TEMPLE MARKET Specials Sold Only With Food Order March 1-2, 1963 Large Cans Peas April Showers 2 " 25c V/4 Lb. Bag Vanilla Wafers 23< Fresh Thin F.F.V. Saltine Crackers 15c — 25 Ft. Rolls Reynolds Wrap 29<_ Easy Monday LIQUID STARCH 9c *■»* CLOROX 45< Gallon Colgate TOILET SOAP 6bar* 29c Pillsbury 3 Cans BISCUITS 25c SOUTHERN BELLE 2 LBS. OLEO 29c Fresh Ground 3 Lbs. Hamburger $1.00 Western Round Lb. STEAK 69c End Cut Lb. Poric Chops 47c All Meat Lb. Stew Beef 65c Homemade Lb. SAUSAGE 49c Fresh Dressed Lb. FRYERS 29c I Supper Success j The Emit 4-H Club benefit sup : per, held February 9, has been i termed a success by the members and leaders. A total of $155 was realized. Miss Judy Strickland, president, said the money will be used for buying supplies for the club. The first item to be purchased will be a desk. j Members participating with the | supper were Rowland Strickland, Nancy Strickland, Carolyn Narron, Wanda Narron, Toni Hinton, j Zelma Batten, Jane Vann, Joan Faucette, Kaydene Wil son, Connie Wilson, Ray Wild ‘ er, Rex Wilder, Robert Wilder^ | Cathy Narron, Alan Tippett, Emo gene Glover, Eugene Glover and Linwood Wright. In Magnolia Court Jackie Mitchell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mitchell of Route 4, Zebulon, has been elected a member of the Magnolia Court at Wake Forest College. Members of the court will par ticipate in Magnolia Week festivi ties at the college this spring. Miss Mitchell, a speech major, will be one of two senior attend ants. She is a majorette and is active with the college theater and student government. Magnolia Week consists of a series of activities centered around the arts. Tie tassels together with a string when you wash them and they won’t become matted. m. ' THIS IS THE LAW By Robert E. Lee Jones sent merchandise to Smith under a bill of lading issued by a railroad. The bill of lading, which Jones did not read, contained a printed provision to the effect that the railroad was not to be liable for any amount in excess of $300. The merchandise was lost in trans it due to the negligence of the railroad. The actual value of the merchandise was $1,000.- How much may Jones recover from the railroad? The answer depends upon whether the transaction is an in terstate or intrastate shipment. If the merchandise was shipped from North Carolina to New York it would be an interstate trans action, and Jones would be able to recover only $300. In inter state shipments the common car rier is permitted by contract to limit recovery for loss to a speci fied amount. Mrs. Billie Green and children will arrive here Friday from Pre | toria, South Africa. Billie is here j already recuperating at the home I of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester l Green, after having surgery in a ! Washington, D. C., Hospital. They [ will be here for about two months ! before going to their new home i in Ghana. Society Bills of lading and express re ceipts are not only receipts but also contracts stating the terms of carriage. Acceptance of such by the shipoer constitutes an assent on his part to the contract therein expressed, whether or not it has been read or explained to him. Persons receiving these well known instruments are, therefore, presumed by law to know that they contain the terms upon which the goods are to be carried. If the merchandise was shipped from one point in North Carolina | to another point in North Caroli | na, it would be an intrastate trans j action, and Jones would be able to J recover $1,000. Contract provisions in bills of lading or express receipts limiting the liability of a contract carrier to a specified amount are contrary to public policy and void in North Carolina if the loss is due to the actual negligence of the common carrier. In this State a common carrier cannot by contract limit the amount of damages resulting from its negligence. This is the last of a spring series of articles that have appeared weekly during the past three months. They have been written for the non-lawyer as a public service of the North Carolina Bar Association. Another series will be started in the fall. Household Tips What are the quickest biscuits you can make? Drop biscuits, made with enriched self-rising flour, of course! These crispy crusted morsels are easily turned into breakfast treats, too, in the form of Marmalade Drop Biscuits. Measure 2 cups sifted enriched self-rising flour into bowl. Cut in Va cup shortening -until mixture is crumbly. Add milk (% to 1 cup) to make a thick batter, stirring only until flour is well moistened. Drop by spoonfuls on ungreased baking sheet. Make indentation in top of each biscuit with back of teaspoon. Place 1 teaspoon or ange marmalade in each indenta tion. Bake in very hot oven (450°F.) 10 to 12 minutes. Makes about 1 dozen biscuits. These bis cuits are one of the easiest ways to add extra B-vitamins, food iron and calcium to your family’s diet. These nutrients are added to en riched selfrising flour by the miller. By folding a heavy thick towel and putting it in a paper bag you can have an easy made knee pad. The towel stays clean and when you are finished, you can throw the bag away. The shorter pole—owned by a rural electric cooperative—was built in 1949 to serve a rural home. Then—10 years later—the area became more densely populated and was annexed into a town. That’s when the taller pole was put up by a commercial, investor-owned power company— the same company which would not serve the area when it was sparsely populated. The company and the town said to the co-op, “Get out.” Fair? Hardly. What’s more, it isn’t just the cooperatives who suffer when their mem bers are taken away by these duplicate lines— although it means one less member to share the cost of electric service. All consumers lose. After all, the cost of the unnecessary power company lines is a part of its customers' electric bills. North Carolina’s rural electric cooperatives believe they—and the rest of the public—should be protected from wasteful duplication which makes the cost of electric service higher than it really should be. WAKE FOREST, N. C. Serving more than 4500 homes, churches, schools and businesses in rural Granville, Vance, Dur ham, Wake, Franklin, Johnston • and Nash Counties with LOW COST ELECTRICITY.