“Stop This Waste
Of AWe Leadership”
•Says Dewey
■t«d7 the s4ieik6« of fovernmeat,
who hftve l»«z2kcd at first hand
the needs and demands of the
people and were ealled npon to
voice those needs and demands,
and who have received the popu
lar Buport of more eitic«u on
Election Day than an^ official in
the nation except the Presient.
of brining Yet today these mett—^fottr Ea-
the ableit p^lioaas and four Damocri^*—are
FASHION PREVIEW
FOB 150 years mea have di»
eussed tlie seetsaity
into the government
men in the «6nntry. Twt we li«ve in private life.’
ignorwi.,the n»ott obvious maans, W© cannot afford to eontinue to
tu th8“‘»-'tnd l>y nit amen.l)i’g the waste our beet tal»^, the author
Constitution , so that every ex- beliees, by retiring such men to
President, every ex Vice presi private life,
dent,, and every presidential o-. Senators, Mt. Dewey feels, na-
minee rWeivia^ the second lirgest jnirally concentrate on promoting
number »f v^ may beccpe. fojp.gie intereaU of a partiCuUf state
life, U^ed $tates. €e^»tor 0t- gj, geotion. Tfce constant vigilance
Laiige.[«f a few BenMor* at I^rge, form
So says Thomas E. Dewey, Dis- Lp Presidents and presidential
trict Attorney for New York ^hominees, most of whom would
County, io hia plea to “8X0? jjayg Binfeitions or sectional
THIS WASTE OF ABLE I^EAD-
EBSHIP!" in the current isme of
the HEiDRft’S DIGEST. , ' He
points out that “there are eight
men in this country today who
have had unusual opportnity to
/fints fai
ilte Housewite
■y Marion Cunninflham
H4ma Economist
npHERE’S a trick to making tht
I kind o( coffee that really
.warms and satisfies the inner
Aan. a trick tllat any housewife
can master. Too ijiany of ui
imake coffee carelessly, and th«
Iresulty are quite naturally medi-
jocre. So here are some simpk
interes* to s*r^e, would leaven
discussion by upholding national
contrasted with local wlefare. |
Mrv Dewey concludes that “at a j
time when both ihe fundamental j
principles and the forma of free
government are under attack, we
cannot afford to be spendthrift of
our brains, experience and abi
lity.’'
Service Club Meeting
Attended In Durham
some
Irules for making truly delicioui
coffee, rul^s that every woman
should conscientiously follow,'
Most important is that every
thing about your coffee be fresh.
The pot itself
f^should be
1 scrubbed and
scoured like
I new. The watei
should be cold
and freshly-
drawn. AjuI
_ ' the coffee beans
si should ha VP all
.their oric.nal
■flavor. It’s not
t^j^ienough to buy
feoffee in a
I vacuum sealed
I conta i n e r if
I you dont re-
'seal th« con* ^
teiiner tightly of
Marion after each us-
Cttnniht^am I n g. T h a t’s
in aclentlncaliy developed' gHSii
jars with JIftt ^rew tops. ,UnUHf
key or knife opener*, these tops
{.'an be removed-intact and snuglj
l^fitted to the Jar afterwards
u^is is important because it is
moisture from the air creepini
into a container that robs coffet
of Its flavor.
, Good coffee requires two essen
tials: precise measurement of in
gredients and fresh making.
