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FRIDAY, MAY 1153 5- THE DAILY TAR H2SL
P4R THASSi
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. -r. i , processors inrouguoQi uie souuiland toy leaturins Dixie-made
products for Dixie homemakers. Southern cooks, especially, will recognize these famous names brands of top-quality that have
been used m everyday meal planning since Grandma was a girl. It's stock-up time down South, with well-known products
specially priced during Colonial's bis "Made In Dixie" sale. Save todav and ovprr vm ttl tnnA l;ii : v,
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shop at CS!
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MADE IN GREENVILLE, S. C. NEW LAUNDRY PRODUCT, PRICED LOW AT COLONIAL
l-j i :i iljiji if,,r jr- wg l y m.. vm i o
MADE IN PLANTS THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH SOUTHERN DAIRIES "AUTOCRAT"
mJ xi- j l, j i, i l ...... 1 1 i vy E-. I
UUM VllKilNIA APPLE ORCHARDS CS PURE SWEET
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APPLE ORCHARDS CS PURE SWEET
mm gam
ficffswmp fHTFf?5Ttl I 7
-TOPPING IWMirr'fT )
7-OZ. CAN V'bf I I I
V g BY TIIE PIECE SUCED
GilZi
GilllTOrJ
17-GZ.
I niv e
Our Pride 3-Layer Fruit
cipness sans
Baked In
Charlotte!
BIG 3-LB.
SIZE
Garner's Blackberry or Dewberry
LHIililjj Ijj Us
Made In FT 12-OZ. n m
VlSEIi' Winston-Salem! jARS Jc
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MADE FRESHJ
SOLD FRESH
CHEF'S
PRIDE
u. :rwc
CUP
8-OZ. jTi
1-LB.
CUP
2c
10-OZ. PKG. 25c
10-OZ. PKG. 25c
10-OZ. PKG. 23c
2 io-oz. pkg. 33c
Other Frozen Food Values . .
SEABBOOK FARMS FRESH-FROZEN
SEABROOK FARMS FRESH-FROZEN
DIIOCCOLS SPEHOS
SEABROOK FARMS FRESH-FROZEN
UllUY LIL1I1 BE&TiS
SEABROOK FARMS FRESH-FROZEN
TEHPEH PEHS
SOMERDALE FRESH-FROZEN
GOHMOItf-TIIE-COD ' 2 pkgs. 2 ears 33c
SOMERDALE FRESH-FROZEN
BHB LIMA BEAFiIS 2 10-oz. 33c
CUT TEFIDSE GOOIi 2 iwz.. 33c
isTifWERl OIUlffifGE ' JBICE a-oz. I7c
CUT' GQEETJ DELOGGOLI- 2 io-ol 33c
Dulany Fresh-Froxen Wordbook Lima
rare ;n 5). ss (p)c
Serrc wilfc Chicken! Oceanspray Cranberry
S3 2
Headless and Drawn
VJ EI I T I lU G F I S H.
LBS. )C
Ocean-Fresh Seafoods
-fRESG? FAWCy RIPS SfLfgffJ
I I I ' J
u
01
( -3
LBS.
EXTRA LARGE FLORIDA
FOR
FANCY HARD HEAD
U. S. NO. 1 NEW CROP
( I m IIIIIMI jy
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pncciiic jugs
2
G
LBS.
BrocUs Marshmallow Candy
Vacaum-Type (-Gallon Capacity
Two Types as Shown
LIMITED SUPPLY -GET
YOURS TODAYl
YOU&
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WITH S.OO PURCHASER, , ,
SSI J1PraMTTFc(?
ViWll Chattanooga!
13-OZ.
PKG.
Cleanser
R 22
25
CANS
Swift's
TO TO "Df?
12-oz.
CAN
Shortening
sr?
3-LB.
CAN
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e - lUMkr .)
.r:.i,vf- ryr .at. ;
WHITEHOUSE APPLE CIDER
WIHEGAI1 qt. 19c
REDGATE PORK AND
BlilHIS 2 1-lb. 21c
MEAT TENDEREZER
ADOLPB'S ' jar 49c
OUR PRIDE SANDWICH
5 HEAP . 24-oz. 20c
MILD AMERICAN
CHEESE - lb. 17c
MARY KITCHEN ROAST BEEF
if H S II 1-LB. CAN 43C
G-E 75 OR 100 WATT LIGHT
DULDG ' each 20c
ALL-FISH CAT FOOD
TABBY can 12c
BIG TIME ALL-BEEF
BOG IT00B 15-oz. 19c
PARSON'S SUDSY HOUSEHOLD
liLZLZcnin pt. i5c
TOILET SOAP
3 REG. pv r
BARS 2C
SOAP POWDER
LGE.
