Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Dec. 24, 1959, edition 1 / Page 8
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PAGE EIGHT section am SOCIETY NEWS ; ; $•- ' 5, A Mather Miss Frances Holton of St. Mary’s College, Raleigh is spend ing the holidays with her moth er, Mrs. Dave Holton, Christmas Guests Dr. and Mrs. Odie Underhill of Morgan ton are spending the holidays with Mrs. Underhill’s mother, Mrs. Belle W. Parker, in the county. Airs. Parker will , also have her son, Guy R. Park er and family of Falls Church, Va., to spend Christmas week-’ end. Christmas Here Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Letcher , and son, Clayton of Nashville, ( are spending the Christmas holi days in Edenton visiting their son-in-law and daughter, Mr and Mrs. Pete Manning. Guest of Parent? Miss Frances Ferguson of New York City is spending the holi-j days with her grandparents, Mr. . and Mrs. E. R. Marriner. ! Return From Farmville Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Long have returned after spending the week-end with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter Jones in Farmville. n . Home For Holidays Miss Faye Dail, who is teach ing at Virginia Beach, will ar rive today to spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Boyce. I\ jj Smit&nfas ! m giving j The World Famous SAMPLER $ 1 1 lb. 52.00 2 lbs. $4.00 $ “ Other Whitman's Assortments 3 1 Ideal For Gifts jj j | ! IWfowdTs || Rexall Drug Store I' Prompt Service Dial 2127 § ! ■ « ' A $ A A A A A A A « A 3 $ $ ® ft ft tt ft ft * .* »: >: | SPREADING THE NEWS | »: - V J t > I Am A\ i :« vq CHRISTMAS "I | I /3 where I m (J m m 1 I you, each and every one, we ££ SCK extend our thanks and our sincere !« BEST WISHES * : 1 i\j J I B{ JV | S«>'■ i * »: ft ‘M Bunch’s Garage And 9j 5 H n *' Bunch’s Auto Parts | jM' !A? n spi Christmas In Portsmouth 1 Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Ambrose j and son, E. 8., Jr., will spend I the Christmas holidays in Ports mouth visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ray Norris and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wheeler, Sr. Christmas Guests Comdr. and Mrs. Hugh Nelson and son arrived Wednesday to spend the Christmas holidays as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Parrish. Visit Cousin Robert and Jimmy White spent the week-end in Norfolk as guests of their cousin, Bobby Garrett. Return From Culpeper Mr. and Mrs. X. J. Wood re turned Monday from Culpeper, Va., where they were guests of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Furgiuele. Holidays Here Mr. and Mrs. Jack Varner of Greensboro are spending the holidays with Mrs. Varner’s par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wal lace. Christmas In Mississippi Dr. and Mrs. L. F. Ferguson and family are spending the holi days in Mississippi. Visiting Daughter Mrs. J. A. Wheeler is spending several days with her daughter in Lexington. O— Return Home Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Wood have returned home after spending a few days with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Furgiuele of Culpeper, Va. Holidays With Daughter Mrs. Eva Lyndell is spending the holidays with her daughter in Mr. Olive. i Week-end Here Mr and Mrs. Freddie Bvrum r s High Pomt spent the week end with Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Dovvnum and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Byi um. Visiting Here Dr. and Mrs. James Glover of Florida are spending several days with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Congei, Sr. Washington Visitor Mrs. John Cotton Taylor of Washington visited Mrs. William I Privott last week. Holidays With Parents Janet Bunch, Rosa Hollowell and Imogene Rogerson of Rich mond, Va., are spendmg the | holidays with their respective parents. | V-.iting Parents ! Bobby Pratt cf Washington, j D. C., is snending the holidays I with his rarents, Mr. and Mrs. j It. L. Pratt. Visiting Father M ; ss Mary Mac Holmes of j Rocky Mount is spending the ! holidays with her father, John . A. Holmes. Sunday In Williamsburg Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Harless, Jr., spent last Sunday in Wil liamsburg, Va. Students Home Among the college students home for Christmas are: Linda Leary, Tommy Kehayes, Paul Twiddy, Stacy Lamb, Gene Saun ders, Frances Holton, Elton Bass, Charlie Small, Jr., Bren da Mooney, Peggy Elliott, John Mitchener 