Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Sept. 11, 1958, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
picnic far Mrs Askew, * daughter of the late Mr, and Mn T. f. Greer. These preeMlfwere: Mr. and Mrs. it. T. Greer. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Greer. Mr. and Mrs. Grady Greer of Boone; Mrs. Bom A. ford of Ktagsport, Tenn.; Mrs. f. W Hopkins of Lenoir, and Miss Mary Gr? r of Lincolnlon. Mrs. J. L Penneu, who resides in* the State of Washington was the only absent members of the fsmfly. Other relatives present were and Mrs. Councill Hensoo of Vilas, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Pre vatic and their daughter, Laura Belle of Lenoir, Mr. and Mrs. Tru man Crltcher and their daughter Jennie Ardease of Blowing Bock, and Mr. and Mrs. Otis Wise and thetr daughter. Miss Gay Wise of Newland. Overseas Wives To Have Picnic The "Overseas Wives" and their families held their fourth annual picnic at the home of Mr. and Mr*. William Edward*, at Roaring River, Wilkes County. A Urge group were preient and countrie* represented were: Eng land, Wale*, Scotland, Northetn Ireland and Eire. * Attending from Boone were Mr. and Mr*. William C. Surrey and their children David and Etiza beth. The MM picnic will be held in Boone and overseas wives in thia area interested in meeting with thia group ar* urged to contact Mrs. Beryl Surrey, (formerly of Walea, Great Britain) Box 140, Boone. Telephone AMherft 4 3813. Men's "A* Club Meets Friday The Men'a "A" Club of Appala chian High met Friday, Sept. 5 aa their firat meeting for thia year. The "A" Club dpes various joba around the school. Besides aelling at the ball gamea the club haa a yearly project which ia done for the school. The senior members of the club received their jackets and are now ' wearing them. Ill is years officers include: Jim Hayes, president; Bill Miller; vice .p resident; Bill Farthing, secre tary; Fred Cook, treaaurer; and 1. R. Hartley, sergeant-at-arms. FOR THE BIRDS Winston-Salem, N? C. ? "Help; murder Pollcel" twittered the pet parakeeet. in frantic chirp* and trills. The R. L. Perkins family; rous ed at 2 a. m., heard strange noises just outside a bedroom window. They called police, who closed in stealthily to search (or a prowler. They found one ? a big, hungry cat perched on a stack of lumber, licking/ his chops and leering at ths family parakeet through the window. YOUR AUTO 1 INSURANCE EXPERT J SEE JERRYl COE FOR INSURANCE keeps your car on the road I on I roj _ A bod collision, theft, fire, o 1 liability suit . , . can end the driving pleasure of your whole family. That's why a modem Family Auto Policy Is. needed to meet modem auto insurance needs. See your local auto insurance expert for a complete pro gram on your car. Coe Insurance & Realty Co. E. r. COB, Mttafer DIAL AM 4-S236 Been, N. C. ? 117 1U1* St. Jellied Salad ? Purple Plum Good! 1 Idaho's F rah Purple Plums (Italian prunes) ar? hm large, swret, d. lidoua? so food for pleasant munching. sliosd with crtNtm and a sprinkling of powdnrod sugar at a drizrle o f honey for breakfast or dassert, in salads of So many kinds. Put than into pies, cobblers, froien desserts, upudedown cakes, quick breads', on your canning cupboard shelves as jams, prsservas and conserves, spicy AM, because their saaaon is so short, do stow soma away in your freezer. No peel inc. no Haothing; no worry over fruit turning dark; no fuss in removing seeds, for these are "free stones" and zip right oof; no fancy ayraping. The prune halves, augarad lightly and properly packaged, will haep for months, to enjoy as yon do those from today'* marketing. But, freah or froaan, do try this luscious and beautiful salad. It's gootT. Fresh Purple Pluai Jellied Salad % cup (agar 1 cup eoantciy-chappad pealed apple, 'icupwater 1V4 cupi aeaded white paps halve* ? I package lemon gelatine 'A cup coarsoly-cut walnut* OR V4 cup orango juice Vj cup miniature marshmallow* 114 cup* coarsely-chopped Idaho Freah Purple Plum* Bring Near and water to the boiling point Dissolve gelatine in the hot ayiup. Add ormng* juice and rind. Chill. Whan it atari* to thicken, stir in remaining ingredients Pour into oiled individual moid* or a l'/? quart mold. Chill until firm. Tarn oat on caid plat* and garnish with crisp green*. Serve with m*yonnalse to Which ha* been added a little orange juice and rind, with whipped cream folded In if desired. Yipld: 6 to 8 servings. Bread Ih A Breeze! I nUed bread" U to mod! Malta it often: if* ?ary to ixprieingly. any "raised" bread iat To help beginners: recipe exactly? no variational (8) "Turn out on flourrd en dough begin* to leave aidea t bowL (S) To knead: over toward yon. Then preea dough down and away from baeii of hande. Tom dough around ? Ut and repeat ' until dough ie smooth, elastic and