Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Oct. 23, 1947, edition 1 / Page 10
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V \4 t/^7' ? -' 4 ' 7 ■ -^*-- ' • -i^A. ■ ■•• •■• THE NEWS^QPBNAL / ^ , .7 •' ’^.r8f: Vr "‘Jf^ ■illl [h^ ..'m inn^' '■ 'f: Save A Life ^'-By Sharing Food Eat no more than you need, waste nothing, end share your food with the less fortunate, is the formula Miss S. Virginia Wil son, Extension Nutritionist at State College, offers for helping save a life and improving your own health at the same time. Do not eat less than you need to keep healthy and work effi ciently, Miss Wilson said, just cut out the “extras" so some starving person can have enough to keep him alive. Everyone is being asked to eat less bread, poultry, eggs and meat, because all four save wheat. which Jb high in food value, can be shipped long distances with out spoiling, and are liked by more people than any other food. Bread can be saved by taking only the bread you are going to eat, and allowing no bread to go to '^ste by letting it mold or go stale. If is is diifilcult to use a loaf of bread before it molds, try to make room fdr it in the re frigerator. It^ill keep several days longer tbdi^. Another good place is a well-ventilated, wash able bread box kept in a cool place. Wherever stored, bread should be well wrapped in mois ture proof paper. One million pounds of bread can be saved daiiy if every A- SANITARY LflUnORY merican fanuly 'tyill save one slice. Miss Wilson said. Cakes and pastries use flour too therefore, saving bread and eating more cakes and pies won’t help the situation. Sweet or white potatoes, rice, grits, com, dried ipeas and beans can take the place of some bread in lunch and din ner menus. Cheese, fish, poultry and egg dishes can be used in place of meat dishes. Dried beans, peas and soybeans can also re place meat in some meals. Use them in sdalloped dishes, as bak ed beansUia, croqueetes and cas serole dishes, or just plain boiled beans. CLEAHEIIS CAUPST AHD, aiag MMS aSANINC^ Hwnietnber-, all the different brands you smoked during ttw wartime cigai^e shortage? That’s when so many people discovered-^from experience— that Camels suit them best.. Yes, experience is the best teacher. Thefe why... mrb^ne IS teacher! The hardest hit meal on poul tryless and eggless Thursday's wMl be breakfast, the nutrition ist said, but with careful thought a wholesome meal that meets all the requirements of a good break fast can be planned without an egg. A good breakfast for these cool fall and winter mornings might consist of; orange juice, oatmeal or other hot cereal with raisins, buttered toasts and a be verage. 1 n Sound Plan Ur^red For Saving Grain By W. Kerr Scott WOODMAN TO MEET AT LUMBERTON 'Plans are .being made for a gala occasion, when the Woodmen of this area and sorrounding com munities attend a district meeting of the Southeastern North Caro lina Log Rolling Association, at (Lumberton, N. C., on November 7th. Mayor Malcolm B. Seawell of that city will give all a cordial welcome. The business session will begin promptly at 3 P. M., followed by ritualistic work ex-, emplified by the officers and de gree team of Raeford, N. C. at the Lumberton Armory. A barbecue supper will be served and Nation al Director Talmadge E. Newton will make an address. The even ing of festivities will be conclud ed by a dance. All Woodmen are urged to make reservations with their local caniiP secretaries ear ly, and bring their families. (Raleigh, Oct. 21—Agriculture Commissioner W. Kerr Scott has urged that bakeries eliminate' consignment selling of bread and thus save ^“untold thousands of bushels of wheat' daily” to help the emergency food situation a- broad. Scott said in a wire to U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson that the bakeries’ practice 6f “crowding the mar ket” with consignment bread re sulted in the loss of approximate ly 150,000 bushels of wheat annu ally in North Carolina alone, and he placed the estimated money value of the loss in this State at about $l,000,i000 a year. Scott’s wire said; “I earnestly urge that the gov ernment take immediate steps to get the bakeries of the nation to cooperate fully in elimiinating the consignment selling of bread dur ing the food emergency. That will save untold thousands of bushels of wheat daily and in North Caro lina alone will result in the sav ing of approximate! ■‘150,000 bu shels of wheat annually”. Scott said he got his figures from Department of Agriculture field men in the Pure Food and Drugs Division., Their survey showed, he said, that thousands of loaves of bread were wasted daily in North Carplina through the consignment practice of tak ing field day-old bread off the store shelves and withholding it from human consumption, with most of it going to city dumps. This practice, Scott explained, resulted from the bakeries’ stiff competition to keep only oven- fresh bread on store idielves." Scott asked Anaei^ to send a Department of AgrUculture re presentative into North Carolina fo a series o(f conferences with bakers. At these conferences, the Federal representative would ex plain the need or. food conserve^ tion and just how the bakers could cooperate in making more grain available for foreign cOnunitm'^nts. He acted after, calling in (Wil liam C. McIntyre, Jr., o^ Greehs- (boro, secretary of the North Car olina Bakers Council for a con ference regarding the big waste' of bread. Mclntire sadd hit would plan a series-^of-meetinffi as soon as Secretary Anderson notifies him that a Federal representa tive will be available. j^tt pointed out that under the War Powers Act bakers were barred from consignment selling during the war. He urged that bakers themselves take j the ini tiative in starting at onde on in dustry-wide program to ^top what the trade terms “crowding the market”. I We Have Galvanized Roofing & Ridge Roll Valley Tin TRY POST-WAR TASTERAam" 666 COLD TABLETS Ralitv* Hw oelws ami "ileea robbina" MisariM •f CokbtafwHIiiM (MOahwIiHMi ^ Cmaioa: UieeatresdlrtclM. QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS duetoexcess acid FreoBookToDsoflloineTreatmenttlMt Must Help or It yflH Cost You Nothing Over three million bottles of the Wiuabd TBEADUBHr have been sold for relief of and Duodsnal Ulcers due to Escets Add— Poor Mgastlon, Sour or Upset Stomach, Gasslnoss, Hoartburn, SloaplessiMSs, ole., due to Excosa Add. Sold on 15 days’ triall Ask for '‘Willard’s Messago” which fully explains this treatment—^fraa—at HOKE DRUG CO. NORGE Electric and Oil Burning Hof Water Heaters NORGE Floor Furnaces Geniune Warm Morning Heaters Stove lupes, grates, Fire dogs, Cooking Ranges - Laundry Heaters Cast Iron Wash pots 8 If' I 9 Raeford Hardware Co I I PHONE 262-1 RAEFORD, N. C. ysimmS: iimii Hi III iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii II SALE OUTBUILDINGS AND SMAll TOBACCO ACREAGES 1 FARM 15} ACRES-55 A. CLEARED ' \ 1 FARM 52 ACRES-SO A. CLEARED 1 FARM 75 ACRES-16 A. CLEARED 1 FARM -31ACRES-ALL CLEARED 1 FARM I 40 ACRES-32 A. CLEARED 1 FARM ) ^ 27 ACRES--ALL CLEARED IFARM 36 ACRES-23 A. CLEARED 4Tracts of Wooded Land 28 Acres Each All Farms Have Small Tobacco Acreage REA Electric Poles Are Already In The Ground To This Property And Electricity Is Expected Soon 1 ■ Terms One^Third Down - Balance In 1, 2, 3 Years in Raeford Township J. L McNEILL RAEFORD, N.C.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1947, edition 1
10
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