SUJGTION TWO—- Failure To Share i Road With Others | Inviting Accidents Common Sense Courtesy Goes Long Way to Reduce Wrecks “Failure to share the road with oth ers is a dangerous threat to safety on our streets and highways,” Major C. A. Speed, director of the Motor Ve hicles Department’s Highway Safety Division said today. The application of common sense courtesy on the part of drivers would dp a lot to reduce accidents, he point ed out. Speed chose these words to stress the importance of highway courtesy which the Motor Vehicles Department and cooperating local agencies are em phasizing in March. “Many traffic accidents occur when drivers are straddling the center line of the road, or when they neglect to yield right of way to pedestrians or other drivers at intersects,” Speed de clared. It is just common sense, too, and courtesy, for drivers to dim their lights when they approach or follow other cars at night, he said. “And it is common sense, and cour tesy. to drive at a safe speed for road, traffic and weather conditions,” Speed explained, “because an unsafe speed endangers the lives of pedestrians and other motorists. If you lose control of your car those innocent, as well as yourself, may suffer from your haste.’' With the nroper attitude of sharing the road with others, these discour ' teous, unsafe practices would disap pear, according to Speed. Referring to last year’s fatal motor vehicle accidents. Speed said they in dicated that the following list of cour teous acts must be considered basic to safe driving: 1. Share the road by driving in the proper lane. 2. Allow ample clearance when passing. 8. Yield the right of way to other drivers ... to pedestrians. 4. Give proper signals for stops and turns. 5. Dim headlights when meeting or following vehicles. 6. Respect traffic laws, signs, sig nals and road markings. 7. Adjust driving to road, traffic and weather conditions. “All these points are summed up in the slogan being publicized in this na tionwide program,” Speed said. He urged everyone to remember and EXTRA SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK 11l ’49 Ford, 2 dr. Sedan $495 HI ’47 Willis Jeep $295 HI ’sl Chev, 2 dr. Sedan $995 HI ’49 Chev, 2 Door $495 HI 1953 FORD 4 dr.Sedan (f /QQC ill Two-tone Green. Fordomatic, fully equipped. J HI New Car Guarantee. M A1 Mo Co A'l Used Caife II North Broad Street . W. P. “Bill” JONES, Manager Phone 58 Page Eight act on the slogan, “Make Courtesy j Your Code of the Road.” | Mix An Easy Dough By MARTHA STILLEY Virginia Electric & Power Co. Home Economist Here’s ar easy way to mix up a batch of rolls in little time with little ’ energy that can be baked or stored in your refrigerator, baked and ftozen for future use when company comes. Even made up into a delicious coffee cake. ’ First let’s make up the dough— Soften 1 package of active dry yeast in 14 cup warm water, and 1 cake compressed yeast in % cup lukewarm ' .water. Let stand for 5 minutes. Meanwhile measure % cup shorter. - • ing; % cup sugar, and 1 teaspoon salt I into large mixer bowl. Scald 1 cup • milk; pour over. Stir until shorten ing melts. Cool to lukewarm. ; Start mixer at medium speed and , then add 2 cups enriched flour, beat 1 ; minute. This beating takes the place . of kneading. Stop mixer. Add softened yeast , and 1 well beaten egg. Beat batter . smooth. (% minute) i With a spoon stir in 1H cup flour. . Beat with spoon until very smooth. NOTICE TO AOMIHISTPATDRS EXECUTORS AM GUARDIANS The law requires an ANNUAL ACCOUNT to be made each year and an Inventory to be filed within 90 days after qualifying. If your Annual Account, Inventory or Final Account are past due, we respectfully urge that you file same at once, as we are required to report all such cases to the Grand Jury, which will be convened at the Spring term of Chowan County Superior Court March 29. YOUR COOPERATION WILL BE VERY MUCH APPRECIATED : • C . \ ;■ . .. I Sincerely