Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Jan. 7, 1943, edition 1 / Page 7
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, tir t lee Passed A;ay Sunday At jjis Home neic (Continued from page 1) committee and 'oet ; T. Crawford's 8UC- S? ampai'gn against the 0s1" . Rritt for congres, late in tffn'l894, the year k which tl kt made such a sweep Lee was elected' JJ Snlral assembly from Ha bounty and was one of t ri I) emocr.te that foug Liority'a plans for legisl ag'ain elected to tl "on- , ! ,,n,hlv in 1910. He wi Cessful candidate for the 8U0Ct her of the con : nom- orporate and held Anangtmente Incomplete ., ...,, corporation com the commis- ..Jr is e longest eVe.F by 7. dividual in the state s nisi SI kn served as chairman of i history. the Haywood county Democratic e L,mmittee for four years. ! execu- .:.,;n,r q pp flint children. , Wil- Survive' - - - u.,n I.ee. a graduate ol the i," c Naval academy, who rose to first the rank ol cominu .,j u.r- Robert Lowry Lee, Jr.. ......Mil,.' Thomas Lee. J Wiivn Charles Alton L- Mrs. D. W. Dickey, Sweetwa ErTenn.; Mrs. C. C. Lewis, Char Son. W. Va.; Mrs. Willis Smith Raleigh; Mrs. James A. Owyn Wilmington, Del.; and Mrs. Thorn u B. Wood, of Edenton. Presbyterians Of District Will Meet Here Tuesday (Continued from page 1) will be held. The visiting speaker will be Mr. Allen M. Craig who has served for a number of years as Secretary-Treasurer of the Afri can Mission of the Southern Pres byterian Church with headquart ers at Luebo, Belgian Congo, Afri ca. All meetings of the Presbytery are open to the public, and local people are especially invited to the morning and night services. The Rev. Malcolm R. Williamson, pastor of the local church, together with the members of the Church Session will act as hosts to the Presbytery. "Swell!" cried the newly-commissioned draft dodger, as he stood before a mirror, looking at his head. ilCTSWAYS TO RELIEVE MISERIES OF CHESTCOIDS Now get grand relief from colds' symptoms this home-proved couDie-action way mat actually - VJMS AT ONCf .2 J? PENETRATES to upper bronchial tllbps wHh anntHlrtrr - L-Uuuu...& ! medicinal vapors. I STIMULATES S meoi, tinu uac& sur- v jacesiiKea warm V ing poultice """who for ho""! ' Combined PENETRATING-STIMULATING action, just rub throat, chest, ml back with Vicks VapoRub at bedtime. Instantly VapoRub goes to work-2 ways at once as shown above-to relieve coughing spasms, ease muscular soreness or tightness, and Invite restful, comforting sleep. Often by morn ing most of the misery is gone. Get relief from chest cold distress "night with double-action, time tested Vicks VapoRub. Insurance Rates Reduced On AUTO FIRE AUTO THEFT AUTO COLLISION Thh offer to cars with A and B Gas Cards) Por Complete Details Without Obligation SEE The L. N. Davis Company 59 N. Main Street 7a WaynesviHe 1943 (One Day Nearer Victory) Meet at Date Bureau Pretty Renee Kiley gaxes up at U. 3, sailor Stan Palmer just after they met at "Introduction," the new date bureau for service men and defense workers which has just opened in New York City. As lonf as refer ences are all right, a service man or worker seeking a companion eaa find one easily at the new bureau. (Central Pre) -TIMELY- Farm Questions and Answers Question: How many lights are needed in the poultry house to "ex ceed the day" and increase win ter egg production? Answer The rule, says the ex tension poultry office at State Col lege, is to provide one watt of light for every five feet of floor space. This means that a 20x20 foot poultry house needs 80 watts of lights. Two 40-watt lamps will do the job. The extension poul trymen suggest that the lamps be placed high enough so that people can walk under them easily. The light should be directed downward evenly over the house. Poultry house lighting normally results in each hen producing 4 to 5 more eggs per month during the short days of winter. Question: How much grain should be fed dairy oows during the winter? Answer: This depends, says John A. Arey, extension dairyman of N .C. State College, on the quantity and quality of roughage available, and on the percentage of fat in the milk produced. Grain should be looked upon as a supplement to roughage. If the cows receive all the good quality roughage they will consume without waste, a Jer sey or Guernsey should get slightly more grain than a Holstein or Ayr shire. For instance, a Guernsey or Jersey producing 20 pounds of milk daily needs about 6 pounds of grain per day, whereas a Hol stein or Ayrshire producing 2ll pounds of milk daily needs about 4 pounds of grain. Question: How much silag' should be fed to a dairy cow each day? Answer: John A. Arey, exten sion dairy specialist of N. C. State College, says that cows will con sume about 3 pounds of silage per day for each 100 