Newspapers / Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / Dec. 17, 1942, edition 1 / Page 6
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Noted Visitors to l imes Sqi'are Service Men s t enter Captain Paul P. Blackburn, United States Navy (left) ami Major General Thomas A. 'lorry. Commander of the Second ( 011’3 Area of the United States Army, are here shown on a visit with Walter S. Mack, Jr. (Center), Pres ident of Pepsl-Cola Company, to the Times Square Service Men's Cen ter, presented by the latter s organ nation as a gift to the men of the Armed Forces. During its first month of opera tions, the Center has been used by over 1UO.OOO Service men, from al‘ over the country on leave in the Big Town. The C elite r furnishes free cl charge luxuriously furnished lounte rooms with reading hml writing la vilifies; radio; piano; check room; shower rooms; telephone facilities; shaving requisites; stationery sanies; tree beverages, amt foot! at minimum cost. It is operated under the sponsor ship of the New York City Defeiis Keerealion Committee. Rural People Ask 3 Questions About Meat Dean I. O. Schaub of State Co'-' lege, director of the Agricultural Extension Service, says that nei ghborhood leaders who are ex-1 explaining the Share-the-Meat pro gram in rural areas, find that most farm people are more than will ing to cooperate in the plan. Gen erally, three questions about the program are being asked the vol untary neighborhood leaders, he said. The first question is: "Do I have to buy or otherwise obtain a per mit to kill my own hogs or ither animals? The answer, says Dean Schaub, is an emphatic "NO!" The pro gram is voluntary at the present time, and farm families ear. kill their own meat animals at will, and on the same basis as hi pre vious years, but they will oe ex pected to dispose of surplus meat above the 2 1-2 pounds quota per week for each adult member of the family. The second question usually ask ed is: “Why do we have to cut down the amount of pork, beef, veal, lamb and mutton that we eat when farmers produced the i t >st livestock in history?” This can be answered, the Ex tension director said, by simply reporting that demands of the arm ed forces and other United Nations have risen to the ertent that our soldiers, sailors and allies cannot have al lthe meat they need if civ ilians are to oat all they want. The third question is: “Why don’t we ration meat as we do sugai ? ” The answer to that is not very complicated either. Dean Schaub stated. Rationing meat it not so simple a problem to work out as sugar rationing. It is not expected that meat rationing Can be put in to operation until the early part of ltU.'l. In the meantime, we are asked by our Government to ra tion restricted meats voluntarily. State College Ans. Farm Questions Question—What is a good recipe for making sausage? Answer—North Carolina farm people have found the sausage re cipe in Extension Folder No. 31, "Killing and Curing Meat on the Farm.'' to be good. For 50 pound of pork (three fourths lean and one fourth fat) use one pound .>i fine table salt. 2 1-2 ounces oi finely ground black pepper, and 3 ounces of sage. Mix these in fredients thoroughly and spread e venly over the meat. Then stir the meat well before chopping. A copy of the folder may he obtained free from the Agricultural Editor State College, Raleigh. Question.