si i hi ■ " H Applications For Home Loans Jump Increase of 5,800 Loans In August Over Pre vious Month GI home loan applications received by the Veterans Administration dur ing the month ending August 25, 1953, topped the 31,000 mark, an in crease of 5,800 over the previous month, VA announced. Under the GI loan program, a lending institution agrees to make the loan before it sub mits a loan application on behalf of a veteran to VA for guaranty or in surance. T. B. King, Acting Assistant Depu ty Administrator for Loan Guaranty, said: “The August rise indicates that veterans, may be Ending it somewhat easier to obtain GI financing, al though we cannot be certain on the basis of one month’s experience. Also, it is still harder for veterans to get GI loans in some areas than in oth ers.” Mr. King emphasized that some of the August increase may be at ,v tributed to the rush of lenders to get ’ loan applications approved by VA be fore the 4 per cent gratuity was sus pended after August 31, 1953. Mr. King expressed hope that the pick-up in GI loan volume during Au gust may reflect a gradually improv ing trend in the GI supply. “We have been looking for a gradual improve ment as a result of the increase in GI interest rates -effective last May and the liberalized discounts authorized in July. The Federal National Mortgage Association ‘one-for-one’ plan also should help the ability of builders to get GI financing for their projects.” ryvyvvvv v -vvvvvv)V.>y^yy/-|y- l^v^fl _ ( -^v v^-|J - JV^^^J^n^^^ 0> ' ■ ■'••' ' *■•■ '~" ' *' / Kentucky^ [ Straight \ l Bourbon J yWhiskeyy M gu fe. WRMQm '. JHNSp - B p • r He said VA would be better able i to interpret the significance of the August increase when it receives de- 1 tailed figures from its field offices i f showing the geographic distribution i I and also the types of lenders who i have increased their participation in < the GI loan program. I Tar Heel Club Women Spend Week Observing United Nations Work “I just can’t resist the temptation ( to tell you what a perfectly splendid idea or project I think the trip to i Washington, New York and the Unit- ' ed Nations will prove to be,” writes ' ; Mrs. Grace H. Andrews of Red ; Springs. Mrs. Andrews is one of more than 100 North Carolina home demonstration club women who will leave Raleigh on October 5 for a week in New York City. , “I am indeed grateful for this and ; the many other opportunities which ; home demonstration work affords, and I am proud to be counted among ! the farm women privileged to work i with home demonstration agents and ; state leaders,” continues Mrs. An drews. i Ruth Current, state home demon stration agent, says that the United ; Nations trip is a wonderful opportuni ty for educational leaders, an oppor ■ tunity to see first-hand the purpose of the United aNtions and to discover i just what the people back home can ■ do toward strengthening and protect ■ ing the American way of life. i Greeting the North Carolina home • demonstration club women in New ! York City will be Dr. Frank P. Gra- I ham, special UN mediator, and Mrs. i Beorge F. Roberts, UN observer for * the Associated Country Women of the i World. i On the way to New York City, the ’ delegation will stop over in Wash THE CHOWAN HERALD. EDENTON, N. C.. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1953. ington, D. C.„ where they will see Mt. Vernon and visit various government buildings. Miss Lena Hogan, south ern field agent for the Federal Exten sion Service, and J. Earl Coke, assist ant secretary of agriculture, will be on hand to greet the Tar Heel wo men in the nation’s capital. Academy Os Music Meets October 16th The Raleigh Academy of Medicine will hold its Fifth Annual Symposium on Friday, October 16, at the Hotel Sir Walter, Raleigh, N. C. The sub ject this year will be “Renal Disease,” and an effort will be made to pre sent both the medical and surgical as pects of the subject with emphasis on correlation between the two. The Symposium will be an all day and evening affair. All physicians of the state are invited as guests of the Academy, both for the talks as well as for the Academy dinner to be given at the Sir Walter at 6:30 that even ing. The Raleigh Academy was founded on February 2, 1870 and is the oldest local medical organization in North Carolina which has preserved its con tinuous existence. Originally found ed as a local organization for the en couragement of the furtherance of medical standards for its own mem- k You wouldn’t buy a car without driving it- / i ft Don’t buy a heater without trying it!! 7 I&ishikjUifrW. W Ml, A FREE * UOTDEMONSTRATION! see and feel how fiieqfai |B IE OIL oi BAS HEATERS | ® ILJ AwiSm ull om y° UR I*r INVITED l Let us prove to you that Siegler gives you I TO ATTEND THIS j without »$Hy pipes irmgkttis to install or chant II HOT DEMONSTRATION BY FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE | AT OUR STORE ALL DAY | Thursday and Friday, October Ist - 2nd I BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00 A. M., AND 4:30 P.M. I See. A Real Furnace In A SIEGLER Oil Heater I Quinn Furniture Company I PHONE 198 EDENTON I bers, it had originally ten chartered members. Today it has a membership of approximately 85 Raleigh physi cians. The Academy presents this yearly symposium for the edification of its members and guests, as its con tribution toward the cultivation of the science of medicine and the advance ment of the character and honor of the profession. Anticipated attendance of from 200 to 300 physicians is ex pected. New Beef Cattle Booklet Is Available To Farmers Conditions in general make North Carolina an ideal state for raising beef cattle, say the authors of a new booklet now available to farmers. The mild climate and heavy rainfall afford good grazing and economical feed production. “Raising Beef Cattle," prepared by A. V. Allen and J. S. Buchanan, live stock specialists for the N. C. State College Agricultural Extension Ser vice, and C. D. Grinnells, professor of veterinary scienoe at State College, is a revision of an earlier manual on beef production. It contains the lat est information on dozens of topics, all of which are important to the farmer who hopes to make a profit of his beef enterprise. The authors explain that North I Carolina’s Coastal Plain, once a thriv i ing cattle area, is again becoming an important cattle region. “In the past : few years ...” say the authors, “thq i cattle business in this section has been . coming back on a much sounder basis . than originally, and many farmers are finding it to their advantage to carry ' a breeding herd or to fatten some cat . tie as an enterprise supplementary to , cotton, obacco, peanuts, and other cash crops.” The authors point out, however, ■ that “the best natural grazing is lo cated in the mountain areas . . ” ' Free copies of “Raising Beef Cat tle” are available upon request to: 1 Department of Agricultural Informa ' tion, N. C. State College, Raleigh. Just ask for, (Revised) Extension Cir ‘ cular No. 268. 1 ' Accidents Cause Loss - 250 Million Man-Days i A million workers would have to - toil more than a year to make up for f the time lost in 1952 due to occupa s tional accidents, according to the Nat i ional Safety Council. “Accident Facts”, the Council’s sta , tistical yearbook just off the press, ; shows that time lost last year as a f result of work injuries amounted to 250,000,000 man-days. This includes hnot only time lost by the employees .SECTION TWO—] who were injured, but also that lost by those who stopped work to help the injured or out of curiosity. Fifteen thousand workers were kill ed and 2,000,000 injured in 1952, ac cording to the Council, but last year still was one of the safest years in history for the nation’s industries. The Right Doctor He was dug out of the wreck of his automobile and carried to the nearest doctor’s office. “I can’t do anything for this man,” said the doctor. “I’m a veterinary surgeon.” “You’re the right man, doc,” said the amateur motorist. “I was a jackass to think I could run that ma chine.” Flowers Choice of Freshly Cut Bouquets Carefully Ensembled Corsages or Deco-Right Potted Plsnts PHONE 342 Lula White’s Flower Shop 203 WBST CHURCH STREET Page Three