General. Room 4415. Muntions Building. Wash- . inglon, D. C. In Hawaii In Iran Double-Header Ball Game Friday Night On Friday night of this week, the people of Boone will be treated to a double-header basketball game in the college gymnasium. The first game will be played between Ap palachian High School Blue Devils and the strong five from North Wilkesboro. The Boone boys are yet to be defeated on their home court and they hope to continue by whipping the North Wilkesboro fiye. The Boone boys are fresh from their victory over the Statesville High five. North Wilkesboro has one of the best teams they have had in several years. Heidi Horton, coach-player for North Wilkesboro high is one of the outstanding play ers in North Carolina. He scored 18 points in the first contest against the Boone boys, which the local team won by a small margin. The second game will be between the Catawba Indians and the Appa lachian College five. Although un victorious for the year, the college boys arc improving steadily under the supervision of Coach Quincy. and they intend to surprise the In dians from Salisbury when they ar rive in Boone. The Catawba boys are rated as the best in the North | State conference and at .the pres I ent time, are leading the conference. D. Hollifield. ion E. H. Hollifield. is now stationed Church Directory FIRST BAPTIST REV. J. C. CANTFE. Pastor Regular services each Sunday as fol lows: 10 a. m. ? Sunday School. 11 a. m.? Worship and sermon. p. ro. ? Training Union. 7:30 p. m. ? Worship and sermon. 6:30 p. m.? Ch6ir rehearsal. ? :30 p m. ? Bible study. ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL _ . w. c. LEACH. Priest. Services at 10:00 a. m every Sunday un 5f?.. announced. Everyone cordially invited. Holy Communion cele month* second Sunday ot every BOONE METHODIST DR. E. K. McLARTY, Minister. 10 a. m. ? Church school. Dr. D. J. Whitener, general superintendent. 11 a. m ? Morning worship service. i 7 p. m. ? Young People's Fellowship ] cervice. GRACE LUTHERAN REV. EDWIN F. TROUTMAN. Pastor 10 a. m. ? Sunday School. 11 a. m. ? Morning worship. 7:15 p. m.? Luther League. JAMES L VANCE"" MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN REV. LOUIS YELANJIAN, Pastor ? 10 a. m. ? Sunday School, Guy Hunt, J superintendent. 11 a. m. ? Morning worship ? 6:45 p. m. ? Evening service. Wednesday 8 p. m. ? Prayer meeting. ADVENT CHRISTIAN "THE ROCK CHURCH" 10 a. m. ? Sunday School. . 11 a. m.- -Morning worship and sermon. L 7:30 p. m.? Evening services for the* children and adults. RUMPLE MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN Blowing Rock REV. WALTER K. KEYS. Pastor i 10:00 a. m. ? Sunday School, L. D. Tes-| ter. superintendent. 11:00 a. m. ? Morning worship. i 7:00 p. m. ?Young People's League. Esta I Mae Pits, president. I 7 :30 p. m. ? I>cssons in Church History, | Mr. Keys, j Cottage prayer meetings. Wednesday j evenings. 7:30 o'clock. COVE CREEK BAPTIST REV*. JAMES C. SHERWOOD. Pastor i Sunday School 10:30 a. m.; morning} worship 11:30 a. m.; Training Union 7j p. m.; evening worship at 8 p. m. HOLY CROSS (Valle Cruci?) REV W. C. LEACH Priest R a. m. ? Holy Communion. 10:30 a. m.? Sunday School. 11:30 a. m. ? Morning service and ser mon. i Holy Communion every Wednesday or) Holy Day. 7:30 a. m. I ST. MARY'S-OF -THE-HILLS , STRINGFELLLOW MEMORIAL CHURCH | EPISCOPAL Blowing Rock ? Evening prayer and sermon in the Com- i munity Club library the first Sunday o? j each month at 7:30 p. m. Rev. W. C. Leach in charge. Everyone is cordially | i invited. OAK GROVE BAPTIST REV. G. A. HAMBY. Pastor Preaching first Sunday and Sunday night; 3rd Sunday and Sunday night, 11 and 7:30; prayer meeting every Thurs day night at 7; BTU Sunday evening at 6:30; Sunday School 10 a. m. WILLOWDALE BAPTIST REV. G. A. HAMBY, Pastor , Second Sunday night and 4th Sunday at it a. m.; Sunday School each Sunday i at 10 a. m.; prayer