Recipes Of The Week By Miss EVELYN HANCOC K Home Service Director Virginia Electric and Power Company Left -Over Turkey After the turkey has made its appearance for dinner on Thanks giving Day it may loose some of its appeal if served again in a similiar way. Since there are so many ways to serve left-over turkey no homemaker can be ex cused from the economical use of the whole Dird. Creamed turkey on hot waf fles will make a perfect luncheon for the day after Thanksgiving. Creamed Turkey Melt over low heat 4 Table spoons butter. Add and blend in 4 Tablespoons flour. Stir in slow ly 2 cups hot milk. Season with salt and pepper. Stir sauce until CHRISTMAS Cl FT SI ((FSTIOSS Cufl Links AND I I I: HAK A 11a rcl rolled overlay t>l 14 Karat £old insure- the beauty and gervu validit y of tin? gmartlx designed get. Link’s, St). 50 — Jie Bar, i Sr plug tax. Peele's - Jewelers SINCE 189!) 121 Main Williainston FOR FINER CHRISTMAS (ilFTS 'smooth and boiling. Cream or meat stock may be substituted for milk. ! Add to sauce 4 cups minced ! turkey and cook until turkey is thoroughly heated. Serve on hot w affles. Optional seasoning may be added as parsley, celery salt, | olives, sherry and meat sauces. Waffles 2 1-2 cups flour 3/4 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 1/2 tablespoons sugar 2 beaten eggs 2 1/4 cups milk 3/4 cup melted shortening or salad oil Sift dry ingredients. Combine eggs, milk and the shortening, milk, and seasoning; blend. Cook Combine liquid and dry ingred ients just before baking; beat un til smooth This is a thin batter. Bake in hot waffle iron Makes 10 waffles. Turkey Croquettes 2 cups diced turkey salt and pepper 1 8 teaspoon paprika 1/2 teaspoon celery salt 1 2 Tablespoon minced onion 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1 cup white sauce Fine cracker crumb. Combine chicken, seasoning, lemon juice, onion, and white saute Mix well. Chill and form into croquettes. Dip into mixture of 1 beaten egg yolk and 1 table spoon water Roll into dry bread 1 crumbs. Fry in deep hot fat and j drain on absorbent paper. Makes ^ 12 croquettes. Turkey A La King 1 cup sliced mushrooms 1 4 cup chopped green pepper 1 4 cup butter 3 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk salt and pepper 1 beaten egg yolk 2 1/2 cups cooked diced chick-1 en. 2 Tablespoons finely cut pi-j miento Lightly brown mushrooms and green pepper in butter. Add flour,' milk .and seasoning; blend. Cook until thick, stirring constantly. Stir some of hot mixture into egg j yolk and arid this to remaining j hot mixture. Cook for 10 minutes, j Add chicken and pimiento. Serve hot. Serves G. Many a man begrudges giving his wife an allowance, because she spends most of it before he can borrow it back. North Carolina has about 4,000 ■ fewer bee colonies 1his year than in 1949, according to a report by the U. S Department of Agricul tun A further decline is expected next year. Ace Threesome In Drama Ai Viccar Three of Hollywood’s top talents ! aided and abetted produc-er-direc I tor-writer Kurt Neumann in the j making of Lippert Productions •Roeketship XM“ (Expedition Moon), the new space ship saga that is garnering rave notices with 11he same ease as the New York Yankees capture pennants. t The film, the exciting story of man's first attempt at interplane tary travel, opens today at the Viccar Theatre. The trio are Karl Struss, cin ematographer par excellance, film editor Harry Gerstad, and com poser Ferde Grofe. Struss was recently selected by his colleagues in the American Society of Cinematographers to photography in the Academy pub lic relations short of cameramen. Considered one of the top men behind a camera in the business, Struss was greatly responsible for the excellent quality of the nega tive. "Calamity Jane" Meets The Texan Biand new adventures of Cal amity Jane . the pistol-packing spitfire whose fabulous Career is legendary, arrive on the screen id the Viccar Theatre Sunday in Columbia Pictures’ outdoor ac tion release, "The Texan Meets Calamity Jane.” Photographed in Cineeoior. “The Texan Meets Calamity Jane” Had Brick in His Stomach 10 Years! A man .said for 10 years he felt like he had a brick in his stomach, due to undigested food he always had inside of him. He was weak, worn-out. headachy and swollen i with gas. Recently he got CERTA-VIN j and says the feeling like a brick disappeared the second day. This new medicine is helping many Williamston sufferers. It makes your food digest faster and better. Taken before meals, it works with your food. Gas pains go! Inches of bloat vanish! Contains herbs and Vitamin B-1 with Iron to en rich the blood and makes nerves stronger. Weak, miserable people soon led different all over. So don’t go on suffering. Get CERTA VIN—Davis Drug Store. ITS BUHT FOR KEEPS! IN the dillicult years ahead, that new truck of yours will have to put out more — anil take it longer. So there