This, That & The Other BY Mrs. Theo. B. Davis Sitting by the fire Sunday night I lound myself all at once long ing to hear a sound familiar years ago—that of a small, swift stream hurrying along under ice. It ir. hard to describe, somewhat re sembling the muffled chuckling of little children playing after hav ing been put to bed and hiding their heads under the covers to deaden the noise of laughter You can sit by a frrzen-over brook and enjoy the sound of the water until you become numb with cold. Down here streams don’t run fast enough to make as much music as do those in the moun tains. Please don’t any of you, any time, anywhere, suggest that I go to see a moving picture of any phase of the war. It may be cowardly; it is certainly not for lack of'interest; but the fact is. I just can’t take if. And anyway, there is no sense in paying out money to have my feelings har rowed. - T —. — You may alredy have tried this remnant-saving dessert. If not. do so. Crumble into dessert saucers what stale cake or hardened cookies you may have on hand. Mix a package of jello with boil ing water and as soon as the pow der has dissolved pour the hot liquid over the cake crumbs Let it harden and serve with whipped cream, if you have it: or boiled custard; or just serve it.; We prefer using cherry or orange jello; but pouring it on hot is more important than the flavoi. v ■■■ ■■ Some of 'these days, when freezer have become com monplace, we are going to forget how eager we Were for pressure cookers. However, you needn't discard your pressure cooker yet. for the freezing is still far in the future as a general conveni ence. And we shall have a lot to -AMU -bow . to prepare meats and vegetables for freez ing, also hOw to thaw them for cooking. My brother in Richmond gave me some veal that had been fro zen I don’t know hew long and kept at zero. We put it in my son's car about the middle of Sat urday afternoon, rode around with it till nearly midnight; and though the car was heated, tha: veal thawed barely in time to be cooked for Sunday dinner, when it was delicious My sister said she cooks chickens right out :>f the locker —puts them on stiff frozen —but that meats should be thawed first. Here is my annual plea for homemade lye hominy to be used along with the verious fresh meats that are a part of the sea son. Mrs. Cliff Horton sent me a jar of it last week. She used soda instead of lye. The hominy is so good I find it hard to be poiite when passing it to other fnem bers of the family. Not having corn, I confine myself. to advising about this matter; but you’ll not go wrong, if you take heed. Mrs. Clayton, with whom I boarded the first year I taught school, used to make a washpot full of soda hominy as often as we ate the previous boiling. I’d come in from school, cold and tired, and she’d be sitting by a, big open fire, giving occasional long sticked stirring to the pot ofcorn, which was always about done by the time I got in. I’d begin eating it and continue till bedtime Good with butter, this hominy is at its best with ham or sausage gravy. Heard or overheard; ... “I was so afraid he wasn’t going to give me a Christmas present; but he did ”... ‘‘No, we haven’t heard for three weeks now, but we keep hbping.” ... “We like the new way of making fruit cake much better than the old.” . . . “and D1 simply die if I can’t have a new permanent before then” . . . “It’s something we’ve all got to face one day or another” . . . “and it’s the .most perfectly darling ideg” . f . “And he made me pay him that two dollars, too. Yes. sir.” ... “I haven’t heard from Wm in over a month, and I’m nearly crazy” . . “That canning sugar coupon had been announced over and over as being good tilt February: and now—” . . . “Well, I can 4o With only one shoe cou pon this year. Dad gave me his.” THE ZEBULON RECORD Volume 21. No. 19 Bookmobile Notes } • i Tne year ‘of 1945 will be the .fourth ye&!> of Wake County l Bookmobile service. We of the ; [ Bookmobile staff wish to thank you citizens of this county of J Wake for your fine cooperation with us in the past and we hope this year will enable us to bring you a bigger and better bookmo j bile service than ever before. j The bells that rang in the new ; year seem to have rung in a wave .ol new books for the bookmobile I too. A number of these are listed and reviewed below; Country Neighborhood by Eliz abeth Coatsworth. A delightful book of anecdotes, brief tales, im pressions and descriptions of Maine country life. The author | has lived for years in Maine and* presents informal pictures of the people in her neighborhood. "First With the Most” Forrest by Robert Selph Henry. Biogra phy of that effective and much quoted Confederate fighting man. Lieutenant General Nathan Brad ford Forrest who began his mili i tary career at the age of forty, as a private, and rose from the ranks. Lost In the Horse Latitudes by H. Allen Smith. The author of Low Man on a Totem Pole arrives in Hollywood and turns the town inside out. This account of his misadventures in movieland is i probably his funniest book to date. Captain From Castile by Samuel < Shellabarger. If you are one of those readers who was enthralled with “The Three Musketeers” you ! will have the time of your life with Captain From Castile. The story of a hot-blooded Castilian on : a campaign from Spain to Mexico. ' Being Met TcfQ&thtr by Vaughan ’ Wilkins. A romantic historical novel featuring a young American who goes abroad and becomes an I agent for Napoleon. The charac ters are exciting people and the details of that period