Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / May 28, 1953, edition 1 / Page 4
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?(frmkrr Stunt Established July 1889 Published every Thursday at Murphy, Cherokee County. N. C ? WILLIAM V. AND EMILY P. C05TELL0 Publishers and Owners WILLIAM V. COSTELLO Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES In Cherokee County: One Year, $2.50; Six Months, f 1.50; Outside Cherokee County: One Year, f3.00; Six Months, fl.75 Entered in the Port Office at Murphy, North Carolina, as secood daM matter under the Act of March 3, 1879. PERSONALS Mrs. James B. Ward, Mrs. Dale Lee and Mrs. J. W. Davidson will leave Tuesday for New York City, where Mrs. Ward will leave on the 6. S. Exeter for a Medkeranean Cruise. Mrs. Lee will shop and Mrs. Davidson will go to Lancaster, Pa. to visit her son, E. P. Davidson and family, Mrs. Lee will join her there later and they will return together. Mrs. H. Bueck, Mr and Mrs. C. R. Freed, Miss Adella Merocey, Mrs. J. W. Davidson, Mrs. L. L. Mason, Mrs. Glenn Bates and the Rev. Aamond Maxwell attended the Methodist Rally at the. auditorium in Asheville, Sunday. Mr. Freed adfe Mrs. Bates sang in the com bined choir. Mrs. H. G. McBrayer of Ander son, S. C., will arrive Sunday to spend two weeks with her mother, (Mrs. G. W. Candler. Mrs. Duke Whitley and children, Lyn and Jane and Mrs. H. Bueck spent last Thursday in Chattanooga. Mrs. S. M. Benton of Cornelia, Ga. and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ben ton and son, Walter Jr., of Louis burg, spent last Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hyde and chil dren. Hospital, Asheville, and Mrs. Mamie Arnold of Appalachian Hall, Asheville are visiting their sister, Mrs. E. C. Moore and other re latives here. Dr. and Mrs. Ben Mayfield are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Buel Adams this week. John Wrinn of Westminister, S. C. was the week epd guest of Mr. and Mrs. Quay Ketner. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mayfield of Helfin, Ala., spent last week here with Mr. and Mrs Buel Adams. Dr. Frank Justice of St Augus tine, Fla., is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Harry Miller and Suise. SMITH AT TABERNACLE The Rev. A1 Smith will preach at Harmony Tabernacle, 2 miles Bast of Murphy, on Andrews high way, Sunday night, May 31. Ser vices at 7:30 p. m. and everyone is I invited. ' Mrs. Carrier's Pupils In Recital Mr*. J. C. Carrier recently pre sented her piano pupils In recital In the Andrews School auditorium. The following played on the pro gram: Margaret Ann Hardin, Jan ice Watts, Gay Frances Stewart, Brenda Stover, Mary Jo Battle, Linda Carrlnger, Truett West, Alta Bnonw, Sue Nichols, Anita Luther, Sandra Phillips, Betsy BatUe, Te ry Slagle, Wilma Joyce Gray, Ann Pulllum, Jannette Carringer, Billy Parker, Jerry Pulllum, Delia Mae Bailey, Nina Brown, Betty Ann Palmer. Joyce Mintz, Jean Bristol, Ardith Hay, Virginia Carrier, Doris Holdec, Dorcas Ann McGutre, Car olyn Dupree, June Brooks, Gayle West, Judy Bristol and Hildred Heaton. Pupils who played in the Nation al piano playing audition in Ashe ville and won their membership cetrificates in the National Frater nity of Student Musicians and their frat pins were: Margaret Ann Hardin, Jean Bristol, Jerry Pul lium, Virginia Garner, Ardith Hay, | Gayle West, Judy Bristol, Mary Jo Battle, Sue Nichols, Anita Luth ' er, Sandra Phillips, Betsy Battle. Terry Slagle, Ann Pullium, Delia Mae Bailey, Janice Watts, and Gay Frances Stewart. Loudermilk Gilbert Rites Miss Carmen Loudermilk, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jess Louder milk of BlairsviUe, Ga., became the bride of J. T. Gilbert of Murphy Saturday in Blue Ridgge, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. David Ballew of Murphy accompanied the couple. SUMMER IN MAINE Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bowers and daughter, Margaret Ann, of Tam pa, Fla., have been visiting Mrs. Bowers' parents Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ritch. They are enroute to Maine where they will spend the summer. They will be accompanied on to Maine by Carolyn