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The Market Basket By The Bureau of Home Economloa. M 1 ! MvHn at P(vei«)«et> Kkunwci OammlMM ter "JTyrFR APPLES PLENTIFUL t\ market NOW j:,- npplc-picking days m the ' ci'«nt rv By the end us Novem. * p ; ttr cr.'P will oil be off the frees * . , .-„ri*ite oi on the market. Since * r . ii, l>.»e: in fact, freight cars a&d ■rack- have moving acroas the r .. nrn; .1; ill directions, distributing '' , n> ,f bushels of apples from the tf ,ow them to the rest of , un ty and other parts of the j Hu: ttv oomrmTciai crop, at .. , ... than half "he total quan •i\ f app>s grown in the United .«n ’tie home farm and on many t w -y o’, and counted almost, as much .. .-:jrulb> as the Irish potato. The popa mty of apples is possibly -„ ;r greati-t vqtu efrom the nutri. . or . **indpc;nt. according to th e Bu -*3U 0 f Hi nv Economics of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. It is be. riu. ; e w, rat so many, especially so jr.ii \ ■ apples, 'hat their food vaiu»s tie importnt. They furnish a rr..«i loucnage, jjiey contain vitamins .X p »rd C especially in the portico juit-ur.der the skin and they have t .nie m.nr'i: value- not enough, how-| f w- m be so very important if w? qte 1 ipplrs r.i of'ener than w* eat lemons. ; < oT eximp'o But apples, although ue -i" old as the Garden of Eden ( c n ’he other side of the world. In mod. i rn '.mi's have become pre-eminently ’ x Nor’h Ani-nran product. Os 211_ .Vxii**' bushels *rown in the United Stire- in 1931 which is many times ! ifsir than the crop in any other 1 c, .fitry more than 104 million bush-j f • supplied *h P home table with ap. | p>. raw cooked, or canned or made ! -,d*r and vinegar. Ir iri\ times in this country, ap-; - 1 s were valued chiefly for making r Jer and vinegar. But the u. c es of ico.es nowadays are almost innumer. ] ase running from such old reliable STEVENSON ■ (Known u Robert Rip. ley’H Believe It Or Not Girt) In Her Sensational Acrobatic Act ■ On Th* Screen John Boles Eycl>m Uy* —4*» ll “ONE HEAVENLY NIGHT“ Regular Admission Tomprrow Ronald Coleman In “THE DEVIL TO PAY” STEVENSON THEATRE HENDERSON, N. C. 3 Days—Starting Monday, Nov. 14 LeaRH Folk, t I^^HOOGES ’I PTr mßmnm Mon,Uvl-4 n *‘ : '! Protnm ***** Tit* a S Agr ot GniKenl”—wtth BMtIN AHMI* “'r A,r ’ ,id *" Talk ” irlt* Erie H*ll* «•* I**l W* ( h “ v ~ Kv,,,ln * For s«*a~—with'iftMftwrt * iM * l *"* IharlJ* Kufg|©«. ' * . diahatf m a«,pp4« aauoe, baited apples, appla pie. and apple dumpling, to com binations of all sorst. apples and bacon, baked spareribs with kpple stuffing, fried apples and carrots, **■*•<* *PPI«s and onions scalloped ap. pies and sweetpoUtoes iR;© ettraotlve dishes for the main course. Apple sauce oake, upside-down apple cake, Dutch apple cake. apple float, apple tapioca, apple brown batty, apple com. pote. apple turnovers ar e variations for dassert. Raw apples make a use ful part of many kinds of salad. And the pectin content 0 f apples make them excellent fox jeity, jam, and marmalade. LOW COST MENU FOB ONE DAY Breakfast Hor Cereal—Toast Tomato Juice for youngest child Coffee (adults )-M ilk (children) IX* ter Pork Chops de Luxe (with apples, potatoes, and onions) Bot biscuits or muffins, jam or syrup Tea (adults)—Milk (children) Sapper Mixed Vegetable Salad Bread and Butter Apple Sauce Cake (served hot or cold) Milk for all RECIPES Pork Chops d« Luxe (With apples, potatoes, Sind onions) 5 pork chops 5 medium.sired apples, pared and cored 4 white potatoes, medium sixe 6 onions, cut in half 3 teaspoons salt 1-8 teaspoon pepper 1 1.2 cups boiling water —Flour. A larg ebaking dish is necessary for this. If a casserole is not available, a roaster with a cove rmay be used. Grease the baking dish. Cut the on- iu. a,yigiCT wm ktob. ywa*T, November h, tost' l !t“ “* *“• “•« 1. *. m>t. eor, th. nr, I 1 ** 1 ' Sprtnkl * »lth salt. « « „ Cut «•<* apple Into “ and stick th* end of a 'he P rl ”* s - Th '» the laver r!e cho P* and apples over ly with fi« f ° n 01,8 and sprinkle light tL U . r - «P the spaces ;,th *' thln,y ■ Uced ’ Add the I a.* n * an d tha pepper. Pour ik \nl Water tnd c « wr the win tfw „ e unt “ tend * r ’ which Mln . vil k * a lltt,e over 1 hour. Then' remove the cover of th® baking dish continue the baking ‘until th e top »a a noh golden brown. Apple Salad Select medium-sized, firm, tart ap- Pl«; pare, and core. Ccok in a cov ered. pan in sirup made in proportion or 2 cups water and 1 cup sugar Use enough sirup to cover th e apples. Aft er cooking, drain the apples, chill, and r*H the center with cottage or cream cheeoe which has been mixed with salt Paprika, and a llttl e freshly chopped gTeen pepper. Or form the cheese into walls, roll i n ground "huts, and place beside the apples. Serve on lettuce with mayonnaise or French dressing. THREEBDUNOOVER IN CLOTHES THEFT $250 Merchandise Taken From May-Smith Clean, ing Establishment ARRESTED IN RALEIGH Railroad Special Agent Gets Trio Late at Night After Thoft Here Earlier; Under S3OO B<»id For Higher Court Three colored