Sat., April 1, tm THE CAROLINA 1001-4
glgHMpLINA Tllfllh 9 April 7, 17S
Getting The Jump On Easter
Daat wait for the bonny to deliver Easter eggs to mar
Inn this year not if you want to get the moat family fun
out of the Easter holiday. Making Easter eggs together is a
super activity that delights every generation. In fact, you may
want to invite friends too, and stage your own egg-painting
party every year.
How many eggs will you
need for the decorating orgy?
More than you guess. One
native twelve year-old
can whiz' through a
dozen eggs suigiehanded be
fore vou can turn around.
Boil all the eggs the day be
fore the party- To prevent
racking, start them in cold
water to which a spoonful of
vinegar has boon added, then
increase to boiling slowly.
Remember, a cracked egg
may be decorated, but as a
safety measure, don't plan to
oat it afterward. When eggs
are hardboQed. store them in
a dry place at room tempera
ture rather than putting
them in the icebox. Refriger
ated eggs have moist shells
which are very difficult to
decorate.
Decorating materials in
clude watereolor points and
brushes, wax crayons, col
ored paper, glue, fabric
scraps, sequins, feathers, and
anything else that occurs to
you. Several bowls of egg dye
in various colors should also
bo provided for overall dip
ping. Using wax crayons on
the eggs prior to dipping is a
favorite trick. It's a good idea
to keep this egg-dipping area
in the kitchen. Set up a sec
ond ana, such as a large
table in the dining room or
den, for leas messy decorating
effects. Here everyone can
play around with the sequins
and the glue, and try their
hand at watorcolors.
You'll be too busy admiring
everyone's handiwork to fuss
much with refreshments at
this time. Plan to serve some
thing simple and refreshing.
Carnation Instant. Breakfast,
mixed with fresh whole milk,
hits the spot with every gen
eration. Serve it hot or cold
to keep your decorator's en
ergy up, no matter what the
time of day.
After the eggs are decorat
ed, appoint several children
as judges to award a prize to
the most original egg. litis
winning egg should be identi
fied with a mark of some
kind. Now the eggs are ready
to hide. Whoever wants to
play Easter bunny takes all
the eggs outside and hides
them around the yard.
An egg hunt on Easter
morning is the happy ending
to this imaginative party.
The person who finds the
special prize egg wins a
small present-such as a kite,
a bag ofgumdrops, or a new
kazoo. The last thing before
the guests leave, remember
to diwy up the eggs. See that
everyone takes some home.
That way, there's no waste.
You spread the Easter cheer
around . . . not to mention
the egg salad sandwiches.
GOLDEN
TOUCH OF HOSPITALITY
. . . from Best Foods Kitchens
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Cookies Galore from One Recipe
A good cookie recipe that can be adapted to make several
different varieties, is an invaluable aid to any family. Nuts,
Jelly, chocolate and coconut each of these can be used to
make a different cookie from this basic dough.
All Purpose Cookie
H cup corn starch 1 cup sifted flour
Vi cup confectioners sugar cup margarine
Sift corn starch, sugar and flour together into mixing bowl.
Stir in margarine, mixing until soft dough forms. Shape as
desired. Place about 1 Inches apart on ungreased baking
sheet. Bake in a S00F oven about 20 minutes until edges are
lightly browned. Makes 2 to 3 dozen cookies. Variations: Form
cookies with a press; or shape by hand into balls, rolls or
crescents. Ron In chopped nuts before baking; or, after bak
ing, dip cookie Into melted chocolate or dust with confection
ers sugar. For thumb print cookies, make a depression in cen
ters of cookie balls before baking. After baking, fill depressions
with jelly. For Double Decker Cookies, press dough Into 8-inch
square pan and bake 40 minutes. Sprinkle with 1 cup semi
sweet chocolate pieces and place in oven just until chocolate
melts. Spread chocolate evenly. Sprinkle with V cup flaked
coconut and cut Into 12 squares.
Education Revenue Sharing Will Hurt Blacks in Urban State
WASHINGTON - Blacks in
large urban states will be the
primary victims under the Ad
ministration's proposed educa
tion revenue-sharing plan.
Opponents of the measure
believe they have sufficient
votes to block enactment of
the proposal, which the Ad
ministration has dubbed the
"Better Schools Act."
