Page Two Wakelon Food Market Dial 4781 FINK SALMON No. 1 can 43c 2 for 85c DOLE CRUSHED PINEAPPLE Chunks 28c 2 for 55c Crushed 28c 2 for 55c GRIFFIN’S LIQUID POLISH 1 for 13c 2 bottles 25c POPCORN 10 oz. can 1 for 15c 2 for 29c (FROZEN BABY LIMAS SEABROOKS FARMS 12 oz. package 29c PILLSBURY & DUFF’S HOT ROLL MIX 125 c 2 for 49c LAHOMA BLACK EYE PEAS No. 2 can 15c 2 for 29c LEGRANDE TOMATOES NO. 2 can 13c 2 for 25c NORTHERN TISSUE 3 for 25c PANTRY SHELF MEATS TREET 12 oz 39c CHOPPED HAM 12 oz 49c BEEF STEW 20 oz. 53c CORNED BEEF 12 oz. 43c VIENNA SAUSAGE 19c CORNED BEEF HASH 10 oz. 53c ROAST BEEF 12 oz. 49c CHILI WITH BRAINS 16 oz. 29c PRANKS IN GLASS f oz. 39c Stock your pantry with these time saving pantry shelf meats. Complete line of Bird’s Eye and Seabrook Farm FROZEN FOODS Visit our Diary Depart ment for complete line of dpiry products and pre packaged meats. This, That and the Other Down in the fenced lots where the Antone sheep stay is a very small black lamb. It looks odd among its white relatives and Mrs. Antone says she has no idea why it is black. I told her that there’s an occasional black sheep in the best families. However, this one’s mother loves it; and sometimes the ewe rejects her offspring if it is off color. Some days ago I read of a “grain- 1 ery’’ which is planned for a near by town. The news was good, but the spelling seemed peculiar. I had never known this word spelled other than granary, and in my childhood it always meant a place to stoife wheat. Corn was put into the cornhouse, not a crib, as in this section, leaving the gran ary for wheat. Reference to the dictionary taught me that grainery is the southern word for the one I knew, and has the same mean ing. Although most economical I lay no claim to being an economist. But I do know there’s something wrong somewhere when I have to pay six cents a pound for potatoes while the Government is having thousands of tons of them destroy- j ed. Good potatoes, which farmers have been paid for raising and which they are now offered at one cent a hundred pounds for use as fertilizer. The subject of crop sub sidies is highly complex and prob ably no one understands exactly how it should be managed; but I am quite sure it is at present being mis-managed. ' For years I have wanted to hook a rug, and at last the time has ar rived when a beginning has been made. So far, it is a small begin ning. Recent magazine articles have urged making rugs of many kinds braided, knitted, crochet ed, appliqued or shirred—and have given directions. The Coun try Gentlewoman told us to cre ate masterpieces. Woman’s Day does not set our sights that high, but insists on our doing some- j thing about rugs. My effort is towards a very simple hooked one;! the kind which requires narrow j strips of cloth pulled through bur lap with a hook to make short loops. I am not attempting any thing more difficult than a stripe and am not yet skillful in hooking; but, at least, there is the satisfac tion of working toward a long-de- | sired goal. Though never expect ing to rival what has been done on the rug line by Mrs. Zollie Cul pepper or my sister Annie, I may yet get to where one can tell what the thing was meant for. And a nice result is that a lot of practi- PH I L-ETT OIL CO. Distributor ESSO PRODUCTS Kerosene for Home Heating and Tobacco Curing Fuel Oil Tanks & Guages Call 2251 or 2491 Avon Privette & Sidney Eddins Zebulon, N. C. DANCE ROUND AND SQUARE Men: SI.OO Ladies Free Each Saturday Night at 8 til 12 p.m. BUS STATION - ZEBULON Phones 2461 3401 The Zebulon Record By Mrs. Theo. B. Davis cally worthless stuff will be used to do some good. In the years since a throat con dition prohibits my trying to sing often, I have listened closely to the words of hymns as others sing, and have found in it both pleas ure and profit. Sunday before last , when they sang Whittier’s “Dear Lord and Father of Mankind” I i paid closest attention, because that is one of my special favorites. They i all seemed to say one word incor j rectly and I couldn’t get it off my j mind without opening the hymnal to see what was wrong. The fault was neither choir’s nor congrega tions. Some editor had cherish ed a notion he could improve on the poet’s composition and made a change. Instead of “Breathe through the heat of our