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Prices! |
Sept. 28, 1988... Quantity rights reserved... None sold to deslers. LOWCSI Qvei*(lll Prices PIUS Top Vcilue Stamps
hAiitin i>vpiu family regular or flouride' UIUITE DDE Aft ~n , ■«
ROUND STEAK “• 89c TOOTHPASTE.’””. 1 .37 c " HITE BREAD iS*°«lßc
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I dUNC JItAR >1.19 Jy dH TUM TABLETS . I BTL? T '66C BLACK FORREST CRACKED WHEAT OR.
baby beef dyf BREAD 18 oz - AQr
52 ’ SMOKED PORK CHOPS “99c J™ SEUZIt ? "" 77t CLUB“ROLLS:=“.3S69 f
- 2; "’ 99c ROUND WHITE BREAD...3a&69c
SIICED PORK LIVER “ ROr SHAMPOO—
kUZjJHwjT'Ij BYRON’S BBQ P0RK.......... 99c
pork sandwiches 99c
sliced
SJSl BACON " 73t FROZEN ONION RINGS..2«&B9c MILD DAISY CHEESE &69c
COUNTRY MANOR 8AC0N..";59c FROZEN AWAKE 3?.%51 EATMORE MARGARINE..2^33c
CARDINAL BACON. “69c HMMMMMMM MACARONI & CHEESE 3“”. $1 CORN OIL MARGARINE.,,3 ;a $1
SLICED RATH BACON “73c FROZEN PEAS 5’,1£89c KROGER GRADE A
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HIMI ‘ff 4 BEEF DINNER STEAKS ..IOstuks99c Ivth I BiW I 9 JI Georgia produced
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FRESH FRYER BREAST “ 59c CHKKEN STEAKS..BSsB9c GREEN GIANT WHOLE KERNEL WHITE CORN OR I HAW
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FRESH FRYER LEGS “ 49c StICEP BtEF LIVER ‘••••s9c GREEN GIANT KITCHEN ITUI
GREEN BEANS 2 cans 49c
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2 * HAMS " $1,39 EVAPORATED MILK 3Sl7c LYSOfsPRAY
BONELESS HAMS “$1.49 |pfl CHUNK LIGHT TUNA 3cX; s sl NYLENE STICK MOR ““98c
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Griffin Daily News
Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1968 1
■9'
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SILHOUETTED against a
setting sun is an airplane
wing standing on end as a
memorial to John J. Mont
gomery, one of the little
known pioneers in aviation.
Montgomery made man s
first eontrolled-winged
flights from this site near
San Diego, Calif., 17 years
before the famed Wright
brothers flight, according to
the monument inscription.
‘Phantom’
Coffee Hour
For GOP Ticket
By MERRIMAN SMITH
United Press International
Backstairs at the Campaign:
Talk about ghostly ideas in
politics! The Nixon people,
through local organizations, are
sponsoring a money-raising
scheme known as the “Phantom
Coffee Hour for Nixon-Agnew.’’
The idea is to have no coffee
hour at all, but for the good
ladies of a community to mail
in a buck (or more, hopefully)
to campaign headquarters as a
contribution.
To make this worthwhile will
Involve not drinking thousands
of gallons of coffee. Also, it
could involve not eating several
million cookies.
The forms being distributed
by local Nixon-Agnew headquar
ters have spaces for name and
address then a box to be
checked beside this sentence, “I
would like to be a Phantom
Hostess for Nixon.” It says
absolutely nothing about want
ing to be a phantom for Agnew.
The assumption here is that
Spiro can dig up his own
phantoms.
It usually is a sign of
confidence, perhaps too much of
it, in a presidential campaign
when at this relatively early
date, people around a candidate
begin to speculate about mem
bership in his cabinet.
Some of the current guessing
in close-to-Nixon circles puts
money on former Pennsylvania
Gov. William Scranton for
Secretary of State and if he
would take it, New York Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller for
Defense Secretary.
A more likely Nixon appoint
ment might be former Budget
Director Maurice Stans as
Secretary of Treasury.
Speculation about Scranton,
Rockefeller and Stans, however,
might trip over a common
denominator in these three men
—they are quite independent
thinkers.
Stans proved this when he
was the budget director in the
Elsenhower administration. His
thoughts about the huge 1958
deficit and recession that
followed ran for ahead of many
other administration figures at
the time.
Rockefeller has a good
administrative record which is
what the Pentagon job requires,
but also, he is a man of quite
positive opinions and he, him
self, might not relish a battle he
must remember from previous
Washington service—the con
stant tug-of-war between a
civilian secretary and the
deeply entrenched structure of
admirals and generals of the
uniformed services.
Scranton’s ideas about foreign
relations must, in his own mind,
run along Nixon lines. Other
wise the former governor would
not be undertaking the current
fact-finding trip for Nixon in
Europe. But Scranton has a
strong, independent mind of his
own. He has been in the State
Department before.
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