meeting each Wed- 1 lesday at 7 p. m. LUNCHES Four million school children are now benefiting from the Federal program of supplying food for luncheons and as a result the chil dren are doing better scholastic work. The high school game will start at 7:30 and will be followed by the college game at 8:30. The admis sion for these two games will be 50 and 25 cents. Hillside Dairy Grade A Raw Milk | Permit No. 6. Telephone 44 BARNARD DOUGHERTY. Owner R. W. NORRIS. Manager. Your patronage will be appreciated. TOPDRESS SMALL ? GRAINS EARLY Small grains in most sections of North Carolina should be topdressed between Feb. 1 ajid March 15 for best yields, reports W. H. Rankin, agronomist of the agricultural ex periment station at State College. "Test have repeatedly shown that late applications of top-dressing aft er April 1 results in lower yields than if the same applications had ! been earlier." says Rankin. "Last year early top-dressings with 16 pounds of nitrogen per acre gave an extra eight bushels of wheat, for example, while late top-dressings gave only three bushels.'' There should be ample nitrogen ; materials for '.op-dressing small j grains this year, according to the j agronomist. Nitrate of soda, cat nitro, and ammonium nitrate will be available in most areas and one may be substituted for another. To give 16 pounds of nitrogen, 100 pounds of nitrate of soda, 80 pounds of cal nitro. or 50 pounds of ammonium ni trate can be used. As to amounts of nitrogen per acre, Rankin recommends 16 to 32 pounds. He also recommends extra potash along with nitrogen where heavy crops of legume hay have been removed. Be certain that each acre, each tent with available labor and mater head of livestock, and each flock pro- ials, suggests Director I. O. Schaub duces to maximum capacity cons is- of the State College. Contact Us for All Kinds of . . . GRASS SEED We also carry a full line of the famous WEAVER FERTILIZER suitable for all crops grown in Watauga County. Watauga Farmers' Cooperative Depot Street Boone, N. C. !!????? ?a? BABY CHICKS We have installed a modern incubator and will accept orders for Chicks from blood-iesied New Hampshire Reds and Red Rock crosses. Prices for orders booked until further notice will be WV2C each in lots of 100, or more and 11c each in lots of less than than 100. We will also do custom hatching from blood tested flocks. Boone Oil Company B. B. CULLER, Manager East Boone, Near Blotwing Rock Road or being friendly with a Chinese cadet "Coke" S Coca-Cola It'* narutal for popular names fo acquire friendly abbrevia tions. That's why you heat Coca-Cola called 'Cole", NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS ?BMW? ? M? BMMBWBB? ?BW? ? I. B. WILSON County Tax Supervisor All taxpayers in Watauga County, who have not listed their property for taxation, due to being absent when the list taker called, or for other reasons, are asked to come to the courthouse and list their property by March 1, in order to avoid the penalties prescribed by law for failure to list. The tax office will be open every day during, the remainder of the month for the purpose of assisting taxpayers in making out their lists. Tax listing in the county is almost completed now, and most of the books turned in. Those whom the list takers could not contact on their rounds must come in and list during the extension of time allowed by the Commissioners. Have a "Coke"=;A thousand miles is not too far to come Chinese flyers here in America for training have found thai so simple a phrase as Haven "C?i?"speafcs friendship in any tongue. East, west, north, south, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that rr/nrsba, ? has become the happy bond between people of good will. soma UNCfR AUTHORITY Of THE COCACOIA COMPANY ?Y COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., Hickory. N. C.

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