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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1940 ' PAGE TWO THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN Civilian Planes Meet in All-America Air Maneuvers budding Time Is All the Time! Church Services Franklin Methodist Church The Rev. Ivon L. Roberts, Pator (Each Sunday) 10 a. m. Sunday school. - ,11 a; m. Worship .services. 7:30 p.- m. Vesper serviee. ' Presbyterian Church Rev.oJ. A. Flanagan, Pastor Franklin (Each Sunday) 10 a. m. Sunday school. 11 a. m. Worship services. Morrison (Each Sunday) 2:30 p. m. Sunday school. (Kach 2nd and 4th Sunday) 3:30 p. m. Worship services. 'a ' Baptist Church Rev. C. F. Rogers, Pastor JAS a. in. iiible school. 11 a. in. Morning worship. i,:3U r.. in. 13. T. U. and llroth t rliiuid. i 7 . m. Evening worship, j By BEULAH V. GILLASPIE Director, Sealtest Laboratory Kitchen Macon Circuit Rev. J. C. Swalm, Pastor First Sunday, .11 a. m. Union; 2:00 p. in. Hickory Knoll; 7:30 ii m Asburv. . Second Sundav. 11 :00 a. m. Mt. Zion; 2:30 p .in., . Maiden's.; 7 :30 p. m. Patton s. Third Sunday, 11:00 a, m As bury; 2:00 p. in.' Mulberry ; 3:00 p. m. Dryman's; 7:30 p. m. Un ion. Fourth Sunday, 11 a. m. Pat ton's; 2:30 p. m. Maiden's; 7:30 , p. m. Mt Zion. St. John's Catholic Parish Schedule of . Masses: Franklin: 2nd and 4th Sunday,. 8 a. m. Murphy : Every 5th Sunday, 7 a. in. Cherokee: Every 3rd Sunday, 8 a. m. Waynesville: Every Sunday, 11 a. m. Canton: Every 1st Sunday, 8 a. m. FRANKS RADIO & ELECTRIC CO. SALES AND SERVICE Licensed Electric Contractors Singer Parts Agent Phone 1804 McCoy BIdg. Bryant Furniture Co. EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AT REASONABLE PRICES Phone 106 Franklin, N.C COLDS Cause Discomfort 666 For' quick relief from the misery of colds, take 666 Mquid - Tablet - Salve - Noae Dropa Loyal Order of Moose Franklin Lodge, No. 452 Meets In American Legion Hall Every Thursday Night 7:30 O'CLOCK Billy Bry son, Secretary; J. E. Potts & Son Funeral Directors Franklin, N. C. HONEST MERCHANDISE AND SERVICE AT FAIR PRICES JOIN OUR MUTUAL BURIAL ASSOCIATION SOLID OAK CASKETS Ambulance Service CAGLE'S CAFE GRADE WE SPECIALIZE IN Steaks, Chops, Fried Chicken and Fish Let Us Help You With That Hurried Meal or Picnic Lunch A. G. CAGLE, Owner FRANKLIN. N. C WOMACK'S ESSO SERVICE 12 NEW CREAT GASOLINES On Atlanta Highway Washing Polishing t-xpert Lubrication ATLAS TIRES BATTERIES Preston Hot Water Heaters Phone 19 Franklin. N. C ! A ft ' -fwK; .Vi ; V; rl -v 1 - si The greatest aerial armada of privately owned planes ever seen fn this or any other country concen trated in Miami, Fla., recently to hold its annual All-America air races. More than 1,500 civilian planes at tended the meet. Winners included Homer C, Rankin of St. Louis, left, who was awarded the trophy do nated by Bernarr MacFadden, center, and Bobby Lupton of Detroit, right, whose precision stunting won for her the Gimbel air acrobatics trophy. They Keep Trade Channels Open for Britain r .Busiest craft in the European war are the British mine sweepers, whose duties it Is to rid the seas of those" deadly weapons. Here vessels take up positions in an area suspected of having mines hidden below the surface. The mine cable,s are cut, causing them to rise to the surface. Sharpshooters then explode them. Inset: A sailor prepares to throw marking buoys overboard to indicate to vessels that the ares; has been swept clean of mines and is safe for shipping. Boy Scouts And Leaders Are Observing 30th Anniversary The nation's 1,130,000 Cubs. Boy Scouts and their leaders will cele brate the 30th anniversary of the incorporation . of the Boy Scouts of America in a week's observance beginning today (Thursday, Febru ary 8.) Boy Scout Week is the most important week in the Boy Scout calendar and nine million present and former Scouts and leaders will join the celebration which this year has as its theme ''Scouting The American Way". The Scout Program with its Pa trol method and other group 'ac tion features is a "school for citi zenship". Since Scouting provides for democratic group decisions and group action, the eeleDrations throughout the nation will be great ly varied. Each Troop will cele brate the birthday anniversary, in accordance with its ovvn plans. Radio will play an important role in the Boy Scout Week celebra tions linking together, if only for short time, the Scouts in the great rural areas with those in the cities and towns. Sunday, February 11, will be Scout .Reverence Day and in thou sands of churches of every