-How should cattle in fested with grubs be treated? A nswrr—Cat.tle infested with grubs (sometimes called “warbles’ or “wolves” should l>e treated in the following way: Mix a powder containing one part of 5 percent rotenone content derris or cube powder and two parts of writable sulphur. The powder should he ap plied to the black of the infested animal with a shaker and rubbed in lightly with the hand. Other methods of control are a derm co cube wash, or the use of a power sprayer in distributing a rotenone —sulphur mixture over the backs of the animals. Question—What is the best type of milk bucket ? Answer—Where hand nviking -s done, a hooded or small top milk bucket is preferred. This type of bucket will exclude about 50 per cent of the number of bacteria which usually get into the milk during the milking process. The I strainer should be seamless and 1 constructed to use standard filter discs. Milk cans and all other u tensils used in handling milk should be of standard construction and free from open seams. State College Hints For Homemaker® BY RUTH CURRENT State Home Demonstration Agent North Carolina State College Home economists of the U. b. Department of Agriculture advise taking a tip from the gas r.taticn boy who cleans your windshield, or from the man who cleans hotel windows. They have to know (V-uck, easy methods of getting clear glass and is hard to rub dry. And they never use rags that shed lint either. Do you feel like a flat tire at 4 o’clock in the afternoon? Then, maybe what’s wrong with you is your lunch. Perhaps you need vita mins-not the kind you get by buy. ing pills, but the kind you der-ve from including raw fruits and veg etables in your lunch. The next time you have your lunch, be sure to include fresh fruit, maybe bright i yellow carrot ttic’s =. a coup’" of stalks o: celery, a tomato or a hit of cabbage. These would all fit well in a lunch pail, too If you like sandwiches, try a combination that includes a fresh raw vegeta ble. a meat and chopped raw spin ach special, or try raisins, cheese and carrot spread. “Do your feet hurt ? asks ■ nc Consumer Guide. Seven out o. 1” people, the Consumers Guide re ports. have foot trouble of some kind, usually due to poorly fitted shoes. You can't get your right size just by asking the clerk for a cer tain size. Don't go by the size of your last shoes either,,, because there is no standard for shoe sizes. Don't guess your size. Have your feet measured each time you buy shoes, and keep on trying shoes until you get a really comfortable pair. Never buy shoes that need altei ations. Allow one-naif inch beyond the end of your big toe to the end ot the shoe inside. The ball of the foot little toe to the great toe joint) should rest on the vilest part of the sole. The shank ot your shoe should lit snugly undei your arch. The rhoe should hug your heel, with no gaping and no slipping when you walk. The fit should be firm nt the bottom of the heel as well as at the top, LEGAL NOTICES SALE OF LAND WHEREAS, on the 12th day of November, 1910. Matthew Piitman and wife, Leana Pittman, executed a note to R. C. Dunn, or order, in the sum of FORTY-NINE HUN DRED ($4900.00) DOLLARS, pay able November 1. 1920: and where as, said note was secured by a Deed of Trust to J. t ■ Blanch, Trustee, upon the lands herein after described; and whereas, de fault has been made in the pay ment of said note and W. A. \\ il I eox, the present holder thereof, de 1 mands that said lands be sold re * IN THE ARM* ★ they say: «vARl> ^ u .low to learn for > wcruii «ho "BUTZINO v***9 1 "C0WtRAC»».kchevroO, |forooa.co»mi«jo«^ F/RST/H THE SERV/CE ; With men in the Army, Navy, J Marines, and Coast Guard, . the favorite cigarette is Camel. I (Based on actual sales records inPost Exchangesand Canteens.) CAMEL ' COSTLIER TOBACCOS PC Statement of Expenditures To Board of Commissioners Year Ending November 30, 1942 J. W. WHITAKER-12 Regular Meetings of Board at 4.4.00.-____ __ -- $-18.00 J. W. WHITAKER-4 Special Meetings of Board at $4.00 _______$10.00 J. W. WHITAKER-384 Miles Traveled at 5c ....-...- .- $19-20 J. W. WHIT AKER—12 Months as Chairman at $25.00 per Month _ _ __— $300.00 J. W. WHITAKER — Hotel and Travel in Interest of Air Port— _ _— - $87.50 X. W. WARREN--12 Regular Meetings of Board at $4.0o X. W. WARREX—4 Special Meetings of Board at $4.00. . X. W. WARREX—800 Miles Traveled at 5c... J. R. WREXX--10 Regular Meetings of Board at $4.00. J. R. WREXX—4 Special Meetings of Board at $4.00 .... J. R. WREXX—392 Miles Traveled at 5c_ _ $48.00 $10.00 $40.00 $40.00 $10.00 $19.00 W. J. COLLIER—12 Regular Meetings of Board at $4.00 W. J. COLLIER—4 Special Meetings of Board at $4.00. _ W. J. COLLIER—3 Days on Tax Values at $5.00_ W. J. COLLIER—637 Miles Traveled at 5c__ W. J. COLLIER—Expense Selling Tax foreclosed Land $48.00 $16.00 $15.00 $31.85 $51.75 M. W. PERRY—12 Regular Meetings of Board at $4.00....