Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Nov. 14, 1958, edition 1 / Page 12
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How Wise Housewives Fill Market Basket on Budget IP : ? an m mmmmm m i am mm* naTTr ihimtt Apple dumplings are still one of the most popular sweets. They have a long history. The variaiion on apple dumplings shown here should please the most exacting hostess. By MISS LOUISE With Thanksgiving coining on, now is the time to start stocking your food shelves so that there will be plenty on hand when holiday guests drop in. A&P and Colonial stores in Beau fort and Morehead City are offer ing food values for which every budget-minded housewife should be thankful. Your $5 this weekend at A&P will buy a pound of real butter, four 16-ounce cans of applesauce, 4-pound chuck roast, 4 pounds ap ples, 5-pound bag of oranges, two heads of lettuce, two 8-ounce jars of sweet mixed pickle and a pound of fresh cranberries. And you get 3 cents change. The penny-wise shopper would do well to look at the meat specials at Colonial this weekend. Among the items to be bought for $5 at Colonial are meats for three or more meals: 5-pound fresh pork picnic ham, 2 '4 pounds chicken breasts, pound of ground beef; other items, quart of Wesson oil. dozen cars of corn and 3 pounds of collards. Change? Three cents. Here's a variation on the apple theme if your family likes apple desserts: Apple Knapsacks Ingredients: 4 large baking ap ples, rich biscuit dough based on 3 cups flour, ty cup sugar, 2 tea spoons cinnamon, 3 tablespoons butter or margarine, 2 cups light brown sugar, IV* teaspoons corn starch, Vi tcasopon salt, Va cup cider vinegar, % cup water. Method: Core and peel apples; cut in half crosswise. Roll out bis cuit dough as thin as possible. Cut into eight 7-inch squares. Mix su gar and 1 teaspoon cinnamon; use SINCLAIR HEATING OIL with RD-119* COSTS NO MORE Helps keep your oil bnrnef In top operating condition. Automatic Metered Delivery Service ? ? T. T. "Tom" Potter & Son Phone Morehcad PA I-3Z1( Phase Beaufort PA 8-3(57 Only OU Heat It So Sale, Clean and Modern SAST! U,WC0,T FA>I ' PORTASLE CLEAN HEAT tmiHY-LOoil burning SALAMANDER Produces up to 140.000 BTU's on Yi to 1 gol. oil per hour ? burns 1 0 ?o 20 hours. Heot Instontly on coll ? Indoors or outdoors. Preferred by construction, industry, ond ogriculture for drying, t Sowing, comfort ond stond-by heot. ? Boots ? Raincoats ? Rainsuits ? Tarpaulins CAROLINA RUBBER & SUPPLY CO. US IT, SOUTH NEW BEKN, N. C. Dial M? T J1M I to (ill centers of apples. Dot with 2 tablespoons butter. Fold corners of squares to center top. Roll out scraps of biscuit dough; cut into eight strips about ?i inch wide and 6 inches long. "Tie" each strip to make a knot with long ends. Place on top of each "knapsack." Place in baking pan. Bake in hot (450 degrees) oven IS minutes. Meanwhile prepare sauce; mix together well the brown sugar, re maining teaspoon cinnamon, corn starch and salt. Add vinegar and water; stir over low heat until sugar dissolves; boil 5 minutes. Add remaining table spoon of butter. Pour syrup into baking pan, lift ing "knapsacks" so syrup will run underneath. Lower heat to slow (325 de grees); bake 20 to 30 minutes longer, or until apples are tender. Serve hot with plain cream. Makes 8 servings. Kitchen Cue; If raisins are heat ed in the oven before being added to cakes or muffins, they will be more evenly distributed throughout the batter. North Carolinians Vote Bond Issues to Construct Schools By overwhelming majorities of up to eleven to one, 20 school units have voted authorization of $39.9 million in school bonds during re cent months. These authorizations are so re cent that none of the bonds have been issued.. Voters in four counties went to the polls Nov. 4 to vote on an ad ditional $3.2 million for schools. Bertie County voted on %llA mil lion; Polk County $ V4 million; Edgecombe County $1% million; and Greene County $450,000. "An appraisal of the reasons calling for the bond elections shows that in each case the pas sage will benefit children and be a step to upgrade public educa tion," stated Mrs. Ethel P. Ed wards, executive secretary of the North Carolina Education Essocia tion. By voting the recent authoriza tions the citizens of North Carolina express renewed confidence in pub lic schools. Local groups, with a responsibility for planning and ef fecting school programs, are tackl ing the problem of finding money to finance the program so planned. The school superintendents in each unit report little or no oppo sition based on arguments that school construction is lavish or luxurious. School construction costs have been the center of controversy dur ing recent months, but the contro versy may have aided bond author izations in North Carolina, for ex amination by questioning lay citi zens and by inquiring school per sonnel