News About Clubs In Chowan County By HATTIE SINGLETARY Home Demonstration Agent June is Dairy Month. The June Month theme for 1954 is “Dairy (^■Foods —For Taste, Health and Econ omy.” Milk is nature’s most perfect food. It contains more of the essential food I nutrients than any other food . . . and 1 you do need milk. You need one quart a day until you are 25 years old and one pint a day after that. Why do you need to drink milk ev ery day? It helps build strong bod ies and keeps them in good repair. In one quart of milk you find 54 per cent of the protein needed for building and repairing muscles and other tis sues. It is almost impossible to get the required amount of calcium in our diet without drinking milk. One quart pro vides 116 per cent of the day’s needs. Calcium is used in building strong bones, teeth, fingernails, aids in the clotting of blood and insuring normal responses of the heart, other muscles, and nerves. A lack of calcium over a long period of time causes the bones to decay easily. Milk is also rich in riboflavin or Vi tamin 82. This “keep young vitamin” presedves a healthy condition of the skin and hair, aids in children’s growth, and in the digestion and ner vous system. One quart of milk fur nishes 141 per cent of the day’s needs of riboflavin. Would you like to have steady nerves? Milk has 43 per cent of the day’s needs of Vitamin B or Thiamin which hips maintain steady nerves and aids digestion. A quart of milk con tains 20 per cent of the day’s needs for iron and this is in a radily di gestable form. That’s not all you will find in milk. Milk contains 40 per cent of the Vitamin A needed for good eyesight and prevention of infections. And there's more, too —niacin, calor ies, phosphorous and traces of others. How can you get milk into your diet? Milk and m'lk products can be used as a beverage, on cereals, in soups, gravy, sauces, creamed and scalloped dishes, salad dressings, milk drinks, custards, cakes and pies. As cream on fruits and desserts, as cheese for breakfast, diner and supper and for between meals. There’s no end to k, the many ways milk and milk products p can be used. Let’s use more milk and milk pro ducts during June Dairy Month. Cook, tasty milk desserts will be ideal for the June Home Demonstration Club, Circle and other similar meetings. Try some of these recipes at your Juno mootings: Lemon Cocoanut Squares 34 cup sweetened condensed milk j 3 T. lemon juice ’i t. grated lemon peel 10 x 5 angel loaf cake 1 cup toasted, shredded cocoanut 9 peach slices, drained mint leaves Combine the sweetened Condensed milk and lemon juice. Stir until thick ened. Add the grated lemon peel. Cut MEMORIAL DAY DANCE Saturday, May 29 9 TIL Edenton Armory Benefit Swimming Pool Fund I Music By HERB CARTER and Orchestra Sponsored By VFW POST 9280 AND AUXILIARY ADMISSION: $1.50 Stag $2.50 Per Couple In Advance $3.00 Per Couple at Door . NO RESERVATIONS.... PLENTY OF TABLES FOR ALL FAMOUS BEAR— Looking at you from his home in the National Zoo at Washington, D. C., is Smokey, live counterpart of the famous forest fire prevention trademark. Says Smokey—“ Each year mil lions of acres of forest and woodlands are lost through carelessness with fire. Please be careful, folks. Help stop America’s most shameful waste.” This message sponsored by: «h angel cake into 14* inch slices. Turn each slice on its side and frost with the lemon mixture. Sprinkle sides with cocoanut. Chill. Place 3 canned peach slices on each. Garnish with mint. Makes 3 servings. Cheese Straws 14 pound butter 1 pound sharp American cheese 2 cups sifted flour % t. salt Dash of cayenne Grate or grind cheese. Sift flour with cayenne and salt. Cut cheese and butter into flour until well mixed. Press together with hands until dough clings together. Roll out and cut as desired. Place on lightly greased backing sheet and bake at 400 de grees until slightly browned. Makes about 24 straws. Serve with a salad. Lime Fluff Dissolve !4 package Jello in V* cup boiling water. Add 1 cup light cream and mix well. Place in bowl of ice j water and whip with rotary egg beat-1 er 5 to 7 minutes or until mixture be-1 gins to hold shape around the side of the bowl. Remove from the ice wa-; 1 ter. Stir gently with a spoon until> smooth. Serve or store in refrigera tor until needed. Stir before using. Serve with cookies. Club Schedule Wednesday, June 8 at B:oo—Gum | Pond, with Mrs. Herman Nixon. , Thursday, June 3 at 3:oo—Center Hill at Community Center. Exactly The Same Hunter—Henry, do you still act to- j . ward your wife the same as you did. before you were married ? Henry—Just the same. I remember when I first fell in love with her. T would lean over the fence in front of her house and gaze at her shadow on the curtain afraid to go in. And I act exactly the same way now. THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON. N. r —UR SPAY, MAY 27, 1954. Banker-Civic Club Program Creating Interest In State Rotary Club Scheduled To Arrange Meeting For Event Regarding the Banker-Civic Club Program, arranged on a state-wride ba sis during the months