denom ination there will be Scouts attend ing special services. More than half of the nation', 43,368 Cub Packs, Boy Scout Troops and Senior Scout groups are sponsored by the churches and synagogues of Amer ica. Scouts of Jewish faith will hold their special services Friday eve ning, February 9. and Saturday. Special emphasis will be placed upon the twelfth point of the Scout Law which reads, "A Scout is Reverent. He is reverent toward God. He is faithful in his religious duties, and respects the convictions of others in matters of custom and religion." " In many communities Scouts, by Patrols and Troops, will take an Old Scout Census", systematical ly calling at air residences accord ing to pre-arranged planis, to re cord the names and addresses of those who were once Scouts or Scout leaders. Many of these 'Scout Alumni" will be invited to participate in Scout activities dur ing Boy Scout Week. Scouts will wear their uniforms and have special roles and demon strations in public and private school assemblies. Fraternal and civic clubs will have Boy Scouts as their guest speakers who will give first-hand accounts of what Scouiirig means to them. .'aw,.. , .... iSS!JS-w rv Hundreds of Troops and Cub Packs will have special "parents' night" meetings in which the par ents will be participants in some of the activities. Other Troops will have their meeting during Boy Scout Week set aside for Troop Reunions with former members re turning to renew acquaintances and for an evening of fellowship, and fun. - The outdoor activities will also have their part in the celebration where weather conditions permit. There will be camping trips, hikes and outdoor rallies, and. there will be inter-Troop winter sports carni vals where snow and ice conditioas allow. "In those states where Lincoln's Birthday, February 12, is observed as -a school' holiday Scouts will make patriotic pilgrimages to shrines of the "Great Emancipator." Troops will also engage in special ''good turns" during the week to show their appreciation to their sponsoring institutions. They will also participate in Boy Scout Merit Badge Shows, Courts of Honor, Scout Circuses and other similar jndoor activities. The Boy Ccout Movement was founded in America 30 years ago this week. Most of us have watch ed it grow and gain in influence, wijh great satisfaction. It is some thing vital to "The American Way" and through three decades, its service has gained the confi dence of all people. It would be difficult to point to any single quality of , the move ment and say with positiveness, "Here is what makes Scouting great." But in our judgment one of its outstanding contributions to the nation, particularly in these times of world travail, U its simply-worded Twelfth Scout Law. It epitomizes all that we as a people stand for; all that bur fore fathers pioneered for when they were fashioning a safe homeland out of a wilderness. Read its stirring - words. They are worth memorizing and, more than that, they should be lived by afl of. us who have the high privi lege of being Americans. Here is the Twelfth Scout Law: ' A Scout is reverent He is reverent toward God. He is faithful in " his religious duties. and respects the convictions tl others in matters of custom and religion. 'All Americans worthy of the name, all yho believj in jhe Decla. ration of Independence, the Bill of Rights and the Constitution of the United States have an abiding faith in such a principle because it. is their very guarantee that so long as it is a living thing they will al ways be free and independent. Beekeeper Has Work To Do In Mid-Winter Bees are inactive at this seatson of the year, but the beekeeper should not go into hibernation, says C. L. Sams, extension apiarist of State college. Now is a good time to clean and repair equip ment not in use, and new equip ment should be secured and made ready for installation before , the spring rush, he advised. Sams does: not think that' the cold weather this winter will ser iously cripple the beekeeping in dustry in North Carolina: "Most of the colonies are in good shape, and if they are left alone the bees will ' come through," the spe cialist stated. He strongly advised against atM tempting to feed bees during cold weather. It may be possible to slip a comb of honey into the hive during the warm period of a mild day, but if the store of food was sufficient at the start of the winter season, the bees 'will Survive the frigid blasts, Sams declared. On the subject of package bees, or eaged swarms, the apiarist said : "To profitably