Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / Feb. 8, 1962, edition 1 / Page 3
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OUTDOOR TIPS * from tho Ancient Ago Sportsman's Idea Exchange 1 ■*— ■—■ r ast-cooked spuds. When you cold and hungry you dfin’t . it to wait ardund for the hot, ' Is to bake potatoes, try this: | an .ordinary six penny nail, jost through the spud. Steel I lies (the heat, cooks them on ’ . i insjde while the outside is kg done. Ire’ starters. There are doz- ’ of them, because they’re so | 1. Here are two new ones: : >tex; the furry, fiber mate is ireported to provide just j right wick effect when soak- j in paraffin. Burns long, and ! "bricks are easily carried, j rks in wet or ’dry weather, j you get stuck and need a | t badly and your lighter i’t work, remember the cot* j inside is saturated and will ( i hot to start wet d ifj you remove it and set Nth ja match.- ,1 Fishing htjftlming is an old trick of -water fishermen who grind oily bait and watch the long j ks attract fish from far ly. A novel' suggestion to : f ly this technique to lake ing calls for adding fish oil e Cod Liver oil) to your out rd motor’s gas tank. While troll slowly the oil is churn into the water. Won’t hurt r motor but may foul spark gs until hard running burns son off. an’t think of where this ild iwork but it’s the kind of . i { ,■- -f WITH THE FARM WOMEN By MAIDRED MORRIS Modern Laundry Methods Pittt sc many different types new fabrics on the market, ne Demonstration Club mem- S ik Wake County have been ■ning modern washing meth ccording to Mrs. Sara Cas ho/ne eccr.omics agent., le. management leaders are nfe the demonstration on' Daratibn for the wash, clean agents, stain removal, pre * itjnent, water; temperature l ric conditioners and bleach- agents. More and Better Reading Irs, Tom Odom of Bolton, o is county .education leader , Home Demonstration Clubs, , making plans for more and ter reading this year. Trs. Elaine Blake, home eco* | tk£ agent in Columbus ■ injy, says Mrs, Odom has set ;oal for each club—at least I ie; members get a reading 1 tificate. Care of Clothing Learning to care for your :&ing is a duty all of you; uld accept,” said Miss Bar- j a Kistler, assistant home eco nics aeent, as she met with! 4-H boys and girls in Ca- I WEEK-END SPECIALS AT THE D & M SUPER MARKET . SHOP AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCERY PHONE 2317 FOR FREE | PLENTY OF FREE DELIVERY ON ORDERS « „ CD OF $2.00 OR MORE! PARING SPACE For That Delicious Roast Try Our Fresh Picnics i 29c DELICIOUS FRESH JIFFY STEAKS PIC FEET lb. 79c lb. 15c FRESH 3-lb. CAN NECK BONES CKISCO lb. 15c Jamestown Sausage Meat, 3 lbs. 99c iiimiiniUi«H»T r-‘-“* J *"“-*““*‘»»» , “»»*‘****»“* tt,, '***' tMIM>,I,,> ** l> **""*" ,ll **"" , * t ****** u *'* ,M ***' tM, * lt 18-OZ. JAR . I 14-O Z . BOTTLE "PresMTeS’ I CATSUP jar 39c J bot!9c SUN-SPUN i l SUN-SPUN ICE CREAM J BISCUITS I ' -r ■ ■ TV TIME I POI>CORN | FAB or tHUtKI ] p KG . MAKES 3 QTS. 6 Mg ■ m O_l 1 , j.- (lO _ problem that comes up. Yoi need to make a long cast anc. the bait you are using hasn’ - * got quite enough weight. Wraj 1 a sugar cube in the end of th ! line above bait with a half hitch 1 Sugar quickly melts in water leaves line free, but gives yoi. enough weight to reach the right 1 spot. Hunting ; .Dragging deer over hard-frozen snow or ice is hard work and j will ruin hide because the hair j sticks and is torn out. Try j this: cut some pine boughs and j use them as a sled for the car i cass. They slide like crazy. I Two srotgun tips: if you’re shooting over snow, darken your | front sight with the smoke of \ a match. Reverse if your hunt ing backgrounds are likely to be dark. Paint a white strip down the barrel. The long shooting plane will sharpen your eye. Third wing-shooting tip: if you are missing, chances are you are j shooting behind the birds. Use an application of the string i around your finger. Only make it around the end of your shot gun. A rag wrapped there big enough to see will remind you to follow through and your score will go up. Sounds crazy but it works. (Try for a SSO prize. Send your tip to A. A. Contest, Sports Afield, 959 Bth Avenue, N. Y. 19, N. Y.) barrus County. Miss Kistler not only stressed the important facts in airing and keeping clothing clean but also how to store clothes properly. Home Records “What suggestions do you have for keeping a record of house hold expenditures? Can you help me set up a budget?” Those questions came from a young homemaker in Clay Coun ty, Mrs. Peggy Tiger. Miss Freida Dean Morgan, as sistant home economics agent, gave Mrs. Tiger a. home account book which she could use in keeping a record of all house hold expenses. Leisure Time Used Wisely What does a young mother with four children do in her spare time? Well, Mrs. Carl Ca hoon of Swan Quarter enjoys refinishing furniture while tak ing care of the children at home. According to Miss Nelda How ell, home economics agent in Hyde County, Mrs. Cahoon at tended a workshop on refinish ing recently. She refinished a table and is now working on an old heirloom desk. THEOHOWAW HERALD, EPENTOM. NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY I. 1982. a?