RECTIOH TWO PAGE EIGHT Negro Home Demonstration News Bjr KBS. ONNIE S. CHARLTON, Home Economics Extension Agent, Negro Work * A training meeting on ‘'How Can Fruits and Tomatoes” Will be held April 12 for home demonstration canning project leaders and community 4-H can ning leaders. The meeting will f>e held at 111 East Carteret ptreet at 1:30 P. M. I During the month of March, training meetings were held on canning low acid vegetables (pressure canner) in each home demonstration club meeting. These training meetings were open to non-members. This month canning project leaders j and/or Miss Nesmith will con duct the iesson demonstration in each club to teach recom mended steps in canning fruits and tomatoes. This work is our goal to have homemakers know and follow recommended canning ] methods and to can enough fruits and vegetables for the family for non-productive months. Non inembers are asked to attend these meetings. It is true that our emphasis j is on canning foods, since, this! is our most economical method of: conserving food. We do have a few families in each community j with freezers and I am sure this j information prepared by Miss ; Nita Orr, Extension Food Con-! servation Specialist (frozen foods) i on -Making A Freezing Plan!,! will be most helpful. “You know how it is with “hit! or miss” things. 'Sometimes they | hit and sometimes they miss, j This is why it is better to have a food freezing plan than to freeze food in a hit or miss fashion. If you freeze your food by a, plan, chances are your family j will eat better than if you fill j your freezer the hit or miss way. Let’s take corn, for example. | How much corn do you want to j freeze this year? How do you. know how much you want to \ freeze? If your family enjoys j oorn twice a week, plan to freeze enough to serVe twice a weeki except when you can get fresh j corn at a reasonable price—un less you want to buy a part ofj it already frozen. In North Carolina we can us-j ually get good fresh com for: about 16 weeks out of 52. That! leaves 36 weeks to depend on 1 frozen corn. (It may be more or less time with you. You may prefer to eat frozen corn than j to buy it fresh when you don't I have corn in your own garden | or you may want to do without cprn for a while.) Anyway, decide on how often | you want to serve frozen corn, ■ then calculate the amount it; takes to serve your fmily. Mul- j tiply the amount the family will eat at one time by the number j of times you plan to serve it and add some extra for visitors. I It’s just that simple. You likely j won't use it exactly according to | schedule, but it is far more sat-; isfactory than freezing in hit or miss fashion. You will find a guide helpful for all of the foods you freeze. 0000000000000000 ALL NEW! ALL BEAUTIFUL! ’63 RAMBLER Save On Americans, Classics, Ambassadors 1963 American 2-dr. Heater Porous Vinyl Trim Oil Filter Air Cleaner Front Arm Rest Double Safety Bralres Self Adjusting Brakes Dual Sun Visors Only $1850.00 (Plus N. C. Tax) UpTSmart Buyers Come T 0... : I J g I PHONE 482-3119 A little figuring gives you *a i guide to go by for the amount |of each food to freeze. Take f strawberries, for another exam ple. Only a few times have I , known of any family freezing too many strawberries to use from one growing season to the next . . . most families don’t i freeze as many as they wish for I during the year. I Some families have certain j foods left over from one grow -1 ing season to the next even j though they haven’t actually fro | zen too much of these foods. You need to follow your guide in the use of the foods. In order to make the use of the foods easy, know what’s in your freezer and where it is. A simple lecord will give you this information. You can work out your own or use one some body else has worked out and found useful. Just about the most simple way is to list the fqods that you put into your freezer. For example, suppose I you have asparagus listed as a ] | vegetable to freeze. For each 1 j package of asparagus you put jin the freezer, put a mark by, j the word asparagus—as you j take a package out to use, cross j out a mark. Simple though this i be, you’ll find it helpful. A j glance at the paper at any time , will tell you how much asparagus I is still in the Leezer. j It’s extremely helpful to know jwhere that asparagus is in the j freezer. It’s a standard joke that foods get lost in the