PAGE EIGHT
United Nations flag
Presented To Scott
Presentation Made Re
cently In Special
Ceremony
Officials of the State College Ex
tension Service presented a blue and
white United Nations flag, one of
thousands made by home demonstra
tion women and 4HH Club girls of the
State during recent weeks, to Govern
or W. Kerr IScott in a special cere
mony in Raleigh recently.
Accepting the flag for the State,
the Governor praised the extension
sponsored UN flag-making program,
which he said will do much to make
North Carolinians 'more conscious of
the United Nations and its purposes.
“The United Nations must be made
possible sometime—and we think the
time to make it possible is right
now,” the Governor declared.
Miss Ruth Current, State home
demonstration agent, presided at the
ceremony. The presentation was made
by David S. Weaver, extension di
rector. Others appearing on the pro
gram were John W. Goodman, assist
ant director; Mrs. Mary L. McAllister,
southeastern district home agent; L.
R. Harrill, State 4-H Club leader; and
R. Mayne Albright, chairman of the
North Carolina Citizens Committee for I
United Nations Day. <
Ann Willis, Wake County 4-H girl, (]
presented a United Nations pin to (
Governor Scott, and Paul Wagoner,
Guilford County 4-H boy, presented ,
a pin to Raleigh’s Mayor P. D. Snipes.
Mrs. McAllister, giving a report on
the flag-making program, sai 1 flags
were being made in all of the State’s
100 counties for use during United
Nations Week, October 16-24. The
banners, she said, were to be present
ed to churches, county boards of com
missioners, town mayors, school offi
cials, State and county fair associa
tions, postmasters, farmers’ clubs,
veterans’ groups, congressmen and
senators, and other individuals and
groups.
Six flags made in Alexander, Cleve
land, Iredell, Mecklenburg, Gaston and
Rutherford Counties were sent to the
Paris office of the Carnegie Endow
ment for International Peace. They
were to be flown in Paris and other
European cities on United Nations
Day.
QUICK BLOOD SERVICE
The first shipment of whole blood
for use in Korea, collected through l
the Red Cross, left San Francisco
August 26. Some 42 hours later it
was being used on wounded Ameri
can soldiers.
fUEILO^
FILL THAT TANK!
Putting off that fuel order
may mean that you’ll be
caught with an empty
tank in a sudden cold
spell. At your conveni
ence, we’ll deliver oil —and
peace of mind. Call us
today!
Coastland Oil Co.
DISTRIBUTORS OF
Kerosene and Fuel Oil
PHONE 32-J
4 * r ♦
QLD SYAG£
Straight Kentucky fi "
Bourbon , H
Whiskey / / j
year? old Mh|
*3l?. *2!S.
86 PKOOF. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY.
THE STAGG DISTILLING CO.. FRANKFORT, KENTUCKY.
■
llVlcVet joy 1 1
' REMEMBER,WXL,VAIS *
ALWAYS READY ID HELP YOU
REINSTATE YOUR LAPSED
GI INSURANCE POLICY
" "" t ~ i.VnM.^^l
Record Crop Os Corn
Is Indicated In State:
Estimate of 79,606,000
Bushels Will Be Larg
est on Record
The 1950 com crop in North Caro
lina was estimated at 79,606,000 bush
els as of October 1. This is 1,090,000
bushels more than the September 1
estimate of production.
The estimated 1960 crop would be
the largest of record and exceeds the
1666]
H LIQUID OR 4
p TABLETS
,GIVES
FAST i
RELIEF
ywhen COLD
MISERIES STRIKE
PEPCNDABILITY
r © dayion-lh'
THE echoes of hitlusfy strokes
vibrating thru the snow-blank
eted forest, the lumberjack
continually matches his
strength end resourcefulness
with the mighty forces of nat
ure. He can be depended on.
Our staff can be depended on
to serve with discernment and
experienced authority. The
efficient manner in which we
care for all details is indeed
reassuring.
iwiuroPDi
I £7 "unihal I
■ PHONE 251 *EDEft TON Nl|
■ THE HOME OETHE iIBEMARLE ■
J MUTUAL BURIAL ASSOCIATION
laasmenMaßeaßaeaemseaueesMUMaaeaMn ■
HERALD EDENTGN, N. C., WO
previous record 1940 crop by more!
than 4 million bushes, or 6 per cent.'
The estimated 1060 crop is 44 per cent
larger than the 10-year average pro
duction of 55,385,000 bushels.
The October 1 estimated per acre
yield of 36.5’ bushels would also be the
highest of record. The current es- j
timated yield of 36.5 bushels com
pares with 55.0 bushels in 1949 and
the 1938-48 average yield of 24.2 bush
els per acre.
The 1950 U. S. corn crop is esti
mated at 3,117,967,000 bushels. A crop !
of this size would be about 8 per cent (
less than the 1949 crop but 7 per cent
morp than the .10-year (1939-1949) !
average production of 2,900,932,000
bushels.
The average yield per acre of the! (
U. S. com crop is estimated at 37.5 .
bushels as of October 1.
