Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / April 11, 1940, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, 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
Right And Wrong Ways Os Cooking Eggs Described There is a difference between "hard boiled’ and_ ‘'hard cooked” eggs, says Miss Mary E. Thomas, (nutritionist of the State College Extension Setrvice. Likewise, soft boiled eggs may be hard cooked, she says. In discussing the “how of egg cooking, Miss Thomas offered suggestions in connection with the second week of the Spring time Egg Festival, a consumer producer campaign to increase the use of eggs, which begins today. This drive has the sup port of C. F. Parrish and other Extension poultrymen of State College The Southeastern Chain Store Council, through P. D. May, its North Carolina represen tative, is also active in the Egg Festival Miss Tfydmas explained that eggs should always be cooked slowly, at moderate, even heat. High cooking temperatures make eggs tough. “For either soft cooked or hard cooked eggs with tender whites,” the nutritionist said, “the eggs should be placed in boiling water and then the vessel should be set back from the heat where the water will simmer but mot boil. For soft cooking, leave eggs in water for six minutes; for hard cooking, allow 20 minutes. “The same general method is following in poaching eggs. That is, the water should be boiling when the eggs are put in, but the heat should be lowered immedi ately and the eggs cooked at the simmering temperature.” The State College poultry specialists point out that eggs are cheap now, and the wise home maker will use quantities of them in the family meals, since they are one of the protective foods needed in every diet. ! Palace Theatre ADVANCE PROGRAM From Thursday, April 11 thru Saturday, April 13 Motion Pictures Are Tout Best Entertainment Thursday - Friday, April 11-12 Thomas Mitchell - Edna Best - Freddie Bartholomew - Terry Kilbum . Tim Holt - Baby Bobby Quillan, in "Swiss Family Robinson” Sail with them to Adventure Island! Wondrous Sights! Hid den Terrors! The Classic of a Century Dynamical I .y Pictur ized! Metro Cartoon in Color: “The Mad Maestro” Special Morning Show Friday 10:30; Afternoons daily 3:15-3;45; Admission 10-25 c; Evening daily 7:15-9:00; Admission 10-30 c Saturday, April 13 Richard Arlen - Andy Devine ! with Peggy Moran - Mary ; Treen, in “Danger on Wheels” Episode No. 6 of the serial “The Green Hornet” (“Highways of Peril”) with Gordon Jones - Keye Luke - Anne Nagel Terrytoon Cartoon in Color: “The Orphan Duck” Matinee 2:30-4;00; Admission 10-25 c; Evening 6:45 • 8:15 - 9:30. (Box office opens at 6:30.) Admission 10-30 c. I Coming To The Palace Mon day, Tuesday. Wednesday, and Thursday, April 22, 23, 24 and 25th Margaret Mitchell’s Story of the Old South "Gone With The Wind” In Technicolor With Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable. Nights (7:30 p. m.) All Seats Reserved sl.lO ineluding tax. Matinees Daily (10:30 a. m. • 2 p. ha.) No reserved seats 750 including tax. Tickets now on sale at office. Buy your re served seats early! An Inexpensive Cottage EjV. SSL —>•«.. j ■" ' - -,' < mm .jafSt J Simplicity and compactness Os design effected 1 J - BtX> R.OOKY without sacrifice of charm and detail make this small ||][~~| ~f~ UJ cottage stand out. Two large airy bedrooms, both lg mmm with two exposures and adequate privacy, highlight La I the home’s many features. The up-to-date standards I * g__, of good planning are maintained in the arrangement REp □ of the living room and the kitchen, which utilizes to | U ffl better value the space ordinarily allocated for a sepa- I ; j Bat h |ll rate dining room. I " . 1 The Federal Housing Administration insured am * mortgage on the property for $4,500. A mortgage (LOOM of this amount may be paid off over a period of 25 LI years with average monthly payments of $26.15, 1 I exclusive of local taxes and hazard insurance. . I Be.pß.ooM 3E I FLooq Plan Plant Pathologist Has Three Plans For “Mold” Cure Three, and only three, methods of controlling blue mold are re commended by the State College Extension Service and Experi ment Station. Dr. Luther Shaw, Extension plant pathologist, says farmers should play safe and ad opt a ccntrol method which has been proven in laboratory and field tests. The first of these, and the most effective in the majority of ilests, is fumigation with para dichlorobenzene. This material consists of solid white crystals. When purchased in 100 and 200- poufld lots, the price ranges from 12 to 15 cens per pound. The crystals are spread over the regular seed bed cover and a heavier cover is then placed over the entire bed and fastened securely to prevent escape of th2 vapors. The second recommended treatment is also a fumigant. It is benzol (benzene) and conies Let Us Help You Build 4ii iJT'*' UU FLOOR AREA 647 sq. it. ftto ft];v. CUBAGE 8675 cubic ft. * »u « A house designed to be light HMt % I 1“ IJM.' and airy, with corner windows LIVING *** iof—]|CLJMii „•., 13 . j I letting the sun into living and [ij] ft •, bedrooms. Kitchen designed for r ! j**‘ M ''ilj easy entrance to the living r W* room. Note dining alcove. HOUSE ’C” GEO. W. KANE CONTRACTOR ft BUILDER PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. in liquid form. It also requires tight plant bed covers. The cost of benzol is usually 20 to 30 cents per gallon. The third treatment is a spray, ar.d there are two formulas recommended. One consists cf 6 ounces of