Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Sept. 10, 1953, edition 1 / Page 5
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Tar Heel wheat (rowers e?tl mate a 1953 yield of 8.800.000 bushels. 5dv(rg? AUTO INSURANCE Carafal driven get protection at "aalaW riak" rate*. A to Z cover age, nonaaaeaaable. Fair, frirndl; claim wrvice ia M Male* and Can ada. Call BANKS FINGER Phone 126 Over A. & P. FARM BUREAU MUTUAL Automobile Insurance Co. HOME OfFICl COLUMBUS, OHIO t Patrolman Reports School Busses Are In Excellent Shape; Drivers Are Announced By Superintendent All 42 of the county's school < busses are In excellent condi- 1 tion, according to an lnspec- I tlon report by Pfc. H. T. Fer-,< guson, of the State Highway 1 Patrol. I< Ten new bus drivers have i been hired this year, County i School Supt. Holland McSwaln . announced this week. They are ! Henderson Roland, Odell Brad ley, N. G. Davis, Claude L. Kim sey, Charles Ferguson, Marshall Fouts, Lloyd E. Estes, Fred Dills, Carl Crisp, and Robert M. Morgan. Other drivers include Lee Dowdle, Marcellus Ivester, Car roll Gibson, Billy Bradley, Har ley Rogers, George Wilson, Edd Cabe, Lawrence Justice, William < Dalrymple, Carl D. McMahan, O. V. Fuller, Wallace Henry, ] Gilmer Setser, Joe Anderson, SPARTAN SPECIAL Dairy Feeds have been re-built and modernized ... to do a better-than-ever job of producing milk at the lowest cost. All first class ingredients ... no fillers! No sifting or separating of "fines". Valuable proteins, minerals and vita mins now in pellets. Crimped oats and pellets add bulkiness and coarse ness that cows love. These feeds are built to produce . . . and priced to sell! t MMM ' U too US NIT ? ?r' "? fSPARTAN jSPEClALf I DAIRY FEED ? " i'wiV ?X W? Xg zmarmmuimu oo.;5 jr i'mkimk ?rioiM,ii - - | f SPARTAN SPECIAL 16% ? 18% ? 20% DAIRY FEEDS 7 Make Lots of Milk V Economy Priced V Extra Palala'ale i Brown & Carson Phone 297 Franklin, N. C. "Researched-Feeds for the Southeast'1 3 ecll Holland, Gus England, Richard Bingham, Frank Soles see, Clyde Crisp, Cleveland Cabe, Georgia H. Young, Claude Roper, Tommy Thompson, Noel 3rant, Cecil Baldwin, Ray Hous ton, Miller Norris, Dan Garland, and Austin Jacobs. Most of the ibove have been driving buses here for several years. Community Sees Coweeta Movie By MISS CAROLYN COCHRAN (Community Reporter) The Patton Community De velopment Organization met September 1 with Erwin Patton presiding. Some 50 were present. A feature of the night was the showing of the movie, ?Waters of Coweeta", by Fred Hannah. Another movie, "South Grows Green" will be shown at the next meeting. The men of the community net yesterday (Wednesday) at the cemetery to erect markers Dn all unmarked graves and started seeding the grounds. P. T. A. Director Gives Plans For 25th Meeting In Candler Plans (or the 25th annual conference of P. T. A. District No. 1, to be held at Candler School, In Buncombe County September 15 were announced this week by Mrs. Weimar Jones, of Franklin, district director. The conference Is expected to attract approximately 300 per sons ? officers of P. T. A.'s, school principals and teachers, and parents ? from Macon, and the other 10 counties In the dis trict. Speakers will include Mrs. T. R. Easterling, of Rocky Mount, president of the N. C. Congress of Parents and Teachers'; Mrs. J. W. Burke, state executive secretary; and Miss Blanche Haley, state field secretary. The program also will be marked by reports, election of officers, and music. Registration will start at 9:30 a. m., and the conference will open promptly at 10 o'clock, Mrs. Jones said. Following ad journment at 1:30, the group will have lunch In the school cafeteria. The Candler P. T. A. has made arrangements, Mrs. Jones said, for high school girls to Sale of Real Estate for Taxes Pursuant to an order of the Board of Aldermen of the Town of Franklin in regular session on August 3. 1953, I will, on Monday, September 14. 1953, at 12:<>) o'clock noon at the courthouse door in Franklin, and thereafter until said sale is completed, sell at public auction in the manner provided by law the property hereinafter described, belonging- to or listed in the names of the persons designated for the town taxes due for the year 1952. in the amounts sec forth with cost of this advertisement and sale' to be a i led: to wit : ? This August 17. 1953. CHAS. O. RAMSEY. Town Tax Collector. Name Acreage Amount Zeb Angel, 1 lot $23.38 J. T. Bailey, Estate, real estate 13.42 I'O. L. Blaine, real estate. .. 