—i;
BRMDB
umi
I By Tbd Ksstmg
Plug casters have been told over i
1 ’ and over to keep their reel handles up, 1
not sidewise when casting, but I’ll
G*W S ,
1 SEVEN *2" Jm
STAR
Eluded whiskey. "The /^JP
straight whiskies are 4 / QgW /
) years or mors old. 3714% / SEVEN or. ‘ /
straight whiskey. 6214% flfl / JuL s *** /
oeetral spirits distilled wl I / /
fromgrain. 15%straight # /
whiskey 4 years old. r'ite* /,
15% straight whiskey 5 DDAAE J
years eld. 7V4% straight DIVVI v ■■■
whiskey 6 years old."
GOODERHAM & WORTS LIMITED, v PEOR!A, ILLINOIS
- —-*-***■ >^*****^A ***********************
Here’s "Required Reading” lor the BEST
Telephone Service—Professor
Checking the Telephone Directory is really
fast reading. It’s much faster than asking in
m formation for the number. And when you
are sure of the right number before calling—
you’re much less likely to get a wrong number.
So take a few seconds or so and check the Directory before mak
a telephone call.
'ey "Required Reading” that will always result in bettc
-rvice for you.
Norfolk & CarolinaTeL &Tel. Co.
Elizabeth City Eden ton Hertford Man too Sun bury
| ||
ox 3 ;
I KEEP YOUR CAR WELL GROOMED l
<; Handsome—the word for today's automo-3j
i; bile. And it will look that way for many years,:;
O % ' r, , ,
j ► if you give it proper care at the outset Start 3;
3 : out right for Fall. Let us take out occasional |;
o dents and touch up the paint, BEFORE rust::
j; sets in. Let us keep it looking g00d... so you < •
3: can keep it longer. Drive in today! 3:
:: v
«►' • O
x — 1 ;;
| B. B. H. MOTOR CO., Inc. !j
¥ “YOUR FRIENDLY CHEVROLET DEALERf
i North Broad and Oakum Sts. P
£ ”
wager leu than a tenth of those you
Isee fishing do it. So let’s stop and,,
•figure out why this is so important. :
First, a casting reel, spins much''
more smoothly and freely with the
spool sort of balanced on the tail pivot. :
It just won’t run right with the i
handles sidewise, the pillars and spool <
horizontal
Then, with 'the reel handles side- <
wise, the guides are on top of the
rod. As the line goes out it slaps ]
the rod and vyhen wet, dings and [
jerks on it. But what-happens with ;
the guides on one side, as they must 1
be with the reel handles up? Why j
the bow of the line downward be-
tween the guides can touch nothing but ,
air. So it flows out smoothly, easily. j
I Now for the most important rea-
son. What do you do when you cast
with the spool horizontal ? Why you’re
throwing the rod out with the thumb
of your casting hand—you just can’t
help.it. But has this ever occurred .
to you?. How are you going to drive 1
the rod out with your thumb and at
the same time use that thumb to con
trol the reel? You can’t. To control
the reel properly, and to be sensitive,
the thumb must be relaxed, not tense
and pushing; one job is all it can
handle. So to push the rod forward
use the lowest joint of the index
finger where it joins the palm.
Now let’s boil all this down to the
[essential sentence, which if you’ll 4g|
! member and follow, will soon make
'you a smooth, accurate and effortless
[caster.
Keep your reel handles and the
[knuckle of your first finger up, and
push forward with the lower joibt of
that first finger—leaving your thumb
relaxed, free with nothing to do but
control tiie spool
Here’s something else that was
brought to our attention by Angling
Authority! Jason Lucas. Fly casters
are told to wait and feel the “pull of
the line” on the backcast. Why has
nobody ever advised the beginner at
plug casting to wait to feel the pull
of the plug? It’s the main secret
next to that free thumb, of smooth
plug casting.
That Began It
Husband—ls a man steals,.no mat
ter what it is, he will live to regret it.
If You Need Money To Finance or Re-Finance
Your Farm atLow Interest Rates... SEE
T. W. JONES
Edenton, North Carolina
Representative of One of the Nation’s Largest
Insurance Companies
TAKE UP TO 20 YEARS TO REPAY LOANS
| | ii ii niHW^j
mS
There’s a change of the year for your Buick,too,
stalwart as it is! Hot summer driving has taken’
its toll—in played-out lubricants, spark timing that
may have slipped off a notch or two over the, many
miles, a carburetor that would probably give you
better mileage and snap if it were properly adjusted
now for fall driving.
Point is—your Buick will feel a lot friskier in the
trying days to come if you let your Buick dealer get
those summer kinks out of its system now! Just
drive in—say you want (1) a fall tune-up and (2) a
regular Lubricare—and see how much rewarded you
are, for a small feet
Do it this week, will you? Before die rush, you can
be served more promptly.
visa*. WF*
\nßufck
Wife (coyly)—You urad to steal
kisses from pie before vrt were mar
ried. • - * ’
Husband—Well, you heard? what I
•Md, '■ . ••
TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED AD
~ f n_rxr
A Three Days' -
Cough Is Your .’ a
■' Danger Signal
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heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
membranes. Guaranteed to please you
or money refunded. Creomulsion has
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CREOMUCSION
nSiw Coesfct, Oral Colik, Acate •rwcfcitle