Newspaper Page Text
The Augusta News-Review - November 15, 1973 -
Astrology ® ,
Today / A
* '-v&i
For The Week of November 15-21:
ARIES (March 21 - April 20) - If you are unmarried you may fall
more deeply in love than ever with a romantic companion. It
would be wise and best to think in terms of marriage, give up
ideas that are too unconventional.
TAURUS (April 21 - May 20) - You may be the leader in a
movement which is quite a step forward for the community. New
trends which are gaining pace in the public can attract you in
unusual way since you usually stay with the traditional; do not be
alarmed.
GFMINI (May 21 - June 21) - Pay what you can on debts, but do
not worry about slow trends in this direction. You will find
people patient as iong as you pay steadily in small sums, but do
not miss payments.
CANCER (auze 22 - July 22) - Romance can be the major factor
now and you can be unhappy when away from a loved one,
practically counting the minutes until you are together again.
This is a deep bond of affections and understanding, one that will
last.
LEO (July 23 - August 23) - Enjoy the pleasures of life, take
some pictures of scenes and people you do not want to forget.
Make life colorful, dine out at a glamour spot, wear your most
dramatic apparel.
VIRGO (August 24 - September 22) - You may relax your desires
and regard for luxurious possessions and put the material world in
more wise perspective. Someone with an attitude you have never
experienced can be an excellent influence when it comes to the
material values.
LIBRA (September 23 - October 22) - The time is ripe for you to
show appreciation of friends and all they have done for you. Gift
and card sending must not be forgotten. You will get much help in
a difficult matter perhaps connected with paying bills that are a
bit too large to handle.
SCORPIO (October 23 - November 22) - Hold on tight where
finances are concerned and you will find there is no real worry. If
you give a party and an important guest does not show up, do not
talk about it or feel injured.
SAGITTARIUS (November 23 - December 21) - It is best not to
make gifts or loans this week. You could lose something valuable
that way. Keep track of your possessions and be especially careful
with those linked to health needs such as glasses.
CAPRICORN (December 22 - January 20) - Do not be irritable
with a relative who calls and spends money unwisely, as you
think. Avoid a tendency to be vexed easily. It can be that your
health needs checking and a specialist may have to be called in.
AQUARIUS (January 21 - February 19) - You can come to some
drastic conclusions about your own state of mind and emotions.
It is good to look within now and acknowledge the truth for only
in this way can you straighten things out and find a smoother
path.
PISCES (February 20 - March 20) - Someone may pry and have
no tact about it at all. You could unleash your temper and words
that would almost literally flay this enemy of yours. Demand to
be treated with esteem and your influence will prevail soon.
MURIEL JANSEN
BLACK HISTORY THROUGH COOKING
I had heard about “The
Historical Cookbook for the
American Negro.” I knew
it was out of print and that
no one who owned a copy
wanted to part with it. A
precious document of reci
pes honoring famous Blacks
of the past.
In a bookstore in Harlem
I met a woman who knew
Dorothy Height, National
President of The National
Council of Negro Women,
publishers of the book. She
suggested I get in touch
with her. Even the Council
SIMKINS SEED COMPANY
1129 Broad Street Dial 722-5327
GRASS SEED, RYE, OATS, WHEAT, BARLEY &
4. A FLOWER BULBS.
PLANT NOW FOR A
PRETTY SPRING GARDEN
'get a 1
Chicken
Dinner Box
149 Wrightsboro Road Phone 722-0632
3007 Deans Bridge Road Phone 793-2827
Wishbone Fried Chicken (RR)
Fried chicken, the way it ought to be.
ftMftOene >* >«■•»•« ir*><•«•' C«» KW to inc Atlanta G*<wo>a |
didn’t want to let their copy
out of the office. Then by
chance I met a fellow work
er at Best Foods who knew
the book. Her sister Helen
Norvelle was a regional
Director of NCNW in 1958
when the book was publish
ed and she offered to let me
borrow her book. There were
so many recipes I wanted to
try, and so much to read
about Black history; pictures
and documents to study-a
delight in every way. Here
is just one recipe from the
book, Banana Nut Bread.