desire Thy coolness and Thy balm” that line repd, “Breathe through the pulses of desire.” For me the loveliest part of the hymn is spoiled. Many times I have listened I have felt the easing of tension and the rest that comes from listening to the “still, small Voice of calm.” And I love the contrast of fevered heat i with coolness and balm. Besides, the way Whittier wrote it is more | poetic and scans better. Try it; Breathe through the heat —of our—de-sire. Now read Breathe through the pul-ses of—de-sire, and you’ll see what I mean. Oh, well; some of us think we can im prove anything and everything we come across. If you would like to pay a trib ute to the memory of Abraham Lincoln, whose birthday anniver | sary is next Sunday, it might be done by carefully reading and pondering over the quotation given j below. I don’t know when he wrote it; but it is as true and as much needed today as ever in our nation’s history. “You cannot bring about pros perity by discouraging thrift. You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong. You cannot | FRYERS for sale MASSEY'S HATCHERY PS help the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer. You can not further the brotherhood of man by encouraging class hatred. You cannot help the poor by de stroying the rich. You cannot es tablish sound security on borrow ed money. You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than you own. You cannot build char acter and courage by taking away man’s initiative and independence. You cannot help men permanent ly by doing for them what they could and should do for them selves.” HOPKINS CHAPEL We are glad to have the fol lowing visitors at church Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. John Foster, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riggens, John nie Foster, Jean and Bobby Rig gens, and Miss Elsie Doyle. Mr. and Mrs. James Williford have moved to Bethany Commun ity. They are living in an apart ment at the home of Mr. Willi ford’s mother. Mrs. Viola Nowell visited her mother, Mrs. Lucy Hopkins, Sat urday afternoon. On Sunday af ternoon, Mrs. Hopkins was visited by Mr. Charlie Rogers and sons, Vaiden, Charles, and Darnell, from Morganton. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Hamlet of Sandy Creek visited Mr. J. O. Pearce and family on Saturday. We welcome Mr. Carl Baker and family into this community j and invite them to come to church. They have moved to the farm of Mr. Eugene Mitchell. Mr. Hoyle Bunn of Durham vis ited Mrs. Iris Temple Sunday. On our sick list this week are Mrs. Roxie Bunn, Mrs. Ralph Mitchell, and Mr. Frank Bunn. Mrs. Lyndell Denton and Mr. Elite Beauty Salon Mrs. Frank Kemp, Owner Miss Susan Stallings, Manager Miss Lillie Ferrell, Assistant Phone 4641 Zebulon BALE SHUCKS FOR SALE Uj CO Live stock and poultry do better on a balanced feed. Bring us your grain and we will O X Ub show you how to make a low Cm priced feed with Wayne conse crate at low cost. We mix it for you. =n o (A JO uj Lucas Milling Co. Zebulon, N. C. qq m BALE SHUCKS FOR SALE ZEBULON AIRPORT 2 Miles North on Hiway 264 DIAL 3291 - ZEBULON J. G. Bunn & Owners Friday, February 10,1950 and Mrs. Robert Doyle visited their parents, the G. S. Doyles, on Sunday. Mrs. Vernon Perry visited her sister, Mrs. Carl Baker, on Sunday. Mr. Troy Mayes of Cape Hatter as visited his mother, Mrs. Roxie Bunn, during the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. John Perry, and Phyllis Ellington visited Mr. Sydney Har ris at Veterans’ Hospital in Fay etteville Sunday. We extend sympathy to Mrs. Madie Ann Perry in the death of her foster father, Mr. Jim Powell. Many of Roxie Bunn’s relatives and friends visited her Sunday. Bonita Bunn, Mrs. Lillie Bunn, Mrs. Flossie Perry and daughter, Elsie, and Mrs. Linda Williams vis ited Mrs. W. R. Bunn Wednesday of last week. Miss Bettie Lou Bunn and her friend went to Rolesville Sunday night. Hopkins Chapel W. M. S. will meet at Mrs. Jesse Bunn’s on Sat urday night at 7:30. Iris POOLE WELDING SERVICE Phone 4262 Welding and Radiator Repair Auto Repair All Repairs on All Kinds of Farm Equipment All -Steel Truck Bodies and Trailers Highway 264 - Wakefield ATLANTIC SERVICE STATION We Never Close GAS & OIL EXPERT WASHING AND GREASING FIRESTONE TIRES Always Ready to Serve You