Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Dec. 15, 1949, edition 1 / Page 9
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kotk AriitotU ud dhmMm* Ml wwn of dwiaiiii otimam< , ? For th* BIG gift on your lUt-ltw on* lhal win mrIm W ?o?i?foc?k>n-wol, ivtt loot ovor thoto GIFTS FOR MOTHER MOTHER'S OWN SET OF TOOLS ELECTRIC IRONS WAFFLE IRONS ELECTRIC CHURNS VACUUM CLEANERS AUTOMATIC WASHERS ELECTRIC RANGES ALUMINUM WARE SETS GIFTS FOR DAD HAMMERS TOOLS SAWS TOOL CHESTS POCKET KNIVES SHOTGUNS HUNTING COATS SHELLS GIFTS FOR KIDS BICYCLES TRICYCLES WAGONS CARPENTER TOOLS TOY WAGONS, TRUCKS, ETC PING PONG TABLES GIFTS FOR THE FAMILY RADIOS ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS NUMEROUS OTHER ITEMS VALUABLE GIFTS ... From the One-Stop Hardware ! FRANKLIN HARDWARE CO. PHONE 117 MACON THEATRE MATINEES: Friday, 3:00; Satarday, 12:00; Sunday, 2:30 NIGHT SHOWS - 7:00 - 0:00 Thursday-Friday, December 15-16 Richard Arlen, Patrica Morrison, Mary Beth Huglnes Ik "THE RETURN OF WILDFIRE" Saturday, Dec. 17 ? Double Feature Program Red Ryder In "ROLL THUNDER ROLL" Lynn Roberts In "TROUBLE PREFERRED" Sunday-Monday, December 18-19 BMRV 3re * v Bmcacm L mem I BHWFiTzSERHD r 'a?*\ T?P^n?. Tuesday- Wednesday, December 20-21 yvur heart w'n race every p* 0ftka"*Y ft ?.? I OfNNIS O'KEffE i / GAIIRUSSOL / RUKfWlW j 'omaiEBm ? uk m 'Minn 1 tfuu innn wn mv> hMMMM. Roil odd i i i 1 IETWEEN fRE/GNT TERMINALS Of It SURFACE RAILROADS ADO US DERAKT MEKT STORES, INDUSTRIAL HARTS AKD WAREHOUSES, THIS ORDERS ROOM RAIL ROAD, , THE CHICAGO TUHREl COMRANY, CARRIES A TREMENDOUS VOLUME Of TRltOHT, RIUMNG CONGESTION Of TRl TEEMING 'LOOT STREETS ? THOUSANDS Of TRUOUOADS Of GOODS MIT. ITS TRAINS Of MINIATURE fREIGHT CARS, nut* DY ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES, RUN OVER U RULES Of TRACKS TKAT IKTER SECT AT 700 RLAdS AND CROSS UHHR TKE CHICAGO RIVER AT tlEVEK fOINTS. A WOMbtdVl JWUOAt sysTiM-wmmr awm* PAKT IH THt WOM-MHt THROUGH A MAZl Of TVHMLS UHBIR CHICACO'S IVSIHtSS DISTRICT. - . Stake College Hints To Farm Homemakert By RUTH CURRENT (State Home Demonstration Agent) Nylon ? it's popularity is grow ing like Jack's beansta'.k and no wonder, for it is long wear ing and easy to care for. You may wash most nylon garments In your washer, Wash hem in warm water. Because JOil does not cling to or pen etrate nylon, garments clean easily at low temperatures. We recommend a mild soap or det ergent though an all-purpose ane can be used, use a water soltener if your water is hard. Piit fragile items such as hos iery, slips, and panties into a oagi or pillow-slip before put ting in the washer. Rinse ny lons thoroughly. Ny'on fabrics re ain their crisp, fresh look always. Do not put nylons through a wringer or you will find it necessary to iron them. Merely shake your nylons and hang them out straight. They will dry in jiffy time. Some nylons may have to have a light going 'over. They look best If ironed when damp, so fold them in a towel after they are washed to retain mois ture, i hen Iron them as soon as possible. Set your control dial at low or nylon setting. Those scraps of soap which accumu'ate in every household can be put to good use in mak ing a cleaning and scouring paste, ex.ension specialists say. Shave or grind the scraps and dissolve in boiling water. Then add enough whiting or powder ed chalk to make a paste. The so-called Spanish whiting is a fine chalk which cleans without danger of scratching porcelain or? o her surfaces. It usually can be purchased at hardware, paint or drug stores. Whiting may be used as a powder for cleaning but the addition of soap often makes the job easier. State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q. What is the purpose of smoking meat? A. The purpose of smoking is 0 add iiavor as well as to give 1 more desirable appearance to the meat. Smoking also im proves the keeping qualities of meat. The procedure that is gener illy recommended for smoking neat is as follows: After the neat has been removed from ;he brine or dry cure it should 3e soaked in cold water for several hours, scrubbed with a stiff brush and then hung to iry over night in the smoke louse. Care should be taken to prevent the cuts of meat from touching since this will cause streaking. It is possible to smoke meats by either of two nethods. It may be smoked 24 ;o 48 hours at a temperature of approximately 125 to 135 deg. F. rhis will give a light mahogany :olored smoke. If the meat is ;q be stored for summer use t is generally more satisfac tory, however, to smoke it at a ;emperature of 80 to 100 deg. F., it intervals of approximately 5 ;o 10 days, over a period of several weeks. After the meat is season it heavily with black smoked many people like to leason it heavily with black jepper. Q. Is