Another way of giving youi
coffee a distinctive flavor, whicl
J will please your family and th«
w guests that come to your home
is to try serving*lt with honey as
,a sweetener instead of sugar
IHoney is put up in such attractive
{'glass containers now that you car
just set a jar on the coffee traj
along with the cream pitcher. No
I only does it give the coffee an
extra touch of goodness, bul
women like it because it is Ics:
fattening than any other sweets
Yqu’11 find that it dissolves quick
ilv in th»i sfenminP rnfT^t*
Alamance oonnty farm officials
today announced the receipt of
ftddition«l checka representing $1,
950.20 issued to farmers in th^
lunty for cti>mpliftnce with He
1&40 agricultural conservation
prc^am. . I
0
States Milk
Industry Shows
High Cash Income
ProSoMi. In tnakiog cheese 6-3
'per cent of^the total milk ir» ; -»4;
iice er«a*-->^|y||fr cent and lann-
jed milk»^.5 cent, according
to charts, •
The distribtor’s milk dollar
shows 62,31 per ecat (oing to
dairy fannem fer milk; 19.24
North Carolina»• position the p„ ,eiit to delivery labor; 8.21
dairy industry shorws 385,000 eows ^at to delivery expense; 6.33
valued at fl8,17U,000 produced expense; 3.94 plant Ifbor,
$12,6^,000 in eash farm milk in g yg administrative labor, 2.18 d-
come for North Carolina farmers ministrative expense; 1.68 office
in 1039. Production of farm milk pf„fit 2.33 per
In the state for the year totaled „
a-jnnnAnnn repTesenTBL^ onlv a frnction ot a
669,000,000 quarts; *reamcrv * -u.
creamery butter—2,232,000 pounds P***
Cheddar cheese—428 pounds; ice The production and utilization
cream 3,670,000 gallons. of milk have so increased in this
The ynited SUtes is one of he country, that today we arp the
ranking milk using nations in the greatest of dairy nations. Milk,
world wifth per capita consumption butter and other dairy products
of fluid milk totaling 153 quarts annually create an ontpt val-
a year. Milk and its products ued at 3 1-2 billion dollars,
emprise over 25 i>er cent of the 0^^ every fifteeft families
1500 pounds of the principals g. dependent on milk
foods consumed each year by the ^ livelihood. Milk » the larg-
*ver^ American, with 45 million g^urce of farm cash
quarU of milks delivered daily to than cattle, twice
cotton, three times wheat, fire
trees be loaitedt |
Aiuwar: H. R. Nisweeger, Ex'
tenuM horticuIturiM tk N.
& StiM Colleg-e, Mn tibmt
miit trees should fit i|t with
the general plan of Imodaamp-
inc and beautifying tlie fmrm
Appu, ebmrrr, pear and mit
kf«M make «xe«llcnt aiwde
trees when aet in IIm tmr 0i
iiM knm or at
. « .tmMr ^—
run Mumi^L
or tktt hufttn
▼esetabia
ptacce for
traca. Orap0 viMm,
M arl^on.
ime fceee Ibr tim
they may' hm piacari
bordart mt tha
Bha*
4
homes and stores,
Fluid of fresH milk for cities
and villages providing the fnrm-
er’e highest fta«4i return, accounts
for 29.9 per cent of the country’s
yearly production. Creamery but-
farm meticulous sanitation,
times tobacco. There are 25 mill
ion farms.
Americans enjoy the best milk
in the world and economical dis-
ter takes 31.6 per
butter—9.2 per cent,
pe^i cent of the milk
fluid milk on farms
For tk» tophmwy lMMn«n of forty who inthit the cort’l ire$t fmarlly,
Ths Fmbrumy Umm Good Houmktxpitig hai tom* im^uhini. Tkm
magamne’t ftuhktm txperU tuggett thU primt. It U of liviHr Hi^n ersp*
vil/i a decided toftntmt over the butt, hat young pocAcM «iH( neckline,
^ tpring tonie for women of all agetl
Today’s batch of checks brought
to $16,763.50 the amount which
has been received thiM far by
Alamance farmers from this
source. The checks represented
54 applicatione while the total
figure received thus far repre
sent^ 438 applicaions. I
The amount received by fanners
in th«;,county thus far was esti
mated to be only, about one third
the total expected for the
year.
Miss Walker Winner
Of 4-H Club Contest
Popular Vote Decid«s
Dictionary's New Words
WHO decides when a new
word shall go in |he diction-
sry.^" is a frequently asked ques
tion. The answer, say authoiities, is
"You," meaning the thousands of
you who use our language.
