PAGE TWO uucnoii ora Negro Nome Demonstration Mews By «« UNNIB 8. CHABLTON, Coanty Negro Bum* ItMNria Rial Home Demonstration Clubs nd Community Organizations re enjoying picnics this month, iugust has always been a good nonth for family and community fellowship. Most of these picnics are of the old fashioned kind—Where the family brings a big basket filled with such foods as fried chicken, salads, home baked pies and cakes. For those groups that will make sandwiches for the crowd, here are a few points which might help. Every sandwich starts with the " bread, but in this day and age we have dozens of varieties to choose from such as enriched which bread, cracked wheat, rye, fruit and nut breads, sev eral kinds of rolls and buns. All these are just a few of the choices. The bread for sand wiches should be at least one day old. The short cut to sandwich va riety is the distinctive “spread”. Start with an easy-spreading food—butter, cream cheese or mayonnaise. Brighten with sea sonings and blend in the unex pected bv way of spices, a zesty cheese, fruit juices, seafoods or condiments. Just a spread on the bread makes good eatine or pair it with a compatible f'lling •• ■VAA * AAAAA AAAAAAA^V P'lbl’V Hearina- For Municipal Building: Continued from Page 1. Section 1 ins at the foot of Br«'ad St-ee f wher° the police station is now located. This public hearing was called for Tuesday night, September 1, at 8 o’clock "in the Municipal Building, at which time it is hoped any objections will be registered. The idea of a new Municipal Building has been in the hopper for a number of years now and, it was about agreed by the Councilmen to remodel the build- 1 ng housing the Police Depart ment for use as a Municipal duilding. However, with some obiection being heard, the Coun cillmen are very anxious to feel the pulse of the general public. I so that the hearing was called | for September 1. The result of this hearing will, no doubt, have a, great deal of bearing on the ecision made by the Council en. In view of the present filled p condition of the trash pile, iton Forehand, who was ap ointed to make an investigA on, reported that he found an deal spot where the town ould dispose of the garbage by he land fill method. The site is n the base property back of ie house formerly occupied by Jr. and Mrs. C. Y. Parrish. He reported that it was cleared high land which provided adequate drainage and was easily accessi ble and just about two miles' from town. Letters have already gone out in an effort to secure this tract of land for use in dis posing of garbage. It was re ported that a bulldozer, neces sary for making trenches, could be purchased from government surbltis stocks for mavbe rs low as SIOO or S2OO. Just what wdl be done depends noon securing a lease for the plat of ground. It is generally known that the resent trash pile is filled to the neck and has encroached on the creek which serves as an outlet for much of the town’s water, so that something must be done in wav of disposing of the town's garbage. Herbert Small appeared at meeting to complain about inade quate drainage on East King Street. Various remedies were advanced by Mr. Small and af ter an investigation was made by several members of Town Council, it was decided to con »r - , \ -jv/ TT r- CONTROL OF • Roach** • Mb* > Nm • Rah, amt j \ I • Termites " I for a change. Some economical sandwich fill ings are made from poultry, eggs, cheeses, cold cuts, weiners, roasts, ham, canned fish pro ducts and vegetables such as let tuce, tomato slices,'green pepper rings and cucumbers. Some oth er sandwich foods are peanut butter, banana, fruit jams, dates and nuts. Hilda Lee Jordan, a member of the Center Hill Community 4-H Club, attended the seventeenth annual 4-H Conservation Camp ' held at A. and T. College at , Greensboro. August 3-7. The camp was conducted by the North Carolina Extension Ser vice and made possible bv the Federal Cartridge Corporation. At the camp a study was made of our resources and the proper ways to conserve our so : l, trees and animal life. On Tues day the day was devoted to Soil and Water Conservation: Wed nesday, Forestry Conservation; Thursday, Birds, Fur Bearing and Game Animals, and Frida v. Wildlife Feeding. Class work was followed bv tid'd trrng each day. Hilda will give a detailed report at Center Hill 4-H Club meeting August 20 at the Com munity Building at 8 P. M. fer with the town’s engineer as to the best way to remedy the situation. The M. G. Brown subdivision, where a pumping station to lift ~ewage is a problem, again claimed some attention. A com mittee reported having met with the Board of