9.90 | Frank Burnett, 1 lot 1.10 j Mrs. Dexter Burrell, real estate 16.50 I Nellie O. Calloway, real estate 14.30 I S. W. Enloe & Son, 1 lot.. 44.00 Amelia Fowler, Admrx., 11 lots 88.00 A. Fowler & T.rene Brown, 1 lot 15.40 Mack Franks, 1 lot 43.45 Thad A. Grant, real estate 7.15 T. M. Green, 1 lot 18.26 J. L. Kinsland, Estate, real estate 2.75 Paul Kinsland, real estate 15.95 Macon Flying Service, real estate 142.67 J. J. Mann, Estate, 1 lot.... 3.35 [Verlin McCoy, 2 lots 106.70 I Clarence Phillips, 1 lot 8.60 | Chas. fleecer Estate, .1 lot 2.20 j R. D. Rogers, 1 lot 49.50 Sam L. Rogers. "Estate, ! 1 lot 1.92 jw. T. Russell. Estate, 1 lot 17.60 j Kansas Stewart, real estate 44.00 Carl Tallent, 2 lots 3.30 | Tallulah Falls Ry., 3 lots 23.50 James R. Vinson, real estate 7.97 Paul Ward, real estate 20.90 Mrs. W. G. Wilkie Estate, 9 acres 19.25 Vinnie Woodard, real estate 4.40 Jeff Burston, l lot 3.30 Alvin Moore, 1 lot 2.75 Willie Scruggs, 1 lot 3.02 You're "silting prefly" behind the wheel Take this Bel Air model. First thing you'll noticc is the qual ity of the interior. Rich-looking appointrr ?r.ts. Roomy seats with foam rubber cushions. Turn the key to start the engini and you're ready to go. You can see all around You look out and down through a wide, curvcd, one piece windshield. The pano ramic rear window and big side windows provide a clear view in all directions. You get more power on less gas That's because Chevrolet's two great valve-in-head engines are high-compression engines. In Powerglide* models, you get the most powerful engine in This demonstration was worth many hundreds of dollars to me! I thought cn'y a higher-priced car would siiiJ me. 2j? then 1 found out how much more C Sevroie} offered for how much less! Chevrolet's Se'J ? the new 115-hp. "Blue-Flame." Gear shift mojels offer the advanced 108-h.p "Thrift-King" engine. Biggest brakes for smoother, easier stop: An easy nutlje on th; pedal brings smooth, positive response r ?right now! Chevrolet's im proved brakes are the largest in the low-price field. It's heavier for better readability You're in for a pleasant sur prise at the smooth, steady, big-car ride of this new Chev Let us demonstrate all the advantages of buying a Chevrolet now! MORI PEOPLE BUT CHEVROLET! THAN ANT OTHER CAR I \ rolet. One reason is that, model for moJel, Chevrolet will weigh up to 200 pounds more than the other low-priced cars. You get greater getaway with the new Powerglide* A lot finer performance on a lot less gas. That's what you get with the new Powerglide automatic transmission. There's no more advanced automatic transmission at any price. A demonstration will show you that Chevrolet offers just about everything you could want. Yet it's the lowest-priced line in the low-price field. ? Combination of Powerglide auto matic transmisiion and 115-hp. "Blue-Flame" engine optional on "two-Tin" and Bel Air modeh m extra cok. And it's the lowest-priced BURRELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC. Phone 123 East Main Street Franklin, N. C care for the small children of parents attending. She added that the state of ficers and district directors will be available, after lunch, to P. T. A. presidents and others for individual crfhferences. This Week With Macon County Agents By Mrs. Florence S. Sherrill i Home Agent i A lot of material comes to the home agent's desk. Some of it is kept, some is read and then promptly thrown into the waste basket. However, the following article, written by Helen Gregg Green, ' who writes for the National Kindergarten Association, was opened, read, and kept. Now I would like to pass it along j through this column to all of i you parents: When we recall our younger days, do we remember the spankings, the scoldings, the exhortations, as helping us to comprehend what would be best for us to do and to be? No, it is rather our parents' examples, their senile admonitions, the wisdom they taught us in one or two kind, helpful, almost cas ta 1 sentences thatJ come to mind. Bringing their philosoph ies into everyday conversation and living carried more weight than high-tensioned "don'ts" and stern commands. But what about those parents who forget their children are liable to become miniature re flections of themselves? Of I what are parents thinking ? or are they thinking? ? when they make such statements as the one I recently overheard: "Jon, stop lying to me! You can't outlie me. no matter how hard you try." One of the most bril liant women in the county said this to her child. This mother writes interviews, columns, pro files. and she records events at the Unitetj Nations meetings. There is no denying her fine ability, BUT