freezer and turn up months later as surprises. You need to be able to find a package of pork chops with ! out dislocating the beans. Se | lect certain parts of the freezer lin which to store meats, vege- I tables, fruits and any other cate gory of food you freeze so each j will have its own section. It is convenient to know what 'foods you have on hand; eco- I nomical to keep foods moving ! through your freezer; good nu | trition to eat frozen food while j it still has its freshness, so know I what is in your freezer. Know : where it is. Use it; j Heart Facts « ——— s' Question—Are heart attacks real ly sudden? | Answer—No. Heart attacks re sult from a long-time pro cess, and are usually pre ceded by warnings. Your physician is familiar with the usual warnings of a threat ening heart attack. If you feel unwell and suspect your heart consult your physician at once. | Aces Lose First | Conference Game - I Panthers of Plymouth Trip Local Outfit By Score of 9 to 2 By KEN D. HOPKNS Plymouth High School, paced by righthander Ray Nobles’ two hit pitching, assisted with some balance hitting and Edenton er rors, handed the Aces their first setback, in conference play after copping two straight wins, 9-2. The Panthers chased southpaw Dave Holton in only one-third inning as they tallied three runs off him. Plymouth recorded four singles and a walk off Hol ton to hand him the loss. Terry Wheeler came in and retired the side on strikeouts. The Panthers had another big inning in the fifth on three con secutive singles, two errors and a walk. They also scored one apiece in the third and fourth innings. The Aces scored in the fourth frame on a walk to Jack Britt. ' an error and a triple by catcher j Bill Bass. It was Bass’ first hit of the season, this being a dis ! mal year thus far for him, since he was the Aces’ leading hitter last year. Nobles went the distance for Plymouth as he gave up a sin gle to Ken Williams and Bass' triple. He fanned six and pitch ed very well to pick Up the tri umph. - ' Sophomore Bobby Hall and freshman Mike Colombo paced the Panthers’ hitting with three hits apiece. The Aces next game Will be a strong Hertford outfit today in Hertford in another Albemarle Conference battle. THE CHOWAN HERALD, EPEKTOW. HOWTO CAHOLWA. THURSDAY, APRIL 11. 1963. Hospital Patients V ViaitiDK hour*: 10-11 A, M.; 2-4 ind 6-* P. M. Children udder 12 ff« rot permuted to vimt patieats. Patients at Chowan Hospital for the week of April 1-8 were as follows: 11 j Admissions White—Mrs. Julia Furlough,' Mrs. Julia Harrell, Mrs. Edith Bouton, Mrs. Annie Knox, Mrs. Lillie Davenport, Mrs. Faye Copeland, Mrs. Mary N. Hopkins,' Mrs. Rosa Boyce, Miss Martha Saunders, Mrs. Mary Marie Spruill, Mrs. Gladys Ward, Mrs. Louise Love, Mrs. Willie Mae Overton, Sharlie T. McCotter, Snowden Calvin Mills, Isaac Riggs, Lloyd Chenoweth, Milton Martin, Roland Ashley, Andrew Wompler, Jr., Sam Thomas Alex ander, J. C. Hendrix, Gilbert Moore, Doppie W. Wheeler, John Presley, Charley Umphlett. Colored—Mrs. Caroline Tread well, Mrs. Martha Foreman, Mrs. Patricia Harrell, Mrs. Georgia Mae Coefield, Mrs. Rosa Z. Madrey, Seaton Owens, Theo dore Belote, Ernest Elton Gil liam, Mrs. Eula Rebecca Frank lin. Discharges White—Mrs. Agnes West, Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Mrs. Esther Crabtree, Mrs. Julia Furlough, Mrs. Annie Knox, Mrs. Faye Copeland, Mrs.' Mary N. Hopkins, Mrs. Rosa Boyce, Mrs. Mary Ma rie Spruill, Mrs. Gladys Ward, Sam Thomas Alexander, J. C- Hendrix, John Presley, Paul H. j|||||r EASTER Wonderful Assortments B IEJL ■£€ O mlfvP OUR LARGEST COLLECTION >/Qia| OF BAGS . . . EVER! 'V^JSSBLiIV Light and oiry as a Spring breeze, they’re perfect I | ' accents for your Easter outfits. What’s more,''" , * ® r .. s they look far more costly than their modest price!' -V 1 \ v *sj|# Carry them with yoor town silks or country cottoflsl jflffl] W 4 w 9 hvl fl «, d f f b bo *’ i See th.i. smorr n.w Hong Kong import,—lh. “ha S fatt WB Leary, William Hannon West Colored— Miss Doris Spruill, Miss Eetty Jean Bond, Mrs. Car- I oline Treadwell, Mrs. Eula Re i becca Franklin, Mrs. Martha , 1 Foreman, Mrs. Patricia Harrell,' j Dorsey Welch, Joel Godwin Bak er, Vernon Brickhouse, David Earl Harrell, j Births I White—Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow | Winston Ward, a son; Mr. and j Mrs. Melvin Ray Copeland, a ; daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Oley