Public Works re garding the town’s facilities. It was pointed out that when the town constructs a sewage dispos al system it will be necessary to have a pumping station in the vicinity of the Edenton Marina,' and when this is done, it could handle the sewage from the Brown property. Ep Debnam, I president of the Brown Com pany, was present at the meet-[ ing and agreed that it would not be advisable to install a tem-' porary lift station at present if the town contemn! ates construct-! ing a larger outfit that would j probably serve the purpose bet-| ter. Mr. Debnam agreed to fur-i nish an overall plat of the 1 Brown property and confer with an engineer relative to the plan for development. A hearing was held relative to zoning plans for the area an nexed north of Edenton. The Zoning Commission at a meet ing recommended the following zoning: On the east side, continue as industry to the north side of the Deese dwelling, then R-7 to the south side of the E. J. Boyce j line, then business to the north- 1 em limits. On the west side, continue as industry to the south Haskett line, then R-7 to the south side if the Edenton Development Company property, then heavy mdustry to the northern limits. A number of interested prop-j ?rty owners attended the 1 meet-: ing, who stated they did not rave time to consider the rec ommendations. so that Mayor i lohn Mitchener agreed to have 1 Calvert lß| Jjj Bruce White, Jr., Completes Training At Lackland AFB 0' ’ - IV IS Airman Bruce N. White, Jr., son of Mrs. Edith Bufflap, has completed his initial course of Air Force basic military train ing at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas. He has been selected to attend the technical school for air policemen at Lackland! AFB. Airman White is a graduate of. Edenton Junior-Senior High School, where he was an out standing football player, and al so attended Chowan College. Basic airmen at Lackland are selected for specialized training at technical schools on the basis j of their interests and aptitudes. They are reassigned to the school after four weeks of basic, and are given additional military basic training along with the technical subjects. «AAA^\AAA>AAA/ the Zoning Commission meet with property owners in the near future to further consider the proposed plans. During the meeting the rec ommendations of the town’s en gineer were presented relative j to resurfacing and repairing streets. It was agreed to use approximately $26,000 of the Powell Bill money to do as much of this work as can be done for that amount. This will leave approximately $13.- 000 in reserve for any emergen cy. The first work to be done will be resurfacing Oakum Street. B ds on insurance for the town were opened. However, R. Ei* jton Forehand, one of the Coun jcilmen and an insurance agent, j asked that his bid be withdrawn. The low bidders were: Work men’s con-mensation and employ er’s liability, Nationwide Insur-j ance Company, $2,579.51; com- j prebensive automobile liability,! Twddy Insurance & Real Estate Company, $694.12; comprehensive! general liability. Twiddv Insur ance & Real Estate Company,! $844. Chief of Police George I. Dail j i reported that he has had a num-1 | ber of complaints about speed ing on Oakum Street between; Church Street and U. S. 17. Af ter discussing the situation the Councilmen agreed to adopt an ordinance calling for a 25 miles' per hour speed limit instead of 35 miles at present. The Court House in Eastvillr. ‘ Va., on U. S. 17, the Ocean Hi '.vay, holds the oldest continu ous coprt records in the United Slates. TXT CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. AUGUST 11 IMA > $ \ v mOi M. . mmv ■ •<> % ■ IT'S^TOOIATE— :.r. ' Mrs. Elmer Sawyer, of London, ; Mrs. Sawyer said she kept puffin, off p-Uo Ml *or Ky., tearfully watch the sheet-draped body of their only child | child, Diane, 2, until she was stricken with the disease. Diane being placed in an ambulance to be taken to a funeral parlor. “ died two months later of infantile paralysis. jj Health For Ail) \nuxr i ■—« Jack Spratt, Mrs. Spratt and Fat We’re willing to bet that Jack Sprat, who ate no fat, outlived ; his wife, who, if you remember, : ate no lean. While they both licked the plate clean, Jack no doubt kept his boyish figure,l staved off arteriosclerosis, and avoided a heart attack/ Mother I Goose doesn’t say, but. Mrs.