Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Jan. 3, 1985, edition 1 / Page 4
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Precautions should be taken toM&oid child abductions / Here are suggestions that can be ? . used by parents and other adults to help prevent child abductions: Da teach your child how to use the telephone. Make sure your I child knows your telephone ' ; number (including area code) and ' c is able to call the police in case of . emergency. Da fingerprint your child and ? keep prints for identification pur ?* poses. Do choose a secret code word with your child which can be used . in an emergency. Tell your child never to go with anyone who does not know the code word. Do teach your child who is a stranger. Make sure your child knows not to get involved with a . stranger in any way. Do encourage your neighbors to participate in a neighborhood child safety program. In Mecklenburg County the PTA Council and the Girl Scout Council jointly sponsor . a "Safety Haven" program that designates safe homes for children when they are in trouble or frightened. Do make sure the school notifies you immediately if your child does not report to school. Do watch your child closely at . all times and ask your neighbors to do the same. Do Not leave your child alone in the car, yard, store or other public place. Know where your child is at all times. Do Not put your child's name on his or her clothes or books. The name tag puts an abductor on a first name basis with your child and undermines the cautions you have given him or her about talk : ing with strangers. Do Not allow your child to talk on the telephone with a caller who is a stranger. Such conversation . could give a would-be-abductor , valuable information. , On the Front Burnei Alice Pet tin Home Economics Agent Low-Fat Chkkea Spread 1 Vi lbs. chicken breasts, skinned Y* (8 oz.) pkg. neufchatel cheese, softened 1 tablespoon reduced-calorie mayonnaise 1 tablespoon grated onion 1 tablespoon sweet pickle juice Vi cup finely chopped celery Radishes (optional) Dash of curry powder V4 teaspoon salt V* teaspoon pepper Vi tablespoon chopped pimento Dash of hot sauce Dash of garlic powder Vegetable cooking spray Leaf lettuce Cool chicken in unsalted water to cover until tender. Remove from broth, reserving 2 tablespoons broth; cool. Bone chicken, and chop fine. Set aside. Combine neufchatel cheese and mayonnaise, beating until smooth. Add onion, pickle juice, celery, curry powder, salt, pepper, pimiento, hot sauce and garlic powder; mix well. Stir in chicken and reserved chicken broth. Lightly coat four Vi cup molds or one 2-cup mold with cooking spray; press in chicken mixture, and chill. Unmold on lettuce-lined serving plate; garnish with radishes, if desired. Serve with melba toast or celery sticks. Yield: 2 cups (about 22 calories per tablespoon.) Parmesan Rounds 2 loaves sliced white bread 2 8-oz. pkgs. cream cheese, room temperature Vi cup (1 stick) butter, melted V* cup plus 2 tablespoons mayon naise 6 green onions, chopped Freshly grated parmesan cheese Preheat broiler. Using 1-inch round cutter, cut 3 circles from each bread slice. Arrange in single layer on baking sheet. Broil on each side until; lightly toasted. Transfer to rack and cool. Com bine cream cheese, Vi cup butter, mayonnaise and green onion in large bowl. Spread about ) teas poon mixture over one side of bread. Dip into parmesan cheese. (Can be prepared ahead to this point and frozen.) Preheat broiler. Arrange rounds on baking sheet. Broil until bubbly and golden, about 5 minutes. Serve immediate ly. Snack Mix Yi cup (1 stick) butter 1 teaspoon seasoned salt 3 cups bite-size crispy rice squares 1 can (3 oz.) chow mein noodles 1 can (3 Vi oz.) flaked coconut '/* cup soy sauce 1 cup blanched whole almonds 1 can (1 lb.) salted cocktail peanuts 1 cup golden raisins V* cup sesame seed Preheat oven to 350 ?F. Heat but ter, soy sauce and seasoned salt in large skillet over low heat until butter is melted. Stir in almonds. Cook, stirring constantly, 5 minutes. Stir in cereal, peanuts, raisins, noodles and sesame seed. > Cook, stirring constantly, until noodles begin to brown, about 10 minutes. Stir in coconut. Spread half of the mixture in a lSxlO-inch jelly roll pan. Bake 10 minutes. Cool on paper toweling. Repeat with remaining mixture. Store in air-tight container at room temperature. Mixture keeps up to 1 month. Yield: about 10 cups. In Weeks To Come MUSIC BOOSTER - Hoke Co. Musk Booster Association meetings will be first Monday night of every month at Hoke High School band room at 7 p.m. Parents and friends of the music association are urged to attend. NORTHWEST WATER - All members are invited to attend the Annual Meeting of North west Water Supply, Inc. at the water office located off Vass Road