Newspapers / The Franklin Press and … / Jan. 26, 1956, edition 1 / Page 9
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1 fftraklitt f fe## ?If|* JRaconian SECOND SECTION Franklin, N.C., Thursday, January 28, 1956 38 Make Union Honor Listing Thirty-eight pupils made the honor roll at Union School for the grading period Just ended, it has been announced. By grades, they are: First: Jane Hastings. Brenda BolLck. Helen Orlbble, Sarah Mae I Mann, Ronnie Ledford, Barbara Jean McClure, and Sylvia Murphy, i Second: Charles Dowdle, Dearl Prince, Bennle Sanders, Jean ' Shields, and Linda Owenby. ! Third: Mavis Dowdle and Olenn I Fitzgerald. Fourth: Joyce Cloer and Sue Sanders. Fifth: Phylis Sutton and How ard Johnson. Sixth: Ann Cabe, Betty Sue Williamson. Betty Cloer, Ethel Sorrells, Sylvia Ledford, Shirley Sorrells, Olivia Carpenter. Delma Carpenter, and Barbara Medlin. Seventh: Ida Mae Ramey. Al ien? Williamson, Patricia Shope, Dorothy Stockton, and J. B. Woody. Eighth: Virginia Ouffie, Linda Hyatt, Kathryn Ann Jones, Mary Jo Henderson, Lana Orlbble, and Betty Jean Ramey. Tough jobs demand a ' Universal 'Jeep' A 4- Wheel-Drive Universal 'Jeep' takes you to the job, wherever it is? on the road or off! This rugged performer carries men and equipment over the high way in conventional 2-wheel drive. Then, when work calls for travel off the road? through mud, sand or snow, up hill or down? you shift a single lever for the extra traction of 4-wheel drive. With power take off, or hydraulic lift, the Universal 'Jeep' does an almost endless variety of jobs. To find out what it can do for you, ask for a demonstration. 4-WHEEL-DRIVE % Taa|| UNIVERSAL WILLYS... world's largest makers if 4-NkHl Drive vehicles Get a demonstration now! Tractitn. 4-wheel drive gives the extra trac tion for traveling up steep grades or broken ground. The 'Jeep' is built to stand up and take it in tough usage. Mobile power. With power take-off, the Uni versal 'jeep' provides mobile power for oper ating welders, compressors, generators and many other kinds of specialized equipment - --JWI ? Hydraulic lift With hydraulic lift, the 4-wheel drive 'Jeep' operates graders, scrapers, post hole diggers and most3-point hitch implements. Now a 'Jeep' with longer wheelbase-the new model CJ-6. Carries larger, bulkier loads; has all the features that made the 'Jeep' famous. W. & H. MOTOR COMPANY REID WOMACK ? OWNERS ? JAY HOUSTON Franklin, N. C. To The Stockholders of Macon County Building & Loan Association 0 ? During the year 1955, your Building and Loan Association loaned $355,395.00 of your savings. All of these loans are secured by a first mortgage bn Macon County real estate, conservatively appraised, with a monthly curtailment of the principal, which strengthens the security of v each loan as the payments are made. Xo loan exceeds 66 2/3 per cent of the appraised value. The ahove amount is represented !>v 163 loans averaging $2,180.00 each. The following is a breakdown of the purposes for which these loans were made: Sixty-live construction loans totalling $160,075.00. Forty-two loans for the purchase of homes, totalling $77. 700.00. Nineteen loans refinancing existing loans held by others, total ling $54,600.00. Thirty-seven for home repairs and other purposes. , totalling $63,020.00. From the above, you can see the part your savings play in the building of Macon County as a prospering community, and in raising the total tax valuation. No savings account is too small for us to handle. Re.spectfullv submitted. MACON COUNTY BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION DIRECTORS: H. L. Bryant H. W. Cabe M. L. Dowdle L. C. Henderson W. N. Sloan Norman Blaine T. H. Fagg Frank Martin A B Slagle Gilmer A. Jones OFFICERS: H. W. Cabe President H. L Bryant, Vice-President R. S. Jones, Sec.-Treas. Gilmer A. Jones, Attorney Marie Jennings, Accountant -I'rfM. Staff Photo# AS TON-HEAVY MILL stones grind corn in the grinding chamber behind J. W. Addington (left), the finished project, flour, pours from the chamber down a chute into a bin in the base ment of the 95-year-old mill where it is worked by miller Harve Tallent (seen through door in floor). I GETS PROMOTION George B. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown, of Franklin, recently was promot ed to sergeant while serving in the U. S. Marine Corps at Camp Lejeune. He is now on maneuvers in Puerto Rico. His wife is the former Miss Jeana Sue Cunningham, of Franklin. Special SUNDAY DINNER Southern Fried Chicken ! Rice and (iravy Creamed Asparagus Creole Sweet Potatoes HoincMiiade Hot Rolls I 'ear with Cream Cheese Killing Salad Desert ? Coffee CAGLE'S CAFE Parker Norton and Ben Sellers. Co-owners Ben Sellers, Manager % Amateur Show For Polio Is Slated At Cullasaja BINGO PARTY SLATED FOR DIMES DRIVE Rotary Club Plans Event Tonight At Slagle Memorial ! A Bingo party, open to the gen- ; eral public, will be held tonight 'Thursday) at the Slagle Memor ial Building, as a benefit for the | I March of Dimes. I The event is set for 7 30 o'clock, j The party is being sponsored by the Franklin Rotary Club, and the plan calls for each Rotarian ! to bring a prize. A large number I of desirable prizes, therefore, are j expected to be available. Norman Blaine. Howard Barn- j well, and W. L. Nothstetn make up the arrangements committee. W. W. (Bill i Sloan has been re sponsible for publicizing the even.. Only 1.5 million marriages oc curred in the U. S. in 1955. as compared with 2.3 million in post war 1946. An amateur show ? featuring % variety of entertainment and en tertainers ? will be staged Satur day night at Cullasaja School for the benefit of the county March of Dimes. Sponsoring the show, which will get under way at 7:30. is the Hig donville Rural Community De velopment Organization. In announcing the event. Harry Moses, who is in charge, said prizes will be awarded to the three best acts appearing during the evening^ AH entertainers in the count: are invited to compete for the prizes, he said. As an added teature of the amateur show, a hall-hour pro giam of string music and singing is to be presented by Hunter Young and his band. Mr Young's band also will be available for use by singers and performers competing for prizes, he said. Since World War II, shifting from state to state and place to place has lessened progressively. NEW TIRES RAblATOR REPAIRS RICKMANS O. K. Rl'RBER WELDERS AND RADIATOR SHOP ALL HYMN PROGRAM COURTHOUSE Saturday, January 28 7:30 p. m. CARL STORY and his "Rambling Mountaineers" With Cas Walker Claude Boone and the Brewster Bros. A GOOD TIME FOR ALL!
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Jan. 26, 1956, edition 1
9
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