pounds of live weight. Or to state it another way, a 1000-pound cow will eat about 30 pounds of silage during the day. Silage should be fed lib erally during the winter months. Many good feeders mix their grain ration in the manger with the sil age. Question: Are barley, wheat and rye good feeds for workstock? Answer: Oats and corn are the standard rations for horses and mules, according tP L. I. Case, ex tension animal husbandman of N. C. State College, but he says that barley, wheat and rye can be fed to workstock if the grain is crush ed and ground. Wheat and rye should be fed in limited amounts, he said, and they should be mixed with other feeds to prevent diges tive disturbances. Cottonseed meal is often used as a protein supple ment, but a safe rule is not to feed more than one pound of cot tonseed meal per 1,000 pounds live weight of the horse or mule Beveridge Plan Creator and Bride ' v ; ; V?; c T J , ; i ltd f i ' Hi Sir William Beveridge. who ongi natd Pndntinue BntU deatMj want for Britishers that Member 15. They nrt pictured shown with his bride whom hsmarmd yec first pnblk spsjefc at a luncheon in J'arity rPft (CmPrL THE Household Hints Tomato Scalloped With Cheese And Eggs 2 cups tomatoES. 1 cup grated cheese. 4 tablespoons butter. 2 teaspoons sugar. 8 hard cooked eggs. 2 cups soft bread crumbs. teaspoon pepper. Into a grated baking dish pour half of the tomatoes. Slice 4 hard cooked eggs and lay the slices on the tomatoes, season with half the sugar, salt and pepper. Sprinkle Vs cup of cheese over this, then add a layer of bread crumbs and dot with butter. Repeat using the re mainder of the ingredients. Bake about 20 minutes in a moderately hot oven or until the top layer of crumbs is nicely browned. Welsh Rarebit 2 cups milk. 4 tablespoons butter. 4 tablespoons flour. 1 teaspoon salt. 1 cup giattd cheese, 'j. teaspoon paprika. teaspoon mustard. 2 eggs, slightly beaten. Melt butter, add flour and stir until smooth. Then add milk and cook until thickened, stirring con stantly. To this white sauce add cheese and seasonings. Stir until smooth. Then add eggs, stirring quickly until blended. Cook and stir for two or three minutes until mixture tnickens. Serve hot on crisp toast or crackers. Meat Substitutes Kggs. cheese, nuts, dried pias and dried beans rank high as sources of protein and minerals. They are similar in food value to meat and may be used in the diet in place of it, hence they are call ed meat substitutes. KHrallopped Eggs 4 hard cooked eggs, sloced. 1 cup bread crumbs. 1 cup milk. 2 tablespoons flour. 2 tablespoons butter. i teaspoon salt. Melt butter, add flour and salt; make a smooth paste. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly until sauce thickens. Into a buttered baking dish put first a layer of bread crumbs, then a layer of slic ed eggs, and half of the white sauce. Repeat. Cover with but tered bread crumbs and place in medium oven until crumbs are! browned. Cheese SoufTb 1 cup grattd cheese. 1 teaspoon butter. 2 tablespoons flour. ',4 cup milk. 3 eggs. i teaspoon salt. Melt butter, add flour an,) salt; make a smooth paste. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly until sauce thickens. Remove from fire and add grated che'.se, stirring until cheese is melted. Separate yolks from whites vf eggs. Add beaten yolks to cheese mixture. Then fold stiffly beaten whites into the mixture. Pour into a buttered bakivg dish and bake 45 minutes in a slow oven. Serve at once. Kscallopped Peanuts 2 cups chopped roasted peanuts. 2 cups cooked rice or other starchy food. 2 cups milk. 4 tablespoons butter. 4 tablespoon flour. 1 teaspoon salt. 4 cup buttered bread crumbs. Make white sauce of milk, but ter, flour and salt. Into a butter ed baking dish put a layer of cook ed rice, then a layer of chopped nuts, and pour over it half of the white sauce. Repeat. Cover the last layer with buttered bread crumbs. Hake in the oven until crumbs are browned. Itean Loaf 2 cups mashed bans. 2 cups soft bread crumbs. 2 eggs, beaten. 1 tablespoon butter or bacon drippings. teaspoon pepper. Enough milk or other liquid to moistan to the consistency of drop biscuit dough. Salt. 2 tablespoons chopped onion. Mix all ingredients. Pack solidly in a well buttered pan, such as a loaf bread tin. Bake one hour or until firm throughout. Turn out on a meat platter, garnish with parsely and hard cook egg pressed through a sieve. Cut in thin slices and serve with tomato sauce. WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER French Empire New High Commissioner of French north and west Africa, Gen. Henri Giraud inspects U. S. troops in 1 Africa ahortlv .Ur ha was named to his nreaent nost followinar the assassination of Admiral Darlan. H 'ma praised as a great military lead. The Nasi YOU'RE TELLING ME! -By