Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Sept. 25, 1975, edition 1 / Page 4
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4-H PLANNERS - Discussing plans for 4-H activities are I front row) Mrs. Zula Pratt. Mrs. Atkinson. Mrs. Neill Brown, anil Sheila Brown., (second row). Judy Crissman, Mrs. Glenn Crissman, Patsy Pratt, and Lena Locklear. 4-H Corner Bv Freddie O'Neal On Sept. 18 the Hoke County 4-H Council held a special meeting. Activities for October are numerous and the 4-H'ers of the county are planning a trip to the State Fair on October 18. Activities that will be carried on during National 4-H Week, October 5 - 11 were discussed, some being window displays, place mats and articles in the local paper. The Reaford Senior 4-H Club will meet in the county kitchen on Thursday, September 25 at 7:30 P.M. Any individual that is 14 . Id years of age that is not a member is welcome to attend this meeting. The Crossbreed Feeder Calf Sale will be held at Laurel Hill on September 25. Several 4-H'ers are planning to purchase a calf to raise for the steer show next year. There was a total of 22 4-H'crs and leaders present for the meeting. From The Home Agent's Desk!: | By Ellen Willis J HINT - Yes, every married woman should have a will. It's the only sure way to insure your intentions are carried. SCHEDULE -? September 25 . North Raeford Hontemakers meet at 5 P.M. September 29, Monday - 8:30 A.M. Staff Conference. RECIPE FOR THRIFT PRACTITIONER Today's "penny wise and pound foolish" is obsolete. Practicing thrift is the "in" action. Our economic well - being encourages it. Consider the impact of price increases on incomes. Following isa recipe for thrift: 1. ANALYZE the family's money difficulties and practices in spending and living. List those practices that are thriftless. 2. AGREE as a family to support thrifty living and plan which practices will be changes, by whom and how Methodist Church Homecoming 28th Community Methodist Church in Five Points will hold its Homecoming Sunday, Sept 28. with Sunday School at 10 A M. and services at I I A. M The public is invited to bring a picnic for dinner on the grounds. Speaker will be former pastor Jack Martin, now pastor of Cumberland Memorial Church Rev. Lester Bissett also announced revival services will start at 7:30 P.M. Sunday and last through Thursday night. Antique Show Set The Garden Club Council of Fayetteville will hold its seventh annual Antique Show Oct. 2-3 at the Bordeaux Motor Inn. Admission is SI .50. 3. ACTIVATE plan and keep re and of practices changed and the dollar value of thrift for a specific time such as a month. 4. Assess progress. Determine the financial value of your new practices for thrift. Make necessary changes for greater thrift if desired and periodically checkup on your progress. Everyone can become more thrifty. The ways wJl vary with the individual or family in respect to current practices, need to change, and the determination and willingness to change. Self - discipline is the key. A diagnosis of money difficulties and practices of spending and living will reveal areas of thriftlessncss. PEANUT PRODUCTS Peanuts are sometimes said to be among the most unexploited and neglected food crops in litis country -but this may soon change. With declining meat production and spiraling food costs in sight, homcmakers are try ing to find other ways to get protein in family meals. Peanuts are twenty - six percent protein - they contain a higher percentage of this vital body-building substance than do eggs, dairy products, meat and fish. Peanuts are in incomplete protein, so plan to combine or eat peanut dishes with dairy products ?? you know - the peanut butter sandwich - glass of milk combination. And there are some new peanut products on the market. Newest is the peanut flake - which is bland in flavor and very light in color Peanut flakes can be made into meat and cheese flavored sandwich spreads and into boneless chicken and turkey rolls. And within the next year, there may be a new dtied peanut soup introduced. And soon pecan flavored peanuts and almond - flavored peanuts may