Page Two
Chl dren’s Day At
State Far Oct 24th
Free Tickets to Be Dis
tributed By School
Principals
School children of North Carolina
will again this year be guests of the
N. C. State Fair on Tuesday and Fri
day of Fair Week, October 20-24, it
is announced by Dr. J. S. Dorton, fair
manager. Free tickets, good without
payment of any admission tax, will be
distributed by their school principals.
Dr. Dorton said that Tuesday, Oc
tober 20, the opening day of the Fair,
has been formally designated as
“Wake County School Day” on the
fair program, and Friday, October 23,
will be “Young North Carolinians
Day.”
“We would prefer,” the fair mana
ger said, “for Wake County students
to use their tickets on Tuesday and
for children from other schools to
come on Friday to divide the crowds.
But, if schools outside Wake County
cannot obtain buses or other forms of
transportation on Friday we will hon
or their tickets on Tuesday.” Dr.
Dorton added that school tickets will
not be good on days other than Tues
day and Friday.
The Fair Office has sent out let
ters to each county and city superin
tendent asking them how many stu
dents from their systems plan to at
tend the Fair. There are nearly one
million school children in the State,
including private schools which are
also invited, and Dr. Dorton expects
nearly 200,000 of them to attend the
Fair.
“We are also happy to announce,”
the Fair manager said, “that the De
partment of Public Instruction school
exhibits in the main educational build
ing will be better than ever this year
and they occupy the most prominent
location in the building. Likewise, a
special class for school art exhibits
has been established and other divis
ions of the Fair’s premium list have
been revised to ‘put more accent on
youth’.”
Dr. Dorton urged school superin
tendents to return their requests for
the free tickets as early as possible
so that distribution may be affected
in plenty of time for the children and
their trip-leaders to plan for trans
portation.
Whammy Now Checks
Speeding On Highways
Speeds on North Carolina highways
are being checked by radar. Safe
speeds are okey by the electric timer
but the Highway Patrol, which is an
nouncing the new enforcement device
in signs posted along highways, is
most anxious that no visitor to the
State get his picture on a Highway
Patrol radar showing a traffic law
violation. The mounting accident rate
on the State’s 70,000-mile highway
system brought the more rigid traf
fic law enforcement for the protec
tion of all users.
Legal maximum speed is 55 miles
an hour for cars except in specially
designated areas where it is set low
er because of congestion or special
factors. Drivers are asked to be es-1
pecially cautious in passing schools
and school buses, of which North Car
olina operates more than any other I
, ■ ■■■■■■■ ■■ ■ I ■ ■ ■ f !■■■ « r 1—
I G W ||
SEVEJV
) STAR. |
| 90 Proof! \
J l
| *3,65 Gsw :
j SEVEN STAR fc
< 4/5 Quart shjStL, [♦
i $2.30 Pt. l
BLENDED WHISKEY, 62K* NEUTRAL SPIRITS DISTILLED FROM bRAIR
GOODERHAM £ WORTS LIMITED. PEORIA. ILLINOIS
| EXTRA SPECIAL BUTTER CAKE~|
This tempting, feather-light,
butter cake makes a party! It’s
an enchanting dessert for any
meal. Its delicate flavor and tex
ture are a result of the choice in
gredients used. Golden butter
carefully blended with sugar, rich
milk, fresh eggs, cake flour and
other ingredients give the cake a
velvety texture.
For best results in cake mak
ing, have butter at room temper
ature, cream- until very light.
Blend with sugar, adding a table
spoon at a time. Add the other
ingredients according to the rec
ipe given.
Layers are put together with
an orange custard filling made
from the yolks of the eggs.
Spread the top and sides of the
cake with fluffy whipped cream
frosting. Fresh orange sections
make the daisy petals on top—
with chocolate shot for the center.
BUTTER CAKE: 2% cups cake
flour; 2% teaspoons baking pow
jS der; % teaspoon salt; % cup
H butter; 114 cups sugar; % cup 1
H milk; 1 teaspoon of vanilla; 4 egg j
| whites. '
state. State law prohibits passing a
school bus that has stopped to receive
or discharge passengers.