President Nixon wants the
Congress to repeal the Elemen
tary Education Act of 1965.
Assistance to the disadvantaged
will be shifted from large urban
states to poor rural ones under
the President's plan.
The Administration's propo
sal will require concentration
of aid to the disadvantaged in
the meddiest districts first.
This, in essence, means that
poor youngsters in "better"
school districts may not be able
to qualify for aid under reve
nue sharing .
Basically, the Nixon bill will
pull together some 30 educa
tional prog rams into five aid
for the disadvantaged, the han
dicapped, vocational education,
aid to school districts with
large numbers of federal em
ployees living op federal pro
perty and other supporting ser
vices such as the school lunch
program.
The President has asked for
$2.7 billion in the coining fiscal
year.
HEW Secretary Caspar Wein
berger ays the plan will elimi
nate the bureaucratic red tape
which "ensnaris tite educator
in time consuming rrivia which
are counter-productive to his
primary goal-education.''
He said that criticism of
the pain was "understandable'
and that the federal govern
ment had committed itself to
providing funds to improve the
education of poor children.
But he said the federal gov
ernment needed to stop "act
ing like a national school board,
telling states and communities
in great detail what they should
CHILD WELFARF
I BA IMuiisS '
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As a young priest, Bishop
Edward E. Swangtrom cov
ered the waterfront as a fight
er for social justice for Brook
lyn dock workers. Since 1946,
he has covered the world in
an even more challenging role,
heading a war against want
for impoverished peoples every
where as Executive Director
of Catholic Relief Services.
In those years, the two
fisted, globetrotting bishop
has administered the distribu
tion of millions of dollars
worth of food, medicines,
clothing and child-care ' serv
ices from Calcutta to Caracas
. . . from Pakistan to Pana
ma. You can help Bishop
Swangtrom carry on his vital
work by contributing to the
American Catholic Overseas
Aid Fund, Empire State
Building, N.Y., N.Y. 10001.
:
"A Sight Better Than Glass"
A number of factors enable a
Shoe salesman to keep his best
foot forward.
Tasteful clothes, an enthusias
tic attitude, the decor of his
store all play significant roles in
convincing a customer he's come
to the right spot to make his
purduue.
Mirrors are an especially im
portant part of this successful
sales formula. The definitive
showcase for the merchandise,
ixirtable minors must give an
accurate reflection, have an at
tractive appearance, and be
sturdy and safe.
In an increasing number of
shoe stores across the country,
mirrors of clear PlcxiglasW
acrylic plastic are replacing tra
ditional glass units. Plexiglas
mirror provkks a totally new
dimension in reflective ma
terials. It possesses the image
reflecting characteristics of con
ventional glass mirrors, but un
like glass it can be strip heated
and bent to fit around corners
and can also be cut into an end
less number of shapes. At the
same time Plexiglas mirror has
many tunes more breakage re
aistanec than glass mirrors, is
less than one-half as heavy, and
fcMgBSfcr to assemble and install.
It is also available in a wider
range of colors.
One store employing the
"new look" plastic mirror is
Miller s West Town in Kaox
vihe, Tetm. Hem a free-stsod-ing,
lS-foot-by-two-foot unit
cosMfaucted from a single sheet
of Plexiglas inirror enables shop
per. in the ladies shoe salon to
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attractive tool la
get a clear, contemporary view
of the footwear they try on. The
distinctive design of this sales
tool was practical due to the
thermoformfng characteristic of
this new reflective acrylic sheet;
the effect could not nave been
obtained econoniically in glass.
"The Plexiglas mirror is a
small element in the overall
decor of our shoe salon,' com
ments Jim Caramon, manager of
shoe retailing"
Miller's West Town,, "but it docs
:i big job. Its unusual design at
tracts customers' attention and
in a figurative sense reflects fa
vorably on the fasliionableness
of the shoes we sell."
Clearly, Plexiglas mirror is
worth looking into.
Plexiglas is a trademark for
Rohm and Haas Company's
brand of acrylic sheet and
mirror.
from
IF.
impact
spend and how much." ji
Weinberger said that alto
gether the states will still have
to spend certain required funds
for low-income children, they
will also have more flexib
in switching federal fundi
one category to another.