| Spratt was probably overweight and may very well have had a fatal heart seizure when she was comparatively young. Jack wasn’t so very smart in avoiding fats compdetely—but he was smarter than the missus. Actually, the whole story about fats in the diet isn’t known yet. 1 But the evidence seems to point to time for a change in the American diet. | The change should be one of| balance, shifting from hard fats 1 of animal origin to cooking oils of vegetable origin, from whole milk to skimmed milk (at least' for grownups), from fatty chees es to cottage cheese, from rich gravies and ice cream to plain-: er, simpler food. High-fat diets, doctors say, in creases the danger of blood clots, I the commonest cause of heart at j tacks. We know about this part ly from observing diabetics. In' the days before the use of in jSUlin, when overeating was fre- ( t quent among diabetics, hardening of the arteries was common even among diabetic children. [ The body manufactures terol—which has been linked to ■ hardened arteries and heart di- 1 | sease—from fats of animal ori- j gin, called saturated fats. Youj | can’t and shouldn’t avoid animal fats completely, but if you’re a housewife, try cooking oils of I vegetable origin,-containing un-J saturated fats, like corn, cotton-J se«d, peanut and olive oils. Americans used to get an es- j timated 30 per cent of heir dai-! ly calories in fats: now they getj 40 per cent from fats. A reduc- j tion to 25 per cent —half animal fat and half vegetable oi's— would be smart. You don’t have to give up milk and meat and eggs altogether. But you and I your family will be healthier if you cut down on the fats —and you’ll stay lean, too,' Chowan Group At j Hertford SOD Meet JI Quarterly meeting of the Board of Supervisors of the Al ’ | bemarle SCD met in Hertford, | j Wednesday, August 12, at 10 'J A. M. This meeting was the j annual field day meeting with .j a tour of Perquimans County ithat afternoon. Perquimans ’County district supervisors were in charge of the tour. Two 4-H teams from Chowan. County performed for the dis trict supervisors. Johnny Win . borne and Scott Ober gave a 1 demonstration on farm pond management. Leon Evans and 1 ( Joe Nixon demonstrated the proper way to set trees. Both of these teams were in the re cent 4-H State contest at Ra- I leigh. | Attending from Chowan Coun -Itv besides the 4-H teams were Chairman L. C. Bunch, Joe Webb, Jr., and H. F. Byrutn. district supervisors; James H. Griffin and Georee Conner. SCS; Georee Lewis, Peoples ißank and Trust Co., and Harry [Venters. Assistant County Agent. MARINE DISCHARGED Marine Sergeant Edward P. Forman has returned to his : home at Fox, Lake, Hit, after I four years of active duty with! i the Corps. He joined the Mar-J rines in July, 1955, after gradu ating from Grant Community I High School. During his service I in the Marine Corps he has been stationed in Okinawa, China, I Japan, Thailand, Guam and Ti i bet. He was discharged from I Camp Jejeune, N. C. Sgt. Forman’s wife is the for , mer Miss Donna Fitchell, daugh- I ter of Mrs. Ruby Mitchell .of | Edenton, who awaited his return | with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Carley, at Fox Lake, 111. Boomerang! “Did you give your wife that lecture en economy you talked about?” “Yes.” “Any results?” “I’ve got to give up smoking.” SURPRISE PARTY A surprise birthday party was given in honor of Mrs. R. L. Williams, Sr., on her 64th birth day at her home Sunday. A delicious buffet luncheon was served the guests who attended which included four generations, together with a few other friends. Those who attended the party were Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Tynch, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Williams, Jr., and children, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Toppin and two daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perry, all of Edenton; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Porter and children of Norfolk; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wright and son of Portsmouth, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Has sell and two sons of Montgom ery, Ala.; Mrs. Vience Sherman and son of Georgia; Mrs. Will FOR RENT ONE NICE APARTMENT ... Three bedrooms. Apartment located at Pine Grove Terrace. $40.00 month. - CONTACT —- A. E. Deßlois ROUTE 2 BOX 48-D Phone Edenton 2077 Don't let spinning tractor wheels rob |,lass-1 jou of farm profits! SIZE 8-24 regular •' jfC>, -*■ v ■W ng trade in price *44*6 * » ' J§P By any standard, the new deep dimen 'JSßm lion 3-T Sure-Grip is the best tractor Hi It.' yWI • 7*& , Sh3Bp tire in its price range. Don’t let worn T tractor tires spin away your farm profits. US 1' , W nowi •?%« • on 75% worn tire higs you can lose ONE hour in evory THREE - - - m e on 50% worn Hr# luge you lose ONE hour In every FIVE -- «* —tHfCK Tent nfr nHP *i >lf * r ~ TWI^”^ OWT I 4 ~ ply < ~ plr