Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / April 22, 1943, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 I THURSDAY, APRIL 22. 1943 THK NEWS JOURNAL, RAEFORI). N. C PACE THREE State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q. Is a pressure conker necessa ry in canning vegetables? A. Canning with a steam pres sure cooker is the best method of saving surplus vegetables, says Mrs. Cornelia C. Morris, home econom ist in food conservation at N. C. State College. Drying is advised for a limited number of products, since dried vegetables are prone to Ajerioration in flavor and table .lity. Vegetables to be dried re Mrfire partial pie-cooking to pre serve the food value, and steam ra ther than water should be used. State College Hints for Farm ?-?crcc inkers 1,000 Years of "Know-How" By KI TH CTRRF.XT N. C. Stale College Some women resign themselves to the drudgery of dishwashing and keep their minds occupied with oth er things. Other women make the job fast and easy with a well-plann ed sink-center, plenty of soap and hot wuter, and a good dish drainer. Take your choioe. Q. What is the best variety of peanuts to plant? A. In contrast to the edible nuts, the oil industry prefers Spanish or the small runner types, due t. the fact that these usually produce crops with a higer oil content than do the Virginia types. However, the Virginia types may product the most oil per ac; c in s'oe s ( t o: s, because of their soperirr y ira's. The family that stays together. plays together i Crackers and wafers which are stored in metal containers near the 1 iange v. ill keep fresh and crisp at all times. 1? v J JO 111 simmer a':c eh 1 : o o -Ire ; ! lo " c i razor blar'c a safe in- ; Wp'iing s-nnts. place ! Mi't'c in a rl;t in a j I". , oris e'ATS as a ; ; ; 1 a us '! il in j r teet ft i r 1 fit : r iH P d r -J ""'A " i PP J? f ft JJ p 4 o eK fr fth A p V r ' v" X . , "' i ,i Si POULlRY To assure highest possible standards of instructing U. S. Army Air Forces maintenance personnel at the Clitvrc'tt Pratt & Whitney Aviation Engine Si lio.il. 2')"'n K. J 'Scr son, Dctrc-t, the lr.rtie staff of instructors, sh..n .J:'vf. was selected with the greatest care. Their combined L ic rience us intensively trained. e::pert meehnpies t4; lr. n.- e tiian l.fiOO yenrs. In assemb::-? the s'afl". F.J Iii.a, ClRVro'..'. n. :t unal -iffct!r of scrvirc (:;.''it ccr.. . n'. ; .-..). 7 f 31 H:t.i c .lirj,; ion 0t , cciitf-r), ucii schcf-'l is cond-.irtft!, r'-l I-. T.. -up'.r isor, combed tiij nr.u on- wide orgnni?3tion of Chevrolet field service represent tives, selecting the best qunlif'cd rr.cn for imtruc; ts. Tliey come fiora 10 states, and tlie experience of c: a of .! e 64 members of the staff ovur;.:; s tilxmt 16 yc-i... ijifnre btint; nssir.cJ rs ini'.ru trs i.i the k.om' the :,c:jl!y qiuilit'ed, seasoned mchriTiii.-s, v-iih tl. ir ir.-i v rs ot expen'.nre, wctc requiicu, i!i :i i : lion, i ' ' t I Irrtf')r?, Conn. T!r I.-.rri st. one instructor to every I.vc l .alt f .rn..s thL . f Vvrartime Rationale Girdf SI 't - S:;.M.t ,,. ;.' n Wi r iiatinn E Hik 1 is ?. for fne pin n ol su;: 'i' t; ' y Si COKFEE Stati'p No. 26 2o-id for one pound through A p : i 1 25. Fl'EL OIL Miunber I coupon became val.d January 3 i and will be good for 9 pailnns until April 6. Period 3 coupi-ns p ud for 9 gallons and valid through Feb ruary 19. GASOLINE Coupon No. 4 in A book good for three gallons TemKrary "T" coupons will be Issued directly by ration boards for a period of not more than 30 day . Boards will use original ODT certificates only for ciieik ing tire inspection. TIRES Holders of Ration A coupons must have tires in spected by OP A on or before March 31. Holders of B and C must get tirst inspection by Feb ruary 23. SHOES Coupon 1 sugar r.tid oolite ra'i crt ties each holder to of shots iint:! '1'o. ! ". i lew .-1 a'V.p ii' il' v'.i; r tion ' i-.i. i: ': 1 i l.c !.: i : t'.f 1" titccfav Annn or? Lai at Our Truck will be in Raeford from b u..til 10:00 A. M. Red Springs from 11:00 1:00. St. Pauls 2:00 2:30. PAYING THE FOLLOWING PRICES: Colored Hens, per pound 26c . . 