111, Mike Malone, Johnny Kramer, Gus Hughes and Leigh Dobson. Rocky Mount Visitor Mrs. K. M. Mangum of Rocky Mount is spending Christmas with her son-in-law and daugh ter, the Rev. and Mrs. Ralph Fowlkes and family. Research And Home Economists Answer Homemakers' Questions: How does low-fat cottage cheese differ in food value from I creamed cottage cheese? Low-| fat cottage cheese has very little i fat and vitamin A. Creamed cot tage cheese usually has about 5 per cent fat ar.d therefore fur nishes more calories and vita min A. How is milk homogenized? Mil!: is homogenized by a me chanical process that breaks up fat into small particles and dis tributes them throughout the milk. Cream does not form in j homogenized milk because thej fat particles do not rise to the; top. Is it possible for a person to j drink too much milk? Yes; if , milk is consumed in such large amounts that it crowds out oth er important foods. Does white cabbage have a lower food value than red? Not necessary. Some varieties of white cabbage have as much vi tamin C (the main nutrient) as red cabbage. The amount pres-j ent depends ■ in part upon con-j ditions under which cabbage has been stored and length of stor-! age period. The method of cook ing also affects the final value. Is there any difference in food value between green and yellow | dried peas? Food values of j green and yellow dried peas are; very similar. Is tomato juice a good source of vitamin C? Yes. One-half cup of tomato juice will sup-1 ply about one-fourth of the daily! allowance of vitamin C. For Variety Use milk in creamed soups ... on hot and ready-to-eat cereal ... in bowls of hot milk toast ... in cocoa or milk shakes . . . heated and mix ed with equal parts of hot cof fee or tea ... in puddings or custards. Eat ice cream, in a variety of flavors, plain or with fruit toppings make your own. Cheese is good for us. ‘Use it often—melted in toasted sand wiches cr used in cold ones . . . melted in scalloped potatoes, in rarebits and souffles, in sauces with hard-cooked eggs, seatooo 1 Taylor Theatrej :li EI/CNTON, N. C, ; f SEASON’S i | GREETINGS ■ > ' Thursday, December 24 Shows Continuous From 3:30 t f Jchn Ericson in i "OREGON PASSAGE" ; Cinemascope and Color .1 g. a i * Friday and Saturday, 'December 25-26 5 Friday Shows Continuous i \ From 3:30 \ \ p Saturday Shows Continuous : From 1:30 A New Tarzan in Technicolor Denny Miller and f Joanna Barnes in f "TARZAN THE APE MAN" | \ Sunday and Monday, S j, December 27-28 5 N. C. Premier Showing Os 5 f "NATURE GIRL AND | | THE SLAVER" I starring ? ! Marion Michael and | Adrian Horen 3 j Kastman Color And J a Dynavision t 3 Tuesday and Wednesday. 3 3December 29-30 B John Saxon and 4 Linda Cristal in J 2 "CRY TOUGH" AComing . . . , | jDecamber 31-January 1-2 3 3 "THE F.BJ. STORY" 1 Coming ... s | January 17, 18, 18 — THIRD MAN ON A MOUNTAIN THE CHOWAN HERALD. EDENTON. NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 24, 1959. — ~ - - - - Return Home Dr. Richard Hardin and fath er of West Jefferson spent last week on a hunting trip in Mexico. ——-o- Visit Parents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knox, who were married. last Friday in the First Methodist Church in ; Logansport, Indiana, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Knox over the week-end. Also spend ing Sunday with the Knox fami ly were their other children, Mr. 1 and Mrs. L. S. Garner and fami ly of Portsmouth, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Knox and fanrly of Portsmouth, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Castellow and family of Wind sor and Mrs. Knox’s brother and sister, Minnie and Rufus Shaw of Norfolk. HINTSTO Homemakers BY RUTH CURRENT STATE HOME DEMONSTRATION AGENT or vegetables over toast . . . ' cheese in vegetable or fruit sal ads, with fruit for dessert, with j crackers or in small cubes for snacktime. | Serve scrambled eggs .. . eggs . in omelets, pouched, in custard, : or hard-cooked for salads or dic ed in cream sauce. Add a little cottage cheese or diced cheese to scrambled eggs, or use cottage cheese “as is” over hot baked or boiled pota i toes, and with fruit. Morale Boosters Treat your ! self to something extra special m every now and then ... a meal .: out, a new hat, movie or play. . It's also a good idea to treat I others your age td calls and visits , 1 and small children to your “spe il cialty” in cookie and milk , snacks. Eating Alone? lt’s smart to take extra care to see that food ( is appetizing and good, and that . it’s eaten in pleasant surround s ings—perhaps in company with the radio, television, a favorite . record or an entertaining book. ; Health For All ] Happy Touch For Christmas Cards I “I’ve been putting those pret j ty little Christmas Seals on my i cards and packages for years now. At first I thought it wasn’t right, perhaps, t& remind people of a dreadful illness like I J-.