** M LAST STRAW—Kooky pig." 1 tails grow under the brim of a beach hat that makes its unseasonal debut in London. ; England. f This Is Youi Life Recently, Rockwell Home i Demonstration Club in Rowan , County had a “This Is Your < Life” program honoring Mrs. . Daisy Fisher Patterson. She is t 81 and has been an active club > member. ; ‘Miss Edith Hinshaw, home r economics agent, says Mrs. Pat . terson was president of the . Rowan County Improvement As ; sociatitm for several years be i fore the county council was or , ganized around 35 years ago. 1 r i j No Comment • s. By JAMES W. DOUTHAT AuiKfnnt ' lei ’ I‘rei.Wcnt, (internment Bellitious lliviniun nf (he National . | AaHuciution (if Munufat-lnrers NO COMMENT is a report of incidents on the national scale, snd does not n- - essarily reflect NAM policy or position. Washington Many members of Congress, already concerned 1 over President Kennedy’s pro- I posal for the biggest spending , program in peacetime history, were further ‘disturbed by dras tic proposals in his annual eco nomic report for a vast expan : sion of the power of the Presi • dency. i There was widespread feeling on Capitol Hill that the range i and enormity of Mr. Kennedy’s program is certain to make Con gress examine it with great • care. , One of his major requests was t for authority to lower all in i dividual income tax rates by as - much as five percentage points —subject to a congressional ve to—as an anti-recession meas ' ure; and that he be empowered ’ to do this also when Congress ■ is not in session. : This was a broadening of his recent request for standby au : thority along this line—a request | that produced many vigorous as sertions that Congress would not > abdicate its constitutional au ■ thority to determine tax rates. Mr. Kennedy also aroused > heated opposition by proposals: i 1. That Congress “examine carefully” recommendations by I the Commission on Money and Credit (formed by the Commit tee for Economic Development) that the public debt ceiling be abolished and that the require ment for gold reserves against Federal Reserve notes and de posits be abandoned. The debt ceiling, which Mr. Kennedy has recommended be raised to an unprecedented S3OB billion, has been regarded as one of the important weapons held by Congress to restrain un bridled spending, including the \ “back-door” variety. Gold backing of the nation’s currency has been the founda tion of the U. S. fiscal system ♦hroughout history. In this connection there is great concern in Washington over the international balance of payments situation under which foreign nations have greater claims on the U. S. gold stock than the nation’s existing i supply of gold. 2. That future presidents, be- j ginning in 1985, be empowered j . to pick their own chairman of j jthe Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, who al ■ so would serve for four years. Mr. Kennedy also proposed that the term of members of the Board of Governors begin on January 31 of odd-numbered years, instead of even-numbered years as at present, so that the new President, inaugurated in January every four years could (make earlier appointments than cart now be done. These recommendations were regarded by many as constitut ing an effort to bring the sup posedly independent Federal Tte -1 serve System under a degree of _j control by the President. A’ There have been a number of (clashes in the past between a President bent op easy money (policies and a Federal Reserve I Board prescribing monetary poli w dies designed to protect th* M tion against ruinous inflation. ~ j 3. That government officials, I with a view to legislative rec-1 ommendation, review rules gov- 1 erning the investment policies of corporate pension funds and ! other private retirement " pro | grams “and the effects on equity I and efficiency of the tax privi- I leges accorded yiem.” . This was regarded as an ef j fort to broaden government | regulatory power over these i funds. A five percentage point reduc- J tion in individual income tax | rates would lower the rate in j the bottom bracket from 20 per- J cent to 15 percent. Those pay |mg a 50 percent tax would be cut to 45 percent. The top | bracket would be lowered from 1 91 percent to 86 percent. Tax experts explain that most ; of the relief would go to those iin the lowest bracket—in line with the advocacy by liberals of stimulating consumer spend ing as an anti-recesstion