Newspapers / Carteret County News-Times (Morehead … / Dec. 7, 1954, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Fun, Thrills, Adventure in the Comics ... 1 - - . 1 ^ : ? ? ???IPrVBIN Feet Flnf Landing) ii ii ii r? ? ? ? i iim mm ?' MOW I LOST HE EM! ' THE SMOW WEEL COVER ] HEES TRACKS! r GOTTA TELL SCORCH^ AMP LE BCV! OAKY DOAKS Accidental Meeting 4SJahm 'VMS RETURWDJGTO TUBRCTOL CASItETOASK PRBICBSS POMOUA IT SHE WOULD LIKE ID LIVE OUACHJCXEH FARM... AND HE WAS 01 SUCH A HURRY HUT HE WHORED AWAEMDJff ntQM-niE OTHER SIDE OP A HILL/ V I DIDWT. K YOOWG r FELLS?.' I BLEW MY -v HOKN/ > WHEJ?E'5 WKlGMTHEfJE/ "THE TRAFFIC J UXXKXJHn JHSilC nCKC RIWM' ON , TH' WRO US J *oe o' tw' ? s-v koad! ( rU-TCLUTToS . THE JUDGE AUO PEACEABLE? rtl SMALL I PUT TH' CUFFS OWYE, r^^?fCCME. , OR WILL YL PEACEABLE / BECOME ^*~v. ^ DICKIE DARE The Wires Go Out | , i.i . i ? i i i. . i HE5 7RYIMG TO TEAR THE SUB AflMtr 1?1 wrm -moss ? >a GHASTLY fel AIMS/ J SOT DAN-MC CANT HURT 1 *XJ INSIDE THERE.' KXjfcf OKAY, RIGHT? ?* QHT? ^ DAN- WHY OOHY r-,,J . THE SCHOOLSHIP WILL SEND A CWER DOWN X> MLP VbJ TWl A TENTACLE FINDS LK3HT- rrGOESCWT WHAN6!tm sub wcks INTO A MASS OP COKAL gNCWUgreD WRECKAOE... Prtnc* Falls in Love - - ? Ann Blyth, Edmund GwMn and Edmund Purdom in a scene from "The Student Prince," M-G-M's new musical In color and cinema scope, with the singing votee of Mario Lanza. Featuring the famed songs of SlglUUnd Romberg, the picture tells the lilting story of a prince who falls in love with a barmaid. Home Pemomtration New? There Are Ways to Send Food to Insure Freshness By MARTHA BARNETT Home Agent These are some notes which might be helpful if you plan to mail Christmas cookies, candies or cakes. Many homemakers whose sons are are overseas or who have friends or family in distant towns are faced with enturisting their delicate Christmas goodies to the mails. The best "travelers" are moist bar or flat cookies, fruit cakes and soft fruit candies, such as nut-filled dates. But even these comparatively durable foods need greaseproof, moist ureproof wrap pers and a sturdy partitioned box. Notch pieces of cardboard for the partitions, and fill empty corners ?with unbuttered popcorn. Cover the whole mailing carton with corrugated cardboard, and then, with heavy brown wrapping paper, for added protection. If you take these precautions, the food should arrive at its destination fresh and whole. It's time to begin to plan Christ mas entertainment now. Good plans make everyone, even the home maker, enjoy entertaining at this season. Iris Davenport, Editor Woman's Department of SoutMrti Agriculturist, Nashville, Tenn., sends us the following suggestions for entertaining at Christmas: The very best time of the year it seems to me and to many, to entertain, is during the Christmas season. The home 4s bedecked, lots of good things ready or almost ready for serving. Loved ones and f/icnds visiting at heme a hom you want to honor . . . and the season calls for sharing your joy with others. P'ar. your party so that you have as much fun as your guest. From the day before Christmas through New Year's Day there are many opportunities and many ways in which you can entertain. There are teas, suppers, break fasts, dinners ? take your choice. Parties for a large number at home or open house, tea, what ever you want to name the in formal afternoon affair ? you may wish to have ? in which a number and their guests may be invited is a simple and easy way to en tertain from 20 to 100, though you may have in as small a group as 10, but you would not name It, you would merely say you were having some friends come tor cof fee or tea. You may wish to have in a large group in the moinlng. fn that case it is an A: Home, Open House, or Coffee. Likewise an Open House or an At Home may be In the evening. At the morning affairs you usually serve coffee, fruit cake and nuts. AtA the afternoon affairs it is usually tea, though it mm be cof fee and tiny cakes <tr cookies, eandies and nuts. At the evening affair it is punch and canapes, though it may be coifee and cake. Buffet Sapper This is an ejoyable way to en tertain from 8 to 40. The party may be on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, though it may be better on any one of the other days of the seaaon. The invitations may be given orally or sent in the shape of a Christmas tree, cut from green paper and written with red or white ink. For the table a large star or red paper outlined with fringe of cedar or pine and with red candles placed ? on top of the star nay form your centerpiece. In Christ mas decorations, there are any number of ideas for tables. Here is one menu which might be used Creamed Chicken and Noodle Ring Cranberry or Cherry Salad Mold on Parsley Bed Cucumber and Beet Pickles Stuffed Olives Hot Rolls Coffee Nuts Plum Pudding Though winter is with us, we mustn't forget that garden that we are going to have next spring. "My garden is a favorite spot, I plant a little, I reap a lot," The above is true in many cases but often the weeds and nematodes reap more than we do. By pulling up weeds and grasses that have seeded (such as morning glory, cockle burr, etc.) and getting them out of the garden we will save a lot of hoe work next year. Pull up plants like tomato, egg plant, pepper, field peas, or okra and check their roots. If they have roundish galls all over them, you'd better plan to fumigate before you plant that garden again next spring because you have the root knot nematode. People who fumi gated this year reported wona?