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Page Two THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Friday, November 7, 1969 DON'T TOSS A SALAD- TWIRL IT! For a change of pace from the tried-and-true tossed sa lad, why not substitute a twirl ing relish tray? Here are a few creative ideas to make the salad course extra-special, Let guests concoct their own salads from a variety of bite size vegetables. How about a tray of shredded red cabbage, crinkle-cut carrots, and bias- sliced celery with a bowl of assorted greens? Try fresh I TIPS FOR I HOME MAKING I By CORETTA T CHERRY Home Service Representative Carolina Power and Light Co. spinach, escareole, or bibb. If you'd Uke, feature three or four kinds of homemade salad dressings served in unusual cruets. How about a variety of “hot" nibbles: cauliflower buds, corn relish, tiny spiced sausages, and garlic-flavored olives? Whet appetites with a tasty selections of out-of-the-ordi nary cheeses: roquefort,brle, feta, gruyere, monterey Jack, muenster, primost, rlcotta, Stilton, tilslt. To go along, serve tiny crackers or home made bread sticks you've made from a biscuit mix. Try a variety of relishes in pert containers such as cran berry relish made from canned sauce with a Uttle orange peel, or corn relish which starts with canned corn and peppers. Dress up cucumber - onion relish with a tangy sour cream sauce. Here's a hostess' delight— a real make-ahead that doesn't even need dishing up at the last minute: tomato quarters, as paragus spears, broccoli buds, and artichoke hearts which have marinated in an oil and vine gar, herb-garlic, Italian, or French dressing. Marinate the vegetables in serving dishes. Arrange fresh fruits of the season on a wooden or color ful china twirling platter: can taloupe chunks, sugared grapes, slivers of water melon, orange and apple wedges. Gar nish with fresh mint or lemon leaves. Perk up appetites with an assortment of eye -appealing relishes such as baked chut ney peaches, a curried fruit compote, mustard beans, and pickled beets. Start the meal with a lazy Susan of condiments and rel ishes: spiced apple rings crowned with scoops of cottage cheese, kumquats topped with HAVE YOU LOST YOUR APPETITE? . . . You'll find it at The Parkway FITZGERALD REALTY T. C. FITZGERALD, Realtor Sales & Rentals & Financing 2608 Nouse Blvd. Dial 638-1486 J. W. SMITH AGENCY, INC. • Automobile • Fire • HomeOwnea • Workmen's Com pensation o Life e Hospitalization 2003 Neuse Blvd. Over Carolina Powor A light Company ME 7-S500 - ME 7-69S4 VITA-VAR PAINTS at MITCHELL'S HARDWARE 220 Cravon Street ME 7-3100 DOLLARS ‘nd sense Stort your savings account today with AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 'What Are We Leeklng For?' What we look for In life will shape our entire experience, Martin Broones, C. S. B., of Beverly Hills, California, told a New Bern audience Thurs day, November 6. To the sick person, to the unemployed person, to some one in search of a stable sense of home, Mr. Broones said, Christian Science asks, “What are you looking for?" The question served as the title of his lecture. The good that men really need can be found in their true identity as God's chil dren, Mr. Broones toldtheau- dience. The need for everyone, he explained, is to find and value this true identity by drawing nearer to God. Christian Science teaches one how to find his “at-one- ment" with God through pray er, Mr. Broones stated. “When we are at-one with God we are 'at home'I" He said that Christian Sci ence “shows that our at-one- ment with God gives us health; it gives us employment; it gives us happiness and security." The Bible, Mr. Broones commented, is fUU ofaccounts of men who knew what to look for and found it through prayer. Their experiences, he added, forwarded the spiritual pro gress of the human race. As an example he gave the story of Jacob and Esau. Ja cob, fearful of an encounter with his brother, Esau, whom he had wronged turned to God in prayer. The prayer led to a change in what Jacob looked for and expected, Mr.Broones said, and this actually changed his nature. Jacob found love, peace, and good in his brother Esau, Mr. Broones pointed out. The first expectation was of hatred and strife, but the change in Ja cob's expectancy savedhisllfe, Mr. Broones observed. In the course of the lecture Mr. Broones gave several con crete examples of how individ uals today have found the same kind of help from a better un derstanding of God. He told of a former coUege wrestler who had oeen dis abled in military service. The man was healed Instantaneously of paralysis, Mr. Broones said, when aChrlstianSclenceprac titioner explained that accord ing to the Bible God had made man in his image and like ness. The veteran gUmpsed the fact that his true Identity was not disabled or impaired and this heal ted him. The experience also was the begin ning of a fuller and happier life for the man, Mr. Broones added. It was this spiritual concept of man, he continued, that Je sus looked for and found in oth ers when he healed and helped them. The lecturer quoted from Science and Health with Key to The Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy: “Jesus beheld in Science the perfect man, who appeared to him where sinning mortal man appears to mortals. In this perfect man the Savlotu' saw God's own likeness, and this candled ginger, spiced canta loupe and honeydew balls, a va riety of crinkle-cut pickles — both dill and sweet, and some rosy tangy crab apples. NAT DIXON NURSERY - OlENBURNIE - Growars of Fine Troos, Shrub* and Plants ■;'I;jiti>:• • ' ^ ? I If 11 correct view of man healed the sick." Mrs. Eddy discovered and founded Christian Science and wrote 'tScierlce and Health" as a textbook to be studied with the Bible. Mr. Broones concluded: “There are many human con cepts of being but there is only one view that allows for the liv ing of abundant life. That is the view set forth in the Bible where we are told that God made man in His image, and God saw ev erything that He had made and it was good." Mr. Broones is on tour throughout theUnitedStatesand Continental Europe as a mem ber of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship. He spoke in church edific§ and his lec ture was sponsored by First Church of Christ, ScienUst, New Bern. r /JjMnw"*' ^ CLEANERS 323 CRAVIN DIAL Ml 7-2700 W. C. CHADWICK GENERAL INSURANCE Clark Bulldina Talaphenn offiM Ml r.ai4«—Horn* Ml r~f4»t PINNIX DRUG STORE The Store of Dependable & Friendly Drug Service 628 Hancock Street New 8ern, N. C. PHONE 637-5128 W. A. Crumpler ft John McDaniel Owners I I I I I I I i. I I I I I I I I 2704 NEUSE BLVD. NEW BERN. N. C.
The New Bern Mirror (New Bern, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1969, edition 1
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