are many reasons you’ll be w ise to choose a GMC! You’ll get the constant dividend < : (IMC's greater pulling power — truck-built horse power with greater sustained torque than other engines. And with that power goes the greater stamina of ( jMC’s rugged truck-engineered frame. In practically all models, from \ i ton up, you get such extra value features (at no extra cost!) as Synchro-Mesh transmission, locco-bardened crankshaft, airplane-type hearings, and Lifetime Weatherseuled cabs. They all tell you that longer life und lower maintenance are standard equipment with t CMC. As > our CMC dealer we are transportation engineers, specializing in selecting the exact combination of the right engine, axle, trans mission und frame for your particular trucking job. That’s why there’s u special CMC truck waiting for you. Come in, let us show you why CMC is vour best buy for the years ahead! . NSW fa$U tic* anywhtr* lit U. $. fxc/uitv* rapid road sonrica far B^GMC ownart call Wattarn Union by num bar, aik for Oparalor 25. Sha ll j|||||f^bL g i» • you t ha n am a o I y o or naaiait CMC approvaJ sarvict Ye nr key It greater keuelmg treble Pet a real truck/ LIGHT • MIDIUM • HEAVY MOOfIS • Mod# in tho wldoti vmrioty oi engine body chatsis combinations to ft ovary tracking *ft#4 Chas. H. Jenkins & Co. of WUHamston, Inc. Highway 17 WilliutuHon, N. C. You'll do bottor on a utod truck with yoot A starts after the death of Wild Bill Hickock, Calamity’s one ynd on ly true love. All the action take? place in and near Deadwood, South Dakota, the town where Hickok was killed, and .vhere both are buried today. According to Hollywood, no effort was spared to reconstruct the town of Deadwood as it was during Calamity’s heyday. Her saloon, the Prairie Queen, and the guns, knives, watches, ladies’ fans, lamps furniture, traveling bags, and other paraphernalia of; the period were produced as faith fully as possible. Calamity’s own pistol and rifle will be seen and heard blazing away, just as they ! did years ago. The pistol is a cap and ball Remington, the rifle was made by Winchester. Both Guns, j in excellent condition, were locat-, -H in Hollywood, in the possession of a Mr. Bill Hiideman. Marshall Plan Benefits South The Marshall plan for Euro- j pean recovery has brought nearly a billion and a half dollars to the | agricultural economy of the South in the past two years, the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond re ports in an article in the Decern-1 ber issue of its “Monthly Review.’’ Of the $4,400,000,000 of Mar shall plan expenditures authoriz ed to purchase agricultural com modities in America during that time, the article states, $1,128,000,- ^ ! 000 has been allocated for cotton and $309.000.000 for tobacco. The article was written for the Monthly Review" by Horace G. 'Porter, senior agricultural econ omist of the Reserve Bank’s re search department. Porter recent ly returned from Europe, where for two years he had been on loan to the Economic Cooperation Ad ministration as a cotton specialist. Pointing out the Marshall plan’s effects on the remarkable recov ery in European industry and ag riculture. Porter stresses the im portance of the program to the South, and the Fifth Federal Re- j servo. District in particular. The j Fifth District includes Maryland, : Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and the District of Columbia. Before World War II Western European countries took about 60 per cent of American exports of cotton and 75 per cent of the j country’s exports of tobacco, Por- ! ter points out. "Fifth District cotton anti tobac co farmers know from sad exper ience what it means to lose, even temporarily, their European may- j ket," he says. "It is more diffi- j cult in times like these for them to know how much of their pre- j sent prosperity is the result of i European purchases of cotton, to- | bacco, and other farm products. "There is no doubt, however, that farmers in thf Fifth District as well as elsewhere in the United States have been considerably more prosperous in the last few years than they would have been ; without the Marshall plan.” * I GI Farm Training Paying Dividends in the government anti-trust suit charging monopoly . . . Claims for damages due to the recent storms in the East are expected to hit an all-time record, exceed ing 1938 claims of $400,000,000 . . tity of corn anil hay, and many “ other items of farm equipment. The above articles may be in spected at any time prior to the sale. This he 28th clay of November, 1950 X. E. Manning, Harvey I). Manning, Executors of W H. Manning, no 30 de 7-14 What does the Cil Rill farm training program mean to the Nation9 In North Carolina, its 24,482 veteran-farmer enrollees account for the largest total of any state in the nation. Furthermore 9? of the state's 100 counties have nigh school instructional units for the veteran-farmers and, in