start hives from packages, they should be secured from six to eight weeks . before the main honey flow begins. "Many beekeepers, use package bees to strengthen weak hives, in which case they need not be bought quite so early. .At this time .of the year such bees must be pur chased from further south, and the price is approxifately "$1 per pound of bees. With a queen included in a three-pound package, this is about 1 3,000 individuals. ''This- is a minimum number of bees that is recommenced for starting a new hive, and they would have to be fed liberally Until early honey plants begin furnishing nec tar." Forest Service Issues New Publication Farmers and landowners of (lie south wilj be interested in a new publication, "Southern Pines Pay," which has just been released by the forest service of the U, S. department of agriculture. Presenting a story of reforesta tion in pictures, the pamphlet of fers outstanding examples of how southern farmers have turned idle farm lands into productive forests. While there is nothing new to the conception that young pines 'lit ?1vtN ftp ht N ;M v, '-'""VWF 1 If limit xTv' t ' Ii,- wwmkoop ' .-v-. "f ..I I.-, jtnufii SAY "pudding" to the men-folks and watch their eyes glisten!" For, a luscious, spicy pudding isn't just an idea tor the Holiday period it's the Xing of desserts for any day of the cold-weather months. Here's one that Is sure to charm the most; sluggish appetite. STEAMED DATE PUDDING WITH SQUR CREAM HARD SAUCE cup. butter ii cup sugar cup brown sugar '. ' 2 eggs' ' Hi teaspoons baking powder 'A teaspoon salt i teaspoon soda IVi cups flour cup buttermilk . teaspoon vanilla 1 cups chopped dates ' to M cup chopped walnuts Cream the butter, add the sugars tan occupy soil too depleted f"r other- crops, that they grow very rapidly, and that after a short period of years the plantations will begin to give financial returns, the approach of this bulletin to the subject of reforestation is distinct ly novel, . . No other region offers greater lossibilities for continuous timber cropping, . and certainly our pines are an extremely important poten tial source of southern prosperity. Copies of "Southern Pines Pay" may be obtained: by addressing the Regional Forester, U. S. Forest Service, Atlanta, G. 1 WAS xhS ' 111! ill 1 1 f HO- HE Will AND "K6WlU. " DENTIST fji' ' Uf YELLeS t. VEU. WITH OOV WHEN SvP-J Ui-A FRANKLIN ELGIN WATCHES At New Lower Prices Elgin Watches have been used by America's most distinguished families since 1 865, GROVER JAMISON Jeweler I TO StRVT AS we 17 I outo inravra- U Advisory Service WITHOUT B. LIGATION. CONSULT US AND LEARN: About our wldo unjo of prlcot. How a ftmlly oh tho fcflco. Why our modern equipment doot not moan high pricos. Why our ionic eoiti no mora than Itawhoro. Wfcy advance decision ra' driiabla. Seek ear advice M 'oral problems. PHONE Court run sealtest Laboratory Kitchen h gradually and cream thoroughly. Add the eggs ana beat wen. mix and sift the baking powder, salt, soda and 23 cup of the flour and add to the first mixture alternately . with the buttermilk. Add the va nilla and fold : la dates and nuts which have been mixed with the remaining 23 cup of flour. Pour into a well-buttered mold, cover and steam for about 2 hours. Servo with Sour Cream Hard Sauce made as follows: . : 4 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons sour cream 1 cup confectioners sugar i,i teaspoon vaullia . Few grains nutmeg Cream the butter, add fup of. the sugar gradually and cream thor oughly. Add the remaining sugar, alternately With the sour cream. Add. vanilla and nutmeg, Serves six to eight, ' SYRUP .',.:., A' process has been perfected whereby over-ripe and cull straw berries can be converted into . a palatable table syrup, with . some, of this product already for sale on the market. HIGHER Local 'market prices' of most farm products averaged higher in mid January than a month earlier, ac cording to the U. S. agricultural marketing service in its latest re port of the price ' situation. i.... f"'lRJi--tJMr Ability, trusrworthlneii, and facilities should be the qualifying factors when the value of a mortu ary service is being considered " Eloquent protestations can never tale the place of the helpful, com forting service provided by our trained staff. Our record of service is Written In the testimony of appreciation of those whose needs and wishei we haye foJtKWIy a.tte,nd,cd. 106 NIGHT PHONE 20
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Feb. 8, 1940, edition 1
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