behind Bute's Funeral Home, at 7 p.m. on Jan. 14. AIRPORT AUTHORITY -The Hoke/Raeford Airport Authority will hold its regular meeting at the Raeford City Hall on the secoad Thursday of each month at 7:45 p.m. AMERICAN LEGION -American Legion Post 20 of Hoke County meets the secoad Taesday of each month at the Edin borough Restaurant at 8 p.m. Those interested in join ing are invited. COUNTY COMMISSION -Members of the Hoke County Commission meet the first Moaday of each month at 9 a.m. and the third Moaday at 7:30 p.m. Pratt Building located at 227 N. Main St. in Raeford. The public is invited. CITY COUNCIL - The Raeford City Council meets the first Moaday of each month at 7 p.m. In City Hall. The public is encouraged to attend. SCHOOL BOARD - The Hoke County Board of Educa tion meets the lint Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the board offices on Wooley Street. The public is encourag ed to attend. AL ANON - Meetings are held every Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Library Conference Room. JAYCEES ? Raeford Jaycees meet the 2nd and 4th Moaday of each month over Howell's Drag Company oa Main Susat. Anyone interested is in vitad to attend. Jon. 7 CIVIC LEAGUE - Hoke Conaty CMc League will meet Monday, Jan. 7 at Freedom Chapel Church at 7 p.m. The public is iavfced. PETERKIN* HONORED 1 lotos Co. Civic League ?? he honoriag Jaates Peterkin on M . . imm . 12 at ML Pi , gah Church ai 7 p.m. The poUkle Jaa. 17 YAM COMMISSION - The 23rd Annual Meeting of the N.C. Yam Commission, inc. will be held Jan. 17 at the Wayne County Agricultural Center in Goldsboro. Free Lunch, no registration fee. open Jaa. U with a Cham pagne Premiere and will run for three weekends (km Feb. 3. Written by Peter Shaffer (EQUUS, KRAMER vs. KRAMER, E.T.). AMADEUS is the longest running drama in recent Broadway history. ON EXHIBIT ? ' "The Conjurer, " an engraving by Theodore de Bry from a painting by John White, will be among the items in "Raleigh and Roanoke, " an exhibit to be held at the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh March 9- June 6. An Algonquian Indian pouch tike the one the conjurer or medicine man is carry ing, collected in Virginia before 1656, will be displayed next to the engraving and the White painting. The exhibit, which is part of the 400th Anniversary celebration, will include 18 paintings by White, the governor of the "lost colony" of 1 587, one of the first English settlements in the new world. - c/WHHS Bet ? Ju. RED BALLOON - Beginning in January the Red Balloon Children's Series will be offer ing four very popular young people's entertainers for children from three to fourteen years old. The Series is spon sored by the Performing Arts Center at Pembroke State University. All four events will be held at the Performing Arts Center on Saturdays at 2 p.m. Tickets are currently on sale at S10 for a Series subscription and S3 for individual events. One adult will be admitted free with one paying child. "UP Abner" the Magician and His Trained Dogs will open the aeries on January 12. On February 9, Stan Bum gamer will present a concert filled with soio pieces for guitar and renaissance lute, personal an necdotes, children's inn and color tUm. The Appalachian Stat? University Young People*! Theatre will present "Robin Qoodfellow" on March 23. Rounding out the Series on April 20, will be Dick Snavdy with his show entitled "hUfic Moments." for more imtonmtkm call the Perform ing Am Cater at 521-0778. MUM. 3 AMAMUS ? The Fayetteville Little Tfcatrc ptodnitiun of the Tony Award winning drama AMADBUS which will Leading the cast for this pro duction will be Mayon Weeks of Fayetteville as the composer Antonio Salieri and Bill Allen of Chapel Hill as his rival, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Katie Johnston of Chapel Hill will appear as Constanze, Mozart's wife. For reserva tions, please call the Little Theatre Box Office at 323-4233 between 4 and 9 p.m. after January 9. TAX SEMINAR - Pittard. Perry A Crone, Inc., is offering a seminar program designed to bring you and your staff up to date on the record keeping re quirements dictated by the Tax Reforms Act of 1984. The seminar ? wfll be cooducted by our professional staff and the com will be $17.50 per partici pant which includes lunch and hand out materials. Reaerva tkmrwBI be accspted by phone through Dec. 31, by calling the Pittard, Perry A Crone office at 175-3751. ADVOCACY WORKSHOP -If you are thaparent ofakao dfcapped child or a profes sional working in the field, you are invited to attend a com munity workshop for an up date on Federal and State Laws on Special Education. The meeting will be held Tuesday, Jam. 8, at Raeford City Hall, 315 North Main Street from 7 to 9 p.m. Babysitting services are available. For more infor