of history are many and authentic. Young’un by Herbert Best. Writ ten about the time of the early fur-trading days of Lake Cham ilain, soon after the Revolutionary tVar, the story is primarily con -1 cerned with a family of children left on their own in the wilds of the fur country. Building of Jalna by Mazo De La Roche. This,, the ninth of a se ries of novels about Jalna, is the | first in point of time. The narra tive goes back to the 1850’s when Philip and Adeline Whiteoak mi grated to Canada and began build -1 ing the family seat in the wilder ness of Ontario. The Letters of Alexander Wool cott. This collection of some of the letters that Alexander Wool cott has written in an interesting lifetime to various friends and ac quaintances is full of little things for fans of the “Town Crier” to chuckle over and find delight in and so enrich his life and theirs. Bookmobile schedule, Monday. January 22: Stations Arrive Leave Rolesville School 9:30 10:35 I Rolesville 10:35 10:45 Hopkins X Roads 11:15 11:30 Zebulon Worn. Club 12:30 1:00 Wakelon School 1:05 2:30 M iss Annie Laurie Wilson’s Bookmobile Schedule, Tuesday, January 23: Stations Arrive Leave Knightdale P. O. 9:30 10:00 Knightdale School 10:05 11:05 Wendell Worn. Club 11:45 12:45 Wendell School 1:15 2:15 Eagle Rock 2:30 Samaria Church 3:00 CHURCHNEWS - BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Worship Ser mon: “The Third Person” 6:45 Training Union. 7:30 Evening Worship. First in a series of messages on the Beati titudes. Lt. and Mrs. Herbert Stallings of Raleigh spent Christmas with Mrs. Stallings' mother, Mrs. Will Duke. Zebulon, N. C., Friday, January 5, 1945 $1.50 Per Year, Payable In Advance With The Men Service Jesse Franklin Pulley AS, U. S. Navy visited hrs family, the J. A. Pulleys, for a week lately. He returned to Great Lakes, Illi nois, last Satturday. His two bro- ; thers, James and Wilbur are somewhere in the South Pacific.' Technician Fifth Grade Hilton L. Gay. 22. of Zebulon is station ed with the Army in England. Gay entered service in August, 1943, and received his basic- train ing in the Air Corps at Miami; Beach, Fla,, where he qualified j for ASTP training. He was a stu dent in the ASTP school at the' University of Georgia before be ing transferred to Camp Gordon. Ga. Gay, son of Mr. and Mrs. F D. Gay of Zebulon, Route 3, went overseas in November. His wife is the former Thelma Horton of! Fountain. Pvt. H. B. Rowland, Jr., has been inducted into the army and is now stationed at Camp Jo seph T. Robertson, Ark. He was formerly employed at Temple Market. Pvt. Craven Parrish is now at Fort Knox, Ky taking a • course designed for training radio operators. Lt. Rom Moser has reported to the Reassignment Center at the Richmond Army Air Base after a leave spent in Washington, D C., and here with his parents, the -E. H. Mosers. Cpl James Allen was here from Ft. Bragg one day of Christ mas week with his wife and baby daughter. Coffeyville, Kans., Dec 31 See. Lt. William I. Green, Jr., 19- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Green. Zebulon, N. C., has eomnleted 10 weeks of photo-re connaissance pilot training at the Coffeyville Amy Air Field and has been sent to a Tnird Air Force staging area. Lt Green received his wings and commission at LaJunta. Col.. Army Air Field, Aug. 4, 1944. Captain Barrie S. Davis, 15th Air Force fighter pilot recently returned to this country, has been awarded the Silver Star for gal lantry during a mission on Aug ust 22 to Germany when he de stroyed two German fightei planes attacking crippled Ameri can Bombers. While in Italy Captain Davis was awarded the Purple Heart, the Air Medal with 13 clusters, and the Distinguished Flying Cross. • The citation received from the 15th Air Force reads as tqllows: BARRIE S. DAVIS. 0-811865, First Lieutenant, 317th !Ftr. Sq 325th Ftr. G"p. For gallgntry in action as pilot of a P-51 type air craft. On 22 august 1944, Lt. Da- j vis led his flight as escort to heavy bombers attacking strategic enemy installations in Germany. Leaving the target area, he re-| mained with the bombers to af ford cover for crippled aircraft after the time designated to leave them. Enroute to base the crip- i pled ships were aggressively at- j tacked by enemy fighters. In the ensuing engagement, displaying j outstanding combat proficiency, 1 though engaged by superior num bers of enemy ships, Lt. Davis successfully repulsed all attacks and successfully destroyed two hostile fighters. Through his con spicuous gallantry in remaining with the bombers, he enabled them to complete their mission and return safely to base. By his outstanding courage, leadership Cherry's Recommendations f R- Gregg Cherry, of Gastonia, lawyer, legislator and former sol dier, took his oath of office as Governor of North Carolina on Jan. 4th and delivered an inaugu ral address that embraced his rec ommendations to the general as sembly. The legislative body, in joint session heard the address. Speaking for an hour, Gover nor Cherry presented a program of outlined growth and develop ment for the state during the nevt four years when he will be North Carolina's chief executive. Emphasis was given to matters of finance, health, education, highways, agriculture, welfare la bor and the handling of veterans and their affairs at the close of the present v. _,r. Governor Cherry is the second governor of the state to be inau gurated during wartime. Zeb Vance, the other such governor, took his oath of office while the civil war was in progress. Finance In his statement of fiscal