This would eliminate
IWiptBgory f tiie
school aid program which has
given hundreds of districts mil
lions of dollars annually. ;i j
Unfortunately, at the same
time, the revenue-sharing pro
posal also provides that states
which now spend more than
the national average per child
form their local and state funds
will lose under the plan.
Although school districts
would get the same amount of
money for low-income chil
dren this year that they cur
rently receive, in succeeding
years the payments for the low
income are expected overall to
be lower.
U. S. Representative Carl
D. Perkins, Democrat of Ken
tucky, and chairman of the
House Education and Labor
Committee, was the major ar
chitect of the 1965 act and he
is pushing legislation to ex
tend the measure. When the
act expires in June, it has a
provision for a year's automa
tic extension. That is likely
to happen.
Representative Albert H.
Quie of Minnesota, the ranking
Republican on the House Edu
cation and Labor Committee,
is also critical of the Adminis
tration's bill.
Quie says the bin uses in
come levels in school districts
as the determinant for educa
tional aid. He has introduced
a bill to counter that element
of the Nixon proposal.
Job Placement
Rise Sharply for
Blacks, Poor
, WASHINGTON A dra
matic 31-percent rise in job
placements of blacks took place
between the first half of fiscal
1971 and the corresponding
period in 1973 (June through
December). ' v
In announcing the rise, Ad
ministrator Robert J. Brown
of the U. S. Employment Ser
vice said that placements of
poor people rose 62.8 percent
and placement of minorities
increased 37.4 percent.
The "turnaround" In Em
ployment Service volumes of
persons placed in jobs, and
job listed by employers, began
in 1971 after five years of a
downward spiral, he said, and
he is continuing a sharply up
ward path.
In the first half of fiscal
1972, Brown said placements
of poor soared by 39.1 percent
ov er the first half of fiscal
1971; placements of minority
members went up by 20.6 per
is
In the first half of fiscal
1972, 1,309,000 persons were
placed an increase of 21.6 per
cent over the 1971 half-year
figure. In the same period this
year 1,610,000 were put into
Jobs, Brown said, an increase
of 49.6 percent over the 1,077,
00 placements made in the
first half of fiscal 1971. ,
Nonagricultural job listings
along, he said, for the first
half of fiscal 1973 totaled
3,838,00Orup sharply from
the 8,060,000 and the 3.057,
000 totals listed for the first
half of fiscal year 1971 and
1972 respecUrelj. e
He said that as is always the
case, some employers lasting
job openings with the Employ
merit Service filled those jobs
directly or through private a
gencies, and in other cases, no
suitable applicant appeared at
ES offices.
(fiP) Sights On Safety
y by UL Public Information Offfae
Proper Care And Use Of Outdoor Appliances
During the gardening season
many Americans will be using
electric appliances such as
lawn mowers, edger-trimmers,
cultivators, grass shears, or
hedge trimmers to make' their
outdoor work both easier, and
more enjoyable. However,
aldng with the increased, use
of these convenience items
goes an increased sense of re
sponsibility for adherence to
rules of safety. Underwriters'
Laboratories Inc., an indepen
dent, not-for-profit organiza
tion, that tests products for
public safety, recommends that
you observe the following
guidelines when working with
outdoor appliances.
Keep the work area clean.
Never use appliances in
damp or wet locations.
Keep all visitors, especially
children, a safe distance away
from the work area.'
Store appliances in high,
dry places when not In use,
and keep them out of the reach
of children.
Never force an appliance to
work faster than the rate at
which it was designed.
Never use an appliance for
a job it was not intended.
Never wear lose clothing or
jewlery which could get caught
in the moving parts. Use rub
ber gloves and proper foot
wear when working outdoors.
Never carry an appliance by
the cord, and never yank it
when removeing from a recep-
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tacle. Keep
from heat,
the
oil,
cord away
and sharp
Never use an appliance In
the rain.
Keep proper footing and
balance at all times, dont
overreach.
Keep appliances sharp and
clean for best and safest per
formance. Disconnect on ap
pliance before servicing,
changing accessories, or lubri
eating, and follow the direc
tions. Look for the UL symbol in
a circle when purchasing out
door appliances. Such equip
ment has been evaluated with
respect to hazards affecting
life and property, by undergo
ing rigid tests which duplicate
in-service uses and abuses that
products may receive.