men, Oscar Harris, alias George Roberts, George Carter and James Williams, were bound over to the January term of Vance Su perior Court by Mayor Irvine B. Wat kins in police court today on charges of breaking into the May-Smith Clean ing Company shop last night and stealing clothing, suits and trousers with an estimated value of $360. Most of the clothing was recovered, it was understood. Their bond was fixed at S3OO. which they were unable to give and were sent to jail. Immediately after the robbery, the trio hopped a southbound Seaboard Air Line freight, and were arrested In Raleigh by Special Agent Gates, of the Seaboard. Sergeant W. N. Strickland of the city police force, went to Raleigh for thfe trio and brought them back here for the hear ing today. Harris was also tried on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon, name ly. a razor, and was given 60 days in jail for that offense. The trio pleaded guilty to the rob bery charge, and only enough testi mony was introduced at the trial to bind them over to superior court. General Assembly Might Legalize Beer and Winej (Continued from Page one.) session to get the necessary two-third* majority in both houses to submit an amendment to repeal the eighteenth amendment, although it is believer' that hte next Congress will be suf ficiently wet to do this. By the time the 1933 General As sembly meets here In January, it will be known whether or not Congress has or has not modified the Volstead Act and whether or not North Caro lina could change its prohibition law accordingly- If Congress does repeal the national enforcement act or modi fy it to permit the manufacture and sale of light wines and beer, the 1933 legislature could then modify the Tur- The President Smiles H \ 23 ; L 1 j mm Thia U one of the be*t close-up* made of President Hoover during his entire campaign. The camera caught the nation’s executive smiling broadly as he yftir platform of hi* private ‘ga rout* do CHlSrtli . : • - . ) i I • v * ' f . •. iS.fr .t- . . A-Si' taking a Living . THE WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON (soldett (Text mmmm ? •- *Tstsmbii » W/m r * v If v VIEV fW ~ M , yoH z ■ ma vklv ■> *■ diligMM Ml •UlhfuL—Rom. 12:11. (The International Uniform Lessons on the above subject for Nov. 13, is Deut. 24:14, 15; Amo* 5:6-15; Mark 6:3; Luke 12:13-21; 19:1-28; II These. 3:6-13; 1 Tim. 6:6-16, the Golden Text being Rom. 12:11, “In diligence not slothful.") By DR. ALVIN £. BELL. God always has had a heart for the .laboring classes of all races. No un necessary hardship was ever to be added to the burdens incident to their making their living. Regarding such matters as payment of wages when due his law demanded: ‘‘As his day thou shait give him hi® hire, neither shall the sun go down upon R; for he is poor, and setteth his heart upon it; lest he cry against tbee unto the Lord, and it be sin unto thee." Amos Champions Cause of Poor The great social messages of such prophets as Amos reveal God’s heart towards the poor and down trodden: "Forasmuch therefore as ye trample upon the poor, and take exacations * - -■■■■- lington act to conform with the Fed eral law, should a majority in both houses favor such action. The more conservative observers here, however, do not believe that the 1933 General Assembly will make any change in the Turlington act to per mit the sale and manufacture of light wines and beer in North Carolina, even should Congress repeal or modify the Volstead act in its December ses sion. This belief is based primarily on the fact that North Carolina is tradi tionally and politically dry and that members of the 1933 General Assem bly will hesitate to legalize the sale of wine and beer without a more de finite mandate from the voters of the State. As a result these more con servative observers believe that about all the 1933 General Assembly will do will be to authorize a referendum on the question in the 1934 election and defer final action until the General Assembly of 1935. It is further pointed out that the State Democratic plat form Is pledged to a State referendum on the prohibition question and that it would be a rather dangerous pro cedure to repeal or revise the State’s prohibition enforcement law without referring the question to a direct vote of th© people. Those who believe that the 1933 General Assembly will repeal the Tur lington act and permit the immediate sale and manufacture of light vines and beer, provided Congress has pre viously modified the Volstead act. give two major reasons for this be lief. The first is that the size of the Democratic majority given the entire Democratic ticket In the State on Tuesday, including the vote for Robert Reynolds, avowed wet candidate for the Senate, is equivalent to a State wide referendum on prohibition. The second reason for the immediate re peal or revision of the State's prohi bition law is the dire need for addi tional revenue by the State and the revenue which could be obtained from a State sales tax on beer and wine. According to estimates made