she is not a far seeing parent. So. reader friend, if you're not a college graduate, don't worry too much. Often, the self educated mother and dad with common sense and the under standing of children, gained from careful reading and ob servation, are miles ahead of some parents with a Master's degree or even a Ph. D. when j it comes to rearing their little ones. Another college graduate re lated before a group of friends, in a half-amused, 1-thought nothing-of-it manner, "Sam doesn't like to deliver his pa pers! Last week he dumped them on a vacant lot across the street!" My dad frequently comment j ed, "Children must be taught the fundamentals! It isn't fair to the child to be offhand about actions which, if continued, will develop lowered standards of behavior. One of my associates in vol unteer work taught in two of the most fashionable and ex pensive private schools in the country. Numbers of her schol ars. she said, told her with ? smart-aleck" pride of having stolen things from the five-and ten-cent stores. Pray, what kind d:' ' entertainment" is this in which children from some of the upper-bracket homes are indulging? As she said, the trend for years among a considerable proportion of young people of every financial group has been, ?Anything you can get away; with is all right!" What a sad state of affairs it is when the world, including our wonderful U S A . must have an element : in it which causes it to become '.?si and less stable, when cor ruption is rampant in wide cir cles. when we find bribery ac cepted by certain politicians and top athletes, and cheating is not unknown even in some of our finest educational insti tutions We must get back to our good old traditions, teaching "first things first" to all of our chil dren ? the commonplace decen- . cies, high principles and ideals. I and the fine spiritual values. Let us, those of us who have let the dust collect on the fam ily Bible, wipe it off and make its reading a day-in, day-out habit. Dorothy Thompson writes, "We can't teach morals without religion." Yes, we must teach our boys and girls about, Ood, ?bout the good life with the fine divi dends it pays In a clear con science, and the right to look life in the face and say, "I'm living up to the best of my understanding." And, mind you, Mother, Dad, we can do it by being and do- , lng those worthwhile things ourselves. There Is no other way. | Legal Advertising LAND EXCHANGE NOTICE Mrs. Ethel Brown has applied far exchange under Act of March 3, 1925 < 43 Stat. 1215), offering 80 acres of land in Ma con County. North Carolina, on the waters of White Rock Branch of Tessentee Creek, ad joining national forest lands and the lands of J. Carpenter, in exchange ior not to exceed an equa'. value of national for est timber on Cane Creek. Holly Branch and Amnions Creek of The only newspaper in the world devoted exclusively to Macon County is The Franklin Press. EARN $40 TO $200 A WEEK In The Field of Beauty Culture 25,000 BEAUTICIANS Needed This Year Men and women, aces 16 to 60 Complete six months course $100 Guaranteed Positions Write us for information South Eastern College Of Beauty Culture 301 E. Trade St. Phone 2-7568 Charlotte, N. C. FOR PLUMBING And HEATING Call W. G. HALL Phone 397 Chattooga River, Macon County, North Carolina. Persons claiming said proper ties or having bona fide objec tions to such application must file their protests with the Reg ional Forester, U. 8 Forest Service, 50 Seventh Street, N. E , Atlanta 5, Georgia, before October 10, 1953. S10? 4tc? Ol GASOLINE COSTS... THE SAME, BUT YOU GO FARTHER ON 18 GALLONS WHEN YOU DRIVE THE NEW //ero . Owners of the new Aero Willys equipped with over drive, according to a na tional magazine, report aver aging 27.3 miles per gallon. Aero Willys have delivered up to 35 miles per gallon. Yon can obtain top perform ance with regular grade gasoline in the AERO WILLYS See Your Willys Dealer Today Macon Willys Co. Phone 3i Franklin, N. C. ATTENTION! If you are planning to build a new house or remodel the old one, we axe at your service. We are equipped to do all Cabinet work on the job, including louver doors, v-panel doors, raised panel doors, etc. Our cabinets are of dado and mortice and tenon construction, and are guaranteed to be of the best in workmanship and design. We do separate cabinet Jobs. Free estimates given. BEFORE YOU Bl lLI), SEE OR WRITE LEE G. KEENER GNEISS, N. C. MORE FLAVOR PER POUND and thafs sound buying , ladies! J
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1953, edition 1
5
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