.TUB DV -LIU I f i rt J ers By VEEA STANTON i Assistant State Agent , ; The built-in sweetness of (all pears and apples can be an aid to v homemakers In stretching the sug ar budget. On the average these fruits are about 10 sugar. , . The simplest way to make the ' sweetness Is to eat them out of hand. But for variety, try them in salads dressed with cheese. Split a pear and fill the center with Roq uefort cheese thinned with a little cream. Dcess -apples with ; cottage or cream cheese mixed with chop ped chives. For a note of color, add nuts, carrot strips, or green pep pers to the salad er use trapes or raisins to lend: It even greater sweetness. - ' - - . 1 . Sour cream dressing makes an other tasty companion tor pean . r HAKE YOUri DREAf.lS COCSTOUE v. Marriages arc made on dreamt but they succeed on solid plannma, Newlyweds who or naldna a bold start In life are full of plans for the future. That future can be protected wflh Rfe Insurance. Your friendly Jefferson Standard raprasantanV will b happy to tell you how, of low cost now, you con have a "Planned Protection program that win provide a sound foundation far futvrt security. Why not call blm todayf M F. ALLEN, JR., AGENCY PHONE 2226 ' ,rs and apples plain cooked dressing is also good with fruit salad. Make It of eggs, vinegar, milk, seasoning, and a little table fat,, and cook it over simmering water.- . For glazed pears or apples, quar ter the fruit and bake with a little water until4 partly cooked. Then spread with bright-colored Jelly, and continue .baking until fruit is tender with a shiny surfaee. AT HOME OH THE FARM WITH Tlin CTY COUSIN Kenansville, N. C. r-JEFFEDSOn STAflDflRD i life insunniicE compaiiv - QRCINSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA J. M. JEIIKIIIS, Mgr. M. F. ALLEN, JR., AGENCY 0 . Kenansville, N. Cr - 3 I am interested in Jefferson Standard Planned rroiecuon. O Name 5 Ace Address With nearly' everyone suffering from "cost-of-living nerves," It is encouraging to see so many people coming to the defense of the farm er. L. C. Laney, assistant Mecklen burg farm agent, was tellln' me last week: "Lots of people have been laying the responsibility for present high prices on the farmer. But he is being pinched Just as much as any one else." Dairy feeds, he said had jumped $17 a ton in a recent five weeks period, but milk prices held their own. Laying mashessential for egg production, is up $10 a ton. Due to the world shortage of grain, wheat and oats are up $18 a ton, and soybean meal up to $21.50. ' ; In this respect, farmers who pro duce such commodities' as meat, poultry products, and milk, are also consumers, for they often rely heavily on the selling market for their chicken and livestock feeds. They must pay farm labor bills, too, and this cost has increased three fold since before the war." According to figures released in June, prices that farmers have re ceived for their products have not advanced as rapidly as the income of industrial workers. So, the way I look at it, our Country Cousins who take all the risks connected with providing us with food should be applauded for conscientious, attempts to hold down our cost o fliving. . QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of D is tress Arising from stc:.:ac:i ulczrs due to EXCESS ACID Free BookToOsofHomeTrMtaM at that Mast Male er It Wlfl Cost Ym Netting Ovtf thraa BiUBon bottiea of IB Wnuu taiTun have ban MM to raUaf of . symptoms aXdtreM arising from SmmaiSi and DiiiawiilWeara qua art Poor MgoMMat tour or Kant Stomach, mam, rMartwawa. SaMptaamm, at Sue to Cjwmi ttmA. Sold on 18 dan tii&ll AMk for "mammr hnw" vfaioh faltr explains IbJ arataoMnt arao .JVAESAW Cr.UG COMPANY V Warsaw. N. Cl ' SXA'i4 C t, i CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF STATE PRELIMINARY CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRES ENTS MAY COME - GREETING: Whereas, it appears to my satis faction, by duly authenticated rec ord of the proceedings for the vol untary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stock holders, deposited in my office, that the CAROLINA POTATO COMPANY, INC., a corporation of this State, whose principal office is situated at No. . Street, in the Town of Faison. County of Duplin, State of North Carolina (H. S. Pre cythe being the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom pro cess may be served), has complied with the requirements of Chapter 55, General Statutes, entitled "Cor poration," preliminary to the issu ing of this Certificate of Dissolu tion:" - Now, Therefore, I, Thad Eure Secretary of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 21st day - of October, 1817, file in my office a duly executed and at tested consent in writing to the dissolution of said corporation, exe cuted by all the stockholders there of, which said consent and the rec ord of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file at my office as pro vided by law. In Testimony Whereof, I have hereto set my hand and affixed my official seal at Raleigh, this 21sc day of October, A. D. 1947. Thad Eure, Secretary rf State. 11-28-tt.CFC State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q. Are strawberry plants rooted at a considerable distance from the mother plant different from those rooted near the original plant? I A. Usually the only difference Is that the ones nearer the mother L" plant are older and, Wwtw' aer. . , . - Q. What is the best lawn grass for North Carolina? ., A. Extension CircularNo. 2S2 will give you this information. Just write the Agricultural Editor. State College, Raleigh, If you wish a free copy. Wcr'saw Girl ECTC Sr. Superlative Twenty-five "senior superlatives" of the class of 1948 at East Carolina Teachers college have been chosen by their classmates In an election which has Just been held at the col lege under the direction of Fran cis Coiner, of Newport News, Va., president of the senior class. Among those elected was Miss Annette Pridgen, of Warsaw. She was elected as the most studious. . Photographs of the senior super latives will be included in a special section of the 1943 edition of the Tecoan, East Carolina student yearbook. is is eta , Eyes EKsJUed, Clasec I. Next Voot To Caveat, Chevrolet Company Permanent Of floe In WALLACE.) N. C. i i u I 01 1. - leToe?.-. ,1. t. A. J. CAVENAUGII . . Wallace 'N. C JEWELER DIAMONDS WA-XatS , WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING ENGRAVING WELCOME TO WARSAW AiLMiisiriiCEs: BAIT WATCH THIS PAPER FOR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT III ISSUE OF THANKSGIVING VEEK Katz Dept. Store ft The Most Certain Thing In Life Is That For Which All Of Us Must Prepare i ' Our passing from this earth is inevitable, that is why truly in telligent realistic men and women make their own final plans just as matter of fact as they take out insurance and leave wills. We'll talk ihings over with you frankly and pleasantly, while we help you to be taken care of according to your wishes. . V- CADILLAC Ambulance Service Aim'IIERE - ANY TIME Tyndall Funeral Home ..- Serving Duplin County IN WARSAW , j! f Where They Lie Hope Can't Die v. ' k'' fi The marked graves of tens of thous- 'i?wffl andsofomboys of all races, colors jMJTli and creeds and the monument to . R 'rSjJnhlAi the Unknown Soldier are a constant 1 11 IS TLT challenge to all of us to fight un- j ' ---juij llinchingly for unending peace. : r , . This anniversary of one war's ending becomes even more sig- nificant when we also think in terms of the war which followed it. ' - . ;- ? :.y' For each war is always bigger and more tragic than the last. We , . can create no more fitting memorial to all our war dead than the j preservation of this world as a peaceful world in which survivors I can live in security. " WALLACE