PAGE 2 THE YANCEY JOURNAL ‘’. '.v f - ' 'v-- Casseroles seem to be a £»• irorite dish of modem cooks. They save time because they can be prepared ahead and re frigerated or frozen to use when needed. They are economi - cal because they are a one dish meal. With most casser oles you need only to have a salad and dessert to have a balanced meal. Also, you can use small amounts of food Left when preparing, other dish es, which would otherwise be •NMNHtMaNMIMHmHSniMSaMiiii ■ Asheville Federal Savings and Loan $ $ $ $ $ MONEY For That Home of Your Own 1 . -- ■ • • » As your building or buying, thoughts develop, let our long experience help guide you and smooth the way. ASHEVILLE FEDERAL can save you much trouble - and likely some money, too. Without the least obligation, call on our loan officers for any information you may need. Building ? Buying P Loans Made for As Long As 30 Years Up to 90%-95% of The Loan Appraisal The Earlier We See You, The More We Can Help Come in for A Friendly Discussion Right Away! ■eitNeee«N«i«ftiiiieHtiiMMfiM'i(niiMMiii*titiMii'iiii«iiiimi(iiiiiiiiii ■■■■■■■■■■■•aiaaaaaitu sum t/lshevitte /federal \ SaVMBS ASSOCIATION'!^ ASHEVILLE BLACK MOUNTAIN Church Street State Street -v —geemieeeeeaaeeeeaeeeeeee riieeiseeeeeeeeeeeeeee i eeee eee ee ee £ E^ O°W 0 ° W^ B -^ BUYS ! * (fifiwEgK fgf SCHICK HOT m& 167 LATHER MACHINE i Ks=4 ■ *•*. 17.55 IJ- J BEN-GAY 139 S ■ PROTEIH -21 159 I HMR SPRAY , - yimmfgS 1 39 SPRAY NET . ► a.Y* M M I ! DIBE i.*JL T . ,ACID *" METARUCIAL J 59 A&R OIHMEHT '“ ii* |23 I i „ Open «MMe?POLLARD,S I All Day Wednesday 8:00am-6:30pm ihwciwl I’*- a t. ■ r M APRIL 20, 1972 ___ ; i ■ ■ , ■*l B Fran The Yancey Extension, Homemakers I •i food news & cues I By Mrs. Mary Gillespie wasted. Casseroles give the cook a chance to experiment with blending foods to find a particular flavor combination the family likes. Therefore casserole dishes are often ori ginal because the cook will add things that her family par ticularly likes. We want to thank Mrs. Wil lard Crowder, of the Newdale Homemakers Club for todays recipe. We have been told by those who have eaten it that it is a most delicious cas serole. CHICKEN NOODLE CASSEROLE T ' ■ —7’h 1 (8 oz) pkg. noodles 1 1/2 cup cooked chicken^dioed) 1 cup grated cheese 1 ( 10 1/2 oz) can condensed cream of chicken soup 1/2 cup milk - f % 1/2 tsp. cuny powder 2 tblsp. butter or margarine Cook noodles as directed on package and drain. Com bine chicken and 3/4 cup of cheese. Alternate layers of noodles and chicken in but tered baking dish. Mix soup milk and cuiry; pour over noodles and chicken. Sprinkle top with remain ing cheese. Dot with butter and bake in moderate oven (375 degrees) for 20-30 min. .Serves six. Mrs. Crowder says ham «i L _______ may be substituted for-chickea DATE-POTATO-NUT-CAKE 3/4 cup shortening 2 cups sugar 3 eggSjWell beaten 1 cup mashed cooked" unsea - soned potatoes 2 cups all-purpose flour 1/2 tsp. salt 1 1/2 tsp. soda 1 tsp. ground cinnamon 1 tsp. ground nutmeg 3/4 tsp. ground cloves 1 cup chopped dates, firmly packed 1 cup chopped pecans 1 cup buttermilk Cream shortening until light and fluffy; add well beaten eggs and mix well. Stir in mashed potatoes and beat well. Combine flour,salt, soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves; stir a small amount into mixture of chopped pecans and dates. Add remaining ' flour mixture to creamed mix ture alternately with butter - milk. Stir in dates and pecan& Bake in a greased and lightly floured 13-x-9-x-2 -inch pan at 300 for 1 hour or until cake tests done. Yieldtl cake. SHINES UP BRIGHT IN MINUTES ys-v LASTS UP A WEEK KMB) GRIFFIN WAX SHOE POLISH Stamp Corner By George Cheren P Pffl jH Something Old For Chino On March 20th the Republic of China (Taiwan) issued the first of four series of stamps known as Masterworks of Chinese Porcelain. Shown above are examples of some 25,000 pieces of porcelain collected by Emperors which were stored in Feking, Mukden and Manchuria. All are about 200 to 300 years old. The collection was shipped to South China in 1931 when there was trouble in Manchu ria; then sent to the interior during the Japanese invasion, and finally sent to Taiwan when the Communists took over Mainland China. They are now lodged in the National Palace Museum in Taipei. This collection will be the ba sis of stamps to be issued over the next three years. BOOK CORNER Mrs. GM/s The Winter Beach. Charlton Ogbum, Jr. 1966. ‘ Pp. 314. William Morrow and C 0.., Inc. New York. "I loaf and invite my soul I ,' Walt Whitman. By the "Same token Charlton Ogbum, author, invites the reader also to loaf with him and examine his soul (by