THE WOMAN’S PAGE oultry Feed iGood Fence Should DURHAM SOCIALS:lI. S. Employment Servic Urged T Take LONGEST Tho; " ’vvho I* ormulas ImportantiLast For Lifetime new publication which lists proved feed formulas for poul- y' has be^n pri^.JTipd by the tate College Kxtension Sorvice, d F. H. Jeter, agricultural «li- |)r at State College, announces Ijiat it is now ready for free The Pastor’s Aid ('luh of Ir'aint JoHeph AMK Chtirch honored Mrn. Mary E. Evans on ChrrMnias day Steps To Abolish Discrimination The Seventy-Six Cnngres:, jhe the first in the histr>ry f)f icoiuitrv t« *l)e in • -ion for iictpd that the ^.jU'airjilano and bomb's would maRo war hid^ know :hat PROFITABLE ■New Uork — The United . Stat- Good wire, properly strung bet ween strong, well braced post» given at the home of Mrs. Julia urged bp the National Association Vhite, secretary, of the as30cia-,(l«ys in a single year, tion, and jti'van Clague, director I*‘d,joum were with a surprise birthday partyEmployment Service has been I , Employment of quorums should make a farm fence last Ooldston on T’mstead St. The for the Advancement of Colored from 7 to 12 years, says II. M- assembled while a taxi was I’eople to issue a *tatement to it^ Ellis, Extension agricultural en- s**"* ^or Mrs. Evans. offices throughout the» country' gineer of 1^. C. State College. When She arrived the house was calling for . abandonment of the stril>ution to interested’ citizens There should he a good coating ofmembers greeted her practice of itiquirnng of prospec- galvaniziHg or zine on the wirc'^'''*^‘ cheerful chorus of Happy ,tive employers the racial identity to protect it against the elements, Birthday T6 You. |Of the workers desired, and to in- ^/North Carolina. “The bulletin fills a long felt Jjeed,” he said, “because poultry- lien, farmers and millers are con- tently requesting formulas for lixing poultry feeds from the foultry Extension Office.” The new publication is Exten- Ion Circular No. 245, “Feed ormulas for Poultry.” It is f»ilable free upon request, by he says. Oames and mtisie was played, struct these offices to send job Mrs. Evans received many beau-lapplicants out to prospective “Some copper in the wire will tiful gifts. The guest were invit-jjobs as they are available regard- add still more years of scrvice to'pd to the dining room, a very less of race, according to an an- the fence,” Ellis stated. ** The'pretty cake with sixteen green |ment made here by the associa- copper content should not run lefts than 2-10 of 1 percent, which s usually spoken of as ’20 p*)int’ copper. The quality of the wire ame and number, to the Agricul- is the main consideration in luild aral Editor, N. C- State College, jing fences, and it isn’t good !aleigh. ; Included among the formulas re mixtures of grains, and pncentrates for starting, growing, economy to buy cheap wire.” Ellis al«o says that for a good, long lasting fence the quality of . , . ' the posts and the workmanship in iying and breeding chicks. The fence must bs of the ^ ttouL-i i, ul . Wwer to the q»^tion: Whfflt,f,ggf enough,Ithe' week enfl in the the nutritive requirements o properly spaced, well planted, and jjc is an instructor in Ga. wood is candles brightened the table. The hostess served a delicious course with confectionaries. • , Those present were: Mesdamea Rosa Taylor, Rosa Royster, Marie Fuller, Lucy Briggs^ Allie Mit chell, Laura Strayhorn, Fannie Hall, Clyde Doom, Lizzie Al bright, Minnie Sjiencer and Mrs. Ty>nnie Tavlor. Service. SMART BUSINESS “Shine your shoes. Mister?” ‘No time, Sonny.” The Vrhit, I>- thoy wfre corrff^t. oi.nt.1 > .1. M. ~ ' .rir,-4, Ror'( KlTort^ to - il i4.').!X) at fc ’ *' blocked bv the abl^ "This is tho time of the year ^.f fr„n and the Con-,to think about the welfar. of f,,,. f-^ press which sat frmn* D.'omber ^ wi 'inJT :k.I, 1017, tq November 21, i;>18. I>eori nnn to r>e wi injr to do ^orathintr about them, i TREES PRESIDENT I XT * I The New lear pre.sent« an 0|>-' A coo[M*rati .e >rd^r ^.