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PAGE SIX-A
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- QUALITY SAVINGS §
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BIRDSEY'SBEST .......... 204 3.98
ERRRTHIRE . i vanaa. 18T 3064
MONEY SAVER .......... 1.74 3.38
: | SPECIAL DISCOUNT - 200 LBS. OR MORE
; I Trade Us Your Wheat \
\ For Any Birdsey Product!
~ BIRDSEY’S QUALITY FEEDS
LAYINGMASH 20% .... ........5.40
SCRATCHCGRAIM .... .... ... .. 500
DAIRY ERED BR% .. . i v v o 460
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Ciemeni T. Chandler, Mr. P! J
DIRECYT FROM MILL TO YOU » l
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GROCER'S marvelous mo.éms séé)ée/
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With the merci'sy sizzling up near the 90’s, Santa Claus would
appear a little out of place. But Barbara Phillips, 4, of Yonkers,
N, Y., seems to feel that every season is Santa Claus season, The
huge mode)l Santa was exhibited at the New York show of the
National Association of Display Industries .
HAL BOYLE
The Poor Man’s Philosopher
THE GCOOD EARTH :
CAN BE AWFUL BAD
NEW YORK — (AP) — A
pauper in the big city can be
defined as a man who doesn't
have “a place in the country.” |
If that’s the only hallmark of
poverty, I'm the happiest pauper
alive. For nothing makes me feel
richer than to talk with a me
tropolitan cave dweller who has
tried to get away from it all by
buying a small plot of land away
from it all.
1 never shared the delusion of
these would-be farmers in the
dell that a city man can thumb
his nose at mother nature for
nine months of the year and ex
pect her to clasp him to her
bosom the other three. She isn't
going to forgive him; she’s going
{0 give him the works.
But this yen to currycomb one
of God’s acres far from the mad
ding throng hits the city’s pent.
up millions like an epidemic each
summer,
A man who has spent the rest
cf the year trying to hurdle the
high cost of living will plod to
the bank with tears in his eyes
to borrow a down payment on
“a place in the country.”
But 'they are happy tears. He
thinks the bucolic breezes will be
good for mama and the kids.
And he figures that he can hoe
down the food costs by spending
up some garden vegetables for
the table.
The awakening comes only too
swiftly. He finds that the farmer
who buys the Brooklyn Bridge is
no bigger sucker than the city
fellow who believes the techni
color pictures on the seed cata
‘logs. Each carrot he raises, what
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATDENS, GEORGIA
with bug spray, fertilizer and
garden tools priced as if they
were gold-plated, costs him about
four bits. ) l
He wears out himself and his
pocketbook commuting to hisi
job in the city. He has to taxi to
the railroad station in the morn
ing and back to his rural palace
in the evening. And he still has
to go out and pick the wilted
green beans in the garden he has
come to hate.
By now he’s tired of the coun-l
try himself but still figures it’s
fine for the family. But is it? The
country’s a dangerous place 1o
foreigners.
Little sister gets sunburned
and cries all week. Then a bee
stings her and she cries some
more. Then she cries because
she misses her playmates in the
city. She’'s homesick.
Junior almost drowns in a
swimming hole. He's chased by a
bull in the next pasture and
tears his knee on a rusty wire
going over the fence. Off he goes
to the doector to keep from get
ting lockiaw, but if Jever there
was anybody needed lockjaw it’s
junior. >4 D
And Mama? She’s sick of ants
by day and mosqgditees by night.
“1 ./ can’t” cook another day on
,}hjs’ darned stove,” he says.
“When are we going to quit
playing Swiss Family Robison,”
So another empire dream
'crashes. The family treks back
to the city, and the merry rab
bits, field mice and chipmunks
lmove in again and take over
what is left of that “Little Place
in the Country.” When papa gets
the bill for the summer’s adven
ture, he goes to bed for a quiet
nervous breakdown.
Every year this happens to one
of my friends, sometimes several.
I go to see them in the hospital
and cheer them up by telling
| them what a wonderful summer
they missed in the city:
“Sure, it - was hot. But it was
nice in the evenings sitting by
the open window, drinking beer
snd lemonade and listening to
the night baseball games on the
» radio, Saved me some ~ mOney,
tco.”
l Then I give them a copy of
“A Tree Grows In Brooklyn”
HO el
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" metal) LID is easiest to vse and
# surest o seal. Fits any Mason g
; " jar. To test seal : ¥
. press dome—if Aty i
% down, jar is fF 5 §
L.-'uolédl C R\
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¢Q‘ * CAPS and |
- S——— Rubber Rings S
have been favorites for genera- § .
i~ tions. They seal all Mason jors.
Easy to usel . | !
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connin® Loy Blue WYM
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end go away silently.
The good earth can be awful
bad for a stranger to the land,
I'd rather be a man without the
country.