be found at the supermarket. After all, walnut - flavored peanuts are already being sold. Library News Two At Conference Mrs. Dot Cameron, Hoke County public library supervisor and Mrs. ram Williams, Hoke County consultant for the Sandhill Regional Library, attended the Governor's Conference on Reading, Sept. 22 - 24. This conference was sponsored by Citizens United for the Improvement of Reading and was coordinated by the Learning Institute of North Carolina. It will be nice sharing our excitement with all of you when the doors to the new library swing open in the spring. A deadline is not definite yet. But just realizing the work has begun helps make the time seem shorter. It will be nice not to hear remarks from the sidewalk such as, "You mean that's a library! 1 didn't know they had one." All of you out there can really be proud of the work you've done when you see the finished product with room to sit and read quietly and a lovely place for children, all their own with just the right kind of furniture. Spreading out is going to be great! It's at least nice to think -? "A place for everything and everything in its place." Some of you are still helping our library fund as is Mrs. Daniel Berry, who has been making Christmas decorations for us to sell. We only have a few left. Others have been coming in with good ideas for money making projects. We hope to use some of these. Mrs. Pam Williams has scheduled five or six county activities for the Sandhills Regional Library's Outreach Project Van during the next several weeks. More about these will be written at a later date. The following is a list of the new books received this week by the Sandhill Regional Library System and distributed among member county libraries. They may be requested from the Hoke County Library or its bookmobile. FICTION "Humboldt's Gift" by Saul Bellow. "The Nightmare Chase" by Evelyn Berckman. "A Plan For Escape" by Adolfe Bicy-Casarcs. "The Toy" by Kage Booten. "Catch The Saint" by Leslie Charteris. "Where Are The Children?" bv Mary Higgms Clark. ; For Love Of Crannagh Casile" by1. Brain Cleeve "Haulin' " by Phillip Finch. "Every Crime In The Book" by Robert L. Fish ? ed. "The Marriage Machine" by Gilliam Freeman. "Julia's House" by Maria Grtpe. "The Mendarin Cypher" by Adam Hall. FACT "60 Seconds To Mind Expansion" by Harold Cook. "Make Your School Work" by Harvey B Scribner. "How To Choose And Use Your Doctor" by Marvin S. Belsky, M.D. "How To Beat Fatigue" by Linda Pcmbrook. "Home Care" by Stoltcn. "In Search Of Frankenstein" by Radu Floresou. REFERENCE Lands and people. Genealogical Research V. 2 by American Society ol Genealogists. Index and digest to Hathaways N.C. Hist, and Gcneal. register with Geneal, by Worth Ray. BIOGRAPHY ?? Edith Wharton by R.W.B. Lewis. CHILDREN'S FACT Q's are weird O's by Roy Doty. CHILDREN'S BIOGRAPHY ? Larry Csonka by George Sullivan. CHILDREN'S REFERENCE New book of knowledge. BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE MONTROSE. SEPTEMBER 30 - Mrs. Josephine Parks. Miss Katie Cameron. Mrs. Elizabeth Lide, Mrs. Lenora Thompson. Mrs. Carol Brown, Mrs. Josephine Mints. Mrs. Valeria Holloman. Mrs. Rceta Baker. Mrs. Doris McAllister. Mrs. Gaston Shaw, Mrs. Eloise Tew. Mrs. Annie Liza Purcell, Mrs. Venetia Walters. Mrs. A1 Potts. Mrs. Moyer Calloway. ASHLEY HEIGHTS. OCTOBER I - Prison. Mrs. Mamie McNair. Mrs. Regenia Smith, Mrs. Laura Stephens, Mrs. Margaret Innntas, Mrs. Mary Murphy. Mrs. Jean Vanhoy. Mrs. Lillian Smith. Mrs. Willie Shoppard, Mrs. Doris Calloway. Mrs. Ethel Carroll. Mrs. Gail Ellis. Mrs. Linda Simmons. Mrs. Linda Sehuchard. Mrs. Betty Sandy. Cost Of Medical Care In Hoke County For residents of Hoke County, the cost of getting sick has skyrocketed in the last few years. Their bills for medical and dental services, for hospital and nursing care, for prescription drugs and other health needs have climbed to an all ? time high. And. even though most of their bills in the past year were absorbed by the Government or by private health insurance ?? $2 out of every S3 being taken care of in that way -? the remaining one ? third, which