Lee Moore, a son; Mr. and Mrs. ' Charles Douglas Spruill, a son. Colored—Mr. and Mrs. James Harrell, Jr., a son; Mr. and Mrs. Erselle Franklin, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Otis Grant Williams, a son. 1 i SUNDAY SCHOOL | i LESSON ’ ? Continued from Page 7—Section 2 asked, Exactly what happened? Was it a physical event? Or was it a spiritual Resurrection? In a fundamental sense the mode of the Resurrection can not be stated. The-early church was aware of this difficulty. The New Testament describes Jesus’ Resurrection in two ways. This Jesus who was resurrected, rec ognized, and talked with was thej pre-Crucifixion Jesus. And yet he wasn’t “physical” in the ordi nary sense. He could appear and disappear; he could walk into locked rooms; and he even re mained unknown sometimes, as on the road to Emmaus ■ (Luke 24:16). Paul described the con dition of Resurrection as a “spir itual body”. The two words, spirit and body, indicate con tradictory categories. But then' Mhe Resurrection does not fit in to ordinary categories. One can 1 j therefore appreciate the dilemma jof the disciples. The Resurrec tion is beyond the dimensions of ! our usual areas of knowledge. 1 Yet —the One who was crucified has been raised. Sin and death have been defeated. Jesus is alive. God has triumphed! What exactly does the Resur rection mean for us? Two points should be made here. In one sense the Resurrection is of the, present, in another sense the Resurrection is the future. i The Resurrection is of the present in the sense that when a person accepts Jesus as Lord he enters a new life. The Gos pel of John, we must remember, speaks of “eternal life” as a quality of life which man can; experience now, in the present.! The Resurrection, indeed, is of j the present in the sense that right now, at this moment, we can be born anew and live in the awareness that God has overcome death and has given i us newness of life in every day. | And what we experience in part now will be completed later. In this sense the Resurrection is future. We do know newness of life now, but we shall know it in even greater fullness when physical death is actually passed through and we dwell in the presence of God in a more inti mate way. In last week’s lesson we spoke of the identification of the be liever with the death of Christ. We must be crucified to the old man, to our old self-love. But •beyond the Good Friday experi ence is Easter. And the believer j is now identified with the life of Christ. For the one who lives within the life of Christ, physi cal death is no longer frighten ing. Death has been overcame by God, and now we live in Him. This is the Easter message: God reigns—even over death and beyond death, and in him is the fullness of life. (These comments are based on outlines of the Internationa Sunday School Lessons, copy righted by the International Council oi Religious Education, and useo oy permission . Wilmington Homes Opened For Tour "Remembrance of Things Past” is the order of the day when the third annual historical tour of Wilmington’s houses opens Sat urday, April 20, at 10 A. M- Meeting at Thaiian Hall, groups will leave at five-minute inter* vals until 11:00. The afternoon tour which will assemble at First Presbyterian Church starts at 2:00, with doors being open! until 3:CO. On Sunday afternoon, j April 21, the tour will begin at' Thaiian Hall at 2:00 also. Proceeds will be used to pre-, serve historic buildings, and j 1 erect markers designating old homes. Sponsored by the LoweJ, Cape Fear Historical Society, and | PERSPIRE HEAVILY? A new ahtl-perspirant tthat really works l Solves underarm problems for many who had despaired of effective help. Mitehum’s Anti-Perspirant keeps underarms absolutely dry for thousands of grateful users. Positive action cou pled with complete gentle ness to normal skin and clothing ia made possible ’by new type of formula devised by a young geniua in pharmacy and produced by a trustworthy 60-year old laboratory. Recom mended by over 600 lead ing department stores and thousands of drug stores. Satisfaction guaranteed. Don’t give m to per spiration worries; try _ Mitchum’s Anti-Perspi 'SSgK- ~ rant today. ** f 90-day supply s3* * Plus Tax ON SALE AT BELK TYLER’S, EDENTON [under the direction of R. V. As bury, Jr., the tours will feature 'gracious homes and public build lings dating from 1772-1860.