spend ing. But. it is pointed out, this would make available little, or no, funds for use in moderniz ing and expanding the nation’s industrial plant in order to pro vide essential jobs and products for the- future. For this purpose industry rec ommends enactment of the Her- ; long-Baker bill which, among other things Would lower indi vidual and corporation tax rates to a maximum of 47 percent by a series of -five annual reduc tions. M Heart Farts 1 From the Chowan County j Heart Council , Question: How many differ ent kinds of heart disease are there? Answer: The diseases of the heart and circulation comprise more than twenty different en tities. The major heart diseases are Coronary Heart Disease, I Strokes, Hypertensive Heart Di sease and Rheumatic Heart Di sease. The work of the Heart Association is principally direct ed against these. Question: Is overweight harm ful to people with heart di- i Straight , i Kentucky * Bourbon rs Gfalffafy VHI/ljhpejil ili Qj| QfO STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOUBBON^I jflfißp; cHiaig/lt kßouJthotv It&iAbf , C'k'icphkfy ilibtrf&d acco>uUnp j ,hihe J • OtSTH-LEO a BOTTLED by ancient age distilling CO ruANKFoar. Kentucky EJg "umm ’ . w MGHT KENTUCKY :iEMT AGE OISTIUING CO.. fRANKFORT, KY. i **r- • J *■ i." “vs . * •. »■ ■ tn. i> i i mfflii .v- -w §1 ■ _ ARTILLERY PEACE-, Sheron Runcorn, rix months bid, prepares to take a short nap on some big guns in Lon don. Rest is often where one finds it sea.se? . Answer: Yes. Overweight puts an extra strain on the heart. Re cent statements bv the Heart As sociation have urged all over weight persons, whether or not they have heart disease .to re duce. Authorities agree that there is no longer any question that overweight is unhealthy. j Elementary School 1 i Lunch Room Menu’ L Menus at the Edenton 'Elc rrtbntary School lunch room for the week of February 12-16 will be as follows: Monday: Spanish rice with I beef, green beans, school baked j rolls, apple sauce, butter, milk, i cheese slices, j Tuesday: Pork and vegetable pie, buttered corn, fruit cup, corn bread, milk, butter. Wednesday: Beef vegetable soup, crackers, peanut butter sandwiches, white block cake, milk. Thursday: Cube steak, school baked rolls, creamed potatoes, I raisin pie, turnip greens, milk,' butter. Friday: Tuna salad, sliced peaches, vegetable salad, garden peas, school baked rolls, potato chips, milk, butter. Gerald Harrell In Play At Greenville Members of a faculty-student cast h ve been chosen and re hearsals begun on a production by the Easf Carolina College Playhouse c. “The Wages o f S;n" by U Nu, Prime Minister of Burma. A political drama developing the theme of the menace of Communism, the play will have its premiere perform ance in the United States at the Greenville college Thursday, Friday and Saturday, February 22-24 at 8:30 P. M. Playing one of the leading roles is Gerald Harrell, Route 1, Edenton, as a friend of Po Lone, a corrupt minister in the Bur mese government. RED MEN MEETING Chowan Tribe No. 12, Im proved Order of Red Men, will meet Monday night, February 12, at 7:30 o’clock. Obed Lee, sachem of the tribe, urges a large attendance. i MORE BIG Plf DAYS W - OF OUR - mm m M Ba a Bf gm m B FABULOUS SAVINGS for Everyone! J FABULOUS FEBRUARY DAYS . . . and you will agree that the prices are fabulously low on good clean merchandise dur ing this sales event. Articles you can save big money on now. Clothing that can be worn right into early spring. Yes. every one saves during this big sale! Make plans to be here! SPECIAL PURCHASE SUPER SPECIALS DRASTIC REDUCTIONS SENSATIONAL VALUES Open Every Wednesday Afternoon Open Saturday Night "til 9 O’elock BELK-TYLER’S Edenton, N. C. ill m . i—i—wfffw—F SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE AND PRICE CHANGE OFFERINGS WANTED ( AISOI.INA l‘»»l l;i: .1 1'11.i1...., i—s., Ouin. I'ld. SliM-k ( AIiIIJ.INA TKI KI-IK)'I ,v TCI.MiI! » I'M eel —Capital N|.„ k l OI.ONIAI. STOKKS, INC—Cum. I'fd. Stock ;« KK l*l»\\ Kit COill’A.M— IT„, ... . ...i. I f I. s| ~'k IIO.MI: TKI.KriIONK A TKI.KIIKAI’II CO.. O) ViltlilNlA—C million riKiHIONT AVIATION. INC —Co* imoil M ck I’IKDMONT NATI ItAl. (IAS CO.. INC.—Colivcrlilil:- Soricu ( ll,u. J*rd. Stock \ OSK’s j, 111 t Ssc STOIIKS; INI ,-( orniio stock (For Confirmation Call Local Representative) CAROLINA SECURITIES CORPORATION INSURANCE BIDS. - RALEIGH, N. C. - PHONE TE 2-3711 Charlotte, N. C New York, N. Y. Members Midwest Stock Exchange Trcns.ici inns cn AM Major Stuck Exchanges Handled at Minimum Commission Rates. Represented in this area by: DAVID M. WARREN Phone 2466 EdentoD —SECTION ON* PAGE THREE
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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Feb. 8, 1962, edition 1
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