thev Presbytery Rally The Men of Fayettcvillc Presbytery will hold a Fall Rally Sunday at Camp Monroe beginning with registration at 5 P.M. A family style dinner at a cost of S2.75 is offered. Rev. Fred C. Holder will be the featured speaker with the theme "A Place for F.very Man". Moore City Hosts Festival In Park The Sandhills Arts Council presents its Second Annual Festival in The Hark, in the Southern Pines Town Park on Southeast Broad Street, September 26 and 27. The festival begins at 8pm Friday, with a performance of The House At Pooh Corner, produced by the Children's Theatre Group of the Sandhills Summer Theatre. On Saturday, from IOAM until 5 PM the park will be filled with artists and craftsmen displaying work for sale and demonstrating in various crafts and art forms. The festival concluded with a musical show, beginning at 8 pm Saturday, featuring bluegrass. folk, rock, and jazz groups from the I Sandhills area. had to pay themselves, amounted to more than ever. ? The facts and figures relating to health care throughout the United States are detailed in reports made by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, by the Conference Board and others. In Hoke County's regional area, based on their latest findings, the average out - of - pocket costs in the past fiscal year came to approximately $148 per capita, it is estimated. This is exclusive of their premium payments for insurance. By way of comparison, the average was $149 per capita in the United States as a whole. For specific individuals, the health bills ranged from well above average to well below. They varied frhm area to area and from family to family. Age makes a difference - a big difference -- in a person's health care bill. During the past year, the over - 65 population had out - of ? pocket expenses averaging $415 per capita as against Si 17 for the rest of the population. The overall average, $149. is broken down by III W to S34 for physicians. $25 for dentists, $20 for hospital care, $39 for drugs and sundries and $31 for other requirements, such as home nursing care, eyeglasses and the like. These average lump together all people, including those who had big expenditures and those who haa none at all. The total out ? of - pocket cost to Hoke County residents for health services in the past year, based upon the estimated regional figures, comes to approximately S2.383.000. For the nation as a whole, health care amounted to over $104 billion in 1974, a 10.6 percent increase over 1973. BINGO CASH PRIZES 8 P.M. Wednesdays Raiford Moose Lodge rmuoxw jail' rhiiva ToadedW"" BOX OF 40 TAMPAX REG. OR SUPER $127 I BOX W LIMIT J BOX OF 12 OVERNIGHT PAMPERS 109 *i SWEET 'N LOW 100 CT. BOX 68< 13 OZ. HAIR SPRAY $2.49 VALUE $117 m limit : WA T"T 4 ASSORTED USEFUL HOUSEHOLD GADGETS YOUR CHOICE 21 LADIES LONG OR WALTZ GOWNS SIZES S-M-L $299 W EACH STURDY ZIPPER SIDE LUGGAGE $999 9 18 INCH ONLY . . . _.ru 24" SIZE ONLY 55 tAfcn BOYS mens LONG SLEEVE PLAID FLANNEL PLAID FLANNEL SHIRTS SHIRTS BOYS BLUE DENIM JEANS SIZES S-M-L-XL SIZES 8-18 SIZES 6-14 9'/j OUNCE BOX "MEN'S 6" OR 8" WORK BOOTS $12 VALUE*1 $ 5 ?MADE IN U.S.A. ?OIL RESISTANT PAIR SOLE rAlK ? SIZES 7 TO 12 MINS COTTON m WORK SOCKS ?$144 FAMlLi pVm % f o ? ? % imRmN'IEO SiTISIfiCTIOh South Main Straat HOURS: Sunday 1-8 RAEFORD, N.C. Mon.-Sat.9-9 ANNOUNCING FRANCES' FABRICS IS UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Joan's Fabrics (owned 8> operated by Joan Sanders) Wo'rt Having A NEW MANAGERS FABRIC SALE 3 DAYS ONLY - THUR.-FRI.-SAT. Sept. 25-28-27 60" POLYESTER FABRIC Re?. 3.49 yd. ?479 R* 2 98 vd ?419 R*'2 49 vd' if 98 SALE PRICE** SALE PRICE * SALE PRICE T I Joan's Fabrics 127 MAIN ST. Houn: Daily 1:00 - 6:00 Wed. 9:00 12:00 Jump Aboard Tka Merry Go Round Earn Money, No Cash Investment, No Collecting Or Delivering, Have Fun, Be Your Own Boss, Make Your Own Hours, No Experience Necessary. Be A Friendly Demonstrator For Information Call NlMa FltUi T.I. 875-4737 Friendly Homo Partite, Int.
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Sept. 25, 1975, edition 1
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