HIM l aw'll mMm» I: ■■■!* 1 fJIBS PARTY-FAIR—Two ways to dress for the holidays: In a black ' cotton velveteen dress edged with white lace and ribbon sash (left) or in a deep red cotton velveteen dress and pants trim med with wide lace. Both by Johnston of Dallas. WINNING ENTRY — Mrs. Martha Fulton, Clarksburg, O., won top honors In the adult division of the National Grange Cotton Sewing Contest with this Jacket dress of cotton ottoman. She will compete with two other division win ners for the grand award to bo announced at the National Grange convention in Novem ber. SEWING AWARD — This cot ton knit coat and dress en semble made by Mrs. Angela Maras, Antioch, HI., was chosen one of the three top en tries in the National Grange Cotton Sewing Contest. The outfit placed first in the di vision for adults sewing for children. / ing: and handlers of North Carolina’s $100 million annual egg crop will take a look at the future of their business in a conference at North Carolina State University, Nov. 5 and! 6. Featured at the 1969 Egg In dustry Conference will be an ad dress on the “Trends and Future of the Egg Industry,” by Dr. Robert Cook, the new head of the Department of Poultry Sci ence at NCSU. Two panel discussions will deal extensively with the Marek’s-leukosis disease complex and housing problems faced by egg producers. Other items on the program will include talks on producer cooperatives, federal egg inspec tion, and waste disposal systems. The conference will open at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 5, with Dave White, executive secretary of the N. C. Egg Marketing As sociation, presiding. It will con tinue on Thursday morning with Ed Woodhouse, executive sec retary of the N. C. Poultry Fed eration, presiding. All sessions will be held in the Schaub Food Science Build ing on the campus of NCSU with the exception of the banquet on Wednesday night, which will be held at the NCSU Faculty Club. North Carolina egg production topped $100 million for the first time in 1968, making the state the nation’s sixth largest produc er of eggs. Soybean Use Increased in Food Products Soy ingredients will probably be foiind in an increasing num ber of food products, from bak ery items to desserts, within the next few years, says Mrs. Ruby Uzzle, extension consumer mar keting economist, North Caro lina State University. We already eat soybean pro ducts almost daily, the specialist notes. If you read the label you will find that the soybean in the form of soy lecithin, flour, pro tein or oil appears in such items as salad: and cooking oils, may onnaise, margarine, sandwich spreads, cake mixes, candies, cookies, breads, cereals, dough nuts, frozen desserts, whipped toppings, baby foods and high it you visit Mew Orleans you may find yourself passing up your own favorite shrimp cock tail for the local favorite, Shrimp Bemoulade. - This is shrimp marinated for hours in a fiery, reddish-gold sauce, then served as an appetizer, tradi tionally on flat plates over un usually wispy amounts of salad greens. Behind the scenes in the city’s restaurant kitchens, es pecially the famous older ones, you will see an inevitable array of large, fiat pans filled with marinating shrimp. Creole \ style: One nice thing about this tangy remoulade is that all in gredients are familiar, easy to get Nothing far-out or expen sive. And it will work texturix ing miracles with the handiest package of all, the can-venient kind of shrimp. Canned shrimp remoulade keeps and keeps. Make it a week or more ahead, if you wish, and keep refriger ated. The longer the shrimp stand in the sauce, the firmer, more “chewy” they seem to get ' SHRIMP REMOULADE 3 can* (4)4 ounce# each) shrimp 3 garlic doves, eat fine K cap horseradish mustard 2 tablespoons catsup 2 tablespoons paprika H teaspoon cayenne pepper 2A cup tarragon vinegar. Vi cup olive oil or ether salad oil •)4 cap finely chopped green onioni, tops included Drain shrimp. Crash garlic in a howl and stir in all ingredients, except shrimp. When thoroughly blended, add the shrimp. Mari nate in the refrigerator two hours or longer, stirring occasionally. Serve on small portions of-shredded lettuce or other salad greens* Makes 6 to 8 servings. (Notes Canned shrimp remoulade is per fect make-ahead party food. Provide party picks and assorted crackers.) protein, low-fat diet foods. The development of the edi ble high protein soybean fiber into meatless meat-like products has opened the door to a new line of farm products, Mrs. Uzzle adds. In its fibrous form, the iso lated soy protein can be shap ed, colored and flavored into a variety of foods. The fare now being manufac tured consists of meatless but meat-like foods resembling frankfurters, hamburger, pork sausage, dried beef and roast beef, fried chicken, sliced chick en, scallops and similar items. Meat-like products are natural in that they actually do taste like the products they resemble. Due to the fibrous nature of the soybean protein, these products also have a texture similar to that of meat. Although the soybean is fairly new to this country, it is actually one of the oldest croos grown by m^n. The ancient Chinese con sidered the soybean their most I - DEATHS Mrs. Sarah Davis Jones Funeral services were held Wednesday for Mrs. Sarah Da vis Jones, 67, of Deep Run route 1, who died Monday morning. Mrs. Saflie Macon Wooten Funeral services were held Saturday for Mrs. Sallie Macon Wooten, 72, wife of Elmer Woo ten of Upper Lenoir County, who died suddenly Thursday night. Mrs. Vida West Leach Funeral services were held ^rid:>v for Mrs. Vida West Leach, 74, wife of Roy Leach of 500 i-errv Street, who died ear !'• Thursday. Mrs. Florence Waller Humphrey Funeral services were held Friday for Mrs. Florence Wal ler Humphrey, 85, of 605 Rhem Street, who died Wednesday nieht affer a long illness. important crop and one of the grains necessary for living, Mrs. TT*zle says. < JARMAN FUNERAL HOME . . . Where Your Trust Is Sacred And Your Wishes Cared For . . . Dial JA 3-5143 Kinston, N, C. DON'T SACRIFICE