of May and June, A. B. Harless, Chowan County Savings Bonds Chairman announced today that he received information from W. H. Andrews, Jr., State Chair | man, U. S. Savings Bonds Advisory . Committee, and Walter P. Johnson, I State Director, announcing that bank ers throughout North Carolina are co- j | operating in a special Banker-Civic I Club Program in which local bankers have been asked to speak before civic clubs on the subject of “What Sound - I Money Means Tc You.” The bankers’ participation in this program is under j the direction of Fred Greene, promi nent Charlotte banker, w'ho is chair man of the State Bankers Associa tion Savings Bonds Committee. Mr. Greene stated that the program was being carried on nationally with I i the full cooperation between the U. S. I Treasury Department, the American Bankers Association and all national ' civic club organizations. 1 1 Mr. Harless stated that the Banker- j Civic Club program is creating con-; siderable interest and that the Eden- < ton Rotary Club will arrange one of, > jits meetings for the event. -' l' ma f t pmfonMAHce I . so outstanding you I f have #o SEE it :to believe it H - 'Jt JOHN TRACTORS St*> tS Wide adaptability! You want it in your new general-purpose tractor. You get it in a new John Deere ”40" Series. The wide ad justlße front axle shown on the "40" above is just one example. This conversion-type axle, which can be set at any width desired, is growing in farmer popularity. It improves stability on hills and sharp inclines; it makes steering easier, especially when plowing or Hobbs Implement Co., Inc. EDENTON, NORTH CAROLINA hBI ■ The Home of Quality Service I |jj and Genuine JOHN DEERE PARTS M Gurnie C. Hobbs, Jr., Graduate At Maryland Among the group of graduates at the University of Maryland on Sat urday, June 5, will be Gurnie C. Hobbs, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Gur nie Hobbs of Edenton. Mr. Hobbs will have finished a four year course in three and a half years and will receive his B.A. degree at the graduation exercises. While at the University of Mary land Young Hobbs worked about 32 hours a week, part time, at a super market. His major subject was En glish and minor subject was philoso phy. He intends to return to the Uni versity next fall to work on an M.A. degree. Miss Inez White Dies Suddenly On Sunday Miss Inez White, 78, died Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock at the home of her niece, Mrs. H. V. Bass. While Miss White was in failing health for about six months, her death came un-: expectedly. A native of Chowan Coun-1 ty, she was a daughter of the late j Watson White and Artimissa Riddick White. Surviving are several nieces and nephews. She was a member of the Edenton Baptist Church. Funeral services were held at the Williford Funeral Home Tuesday af ternoon at 3 o’clock. The Rev. R. N. Carroll, pastor of tire Baptist church, officiated and burial was in Beaver Hill Cemetery. The things taught in schools and colleges are not an education but the means of education. —R. W. Emerson. pulling heavy wagon loads. The axle is designed to permit turning in an area no greater than re quired with the regular dual front wheels or single front wheel. What's more, you can now get the John Deere Quik-Tatch Cultivator for use with the tractor when equipped with wide front axle. Get a iree demonstration. See ing is believing! Colonials Win Game From Colerain 10 To 5 In an exhibition game played on Hicks Field Saturday night the Eden ton Colonials defeated Colerain by a score of 10 to 5. The Colonials scored three runs in the opening inning and again in the third and fourth innings chalked up three more runs. Manager Gashouse Parker used four moundsmen, Andrew Whitson, Henry Allen Powell, Gene Taylor and Bill! Herman. i Dragline Work <> < > !! HAVE YOUR FARMS PROPERLY DRAINED AND j; IRRIGA TED TO INCREASE THEIR VALVE \ > I AND PRODUCTION! I < > < > We recently finished a dragline job on the farm of W. E. J J Bond which had been abandond by another contractor. We | J are now equipped to handle any kind of dragline or bulldozer \ \ work. Call on usf Emmett H. Wiggins Phones 757 and 812 p O. Box 83 < > EDENTON. N. C. I n Congratulations TO JACK HOPKINS ON THE OPENING OF HIS NEW GRILL IN EDENTON We are proud to have had the opportunity of installing the new Frigidaire Electrical i Equipment and wiring of his modern grill. SAM LONG Phone 2716 Hertford, N. C. II » meowcT ■UMMtM*wnu>W I| WMKHLKY DISTILLMS. M nuawort umvcn ~ .#> I KENTUCKY WHISKEY* A BLEND K PROOF. 70% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. SCHENLEY DIST.. IR&. FRANKFORT.«. = SECTION THREE—I 1 t Fred Keeter, Edgar Rogerson, Ted Lassiter made two hits each while C. T. Wynn for Colerain led Colerain with two hits. Rocky Hock Defeats Colerain By 2-1 Score On Hicks Field Sunday afternoon Manager Palmer Tynch’s Rocky Hock baseball team defeated Colerain 2-1 in a hotly contested game. Franklin Hollowell, on the mound for Rocky Hock, allowed only two hits during the game Page Five

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