mation call Hoke County Children's Center, 875-5074. EVENING CONCERT - The North Carolina Symphony String Quartet will perform a free evening concert at the Hoke County Library on Jaa. 8 at 7:30 p.m. All Hoke County residents are encouraged to at tend. MATH AND SCIENCE - The N.C. School of Science and Mathematics has opened its formal 1984-85 nomination process by mailing information books and application forms to high schools throughout the state. The school is looking for about 200 students to make up next fall's llth grade. Applica tions must be postmarked by Jan. 31. Applicants must take the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) no later than the Jan. 26 testing date. COMMUNITY CHORUS ?Efforts are being made to organize a Hoke County Com munity Chorus. Once assembl ed the aduh group would per form at community events, at churches and for civic dubs. Interested adults should call John Plummer at 875-2677. aiffl 14-16 INDIAN ART CONTEST ?An art coot est to recognize the talent of American artists in North Carolina Bordeaux Motor Ian terifle The Pvt. Tyler R. Johnson, stepson of Ronald Smith of Aberdeen, has completed basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky. During the training, students received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military justice, first aid, and Army history and traditions. He is a 1984 graduate of Pinecrest High School, Southern Pines. Black re-enlists Spec. 4 Charles J. Black, son of Eugene Black of West End, and Margaret G. Black of Raeford, has re-enlisted in the U.S. Army at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, after three years of military ser vice. Black is a correctional 'facility specialist with the U.S. Army Gar rison. His wife, Charlotte, is the daughter of Vivian L. Blackburn of Vass. Tobacco supports face reductions in future Since the inception of the No Net Cost Tobacco Program in 1982, Stabilization has received $171.6 million covering the 1982-1984 crops. The fund was established by ? Congress to ensure that Commodi ty Credit Corporation would sus tain no net losses from the price support program carried out by Stabilization. A 3-cent assessment was established for the 1982 crop, from which $29,5 million was collected. Because of a larger than expected quantity of loan receipts in 1982, the assessment was increased to 7 cents for the 1983 crop. Not only growers were assessed in 1983 but also owners of flue-cured allotments who leased and transferred their quota.The 1983 contributions amounted to S83 million. The 1984 assessment re mained at 7 cents; however, because of a change in the law, on ly active growers contributed to the fund. The 1984 contributions amounted to $59.1 million. > As required by the No Net Cost legislation, Stabilization's Board of Directors is required to recom mend to the Secretary of Agriculture the assessment for the 1985 crop. The annual assessment is not on ly for the 1985 crop potential losses, but also for any losses on the 1982, 1983 and 1984 crops which come under the provisions of the No Net Cost legislation. Stocks of the No Net Cost crops exceed 540 million pounds with a principal and interest obligation in Extension News Willie Featherstone County Extension Chairman excess of $1.2 billion. In view of these conditions, the Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabilization Board of Directors has recommended an assessment of 25 cents per pound; however, if any reduction in the price support level is made the assessment would be reduced penny for penny down to 10 cents per pound. The Board also approved a resolution advising growers that a substantial rollback in price sup port be considered. In view of this possibility and the recommenda tion of a 25 cents per pound assess ment, growers should consider these when negotiating rental agreements for the 1985 crop. A contributing factor to this problem is that there is a worldwide surplus of tobacco due to global economic conditions, high taxes, and unfavorable publicity based on health issues which has weakened the demand for cigarettes. This year 1985 will be a crucial point in the history of U.S. agriculture. As Congress and the Administration prepare to develop the 1985 farm bill and a new federal budget, it is anticipated that changes will take place in all commodity programs. ONE DAY ONLY, THURS., JAN. 3RD '"The Sjirulhilhi (jrj>nL ' Suli'E i i'f Sullivan s 210 N \\ B.ood Str... Suu'hern Pint- N ( HOURS: V n So' 8 ,"<0 1 near NEW YEAR'S BOOT and SHOE ONE DAY ONLY! Save On ENTIRE STOCK ^adies, Men's & Children's1 Famous Brand Shoes TAKE AN E-X-T-R-A Happy New ) ear. . . to all our friends and customers J
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Jan. 3, 1985, edition 1
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