•m h n- ..n, 1, Cofi ^ rf . 1 inf'! Ml a rv»t pro- f:-.r Knimitt Fisher of Fayette-viHe, Wrtunity to sot a new record in itban burnlrtvl dolUr mr>re ortJi Prof. Robert MolTitt of Oreens- faickens and turkeys T is also braced. If durable lt>ntained in the circular, .not available, soft timber may be ijj^mary is given of the prot«inJ jj.eafced with creosote or otherwiseColleee •inerals, and vitamins needed ofmake the posts last as long aslp^t jjj farv N o’ljtry. the wire. ^ ’ tion. The Employment Service was urged to Beek out Negro skilled workers and place. their names on file precisely as such promo tional work is done for war ve terans. The national office of the Service, located in Washington was also asked to >onduct an in-! vestigation into the practices under its jurisdiction. Announcement of the Associa tion’s action in the matter of wiping out discriminatory prac tices against Negro job applicants was made by the NAACP follow- “Well, to start the day right Route 5, has been elected presi- individual development but noti,,f tret- has iu-fn pl*t‘»*d by I’ll do for nothing.” “All right, go -ahead.” “There how’-kIocs she boss ?” ^ “Fine.” “Well, for ten cents I’ll do both. ’ ’ ident of the Cumberland County. niany people will strain them 'Service Club for 1941v*reports'M. ■selves, look,’E. Hollowell, assistant far?n' ® a;rent.of the State College Exten-! t^ne of the strange things TOO RISKY “^jisten, I 'wouldn’t cash, a check for my own brother.” “Well, of course, you know your family better than I do.” sion Service. “Any company or individual is i liberty to prepare feed in ac- ^j)rdance with the formulas con- Lined in this bulletin. However, le North Carolina Agricultural' posts It is wire,” the specialist de- Miss Marie Moore, a student at visited her par- . C. during the'*”^ conference last week in 'Washington between Walter HE IS Cohen—Dot’s a fine new baby I^ve got,, at my house. , Levy^Is hef Cohen—No, Ikey. CALVES Ilfirold Ijancaster. fioldsboro. Route 4, and Gerald Edwards, La fJrange, Route 2, Wayne County 4-H Club members, have j)urchas- ed baby beef calves to feeil out •nul enter in the spring fat stock shows. about man is that you can eas' iiy persuade him to undertake almost anything that is not for his own good. i-II Club member^, of FMifPfombe I unnty. rermrt- F. H. .Jameson, a 4i-if.int farm 'irent. Employers urged to keep draftees on jobs until accepted. The average revenue received DEMOCRATS railroads for hauling a pass- The Democratic National Com- enger one mile was 1 3-4 cents in mittee is moving and enlarging 1940, the lowest on record. Mrs. Irabele Pettiford of New Jersey was the guest of Mrs. dared, “to build your fence. on Lepna Seate during the holidays, paper before you start cutting and buying wire, NbrtF Ktension Service do^s not-super-j^Carolina farmerif ^^nt'thousands he the rianufacture or mixing of dollars every,^ir maintaining I' any feed and, therefore, does!fences that are^not essential; ot, accept any responsibility for I fences that are of the wrong type 36 results secured, or for the,to ke^ animals in or outj and laims made by feed manufac- fences that are not worth main- arers.” I ining because of poor piaterial or poor workmanship.” Mr. and Mrs. Jack GeMry and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Gentry, iwere the house guest of Mr. and Ms. Ed Cooper of Durham. Mis.s Jewel Gentry spent the week-end in Roxboro visiting her brother and friends. Miss Mary Lee Gentry, Carrie Luvinia Cooper and Nannie Gen try spent a few days in Roxboro during the holidays. !‘ I*;''!