-L -T.-L JR yx. W. e: »: e: I 'J C : , **' ' *: s Al 1 _ g> f May the Yuletide shine on you with all pi the j oys that are a part g " of Christmas. 1 g * . May the days that g I follow continue to be g | 'filled with happiness. *• We receive no great g _ er enjoyment than £ -wishing you and yours g __ _L the very best. g< wrE We ave always ; g valued your friendship and look forward to £ .1 serving you in the days g Jr to come. « ft ft j Jackson’s Radio-TV Service &&---> .. v.- ' * .• f BIRD MAN Robert Stroud, subject of the book, “Bird Man of Alcatraz,” enters Fed eral Court in Topeka, Kan., to petition that his life sentence be set aside. Stroud, 69, has served 50 years in prison, 43 I in solitary confinement. He is I one of the world’s foremost I authorities on bird diseerey ! self-taught. tuberculosis when you send them a happy thing like a Christmas card. But then I felt different about it. Christ mas Seals are happy, too. They mean something s being done about. TB. And that’s surely a cheeriul thought.” We were in the basement laun dry of o ir epartment house and had got into conversation with the won lan whose wash was spinning around in the machine next to ours. We’d exchanged some current biographical facts and 'Ve had turned her thoughts to Christmas Seais. Though tuberculosis is still a serious problem in this country —a quarter of a million people are ill with ir right now—it isn’t the- -nocking scourge it was fifty yea.s ago. Christmas Seals have had a lot to do with that. The money that generous peo ple like our neighbor send in ’or Crhistmas Seals supports the work of the 2,700 tuberculosis associations round the country which make battling TB their business. That little red and green seal, on a Christmas card or letter or package you send means that you have helped your local TB association to find a case of tuberculosis soon enough for it to be cured. You’ve helped teach people how to protect themselves against TB. You have also help ed in the research which is al ways trying to find better ways of fighting TB. And thanks to you, some despairing TB pa tient will be helped back to nor mal living and working. This year’s Christmas Seals are particularly attractive. They will add a bright spot wher ever you put them. And the’ money you contribute for them does such wonderful work. TRY A HERALD CLASSIFIED UNA’S Beauty Nook Fbr Appointments Call 2218 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:00 TIL 5:30 I UNA WHITE DOT DAVIS > JS ft A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A Aft AAA AO. 0. 0 jS pleosur* to think of you | for a joyful Christmas | 1 HUGHES-PARKER HARDWARE CO. I m < m \ 0 mmmmwMmmwMmmmmmmmmwMmmmmwMMMmmmwn I NOW OPEN THE RUG SHOP 204 South Broad Street EDEINTON, N. C. I (Building formerly occupied by Western Gas Service) I WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF I ALL TYPES FLOOR, WALL R AND CEILING COVERING I CERAMIC SPECIALISTS | -■ COMPLETE LINE OF _ 1 I Pittsburgh Plate Class Co. Products 1 I Aluminum Awnings We now have with us a man with 25 years experience in the (J tile laying business; also a specialist in wall-to-wall carpet lay* I in. Complete Duraclean Rug and Upholstery Service . . . in- I eluding Moth-Proofing and Fire-Proofing! I REGISTER FOR FIVE BIG PRIZES I TO BE GIVEN AWAY THURSDAY, DEC. 24th Da wings To Be Held At 9H)O A. M. and 4:00 P. M. 1 I You Do Not Have To Be Present To 1 I Win ... Just Come In And Register ❖ Np I * Aflift |RR V 1 Isl B §|ff| AN Hl|| mm m ■MMBRR ■ m . I Sir Nr iuv l lfn lINil HI r 1 Imll.lv IIN I H wUnI iM In I Ltl|l nl I|| HI Irk ft KfTll ISI a Igj ISfa Jylln V Christian Science Presents || The Perpetual Promiseof Christman Over WCDJ 9A. M., December 25 | JfICQUIIN'S JL ROYALE SI tIM •*>•**• »*»»—**—Jlß *2 PINT MBBjl DISTILLED FROM CRAIN - 80 PROOF CHARLES JACQUIN et Cie, Inc., Phila., Pa. Tii-^
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 24, 1959, edition 1
8
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