-. .. . $48.00 M. W. PERRY-4 Special Meetings of Board at $4.00.. .... .. $16.00 M. W. PERRY—8 Days tax Valuation Outside __ _ $40.00 M. W. PERRY—Expenses of Board to Convention at Asheville_ _ _ _$98.10 M. W. PERRY-332 Miles Traveled at 5c___ -. -.$16.60 $1031.60 NUMBER OF DAYS OF BOARD IN SESSSIOX_ ____ 16 DAYS NUMBER OF MILES TRAVELED . .. ..2601 MILES The above statement is published in complainc-e with Section 1311-C. S. M. H. MITCHELL, Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners tn law to r-otutv Fan cording note. NOW, THEREFOKE. notice i“ hereby given that the undersigned J. C. Branch, Trustee will sell the lands described in said Deed ot Trust at public auction l'oi cash at the Courthouse in Halifax or Monday, the 28th day of Decem ber. 1942. The lands which will be sold as aforesaid are described in said Deed of Trust as follows FIRST TRACT: That tract or parcel of land beginning at the center of a path in a line divid ing the land of the late Jane Pittman and Rice Pierce, then ce S. 24o 20' W. 750 ft. to a stake, thence S. 35o 50' E. 421 ft. to a stake, thence N. 34” 40' K. 750 ft. to a stake in the cent er of said line, dividing the lands of the late Jane Pittman and Rice Pierce, thence N. 42o 45 W. 532.5 ft. to the beginning and containing eight acres according to plat and survey made by C. F. (lore, Engineer, on the 11th day of February, 1919, and be ing the land which was allotted to Matthew Pittman by S. P. Johnson, l). E. Campbell. Rich ard Brickell. SECOND TRACT: That tract or parcel of land beginning at a stake Harper's corner In 14. E. Sherrill’s line and running a long said Sherrins line S. b l-4o W. 2363 ft. to the County road, thence along said County road in a Westerly direction 800 feet to a stake, thence N. 6 l-4o K. 2930 ft. to a stake in line of Harper, thence along Harper's I line S. 69 l-2o E. 790 feet to l the beginning and containing 46 ! 3-4 acres and being the same j land that was conveyed to Mat thew Pittman by the Bullock Land and Supply Company and being Lot No. 1 of the Williams and Emery tract. I Dated this the 24th day jf Nov. ember, 1942. J. C, BRANCH, Trustee K. L. Travis, Attorney. Dec. 24 - 4t. COMMISSIONERS SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of an or. der of sale entered on Monday the 23rd day of November, 1942 by A. L. Hux, Clerk of the Super. ior Court of Halifax County, in in action therein pending, entitled “John C. Long vs. Robert Taylor and Ethel Taylor, his wife, Olivia Alston and Thomas Alston, her husband, Millard Taylor and Dora Taylor, his wife,” the undersigned the duly appointed Commissioner, will on Monday, the 28th day of December, 1942, at the Post Office door in Weldon, North Carolina, at 12 o’clock, M.. offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following described real estate, to wit: Those two certain lots or par cels of land lying- situate and being just West of the Town of Weldon. Halifax County. Nor th Carolina, on the South side of First Street, extended or the old road leading from Weldon to Roanoke Rapids, fronting 75 feet on the South side of the aforementioned Street or Road, and extending back between pa rallel lines on the Eastern edge 103 feet and on the Western edge 101 feet, and numbered and designated as Lot No. 3 and Lot i No. 4 of Block "C”, according to plat or survey heretofore pre pared by W. A. Peterson, C. E. of E. M. Eustler Engineering Co. of Raleigh, January 20, 1920, which map or plat is duly rec orded in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds of Halifax Coun ty in Plat Book No. 2, pages 87 