Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Jan. 22, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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Cbe COtroktt Acout a** ; v r ? - ray. im rmy ThumUy u Kurptoy, Ooanty, N. C. y' ncBAito oounr to'CbtttlM? fclubty: Om Tmt, CI. BO: six V" OuiatOb tanrokM cotmty: Oti? Tnr DttO BU Mohuu. W T8 r-.'l "? C. "-STATE COLLEGE HINTS ?TO FARM HOMEMAKERS HEARTY SOUP, A WHOLE JfcEAL ? Soup can be ? whole jneal when it's as hearty as Down-South Stew- This recipe fivm the Testing Kitchen of Dur -um Wheat Institute, Chicago, .~jise?, rich hbmehiade chicken Kiotll as the basis. - "Place one stewing chicken (cut ~ypj 'tn a large saucepan and cov ? er with water. Add four teaspoons Zjsalt and one small chopped onion. ? Ij tog to 'boiling. Reduce heat, rfover, simmer until tender. Remove chicken from broth and ? cool. Then remove all but two Uiuarts broth. If you desire skim excess fat from surf apt Add two cups whole kernel com, one cup cooked tomatoes, two teaspoons salt, one-eighth teafpfon pepper, and one teaspoon Worchestershire sauce to the broth. Cook about IS minutes, stirriag 'occasionally. Add six ounces elbows spaghetti and cook 10 minutes longer. Cool and remove chicken from bones; cut Mto pieces. Use two cups cut up chicken fbr iteW. Add chicken and one cup cooked okra to stew and cook just long enough to heat thoroughly. Makes six servings. ' X ' L Tke Moiidikj I 0 | buf i(o u oxin sHji enfoij WINTER CARNIVAL ICE CREAM TT s rich, smooth, Creamy ice'cretan filled with juicy cubes of red and green pineapple. Colorful! Delicious! Enjoy it tonight! Save. ..buy the big half-galion TARGETS FOR TOMORROW. .. Science jets its sights on rile moon, purposefully plans, per sistently works to achieve its objective. Each of us hos Mi own personal goal in life, which can only be reached by eudi the same kind of farsfghted planning and sustained effort. A well conceived program of syS ? tematic saving, faithfully fol lowed, is usually essential la ? our success. For a good start in th? right direction, open a saving* account . . . nowl k CITIZENS BANK and MIST ?0. murplky - Andrews **? HbbMmvllle Hayes vi fie SERVING SOUTHWESTERN NORTH CAROLINA Member fWrihl Deposit tMormoe* OovporfcOmi ?? mmSrn -rrVr ?_ ? Jy |iH vc^... ft: , vow* 'l.'XnaUn* ' 14 *- ' ? * *. rrtWf* t ?M i iwajure , *P*nfs* '"'S? ? Ind- fttteh _ XMflriicftd ?. 4un)ber ?rophesy !v?U t? Up CnunfUsg I8.5lrut*Je pronoun 03. Xfn|lMU 94. Ancient 38. Distribute MUMMe >11. Destroy "" " it itless 48. Him W.Nickt:: chein. North Carolina Woman Recovering fo-oa Malady Caught By Sad Canning ' , :v Nrtrth Carolina's first case of; botulism since 1935 has focused new attention on the rare, and se-| vere food infection, which occurs ] in canned goods and has been -fa tal in 70 iper cent of the cases on record. A farm housewife near States vilte, Mfe. J. M. Milter, survived the malady after a \S4-day Trtay In Iredell Meihorial Hdspital. She is now on the way to recovery at her home, after 9tirring into ac tion medical inen and scientists of three 'states. The disease, cbusin of tetanus or "lockjaw." seWdhi affects the stomach as do the commoh "food poisonings." Most frequent "syrtp toms of botulism are -paralysis of the ^hroat and eye 4pua4Us,e rend ering the victim uh&fe to see, oat or speak. J That was MA. Milter's Condi tion when Lederle Laboratories, a drug manufactory _ which pro duces antitoxin for the 'seldom heard-of disease, sent an emer gency shipment by airplane from its Pearl River, N. Y-, headquar ters to Charlotte. The drug was rushed from Char lotte to Statesvllle by taxlcab, ar riving 10 hours after hospital pharmacist Charlie Milk tele phoned Lederle representative Robert W. Sbuth at Moohes Ville. rredell County health director Dr. Ernest Ward sent ttfo sanu Brians in search of the gertn's iHgin. Canned oysters which had sboRed were first suspected. The Virginia health department was notified, and investigated the ifoHblk packer which eataed the jysters No evidence of botuKsih was foond there, nor did N. C technicians find (he germ in two carts of the outdated oysters whfch "were still on -the shelf of a rtore. v At last report N. c. Technicians were atiU testing home-canned' oods frcMi the pantry of Mrs. Mil-' ler, but had not foupl the culprit Botulism germs are aporin,. smaller .than bacteria. They are inaerobfe, whl?h means they can thrive otlly fn the absence of 'oxy gen?making the modern food can s favorable habitat. They also favor a home with low acM, such is green vegetable*, and are lass likely to be found in high-acid foods such as fruit and tomatoes- [ QUESTION: Do all North C?h> :1m farmer* have 'their cotton euttom (ginned before ceiling -it? No. "An WtRlrtitM M jer cent of the 1958 cotton crtlp wMi *0*1 in (Me wd. Cotton mar leting sped alUt flBtff* 'Mat fc 'faq uir Celling ;hts cotton In the aefed ort* frtoln its to m per "bale tie-1 Jehdlnfc on the tr*<ft 'total ort Wferal Vy f?rmen to t? ? mounted *tb dn e^tfrriatl^l $3*0. ibo. ' ' ?l it ' QlIEMdN: For what to 'trie to formation obtained to the Annual rotfnrtiip Farm ceniti? ANBWEt-Mt ia uttd 'I* afHeul- J tiral i?*n to H? <?? *f?rul toral program*. ?* taMtarttni Obtained on Individual farmt ia dwayi held ia coftfldatow. 