Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Sept. 3, 1959, edition 1 / Page 12
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By Eugene Dowdle A common occurence with amateur photographers is the steady parade of bare, toneless sides in outdoor pictures. With out the framing of sky tones to give pictures balance, they have a curiously unfinished loot ?? De-sfred tptoe Is easily had in black-and-white shooting through use of green, medium yellow or red filters. Color shooters can beef up sky tones with a polarizing filters. If your pictures suffer from washed-out skies, get in the habit of using filters for a simple and effective solution to this problem. We are happy to announce this week that we have added a new employee to our staff. We hope with this new addition we will be able to give a little j better and faster service. Our j new employee is Mr. Harold 1 Dowdle, from Springfield, Va. Get in the habit, too, of drop ping in at GENE'S STUDIO & CAMERA HOUSE for your photo needs We stock every thing in the line of film, fil ters, accessories and supplies, to' keep any snapshooter in fine shooting fettle. Quality and price make a happy combina tion at GENE'S STUDIO & > CAMERA HOUSE, 10 Phillips St Try us. Phone LA 4-3322 Paid Adv. Look at this . . . WASHABLE CORDUROY WITH QUAINT BLOUSE Sizes 3 - 6x The Children's Shop MACON THEATRE Thursday-Friday, Sept 3-4 Walt Disney's "PETER PAN" Saturday, Sept. 5 Double Feature "FORBIDDEN DESERT" And "GOOD DAY FOR A HANGING" Also Late Show ?THE HOT ANGEL" Sunday -Monday-Tuesday, September S-7-8 "THE YOL'NG PHILAI)II.PHIAN,S" YVed.-Thurs.-Fri., Septeml>er S-10-11 ' ASK ANY GIRL" FRANKLIN DRIVE IN Thursday-Friday, Sept. 3-4 "MARJORIE MORNINGSTA8" Satni'day, September 5 DouVe Feature "SPANISH AFFAIR" And "RIDE A CROOKED TRAIL" i ? ?Sunday-Monday, Sept. 6-7 Adm. 65c "LOVE IS MY PROFESSION" Brigitte Bardot ' Tuesday, September 8 Mystery Movie ? Plus Lester Flatt-Earl Scruggs In person cm .Stage Adm. 75c Wednesday, September 9 TOY TIC.ER' A fast trout stream runs along US 64 between Franklin and Highlands. This scene is a photogra phic "must". 'Staff Photo). Fibre Bounce Important To Rugs Looks You probably know that bounc ing a rubber ball has something i to do with the compression of air inside and its return to normal when the pressure is released. But did you. know that this same idea of springiness is>a vital quality in ycur carpet fibers? This fiber bounemess is import* for oo'! ? looks, .longer wearing, .and. fMsicr drafting, ? points out Mrs. Edit h MrGlatnery, home de "v'i Irpm t pec ia list for t lie Nv C A'-'.^ici.!1 H'/al Extension Service. A fiber i.>. springy because the ?limp, or waviness. of a fiber auses it tv repel, another fiber like i^elf. If you press the fiber.1 together by walking or placin g urniture on them, they spring back as close as possible to their jrigiioai shape when the pressure, s taken away. This is called re iliency. / V If. .Mil* fibers haven't a high de gree of resiliency, they will crush. Results will be a spotty looking rug because crushed fibers reflect the light differently. Repeated pressure on the little creases in the fibers causes them to break ind the rug looks worn. Dirt and fibers are matted together mak ing the rug extremely difficult | to clean. A vacuum or steaming process will revive matted fibers, j The more common rug fibers | are wool and acrylic. ? Acrilan. ; Dynel. Viieli nylon and super L; raj on. rayon, cotton, and acetate.! About Pcop! Ranr;- iph Bulgin is spending a. j * v."r> week's leave with his parents. Mr and Mis. oJhn Buh'.in. He has I just, completed training at tlv; ; i U. S. Navy Machinery Repairman':; School, San Die^o. Calif , and will 1 ko from here to report to the CJ.S.S. Mandan in Norfolk. Va . , September .8 Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Penlanc and grandchildren, Lebron and Carolyn Penland, of Lafayette. Ga? were guests of Mrs. Burt Pen- j land last week. Bob Wiley, of Miami. Fla., re turned home this week after a visit with Mrs. C. E. Bild ani Miss Nancy Bild at their summer home on Wayah. Mr. and Mrs. H. Bueck will have , , as guests this week end Mrs, ' Bueck's sister-in-law, Mrs. J. Wal tcn Branham. and children' Faye and Buck, of Raleigh, and Mrs. 1 Bueck's sister and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Victor I \ n n . and! 