Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / May 19, 1977, edition 1 / Page 6
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PAGE 6 \ THE YANCEY JOURNAL MAY 19, 1977 Only A Specialist 1 ■ . ™ ■ With Up-To-Date Training J^l ,s Qualified p* 11 /C tSv^ >To Service Toda y’ s Complex /| X Automobiles SfiSiip!l ‘“Transverse Engine” H Tf*** “Catalytic Converter” 1 II “Gas Recirculation” “Rad: and Pinion Sterrlng” “Electronic Engine Controls” ! Begin Your Training Now!! Enroll In The Automotive -Diesel Mechanics Program !; Call 765-7351 For More Information Mayland Technical Institute AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY INSTITUTION ' BURNSVILLE OPTOMETRIC CENTER Is Now Open Dr. H.B. Hahn Dr. R.H. Dickey Banks Family Square Burnsville, N.C. 28714 704-682-6417 HOURS: 9-5 Tues.-Thurs.-Sat. APPOINTMENTS SUGGESTED i CY JORDAN REALTY REALTOR ISM Cy Jordan Realty-Realtors welcomes Peggy McDonald as an associate broker with the Arm. I Peggy is a native of Alabama. She and her family moved 9 to Burnsville the first of the year from Asheville where IS the} h®d lived for s‘/2 years. She received her Real Estate ||l education certificate from Asheville-Buncombe Technical ill Institute in Asheville. She also attended the University of North Carolina In Asheville. ||l Peggy is the wife of Toney McDonald who is employed at Roberts Chevrolet. They are parents of two daughters fl Dawn and Dana. Peggy is looking forward to meeting and working with the | people of this area. OVERWEIGHT? As advertised in the April 1976 issue of McCALL’s Magazine Best Diet & Exercise. ; Ouiet Diet f s njPnp" ? ? i Revolution _ ’ ' W - '2 1 1 ■"'W'”' j,| Has Reached ;■ -~~<• Burnsville MM Area... » flj^H PRODUCT COMES IN A3O "1- " “ DAY SUPPLY AND WILL SOON BE AVAILABLE IN A ' * •«*** ( tJtKggg mKKKKtm 10 DAY SUPPLY. Representative Tom Marshall explains Program to A1 Muratori at Banks Drugs. It really works. 100% Guaranteed! In 4 short weeks Mrs. Walter Davis of Shelby, N.C. lost 23 lbs., Mrs. 1 Robert Wolfe, Charlotte, N.C. 5 lbs. la just 1 week, Mr. Charles Davis, Mor gan ton, N.C., 8 lbs. In 2 weeks, Dorothy Howze of Kings Mountain, N.C. lost i lbs., I week. In two short months | hundreds of area resi dents have been Intro duced to NATURSLIM, which unlike so many f around, requires no meetings to attend, no exercise, no drags or shorts, and best of all, for those who try It, no I hunger pangs. According to Mr. Tom Marshall, representative far the product In North Caro- Banks Drugs / Pollard’s Drug Store f Bank » F —’‘fr Square L , Main Street tins, the key to the program Is a powder seed twice a day to malm a variety of mlk shakes. These provide two high protein meals and allow the user to ed anythhig he or she wants for dinner. Aim provided are vltamhis necessary to maintain the required daily needs. The one pound can supplies two meals a day for a Month. The mlk shakes are made with one table spoon of powder called NATURSLIM, combined with eight ounces of low fat mlk or unsweetened fruit juice, extracts, hon ey or artificial sweeteners are also added, according to tastec The Ingredients are ail I J from The Yancev Extension Homemaker* I news & cues BY DONNA McLAIN Extension Homemaker Something verrrry differ - ept: Chinese Hash with a pie for dessert. CHINESE HASH 1 lb. ground beef 2 tbslp. salad oil 2 medium onions 1 cup celery V* can chow mein noodles 1 can cream of Mushroom soup 1 can cream of Chicken soup IVi cup uncooked rice */« cup soy sauce Vi tsp. pepper Brown meat in hot oil. Add onions, celery and soups. Rinse soup cans with warm water, add to mixture. Stir in soy sauce and pepper. Turn into lightly greased casserole cover and bake 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Remove cover and continue baking for 30 minutes longer. Cover mix ture with noodles and bake 15 min. longer. KEY LIME PIE 1 (14 oz) can sweetened condensed milk 3 egg yolks Vi cup lime juice dfgfgergfg 1 K ' 1 ic \ t WKjP w ~ sr *') s■ k I combined In an electric blender for several mki ules. Recipes Include such tasty shake com binations as mocha, ba nana, cho co-maple, cof fee, Jello, yogurt, juice and diet soda. The unusual part of the diet, says Mr. Marshall, Is there qarc few restric tions on the third meal of the day, as long as It Is well balanced and nutri tionally sound. This meal Is unrestricted