Ritch. FRANCES DAVIDSON Frances Davidson, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. San David son of Murphy, was (Tad na ted Tuesday from Brevard College. During the past two years at the school Miss Davidson has served as secretary-treasurer of the Stu dent Government Association, member of the House Council and Pcesident's Cabinet, was a (Miss Jory, Mr. Hawkins {Take Vows In Peachtree Jory wad Paul Hawkins were married May 17 at 1 o'clock in (fee afternoon at Peac tree Baptist Church, with the Rev. Lester Stows officiating, at the The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Jory at Murphy and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Caeteel Hawkins of Suit. The bride wore a gown of white nylon and a fingertip length velL She carried a white Bible topped with a purple orchid. Miss June Jory, sister of the bride, and maid of honor wore a white nylon 'ballerina length gown and carried red roses. Bridesmaids, Geneva Barnett and Loretta Voyles, wore white nylon ballerina length gowns and member of the College Glee Clab Commerieal Club and Woman's Athletic Association. She was al so a cheerleader and was atten dant in the May Court both years. brother of the uahen were Marvin Hubert Walker. The mother of the bride wore a brown drear and as?ag? of yel low rose buds. Her accessories were brown and white. Mrs. Hawkins, mother of the bridegroom, wore a navy drees with navy accessories and a corsage o fwhlte carnations. Solost, Mrs. Roeland Hawk sang "I Love You Truly" and '^Because", accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Russell Elder, who played "Trau merie", and Flower Sing". DINNER GUESTS Mrs. Steve Dockery bed as din ner guests Saturday night, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd G. Simonds and sons, Dickie and Jimmy of Aiken, S. C. Mrs. M sttle Dalton of P each tree, Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Head and children, Carl Lewis and Linda, Vivian and Jenny, of Andrews. BY DR. KESSITH J. FUKl MAN Iwakacmm.. What Never Fails fer May ft, IMS i W 'ou tor. moat of VV aOJ Who. do you prayfor most of all? You wish and pray tor many things, and this Is right but what la above ail? If you ?.*t Tour New Testament seriously, there can be no question about I You Will want above'all the thing that la worth more th.n ev erything else; you wUl not be con tent to ask tor less than the great est thing in the world. You will God for love. ? ? ? Better Than Miracles Remember, when St. Paul or Jesus talked about love they were not thinking about the thing you hear about from the Jukebox at the corner drugstore. They were not thinking about the sort of thing taat comes aiyl goes and leaves headaches and heartaches behind. They were not thinking of the kind of love that wants to get, but of the love that wants to give. They meant the kind of love God has and is; the kind of love that traiis forms the per sons to whom it is given. The kind of love that Jesus lived out there in Dr. Foreman I Galilee, the kind that can be lived' on any street in the world The-' kind of love the Cross stands for. This kind of love. Paul said, is better than miracles. Indeed, mlr acles are no account without it' When Paul talks of "speaking with the tongues of men and of angels", he is not meaning eloquence, ora tory He means (as you can see froa. I Cor. Chap. 12) the miracu lous "gift" of tongues which the Corinthian church knew. Some of the members there could speak with tongues, some couldn't. Those that could, despised those that couldn't. That's not the point Paul means to say The measure of a Christian is not miracles, but love. ? ? ? Mightier Than the Mind Love ? also better than some thing else we all admire and v.o--Jd like to have a^mveh of as pos sible. It is better and mightier than mental genius. The world around us is full of mysteries. A child can ask questions the wise cannot an swer. If I only knew! is a thought that has occurred to every one. Each of us thinks he would be happier if hp knew all the answers. We feel sure we could do more and be more if our minds were even just a Utile sharper than they are. But Paul reminds us that even If our prayers for