it all right to can meat n half gallon or larger Jars A. Meat should not be can ned in any jar larger than a mart. Pints are even better han quarts. It takes so long a process meat packed in half ralioh jars that some meat is >ver-cooked while there may be cold spcts" within g Jar. In these "cold spots" spoilage bac- ' teria may survive. Q. How can I reeognize fowl pox to my laying flock? A. External pox is recogniz ed in the early stages by the appearance o f blister-like nod u'es on the erposed surfaces of the body, particularly the comb i and wattles. These areas later ; develop into hard scabs. The ] internal type of infection, some- . times called wet pox, forms white to yellowish patches or ; false membranes in the region . of the mouth. When these ] patches are removed a raw , bleeding surface is exposed. ] Mortality is usually not high, j but egg production may be ; markedly decreased. The Chippewa Indians once occupied over 1,000 miles of ter ritory along lakes Huron and Superior in Minnesota Michi- 1 gan, Wisconsin and South Da- 1 KOta. i fatted FdNM Ttabtt For Sal* ikied fekU *111 be received by ' &l Feriat Supervisor, Franklin, tfortH .fcarollna, up to and not ater than 2:00 p. m., January 16, 1060, and opened lmmedlate y thereafter for all live timber narked or designated (or cut ting and all mferthantable dead >linber located <ki an area em gracing about 480 acre* within ;he Little Hurricane Creek Unit, Ifantahala River Watershed, Macon County, Nantahala Nat ional Foreet, North Carolina, ?t:mated to b? 500,000 feet B. M., more or less, of chestnut. Mo bid of less than $3.00 per M will be considered. $500 must be Jeposlted with each bid, to be ippUed on the purchase price, refunded, or retained in part as iquldated damages, according to conditions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids is re served. Before bids are submit ted, fu!l information concern ng the timber, . the conditions )t sale and the submission of ilds should be obtained from ,he Forest Supervisor, Franklin, North Carolina. 015 and D31? c NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NORTH CAROLINA, MACON COUNTY. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a certain deed of trust from Gerald W. Cornelius and wife, Mildred S. Cornelius, to E. P. Stlllwell, Trustee for The Jack son County Bank, dated 2 Jan uary, 1946, and recorded In Book 38, at Page 534, of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust In the of fice of the Register of Deeds Df Macon County, North Caro lina, default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured, and the holder thereof having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale and sell at the Court House door In the Town of Franklin, Macon County, North Carolina, at 12:00 o'clock, noon, on Saturday, 7 January, 1950, at public iMUon, to the high ftrt bidder tor euh, til those certain trieu or parcel i of land, described In and covered by said deed of trust, located In Highlands Township, Macon Cdunty, North Carolina describ ed as follows :i All the lands described in a deed from Rebecca S. Harris to Gerald W. Cornel ius, dated December 21, 1945, and recorded in Deed Book N-5, at page 299 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Macon County, North Carolina. Tliis sale is made subject to all unpaid or d?Ilnqu?nt ttXM against laid property. Thl? the Jth day of DMtmkcr, IMS. E. P. ST1LLWB1X, Trustee D8 ? 4tc ? D29 The Chicago drainage canal is now a part erf the wa erways system that connects that city wih the Mississippi ri.er navi gation sysem. Say: ."I saw it advertised in The Press." USED CARS AND TRUCKS We have a large stock of Used Cars and Trucks on hand that are priced to sell. All of these Cars and Trucks are trade-ins on new Ford Cars and Trucks. Whatever your needs may b: see us before you buy a car. DUNCAN MOTOR COMPANY SALES SERVICE Phone 69 24-Hour Wrecker Service ? OPEN ALL NIGHT ? Phone 69 Franklin, N. C. A Christmas Present we ordered 334 years ago! s Excuse our blushes, but our pride Is show ing. It's a grand and glorious feeling to be headed for the cheery Christmas season with not 1 but 101 bright and shining presents for the Southland. We're talking, of course, about our 101 new streamlined coaches, all-room Pullmans, diners and lounge cars. They've been going into service almost daily since the first one reached Southern Railway tracks last July. Nearly all of these cars? ordered more than three years ago ? will be in our trains by Christmas. Expensive? The price tag reads $1 1 V4 million ! But we enjoy playing this kind of Santa Claus for the Southland we serve. /minT ?? Pr?tid?nt SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 15, 1949, edition 1
9
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