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PLAY RACE TO RICHES
j CHANNEL 5 Mrs. E. N. Lewis- Mrs. Roy Alexander Mrs. P. F. Langford
SAT. 5:30 Mrs. R°b ert Anderson Mrs. J. W. Short Mr. Malcom 0. Riner
copyright in? w Mrs. Thomas Lane Mrs. Mary W. Smith Mr. L. M. Wilkie
Mrs. Alyn Jones Mrs. Curtis W. Black Mrs. Rachel Bryan
i u ' m ; Mrs. Rosa Kendrick Mrs. Melon Crenshaw Mrs. John S. Arnold
ATOI T effective thru Sat. f*^"* 1 **^" ll " a—
!■ fl I*l * I*l Bl **" I TENDERAY ® BRAND
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STEAK LB O> STEAK LB »
ROUND TO 4 K"B TO*
Jr SHANK portion STEAK LB > 7 STEAK /7
St M ilk TENDERAY ® BRAND -.— —
f HAM 1 boston roll roast -79
s »* ■WWMWW W RIB ROAST .. 8 .79« RIB ROAST 6 L 7 ?. . L8 .69<
i s D h ” Hfllf !?• ” e Mi t t CHUCK ROAST < •" 49< SHOULDER CLOD ROAST.?. 89‘
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ft Center Slice lb. 89e X kwick krisp _ rath Blackhawk
\r o3/ BACON 549 BACON “ 69‘
FLANK STEAK .!.99< FRES-SHORE CATFISH i 8.63«
STREAK-O-LEAN i 8 ..49< SHRIMP COCKTAIL... 3 «• 99«
FRES-SHORE PERCH ..’.39* BONELESS BEEF STEW ..’ 89*
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jiffy aA< chub pak ' 4l Ji A< wayne county vv a« IZ E “^* m p B 0 ■« ,
CUBE STEAK 89 GROUND BEEF. 49 COUNTRY HAM“ 79 BEEF ROAST “95
BUTT HALF - lb. 85c .
COUNTRY OVEN VO-5 - Reg. $1.50 Size ' 1
POTATO CHIPS...’, £ 2 39' HAIR SPRAY ’."..“.99'
BLACK TOP PILLSBURY Plain or S.R. MORTON FROZEN
PINK SALMON. ... n °.n’63' FLOUR 5>«57‘ . JFIhIBINEDCIL
KROGER LARGE ANGEL FOOD MF ■ ■ W ■ W ■■
SKIM MILK S L lO' CAKE “..“.39' J. Ti, A CM 1
MILD DAISY KROGER Orange, Gropefruit, Blended ®
CHEESE .“..69 JUICES II oz. ■ a
APPLE - CHERRY - PEACH BOROEN "BIG 10" PKGS. JHF
TURNOVERS ' 5 PK a 2 49‘ FLAKEY BISCUITS. 4%g69* K . 1 ALL VARIETIES '
WIENER ROLLS OR HERSHEY ALMOND OR Vl< /
SANDWICH BUNS 2’pk£29< MILK CHOC. BARS
KROGER CRUSHED SUNNY TENNESSEE FROZEN UP TO ’
PINEAPPLE • FLAT*'CANS 89< STRAWBERRIES 4 ’ P °KG°S Z - 24< •
NORTHERN JUMBO MORTON FROZEN __ __ 1
TOWELS 1“..?.27‘ DONUTS 3'^ z »l yNFftEEKE lk
NORTHERN - White or Colors - MORTON FROZEN HE
TISSUE 4p°g 1 37* HONEY BUNS 4'?k£’l < Tympir vacpac > '
FRISKIES - Dog, Cot or COLGATE - Reg 59c Six. W ONt Lb. VAL- PAL- TO
CAT FOOD TREATS..:.".B%I»I DENTAL CREAM f 1 i
KETCHUP. 4'k“95« LOTION A;“39< 1 JM Ml ;
KROGER GRAPEFRUIT MENNEN ANTI PERSPIRANT
SECTIONS 4 n cXn” 3 89’ DEODORANT r L. m . 6 . ?..°:.59’ <ll iJN •
MENNEN SPEED STICK - Reg 89c Size
DEODORANT .'. ! ‘.“.59< wr
LIMIT I WITH 1
55 0R MORE PURCHASE I
GOLDEN RIPE ;
t BANANAS 1 WATERMELON
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■_ One pkg. 5M ct. _ yMHH9w — ■ ■ T\i/rs •
- FILLER PAPER ; P HF LEMONS. 2 = 2 tomatoeT" ” cantaloupes X
: POLE BEANS 2 LBS 39* E.“H”:.0E.0
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• One 14-Oz. Jot ■ , g 1- LS BOX • 4 Oz KROGER " " One 1244 Oz ■• «
• STOTLIGHT ■ (Crush ot Smooth) •" KROGER REG OR BUTTERCRUST BREAD ■ ■ T ° pp| NG MIX and 2 Pts. w CHEF BOY ARE DEE riii rc «
J INSTANT COFFEE " PEANUT BUTTER - " HONEY GRAHAMS « ■ BUTT Z Z FRESH STRAWBERR| ES J a FROZEN PIZZA ■ HOLLAND BULBS ®
■ COUPON EXPIRES Z*~X ■ COUPON EXPIRES ■ COUPON EXPIRES COUPON EXPIRES Z~\ ■ COUPON EXPIRES / X ■ COUPON EXPIRES • COUPON EXPIRES
■ APRIL 29, 1967 J , apr !L 29, 1967 Qc J* APRIL 29 - 1967 APR,L 29, ' 967 QG J ■ APRIL 29 ' 1967 J " APRIL 29 < 1967 ■ APR,L 291 1967 \<s)
Griffin Daily News
Wednesday, April 26, 1967
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STRAW HATS led the way,