20c 14c 30c in a way Ilia', lie i ii'd. i-.. re oil" .m ca el'ally care- throt;;-;h the iiioat the lincst plate). TlH'ii dry the grated peel, place in a tight container, and use as a pleas ant flavoring when a fresh lemon is not at hand. '' h..v !': PjJ fully ana put it i:3 ciiopper (using t Tl tu .... .. Leghorn Hans, per pound Roosters Eggs Lemons which have been soaked in hot water a few minutes piior to using will produce much more juice than those not so treated. I Wilful waste makes woeful want. Some ways to waste foods are: To pare vegetables thickly; to discard wholesome edibles; to drain away fat. RATIONING Sanford Poultry & Egg Co. Sit ii ford, N. Butchers are not allowed to re duce the point values of rationed meats and fats without lowering money prices at the same time. 3 11: ii yuj i-aven It to buvins a Second Viar Loan k Bond, stop and think what it would mean to you if our sol diers hadn't rotten round to the fight. . i'1 !. "kmmm :;,f J Unkncv.'n Donor's $3.00 Is S'ai t of Loan Fund A $ banknote, left anonymously upon the doorstep of the president of the Pennsylvania Stale college two years ago, has increased its value almost 1.000 times. With that banknote as a starter, Mrs. Ralph D. Hetzel, wife of the president of the college, established a loan fund which is available to students when they need it in an emergency. Total loans of $4,981 have been made to students. With $10 named as the highest loan, students borrow money from this fund to meet emer gency needs for food and room rent, special visits home, job interviews and medical expenses. No interest is charged and no time is specified for the payment of such a loan. The only requisite is that a student must need the money to tide him over an emergency. Up to and including August 31, 338 students have borrowed 524 times from the fund. Nearly two-fifths of the loans were made to men and women who need ed money for food and living ex penses. Graduation expenses, books and shoes, eye glasses, clothes, and personal reasons were other neces sities which brought the student to the emergency loan fund. Donations, many of them from alumni, faculty, and undergradu ates, have increased the fund to it.; present status of $2,3ti7. Col- thrr Retnrc'.s Tobac V.': ;e.l h 1st. Lumbeiicn, April 20. Continued j cold weather has held back tobacco I plants in the Lurnberton area, add- ; ing to the farmers problem that be- j gan early in the year when his first I seed beds were killed out about 70 i per cent by the freezes. This statement features the fourth tobacco condition report of the sea son just issued by Jasper C. Hutto, supervisor of the Lurnberton tobac co market. The more fortunate far mers ai doing some transplanting now in sections below an east and west line taking in Robeson county, the report says, but the favored far- l mers are few and scattered. "By April 25 there will be some transplanting aM over the area, and particularly to the south and east. Areas to the north and west will be engaged in their heaviest setting out from May 1 to 15. The late beds are reported as having plenty of pilots, but delayed because of the unfa cor; ble g: owing weather. "Reports on blue nio'rl indicate the scourge is mild in virtually all sections where it has hit. and tf disease is reported rather generally from the south and cast territory out of Lurnberton. "Grasshoppers, grub worms, flea bugs and all the other tobacco in.se; ts get mention in the reports that come to this office None of the perts appear to be doing serious damage so far." GET ESSENTIAL JOB. Lear Electric Welding FREE- Fay ettcville City Schools. Ap ply Local Employment Ser vice. County Office Building or at Fayettevillc. READING & WRITING LET YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER HELP YOU TO DO THIS WITH "Monthly Motor Car Maintenance" Democratic Party The Democratic party claims ori gin from the earliest years of tlus republic, Thomas Jefferson being its first leader and spokesman. By 17;2 the term Donux ratic-Iiepublican party was being u.,cJ to designate the Anti-Kcderalisls or thoK who be lieved that tile f;ov"rmiie!it was be coming too cl i.ti a'i, a tl. Aiur t:'e first ten rnr.cnoii ents to the 0 n. li tulion, the ''Jill of nirJhs," wele added, this party ceased to oppose the Conslitution. The next three Presidents, Madison, Monroe