- , Vitamins from vegetables Leafy-jreen, and yellow vegetables are rich in vitamin A value, especially : .the dark green leafy kind and car J. rtfU. ( These vegetablea provide iworth , ; some calcium; cabbage, feroceoli, ,whfte;mounta tof riboflavin, iron, and j Brussels sprouts give vitamin C. ! i Citrus fruits, and tomatoes are ex i cellent sources of vitamin C. Cabbage, salad greens, green peppers, turnips, ' ; strawberries, pineapple and( cantaloupe : " are also good sources if eaten raw. If cooked briefly in a very little ' ater, cabbage, broccoli, Brussels sprouts,' and greens are good sources of vitamin C- .' , . . Potatoes and sweet potatoes contain a number of nutrients. Because of the quantities in which' they are eat en, white potatoes' can become ; quite important as a source of vitamin C Sweet potatoes are valuable for vita min 'A in addition to vitamin C Other vegetables and fruits, high in, vitamins and minerals.' which help toward a good diet" are beets, cauli flower, corn, cucumbers, onions, turn ips, white cabbage,: apples, peaches, berries, rhubarb. ,-RLI Loss Avc!3 FcrOsllcr Faming Amount Depends Upon Needs For Planned ' Operations . . ;, Operating loans are made by the ' Farmers Home Administration to help eligible operators of family-type farms get ahead through better farming. .. These loans are based on farm and home plans developed with each in . dividual family to provide for the best ' use of land, labor, livestock and ' equipment. " To be elisrible for an operating loan . an applicant must be .a citizen of the United States, have had satisfactory I farm experience or training, ana can not obtain needed credit from any other established source in the com munity at reasonable rates and terms and if the major portion of income will be derived from farming and the major part of time will be spent in carrying on farming operations; and one owns or can rent on reasonable terms a family-type farm suitable for the training operations planned to carry on. 'Loan funds may be used to enable you and your family to carry out planned farm and home operations." says E. F. Morgan, County Supervis or. "When necessary loan funds may be used to purchase farm and home equipment, livestock, feed, seed, lime and fertilizer; to pay family living expenses, including medical care; and to pay other necessary farm and home operating expenses." Loan funds may also be used to enable you to join with two of more other farmers to buy or obtain the use of such items as high-grade sires or heavy equipment which you could not afford to own for individual use.. ) ' "The amount of your loan will de pend upon your needs as determined by your plan of operation. ; However, the most that you can borrow at any one time is $7,000.00 and your total outstanding credit debt for operating loans cannot exceed $10,000.00. - The interest is 5 per cent per year on the unpaid balance. Loan funds advanced to meet operating expenses during a crop, year will be repaid when that year's income is received, however, loan funds advanced for such tilings as the purchase of dairy cows, and other breeding animals, as well as farm equipment, and to carry on basic : soil building and conservation prac tices will be repaid as rapidly as pos sible but in no case may the loan run for more than 7 years. 1 "Loans are made with the expec- Do You Remember? BY J. P. PERBY ' When W. 'R. iShannonhouse kept store in an old frame building with a front .porch, on the 'site where J. Broughton JBros.' brick store now stands. And Mr. Shannonhouse would tell Mr. Babb, who clerked for him, to give his customer, Mr. Brown, a stick OI CIMKiy ;W 8S" mwtp, "O (Brown was a mighty fine man.' , When J.'R. Jackson ran a store on the site where the bank is now located. When C. W. Morgan ran the "fan ciest" store in town, and carried a lot of ' 10 cent .i glassware, and also Hry goods, notions, and groceries. George Burgess was his clerk. When Daughter? , and McMullan kept store in a frame building on the site where J. C Blanchard and Co.s store is now situated- When (the first drug store in Hert ford was opened where the State The atre is now located. When Dr. .Nowitj&T came to Hert ford 6n court f?r and stood on a stack of dry -ooa boxes and sold patent meUI s 'and performed sleight of hand tAU, entertained the crowd with ISnow EaU," the Charlie McCarthy of his day, lota of fun. :- .. Who was the author of the wording on te Confederate fcfwument, and i f' ' , "x, When H. & A JIacht ran a imts furnishing store where te Hertford Hardware Co., is now loc&ted. . ? ' tation that they wHl be repaiu out of income to be received : inom future farming operations. ; For that reason, a definite agreement must be made as to how future income will be used. To give effect, to these agreements, security will consist of a first mort- McMillan To Speak At Farm-Home Week One of the featured speakers at this year's Farm and Home .Week at State College. August 18-21,' twill be Wheeler IMoMillen editor-in-chief of Farm Journal and also the news mag azine PatJhfinder. V McMilien will apeak Tuesday even ing, August 19, on a program spon sored by the Rural Church Institute. His subject will be The Rural Church and Community life," Special music will be furnished by the choir of the Beech Grove Methodist uhurch of Craven County. ' Long a prominent agricultural edi tor, McMilien is also well and widely known as a public speaker and his speeches have been widely reprinted. As an editor, his columns in the (Farm Journal reach more than 2,860,000 farm families, and those in Pathfind