UL further suggests observ
ing the following rules of safe
ty when working with edger
trimmers or lawn mowers, i
Keep guards in place, and
in working order.
Keep blades sharp.
keep Hands away from the
culling are,;' '
Hitting a rock or other such
foreign object with a lawn
mower can be very dangerous.
In the event that this should
happ en, take the following
steps. 5
1. Stop the mower.
2. Inspect for damage.
3. Repair the damage before
restarting and operating the
mower. f
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You get service.
And you get maintenance.
And replacement of worn or broken parts.
And updated equipment. Including the latest
devices for business communications, every
thing from automatic dialers to data phones.
And as new changes and improvements come
along we will make them available to you.
You see, we have to.
We're in the telephone business and want to
keep you as customers. As happy customers.
GEI1ERAL TELEPHOflE
The people you cen telk to One-to-One.
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EXTRA LOW,
PRICES!
ABSOLUTELY
NO
COMPROMISE
IN QUALITY!
grandchildren!
Tbcltotltn'OoosshtMl
to be 92. the oldest ana at
which a woman has become a
mother is 58. That record
set by Mrs. Ruth Rustier of
California in i 965
That's right, Double your money back if you're not completely satisfied with any meat purchased at A&P WEO
(PRICE LABEL OR REGISTER TAPE NECESSARY, OF COURSE)
' 1 "
ROAST
CHUCK
BONE
IN
LB.
Stew Beef
Shoulder Roast
Chuck Roast
Chuck Steak
Cubed Chuck Steak
Chicken Steak
I Chuck Tender
Bant
In
Boneleis
Boncleti
lb.
lb.
Lb.
lb.
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M.05
M.09
M.19
M.59
M.59
M.59I
STEAK
Extra Lean
tontleu
Ik
1.39
"SUPER-RIGHT" EXTRA LEAN
Ground Chuck ''tJvC $1.09
Ground Round ':r'
CHUCK
BONE
IN
LB.
JL2SJ Beef Shank Meat Bone In 89
SAVE MONEY AT ASP WEO ON
"Super-Right" Wafer Thin Sliced
Beef, Turkey, Chicken, Pastrami, 3-Oi.
Corned Beef, Spicy Beef, Smoked pkrj.
Beef and Chopped Ham
CAP'N JOHN'S PRE-COOKED FROZEN
Fish Sticks ?' 55c
Weeceo! SAVINGS ON
Dak Chopped Ham
mMAT SAVINGS ON ft)
WHOLE
1-lb. Ogf
Can nPapaj
CHICKEN
Weeeco! "SUPER-RIGHT"
All Beef Franks
FROZEN CHICKEN. BEEF OR TURKEY
Sultana Pot Pies
SAVE MONEY ON ALL VARIETIES
79c A&P Pimento Spread
CHECK AND COMPARE SAVINGS ON
a OB a Fruit Cocktail
HOT
JVa-ib.
39c
95c
99c
l-Lb
Pkg.
8-Oi.
Pkgi.
a Mandarin Oranges
Save Money On Number 1 Thin
cap1 43c Market Sliced Bacon
Top Quality Grade "A" 4-7 Lb'.
24upfhcup 75c Baking Hens rVt
ON "SuPIR-RMSHT" PURE
Lb
Lb
86c
59c
SAUSAGE
a Hot
MiM
t-L.
Rail
m
GRIAT MANY WAYS TINDIR
Fresh Yellow Corn
GREAT TASTING
Western Cantaloupes "sr
'FIRST THING IN MORNING TRY 27 SHE
Florida Grapefruit 2
MAKES GREAT TASTING LEMONAOE
Fresh Juicy Lemons
TRY SOME IN A TOSSED SALAD
Crisp Red Radishes
SAVE MONEY AT ASP WEO ON
Fresh Pineapples
5on"' 49c
e. 49c
For 29C
.?',92 59c
19c
SAVI MONEY AT A&P WEO ON JUICY FLA.
ORANGES
A&P Soap
SAVE MONEY WITH ASP
Bathroom Tissue
GREAT WITH ANN PAGE SOUP
Barh Siic
4-Bor
Pk,
Single Ply
4-Roll
Pkg.