* its Washington headquarters. The new location will be in the May flower Hotel. It is also announc ed that the annual Jackson Day Here’s an odd idea: This is the last paragraph that we write in 1940,, regardless of I and we can’t say that we are ATine On Hollywood dinner, on January 8th, will be a-year’s work. Marvin Cooper spent the holi-^^ abandoned because it comes too ■ • t® the Inaugural ceremony "'™i"R^rap on the 20th. The party plaans a days at home with his father Ed Cooper from the Boy Scout Camp. Victory Dinner” in February r Mrs. Sarah Peace agd son Johah left Saturday ^o spend a few days with relatives and friends in Oxford. HOW TO BE YOUK OWN DECORATOP By ' * director. Good Housekeeping Studia Why Not Furniture as a Christmas Gift? Fof months, perhaps, you have been longing for a special chair, t. lamp, OT a table. Now is the time to get the family to club together and write a special letter to Santa Claus, stating your heart’s desire. Foi instead of each member of the family giving you some trifle, they could combine and get something realljj worthwhile. All the shops have very special things tc oflfer and I would suggest that you also tell Santa Claus that you would like to go along when the gift is to be bought. Or, again perhaps you know that youi husband wants a good, sturdy chair to use at his desk and would be overjoyed at the roundabout type shown in the illustration. In fact, just such a corner as wo illustrate may be what your room needs. I have been telling some of my Good Housekeep ing readers about the good reproductions of tine obi pieces which are to be had. If you are an antique loveii this idea may appeal to you especially, but even if not( it is a careful thou)j;ht to consider as you are likely tc eet a piece of furniture of lasting value. Today then March. Materials from approximately 120 manufacturing plants go into the construction of a standard steam locomotive. ou are likely tc get a piece of furniture of lasting \ are authentic reproductions of Williamsburg pieced P Make Holiday Fruit Cake Early! iTjTRniT cakes are as much a part t^^of ChriBtmaa as holly wreaths ]|an‘d pine, and mistletoe! The dark cakes, rich with fruit and nuts do Jmprove with age. They grow mel- and flavorsome as days go by, ^6 make them early and let them f'ripen” before the holiday season iS'her% 1 Prult cakes won’t mold or dry out if they’re properly stored. The cooled cakes may be wrapped in wax paper, then stored in tightly covered tins. And, if you like, bnindy or wine may be spooned pv)3r the cakes at 2-week intervals during storage. • Don’t forget that fruit cakes, cookies, and small plum puddings loake charinlng ChrlstmaB gifts specially tor the friends and rela tives who’ll be away from home for the holidays. CHRISTMAS FRUIT CAKE ' (Makes 10 pounds), VA pounds currants 8 pounds seedless raisins ^ 1 pound citron 1 pound mixed candied fnitl 1 pound candied pineapple 41 pound candied cherries 1 cup butter ' 1 cup brown sugar 4 cups pastry flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 tablespoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon allspice 1 teaspoon nutmeg ^ teaspoon cloves ^ teaspoon salt 1 cup fruit Juice or wine Cut fruits. Cream butter and add sugar. Add well-beaten egg yolks.. Mix and sift dry ingredients and add alternately with fruit juice or wine to the butter mixture. Add| fruit. Fold in beaten egg whites.l Place in baking pans lined with! wax paper. Cover pans with wax' paper. Place on rack In steai£er,l and pour several inches of water! in the bottom. Cover the steamer,! and steam the cakes for 5 houra.j Then place in oven and bake for, one hour, with the electric thermo stat set at 276°. The accurately controlled heat In the ovens of modern electric ranges provides the low, evefti temperature' necessary for baking the cakes. Ovens are roomy, too, and will ac commodate several cakes at a time. Cool the cakes in the pans for, about 6 minutes after baking. Then carefully remove from pans, and place on wire racks to cool. Cakes may be glased, if dtsired. HILCN KOIMS Difctet o! Good Housst(«pia( Studio are auinenuc reprouu _ on the market and there are others, also good reproductions, inspired b the historic capital of old Virginia. You perhaps have visited Williamsburg and know its charm. If so, I need say little more as you are sure to want something in the spirit of those rare old pieces. The small candle tables which today we use at