“We editors of dictionaries have
00 voice in the matter i t ail," writes
Charles E. Funk, editor of the New
Standard Dictionaries, in the Febru
ary issue of Good Housekeeping
Magazine. “Wo may not like the new
word or we may resent the liberties
you have taken with the old; but it
is your language, and you determine
how it shall be used. We can merely
record your usa^e." '
As wars alwayj do, the war in
Europe has produced a number of
terms already familiar. Permanent
fixtures that Mr. Fwnl: points out;
include the now welJ-known tilitz-®
krieg. meaning lightninsr warfare;
Luftwaffe, the air force; Panaer.
mechanized. As these are German
nottns, we still begin them with
sapital letters, but when they be-
some fully anglicized the capitals
wilf be dropped. Among the oritish
coinages during the nast year are
eonchie, a conscientious objector;
)uiiIing,from the Norwegian traitor
of that name, A Portable radio there
is-known as a walkie-talkie,
tou may nc'; be a “swing fan’.’ but
(f tou wish to understand the lah-
((U|ge of your children, Mr. Funk
walms that you must know that
boAgie-Woogle is nothing more
alarming than piano music with a
fafrt, rolling bass; that schmals: is
*swfcpt, sentimental music; that ,ut-
butkct is primitive, if heartfplt, jazz.
A Juke box, your child will explain,
is ft record playing nickelodeon —
sna tliis word no longer means a
Jive-C-Hit cinema, but an automatic
phonograph that playt a record for
a« eSBts. .
, These are but a few of the huft*
jredi of newly offered #*ords. Which
will survive the year 1941T You
will have the test word.
oliib. The third prize of $2.50
wen to tAe Richardson twins,
Daphna and Doris, _ of the Eli
Whitney club. The toomA were
judged by Miss Katiierine Mill-
Miss Nancy Walker of the Al- sapsj county h^me demonstral-ion
tamahaw-Oseippee 4 H club was agent, and Miss Grace Allen.
awarded first prize of the 4-H - ^ , .
_ , , . . .• V In 1940 at the 4-H club meet
Room Improvement contest which . - i i, -
. , . I ,r- TTr„ii mgs various plans for room im-
ended this past week. Miss Walk- t.
• J Arrirn i. • proveftients were given as sugges
er received $7.50 as her prize* • i v * T v
l„ , • *cnA 1 tions to the girls who love to be
'Second Rrize of $5.00 went o • .
T V if wi beautiful surrounding.
Miss Lelm Clemmer of the Elon _ ^ ' .
I z This contest w«« put oi ounng
ihis vtime with eight girls from
the varions Alamuiee Connty
4 H cluibs participating, fcacfc
girl improved her room in her
home, using the plans dicussed at
their Meetings.
—tT"?! —— ---7
Acswers to "/r’if Tim YOU KNW' by Lawrence
The* statue of Joe Cook, famous star of "It Happens On Ice,”
is located in Bvansville, Ind., his home town.
The word, Kangaroo, means, "I don’t know.”
The 18 tiny screws used in the Balance Wheel of every Bulova ^
Watch movement, serve to "poise the balance”—that is, assure ■
an equal distribution of weight at eveiy jpoint around the
Balance WheeL
The Washington Monument was erected, as its name indicates,
in honor of the Arst President of the United States.
Daredevil Skier Makes / 7;
Down Loftiest Mcmuaia
\Abotie, typical view of Mt. Whitney
trail—ice, tnow and fagged roekn
'above, right, Jumping erevatse cn
mountainside { right, Hant Georg,
■tvho ettablithed new teorld record
for tkiert,
I
Anight trip on skis down Mt.
Whitney, highest peak in the
United States, has aet a world rec
ord that all but cost the'life of Hans
Geoi^, internationally famed winter
sports star.
Daring mountain skiers have long
■wanted to attempt the great Cali
fornia pc#k, which rites 14,495 feet
above sea levsL But ice, snow slides,
falling rock, and sudden storm con
ditions have offered too small a
chance of survival. «
Prepared for his attempt by
weeks of study of the mountain,
Georg made the upward climb In
something over twelve hours. With
only a brief pause, he started the
downward trip. Even so, two hours
later found him in darkness, picking
his way along ioe ridges and across
,«now crevasses by flashlight.