Ea.
Only
39c
3? $100
I 125 Size
59c
39c
Nabisco Premium Saltines
MEL-O-BIT PROCESSED
American Cheese Slices
GREAT FOR PARTY SNACKS ANN PAGE
Olives ,ooBot 49c
SAVE. AT A&P WEO ON
Sultana Mayonnaise
Regular Size
a Bar
Pk,
2-PI
4-Roll
Pk,.
l-Lb
Pk,.
12-Ox.
Pk,.
Stuffed
5' a-Or Bot.
Qt
59c
49c
43c
75c
49c
49c
GREAT FOR SLAW AND SALAD CRISP
CREAM SUNNYFIELD
Grade A North Carolina Produced 1 ml pt;q
T .onto Li-TSPW.;-: ;.:?w
SUNNYBROOK EGGS ln
ci? WF r i Lb. Pr.n
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CHAN YOUR BATHROOM WITH
imulfl 409
SHOP AfcP WEO tOK SP!
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FOR MANY USES AROUNO YOUR HOUSETRY
AtVP Cleniw
SHOP AI.P WEO FOR SPRING CLEANINO VALUES
CLIAt:' '
OR
LEMON
LINE YOUR KITCHEN SHELVES WITH
SHELF
PAPER
FOR YOUR SPRINfi CLEANING NEEDS ALL PURPOSE
DISPOSAL
TOWELS
inCt.
Pk,
FOR YOUR SPRING CLEANING NEEDS ALL PURPOSE
EAT SAVINGS FOR SPRING CLEANING ON AftP
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SPRINGTIME WEEF.0 SAVINGS ON
AW Tfmh Cm Iwm
DEODORIZING CLEANER
SET YOUR FLOORS
ACRYLIC FLOOR F
POLISH YOUR FURNITURE WITH LEMO
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Can
GIT YOUR FLOORS SHINY WITH
FLOOR SHINE
CLEANER
ACRYLIC FLOOR FINISH FROM AP
30 Cr
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THIS IS ELEGANCE...
at a bargain price! Porcelain
FINE CHINA
W. Ml
1
This is Queen Anne. An unusually hand
some pattern with all the lavish decor and
rich colorings of the Rennaissance. Worthy
of a formal dinner occasion.
4 SALAD
PLATES
SAVE 50
BREAD &
BUTTER
PLATES
ONLY
39c
EACH
withavarv
SSpurthaa
Rcsulaily 75c
Next week, cups. Follow the weekly sale
features and build a service for eight
only M il
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I started something.
According to a recent Gall
up Poll, women now consider
two children to be the ideal
family size, compared with
four just a few years ago.
Probably women are more
aware that besides the pill,
diaphragm and loop, there
are other good birth control
methods including some like
Conceptrol or Deifen they
can get in drugstores without
a doctor's prescription.
In 1938 a British mother
bore the smallest baby to
survive, 10 ounces. The big
gest, 25 pounds, was delivered
in 1961 in Turkey.
The picture above is of
Mrs. Anna R. Jar-vis of West
Virginia. It was in her honor
that Mother's Day began to
be celebrated, in 1908.
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A bra-sized bikini by Bobby
Len that stoetcnes to fit, fin
ishes off with its own slit skirt.
"California ih end of the
rainbow." (American Proverb)
That with the increased
yield of new A-3 Polaris and
Poseidon reentry vehicles and
their independently targeted
warheads, a sea-based deter
rent is expected to provide a
high probability that as many
as 1000 enemy targets could
be destroyed even after losing
some U.S. submarines to an
enemy attack?
a
That sea-basing appears to
be the ideal deterrent-yet the
idea of depending only on
sea-basing has been rejected
because it simply wouldn't
meet the needs of a credible
U.S. nuclear strategy for the
future?
That the beat defense for
the U.S. is based on the Triad
system of land-based missiles,
land-based bombers and sub-marine-kunched
ballistic mis
siles, for then the enemy is
faced with a complex of cur
rently unsohrable strategic and
tactical problems?
That you can get a
reprint of a magazine article
explaining the need for a
diversified U.S. deterrent? It's
available by writing to: Reprint
Editor, American Ordnance
Association, 819 Union Trust
BUg., Washington, D.C. 20006.