Page 8
Indian Relics
On Display
An exhibit of Indian relics
and artifacts prepared by the
Augusta Archaeology Society
is now on display at Jeff
Maxwell Biznch Library, 1927
Lumpkin Rd., The exhibit is
housed in glass display cases
presented to the branch by the
Friends of the Augusta Library
a non-profit organization open
to anyone interested in the
welfare of the Augusta-Rich
mond County Library System.
According to George S.
Lewis, president of the
Archaeology Society the
purpose of the organization
and of the exhibit is “to
encourage people to become
aware of the importance of
preserving knowledge of our
basic heritage, for, like a
non-renewable resource, once
an Indian site is destroyed, it is
gone forever.”
Lewis pointed out that the
destruction of such sites by
farming, roadbuilding or land
development necessitates rapid
extraction by trained personnel
in order preserve this
knowledge for future
generations. He emphasized
that a basic purpose of the
Society is to discourage
“pothunting” and the selfish
destruction of Indian sites for
personal gain. Lewis explained
that the Archaeology Society
was founded more than five
years ago by a group dedicated
to “stewardship of the past”
and “the preservation of the
unwritten record of man’s past
in this area for future
generations”.
This does not mean amassing
a large collection of artifacts
nd relics,” Lewis said, “but
rather a scientific analysis of
the sites and their contents.”
More than 80 percent of the
society’s members have had
some college training in
archaeology and anthropology,
although this is not a requisite
for membership in the
organization. “None of us
considers himself a professional
but most of our group have
been trained in the location
Now that I know there’s
a copy of “The Historical
Cookbook for the American
Negro” in the Schomburg
Collection at 103 West 135tb
Street in New York City,
I may refer to it again.
BANANA NUT BREAD
1 cup dark corn syrup
'A cup shortening
2 eggs, beaten
2 cups sifted flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup mashed, ripe bananas
1 cup chopped nuts
Grease 1 (9 x 5x 2 3/4-inch)
loaf pan. Stir together corn
syrup and shortening. Add
eggs. Beat until light and
fluffy. Sift together flour,
baking powder and salt. Add
to creamed mixture alter
nately with bananas. Mix
well. Stir in nuts. Turn bat
ter into greased loaf pan.
Bake in 375°F. oven 55
minutes or until cake tester
comes out clean and loaf is
a golden brown. Remove
from pan. Cool on rack.
Makes 1 loaf.
Note: Muriel Jansen is a
home economist with Best
Foods, a Division of CPC
International Inc. She test
ed the recipe for Banana
Nut Bread with Karo corn
syrup, using margarine for
the shortening.
"""
"Augusta's First Black owned Clothing Store
ton Broad Street"
Augusta it's here!
Supreme Fashions
invites you to their
’ fabulous grand opening,
Friday Nov. 16
Supreme Fashions
■ 3 j the only Black owned
K ‘ & operated clothing
store on Broad Street in
Augusta.
I K t, Supreme King Arthur
' . \ \ says, "Let's get it on at
\ \ \ Supreme Fashions."
\ ’
i
t
1
Supreme Fashions, the best for her and the best for him.
Supreme Fashions, making it, with the latest in fashions.
1008 BROAD STREET
"A SOUL SHOP"
J'" ."J" 1 " I"
I
yw wy |
Sg JBt S f B 3] ‘B S ggg Kk g ' Bflfr /""% gB S ■ * '**'?
by Georgia Consumer Sendees
Reduce Heating Costs
And Help Save Energy
Between inflation and the energy crisis, we dread
the coming of cold weather. Is there any way to cut
the cost of heating your house during the winter?
There are several things you
can do to cut your heating
costs. According to a U.S.
government study, as much as
fifteen to thirty percent of
your heating bill may be
caused by warm air leaking
and recording of aboriginal
sites and can intelligently assist
professional archaeologists in
he tedious work of excavation
and recording data,” he
explained.
Included in the display are
arrow heads, a grooved axe,
gamingstones, grit-tempered
and fiber-tempered pottery as
well as an explanation of how
various tools were fashioned
and finished. “With he
exception of two items, so
marked,” Lewis said,
“everthing in the exhibit was
collected by members from the
surface of disturbed areas and
carefully catalogued for future
reference. The bone chisel in
the display is in a remarkable
state of preservation and was
excavated from a test pit at
one of our sites along the
Savannah River in Columbia
County”.
Other items are a number of
flaked projectile points, a
serrated Bradley spike, end and
side scrapers, drill bits, large
flint knives and steatite boiling
stones.