insight and wisdom were all answered, even if we had such wisdom that not a single question would be left unanswered (not that any such thing is likely to happen soon!), we should still amount to precise ly nothing, if we did not have love. Paul does not say that mental pow er Is a bad thing; he did not say that miracles are no good. What he does say is that miracles minus love, or mind mlnnf love, will not fulfill God's dreams, nor ours, wee Nobler Than Martyrdom The Christian church has always1 honored her martyrs, the men and women and children too who have died rather than give up their faith. We are inclined to put mar-1 tyrs up in the highest bracket of1 the saints, partly because most of us are sadly aware that we are not the stuff of which martyrs are made. But Paul pulls us up short. Even to be burned at the stake for a righteous cause is still nothing at all, if there is no love behind and in the action. ? ? ? Love Is the Miracle Two hesitations cloud the mlnA Is it not selfish to ask for the great-' est thing in the world? Should we not rather be contented with lesser gifts? The answer to this hesitation is that this divine UmA of love is precisely Unselfishness itself. To ask for the grace of un selfishness is surely no selfish prayer. Another hesitation Is this: Is not this divine thing, th(? tMny taat outlives and outlasts wisdom and miracles and martyrdoms?. is not this too high for us? Is It' not a miracle Itself, so rare we should not know what to do with It If are had it? Well, it Is rare in deed, and with the exoeption of our Lord there was never a life that shone with it from beginning to end. Yet we who have known Christian homes and Christian peo ple have seen this miracle, we have lived In Its light It is a miracle Indeed; but It Is not coe. to lift us above the clouds, it Is one to keep oar feet on the ground. ate unlikely to coe tract fog larger acerage of vege tables than in 19S2. Stocks of csnn vegetables are generally ade quat# and those of frosen vegeta blesare large. DICKEY THEATRE MURPHY, N. C. HENN THEATRE ANDREWS, N. C. > Thurs.-FrL, May 28-29 Gilbert Roland "The Miracle Of OurLadvFatima" Fri.-Sat., May 29-30 Charlton Heston-Khonda Fleming "Pony Express" Sat. May 30 Allan "Rocky" Lane * "Marshall Of Cedar Rock" Late Show. Sat. May 30 Carle ton Carpenter-Jan Sterling "Sky Full Of Moon" Sun.-Mon., May 31, June 1 Bette Davto-Sterlln* Harden "The Star" Snn.-Mon., Mar 31-June 1 Lana Turner-Kirk Donilu The Bad And The BeantifnT Wed., Jone 2-3 Payne-Ellea Drew "The Crooked Way" Tact* June 2 The Bowery Boy* "Jalopy" HENN THEATRE MUKFHY, N. C Wed.Thur*., May 41-28 Don T ay Jar-Lea Genn Introducing Dorothy Brome ley-Audrey Dal ton "Girls Of Pleasure, Island" Fr..-Sat, May 29-3* trAKgQSPVR A M?HO-GOtOWYMMAY?? MCTUK Late Show ,Sat, May 30 IN THE CRADLE ^ OF THE STREETS BUT wuLouh&i with WISDOM! i ftcnnc PttstxT irlUtu n-rfi. BOBBY JORDAN LEO GORCEY CLARENCE MUSE PAVE O'BRIEN <1 Sun.-Mon., May 31-June 1 donald Debbie O'CONNOR4 REYNOLDS A MCTfO-OOLOWVK-MATCTJCTlWt Tues., Jane 2 Alan Hale Jr. "Trail Blazers" AS "Sr. to VovKset YOU DO EVERYTHING FASTER than a team of horse* or mules with a MCCORMICK9 Formal! Cub 1* Do all field work ?over 26 matched McCormick implements built for every season's work ? plow 3'/i acres a day ?cultivate 12 acres ? mow 15 acres a day Famous Farmall Traction lor yard work...pull-power that gets your work done in all kinds of weather. Prove to yourself -- that the Farmail Cub is the tractor for your own farm. We'll be glad to show you that you can farm better with a Farmall Cub. Ask us for a demonstration. ** DICKEY AND DAVIS BOB WHITE Phtone 288 Murphy, N. C. SPECIAL GALVENIZED ROOFING ALL LENGTHS $8.95 Per Square Just Received A Carload This price good for as long as it lasts. Available At All FARMERS FEDERATION WAREHOUSES TV A i Ammonium Nitrate Nitrogen 33.5% $3.72 per 1 lOO lb. Bag 282 HYBRID SEED CORN REGULAR & MEDIU MFLATS FARMERS FEDERATION Phone 62 Murphy, N. C. Don Ramsey, Mgr.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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May 28, 1953, edition 1
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