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Chickens hatched by commercial hatcheries In North Carolina dur ing July amounted to 9, 075,000, according to the North Carolina Crop Reporting Service. This was a record hatch (or the month, and I It was 10.6 per cent above the previous high of 8,205,000 attained In July, 1955. Never a BETTER CAR Never a BETTER BUY! Would you believe it? You can own a big, new Pontiac . . . loaded with luxury features . . . with 124* wheel base, rugged X-member frame . . . plus the brawn and "go" of 227-h.p. at a budget-pleasing price! Pontiac prices start below 43 small-car models! See for yourself . . . now! ^ NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE GET THE BEST BUY OF THE YEAR ON THE MOST EXCITING CAR OF THE YEAR! PONTIAC RECENTLY BROKE 54 NASCAfi ENDURANCE AND SPEED RECORDS AT BONNEVILLE, UTAH Pontiao IVIE PONTIAC CO. N. Main St. CLAYTON, GA. ry That means Buick Super 6-Possenger 4-Door Riviera SMART BUYS for the QUICK-MINDED ill Ml . II x" 1 S#P? 3W 5 I -. " :t ?1 Smart buys are in season. This is fine trading time. Your present car is at peak value. And with today's low Buick prices and high volume? you'll get a deal that can't be matched. So why put off any longer the excitement of bossing the mightiest V8 in Buick history? Why not start enjoying today the terrific performance of Buick's Variable Pitch Dynafiow*? with its double-action getaway? Why wait to enjoy the freshness of Buick styling, the fabulous Buick ride ? when you can make a bonanza buy on the biggest-seHing big car of all? Come in today to enjoy the best motor ing money can buy? at a bargain you'll boast about for years. *New Advanced Variable Pilch Dynaflnw is the only Dynafiow Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmaster, Super and Century? optional at modest extra cost on the Special. Buick L WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUI 9??d buyhs?rV*i?rne specially h'sh-PoZedc"?W ?n th? 'he e*?ro-SDQr URyond Be"*' see So'?. r?o I SOOn, ID THEM Bonanza Trade -in Allowance ?because your present car is at its peak value right now. And because? with Buick so solidly set as America's No. 3 Best Seller? our bigger sales volume permits us to make you an even better trade-in allowance. Bonanza Buy Buick prices start right next to those of the smaller cars. But those Buick dollars buy you a whale of a lot more automobile? more room, more power thrill, more styling freshness, more ride stability, more solidity of structure? the Best Buick Yet. Bonanza Resale A Buick always resells high. But the '56 Buick will bring you even more money when you I trade it because itcarries today's new Variable Pitch Dynaflow.* It's the most advanced transmission yet developed? and the only one that breaks with the past to bring you the switch-pitch performance and gas savings of the modern plane's variable pitch propellers. SEE JACKIE GlEASON ON TV ' Macon Motor Company, Inc. Nmer Street, Weit Dealer 594 Franklin, N. & Scene On The Beaten Path I I By MRS. ALLEN SILER Janey has just left Tor college . but she has already distinguishes . ' herself by proving that the family car is a moving van ! Into it. she stored, with the assistance of her father (whoss patience had worn wafer-thin) several pieces of shiny, I new luggage and her trunk packed 1 with all those "just right" college clothes, her three-year old bath robe and her cheerleader sweater. Just as her father thought pack ing operations complete, out came Janey with an assortment of other items, including a mountain of clothes on hangers, a radio, a rec ord player and records (from classical to Rock n' Rolli, and a waste paper basket containing four stuffed animals, a "No Park ing" sign, and three pairs of well worn shoes that she felt she would "need" at college. Her daddy, in exasperation, finally exclaimed. What do girls do with their stuff when they travel by train or bus!" On arrival at school, Janey, with her roommate, will crowd and jam all those treasured pos sessions into a small room with limited closet space. The room will look Just as it sounds ? cluttered. It will probably remain in that condition for four long years; for at the beginning of each college term. Janey will find it impossible to leave any of those belongings at home. In the meantime, she will have acquired more clothes and accessories! ? ? ? The place of confusion that was Janey's room at home is now neat and bare. The perpetual noise that sometimes drove the family to the brink of suicide is gone. The sil ence is huge and rather sad. The pain of goodbye has not eased, ] yet Janey's mother feels a glad- f ness, too. A gladness, because she i knows that her Uttle girl has tak ] en a big step toward becoming an j educated and understanding worn- , an ? a woman who will be more , capable of meeting life's hard de mands. When Janey comes home i for Christmas, the change will al- i ready be apparent. She will have i conquered the torture of home- , sickness and completed the trans- : itlon from a self-Important high school senior to a wide-eyed open- , minded freshman. Janey will be well on the road to maturity. FOR SALE Comfortably Furnished, Modern 2 -Bedroom Frame Cottage With Bath and Half, Garage, Guest Cottage, 14 acres good pasture land, beautiful view of surrounding mountains, overlooking Little Tennessee River. Outbuildings, good well. Three miles from Franklin off Highway 28, on River Bend Road. Price $10,000. Terms Can be Arranged. Write N. P. Sloan, 892 5th Avenue South, NAPLES, FLA. Or