THE ZEBULON RECORD Volume XXVI. Number 79. MOTHER NATURE'S HOME REMEDIES By Mrs. Theo. B. Davis The following aiticle by Mrs. Theo. B. Davis of Zebulon, which appeared in a recent issue of the Carolina Journal of Pharmacy, is reprinted for Record readers. Suggested by Heywood Jones, lo cal pharmacist, it was published first in February of this year. Childhood Remedies In my childhood I never saw a drugstore. Indeed, I did not often hear the word. My father called them apothecaries’ shops, just as he said an ordinary instead of an inn or boarding house. We lived in the country and medicine was bought from the general store or, in more serious cases, from the doctor’s saddlebags. No one was given a prescription to have filled. Most of what we used was prepar ed at home and compounded with faith as much as skill. Homemade medication began at birth when newborn babies wore navel dressings of old linen cloths, scorched, and liberally greased with lamb’s tallow, a cake of this having been hardened in a tea cup and put away carefully with the layette. Sometimes, in cases of neglect through carelessness or in emergency, hog lard was sub stituted for tallow; but this was a matter of embarrassment to all concerned, except the baby. Powder Unknown Talcum powder was unknown, its place being taken by corn starch or wheat flour that had been kept in a slow oven until browned. Even then it was a bit sticky but helped relieve the pain of chafing. Various teas were poured down the throat of a new baby in an effort to get it well started on the road to health. Soot, catnip, or calamus root made infusions that were sweetened and spooned into the infant for their digestive value. Watermelon seed made a tea that was supposed to be a specific for kidneys that needed stimulation. Chicken Gizzards For colitis the lining of chicken gizzards was saved. We scrubbed them well, strung them with a darning needs and coarse thread, hung them to dry thoroughly, then put them away for use as needed by the family or by those neigh bors who killed fewer chickens than we. (And after years of be ing laughed at whenever speaking of this remedy, I heard a doctor prescribe for a small nephew a medicine which, he explained, was made from gizzard linings.) If afflicted by measles, we were not allowed to drink cold water, but were forced to swallow hot drinks pine tea being a favo rite with nurses. We had ad vanced beyond the prescribing of a tea made from sheep droppings, though I have known those who had taken it. Summer Complaint For diarrhea, commonly called “summer complaint,” we drank water that had been poured over the bark of peachtree roots and allowed to stand till pinkish in color. It was bitter, but efficacious. To cure boils it was necessary only to fill a quart jar with ber ries from red sumac and pour cold water in, letting it stand till a pink tinge was acquired. This liquid was drunk whenever the sufferer was thirsty, more water being poured in as needed; or more (Continued on Page 4) R. I. f. By V. I. P. I ~VU.*REST IN Li PIECES if you OVERLOAD your car REPORTER Meantime, last week Thurmond Chatham and Governor Scott were guests at a tour of Buggs Island and a barbecue at Oxford, both promoted by the Wildlife Club there. Thurmond heaped praise on Governor Scott. He termed him the best agriculture commission er in the history of the State and predicted Scott would go down in history as a great governor who always was “for something.” Chatham in Race All of this brought the comment that Chatham sounded “like a man running for something.” The Elkin manufacturer told one reporter he was interested only in “being the best representative this state has.” Other folks thought Chatham either had his eye on the governor’s chair or the Senate seat now occupied by Clyde Hoey. Other Gleanings Gleanings from the Buggs Is land trip included reports from CIITIDN QUIZ MUCHIS IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF A.ggfjg AUTOMOBILE: J APPROXIMATELY 6SPOUNDS OF COTTON ARE USED IN THE VARIOUS PARTS OF A CAR ! Zebulon, N. C., Tuesday, June 19, 1951 some tobacco farmers that activi ties of the warehouse associations are slowly but surely sounding the deathknell c the auction system of selling tobacco . . . Consolida tion of schools is a major problem. One politician said it was a ne cessity, “but I don’t know wheth er to come out and fight for it killing myself politically or to just sit back and see what hap pens” . . . Farmers also were talking about the increasingly high cost of getting started as a farmer due to high labor and ma chinery costs. Some Car The new $4,000 Cadillac for the governor has arrived and been put into service, it’s mighty fan cy, with all kinds of p.