the Chowan Herald SECTION B Herald Kitchen: Packing School By Mildred Huskins Inflation has hit the school lunchroom and, according to reports from school ad ministrators, lunches will cost more during this year. Some managers have predicted that the cost will rise even more by the middle of the term depen ding on the financial assistance which could be available. More and more homemakers will be J fl C ,44 p^, j. ■ ■IT & -Ml.. . i- % Jwp #*« ;w mh ISfßsßSfl -'' pi *1 »ii tP BkljL* %*, 4 al',;: a* '■"" ■ - % % IP: ®**.- '* ■*> tafe.. ty’VKmP r CRUNCHY DESSERT Finish off a nutritious and in teresting bag lunch with these Heavenly Crunch Cookies. It is time to fill the cookie jar not only for lunches but for munching at any time. TARKINGTON’S I ■ Our New Fall Fashions Are Here I Fashions For Xadies And Children DOWNTOWN, EDENTON NOTICE TO ALL VOTERS OF THE TOWN OF EDENTON MUNICIPAL ELECTION TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1981 FILING PERIOD FOR MUNICIPAL OFFICES FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 11 AT 12:00 NOON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 AT 12:00 NOON REGISTRATION BOOKS CLOSE MONDAY OCTOBER 5 AT 5:00 P.M. ABENTEE VOTING WILL CLOSE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29 AT 5:00 P.M. POLLING PLACES EAST EDWTON CHOWAN COUNTY OFFICE BUILDING Mrs. Andrew Whitson Registrar Mrs. W. E. Mills Judge Mrs. Rudolph Dale -Judge Mrs. Darnell White Assistant Mrs. Phyllis Swain -Assistant Mrs. Tilmon Keel Assistant WEST EDWTON EDENTON MUNICIPAL BUDDING Mrs. Carroll W. Jones —Registrar Mrs. Rosa Rountree————-—— Mrs. David 0. Wright —— ——Judge Mrs. Eaily Brooks Assistant Mrs. S. F. Hicks- ————————Assistant Mrs. Walter Nonenan —Assistant Mrs. Paul Oborn Assistant The voters of the Town will be voting for a Mayor, Treasurer, one Councilaan at-large and Councilaen for the third and fourth wards. Persons nay register at the Election Office on Monday, Wednesday, or Friday fron 9:00 A.M. until 1:00 P.M., or at the Tax Office on Tuesday and Thursday fron 9:00 A.M. until 1:00 P.M. They say also register at the hose of the Registrars or Judges or with any aeaber of the Board of Elections by appointaent ONLY. Any person who has been a resident of Chowan County for 30 days is eligible to register and vote. He sust be 18 years of age. Any person who has aoved froa one precinct to another aust transfer to the precinct in which he now lives. Deadline for transfer is Monday, October 3th at 3:00 PJ(. POLLING PLACES WILL HE OPBI FROM 6:30 A.M. UNTIL 7:30 P.M. CURBSIDE VOTING WILL BE ALLOWED FROM 7:00 AM. UNTIL 6:00 tM. ONLY. VOTING MACHINES WILL BE USED CANVAS DAY NOVEMBER 3. 198 l (Julijt A Chairaan, Chowan County Board of Blaetiona 1 v* Edenton, North Carolina, Thursday, September 10, 1961 packing the lunch bag and planning for school lunches can be a real problem. The “if it's Tuesday, this must be bologna’’ syndrome attacks many a brown bagger from time to time. Staring blankly into the lunch bag, loss of appetite, bored sighs of “not this again’’ are symptomatic of such attacks. Boredom in the lunch room takes its toll on good nutrition, too. As summer fades into fall, millions of students from kindergarten through college will be indulging in this noon-time ritual. Yet, the lunch bag is not “for kids only”. Many employees in all working realms are brown bagging it. Lunches should be packed with tantalizing textures, colors, and tastes for eye appeal and with those foods that satisfy important nutritional needs. You can get out of the lunch-time rut if you think “fresh” when packing lunches. Fresh fruits and vegetables are as versatile as your imagination. Fresh apples, oranges, bananas, pears, grapes, carrots, celery and radishes are favorites for out-of-hand eating. Tuck in cucumber spears, green and red pepper sticks or rings, cauliflowerets, broccoli buds, cherry tomatoes, turnip sticks or squash rings. Carry assorted vegetables in a tightly sealed plastic bag and you might add a small container of dressing or a favorite dip. Create endless salad combinations with fresh fruits and vegetables and for a gourmet touch, roll lettuce leaves around a meat, egg, fish or cheese filling. Use fresh fruits and vegetables as natural stuffers. For instances, core an apple and stuff with peanut butter or cottage cheese mixed with nuts, grapes or other sliced fresh Completes Training Navy Seaman Rusty J. Barath, son of Micklos and Margo Barath, West Queen Street, Edenton, has completed recruit training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, 111. During the eight-week training cycle, trainees studied general military subjects designed to prepare them for further academic and on-the-job training in one of the Navy’s 85 basic occupational fields. Lunches fruit. Add tuna or a seafood salad into a green pepper cavity. Make a banana boat slicing the banana length wise and filling it with peanut butter. Don’t forget fresh fruits and vegetables add pizazz to sandwiches, too. The