yellow copper oxide, (3 ounces of a reliable spreader, such as Vastole OTC, Over, or Lethane; one quart cf cottonseed oil, and 25 gallons of water, pre ferably from a pond or stream. The other formular calls for 6 ounces of yellow copper oxide, 1 quart cf self emulsified cotton seed oil, and 25 gallons of water, preferably from a pond or stream. If the spray treatment is used, it should be started when the plants are the size cf a dime, or larger. The fumigants are best applied when blue mold makes its first appearance in the com munity. Complete directions for blue mold control are contained in Ex tension Circular No. 229, which is free upon request to the Agri cultural editor at State College, Raleigh. o LAND POSTED SIGNS AT THI TIMES OFFICE TENANTS In 1937, two out of every five farmers in the United States were tenants. /1 LOT JI "THE longest of I “I CC 1 THE LOT" ffi Features like These! Xlgm § "the ride royal" I chev rolet for ’4O is the only C “'’ ‘ * pictured with Perfected I Chevron* modern features P'»- t-JlM=_:^ Knee-Action | combining all * e evrolet brings you CjH^^SSlO §On Special De Luxe and Mas- I _ t OHIY nC • . XmKd^—jKd^SEMjL, f -O.UX.S.H., I h ere. Remember, 7 and with low r..,,.“71 i Chevrolet's famous Per- II £n*#«tlireS Clt loW u II VALVE-IN- | | f«l«d Knee-Action Riding It —II fheSU teOtU j opn l Only CHeV II HEAD SIX |I System brings you ride 11 MitQ * ■ 11 i results never before known. I Q f Operation OH r J„rtion the I Chevrolet s first In occel- 1 I 11 COST OT I prOdUCTIOII ll erotion, first in hill-climb- § fmmmmmmmmmmmmmKmmJk . . „ the top volume I- I ing, and first in all-round 1 f rolet has the les leadership l performance witfl all . 1 • » A nt vear-after -year I round e cono my -now | ronSlStem 7 ■ U e c». . • • DU 7 I even more outstanding gs CO . w -1.,0 Buy the Oe»** I in smooth, quiet, vibra- i I """ t0 9 * Ve SUth Valoe 01 operation. i iZ.. 1 "rutVROLETS *659 HEADLIGHTS with Sepa- I ■ . WM M MV/ MASTER 85 | rate Parking Lights II ® I BUSINESS COUPE I The newest, safest, most sclen- ll mU m V# 9 Other modal* | tjflcroad-Mghting system ever II M MM WE MM gJ g # »'l8h»ly higher 1 “' 9ne f ° r ° ny m ° ,or I rtf *9* ■Sf "ode l * P"ced at Flint, 1 m m |_| Michigan. Transportation 1 fuelt-.Tiuilt-Thuiltl I HYDRAULIC BRAKES W / „ Bn¥4| *" _ ' Today, a, alway., the la.l word NEW FULL-VISION BODIES BY FISHER g\ jggQf/ > ROYAI a,m * STYUHG In dependability, In earn and The finest bodies built today—with full N. ge ■*! Wlrtl completely new stream smoothness of operation, in posl- 3-passenger front seat and wider rear com- lined body—lowered center of live safety for you and your partment—with 1% Inches wider windshield ''A sravity without reduction In family, as Chevrolet owners and more vision all around—bigger, more 11 H I ■ road-clearance—completely everywhere will gladly testify. beautiful, more comfortable In every way. (jl II • t l ul PP* < * Instrument panel m TAR HEEL CHEVROLET COMPANY, Inc. Main Street Roxboro, N. C.J Mattress Project May Help Low Income Groups Cotton and other materials for making of mattresses is being given to low income families of the State through a cooperative program of the U. S. Department of Agriculture and the State Col lege Extension Service. Already six counties have availed them selves of this opportunity to re ceive without cost surplus cotton held by the Surplus Commodities Corporation. The materials for -making cot ton mattresses for low income families are furnished in any county where the County AAA committee certifies that there are at least 120 rural families in the specified low income group. The Extension Service, through its county agents, takes the lead in conducting demonstrations to show members of the families and other leaders how to make the mattresses, and in distributing the cotton and ticking. Farm families with a total cash income for the calendar year of not more than S4OO, and non farm families with a gross income for the year of not more than SSOO are eligible to participate in the surplus cotton program. The first counties approved were Anson, McDowell, Alexan der, Person, Halifax and Wayne. Demonstrations -have ailrteady been held in those counties and the cotton and ticking is on the way. In addition to these six counti es, applications have been re ceived from Hoke, Avery, Vance, Bertie, and Yancey Counties. John W. Goodman, assistant di rector of Extension, and Miss Ruth Current, state home demon stration agent, are in charge of the pregram for the Extension Service. Miss Pauline Gordon, Extension economist in home management and house furnish ings, and Eugene Starnes, assist ant farm agent-at-large, are con ducting the demonstrations. o EXPORTS United States farm exports to Latin America increased from 33 million dollars in iao2 to appro ximately 53 million dollars in both 1937 and 1938. No One Likes The Taste of Weeds in Milk or Butter If you are having trouble with an onion or weed taste in your milk or butter why not change to ours today. Give us a call and we will be glad to start delivery at once. We think you will like our products. Roxboro Dairy Products Company QUAIL ROOST GRADE A PRODUCTS PHONE 2921 THURSDAY, APRIL 11,194® DEBT The United States farm morW«- gage debt, in the fall of 1939, was; the smallest in 20 years. We sell Eye Glasses to sat isfy the eyes $2.00 to SB.OO THE NEWELLS Jewelers Roxboro, N. C.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 11, 1940, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75