either end of the sofa to hold a lamp, are particularly at tractive and not expensive. Envel ope tables, round tables, oblong tables, or varying heights, are wel' come gifts. Queen Anne tab! with pulls at each'' end, originall}^ used to hold can dles when the tea tray was set in place, is a piece having distinction which is worth looking for. Another re vival in fashion, which iS"a very at^ tractive one, is that of the hang* ing shelf. They, were used exten-l I An tt$lraetiv» eornsr U made with WiUiamtburg nptoduetion* sively In the 18th Century and today with the increasing use of this type of furniture the shelves have become a wide vogue. 'Tn : FnedlChickeri 1 ClarkjGablejj I Fqvprit© Kih , (WhenT^Clark #GableT^Bits i imn to dinner and aska for I 'is favorite dish, you nwy be I sure they will bring on fried chicken. The Metro-Goldwyn- I Mayer star divulged his own ) recipe on the set of “Comrade IX’' in which he wpeara wit^^ rHedy Lamarr:^ , _ r 2'small chickens^ salt and peppec flour cup fat ' 1 cup milk i ^ Cut each'diicken'^fffo Idur’ or six pieces, dip each piece quickly in cold water, then ; sprinkle with salt and p^per, ,and roll in plenty of flour. Saute the chicken in a little fat until each piece is brown on both sides. Drain ^ the pieces well and arrange on s warm platter, setting the disk ' in h hot place to keep the meat from cooling whil^tbe gTBV|^ ij beiny made. " when you happen to read it- MEN .WITH' GRAY HAIR ... Here% InsideTip Look Years Younger This Easy Way.. • Stop worrying about whether your gray hair might some day cost you your job—or whether folks are whispering, “That mao certainly has aged!” Yes, stop worrying: s : and start using LARIEUSE. With GODEFROY’S LARIEUSE Hair Coloring you can bring radi> ant, glossy, youthful-appearing color to ALL your hair. Easy to apply. The exact shade you want comes evenly. It won’t rub off or wash out. Known and used for 45 years. Money back if not satisfied. Ask for LARIEUSE (Larry-use). If your dealer doesn’t have it, send ^1.25 direct to . i > GODEFROY MFG. CO.. J510 OUVB STREET. SAINT LOUIS. MISSOURI. OODEffDOrS Ann Rutherford returning from the Cotton Festival at, Greenville, South Carolina ... Euth Hussey turning her garage ( into one of Holljrwood’s smartest, playrooms, with ping pong; tables, table croquet and what-| have-you .. . Clark Gable send-, : ing wife Carole Lombard a gag] I cake that played a tune when sh« started to cut it . . . Bob I Taylor and Barbara Stanwyck! I packing their bags for a flying; Strip to Arizona ... Veree Teas- dale returning from New York 1 for a role in “Come Live With I Me.” . . . Ann Sothern busy , stitching pinafores for all of her ifriends^.., Maureen O'Sullivan expectei back in Hollywood on ■ Tuesday. She has been in Can- ! ada with her husband... Jimmy i Stewart claiming he has sneezed off two whole pounds . . . Jean ette MacDonald and husband Gene Raymond vacationing at Yucca Loma near Palm Springs r ... Rita Johnson thrilled over the news that her brother is - being tested as a screen "find.”, . . . June Preisser moving into her first real home. It is in West wood ... Diana Lewis watching husband Bill Powell’s two screen ! hits, "The Great ZIegfeld,” and i “The Thin Man.” She had never 1 seen either one... Lee Bowman off on a trip East... The Marx ; Brothers attending the pre- ! miere of a play featuring Max- {ine Marx . . . Bonita Granville I getting ready for a Pahn I Springs stay . .. Jackie Cooper spending his days away from the studio riding his horse . . . jLaraine Day readying a new j script for her next 16->mm. mo- jtion picture drama . . . Donald 1 Meek bringing some of his prize I blooms to the studio. Horticu!- ' ture is his hobby . . . Virginia ' Grey at last finding a short cut I to her new home in the Vallfey I... Judy Garland home from the 1 hospital where she parted com* inanv with her tonsils. Flavor Hints | /or Vegetables by Dorothy Greig • rf^RANNY used to say, .“All veg^ ^ tables are more exciting with ai bit of fixing np.