er more than 1200,000. - Long interested in finding new in dustrial uses for farm products, Mc Milien wag a prime founder of the National Chemurgic Council, of which he has been president since '1937. "New riches from the Soil," his fourth book, has lately sold out several editions.;- .;w -V; ..: --'V-i-' ' ; ;- He is a member of the national gage on all crops to be produced asL,,,w,v hnomt vf -iuv mnnta WBU UB on me UVeslOCK ana eOUlD-1 nJ .Volion t V kMoI nnra ANNCUNr-.:rNT I!? ' : a . t V ii:. wem. jiiuuiubto wicn loan tunas, a mortgage on other chattel property that you; own and depending on the circumstances other written agree ments may be made. Applications for operating loans may be filed at the local offfe f Farmers Home Administration serv- ing Chowan County located over the; bus station in- Hertford. committee on rural Scouting. IFor service to American boyhood he has received the - highest awards of both the Boy Scouts and the 'Future Farm ers of 'America. , McMilien is a trustee of Rutgers, , the State University of New Jersey a director of the New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce, and of the New Jersey Ben Telephone Company. He maintains offices in Philadelphia and Washington ana" lives near Hopewell, INew Jersey. Tv;o Ocea Ports In ILCToCeOcated 1 JAX$.2 T2H2.te- sjs Sunday. Bobby Chappell and Ted Chappell did the pitching for Chappell Hill while Arnold Chappell was the catcher. The team plays South Mills next Sunday. . ' ' ulS Classified and Legals NOTICE TO THE MAN WHO EN tered my shop Tuesday night. Aug ust 5th; please return my strong box. I know who you are as I saw you leav ing. Mrs. Ellie Goodwin, Hertford, N.C. It FOR SALE-TWO USED ELECTRIC brooders. 600-chick capacity. Rea sonably priced. George Jackson's Poultry Farm & Store, Hertford Elizabeth City Highway. aug8-15. Two new ocean shipping ports are to be formally dedicated in North Carolina this year one at Morehead City on August 14, and the other at Wilmington on September 16. They represent an investment by the State of $7,500,000. Operated by the North Carolina Ports Authority, the two ports will provide industry in North Carolina as well as other nearby states with cheaper freight rates to domestic and foreign ports. Both Wilmington and Morehead City have long been used as ports of a sort, but up until now they lacked ocean shinning1 facilities on the scale now being completed. iNorth Carolina's Governor W. Kerr . FOR SAILE-GOO!D sq'UiTRlRtJL DUG and the defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear at the office of toe Clerk of the Superior Court of Perquimans County, in the Court House in Hertford, N. C within twen ty days after the 6th day of Septem ber, 1952, and answer demur or other wise plead to the complaint in said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court in, term time for the relief demanded in the complaint. , This August 4th, 1952. j W. H. PITT. ." Clerk Superior Court. C. R. Holmes, Attorney. 1 . aug8,15,22,29 two years old. See Floyd Barnes, 1 Willow Street, Hertford, N. C. It I IN MEMORIAM . In sad and loving memory of our husband and father, Thomas D. Ward, who left us three years ago today, August 4, 1952. Day and night we watched him Fade and slowly sink away. Though in our hearts we prayed That he might longer stay. We'll no more hear his footsteps Nor meet him at the door, For he has gone away and le$ us To return no more. Why he was taken from us We cannot understand, But God needed a shining angel dUties in the Tarheel State, but no The above named defendant, Sam 10 complete His holy land. mnnev was ever ant a air? a tn inviHvmnnmn. will talcs nnHrn that, an I appreciable sum until the 1949 Gen-'action entitled as above has been com- A wonderful husband, father and aid era! Assembly voted without dissent menced in the Superior Court of Per- 9ne who was better w3 "ever made, among its 170 members to spend $7,-lquimans County, North Carolina, by wonderful worker, so loyal and true i m i i . I .i ' . j it i a ' linn in a VM-ilKm iV o Ann a ah duu.uuu ior development or tne two tne piainmi to secure an aDsoiuie "". .... 'Z seaports. 'divorce from the defendant on the: nis wwa ajhu vmuimi&n. Scott, who spearheaded the movement in the State's General Assembly in early 1949 for expenditure of $7,500,- 000 in State funds to develop the North Carolina In The State's two principal seaports, will Perquimans County Superior Court head a delegation of dignitaries, in-IThelma Elliott Hymanson, eluding members of Congress, to each Plaintiff, of the dedications. i vs. Many North Carolinians have Sam Hymanson, dreamed for more than 100 years of Defendant. developing adequate port terminal fa. I NOTICE M j xT- m i . rj t . . HCw,"r,?.'''',tv . iifctasj i,'ttt'''Tm'4rm A 'ail mm ii lirth I, 1 SPECIAL LOW PRICED-ARMOUR'S VltNNA SPECIAL LOW PRICE ARMOUR STAR ODD CORNED BEEF DOG FOOD 3 07' or. is. stcui-nu,,,. c MEAT AND PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. NIGHT AUG. fe BUY OF THE WEEK LAMB FANCY CLDERTA LBS. LONG CRISP GREEN SHOULDER ROAST 49 U. S. CHOICE SQUARE CUT LB. WHOU OR HALF WHOLE OR HALF CUCUMBERS 3 for 25 , SWEET WHITE SEEDLESS mm . lb: 25 LAMB LEG ROAST 69 U. S. CHOICE LB. FULLY TRIMMED LAMB RIB CHOPS 89 U. S. CHOICE LB. FLANK ON - '::ii.v, .yJ:T:-;v ir- . : f- aa mmmm Av 'A' LARGE CRISP CALIF. ICEBERG : ( I head 15) tA '"'-se 3 1 ' LACE GREEN PASCAL A I ' ! ; Or: staik ,2v BREAST O' LAMB OO.V U. S. CHOICE IB. ! J WBTOM Mtf-KAM SQUAM CW CHUCK ROAST " DELrCIOVS 7 INCH CUT Rl B ROAST vs. coo it. PLATE RONS IN STEWING BEEF LD. 29pf