*r ful results even though we had extremely dry weather. . Get those coldframes and hot beds in shape this month. Cold frames throughout the state may be utilized by growing winter greens in them. Plant lice are usually plentiful this month. The Entomologists re commend Lindane or Rotenone for control. Here are some November and December reminders from your Extension Poultry Specialist. 1. Be sure to seed a range for grazing pullots next yea^. (2) Place chick orders now in order to secure well-bred layers for next year. (3) Cull old hens that molt and stop laying this month. (4) When production slows down, use lights, pellets or wet mash to stim ulate the pullets. (5) Provide a deep floor litter and keep plenty of litter in the nests. (6) Let's pack 12 good eggs in every uozen and then ask for a premium price. Strangers Are Really Fatigued Travelers State College, Pa. CAP) ? Resi dent! of this Centre County com munity wondered why hosts of itrangeri were parading around the town. They found out from the police force. In a more to cut traffic ac cidents. the police set up * car stopping program. Any driver found who has been driving more than four or five hours must get out of Ms car and Valk around the block. The measure is Intended to shake off driving fatigue. Dunks T* Safety Belleville, III. (AP) ? A rail buckled on the Southern Railway. A few hundred feet away John Becker, with his wife, Rita, and children, John, C, and Jackie 3, stood beside a pond watching a train approach. Suddenly Becker noticed one car was off the track raising a cloud of dost. He grabbed the children and ke and his wife ran. In the excitement he fell into the poqd, but the spot from which they ran was buried In twisted steel of wrecked railroad can. Royal Habits Set English Feast Customs . IXMidon (AP) ? Royal habits set the example for many of Eng land's Christmas customs. Turkey is the centerpiece of the family dinner at Christmas time and it was James 1 who start ed it. He always had one for his Christmas dinner and gradually it replaced the boar's head of mediev al times on the festive board. Similarly, Henry VIII popular ized mince pie as an English Christ mas dish The first recorded re cipe, with mutton the chief in gredient, appeared in 1596. Mince pie survived although the Puri tans held it wasn't "a fit dish for men." In fact, Cromwell's Parliament banned the Christmas observance entirely, including church services, in 1644 in order to end what it called "pagan and heathen obser vances." The Puritain Roundheads of the day frequently expressed their contempt over the revels and de bauchery then associated with the Christmas season. It wasn't until the restoration of Charles II in I860 that the Christmas feast was revived. A tradition of more'recent dates is the Christmas tree, also set by Royal precedent. Queen Charlotte, German born wife of George III, al ways had presents for her family of 15 hung from a fir tree. But the custom didn't catch on generally in England until Vic toria's Consort Prince Albert, also EAST DRIVE-IN THEATRE One-IIalf Mile East of Beaufort On Highway 70 Children Under 12 Admitted Free Tuesday ? Wednesday DOUBLE FEATURE "THE CONQUEST OF EVEREST" The world's highest mountain conquered at last . . . Adven ture, thrills high above the world. and "FEUDIN' FOOLS" with T1IE BOWKRY BOYS . Thursday ? Friday *.0W MAM SMASHED ?em?. A , The IWiArvii Story TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY First Show Starts at 7:00 LAST TIMES TODAY "SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN BROTHERS" Starring JANE POWELL HOWARD KEEL ? _ . ***+ I HESTOH vowfo mSSev I MITCHEU.' ^ SUMAC THURSDAY - FRIDAY "Black Horse Canyon" Starring JOEL McCXEA MAM BI.ANCH ART) Bert Gifts] . lever i carried! SOUND APPLIANCE COMPANY 1408 Bridget Si Moreheei City ^ Hardware Dealer Ma* Successful Alarm System Detroit, Mich (AP) ? Fr?d Kingon, S3, ? hardwire deder has hit own burglar alarm system ? a loud speaker hooked up from his More to hit home And it works. Ktngon heard noises coming over the speaker and called police. They investigated and found two men chipping a hole through the rear wall of the store. Officers fired five shots at the pair, but only captured one in a chase. a German, reintroduced it. That was in 1840 when he set up a 40 foot tree for the Royal family at Windsor castle. OCEAN PARK DRIVE IN THEATRE Tuesday ? Wednesday MM HCSTON iu?.? SCOTT ?H FOSTER BAD FOR EACH OTMEP ?I? MWr* Fr? ? M LAST TWO DAYS Tuesday *- Wednesday as thelnjun-Lover'in DELMER OAVES' m sweeping ? Thursday ?? Friday ? M-G-M's Youthful, Bnutiful Musical... : ANNBLYTH - EDMUND PURDOM : : : *????? ??MSB _ ?????< Hlorehead Last Timet Today JAMES STEWART GRACE KELLY "Rear Window1' ? Wednesday ? Thursday ALEC at his *3, i -il greatest! ?F GUNSfClfTS AND GLORY! JACK HAWKINS ANTHONVSTEEl -PlOt A t ORSON
Carteret County News-Times (Morehead City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 7, 1954, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75