~ In her houe we'd find little white onions mixed tn^ with the peas, and the peas cooked; with sprigs of mint; or • fleckfng of nutmeg on carrots, or onion bat>' ter over beets. Granny never had’ to coax the members of her family to eat vegetables. They alwajs passed back for more. One of my own pet flavor ea* bancers for vegetables is condensed •oups. These being skillfully s«» •oned in themselves give forth o( that flavor to the vegetables. Par Instance: Savory QIand Carrots 2 t&blespoona butter Z tabtespooBs onions, dtopped 2 tablespoons floor • H teaapoon salt 9-10 whole scraped carrots^ ‘ 5-6 Inches Iooc> - ^ 1 caa condenaed consomme ^ Cook the chopped (mioBS In tlM batter until soft but not brovn. Roll the carrots in the floor and salt and saut^ with the (mlons and butter for about 10 minates. Theo pour the consommA with ^ cap water over the carrots. Cover tights ly and cook ontil tender. SprinUa with chopped parsley Jnat b«(or« serving. And mealy baked potatoM, so>4 as they are. taste erext batter a«^ Tomato Cheese Baked PotaftMS Bake the potatoes. Scoop oat tM shells ^d mash well or pot tkrooglk a ricer. For each medtnm. aised potato add; 2 tablespoons- coadcased tontato 1 soup ' ■ . V teaspoon salt Pinch of pepper >; 2 teaspoons batter > 1 tablespoon sharp grated chesM lUx all' together thdrengbl^ - put mixture back in potato firown In hot ovea or imdar bmflwi These Clouds Mean Defense „ _ _ „ >ey are made of! mahogany; many hold a few books and small ornaments or rare bits of^ china which you especially want to display. They are attractive when used over a table eui suggested in this picture or a pair of them put together over a sofa forms an attractive bit of decoration. Lamps are particularly acceptable nfts, but should be chosen for the. pnritbse for which they will be used. If you want a lamp for a desk, it is well to have it 23 inches high and fitted with an inverted bowl with the bulb 100-200-300 watt to give the intensity of light you need. The HAIR COLORING Cloiuls arise as North Carolina ground agrieltural limastona Veal kidney chops, braised to their delicate perfection, are delightful diversion to time-worn menus. One of the best ways to prepare them is to braise with sour cream. Dredge the chops in flour and brown on both sides in hot lard. When nice ly browned, season with salt, pepper and paprika. Add sour farmers increase the fertility ot* through the AAA grant of aid cream, about 1 cup for 6 chops, and cook very slowly until treating them with They bougkt and floorTamp^s another acceptable ^f^and again, Wh“the'f.E.S. attach- done, about forty-five minutes. You can make a delicious Am r thoutsands of ton» of ment. it gives its greatest service. It is a mistake to use pairs of floor |sour cream gravy by removing the chops to a hot jJlatter as Clouds aise as American through pri%-at» pareha;i«a. lamps as a rule J* ^ as they are done and thickening the drippings and add- soldiers increase their skill ^939 North CaroUna farHWW the floor lamp in some comer where it throws light to the ceiling and; . 1 , , . ...» gives general illumination, or near a table where cards or games are' **»» more liquid. !through artillery practHje. Both cording to reports of eonty fi played. Across the room there should be a good table lamp fitted per haps with two 60 watt bulbs to give liirht in the various parts of the room, i^e base of such a lamp should follow the character of ihe decorations. A wired Chines* jar or an urn or tha pedestal typ: ui*rh>‘ far the 18th CantMV furni.'irc. Cauliflower is excellent with veal chops as shown here in fertile soil and skilleti gunners 1938 they used 144,^6 tons m- the photograph. The main.course of such a menu might be are vital to the Nation’s defense, agents of the St«t» CoU^ Extai^ completed with mashed sweet potatoes, grapefruit and cran-;In 1940 farmers of North Carolina apjdied 196,040 t«i8 of linw; ia berry salad, hot rolls and grape marmalade. Iwere furnished 230/)00 tons of sion Service.