policy, Governor Cherry said that appro priations for the coming bienniun, “must be kept within the availa bility of revenues estimated to be received during the biennium.” The present general fund surplus he added, will amount to $70,000,- 000 by June of 1945, because of abnormal wartime business condi tions. “This surplus must not be dissipated in current expendi tures.” he said. He added that this money should be used in provide for the retirement of state debts, to come due in fu ture years. His recommendations along this line are for the setting aside of a sufficient portion of this surplus to meet all general fund bonded debt payments as they come due, both principal and interest. He said this would take $52,000,000 -»»d would, by this provision also, reduce current levies of taxation by $5,000,000. The remainder )f the surplus should go into a post war reserve fund, he continued, tc serve as a cushion against a sud den decline in revenue, or for other possible needs and purposes that might arise As a fiscal policy for the imme diate future, the Governor came out strong against any new taxes and for holding unchanged (for the most part) the present tax structure. Tax structure changes and devotion to duty, as evidenc ed throughout over seventy (70) successful missions against the enemy, and six enemy aircraft de stroyed in aerial flight, Lt. Davis has reflected great credit upon himself and the Armed Forces of the United States of America Residence at appointment: Zebu lon, North Carolina. Captain Davis is now stationed at the Las Vegas Air Field in Nevada. SGT. PACE THOUGHT DEAD Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pace have been notified tnat their son, Sgt. Warren Pace, missing in action for more than a j’ear, is considered to be dead. He was a gu, ner in the Air Corps and was lost over Ger many. Besides his parents, three half brothers survive: Fred Pace, Percy Pace and Charles Pace, with two half-sisters: Miss Ma toka Pace and Mrs. Annie Jones. Chief Petty Officer Edward S. Pearce, USN, was home for the Christmas holidays and this past week end visiting his wife and children in Zebulon. WANTED INFORMATION Leading to clarification of how news of my being drunk reached relatives in Germany before it did my home in Wakefield, N C. It is said that to spread news, you telephone, telegraph, or tell a woman. J want to know who told who, what, how and when. Signed: B. B. RICHARDS. Paid Adv. Zebulon, Route 1, N. C. suggested were to make drugs used by doctors and patients ex empted from tax, and permitting the income tax structure to ex empt expenses for medical care, funerals, and of children in school. He advocated continuing the war bonus for teachers and slate employees. Education Turning to education h e sug gested an eight-point program to strengthen the public school sys tem. He wants: a base pay of 5125 per month for A-grade teachers just starting in the pro fession, with increment for ex perience; an expanded program pf vocational training: free text books through the eighth grade and rental fees on high school books only high enough to main*' tain the rental system; 10 months pay for principals to provide for time on the job before school opens and after it closes; raising compulsory attendance age from. 14 to 16 years; a program of ad ditional compensation for excep tional teachers; state aid in sup plying better sanitation facilities in connection with schools and better fiscal control of public school funds. Governor Cherry also recom mended “adequate provision” of funds for higher educational in stitutions. He pointed to future highway needs and said that as men and materials are available he wanted all-weather roads for all communities. He also urged further uses of the by-products of agriculture in the state and the developments of new products, and a better program of training for the boys and girls who will run the farms of tomorrow. Veterans The address also called for sup plying the needs of 300,000 war veterans who will return to the State. This should be cared for from, the postwar, reserve fund— “when the needs of the veterans can be determined.” The Governor said a grateful state should provide ndw educa tional opportunities for these men and women and should acquaint them with their rights. The chil dren of t.iiose who gave their lives in battle are deserving M ample protection at the hands of the state. Concerning the veteran he said: “We cannot merely see that he gets his discharge pay, a parade, and a few days of glory and ap plause.We must make him one of us again.” Turning to the state’s health program, Governor Cherry said he agreed in principle with a re port made by the commission named to study the problem of health in the state This group has proposed a state-wide program of hospital and medical care. He called for further advances in the field of health and asked for ap propriations to wage a more com plete war on disease. The Governor also advocated: A strong department of cbnserva tion and development; better care of the state’s less fortunate: ade quate representation of labor on all state commissions and boards dealing with the problems of la bor: a constitutional amendment lhat will make women available for jury duty and remove STI oth er discriminations that exist against them in the state consti tution: the establishment of a de partment of state police to in clude several now existing state law - enforcement agencies; a state —wide referendum on the liquor question; and further as sistance for libraries throughout the state.