'nu ;hters.. Vickie and Bambi. of Richmond, Va. ? Ffc. Donald B. -Shircliff is , pi-ndinr. a leave with his family n Wayah Valley, en route from1 Ft. Deven, Mass.. to Japan, Where he will be stationed. Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. ?John Crawford were Mr. and Mrs : Gerald Romine. of Roanoke. Ala ! and Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Harri | son and son, Neil, of Rogersville. Ala! Henry Stiles returned to hir- ' home in Seattle, Wash., Sunday after a months visit with his brothers and sisters, Mrs. J. T Gray, Mrs. Wade Cunningham. C L CAMPBELL DIES SUNDAY AT HIS HOME Carpenter And Native Was 54; Rites Tuesday Charles Lester iLurk> Campbell, a carpenter and native of this county, died Sunday at 3 p.m. at his home in the Iotla section. Fifty-four, he had been ill five months. Funeral services for Mr. Camp bell were conducted Tuesday after noon at the Iotla Baptist Church, jf which he was a member. Offici ating were the Rev. M. W. Wyatt. pastor, and the Rev. William L. Sorrells. a former pastor. Burial vas in the church cemetery. Pall searers were Carl Baldwin, Fred Tallent, Leland Roper, Carlos Rogers, Howard Willis, and John N. Woods. C Son of the late Edwin and Mrs. Smma Fouts Campbell, he had jeen a carpenter for 28 years. He vas married in January, 1933, to vliss Lavadax Angel, of this coun y, who survives. Also surviving are three sons, Clinton E. Campbell, who is with he U.S. Air Force in Greenville, 3. C? Charles L. Campbell, who s with the U.S. Army at Fort Penning, Oa., and James B. Camp jell. of Franklin, Route 3; two laughters, Mrs. Ella B. Miller, of Greenville, and Mrs. Lucille Allen, >f Route 3; four brothers, Leslie, 31enn. and John Campbell, of Mt. -lolly; a sister, Mrs. Lucy Evans. >f Route 3; and three grandchil Iren. Arrangements were handled by Pott? Funeral Home. ind George Stiles, of Franklin, ?nd Claude Stiles and Mrs. John 1 Rogers, of Brevard. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Dills and | two children. Larry and Cynthia, jf Sarasota, Fla., are visiting Mr. j and Mrs. Roy Dills, of Route 5, 1 and other relatives. Mrs. J. A. Campbell, of Ashe lille, was the guest last week of Mrs. Charles O. Ramsey. Mr. and Mrs. Dayle Morgan, of Decatur. Ga.. visited Mrs. S. W. Stanfield and other relatives last ' week end. Mr. and Mis. Robert Price, of Homestead. Fla., recently spent j seme time visiting Mrs. Price's! grandmother. Mrs. Sam Stanfield. Richard apd Jimmie Stanfield, of Fort Pierce, Fla.. are spending their vacation with their grand mother.- Mrs. Sam Stanfield. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph West, of Cantoris visited Mr. West's mother, Mrs. R. D. West, last week. Considered Contour Strip Cropping? Pall seeding season is an ideal time for establishing contour strip cropping, according to J. Frank Doggett. soil conservation special ist for the N. C. Agricultural Ex tension Service. Contour strip cropping is a pat tern of farming in alternate con tour bands of close growing and till crops, explains Mr. Doggett. Tn many ways It is the most satisfactory means of erosion con trol available to farmers. It pro tects against both water and wind Tosion. And it can be used on sandy and shallow stoney soils where terracing Is not practical. It is also used on slopes too steep for terraces and on land to nearly level that terraces are not necessary. It Is generally used without terraces, but on extremely ?rodable soils it may be used with terraces. Contour strip cropping is simp 'y a good soil conserving rotation ?stabllshed in contour bands rather than fields, declares Mr. noggett. It has