Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / July 7, 1955, edition 1 / Page 3
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\OA/iY TOTAL SAV//V6S At>> ? ///> 70G#?A7?/< SAYM& And when you odd the S&H Green Stomp* you get at C ' ' Drr.e to your savings . . . you'll find you've really Saved Double! U. S. Gov't. Inspected Serve With Ccno'.-d Sweet Pototoe? . . . Rib End PORK ROAST ?? 39c Serve With Slices of Fried Apples . . . Loin End PORK ROAST - 45c From Corn-Fed Porkers . . . Economy Cut PORK CHOPS - 35c 4 ? 19* Thick end Smooth . . . Thrifty Moid Golden Cream Sty le CORN ! ?2 - 27c Serve Boked or Candied . . . Durand Sweet Potatoes 2!s Made From the Finest Fruits . . . Quality Tonctor Pork! Choice, Carefully Trimmed . . . Center Loin PORK CHOPS" 79c Tender and Good . . Center Rib PORK CHOPS" b*c Tasty ond Meaty, Full of Flovor . . Country Style Pork BACKBONES > 39c Flavorful and Tender! ARGO PEAS 2)03 Can* flEl if Easy on the Meat Budget 12-Oz Armour's TREET 35c For Cooling Summer Salads! Snow Cap RED SALMON . ?fe Fresh Fruit Flovor . . . Dixie-Home No. 2 Orange JINCE 3 35 c For Quick Casserole Dishes . . . Thrifty Moid TQHATOES 2 "ST 23c Old Virginia Apple Jelly 2 t 25' Smooth as Velvet . . . Dixie-Home MAYONNAISE * 25' For All Cooking, Baking and Frying! / Swift Jewel Shortening 3 & 6^' Juicy Large Size Sunkist LEMONS 33' DOZEN Fancy Tender Fresh Green BEANS 10< POUND Chicken of the Sea TIM FISH 33c No. Vi Can Playmates Sweet Mixed PICKLES 16-Oz. Jar 23c Swift's Dog Food PARD 2 d 2Sc End Pie Crust Failurr Use CRISCO 3 ? 87c Peanut Butter PETER PAN 12-Oz Jar 43c Easy to S?rv?.... Bunker Hill Brown Qf?y J gMf ?. 53c Truly all Purpose Shortening BAKERITE 3 ? 75c Precreamed to Blend Easier SPRY Shortening 3 Can 87c Wilson's Certified Meats MOR 12-Oz. Can 35c Corn Beef Hash 16-Oz. Cant 29c Vienna Sausage 35c 4-Oz. Cans Ubt>y'? strained Baby Foods * 6 j~ 59c Bake o Pi? for Dessert . . . Lucky Leaf Cherry Pie Riling ' 34c For Your Favorite Pizza Recfpe . . . Hunt's TOMATO SAUCE - 9c AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT In Most Stores Chmmt Stwm m Tou'n a pleasant place to shop! ?B- .. !L - L 1 ' m]JlU? Jiabbliu' About How It's All Over Now "Daddy's beard's in the waste- 1 basket," Is the method my learned and loquacious two-and-a-half-year- ' : old youngster, Steve, uses to in- 1 form anyone who cares to listen I that the Franklin Centennial is' all over. And that's an improvement for him. With the timed disappear ance of my mustache and "mut ton chops'' i the wife greeted me at the front door with a razor in the dying hours of the cele brations it took a couple of days I for Steve to shake off the ten dency to point at me when I arrived for lunch and ask his mother, "Who's that man?" Through a series of gestures i faintly resembling shaving) and some fatherly lectures Uhe birds arid bees come next) i finally con vinced him the old man was part of the homestead. His "Daddy's beard's in th?> wastebasket" bit followed. By next week I should be fully reinstated at the kitchen table. But, now that it's over, I miss | : all the hullabaloo that went with I sta8ing the Centennial. Things i are just dull, that's what! They've .even carted away the "caUboose". , and save for an excess of chewing gum wrappers blowing around and some beards (couldn't get 'em to giow 'em for a while and now jcant get 'em to cut 'em off) the . whole thing is as wisp and elusive j as a puff of cigarette smoke, it s j already becoming hard to remem ber actually what did take place [during the three days of festivi ; ties. j Probably what I miss most of I all is that natty derby hat I wore I for more than three months. Aside from battling a constantly itchv scalp, that derby to me was the Centennial all wrapped up into one felt bundle. As the first hat ever worn, it turned me into a gentleman of the first order 'for years I have been a second or ' even third'. For that I am thank full I learned what it was like to leally be polite to everyone, all be cause of that derby; Tip it to the men and bow and sweep it to the ladies. That can only be done properly with a derby. You'd feel j mighty stupid bowing with a sum mer straw or porkpie, but the old j faithful derby is the key to cour tesy? at least as far as I'm con cerned. I Even now, when walking down the street, I find myself having to fight off the urge to leach for the now-absent derby and bow to the ladies. * * * AND I'LL ALMOST BET HE CAN MOO, TOO We had our slip really showing during the Centennial ? the news paper that is. Ar.d at any other time but then thanks to the confusion) half the population would have laugh ed us out of town. j This fluff concerned a bull a j real oddity by Franklin Press engineering. ; Through proofreading error it was reported that said bull, a' ro bust young turf-pounder with the sterling (name of Belmont View Primer King, "has a production record of 10,011 pounds of milk and 457 pounds of fat . " Of all the newspapers in the world, The Franklin Press has to be the one to come up with a , milk-giving bull. How this got by us is easil.v i explained. The milk record was | the bull's mother and the slip of i "he" rather than the obviously j ; correct "she" put us in the glaring , spotlight of error. There's consolation, though, ill knowing we didn't put the bull j in the position of having had a i calf. 1 KEB IS OUT THIS riME TO END PARIS The unpredictable Zeb Angel Is kt it again. You will recall that it was Zeb who set the Sunday afternoon carriage trade agog a couple of months back by appearing on Franklin's conservative Main Street wearing a pair of Bermuda, shorts. On the fourth, Sir Zeb was again on the street and again flabbergasting the motoring pub tic. He was wearing those same old Bermuda shorts, but i Paris fash ion experts, please note) this time his accessories included a black Stetson and combat boots. "Or Zeb knows all about thes? styles," he explained, his jaw drooping for a wise wink of thtt eye. ANNUAL FARMERS FEDERATION PICNIC SATURDAY, JULY 9TH 10 A. M. East Franklin School ? ? ? Panhandle Pete AND THE FARMERS FEDERATION STRING BAND FEATURING Joe Franklin ? Jimmy Buchanan ? Darryl Petty FREE WATERMELON FREE LEMONADE $10.00 PRIZE 1 FOR BEST LOCAL ACT Other Prizes For Largest Truckload Of Picnickers And Contest Wiqners ? ALL CHOIRS, MUSICIANS, SINGERS AND DANCERS ARE ESPECIALLY INVITED 'Boy, look at those OK Used Cars!" ). men V AT Work n For the "best show" on the road, your ticket is the red tag that identifies an OK Used Car. Attention-getters for performance as well as looks, OK Used Cars are thoroughly inspected and scientifically reconditioned. They are dealer warranted in writing at no extra cost! Sold only by an Authorized Chevrolet Dealer 4: Look for the red fctTogf BURRELL MOTOR COMPANY, Inc. PHONE 123 Franklin, N. C.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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July 7, 1955, edition 1
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