communion with nature, ) in his book, entitled The Winter Beach. The fas cinating world Mr. Ogbum por trays becomes the reaaer's own, as the author describes Jiis long and leisurely explora tory trip of the Atlantic beach es from Maine to North Caro lina, following winter south ward, to observe nature in a different mood. Mr. Ogbum declares that the change of pace on the \ beaches from summer to win- X ter was well worth the trip,if \ for no other reason. He felt \ that the abandoned carnival x trappings of the popular beach X resorts could easily have passed { for a painted backdrop on a l stage. Far from the madding crowd the author found tirrfe to examine, ponder, and me ditate on the wonders of na ture. For instance, he dis- I covered the sea to be both gentle and cruel* While on a lobster fishing trip off the coast of Maine, he felt the boat set tle low and semingly happily I in the calm water like a mo * therly duck. But it was quite 1 another story at Cape Hatteras r on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Although on either side of the shoals the ocean j was placid, off the point an entirely different order prevaik | ed. The sea was angry, with low breakers thrown up, and as ! suddenly flattened—a result i of the collision of the coastal current and the Gulf S tre am. j THE YANCEY JOURNAL Burnsville.N.C. Ed Yuziuk - Publisher Pat Briggs Manager Jody Higgins - Editor Published every Thursday by Twin Cities Publishing Co. 2nd Class Postage Paid at Burnsville,N.C. 28714 (application made for name change, subject to approval from Washington) Subscription rates: •3/yr. in county *5/ yr. out of county Thurs., April 20, 1972 Number 3 1 H. . _ , , r—r-r— Happy Khmer New Year. This was just one of the many oddities of nature that the au thor found both eerie and un canny. in his langu age, Mr. Ogbum is keenly alert to man and his place in nature. He states that he could never see how God and nature could be twain. Science has shown us what we have been in danger of forgetting, how much we are a part of nature, and how much nature is a part of us. To sum it up, Mr. Og bum concludes thai 'To see things fall into place in nature in accordance with a design is perhapis the next best thing to an affirmation of a univer - sal purpose. " DEAR MR PUBLISHER, PARSON JONES Dear Mr. Publisher: My wife's b£en telling me for a long time that I didn't look dignified enough, so I went out and bought me a preach er's collar—you know the kind Catholic Priests wear. When I put that thing on, my wife stopped hollering at me and started walking soft through the house. It was remarkable how religious she got when I started looking religious. Well sir, I wore that thing into town and got a real reve lation. Everybody I met was so nice. They said "Hello'hnd even smiled when they sad it. Even the women folks smil ed at me. When I would come to a door somebody would always open it for me. In the stores it was something else. I went one place where it's always hard to get waited on, and when they finally come around they make you feel like you shouldn't be there. Well, this time it was different. The clerks fell over theirselves to wait on me and it was "Sir" this, "Sir" that, and "Sir" the other. On the way home even the dogs didn't bark at me. Itwas a good experience, Mr. Publisher. I got to thinking, "Why was I treated different with a preacher's collar on?" My wife said it was cause they saw the God image in me. At first that upset me, but then I got to thinking that wasn't such a bad idea. After all, everybody was made in the image of God. If we could just get-folks to see the God image in everybody then think what a nice world this would be. People would fall all over theirselves being kind to oie another. So, Mr. Publisher, I've come up with a fantastic idea. Why not get everybody in my church to put on a- preachers collar so's they can see the God image in one another. Bet ter still, why not put preacher's collare on everybody in the whole wcrld. After all, collars would be a site cheaper tlan buying all thotie guns and instruments of war. Well, I got to be running along for now. I've got to go, over and counsel with the I. B. Greadie boys. There daddy just died and they're in a terrible fight over who's gonna get what he left. I wish he'd a left them some preacher's col lars. Bye now I P arson Jones ~ The r „, 'w'f lilP**^ sUtion west of the Missis- /j / \\\\( r- I w“ x| sippi was KTLA, which be- JMH' [Jj J ' gan broadcasting at 8:30 ,/IC —-T) } I P.M. on Jan. 22, 1947 'WizX. fT~ ~W from a converted garage in II hlmWl Hollywood, Calif. ]f ~•**[/ '*■ {■NATOS i SAM ERVIN WASHINGTON—The