see your broker News About People Mrs. Zeb Conley returned last ?week after visiting relatives in Rocky Mount and Sarasota, Fla. Z. W. Conley, of San Francisco, Calif., is here visiting his mother, Mrs. Zeb Conley, and his sister, Miss Dorothy Conley, for several days. Dr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Mann, who have been spending the sum mer at their home in Wayah Valley, left last Friday for New Orleans, La., to resume their duties as members of the faculty of Tulane University. Capt. and Mrs. James E. Peek and two children, of El Paso, Tex., and Mr. and Mrs. Richard ,S. Peek, Jr., and family, of Lowell, have returned to their homes after visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Peek for a week. This was Capt. Peek's first visit home in over six years. Mrs. Gordon Reap and son re turned to her home in Tampa. Fla., last week after a visit here with her sister, Mrs. S. H. Lyle. and Mr. Lyle. Mrs. Joe Higdon. Jr., and small son, Mike, accom I panied them to Tampa for a visit i there. Miss Rose Rogers, who has been I in Heidelberg, Germany, with the American Red Cross for the past three years, is here visiting her I aunt. Mrs. Gus Leach. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Graham | who have been spending some time at their home on Franklin. Route 5, left last week to spend the winter in Naranja. Fla. They have had as recent euests Mis. Walter Thompson, of Homestead. Fla., and Mr and Mrs. B. T. Creel, of Macon, Ga. Mrs. Thompson ac companied the Grahams to Flori da. Mrs. Pearl Hunter recently re- j turned from a visit in Charlotte with her son and daughter-in-law Ax. and Mrs. Nick Hunter. While iway, Mrs. Hunter and her son risited In Lynchburg, Va. and Mrs. Hunter also attended the school of Missions of the W. 8. C. it Phelffer College In Misenhelm sr. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jackson, at Atlanta, Ga.. and M/Sgt. and Mrs. Qaston Clark and children, Lillf 3ail and Freddie, of Camp Rucker,. Ma., recently visited their parents^ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Moore and their sister, Mrs. Marvin Roper, and Mr. Roper. Miss Nancy Dayton, who is em ployed on the office staff of the A and P Tea Company in Atlanta, Ga., visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Drover Dayton, Labor Day week-end. ML T. Ledford Succumbs At Age Of 37 Morris Thomas Ledford, 37-year old native of the Burningtown section here, died September 5 in Sylva after an illness of six months. A farmer, he was the husband of the forme:- Miss Neal Angel, of Franklin, and the son of /Duffel Ledford, of Franklin, Route 3, and the late Mrs. Ledford. Funeral services were conduct ed on the 7th at 2 p. m. at the Burningtown Baptist Church by the Rev. C. C. Welch, and the Rev. N. E. Holden. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mr. Ledford was born December 20, 1918. He was married Febru ary 5, 1954. in Walhalla. S. C.. and was a member of the Oak Grove Baptist Church. Surviving, in addition to his wife and father, are a son, Morris Thomas, Jr., a daughter, Geral dine, and four brothers, Vester and Bert Ledford. both of Route 3, Herman Ledford. of San Fer nando, Calif., and Oscar Ledford, of Franklin. Bryant Funeral Home was lit charge of arangements. A broken bulb can be removed from a socket by using a large cork. Turn off the current, press the cork over the broken edges and turn the cork until the bulb screws out. Keep This Ad! Over 20.000 Arthritic and Rheumatic Sufferers have tak en this Medicine since it has been on the market. It is inex pensive. .'an be taken in the home. For Free information, aive name and address to P.O. Box 826, Hot Springs. Arkansas. What Is A Catholic? The subject of Protestantism and Catholi cism can always create controversy. Episcopalians think of it in this way. Tht Protestant denominations are a product of the Reformation. They are the churches which severed connection with the ancient stream of Christian faith and practice. That is simply historical fact, not criticism. We believe, and cite history to prove it, that there are four distinct streams of Catholic Christian faith and practice which stem directly from the primitive One, Holy, Catholic ana Apostolic Church. They are the Anglican Church of which the Episcopal Church in th? United States is a part; the Roman Catholic Church (which holds allegiance to the Pope of Rome); the Eastern Orthodox Churches (there- are many branches ? Greek, Russian, Syrian, Armenian, etc.); and the Old Catholic Churches, associated with the See of Utrecht. If we happen to believe that we Episcopalian* have, without addition or subtraction of es sentials, held most closely to the faith and practice of the undivided early church, that belief is held without criticism or rancor. W? should like to tell you more about why 40,000,000 Anglicans the world over join in worshipping God in a united body. Visit the Episcopal Church near you at your earliest opportunity. Here's easy-to-get information. Send the coupon below for a copy of "The Episcopal Church, Some Essen tial Facts". You'll enjoy reading it. "C1 1 REV. A. RUFUS MORGAN Route 1, Franklin, N. C. I'd like to learn more tbout the Episcopal Church. Send me my free copy of "The Episcopal Church, Some Essential Facta". Sam* Street and No. ? City.
The Franklin Press and the Highlands Maconian (Franklin, N.C.)
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Sept. 13, 1956, edition 1
11
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