non-itirky. You will aid by beaming lacee 'round your table ? when you bake Vt cup butter or other shortening 1 cup hot water 1 oackiM dry vrait 6 t?blc3|>oon? sugar 1 teaspoon salt 2 cop* tendn-thln flakad noup raisin* egg yoUu 4 cup* ail tad float (about) Melt butter In hot water; then cool to lukewarm. Add yeast and Mir until dissolved; then add sugar, salt, coconut and mkins; mix well. Stir in eg* yolks. Add flour to make a dough which can be handled easily. Turn out on floured board and knead until smooth. Place dough in creased bowl and brush surface with melted short ening; cover with doth and let rise in warm place until doubled in bulk. Turn out oa floured board and knead again. Shape into i loaves and place in two greased 8x4x3-inch pans. Brush with melted shortening, cover, and let rise in warm place until doubted in bulk. Bake in modern t? oven (MOT.) 60 minutes, or antil done. Note: About 6 hours are required to nufke this bread. Here's Luxury Heat at Lowest Cost! U/arm /Horning THF NEW MODEL "500" Deluxe Circulator COAL HEATER Check thtM features PORCELAIN FINISH? two-ton* brow*. LAROI CAPACITY? Ml ? only one* ? dap. DltUXI CIRCULATOR? mora fc.n.im ?..*? L - U-nt. ua 4m JL I II m M?l npun vp w q ivvwii PATINTID 4-FLUI RMMICK LINING BARGAIN IOW ?NE TIRE & BARGAIN STORE W? W. KING ST. BOONE Total Farm Production ; Greatest InlfHistory J i EE . By IL J. Total field crop production for the United States iu 1#M is big ger than at any previous time ia our Malory. This. record breaking harvest, it duf to ma ay factor*. Some of Jkse factors include favorable lmther conditions, liet ter management by farmers, and contributions of pabtk and pri vate scientists that have develop ed batter seeds, improved fertili zem better Insecticides, and new equipment 'jfafii A f ? . [????' This produetioi. achievement U belli# accomplished through bet ter education of the' farmer and ??W'V-3 " *?? ' TV thf farm advisor. r/vnt<?UryhU credit to this increase it due to Hitler rtmiprvil ion of toil and w?ter resources on the farms. Lo cal Soil Conservation Districts and the Soil Conservation Service have had a part' in tbii conserva tion movement and can see the re sults in increased, jrtaMs on thou sand* of farms across our ration Hti( record breaking yield came a boot with the least acm|i ' ia crops in 40 years. It shows that our farmers are making greter use of the latest technical V?w ledge. This use of scientific meth ods .together with good weather ^ Improve Breakfast Habits During September Better Breakfast Month Breakfast to ba adsquate for 16-19 jwi aid bon should provide approximately *00 calorie* and 28 grams of protein, if it is to meat one-fourth of the daily nutritional requirement! recommended by the National Research Council for tMa age group. It ? easy to modify a hasir cereal and milk brsakfast pattern of fruit, eereal, milk, braad and butter, recommended by doctors and dietitians aa adequate for moat people, to most the increased re quirements of the older lira age boy. Here is a well-balanced breakfast msnu suitable for tUa ago group: Orange juice, a large serving of oatmeal with milk and sugar, buttered toast, and a chocolate mi hoc for the bevvrttt. ' "Food Comas First"? the last tan minutes of sleep are not as important for the active teen-ager aa devoting this time to eajbw . breakfast Research with teen-age boys at the State University gf Iowa proved that brsakfast is important for maximum physical and mental efldency during the late morning hours. Teachers reported that good brsakfast habMs resulted in better attitudes toward school work and higher grades. September Better Breakfast Month is the time to re ssteblisn good breakfast habits for .the school and workdays ahsad. NEW the patented PATENTED 100 % PATENTED built-in rims 4 TUNIS MORI NEAT OVER TNI FLOOR Hmm inr k.f.re! The revolutionary new Siegler sends the air right through the heart of the fire TWICE to give yo* a houseful of SUPER Floor Heat! Here's furnace comfort with out costly pipes and registers to install. You save the cost wasting beat on the ceiling or out the chim ney. See the amazing new Siegler that pay* for itself with the fuel it saves. Buy it on a MONEY BACK GUARANTEE ?jea?eft. Annuo wroKto-ut Oil NOME NEATER (mm fa far ? Fill hH iemtstntiu! BOONE TIRE & BARGAIN STORE W. KING ST. BOONE '7"praR coalition* has mad* this (rut kwvnt possible. Large crop yields create pro blems for the government and for the farmer. Oar bulging ware houses and storage bins will mean lower profits per unit for the tanner It will also mean more keadaches for the government to disposing of these surplus crops. The long range picture leoks brighter for agriculture With a. continuous increase In population, freater production is going to be seeded to meet the demands for tood and