addition, there are 17 city high school in structional units participating. Typical progress has been shown by a Stanly county veter an-farmer who saw the advisa bility of soil conversation. It is an accepted fact that it takes 18 bushels of corn to grow one acre i of it. His yield used 22 bushels, leaving only four bushels profit. After improving his land through the GI Bill farm training pro gram, he grows GO bushels per acre. Now he gets 42 bushels pro fit instead of four. EXECUTRIX1 NOTICE North Carolina. Martin County. Having this day qualified as ex ecutrix of the estate of Nonie Ruf fin, deceased, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the undersigned within one year from this date or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their Recovery. All persons indebted to said estate are asked to make immediate set tlement. This the 22 dav of November, 1950. Millie Outlaw, executrix of Nonie Ruffin, no 23-30 de 7-14-21-28 NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION North Carolina, Martin County. Having this day qualified as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Idell Brown, deceased, this is to notify ail persons having claims against the said estate to exhibit them to 'the undersigned within one year from this date or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th dav of November, 1950. Wheeler M Manning, Administrator of the estate of Mrs. Idell Brown, no 30 de 5-12-19-26 ja 2 NOTICE As Executors of the Estate of W. H Manning, deceased, we will offer for sale at public auction for cash at the W H. Manning Farm, two miles south of Hasseli. N. C., Martin County, on the Gold Point Road, at 10:00 A. M.. on Wednes day the 20th day of December, 1050, various articles of personal property, livestock, farming ma ■hinery and tools, hay and corn, in»luding the following: 6 mules. 5 horses. 8 sets oil curers, 5 wheel plows, 5 carts, 3 wagons, peanut picker, hay baler, 2&000 tobacco sticks, several sets of tractor cul tivators and other tractor drawn equipment, 1 Case tractor, 1 Mas-1 scv-Hains tractor, a large quan- I Vi nil Ileili" mill r Meyers Williamston for llie “Brut ffiiya In Futniture” Interesting Bits Qf Business in U. S. Military expenditures have been over-estimated, analysts state, being nearer to $20-$30 bil lions annually rather than the $50-S(i0 billions talked about pub licly .... Investment bankers, now in Florida tor their conven tion. are confident they will win SEVEN STAR ' IUbM wfil*k#y. H» •traifta whltkl** ar* 4 ywn ac nm *14.17V4H gtralght whlikiy. *3VkH •Mlral aglrlt* 4l*tlHR4 Inn grain. I $% itralght wkUbay 4 yaar» al4. 11% atralght whltkay I yam #14. 7Yi% straight l«klik«y 4 yaara #14." 90 PROOF OOODIRHAM A WORTS tIMITID, MORIA, ILLINOIS I I 0 BOTTLE GAS — It Cooks — It Heals Courtney Gas Co., Inc. SERVICE - It Makes Ice — Dial 2572 -e +ne time xor all good men .. aid of their pocketbook to come to the ai _ Ahere’s been a lotof talk in recent weeks about “l*he buying power of the dollar”— past, present and future. We can’t foretell the future—but we can tell you this right now: You’ll look a long way before you’ll find a ear that offers as much for the money as you can get in a 1950 Buick. Close to half a million of these cars have been built and sold this year. Close to half a million people have checked their features and prices against tire Held — and decided they’d in:to l>::y littkk. As to prices —they start down below some sixes. And whether you price the Sl'UCIAL, the SUPHK or the KOADMASTKK, you’ll find, on u cents-per-pound basis, that few other cars can touch them for value. And this is for sure! When it comes to performance —ride —the way they handle and hold the road—and thrifty use of fuel and oil—Buicks have never been finer. That’s another way of saying that cod springs on all four wheels — Dynaflow*— torque-tube drive —and Muick’s high compression, high-economy Fireball power produce an out-of-this-world combination. So if you want your dollars to do extra duty—the time to act is now. Look at the price tags—look at the features — sample the power and thrill that you get for your money —and you’ll know what we mean. *Dynnfiow Driv* t« standard on Roaomasiku. optional Hi tJtlru coal oh Surhk and SttcJAi. iMxitlt* rov* itry T0ow*rE* KAU/f model **d tulck BMCIAl 4.p.tt*n|" *•<*•"•* with !»*• $2093.00 (UluttralW) »uick SPECIAL* P«‘* da lux* trim yo*» f*i«f »A*°* with i .oo . nWM MODEL 71» BaickBOAOMASTEt i-psiM"*" Rixiera S*d«" MODEL I** tuick *U«« i-M'**"*" ,'a**r ' . , mav vory *ligh''y ,n ■tivivra additional- Pric»« may Optional A,‘ P,,C“ ‘Ub“d ’° 1 "n adjoining command*** 0 4-door ■gemr m Tyne in HENRY J. TAYLOR, A AC Network, every Monday evening. Chas. H. Jenkins Co. of Williamston, Inc. Highway 17 Phone 2147 WHEN BETTER AUTOMOEIIES ARE SUItT BUICK Will BUIIO TWEM ! Williamson, N. C. =3 /

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