Newspaper Page Text
6B
THE COVINGTON NEWS — THURSDAY. DECEMBER 11, 1975
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I EDUCATIONAL
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84 EXCITING SETS
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REG. $2.49
$199
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REAL COMFORT AT
A REAL SAVINGS!
$127
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FOR THI LITTLI FOLKS
SLACK SETS
$399
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PRICED FROM . . .
$199
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U.L. AFFROVIO
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9
Newton Plaza
Ntw Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9-10 Sunday 1-8
I PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST |
20 EXPOSURE I
ROLL OF
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FILM
FOR COLOR PRINTS!
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C-126 20 SIZES
$137
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Poster Winners Named
The Conservation Committee of
the Covington Woman’s Club
sponsored a poster and essay
contest at Palmer Stone School in
Oxford for fourth and fifth graders
on the subject “How I Can
Improve the Environment." Forty
one essays with 52 posters were
submitted.
winners of the essay contest were
Kacy Shipley, Ist prize; Meg
Davis, second; and Karen Tate,
honorable mention. Poster winners
were first place, Clara Smith;
second, Michele Smith; and honor
able mention, Letitia Smith.
Final selections were made by the
committee and certificates of merit
and prizes were given Friday
morning at the school. Club
members as well as the teachers
and Principal D. F. Roberts, were
pleased with the enthusiasm and
interest displayed by the students
in discovering ways to help improve
their city, school and home en
vironments.
g^COOKING
IS FUN
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
CHEESE BALL
4-ounce wedge Roquefort
cheese
4 ounces cream cheese
2 tablespoons cognac
cup toasted walnuts,
grated fine
Beat together the Roquefort,
cream cheese and cognac; pack
into a 1-cup measure; cover tightly
and chill at least overnight. Shortly
before serving, with the help of a
small metal spatula, turn out
keeping ball shape, onto wax
paper. Roll in nuts — ball may
flatten. Place on small serving plate
and keep chilled until served.
Delicious with thin apple wedges.
CLELLA WHITMAN S
EVERYTHING CASSEROLE
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 pound ground round beef
1 Spanish onion Ismail size I,
chopped medium-fine
green pepper, chopped
medium-fine
8 ounces rotelle pasta,
cooked al dente
8-ounce can whole-kernel
corn, undrained
8^ -ounce can green peas,
undrained
8-ounce can stewed tomatoes
3j4-ounce can pitted ripe
olives, drained
Salt, pepper, garlic,
basil and oregano to
taste
2 cups grated cheddar
cheese
In a 3-quart casserole mix
together all the ingredients except
the cheese. (May be covered and
refrigerated overnight). Bake,
covered, in a preheated 325-degree
oven until bubbling-hot —about
45 minutes. Sprinkle with cheese
and continue baking, uncovered,
until cheese melts — 5 or 10
minutes longer. Makes 6 servings.
NEI/VTON CINEMA
Newton Plaza Shopping Center
24 Hr. Answering Service Phone 787-3449
Starts M. Dec. 12
Showtimes: 7:00 P.M. & 9:00 P.M.
HE was taken by everyone,
' FOR EVERYTHING HE HAD-
®-<7\ Now he's going to
• Pay them back double I
* wMs), Pirieaat Picteres prtstits
AVOI FRAMED
Till’ WEIK’S® * PvMNaitPictvi
man is '
back!
Family Matinee Special
Sat. ■ Sun. Dec. 13 & 14
Showtimes: 1:30 P.M. * 3:30 P.M.
"NEVER GIVE A SUCKER
AN EVEN BREAK"
With W. C. Fields
All Seats 50*
Coming Next
Columba Pictures
AN HM PRODuC T ON A [>vw»on ol Columbia Pictures Industries. Inc.
Essay Contest Winners
Palmer Stone winners in the essay contest conducted at the
school are shown with Mrs. A. A. Guritz, committee chairman of
the project. Winners are (1-r) Karen Tate, Meg Davis and Kacy
Shipley.
Mrs. H. E. McKenzie, (1), and Mrs. Ludwig Bahn are shown with
postor winners in a contest sponsored by the Covington Woman’s
Club at Palmer Stone School. The contest theme was "How I Can
Improve the Environment.” Children winning the contest are (1-
r) Letitia Smith, Clara Smith and Michele Smith.
Light Up That
For Few Cents Day
Maybe Christmas is a good time
to dispel the myth (no, not Santa
Claus, Virginia) that lights are big
energy users, that it is somehow
unpatriotic to light up for Christ
mas.
Fact is that only about one per
cent of the energy used in the U.S.
is needed to light homes, and only
a small fraction of this amount is
used for home decorative holiday
lighting.
Actually, a modest display of
indoor and outdoor Christmas
lights using about 500 watts for
four hours daily adds only about
six cents a day to the electric bill.
(Cost is based on the national
average of about 3 cents per kilo
watt hour).
Gary Mason, General Electric
Christmas lighting expert, suggests
Poster Winners
this *‘soo” lighting package for the
economy-minded:
Indoors — Decorate a six-foot tree
with three strings of 25 “cool”
lights for a total of 75 lights.
"Cool” type bulbs use fewer watts
than standard bulbs and actually
operate cool enough to touch. As a
result, they can be used on plastic
as well as live trees.
If your tree doesn't happen to be
a six-footer, use this formula to de
termine how many lights to use:
multiply the tree height in feet,
times the maximum width, times
three. Double this figure if you use
midget bulbs.
Outdoors — Use three 50-light
midget sets to outline a door or
window or to spruce up a tree.
Midgets are particularly attractive
in the bare branches of trees which
have lost their leaves.
For a more traditional approach,
light an evergreen tree or shrub.
Armed with three 50-light midget
sets, a home-owner can choose
between creating several displays or
concentrate all 150 lights on one
“spectacular.”
At six cents a day for two weeks,
these indoor and outdoor Christmas
lighting displays (three Cool Bright
25 light sets and three 50-light
Merry Midgets) would add only 85
cents to the electric bill. For three
weeks ... $1.27, and about SI.BO
for a full month, according to
Mason.
For the all-thumbers and those
who prefer to let others do-it-them
selves, there are lighted decorations
for doors, walls or windows. One
company has wreaths, large tinsel
bells, even an 18-inch tree ... all
wired, ready to hang and light up.
To keep energy costs down this
Christmas energy-wise consumers
will use efficient, lower-watt midget
or cool bulbs, Mason said.
Midgets are now available, he said,
in straightline sets that are easy to
install, unlike early midget sets
which were looped and awkward to
decorate with.
Midget light sets use only 18
watts, regardless of the number of
lights they contain ... 20, 35 or 50.
And five 50-light sets of midgets —
that s 250 lights — use less electri
city than a single 100-watt bulb.
One in 14 American babies —
more than 200,000 a year — are
born with birth defects, says The
National Foundation-March of
Dimes.
Free