yours, E. W. Spires Clerk Superior Court THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1954. Cover and let rise double in bulk. Work down and let rise second time (30 minutes). Shape into rolls, let rise. Bake 425 degrees for 20 minutes. If you’d like an easy coffee cake— I Prepare a mixture of % cup flour, % cup sugar, % cup melted butter, 3; t tbsp. cinnamon and % cup bread crumbs. Add 1 cup raisins to the' ! dough and Vt cup chopped nuts. Shape 1 dough into balls, roll in sugar mixture I ► and place in 2 layers in well greas ed coffee cake ring. Serve hot with [ plenty of butter and cups of good cof fee. t . • [ HEALTH FOR All | tl FACT OR FANCY? ) One of the greatest differences be - tween our own times and those of our grandparents is in the attitude toward 1 illness. Modem man says; “Give us! I the facts and we’ll do something about ; it.” Nineteenth-century man saw di sease either as a cruel stroke of fate t or as punishment for his sins, r Since there didn’t seem to he much he could do about illness, grandfather . was inclined to romanticize it, make it as pretty as he could. Tuberculosis, Truck Bargains ’SO Chev. Paneled Truck $595 ’49 Chevrolet 2-ton Truck $795 or consumption, as it was commonly called, was a favorite of Victorian nov elists. Almost every family in a nov el of that era had a sweet, angelic ! young girl going into a decline. Us jually she died, with her last breath forgiving the sorrowing family clus tered around her bed. Sometimes Papa took her to Europe where she fell in .love with an English nobleman and made a miraculous recovery. Another I typical character was the Black Sheep who came home to beg forgiveness for his wild life and die coughing in his mother’s arms. Poets and artists almost always were described as having a hectic, tu berculosis flush. They died young, j after completing one great work of art. There was a legend that tuber i culosis made genius bum more bright ly- Modem man doesn’t want romantic legends about disease. He wants facts. He doesn’t leave his health to fate, but takes personal responsibility for it. He knows that the poet’s death from TB was tragically unnecessary; that the great picture was painted in spite of, not because of TB. He does not think it’s romantic to be half Mff THEWILKENCO.,‘AWRENCEBURG,IND. . BLENDED WHISKEY . 85 PROOF • 72’M GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS 1948 Chev, 4 Door Sedan O Q If You Want Transportation Cheap . . . This Is It! i Qjr ' alive. I So he joins with his neighbors in . 1 community efforts to fight the spread .I of tuberculosis. He follows the ele 'lmentary rules of healthy living so ! i that his body can defend itself against .'infection. If, in spite of his own es- I [ forts, he should contract TB, he knows I I he is not doomed. With modem treat- I ment—rest, drugs, and surgery—he .'has every hope of making a good re covery. . It’s a big change, but a change in , the right direction. PRESIDENT’S BOYHOOD 1 TOLD BY BROTHER ; Heart-warming story of the boyhood ' days of President Eisenhower as told by Ike’s brother, Earl. Don’t miss this fascinating two-part series beginning March 28th in THE AMERICAN WEEKLY . Magazine in Colorgravure with The , BALTIMORE ; SUNDAY AMERICAN Order From Your f Local Newsdealer ’49 Ford, 2 dr. Sedan $595 111 ’47 Plymouth Club Coup $395 ’4B Ford, 2 dr. Sedan $350 ’4B Austin Coach $295 | LINES BY SGGLOW ~. —. ■ .1 birthday why not sign ■■ •• 1 another United States Soring* BobA i Here’s a gift that mean* good hard cash for the future. For wdiool or r college. Because aalhoae birthdays roll hr—those Savings Bonds are piling up —collecting interest earning extra money for yonr youngsters. United States Savings Bonds now mature hi less than tan years—and they pay off handsome ly* four dollars for every three dol lars you put in. It’s never too soon to plan for fo*r youngster's future. Start buying him United Stale* Savings Bonds today.