und 88, reference to which is here made for greater certainty of description. The sale will be made subject to the confirmation of the Court, and a deposit of ten per cent of the purchase price will be required of the successful bidder as evi dence of good faith. This the 23rd day of Novem ber, 1942. (.'HAS. K. DANIEL, Commssioner. Dec. 24 4t,_ COMMISSIONER’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of an or der of sale entered on the ICth day of November, 1942 oy A. L. Hux, Clerk of the Superior Court of Halifax County, in an action therein pending entitled "Huger (I. Lucas and Willis McIntyre Lu cas, Incompetents, appealing here in by their duly appointed Guard ian, Mrs. Christine Pair, to the Court ex parte,” the undersigned, the duly appointed Commissioner, will on Saturday, the 2nd day of January, 1943. ,t '^=, the Post Office door M- C.. offer for "a°" . " *3 est bidder for cash tk *i <lescribed real estate t That certain lot 0r land, together w,!h ,**1 thereon. ,n South wJu’ fax County, North ra ^ ® more particularly d follows: Beginning ?",bl oak in the edge a * l“st above the road leam,“ Mrs. W. H. Holdford's "".fl (now owned hr \y \y 1 ”"*** wife to the public roauTj from Weldon to Halifax , me (hence along u,e edge ditch S. 31 1-v w ‘j* thence at right ang,M l(J‘ last mentioned line s 5: , ‘ f° thencc at right ,4, to said last mentioned !!„* 34 1-2 " 200 leci; thence right angles to said |ast , tmned line N. 55 3.4 p " to a white oak. Uie point' beginning, l or greater cert, ot description reference i* made to the deed of Cm Keeler and Ruth heeler t0 Holdford recorded in book 2 page 479 and deed record, book 3b4 at page 397, dated ruary 12. Il»2b. The sale wdl be made 3 to tho confirmation of the and a deposit of ten per Cl tlte purchase price will be i ed of the successful bidder evidence of good faith. This 30th day of Nov, 1042. CHRISTINE pai: Commissic Chas. R. Daniel. Attorney Weldon, N. C. Dec. 31 - 4t. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTIcJ Having qualified as adminiit tor of trie estate of Ettron son, deceased, late of HaU County, North Carolina, this la notify ull persons having claimi| g ainst the estate of said to exhibit them to the under.™ ed administrator at Weldon, N on or before November 27 1943, or this notice will be pit ed in bar of their reeoverey. persons indited to said est* will please make immediate ps ment. This the 2oth day of Noveml 1942. A. C. Cofield, Administrator of the estate Ettron Harrison. •T. T. Maddrey, Attorney. Dee. 31 - 6t. USE SINCLAIR LUBRICAN In saving wear and avoiding breakdown the U. S. Army uses Sinclair lubricants in many “Jeeps", tanks and other vehicles. Your Sinclair Dealer has the same quality lubricants to reduce wear in your car. To save engine wear he has Sinclair Opaline Motor Oil. Opaline stands up better and lasts longer because it is not only de-waxed but also de-jellied. Play safe, have your Sinclair Dealer drain and refill your crankcase with Opaline every 1,000 miles. Oil IS AMMUNITION-USE IT WISELY SINCLAIR OPALINE nr DISTRIBUTED BY E. W. PARKER WELDON, N. C. COLLIER’S SERVICE STATION WBLDON, N. C. HARRIS SERVICE STATION JACKSON, N. C. WELDON MOTORS, Inc. WELDON, N. C. ALLMONDS SERVICE STA. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. V. I. MOHORNE BRINKLEYVILLE, N. C. M. P. CRAWLEY ANDERSON’S * "ROADS, N. C. EUGENE LASSITER LASKER, N. C. W. J. DEBERRY CONWAY, N. C., R. F. D. R. G. FUTRELL CREEKSVIILE, N. C. MURRAY’S SINCLAIR SER ROANOKE RAPIDS, N. C. C. L. KELLY AURELIAN SPRINGS, N. C. R. W. LONG LASKER, N. C. TILLERY MUTUAL ASSN. TILIJSRY, N. C. F. B. COOKE TILLERY, N. C. ELMORE WILKERSON TILLERY, N. C. H. T. HANCOCK SPRING HILL, N. JACK WALKER HALIFAX, N. C., R- I1 " J. T. MIZELLE palmyra, n. C. JOHN PARKS JACKSON, N. C„ R. F >> P. A. BULLOCK seaboard, n G
Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 17, 1942, edition 1
6
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