1 Pausing under a rock wall to
break the ice on his gloves, he leaned
this ski poles against a boulder. He
. reached for them again—and missed.
Hie poles slipped at^ay and clat
tered down out of sight in the dark-
bess.
In that moment, Geoi* knew he
was probably dohe for, Without the
‘ ^les his skis were useless. He could
j ^t balance himself, check his speed,
' «r avQld huge bouldtfs which loomed
up unexpectedly in the team of hia
flashlight. Crevasses and ice rid^c-a
would block his way. Ho 'ftould
freeze to death on the mountain.
Using his light, Georg worked
over to the edge of the trail. Ten
feet below him were the poles. But
only their tips were caught in the
frozen crust>—-the least movement^
might dislodge them. Georg worked
his way down, inch by inch, an4
grabbed them.
“Hanging on to my light, which
I had secured by a strap attached to
my belt, I made thea-est of the trip,”
Georg said. “Without that light the
climb was impossible, t doubted
that the batteries could stand up in
that severe cold, but they were fresh
when I put them in and they kept a
bright beam shining. That, and iots
of luck, got me through."
Georg, although almost exhausted
when he reached the foothills, cams
through the ekpericnca unscathed.
He Is known to sports enthusiast*
the world over, and was the first if
introduce "the new St. Moritz ski
method in the United States.
! Chicken Fricassee
j and Dumplings tcith
Mushroom Sauce
by Dorothy Greig
Chicken fricassee is a comfort-
abie family sort of dish. When
jit comes to the table, the glistening
'chicken pieces so tender the meat
'parts from the bones with a fork,
surrounded by thickened gravy and
topped with fieathery dumplings,
then (father around. For here ts
savory eating.
Especially is it good flx^d tliis
new way We use condensed cream
of mushroom soup to add its cream
Iness and mushroom flavor to the
already deep chicken flavor of the
gravy
Fricassee of Chicken and Dum
plings with Mushroom 8aucs
1 fowl (4-5 pounds)
I Hlloe onion, carrot and BtaU; of
celery
1 teaspoon salt
H teaspoon pepper
Wash fowl and cut into pieces;
place in stewing kettle with slice of
onion, carrot and stalk of celery,
add water to half cover (about
IVfe quarts) and simmer slowly
When chicken is half-cooked, add
the salt and pepper Cook slowly
for one and a half to two hours or
until fowl is tender
Dumplingn for Fricassee
' i cups flour
I 1 teaspoon salt
I 1 cup milk
4 teaapoonM baking powder
I 2 teaspoons ehortenfnK
I Sift the flour atid measure. TL
j combine flour, salt and baking pow-
! der and sift again Cut in the
: shortening and then stir in the milk
to form a medium soft dough It
'may not be necessary to use the
(entire cup of milk Drop the dum
plings from a teaspoon on top of the
chicken In the stew . Cover tightl:^
and steam for 12-lS minutes.
Mushroom Bauee
1 ean condensed CretM ot niMh-
room soup
1 can chicken stock from frieuate
Combine the cream «» mtHhroom
soup with tb« chicken stock frem
, fricassee (using soup c«n for a
measure) Heaf"well and pour the
sauce over the chicken and dum
plings which have been arranged ,ou
b ^»lntter jij}' chop plate.
cent,
while 11.7
is used as
where pro-
pa.steurization and other safe
guards have made our milli sup
ply a world standard.
HOUSES for RENT
No. ROOMS
ADDRESS
2 6 Adams Court
3 3 Adams Court
2 8 Adams Ct.
3 529 Coleman Alley
2 1012 Cornell ^Street
4^ 1031 Cornell Street
506 Dowd Street (Store Bldg.)
3 113 Dunstan Street
3 121 Dunstan Sti^t
t 1018 Fayetteville Street (Spt.)
