Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Sept. 26, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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Nash ? Franklin Home Economics Teachers Meet The N ash- Franklin Home Economic* Professional Group met Monday Is the Loulsburg High School with Mrs. Mar)orle Leonard as hostess. After a brief business session led by Mrs. Ruth Perry, chairman of the group, Mrs. Leonard intro duced the speaker, Miss Emily Burt Person, home economics teacher at Warrenton. Miss Person's topic for dis cussion vas "Human Develop ment," which Included the areas of child development and family relations. Representing the borne economics teachers of North Carolina, she had at tended a workshop on "Child 1 Development, " which was held Is Detroit, Michigan last July. During the discussion new concepts and generalizations of teaching Human Development to students were given. It was pointed out that one matures at different levels and stages throughout life- -age not acre Sammy Jackson Show The All Night Show 12 Midnight? 6 a.m. Monday - Saturday On ^WIZS On Your Henderson Dial 1000 Watts The BeatThere la. I ssarily being a factor. Each Individual hi* his own patters or rate at which he prows, in I summary. Miss Person quoted , from n well know author, "As a ciUd of my parents, one says at /himself, 'I ought to do t^e best 1 can to become the sort of person I partly ani and wholly hope to tie'." Others attending the meeting were: Mrs. EvelynGlover, Mrs. Hulda Wilson, Mrs. Ann Aber nathy, Mrs. Sarah Matthews, Mrs. laleen Mode, and Mrs. Christine Shirley. [ - | News from Hollywood Tom Lowell wtl] make his motion picture debut in "The Carpetbaggers." Previously Lowell has appeared frequently on television, Including many segments of "Combat" and "The Alfred Hitchcock Shoe." Polly Bergen will wear eight een gowns, designed by Howard Shoup, for her role as the first woman President of the United States in "Kisses For | My President." She *111 co star with Fred MacMurray. Saving^ left her home In Switzerland, Audrey Hepburn has settle In Hollywood where she Is making the film version of "My Fair Lady." Andre previn will direct (he musiOi Recovered from a serious back injury, Gene Kelly will ; soon begin work on "I Love Louisa." He will co-star with Shirley Maclane In this musical comedy. Just The Same Jack ? Do yoii act toward your j wife the same as you did before you were married? BUI ? Just the same. I re member when I first fell In love with her I would lean over the fence of her house, gaze at her shadow on the curtain, afraid to go In. And I do the same thing Engagement Announced MISS JOYCE ROSE PERRY'S engagement 1 to Mr. Robert Allen Williams, son of Mr. ami Mrs. James Robert Williams of Ahos kie, North Carolina, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Wesley ; Perry of Louisburg, North Carolina. A De- i jcember 29th wedding is planned. ; To Whom, Pray Tell The He--" What Is this thli* called Love?" The She ? "The tenth word In a telegram." The Wrong Companion "Ah, sighed the sentimental girl, "I could sit and gaze at the moon for hours." "Would I were the man In It!" said the youth who wasn't the one. . "I agree with that," she re plied wearily: "then you would be several hundred thousand miles away." OUR STORE WILL OE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY FOR RELIGIOUS HOLIDAY PLEASE SHOP EARLY. TONKELS To!, E. Hash Street Louisburg. N. C. OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 7 P.M. Franklin Memorial Hospital Notes \ The following were patients in tbe hospital Thursday morn ing: WHITE PATIENTS Mrs. Lucille Andrews, Louls burg; Henry M. Bell, Zebulon; Mrs. Cassle Cash, Loulsburg; Curtis Davis, Loulsburg; Cla rence Edwards, Loulsburg; Mrs. Clara E. Faulkner, Louls burg; Mrs. LUlle Ferrell, Zebulon; Rufus Harris, Louls burg; Mrs. Josephine H. Holmes, Loulsburg; Mrs. Mat tie S. Jones, Castalla; Mrs. Mildred Kearney, Loulsburg; V. E. Osborne, Loulsburg; Mrs. Mary Esther Pearce, Zebulon; Miss Irene M. Perry, Zebulon; Keith A. Perry, Loulsturg; Ru fus Place, Loulsburg; Robert T. preddy, Frankllnton; Frank Rose, Sr., Loulsburg; Mrs. Christine C. Rouse, Loulsburg;1 Mrs. Mary t>. Senter, Franklln ton; Mrs. Margaret W. Swan son, Loulsburg; Mrs. Ruby Weathers, Wake Forest; Mrs. Betsy Wester, Castalla; Mrs. Mamie Whitley, Zebulon; Miss Ethel Wlnstead, Loulsburg; Haywood Hill, Loulsburg; Mrs. Ruth Wlnstead, Loulsburg; Mrs. Alice D. Smith, Loulsburg; Al bert Collins, Loulsburg; Mrs. Maude Roberts, Frankllnton; Will Lancaster, Loulsburg; WHITE BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Pearce of Route 2, Zebulon, N. C., announce the birth of a boy, born on September 25, 1963. Mrs. Pearce Is the former Mary Esther Bailey. COLORED PATIENTS General Lee Alston, Louls