nomination of Richard Kleindienst to be Attorney General reached a critical stage last week. What started out as a request by Mr. Kleindienst to clear his name before the Senate Judiciary Commissee following the publication of certain serious charges by columist Jack An derson reached an impasse when the White House refused to allow Residential aide Peter M. Flanigan to testify as to his role in the ITT affair. The Committee, after weeks of hearings, has yetto learn what transpired between Mr. Flanigan and ITT officials ' when they conferred about the Administration's anti - trust polfisy. The matter is one of importance by reason of the fact that several witnesses have testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee that Mrs. Dita Beard, an ITT indicated to them that she prepared a controversial memor andum. In essence, the memorandum conveyed the impres sion that there was an agreement that the Justice Depjartrrent would settle certain ITT anti-trust cases out of court and, in turn, ITT would make a contribution 6f about $400,000 to defray expenses of the forthcoming Reprabiican National Con vention in San Diego. By reason of the allegations, the Ju diciary Committee is seeking to find out whether the Justice Department engaged in any questionable pjractdces in ap proving the ITT settlement. At the time, Assistant Attor - ney General Kleindienst had the responsibility of making a final decision in the ITT cases. In my judgment, Mr. Flanigan's testimony would be help> ful to the Committee as it seeks to discharge its duty. Un fortunately, it appears that the White House is ready to in voke "executive privilege" to prevent Mr. Flanigan from testifying before the committee, or to reveal any part he may have played in the ITT settlement. What this seems to mean is that the President is unwilling for the Committee to obtain information that it needs to aiTive at a decision in resprect to the nomination of Mr. Kleindienst. There is evidence from the testimony of other witnesses before the Committee that Mr. Flanigan played some part in the ITT affair. Whether Mr. Flanigan's conversations with ITT officials resulted in any significant action which had a bearing on the decision by Mr. Kleindienst in resp>ect to the ITT settlement has yet to be revealed. The Commit tee and the country ought to know. I am at a loss to understand the White House position to invoke executive privilege" to prevent the Committeefran receiving Mr. Flanigan's testimony. I think that it is absurd to say that "executive privilege" is applicable to prevent, the disclosure of essential facts about a matter which ought to be resolved one way or another. As I view "executive privilege, " it prevent?'the-disclosure of a communication be tween one advisor and the Resident or communications be tween two advisors to the Resident. It does nbt prevent the Committee from learning what transpired between Mr. Flan igan and a third party. Nor does "executive Rivilcge" pre vent the Committee from learning whether Mr. Flanigan sought to give the Department of Justice any political direc tion when it approved the settlement of the ITT cases. Ttese are matters beyond the sanctity of "executive privilege". As matters now stand, I do not think that the Senate ought to confirm Mr. Kleindienst until and unless White House aides come up and divulge to the Judiciary Commit tee what transpired between them and ITT officials in re spect to this issue. Fertilizers May Blind Dr. Samuel McPherson, Jr., Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee, North Carolina Society for the Prevention of Blindness, warns that people who work with liquid fertili - zers, particularly ammonia fertilizers, can get a serious eye injury—and possibleblind ness—unless they wear the Proper eye protection. The National Society for the ftevention of Blindness is getting reports of farmers and farm workers totally or partial ly blinded by ammonia and otter agricultural chemicals. As helpful as these fertilizers are the fact remains they are dangerous. "The appropriate safety goggles, with hooded vents and a rim that fits cloee to tie face around the eyes, nuet be warn at all times when work ing with or around these sub stances to prevent eye Dr, McPherson warns. "In case an accident does occur, the injury must be im mediately and continuously flushed with water for at least 15 minutes. If there is a pond or other body of water around," advises ft. McPherson, "the injured person should jump in —immerse himself Dr. McPherson says, "the fiat ten seconds after contact are O critical I"

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