3 1204 Hanover Street
2 510 Henry Street
3 511 Mobile Avenue
5 605 Mobile Avenue
5 418 Piedmont Avenue
4 514 Proctor Street
528 Proctor Btreet (Store Bldg.)
4 514 Proctor' SItreet
3 514 Ramsey Street
2 604 Ramsey Street
2 606 Ramsey Street
2 612 Ramsey Street
2 408 Roney Street
3 4lO Roney Street
3 416 Roney Street
3 408 St. Joseph Street
4 303 H Sowell Avenue
5 821 Third Street
2 10()5 Willard Street
WEEKLY RATE
$
2.50
3.50
2.50
3.00
2.50
5.00
6.00
3.50
3.50
15.00
3.00
2.25
3.00
6.00
5.50
5.00
6.50
5.00
3.75
2.50
2.50
2.50
2.00
3.00
3.00
3.50
4.00
3.50
2.50
Onion Insurance
and Realty Company
REAL ESTATE~-RENTIN(J-INSURANCE
REPAIRS AND BUILDING SUPPLIES
PHONE J-6521
DURHAM
NORTH CAROJJNA
Hi
Complete
BUILDING SERVICE
••••REMODEUNG
• ••••NEW CONSTRUCTION
••••ROOFING SERVICE
••••BUILDING SUPPUES
Esitnates Gladly Furnished
For Painting, Papering and
Decorating we use ROGERS
PRODUCTS, a
SMALL PROFIT, LARGE VOLUME
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
«tTe Use Longdlife LOGAN-
LONG ASPHALT ROOFING
EXCLUSIVELY.
long UFE
Jk
ASPHAD SNWtUi
Rw Better Service
CALL
BROOKLYN DRY CLBANING CO.
s. McDowell St. ••• Ph^ ^328
E. T- Lovelace - Lee Jackson»
Mgr. Prop.
Durham Academy Of
Medicine
PROF ESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
LI» G. BRUCE, M. D. i DOCTOR A- S. EUNTES
Physiean and Surgeon f „
814H Fayptteville St. ^ ^NTIST
Telephones I Mutual BuiMinf
Office J-6222 Res. L-,i54'* Office J-0e91 Res. L-3581
J. N. MILLS, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office 106H Parrish St.
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO
DISEASES OF WOMEN
Trained nurse in attendance
DOCTOR M. C. KINO
Tel^hones
Office 253-6 Ras. 249-1
I Franklinton, N. C.
DOCTOR E. P. NORRIS
DENTIST
707% Fayetteville Street
Hours 9-1 2-3 4-7
Telephones
Office J-8321 Res. J-9042
R. P. RANDOLPH, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
312 Dowd Strept
Office Hours 9-10 6-7
Telephones
OficeN-5211 , b. Res. N-6562
“ J. E. TURNER*^M.‘'iy.
INTERNIST
618 Fayetteville Street
Telephones
nficce L-8254 Res. J-8564
J. S. THOMPSON, M. D.
PHYSICIAN
709^4 Fayettaville St,
Telephones
Office L-2541 Res. L-8621
ELLIS E. TONEY, M. D. '
303 Hillsboro Street
Oxford, North Carolina
Telephones
Office 445 Rea. 932
S. M. BECKFORD, M. D.
GENERAL SUSGERt
212 Montgomery Street
Hpnderson, N. C.
W. A. CLELAND, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Biltmore Hotel
East Pettigrew Street
Hours:
8:30-10:30 1-2 6:30-7:9$
Telephones
Office F-4021 Rm. J-1634
J. W. V. (X>RDKE, M. a
GENERAL SURGEKT
711H Fayetteville Street
Telephones
J-9081 L-8ST1
DOCTOR J. M. HUBBARD
DENTIST
N. C. Mutual Building
Office Hours: 9-1 2:30^:30
Evpnings and Sundays by
Appointment
Telephone J-0^1
THIS COMPANY OPERATES ON A VOLUME BASIS
Home Modernitation
and Supply Co.
614 Fayetteville St. Durham* N. C. Phone J-4821
!■«■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
Save Time and Money
Bj/ Relaxing in the
BUS
V
GOING TO AND FROM work
ride the bos. Yo« get home earlte.
Durluun
Servic*^
1
mil
■ -St