burg; Morris Clemonts, Louls burg; Eugene Foster, Louls burg; Elizabeth Malone, Louls burg; Kenneth Earl Mann} burg; Mattte Perry, Loulsburg; Gwendolyn Terrell, Loulsburg; Orsben Wright, Loulsburg. Why Is It that most people get so excited over nothing? (1 * FARMERS WORKING FOR FARMERS" THAT'S WHY YOUR TOBACCO SELLS HIGHER AT THE ..w , I BIG FRANKLIN! A Good Sale Every Day PHONE GY6-3667 Big F rankun Warehouse BKXETT BLVD. BY-PASS 10UISBUR6, N. C. ARCH WILSON ? BRYANT COTTRELL - STERLIN6 COTTRELL About Your Home If you wish to improve your , ?oil, it will be necessary to add humus and fertilizers in the proper amounts to your exist ent soil. As high as ten per cent of a good garden soil should be hum us. This humus may be made up ol a number of things, such as peat moss, {round corncobs, leaf mold, animal manure, de composed organic matter from compost pries, old sawdust, rotted wood, jreen manure, straw or hay, pine straw, hull from nuts, or a combination of any number of these things. If the soli is chiefly clay, it should be turned over in the (all so that the humus works Its way. In, assisted by the weather. The addition ofdolomlticoragricul-, tural lime, plus sand, may help break up the soil. Your soil may be tot- light ? containing too much sand. Hum* us roust be added as . mulch to build up the soil gradually so that it may retain moisture. It is a fact that fertilizers, either organic or Inorganic, add minerals and chemicals to help break down clay soil and build up those which are sandy. Dried manures are expensive but easy to use. They are labelled as to the nutritional content. Fish refuse is a com plete fertilizer, containing nl trogen, phosporus iixi potash. Bom meal is biff- le potash. Fertilizers are mined so that all the elements are available In one package. The coftslxeqjcj 0# soil can be tested in the hand. U slightly moist, soil will term a hard ball wheo pressed. Ttus is clay. Good loam, or silt under tiw same cocdttKvts. %U1 be loose or cnahl). Adding lime *111 correct an acid condition oi the soil which sometimes develops tvecause of poor drainage. Grass mar re quire lime e*ery three or four years. A rlgaag stitcher ora straight sticker, a cabinet or a portable type ? these are q tstKx s often asked by womenihinkiTtgof buy ing a sev lng machine. If you are shopping for a sewing machine, there Is a wide range available to choose from. Two que stlc -j yea might ask yourself to help you make the rigt* declsior ?re: '-What kind of sewing do I do, and how cf te: db I Lie a machine?*" If you .. se a machire for plalr sew ing without machine- rr.ade decorative effects, a stralght siltching machln# will he satis factory. if you do a great deal of sewing that calls for decorative stitching and em hrv kWtt , t UftM machine will !* useitj. A u$ti{ type is the ?wr? ex pensive, ud ywi'slwtild decide whether you doeooufh spec laity --type ?<?x to warrant the added expense. You may he trylsst to decide hetweer. a cabinet unJ a portah;e-trp* machine; Jus* re -r.err.ber that s food cabinet with well s-pported leaves ind stur dy le<s jrres jood sewing sup port and is always ready for use. His Lucky Day Sonsy-- Daddy, do you re member where It was that you ta a met mama" Daddy-- Yes, son. I re call that it was at a party where there were 13 at the table. , "* All Night Sing Set Saturday The Zebulon Lions are spon soring an all night Gospel Sing, September 28, 1963 in the Wake Ion School Auditorium In Zebu lon. The song fest will feature the Dixie Melody Quartet of Durham, Craftsman Quartet of Wilson, the Baker Quartet of Zebulon, and the Woodal Trio of Smithfleld. Advance tickets may be ob tained from any member of the Lions Club, and will be on sale at the door of the Wakelon School Auditorium on Saturday night, September '28, 1963. Proceeds from this affair will be used by the Club for local blind activities. ENGINEERING CIVIL - SA.VTARY - STRUCTURAL Blackmon & Associates HYDRAULICS i DRAINAGE BRIDGES STU DIES - REPORTS EARTH DAMS SEWAGE DISPOSAL STRUCTURES WATER SUPPLY SUB-DIVISIONS SURVEYING Telephone 963-5621 Box 335 1 L BLACKMON PE Four Oaks, N. C. PURE PORK SAUSAGE 3 Lbs. $1.00 SLICED BOLOGNA 3 Lbs. $1.00 SMOKED SAUSAGE 3 Lbs. $1.00 SKINLESS FRANKS 2 LBS. 690 Sweet Rasher 1 Lb. Pkg. BACOI DUKE'S or BLUE PLATE SALAD DRESSING 1 45? r 35* "KING COLE" ALL GREEN ft BUTTER BEANS B 303 Cans MAYFIELD YELLOW CORN "8 99? "LARUTA" - A CORN BEEF Zcans 79C PET MILK m TALL CANS POTATOES " ? "? ? IQW GIANT SIZE TIDE 75* GAINT SIZE FAB w GIANT SIZE DUZ 75' KING SIZE PMK TREND CS< We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities MIDWAY HMO STIBE
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
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Sept. 26, 1963, edition 1
2
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