The society president
pointed out that the group
considers the Augusta-Rich
mond County Musuem its
home and that museum
director Clemens de Baillou is
local technical advisor. The
group also works closely with
Dr. Joseph Caldwell of the
University of Georgia and has
worked for the Universities of
both South and North
Carolina. Other officers and
directors of the Augusta
Archaeology Society include
Dean Whittle, Jean Wheadon,
Pat McCoy, Harold Hohnston,
Barry Speth and De Baillou.
Information on the
organization, which meets on
the last Tuesday evening of
each month, can be obtained
from any of these members
who also welcome information
on the location of sites, »
The public may see the
exhibit during Jeff Maxwell
J. LESTER FURMAN
JEWELER
214 Bth Street
Authorized
BULOVA
Dealer
Sales and Service on
Ladies' & Mens Accutrons
Phone: 722-2932
out and cold air seeping in. If
your problem is drafts it is
easily solved. Install weather
stripping at the movable joints
of doors and windows, and
caulk (fill with air tight
material) the frames of doors
and windows. Weather
Branch Library hours which re
10 a.m. - 9 p.m. on Monday
and Thursday, and 10 a..- 5:30
p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday. All of the
books used in connection with
he exhibit may be checked out
by holders of an Augusta
Library Reader’s Card.
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stripping and caulking material
can be bought inexpensively at
any hardware store.
Six inches of thermal
insulation on or below the
floor of your attic helps in
both winter and summer. If
you don’t have that much it
can easily be put in an
unfloored attic; you just
scatter it around. If your attic
is floored, you could add extra
insulating material by having a
couple of floor boards taken
up, and blowing the insulation
in. If you think you need
more insulation in your walls,
you should consult an expert.
Os course, this costs more, but
adding insulation to walls is
tricky, and if it isn’t done
right you may have trouble
with moisture condensation in
the walls. According to the
study, you will recover the
cost of the added insulation in
fuel savings in just one year if
you live where the
temperature between October
and April is around forty-five
degrees.
The efficiency of your
furnace or other heating unit
influences the amount of fuel
you bum. Fuel burning
produces combustion elements
that are deposited on the
surfaces that are supposed to
carry the heat, and keeps them
from working at top
efficiency. Also, for the
furnace to burn the fuel it uses
there must be air present in
the unit, but too much air
increases the amount of heat
you lose. The heat exchange
service should be changed
regularly, and the combustion
air adjustments should be
checked and repaired, if
necessary, by a professional.
You should be sure that the
air filters are free of dust and
lint.
You could slightly reduce
the amount of heat your
house loses with heavy
draperies and curtains?
Indoor air rises. Therefore,
if it can leak into the attic,
you are losing a lot of your
heat through the attic
ventilation system. You
should be sure that any
opening to the attic is tightly
fitted. You might consider
putting weather stripping here
too. Don’t forget to check the
places where electric fixtures
and plumbing pipes go into
the attic. The federal study
reports that a one-fourth inch
crack at the bottom of a three
foot wide door costs you
$4.50 in wasted heat per
winter. That may not sound
like much, but when you
think of all the other places
that allow air to escape, you
can see that it could add up to
quite a sum.
Os course, you should
always turn off electric lights
and televisions, etc. when you
don’t need them.
Don’t put off having that
leaky hot water faucet
repaired. A leak of one drop
per second adds up to 650
gallons a year.
Turn down the heat a little
at night. Fuel savings can
amount to three-fourths
percent for each degree you
lower the heat.
Finally, if you’re in a
position to put up some
money, you might consider
installing storm windows.
Storm windows can cut the
amount of heat your house
loses in half. The average cost
of storm windows is eighty
dollars each, and the federal
study says that you will have
recovered the cost of storm
windows in fuel savings in
seven to ten years.
WARNING: If you decide to
install storm windows, buy
only from a dealer with a
reputation for good products
and good service. Compare the
prices offered by more than
one dealer to be sure you get
the best buy.
GEORGIA CONSUMER
SERVICES is a unit of the
Division of Community Services,
State Department of Human
Resources. If you have questions
or problems concerning product
quality, credit and contract terms
or how to spend your money
wisely, call 1-800-282-8900 free
from anywhere in Georgia. If you
have trouble reaching the number
ask your local operator for help.