and can consist of many of the so called ‘foibldden foods’. Perhaps this Is what has attracted so many resi dents to the program In such short time. Mr. Marshall states that the reason (ha... program has so much appeal la that there Is no weighing In, no weekly meetings, no criticism from an Instructor, and no fees or penalties. No wild promises of over night miracles, Just steady, believable results without starving yourself. Further, the diet Is tasteful, easy to take, and the main meal Is no different from the non dleters. It Is the first time the food manufactured In California has been avail able here in North Caro lina. NATURSLIM has been sold In California, Chicago and New York for over 8 years. As It Is Introduced throughout the U.S. users In each etphmunhy number In the J 1 baked 9 in. pie shell Meringue or whipped cream Beat first 3 ingredients together until the lime juice has thickened the egg yolks. - Pour mixture in baked pie shell and top with meringue or whipppjd cream as desired. (1 9-inchTjpie) Crafts Display- Event Ceramic tableware, glass ware, wood and comhusk flowers, baskets and wrought iron napkin rings, all created by working American crafts men, were used to set tables at a White House luncheon given by First Lady Rosalynn Carter on May 16. The luncheon is a traditional event to which wives of all U.S. Senators were invited. The crafts were chosen by Mrs. Carter in recognition of a growing trend toward use of functional art in everyday American life. The National Endowment for the Arts provides guidance in choosing craftsmen throughout the country who are engaged in full-time production of their work. Each potter and glass blower has loaned up to twelve settings of tableware and stemware to set twelve round luncheon tables, placed in the State Dining Room of the Whitehouse. Among the craftsmen who were chosen to have their crafts exhibited at the event was William Bern stein of Burnsville, N.C., a glassblower. 1 Ruth Brown t Studio ( Os Voice t ) And Piano ( f Bachelor Music Degree / 1 Voice Major V I Graduate Studies in / 1 Four Universities J I Long Experience In 1 V Teaching-Performance f f in Florida and Carolinas I I Local References # 1 Available V ( For Details Call ) ) 682-2670 1 1 After spm \ JOr Write Box 202 k ( Burnsville, N.C. r /28714) tffrrnf North Carolina jljS| FARM BUREAU Insurance Carlie Rice, Mary Suraailey, and Dan Wilsoj DIVIDENDS PIID For the 11th consective year, Farm Bureau Insurances paying a cash dividend on Fire, Kfmeowners, Farmowners, Inland larine, Tobacco Floater, anqSpecial Multi-Peril insurance policies. The 20% Dividends were mied April 15 Farm Bureau Insurance ilso deviates 10% below state rates Ai these Fire lines and 15% below spte rates on Auto Physical Damagalcoverage- Carlie R. Rice, A^f 1 Rt. 6, Burnsville, N<C -8u5.682-2077 Res.6*|29l3 Mary Sue Bailey, Agent P 1 Wilson, Agent P.0.80x 784, Burnsville #<•!, Burnsville 8u5.682-2077 Res.6B2-2834 ** y , V f * if ■ k *JB flp _ M*" m - A jjt&ESP I A ” 4L ""'w. A I 1 f 3- PHil ry i w'b ■jf Photos by John Morgan I Wy ; J m 1 ' ★ ★ ' ' slim ■ f \>£ ' CaLL US for a Fnp Estimate on Spray feinting your barn, wise, or other building* AfWORK GUfiANTEED *2-6813 jQk~\\fiys * I In addition to weather stories and saying, hunting yarns have figured promin ently in our mail recently. Many of them have been variations of the shakey-gun tale. This week’s offering from a Watauga County reader is a mite different; call it either a bent gun or tired bullet story. IT PAYS TO GET MAD Old Man Liehue said he went over to Turkey Nob deer hunting the other day. Hadn’t been there long till a big 10-point ’ buck deer come a-lopin around the side of the nob. He took ame at the deer with his gun, but the gun didn’t far: About 20 minutes later the deer come around agin smack dab in shootin range. Up with the gun but it still woudn’t far. At this Old Man Liehue got so mad that he busted the side of a white oak with the gun and it went off with a bang. When he picked it up the barrel was bent like a new moon. About this time here come the deer agin with a humin sound close behind. This went on until they had circled the nob a half dozen times. By this time the deer was so pooped that its tongue was run out of its mouth and it was shakin its head. Now he could see the bullet right behind with a drop of sweat the