many advantages: Once established, it makes a ro 'ation simple and easy to follow, t cost nothing to establish and >rovides no obstacles to farm ma hinery. N-> more land is reauired fo farnt land in a given rotation n strips than 4n fields. Many farmers will establish gxr~ are bendinK to the ch? <* * No. 1 lines of the one held for the fly-in lines of theone held for the fly-in last September, is being whipped j into shape by the Franklin Jay-' cees. It will be held Saturday ! night, the 12th. Beauty Contest Highlighting the hoe-down's Former Methodist Pastor To Preach At Patten Revival The Rev. J. C. Swaim. a former Methodist pastor here, will do the preaching at a revival that will get under way Monday night at iflMMHIMHI WiSS% f. GETS SCHOLARSHIP Miss Patricia Iledden, of Franklin, daughter of Mrs. G. D. Ileddrn, has been awarded a S200 scholarship under the James G. K. McCiure Educa tional Fund. A freshman at Western Carolina College, she has been working this summer i in Franklin. contour strip farming this fall by seeding alternate strips of small grain and lespedeza or clover fields. Others will seed alfalfa or perennial glass strips in alternate bands. Approximately 134,000 acres are now strip farmed ac cording to records of the Soil Con servation Servjce. Each year sees the number grow. Be wise . . . beware . . . and be sure at railroad crossings. Slow up before you reach the tracks, then stop dead. Look! Listen! And lessen accidents. rnone L./Y i-jjiu twono'Siooi T p:st rci Tuoii-r j many activities will be a "Miss Ruby" beauty contest. Four tro phies for the queen and her court already have been sent here by the Florida organization and are on display at Jamison's Jewelers. Last year's contest attracted 40 contestants. Firms wanting to sponsor a girl in the contest are asked to get in touch with the Patton Methodist Church. Services will be held nightly at 8 o'clock. Mr. Swaim, who left here In 1943, after serving Patton and other churches on the Macon Cir cuit, has -been pastor of a church near Salisbury for the past 10 years. ENTERING INSTITUTE Jim Shope, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. Frank Shope, will enter the Tennessee Military Institute at Sweetwater, Tenn., Monday. No. 2 open registration books in the precincts October 3 to 9 a m. and keep them open until sunset October 17. Challenge day will be October 24. Ballots for the special election are now being printed and will oe mailed to county chairman about the middle of Sepember. All nine issues are on one ballot. Under the act providing for he special election, the state will eimburse the counties . fbr ex penses of holding the election. J aye ft president, R. M. Biddle, Jr. Free Dancing ' Weather permitting, the hoe- * down for the visitors will be held on the west side of the county courthouse. Free square .dancing, with music by the Cumberland Mountaineers, will be in swing, as well as many other activities for the public. GALAX THEATRE HIGHLANDS, N. C. THUR.-FRI., SEPT. 3-4 Millie Perkins Joseph SchUdkraut "THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK" SATURDAY, SEPT. 6 Kenneth More Jayne Mansfield "SHERIFF OF FRACTURED JAW" SUN.-MON., SEPT. 6-7 Frank Sinatra Eieanor Parker "A HOLE IN THE HEAD" the.- wed., sept. 8-9 Glenn Ford Ernest Bo r? nine "TORPEDO RUN" AUTO SERVICE *?/R?fiVRS j THE GAS ... Oil CLUTCH AND NEW TRANSMISSION IS ALL YOURS \ . . FREE ... SIR Though the above are not included, we do have certain free services. Furthermore you don't have to hypnotize us to get them. Just ask! We're always happy to serve you. ?? ' , Burreil Motor Co., Inc. Tel. LA 4-2421 Franklin, N. C. Dealer 3014 SHORTY MASON'S M Dial LA 4-2156 Visit Our New Modern Market We Deliver MISTLETOE MARGARINE z,,,? JFG MAYONNAISE _ _ _ - Q, 49c JFG COFFEE '1:1^ 59c I EPPQ $100 LuUJ 3 Do?. 1 PINTO BEANS?? *Lk,r I BANANAS _ 3 25c
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 3, 1959, edition 1
12
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