*sh-buttons, which most folks is as it should be for the State’s chief exe cutive even if he is a farmer. But even more interesting to this reporter was the stuff that the Governor carries along. There’s a copy of a farm magazine, a Ral eigh telephone book, a first aid kit, a box of cleansing tissue, mem orandum pads, a road map, one of those thin raincoats that you can fold up and put in your pocket, and on the day I peeped —a withered rosebud that the Gov eorner had discarded from his la pel. Not So Petty The misuse of State-owned cars once more is hitting the head lines. It doesn’t sound like much when one man drives a car home at night, then mebbe takes the missus back downtown to a movie. But when you add it up it comes to a not-so-petty sum of state cash gone down the drain. Attorney General In the latest drive to stop this, the Governor called on Attorney General Harry McMullan to find out what could be done to stop the goings on. So don’t be surprised if sev eral state employees either get fined or fired in a drive to stamp out this “not-so-petty” graft. Hailstorm Last Thursday Afternoon Does Thousands of Dollars Damage To Tobacco, Other Crops in Field A single hailstorm which swept from Daniel’s Store east of Wake Forest past Rolesville and Zebulon as far east as Murraytown did damage to local crops last Thursday afternoon which may reach the million dollar mark. The storm, accompanied by torrential rainfall and high winds, did its greatest damage along the Bunn Road east of Wakefield and along highway 39 northwest to Rosenburg, including hundreds of acres of the same area devastated by hail only a year ago. Six Softball Contests Scheduled for Wakelon Diamond During Week Six softball games are scheduled for men on the Wakelon diamond on three nights of this week, ac cording to Jim Fish, recreation di rector. Games will be played on Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday nights. Tonight the Lions meet Pearce and Pilot plays Wakefield. On Thursday night the American Le gion meets Pearce and the Na tional Guard plays Wakefield. Games Friday night include the Lions versus the National Guard and the American Legion against Pilot. This schedule will be incorpor ated with the games which will be scheduled for the girls and the teenagers. The first game each night will begin at 7:30. Director Fish stated, and no inning of the first game may begin after 9 o’clock. Methodist Field Served By Rev. Keith Glover Rev. Keith Glover, a recent graduate of Duke University and ministerial student, is assisting Rev. S. E. Mercer at Zebulon and Wendell Methodist Churches for a five week period under the sponsorship of the Duke Endow ment. Mr. Glover is helping in Vaca tion Church Schools, youth work, general pastoral assistance and is preaching at the Sunday evening services. He will conduct Youth Week in both churches soon. Mr. Glover will enter the Duke Divinity School for further train ing in the fall. He is a native of the Mount Pleasant community in the adjoining county of Nash. COMPLETE "OVEN MEALS" SAVE TIME A good way to save time now that the busiest season of the farm year is approaching in central North Carolina is to make full use of your electric range in preparing “oven meals.” Here a farm house wife takes a completely prepared meal of pork chops, string bean casserole, and baked apples from her oven, after making it earlier and storing in her refrigerator until almost meal time. Such time conserving steps will be explained to you by Mrs. Maude Mclnnes, home demonstration agent, or the home agent of your power firm. Theo. Davis Sons, Publishers T Crop damage was estimated at from 50 to 100 percent on tobac co, corn and cotton, and insur ance adjusters were swamped as farmers made reports of the heavy damage. The hail, which ranged up to the size of golf balls, fell with such force that large heads of cab bage were split open, stalks of corn riddled, and tobacco and cot ton stalks cut completely in two. Heavy Fog Following the hail, a heavy fog rose from the ground, making it necessary for automobiles to drive with lights in many areas. Many cars, caught in the open during the storm, had paint pep pered by the stones. By late Friday farmers were re planting tobacco in sections in an effort to regain some of the lost acreage. Others hoped to cultivate suckers rather than work with a late crop. Weekend Rains The rains which fell over the weekend proved a great aid to those who were replanting their fields of tobacco. A complete estimate of the dam age will not be possible until all reports are in, according to D. D. Chamblee, local insurance man. Aleigh Perry Represents Town in Beauty Contest Aleigh Perry, lovely daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sean Perry of Zebulon, has been selected as the Zebulon representative in the beauty contest to select “Miss Raleigh Capital” for the Raleigh baseball team. Entrants in the contest must be from Wake County, and between 17 and 25 years of age. The win ning contestant in the Raleigh contests will be entered with i other winners to determine “Miss I Carolina League.”