lunch bag would be incomplete wihtout a cookie or a piece of cake to top off the “fresh” lunch. Heavenly Crunch Cookies are unearthly good! Can you think of a richer, tastier combination of ingredients in a cookie than chocolate chips, coconut, almonds and 100 per cent natural cereal? What we’ve been trying to say to Mom is that it is time to fill the cookie jar for the lunch bag and for munching just any ole time. Heavenly Cunrch Cookies 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar Vfe cup butter or margarine 2 cups 100 per cent natural cereal lVfe cups all purpose flour 1 pkg. (6 oz.) semi-sweet chocolate pieces Vz cup flaked or shredded coconut 1 egg 3 tablespoons milk V 2 teaspoon soda Vfe teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon almond ex tract Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease cookie sheet. In large bowl, beat together sugar and butter until light and fluffy. Add remaining ingredients; mix well. Drop Federal Deregulation. The Cost Is Coming Home. Question: How does federal and competition, Carolina Tele deregulation and competition phone can no longer count on affect the cost of home phone this money to help pay for home service? phone service. And that’s going Answer: Carolina Telephone, wauh your balin' station fa CamUm Telephones to affect your phone bill, like all investor-owned tele- Feder “ l Yet, through it all, Carolina phone companies, has always Telephone is working hard to used long distance and equip- keep your bills as low as poss ment revenues to help pay the ible. Because we know cost of home service. So your the cost of phone service has actually been of- service hits very sered below cost. But be- close to home. AttßKts \ ■ M^Br \ . r - i 11111 ' ‘iftforyau” ~ a 555 BPE.? wopnons l i**TOTas*o«s»sT»« BBS. SECTION B by rounded teaspoonfuls onto prepared cookie sheet. Bake for 9 to 11 minutes or until light golden brown. Cool one minute on cookie sheet; remove to wire cooling rack. Makes three dozen cookies. Unless you’ve already had the pleasure of tasting the flavor combination of prunes with brown sugar and chocolate you have a delightful surprise when you bite into these Chocolate Frosted Prune Bars. Chocolate Frosted Prune Bars 1 cup pitted sun sweetened prunes 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour Vi teaspoon baking powder V* teaspoon salt one-third cup soft butter or margarine 1 cup firmly packed light brown sugar 1 large egg 1 teaspoon vanilla Vi cup chopped nuts Chocolate Browned Butter Frosting Snip prunes into small pieces. Resist flour with baking powder and salt. Combine butter, sugar, egg and vanilla, and cream until light and smooth. Stir in flour mixture, then prunes and nuts. Spread in greased 7xllxl Vi inches. Bake at 350 degrees about 30 minutes, until firm on top to touch and lightly browned at edges. Cool in pan. Spread Chocolate Browned Butter Frosting, and allow frosting Continued On Page 2-B Williams Is Award Recipient PRINCETON, N.J.-The famed American Boy Choir Schoolof the Lamper tEstates here has awarded a $4,300 scholarship to Michael Kerry Williams, 11, son of photographer Jack Williams and piano and voice teacher, Lynda Williams, of The Eyrie, Route 4, Elizabeth City, Headmaster Stephen Howard announced this week. A professional singer and actor, Michael is considered one of the leading boy sopranos in the nation ac cording to his manager, John Shallenberger of Pittsburgh and New York. Michael was invited to audition with other prominent choirs, such as St. Thomas Episcopal Choir in New York City, but “his sterling qualities in voice, high academic promise and self-discipline” led the versatile maestro Donald Hanson, of Toronto, to insist on Michael’s grant with the American Boy Choir per formers. Theirs is the only non-sectarian boy choir in the Western hemisphere. Michael was the school’s guest last spring and has since signed a contract to participate in their widely acclaimed recordings with national orchestras and TV specials. Their most recent presentation was ‘‘The Messiah” with operatic tenor Charles Bressler, of Manhattan School of Music, who recommended Michael for the school. The choir has performed with conductor Leonard Bernstein and Eugene Ormandy’s Philadelphia Orchestra, and their renditions have en tertained presidents and royalty. Michael will feel his stride when the choir tours Japan this season since he has electrified audiences at age nine in historic cathedrals of the Low Countries, Cologne and Notre Dame. Home town supporters and the W *lji| I J 8 ■ ■ 1 GIVEN SCHOLARSHIP Displaying his charms as a singer and actor, boy soprano Michael Kerry Williams, 11, of Elizabeth City, performed earlier this year for the Little Miss Phillipines Pageant, Virginia Beach. He has just earned a $4,300 scholarship to the internationally-acclaimed American Boy Choir School, Princeton, N.J. Pasquotank Arts Council contributed greatly to his travels which resulted in programs with the famed Continued On Page 2-B