1 'When the spores enter the hu man body fh0y multiply and form -a neurotoxin, which attacks the ntrves. It seemed likely the source of Mrs. Miller's case would remain a mystery. But public health of ficials had 'a consolation in that nft'ittlwr esses showed up. And the Kate's 'first realistic reminder in 23 year* was Certain to add etrifrh&sls, to home demonstration feints' precautionary advice to hbriie cartners: '(1) Do your canning with pres sure cookers. If the germ is pres eht, steam temperature (212 fah renheit) 'will kill it. '(2) When you open canned Mods, especially low-acid foods, Mat them well before serving 'them. * ? FARM 4VE0TIOXS . QCtSffON: Should I bw MH-SO (or tobacco sucker control' ANSWER: It U advisable not to uae the chemical until sciontiats <fe able to determine under what conditions, if any, it can be used without affecting tobacco quality Research has already shown' that MH-30 causes some chemical and physical changes in tobacco. Some of these changes are desir able and some undesirable. Rath er than take a chance on lowering the quality of their tobacco, farm ers should refrain from using MH-30 until further research on its effects is completed. QUESTION: How did pig far rowings in the fall of 1958 com pare with farrowing a year ear lier? ANSWER: Farrowing were up 13 per cent. This is expected to cause hog prices to be weaker In thee spring of 19S9. Hog prices are expected to reach an early seasonal peak in July and trend downward in the fall. A large build-up of hog numbers is ex pected to come in the 1959 spring pig crop. This will greatly de press fall prices. While hog prices will fall below those of a year ago, the early cornhog ratio is ex pected to be favorable. QUESTION: Is tobacco usage in the United States expected to increase or decrease in 1959? ANSWER: Domestic use of both flue-cured and burley tobacco is expected to continue upward in 1959 as a result of increasing cig arette manufacture. Present indi cations point, however, to a de crease in flue cured tobacco ex ports this year. Words Of Life % ? i ? *.y jOoN U. LAW, SttMkkt Paster, TWBHTTWtta Pirsliyleriu Church "For k Is our feeace, who ku made us both oar, and has brok en down the dividing wall of hostility . . Ephesiaas 2: M. Let us continue to think on Paul's message to the church at Ephesus as it is contained in the second chapter of the letter. In past weeks we have teen that Paul reminds the Ephesians of their complete indebtedness to God for their salvation. They were dead in trespasses: God made them alive in Christ. They were without faith: faith came to them as the gift of God. Their lives had been but con stant yieldings to passion and sensuous desire: God made their lives His workmanship, created in Christ for good works. Much of the latter half of this second chapter is devoted to the I task of demonstrating the oneness of all mankind in Christ. Again the gentile Ephesians, as former , outsiders in God's dealings with men, were totally indebted to God fcr bringing them into the coven ant hope through Christ. All men are now one before God- Paul says it differently in another letter to gentile Chris tians: "There is neither Jew nor 1 Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in ' Christ Jesus." In and prior to, Paul's day the Jewish people had dispersed them | solves widely throughout the Ro man Empire. There were lew ?li able towns in the eastern provin ce* of the Empire that did not have Jewish colonies. Hie Jews were peculiarly suc cessful in finance; they were al most fanatical in nationalistic 4>ride; they tended toward exclus iveness in religion. All of this did not enhance their popularity among their gentile neighbors. There was enmity and envy and suspiscion. The "dividing wall of hostility" of which Paul spoke was real. Paul was bringing goad news. In Christ the dividing wall is destroy ed. In Christ there is no favorit ism or exclusiveness. In Christ there is no cause for envy. In Christ the Jew. the gentile, the bond, the free, all are one. The lesson for our own <iy la fairly apparent. In a day wHai there is a decided waU of hostil ity between races; when social and even religious exclusiveness is almost expected. In a day when envy is allowed to run rampant under the guise of ambition; and when national boundaries often mark the limita of genuine love and concern; then a message which not only holds out oneness at an ideal, hut offers the power to bring it about in the hearts of men, It most relevant. From such a mes sage radiates hope which not only penetrates the heart of the local destitute man, engulfed in an in escapable sea ot descrimination, but also reaches out to touch a continent here and there a art shows to a world the possibllitle ' ot a promise. Rummage Sale Clothing Benefit - EVERY SATURDAY - Time - 10:00 A. M. to 12:00 Noon Place ? Basement of Davidson's Store Sponsored by The Ladies of Murphy's Catholic Chapel , ALASKA'S CONTRIBUTION? Australia gave us the omnl- j present hoop and now the Alaskan Eskimos are getting into the act . with a sort of bolas of the South American Gaucho. It can also be likened to a yo-yo. Sharon Otrbeck of Fair banks demonstrates the bolas (or yo-yo, or whatever) in Wash ington, D.C. As it is swung up and down, one ball goes one way and the other ball the other. So far, they're made only by the Eskimos. SUBSCRIPTION SALE! ? SET THE SCOUT IS MONTHS FOR THE PRICE OF 12 MONTHS 3 - - MONTHS FREE! --3 Take Advantage of this MONEY - SAVING SUB SCRIPTION SALE from Jannary 23, 1959 through February 20, 1959. . ? J You Pay Only $2-50 (in county) for 12 -Month Subscription and Receive The Scout 3 Extra Months at no Cost MiM RENEWAL SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED UNDER TIBSOFFER. /?, ' - 4 This Ofm oily In dicfoke? Coftnti e s Cherokee Scout Murphy, North Carolina t
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 22, 1959, edition 1
2
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