WILLIAM RITT Central Press Writer LABORATORY work has com menced on development of a syn thetic rope. So we can save the real article for use when we round up Hitler, Hirohito and company ? No, Junior, for the thousandth time we repeat; There is no talk whatever in Washington of ra tioning spinach! j j i That newspaper strike revealed for the first time to many New Yorkers that their fellow subway passengers had faces. ! ! I Zadok Dumkopf believes that men might curb the trend to Citrus Fruits in By BETSY NEWMAN OUR VITAMIN C needs can be largely taken care of if we see to it that we get a sufficient amount of citrus fruit in our menus plus or course, sunshine, f or a gala meal, start with a tangerine cock tail anl serve a two-crust grapefruit-pie for dessert. The citru fruits are at their best right now. Today's Menu Tangerine Cocktail Cushion Style Lamb Shoulder Roasted Potatoes Canned Green Beans Molded Tomato Salad Two-crust Grapefruit Pie Coffee Tangerine Cocktail 3 grapefruit S tbsps candied 4 tangerines ginger 1 avocado Cut grapefruit in halves, re move all pulp, keeping sections as perfect as possible. Scoop out mem branes and leave shells plain or cut in scallops with scissors. Peel tangerines and section; pare avo cado am. cut in slices, moisten with a bit of fruit juice, and put several strips of csndied gingr" " center of each cup. Chill th ly be fore serving. Serves 6 Cushion Style Lamb kihuulder Have your butcher prepare a cushion style shoulder of Iamb. It is made by removing bones from a lamb shoulder, leaving a good sized pocket for dressing. Season Blocks for the B, CARRY CLEVELAND MYERS. Ph D IF YOU go into a nursery school or ki idergarten, you will observe that the blocks which the children play with sre very large, though not too heavy. The ad vantage to t:ie children of blocks so large is tnat they can put up buildings lar.-fe enough to get into. Also they car. build steps and walls on which to walk and from which to jump. However, some nursery school and kindergarten experts have given parents of tots the impres sion that large blocks sre indis pensable for the home. The aver age mother who believes this to be so, and is unable to have a nur sery or other space for large blocks, may worry and feel that her child is being denied fit home education. Some young married couples, indeed, suppose they should bring no children into the world unless this child can have a separate play roon. and very large blocks. Absurd! In the first place, the large block idea has been unduly emphasized, even in some nursery schools and kindergartens. There should be some, of course. Ever, in a home there might be a very few. Also there should be some smaller blocks to give variety of activities. The nursery school and kinder garten's emphasis cn the very large block is a reaction to earlier practice of having young children play only with very small blocks and other small things which re We Now Carry A Complete Line Of Stationery for Home, Office and School At The Mountaineer Leader Giraud leader by Secretary of State Hull and - oon trolled Vichy radio denounced him. slacks for street wear by threatening to don kilts. And, he adds, that's no Scotch joke, either. ! ! ! Mussolini has just fired two generals. Another example of "too little and too late"? I ! ! Those new "B" type plane seem to have more pep than the vitamins of the same name. ! ! I If wo continue to sink Jap ships at the present rate, says Chuck Thobaben, Washington can expect a priority request from Davy Jones for a new add ing machine. Day's Menu inside and out with salt and pep per, hi) loosely with celery dress ing, sew or skewer opening. Put on rack in uncovered pan, fat side up, and roast without water in moderate oven (350 degrees F.), allowing 26 to 30 minutes per pound. Celery Dressing 1 c. finely chopped celery 1 tbsp. minced onion 1 tbsp. parsley 1 tbsp. butter 2H c. bread crumbs tsp. marjoram tsp. celery seer V, tsp. salt Cook celery, onion and parsley in butter foi a few minutes, add otheringredientsandenough water or soup stock to make dressing slightly moist. Two-Crust Grapefruit Pie 1 recipe plain 8 V4 tbsps. flour pastry tsp. dnna- 2Vi c. grape- mon fruit sections M tsp. nutmeg Mi c. honey 2 tbsps. butter Line 8-inch pie pan with one half the pastry. Mis honey, floor, cinnamon and nutmeg. Place one half grapefruit sections in ;ie pan. sprinkle with half honey mixture, repeat, dot with butter, top wita remaining pastry. Bake in very hot oven (460 degrees F.) 2S min utes. Serve with topping of: era fe ed cheese, hard sane, whipped eream, or peanut aiitter a garnish. Child at Home quire finer muscular coordination practically all the time. But as any mother knows, a tot ftf rnrpD or four can train a deal of wholesome creative fun from playing in