LARGEST TEN COMMANDMENTS
FOUND IN N. C. MOUNTAINS
The largest Ten Commandments are
to be found on a mountainside near
Murphy. At Fields of the Wood, a
religious assembly ground, the Church
of Prophecy Marker Association has
spelled out the Commandments in
white stones on the mountain. Pas
sengers on planes flying over this re
sort area can read the inscription.
As many as 3,000 sightseers visit
the assembly ground on Sundays
' /V TO
MAR HER BEAUTY
Why would a beautiful woman want
her face made ugly? A famous plas
tic surgeon reveals the fantastic story
of a mysterious Italian countess whose
beauty stood between her and the man
she loved. Don’t miss this unusual
feature in October 18th issue of
THE AMERICAN WEEKLY
Magazine In Colorgravure With The
BALTIMORE
SUNDAY AMERICAN
1
Order From Your
■ I Local Newsdealer
THE CHOWAN HERALD. EDENTON, H. C-, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1958.
For Frosting
1 cup whipping cream; 2 table
spoons sugar; Chocolate deco
rettes; 2 oranges, peeled and sec
tioned.
Sift flour, measure; sift 3 times
with baking powder and salt.
Cream butter until soft and
smooth, and gradually blend in
sugar. Add sifted dry ingredients
alternately with milk in several
portions, beginning and ending
with flour; beat well after each
addition. Stir in vanilla and fold
in egg whites which have been
beaten stiff. Pour into three, 8-
inch cake pans, buttered and lined
with wax paper in the bottom.
Bake in moderate oven, 375 de
grees F., for 25 minutes.
Remove to cake racks, let stand
for 10 minutes, turn out, and cool
before filling and frosting. Wher
cooled, spread orange custard fill
ing (made with the 4 egg yolki
left from cake) between layers
and cover top and sides with
cream which has been whipped
until stiff and sweetened with the
2 tablespoons sugar. Sprinkle
1 chocolate shot in center of cake
j and arrange orange sections
' around them petal fashion.
a Throngs attend Easter and autumn as
semblies at Fields of the Wood. It is
near Lake Hiwassee on N. C. High
way 294 near the Tennessee border.
TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED
Jfc SlEGtitt USES H»1 THAT’S ]
nfoVER YOUR FLOORS! I
|\Lm|w[ I I
jj Quinn Furniture Co. jj
IJT-WT IMBj
“He’s too old to get TB.” When
you hear anyone make that statement
speak right up and say, “It isn’t
true.”
There is no age limit on tubercu
losis. The germ can and does attack
babies, children, young adults, the
middle aged, and the aged.
It is true that Tr> causes more
deaths than any other disease in the
age group from 15 to 25. . Fifty years
ago, tuberculosis was considered a di
sease primarily of young people. The
reason for this may have been partly
because in Jphe old days a TB patient
didn’t have a chance to grow old.
1 !h t
THE WILKEN CO.. IAWRENCEBURG, IND. • BLENDED WHISKEY . 85 PROOF • 7254 X GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
Death within a few months or years
was result. ,
It may also be true that for some
reason there is greater susceptibility
to tuberculosis infection in adoles
cence, just as there seems to be great
er resistance to the disease in chil
dren from five to 16. When TB strikes
children under five, it may cause the
dreaded tuberculosis meningitis.
In recent years tuberculosis has be
come more and more a problem of
middle-aged and old men. It may be
that modem life places especially
heavy strains on these men or that
they are careless of their general
health.
However, a heavy bombardment
with TB germs combined with a poor
state of health can cause tuberculosis
to develop at any age.
Money is not as important as a lot
of young people think it is.
Flowers
Choice of Freshly Cut Bouquet.
Carefully Ensembled Corsages or
Deco-Right Potted Plants
PHONE 342
Lula. White’s
Flower Shop
203 WEST CHURCH STREET