According to tradition baby
Wonderful Food for the 4 %
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. E|gh‘t Wi' > >{" 'ALL A&P STORES WILL BE CLOSED ALL L 5"
[ =1 DAY JULY sth BUT WILL REMAIN OPEN (@ %
07 CI ock i ! ALL DAY, EACH DAY, JULY 6th-10th. 3 b .
_._,\.., < ,/S’ Hjl .\"nu're )_mvnd(-d fnr‘thc mountains or 'the shore for a hul'id'n,\". here's :‘he f": ‘* blf f
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ILb Bag 4o¢ /\fi‘u_ k4] lr'_ym-,' chickens and wide assortments of cheeses and cold cuts for ~:'md; A ,feiv-: ) "%\\l
XS Ty oo o scots o Cake und Mmpling e, it 00, aba o by
3-1 b Bag 51_15 \‘ g{ f_\'“\- No matter what your choice, yowll find everything a real value. ::“ AsZ L ‘
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SULTANA—STUFFED AN ‘\e'{ ‘(@ oby A
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oLives | » Peanutßutter33s as
20w 15¢ L &) aopows SORY
, . T _;'w': ,f: . - 83",'0 : ‘g\fi {8 ; " j.‘
‘“W:A‘E/q"i"fi;r" \ »r—"i“"z' ANN PAGE—RED RASPBFRRY %’7 r {e@,}\
, 7 o /AR
s 7 Preserves «=«37¢ # %
4th OF jULY .V 2| KRAFT'S PHILADELPHIA CREAM ifi,‘i’;}.‘.\‘i‘ A fl:_,,,
g S VW
CAKE ~}¢ ; ch&a es g 3-oz. Pkg. 18¢ «K o
26-Oz —Each 65¢ \‘ e '
| MARVEL SANDWICH 7 é "‘E’Q ’/A..:,- ;‘“—:’;—_F.:\ /:‘\ N\
JANE PARKER < e RSR N T /’/ (e S\
Jelly Roll. .120. 35e STR o T ‘»,‘2;;;7'_ . 8 ' \‘}
= SRS SRR i i .\
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e e Y DWW ks ocoasccavomicac B |AP R
i 2—— i ETAREER £\t /
Tomato §%18y4% g(I 2 BARR N — 48
N % q”: =‘g E% TR'Q gV B R . - e
I AV B § E o S B R P o D % e i
Ketchup §._ i P (BT G 0 |
14-Oz. Bot. 22¢ (o " GEORGIA RED RIPE
—_—— Y — o _*“ b Y
i WATERMELLONS . . Ib. 3':c
uirkee’s SH CALIFORNIA LARGE SUNKIST
: Bin Ch o LEMONS, doz. .. .. ... 29¢
Dressing 43 erries EEB Ci;lil_FOßNlA
UMS, Ib. 29¢
10-Oz. Jar 35¢ 'b 35‘ FANCY CROWDER ! e
® : PEA5,31b0..........]7c
> A O 5 4 A 5 PO AT
GEORGIA OKRA, 2 Ib -
FANCY RED RIPE E '2s‘: AVA(ADOS,Z'O[29C
IOMAIOES 14 GARDEN FRESH
oAdor.chn, .. .. .. .. 19c |WHITE CORN, dears .. .. .. ... 25¢
-—-———-——-—————*.——-—-———-——-————
| Vegetarian,
Beans PAANGNE With Pork and Tomato Sauce 2 I&'r?sz' 25 ¢
or Boston Style 4 4
ad
Mayonnaise wr «-=49¢
=
vap. l WHITE HOUSE Tall Cans 42 F(
Our Own sea . w~27¢
OCTAGON CLEANSER
2 Large Cakes 1 7}{ 2 13-Oz. Ctns. 13¢
syru p 114 b. Glass 22 ¢
syr u p 5.1 b. Glass s7¢
sta rc h I.Lb. Glass 13¢
CASHMERE BOUQUET
2 Cakes 23¢
SIAX | VEL
2 40z cns 23¢ 120 z Phg BX &
GRANULATED SOAP
SUPER SUDS
90z g 1 5H¢
24-Oz Pkg. 34e
boys are generally dressed in
pink and baby girls in blue, but in
some parts of the United States
this tradition is reversed .
Ordinary white horses are not
born white, but are generally
PALMOLIVE
2 Reg Cakes 19¢
dappled greys which have grown
lighter until they become white.
Meny Arabian horses are light
gray at birth and become white
by the time they are four orl
five years old,
i ,Q““/‘.ty @ G
e S, P
0 TR S e e e L N
= DRY SALT
- Streak O’Lean, Ib. .. .. .. .. 35¢c
- SLICED BREAKFAST '
¢ Bacon,lb. .. .. .. .... .. L 4850 !
CHOICE '
- Frankfruters, Ib. . .. .. . .. 55¢
LOIN CUT
- Veal Steak,lb. .. .. .. .. .. . 69¢c °
- BONED AND ROLLED i 3
- Veal Shoulder Roast, Ib. .. 69¢ |
© WHOLE OR HALF < g
- Large Hams, Ib. .. .. .. .. .. 5% g
;:..;m,....;.............m..m.....,....u...,................ 0050 .%
e
PALMOLIVE
2 Bath Size Cakes 2 7¢
HHURSDAY, JULY ¥, YO4B, =
[LLIN A SOOTHING DRESSING «
ciff MOROLINE
~~"_ peTROLEUM JELLY [[4]]
OCTAGON
Soap Powder
2 13-Oz. Pkgs. 1 5¢
40.0 z Pkg 25¢