and J. Q. Adams, belonged to the party, which under Andrew Jackson in liiil became generally known as the Democratic party. H, V ofiJ amm-z IJ Part of Fighting Equipment Sugar is far more easily digested I than starch. The average starchy foods take three or four hours for ! digestion, but the human body bc ! gins to utilize sugar from ten min 1 utes to half an hour after it has I been eaten. For this reason, sugar is an indispensable part of a fight- ing man's equipment. Candy bars j w ith a high sugar content are a part i of the field rations of the United ; States army. In l')42, according to cstimnlcr of the O'lice of Price Ad , min s.rction, beet sugar, grown and ', proecsjed in 19 western and middle j western states, will for the first time be the largest single source of sup ply for the American consumer. Deinuey's 'Long Count' Thir occurred in tliL- seventh round of the fiVht en Septembe r 22, 1027. in Soliiicr Field. Chicago, when Dimpsey wr.s reeking to regain the caampionshii lost the previous year, "he rcfeire explained the delay in counting as due to the Illinois law making it r andntory that when a fig'itor was knocked down his opeo "t: l .'hoiiki retire nt once to a ncu trr. ororr, mi l th;:t tl.o cunt m at not i xoeid until he c'.d. He con- JOHN WHITAKER one d , ri . the h..t I bat i n p" v la i ' o to Ion; ,-. ar.oed to do so. T ie in hi.15 a'l i in cunmiiss:oo. KOKE AUTO COMPANY I! - Ml I 'I. ' .'V VI I.TI no: s :vr, mimi m. L1TI.ER is a man with whom I can work, if ncccsarv, but with whom I can never have & mccring of minjs." The pcikcr U Mu'.'olini, the time, 1934. Suppose, foreign ;orrc-pondcnt lohn Whit.ikcr asked 11 Duce, "jpp..-c scr many is so strong three years i r, on n ils' Jut no ac,i;re.,.l:on of posi.r.s in vw r .J cm stand againsr lur? U Ii.it ilici for :! c : mure of Italv ':" The little man sprang from his jV k and shook his clenched fist in U'hit.ikrr's fjce. "Ah, in that moms nt," he said, "It.ily w.Il be the ally of Germany." John Vi'hitakcr's new bock, "'S'e Cannot Escape History," is a keen analysis of the living history of the past decade, witnessed for the most part firsthand. Since 19)7 the author has been roving correspondent for the Chicago Daily News and th N. Y. Herald Tribune in Europe, the Near East and South America. He wai expelled from Italy in 1941. He was ont of the few who predicted Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. The title of his book is from on of Lincoln's speeches: "Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history. . . , The fiery trial through which wt pass will light us down in honor or dishonor to the latest genera tion. . . . Wt shall nobly win or meanly lose the last best hop of earth." Whitakcr holds that the statesmen who closed their eyes and "tried to escape his tory" art every bit at guilty for the present crisis as tht Hitlers and Mussolinis, tht fifth columnists and the traitors. Here's an underground story from "W"t Cannot Escape History." Clendenning Robertson, of tht American Red Cross, went to a Paris restaurant where it was said that one could eat well despitt tht ration tystem. The waiter shrugged his shoulders and said that he had nothing to serve. Robertson finally persuaded him to prepare an omelet. After; ont bitt of obviously spoiled tegs, Rob ertson put down his knift and fork and called for the manager. "I'vt been work ing for months with tht American Red Cross," he said. "Wt havt brought milk and bread tn -our children. Here I com in and ask you for a meal and you serve me rotten eggs." The manager cuffed the waiter. "Im becile!" h screamed. "I've saved those eggs for weeks in order to serve tl.em to a German." Tt show how gociJncss and dullness are often confu ed in tie aver age mind, 1 larry Emerson I'osdick, in "On Being a Real Person," quotes this schoolgirl's essay on tht lifi cf Queen ictor!a: "Vs hen Oarcn Victoria was coronated, she took as her motto 'I mill be gxvi.' Sh followed thj motto passionate'? trrc'.'h a Lz aaj u-as ui,''j 8? r
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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April 22, 1943, edition 1
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