has revealed that the state gets a high return for each build ing dollar. The School House Planning Divi sion of the State Department of Public Instruction, which aids local units in planning buildings and sites, also appraises cost factors and assists the units in obtaining the most for each dollar. John Cameron, head of the divi sion, states, "School construction costs are affected by many fac tors, but savings in initial construc tion sometimes result in higher maintenance and operating costs." "Our division and local school personnel," Mr. Cameron contin ued, "are dedicated to planning economical buildings which will facilitate learning, not handicap the process by being penny-wise and pound-foolish." Register of Deeds Records 54 Real Estate Transfers (Editor's Note: In recording real estate transfer!, the law does not require that the amount paid for the property be stated in the deed. A token amount, such as (10 or <100, may be stipulated. Attached to each deed, however, must be United States documen mentary stamps, the value of the stamps based on the price paid for the property. Property which changes hands for less than $101 requires no stamp, according to Odell Mer rill, register of deeds. Property which brings a price between $101 and $500 must bear a stamp valued at 55 cents. From $501 to $1,000, the stamps affixed to the deed to tal $1.10, and thereafter for each additional $500 paid for the prop erty the stamp value goes up 55 cents. From the value of the stamps placed on a deed an estimation of the price paid' for the property can be determined. In the trans fers listed below, the seller is listed first, the buyer second, and finally, the value of the stamp affixed to the deed). There were 54 real estate trans fers recorded in the county Oct. 21-Nov. 3. They follow: Morehead City? George F. Spell and wife to Milton Best and others, $1.85; George F. Spell and wife to J. L. Holt, $1.65; George F. Spell and wife to A. E. Racklcy and wife, $1.10. Hendricks W. Wells and wife to William N. Banks and wife, no stamps; J. J. Ewcll and wife to C. H. Freeman and wife, $3.30; Ely J. Perry and wife to Morehead Biltmore Co., $4.93; Ronald Ste wart and wife to Morehead Bilt more Co., $1.85. George F. Spell and wife to George C. Justice and wife, $1.10; Thurlow Whealton and wife to J. W. Whealton, no stamps; J. W. Whealton to Thurlow Whealton and wife, no stamps; John W. Morris and others to Gerald S. Posner and wife, $15.85. Earle Webb and wife to The Earle Co., $48.20; John A. Smith and wife to John Henry Smith and wife, no stamps; Maggie Bell to W. Roy Poole and wife, $5.50. James C. Willis and wife to trus tees, Church of God, $2.7S; Ely J. Perry and others to Benjamin J. Row e and wife, $1.10; Ely J. Per ry and others to Richard M. John son and wife, 55 cents; Harvey Hamilton Jr. and wife to Luther Earl Lewis, $4.40. Robert M. Waller and wife to A. C. Hodges, no stamps; C. H. Freeman and wife to W. A. Stan ley, $8.15; Otho G. Duke and wife to John Harold Murfee and wife, 12 28. Alton L. Bland and wife to Tbomaa a Moor* awl wife, $22, Alton L. Bland and wife to Thomas O. Moore and wife, $77; Dyer Jones and wife to Bruno Marino and wife, $1.10. Nick Galantis and wife to Bruno Marino and wife, $3.30; William George Dick and wife to George Rahn and wife, $2.20; and Mar shall J. Wise Jr. and wife to Bruno Marino and wife, $2.20. Beaufort ? Dan L. Walker and wife to Beaufort Cemetery Assn., no stamps; George W. Huntley and wife to Frank H. Morning and wife, 55 cents; Claud Martin and wife to Claud Martin and wife, 55 cents; and Helen Stanley to Babe Ross, no stamps. Newport? Rommie S. Jones and wife to Wallace B. Hill and wife, $2.20; Leona G. and Nash Pridgen to Leon Owen Garner, no stamps; Nannie Garner and others to Leon Owen Garner, no stamps. Mollie G. and William Pritchard to Leon Owen Garner, no stamps; John J. Molisani and wife to Har old W. Childers and wife, $6.60; W. L. Lockey and wife to Bernice Millis, no stamps. W. J. Kirby and wife to Wilbur V. Garner and wife, $1.10; Charles L. Smith and wife to Frank G. King and wife, $(.60; Cherry Point Mutual Veterans Housing Associa tion to Francis Donovan and wife, no stamps; and E. C. Quinn and wife to William E. Cayton and wife, 55 cents. White Oak ? L. C. Gailey and wife to Lydia G. Sounders and others, $2.75; George E. McCaus lcy and wife to Reaford Blizzard and wife, no stamps; John Robert Jones and wife to Thomas Hill and wife, $1.65; White Oak-H. M. Watson and wife to E. L. Weeks and wife, $1.10. Atlantic Beacb? George F. Spell and wife to Naomi Hendrix, 55 cents; George F. Spell and wife to Calvin G. Wellons and wife, $1.65; and B. C. West and wife to Raymond L. Duke and wife, $1.65. Cedar Island? Hugh MacRae and wife to A. W. Daniels, $3.30; and Ervin Lupton to Ernest Goodwin, 55 cents. Sea Level ? George Willis and wife to Theodore