here by those statistically minded, at least 12,000.000 bottles of beer would be con sumed each year In North Carolina, while estimates went even higher. With a sales tax of five cents a bot tle imposed by the State, it would be able to collect $600,000 a year of new revenue from this source. It is agreed that this $600,000 a year of new money Is going to look very tempting to the 1933 General Assembly in the face of shrinking revenues from all other sources. Quality and Service Are the real issues in the meat question. All ex perts agree on that. In these respects we mea sure up to the top notch. Turner's Market Phones 304-306. Fresh Fish and Oysters Quality Seafood Market 413 Garnett Street ■ ~ Next to Old Dutch Market »» 14:11. from him of wheat: ye have built houses of hewn stone, but ye shall not dwell In them;....for I know how manifold are your transgressions, and how mighty are your sins-ye that afflict the just, that take a bribe, and that turn aside the needy in the gate from their right....for it is an evil time." Amos, himself a laboring man, de nounced the national sin of the north ern kingdom of Israel, which was oppression of the poor ‘‘because they sold the righteous for silver, and the poor for a pair of shoes,” ‘‘making the ephah small and the shekel great." God's attitude towards the religion of a nation guilty of such social in justice Amos pictures In such strong terms as “I hate, I despise your feast days, and I will not smell in your solemn assemblies I will not ac cept taem. neither will I regard the peace-offerings of your fat beasts. Take thou away from me the noise of thy songs; for I will not hear the melody of thy viols." And when such messages against their social wrongs went unheeded the judgment of God fell speedily and effectively upon the nation in its destruction and captivity within 70 years of Amos' unheeded warning. Those who oppress the poor may ex pect judgment without mercy from Jehovah. Christ Dig in tie* Labor. The dignity of manual labor as a means of livelihood is established by the fact that the Son of God was un ashamed to be known as the carpen ter of Nazareth. Most of his. parables dealt with common laborers and their dally tasks. The rich fool with his bursting barns and famished soul he condemned because he gave himself solely to making a living and failed utterly to make a life. His was the covetousness that failed to discern that “a man’s life conslsteth not in the abundance of things which he pos sesseth." He commands diligence at one's task in his parable of the pounds. Here two servants report the result of their ap plication of themselves to their tasks, using but seven or eight words to re late their successors, while another servant entrusted with equal oppor tunity makes an alibi for his failure, which, in our Bible, consumes 41 words. Labor and Bread. St. Paul dignified manual labor as a tent-maker and taught that all men "work and eat their own bread," which certainly implies that every man be given an opportunity to find employment rather than be forced to accept charity as a means of liveli hood. When this inalienable right of th® Creator’s endowment is denied great groups of men it is because others, in their own covetousness, have ignored his word that “the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil." In the business of making a living let ua seek to live and let live. Rural Churches MIDDLEBURG M. E. CIRCUIT. Rev. P. D. Woodall, pastor.. At Tabernacle next Sunday at 11:15 a. m. the pastor will deliver his last germon before going to conference. : (The subject will be, “God and the ‘ Sparrow.” I At Mlddleburg at 7 p. m. the last ‘ service of the conference year will 1 also be held. The subject will be, ' “Jesus.” Large congregations at both places (are hoped for. "A coffee thet makes tfe poß* ' To see tfteongh ell fhiwp wfck ' he halfabut eye*.” eeeeee*e*****M»eMMseeeoei—>MWß>%H#oooeooeeee—*e*ee*eeeeeee»—#—f LUZIANNE) REDEEMABLE WITH COUPONS ) OCTttKW SOAP COUPONS I I ~ Tiwi i -n Extra Special On Flour 1-16 barrel 30c, 1-8 barrel- 65c, 1-4 barrel 95c, 12 barrel $1.85, one whole barrel $3.70 FREE BUTTER One pound of fresh Country butter free with . every pound sold at 30c j M. G. EVANS Phones 162-163. Notice To Members of Subscription Club Members of our Subscription Club are requested to please make their reports on all subscriptions collected for, on or before Saturday, Nov. 12 This is very important and we hope that all mem bers will make their reports promptly. This is necessary in order that we may make changes in expiration dates. Henderson Daily Dispatch FREE! Beginning Monday, November 14, 1932 You will find numbers in Blue Ribbon Bread. The lucky number in 5c will get 50c worth of groceries, and lucky number in 10c Bread and 25c Cake will be worth 76c in groceries from store from which you purchased bread or Cake. Lucky Numbers Will Be Posted In Each Store On Saturday MBrninfc of 6ach Past Week. When energy runs low eat Blue Ribbon Bread. Blue Ribbon ; Baking Co. Henderson, N. C. PAGE THREE