PKG.
SWIFT'S CANNED
IKlnuDiincEns
G9c
10-oz.
CAN
Fresh
Atlanta!
MARGARINE
Gel 10 Can Free!
DOG FOOD
Gala Baked Ham Slice
1 two-inch thick ham slice, uncooked 1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 cup CS pineapple juice Whole cloves
2 cup brown sugar
Cut slashes in the fat edge of the ham two inches apart. Insert cloves in the
fat. Place ham slice in shallow baking dish or casserole.' Pour in pineapple
juice. Mix brown sugar with mustard and spread over meat. Bake in moderate
oven, 350 degrees, 2 hours. Cover pan for first half hour. Spoon juice over
ham two or three times during baking. Remaining juices may be thickened
and served over the ham, if desired.
For specific recipes, home ma king or cooking information, write to met Nancy
Carter, Director of Home Economics, Colonial Stores, Inc., P. O. Box 43S8,
Atlanta, Ga.
MRS. MARIE KIRCHAUSEN,
German mother of Berlin born
Pvt. Carl Kirchausen, 27, the
first American POW to be re
leased by Reds at Panmunjom,
wraps a package for her son, in
Berlin whom she has not seen in
13 years. Carl's father fled Ger
many with the boy during the
Nazi persecution of the Jews
shortly before World War II. Af
ter a brief stop in England, they
went to the U.S. where Mr. Kir
chausen died during the great
war. Carl was drafted into the
U.S. Army in 1950 and spent 2
years in a North Korean . prison
camp. Mrs. Kirchausen hopes to
come to America to see her son.
NEA Telephoto.
7952 Grads
Plan Reunion
Here June 6
The Baby Class of 1952 of the
University will hold its first reun
ion Saturday, June 6 during Com
mencement reinaugurating an
event that has not occurred since
before World War II.
Class President Archie Myatt,
High Point, and Vice-President Al
bert House. Hobgood. have an
nounced plans for the event which
will include registration in Gra
ham Memorial from 12 noon until
3 o'clock; golfing and swimming
privileges and tours of the new
School of Business Administration
and Health Center from 3 until 5
o'clock; A reception with deans
and members of the University ad
ministration from 5:30 until 6:30 at
Kessing Pool; and a banquet in the
South Room of Lenoir Hall at 7
o'clock.
Following the banquet there will
be informal get-togethers among
members of the class.
Accommodations will be availa
ble for any who can remain in
Chapel Hill for the enitre Com
mencement weekend, Myatt said.
Members of the planning com
mittee for the reunion are Chair
man Albert House, Julian Alber-
ghotti, Charlotte; John Foust, Lex
ington; John Dortch, Chapel Hill;
Mary Nell Boddie, Durham; Jim
Mclntyre, Ellerbe; and Nat Mag-
ruder, Sarasota, Fla.
Photo Exhibit Is
In Planetarium;
Features Egypt
The Morehead Planetarium has
a photographic exhibit, "Egypt,"
now on display. It will continue
through next Friday.
"Egypt" contains the most re
cent photographs of remaining art
monuments from an Egyptian cul
ture that flourished for 3,000 years
before Christ. The exhibit is based
on the photographic essay, "Art
of Egypt," published in Life last
winter. The exhibit, however, is
greatly enlarged in scope, and in
cludes much material not before
published. The showing here was
assembled under the direction of
W. C. Hayes of the Department of
Egyptology at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art.
"Egypt" includes some 50 pho
tographs by Life photographer
Eliot Elisefon, taken while he was
on assignment in the Nile Valley.
The subject matter is from the Old
and New Kingdoms, and ranges
from the majestic simplicity of the
Step Pyramid of King Djoser
(2780-2761 B. C.) to the Great
Temple of Hathor at Dendera,
which was built during the first
century B.C. under the Roman Em
peror Augustus.
A series of three panels is devot
ed to several unusually fine reliefs
uncovered in 1941, and not hitherto
widely known. The photographs
are distinguished by their clarity,
and they convey a sense of scale
often lacking in photographs of
the colossi of ancient Egypt.