B. Finney, $3.66; Marshall berg ? Margaret B. and Richard Benson to Julian Brown and wife, 55 cents. Students are Tricked By Misleading Sign Athens, Ohio (AP)? They nfay have to change the name of the student newspaper at Ohio Uni versity here ... or else the word ing of the sign over its office door. The newspaper is the Post The sign over Its door reads: Post Of fice. Staffers have to refuse a lot of freshmen trying to mail letters nut pickigti* Cameron reported to the State Board of Education recently that $330 to $400 million will be needed in the next 10 yean to replace obsolete facilities, construct new facilities and to renovate facilities. "The only criticism I have had of my figures," he remarked, "is that they are perhaps too conser vative!" The Office of Research of the North Carolina Education Associa tion reports school costs to be less than the average for construction recently reported by the F. W. Dodge Corporation, nationwide construction analysts. Dodge Cor poration reports for the past two quarter* reveal only 10 per cent of North Carolina school construc tion costing more than 310 per square foot, while 30 per cent of all other North Carolina construc tion exceeded $10 per square foot. The reported cost per square foot for schools ranged from $7.12 to 310.70, while non-school construc tion ranged from 34.39 to 317.26. Each of the bond elections will provide funds to consolidate small schools. One purpose of the elec tions will be to provide high school students an expanded and enrich'1!' curriculum. B. L. Davis, superintendent of Greene County schools, expressed the sentiment of teachers and pa rents when he stated, "Greene County cannot afford to falter nor should she fail her children, and we must be mindful of the in fluence we will exert statewide should our election fail." The local responsibility of citi zens was emphasized by James W. Gantt, Polk County superinten dent, who, during a telephone in terview said, "Our people are be coming increasingly aware that public education is more than sim ply a gift from the state; we are learning that we must dig down in our pockets if we are to provide an adequate and a quality educa tion." The small high schools planned for consolidation number six in Bertie County. Present enrollments number 44 in one school; 60-70 in one school; 80-90 in two schools; 105-115 in one school; and 170-180 in one school. Commenting on the situation, J. L. Dupree, Bertie superintendent, pointed out, "Our children are be ing penalized, for the offerings are far too limited for occupational preparation and virtually impos sible for a really good college prep aration." Guilford County tops the list of authorized bonds with $7 million, closely followed by Alamance County with $6.5 million. Forsyth County also exceeds the $5 million figure with an authorization of $6 million. Teacher's Goal: Reach Each Child's Heart, Mind By Mr*. Margaret Arlington and Mrm. Sarah Dudlry Beaufort FacaKjr Members Again today our third excerpt la taken from the pamphlet, "Our Teachera ? Their Importance to Our Children and Our Commun ity," with permission to quote giv en by the National Association of Manufacturers: Growth of our public education system has brought streams of students to school with an endless variety of traits, interests, talents, and gifts. The laws of the indivi dual states set the age limits high for compulsory education and thereby restrict child labor. i The teacher is required by law to take all, keep all, and treat all on equal terms? the leaders and the followers, the gifted and the slow learners, the good and the bad. The teacher must create a successful, harmonious working atmoaphere to accommodate diver sity. Because learning should be a vivid and a memorable experience for all, he must give scope and incentive to the bright students, encouragement to the laggards, hope to the handicapped, sympa thetic interest to the unhappy and confused, and instill a aense of responsibility in all. Sawmill Operators . . . Please remember, every load of pine slab* and strips you bring us saves a load of young pines (o grow into saw timber for future generations. DICK DANIEL THURMAN CHIPPING CO. S Miles Below New Bern on Morehead Highway 70 AitomAttoa, atomic merer, and the increasingly complex pattern of business and industrial develop ment have put America years ahead o I any other aatloo. These activities will sweep us aloof into an entirely new world, with a higher standard of living for every one?if there is enough initiative and energy available in the future. Which way America heads in the next few years will depend in a great measure upon bow well talents and skills are reinvested and utiliied. 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Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1958, edition 1
12
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