fiber. These demands must be ' met despite continued losses ot agriculture land through ?oil erosion, through super high ray construction that takes up to 50 acres of land per mile, indui rial expansion, new home deve opments, etc. Only through a stepped up soil ind water conservation program >n our nations farms, and the ue >f all technical knowledge avail iMe, can we expect to meet the food needs of our people a few fenerations hence. Our surpluses oday indicate that we can better >revent food shortages to the fu ure. Win. O. Greene Taken By Death William Oliver Greene, well mown Blowing Rock citizen, died Saturday afternoon at Watauga Hospital. He was 80 yean old. Funeral services were held at :he Rumple Memorial Presbyter an Church in Blowing Rock Mon iay at 2 o'clock. Rev. Walter K. Keys and Rev. Edwii^ F. Trout roan conducted the rites and bur ial waa in the Evangelicial and Reformed Church cemetery. Mr. Greene is survived by two ions and one daughter, Stanley Sreene, Sylvester Greene, and Mrs. Cecil Rhodes, Blowing Rt>ck; I ? sister, Mrs. C. W. Moody, Ln air; a brother, H. H. Greene, of Lenoir and three grandchildren. Mr. Greene was a member of St. Mark's Lutheran Church. He supervised the building of the or iginal Blowing Rock golf course and for 48 years waa careaker for Green Park Hotel. More than 50 years ago he waa married to Miss Mabel Greene, who died five years ago. CHEOPS GETS LIT - Cairo ? They've installed neon light inside Cheops. This is the largest of the pyramid* and the one tourists enter to view the bur ial chambers of ancient Egyptian royalty. Heretofore, visitors had to grope by candlelight behind their guides. Candles are still us ed in the surviving temples. SERVING IN GERMANY Augsburg. Germany ? Army Pet. Ulyless L. Moore, son of Mr. and Mri. Ulyless L. Metre, Route 1, Sugar Grova, M. C., recently arriv ed in Germany and is now a mem ber of the 24th Medical Company. Moore, an ambulance driver in the battalion'* Company A, Augs burg, entered the Army la Janu ary 1908, completed basic train ing at Fort Jackson, S. C., and ar rived in Kurepe in August 1988 ' School - Office - Art Sapplfes Smith Printing Co. King at Appalachian The 11-year-old soldier was graduated from Cary District High School, Cary. W. Vr. in 1957. Baming tobacco i? one of the major coat* of producing flue cured tobacco. TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES CASH REGISTERS RENTALS ? REPAIRS SALES -Smith Printing Co. , Boone, N. C. PROTECT YOUR FAMILY BY BECOMING A MEMBER OF Reins-Sturdivant Mutual Burial Association, Inc. TELEPHONE DIAL AMkent 4-8866 A 25-Cent Fee b Charged Upon Joining, After Which The Following Dues Are la Effect: DOUBLE BENEFIT Quarterly Yearly Benefit One to Ten Year* 9 -20 9 -80 $100.90 Ten to Thirty Year* .40 1.90 290.00 thirty to Fifty Yean __ JO 3.20 200.00 Fifty to Sixty-Fire Yeart 1.20 4.80 200.00 Paul said to Mr. Ed: After months of Iffort, the old merchant at the general store finally collected from a stubborn debtor. "Say on ray re ceipt," said the ornery customer, "that X dont owe you ? thing." With painstaking ore, the old storeman wrote: "Bearer dont owe the undersigned nothing? and ain't going to."? Ex. 1 Paul Watauga Insurance Agency o. r- / m ^ f NORTHWESTERN BAN^ BUILDING ? PHONE All Uftl BOONE, N. C. E. A. GADLTNET AND J. PAUL WINKLKB BOB AND PAT DIINNING'S DREAM CAR COMES TRUE IN PLYMOUTH'S END-OF MODEL CLEARANCE SALE Canny young local couple takes advantage of year's lowest prices ? Bob and Pat Dunning had put off bay ing a car. Budget Wanted to aea what would happen. Laat week aa Bob, a commercial artiat, waa driving to work be noted a sign in a Plymouth dealership reading, "End -of - Model Clearance Sue. Loweat Price* of the Year." . . . "Just," aa be aaya, "for the fun of it," he (topped hia car and wot la. Chatted with a Plymouth aaWaaum. Couldn't be bare hia ear*. Bob and Pat own their Mar Plymouth s Don't mi? LAWRENCE WELK imTr, nor* if nu( bright*# i nmicul htv THE PLYMOUTH SHOW rtW7 meek ?? ABC-TV. St TV naiw /cr liau ?nW chmmiuL 5g,- > v - / V. 1 " now ? made the beat deal of their Uvea. You can, too, if you hurry. Thia End of -Model Clearance Sale will be on at your Plymouth dealer'* until the laat 1958 it " aold. Afl modela included, and all at the yeair'a lowest prices. All come equipped with Plymouth' i luxurious Torsion- A ire Ride at mo extra coat. All femture sleek Silver Dart Styling. Total-Contact Brakes, thrilling sports-car "feel," other Plymouth ? exclusive s. Engine op lions even include A* breath-talcing Golden Commando V -8. Batter atop in at your Plymouth dealer'* today- If you're keen waiting to "aee what baffiwa" . . . it'? happening right now!
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 11, 1958, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75