his own way w.t.i domi onri cherker men and other small blocks at home; nor do these smaller plaything? taice up so much space. Most of the sets of blocks don't have long pieces for building fences and the like, easy enough for the child to handle in the av erage home. Such blocks should include some long and narrow strips and multiples thereof, to gether with some that are wider, thicker and longer. Some mothers also are handy with tools and could make such or similar blocks. Also some older children can gain a deal of fun and much valuable training from mak ing these playthings, for a baby brother or sister. Solving Parent Problems Q. My daughter nine years old blinks her eyes and makes dread ful grimaces. Her eyes have been examined by a specialist and her doctor says she is in gooJ physical condition. This habit almost' stopped during the summer but has grown worse since school be gan. Please help me. 1 am enclos ing a self-addressed envelope stamped with three cents. A. I sent her my bulletins, "Nervous habits in children" and "Nervous Jittery Mothers." Inspects Yanks Gen. de Gaulle, Fighting Fre This is a radiophoto.- Outstanding G-Man To Address Scouts Of This Area On Monday J. Kdgar Hoover, head of the FBI, is sending one of his most able G-Men, E. C. Kennelly, to speak to a mass meeting of boys of Western North Carolina at the city auditorium in Asheville at 6 o'clock Monday afternoon, Janu ary 11. Mr. Kennelly will speak on what boys can do in war time. The meeting is being sponsored by the Daniel Boone Council of the Boy Scouts of America and will be held in connection with the Annual Scouters' Convention of the Scout Council. Mr. Kennelly will also address adult Scouters and their friends at 6:30 at Central Methodist church in Asheville on the job of Scouting in War Time. The Daniel Boone Council is composed of fourteen counties of Western North Carolina and Scouts and adult leaders from all sections are expected to attend the two meetings. Invitations have been sent to principals of all schools in the area to send boys to the afternoon meeting. In addition lo the two sessions at which the (i-Man will speak, leaders of the Scout movement will hold group sessions in the after noon to discuss aggressive plans for increasing the part Scouts are playing in Hie war effort during l;M'i. ('in, iteration is being given by le.nli is of civilian defense, the Yes -We Have -And In Good Quality- 2 and 3 Yards Wide It's good quality in 28x32 construction. With or dinary care it's a quality that will last two seasons. The 2-yard width has rings and we expect some 3-yards wide with rings. Get Yours Early At Ray's C. E. RAY'S SOWS County Hospital Is On Approved List (Continued from page 1) new and relocated war industries. and, establishment of large mili tary encampments, have caused ex cessive demands for hospital ser vice in some communities, and there) is increasing danger of lowered standards in the effort to care for more patients than the depleted staffs can properly serve. In thia emergency most communities are rallying to the support of the hos pitals, furnishing volunteer nurs es' aides and other voluntary work ers, encouraging study and practice of home nursing, discourageing hospitalization for minor illnesses, interesting young people in careers in medicine and nursing, and in creasing disease and accident pre vention efforts. By voluntarily granting hospitalization priorities to the more seriously ill, the people will conserve hospital resources as they are conserving other services and many commodities through al locaton according to needs. The requiremsnts for approval are fundamental to good hospital care, as may be seen by the follow ing summary of the principles: (1) Modern, well operated phy sical plant. (2) Constitution and by-laws clearly stating relations, organiza tion, duties and responsibilities. (3) Responsible, enthusiastic gov erning board. (4) Competent, well trained ad ministrator. (6) Adequate, efficient, properly organized and supervised staff. (6) Organized medical staff of ethical, competent physicians and surgeons. (7) Adequate diagnostic and the rapeutic facilities under competent medical supervision. (8) Accurate, complete medical records, readily accessible for re search and follow-up. (9) Regular group conferences of administrative staff and of medi cul staff to revii w thoroughly their respective activities. (10) A scientific spirit allied with humanitarianism to assure the greatest possible medical and nurs ing aid to each patient. Citizens Service Corps, the Amer ican Legion Bnd other civic or ganizations. SALLY'S SALUES Tobacco Canvas (All Kill WUtWfHl WAIK-Co Phoie 77
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1943, edition 1
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