size of a goober pea on its nose. An hour wen i by but no vfVr. Reading Loft At South Toe South Toe School has a new reading loft this year, thanks to P.T.A. efforts. The idea was first created two years ago by reading teacher, Mrs. Judy Byrd, when crowd ed conditions didn’t allow for adequate space for her reading classes. In spite of having fewer students in the school this year, it was decided to go ahead with the loft project. “Carpenters” John Thomas, Paul Cope, Locke Wilson and two former South Toe students, Tasha Harvey; and Linda Johnson, built the loft in one corner of the library. In exchange for the donated labor, they used the gym for soccer and basketball work-outs during the many frozen weekends of the past Winter. Carpeted and furnished with some bean bag chairs, the loft provides a comfort able, cozy spot which has lots of appeal to children for reading and studying. All classes have enjoyed the loft, but it has been especially helpful for breaking up into smaller reading groups. While the teacher works with one group in the classroom, another group can go to the loft with one of the volunteer The gardenia was named not for where it grows but after a botanist called Alexander Garden. more sign of deer or bullet so Old Man Liehue took off around the nob in search of them. As he came around the bend he seen the deer hung by its horns on a locust tree already skinned, gutted and cleaned. On its tongue was a message-“yore meat salted and preserved till summer. I’m a little thirsty so have gone on back to the house.’’ Signed: Your bullet. Friend Guy Owen, North Carolina novelist, poet, writer of short stories and occasional teacher of folklore, sends us a sampling of’numorous folk sayings compiled by members of one of his classes and asks for additional contributions from Folk-Ways readers. He offers a price of SIO.OO for the best list of expressions not already found in the Frank C. Brown Collection. Readers may send such expressions in care of Folk-Ways or mail them directly to Dr. Guy Owen, Department of Eng lish, N.C. Stßte University, Raleigh, N.C. 27607. Following are examples of the types sought: -So stingy he’d skin a flea for his hide and sell the tallow -His mouth tasted like buzzards had roosted in it -So ugly he looks like he’s been hit in the face with a bag of nickels -She's so ugly she’d turn a train down a dirt road -Grinning like a possum eating bumble bees -He lies so bad he has to hire aids. The students can receive more individual help this way. The parent volunteer pro gram has been another successful endeavor on the part of the P.T.A. this year. Many mothers graciously gave time every week to aid teachers in many capacities. The teachers unanimously stated that "just listening to a child read” could be a tremendous help, so this job was filled by several parents. Others could be found ga thered at a library table sorting out educational mater ials and putting them into simple, interest-catching forms for the Social Studies study center. Others filled in with music and art wherever there was a need. The luxury of an empty classroom was put to good use for these various projects, the volun teers helping to organize resource materials, art sup plies, donated magazines, etc. on neat shelves so the materials could be easily located and readily available. There is a “family” atmosphere about South Toe School due to parents, child ren, and teachers working together and having a lot of fun doing it! -V & somebody to call his dogs -So skinny if she stuck her tongue out she’d look like a zipper -Cuter than a bump on a pickle -If brains were dynamite, he couldn’t have enough to blow his nose -He looked like death warm ed over -As lively as a spring lizard in a henhouse -Grinning like a catfish with his nose up to the dam -As cautious as a monkey on a barbwire fence -So ugly the tide wouldn’t take her out -As tight as the skin os i dry lemon -As pleased as a dog with two tails ->5" Readers are invited to send folk material to Folk- Ways and Folk-Speech, Box 376, Appalachian State Uni versity, Boone, North Caro lina 28608. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■a Read The Ads
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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May 19, 1977, edition 1
6
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