but milady can feature
straw in numerous acces
sories this summer if she’s
so inclined, as long as she
keeps away from horses. A
strawlike material is used
not only in this little hat,
but also for long-pigtails
and on the rims of this
model’s sunglasses, and a
tote bag, which may be in
cluded.
Lyle Wilson
Income Taxes
Kept High With
‘Pain Killer’
By LYLE WILSON
L'nited Press International
Personal income taxes would
come down in a hurry if the
government would give up the
pain-killer system of collecting
the taxes at the source.
The taxpayer would not give
up his dollars so easily if he
were able to jingle them even
briefly.
This is the withholding tax
system, imposed during Fran
klin D. Roosevelt’s era and in
force ever since. This tax
collection system is the greatest
pain-killer since morphine and
ether. This is the season in
which citizens would be shooting
tax collectors on sight, but for
the withholding system.
The alternative to withholding
would be to force the taxpayer
to get up in one great bundle
his annual tax levy. There
might be a tax rebellion in this
country but for the withholding
system.
Personal income tax Is
withheld by employers and paid
directly into the U.S. Treasury.
This is your money but it loses
its identity.
So it is that vast sums are
paid into the U.S. Treasury.
Indirectly at least, these vast
sums enable the politicians to
live in the style to which they
have become accustomed and to
help others to do likewise. Open
handed is the word for our
politicians. It is easy to spend
tax dollars collected so painless
ly the average citizen never
misses them.
But whether he realizes it or
not, the humpbacked taxpayer
pays and pays.
Consider President Johnson.
The President is a frugal man.
He say so hemiself. In the 1966
fiscal year which encfr-d last
June 30, LBJ collected $104.7
billion in taxes, of which
personal income payments to
talled $55.4 billion.
In the fiscal year 1967 which
will end this June 30, LBJ
expects to collect Sll7 billion,
including $62.2 billion in person
al income taxes. In fiscal 1968
which will end June 30, 1968,
LBJ will take $126.9 billion,
more than $73 billion of it in
personal income payments.
But even these vast sums will
not suffice to run the govern
ment as LBJ runs it. He has
budgeted for deficits in those
three fiscal years as follows:
$2.3 billion in fiscal '66, $9.7
billion in fiscal ’67 and $B.l
billion in fiscal '6B. These
deficits, of course, will add to
the public debt. And it already
amounts to $330.7 billion, up
about $lO billion in the past
year. Interest on this debt will
increase from $12.1 billion in
fiscal 1966 to $14.2 billion in
fiscal 1968.
This system of borrowing
huge sums to pay government
bills instead of taxing the
citizens is beloved by the
politicians. They might be
ridden out of town on a rail if
they laid on taxes sufficient to
pay the bills they run up in
conducting government busi
ness. The politicians know this
system cannot go on forever but
each expects it to survive
beyond his term of office. When
the reckoning comes, the
current crop of politicians
figure to be retired; mayb
figure to be retired; maybe
dead. They had better hope so.
This dficit spending system
has been accompanied by a
devastating erosion of the
purchasing power of the U.S.
dollar. The buck has lost about
68 cents in purchasing power in
the past 30 years. The two-bit
-‘nllar is o»«
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