Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Jan. 20, 1955, edition 1 / Page 6
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NOTICE. WE ARE BUYING dog wood ??aln. See Cloer & Ander son at Hayesvllle. N. C-, for prices and specifications 18tfc FOR BALe: Chicken grit, alio for laying hens. $10.50 a ton in bag?, KOB Plant. Columbia Marble Co., Marble N C. 28-tfc DB SALK ? Cladet dtocka, any rise, any ? mount delivered Ptlawr Bros . Phone 202 Mur phy, N. C. 21-tfc NBLX DHIli^INu ? Have your wells drilled, motern machinery Six and elgu; Inch domestic and commerlcal wells Macon Pump and Well Company Write F. B. Bogerl, Kou,.' No 1 franklin. N C. 1?-Uc RESURFACE your floor* . Do the Job yourself. Rent our tloor sand machine. Reasonable rates oj t Be half-day, day or week. Also complete line at floor fili ng and pant. Gibbs Hardware &. Auto Supply. Phone 100. 26-tfc KELP WANTED, MALE. WHITE: Are you interested in a business of your own with earnings of $4,000 per year or more above all operating expenses selling Nationally Advertised Watkins Products to Farmers <n Chero kee County? If you are ana you are 25 years or older, willing to cover routes five days a week The J. R. Watkins Company, P. and have dependable car write O. Box 50T1, Richmond, Virginia For further details. 25-3tc Johns - ManviDe Bldg. Materials Asphalt Shinfles-RoIJ Rooflnj Asbestoe Sidlnc GIBBS HDW. * AUTO 8Cf?LT REPAIR WORK On Jewelry, glasses Ronson light ers and watch bands ? AU types of gold soldering E. C. MOORE, Jewelers Phone 192 Murphy, N. C. Ws DJEESSggj ^5 AVE! See our daily specials E.C. J | IULL DOZER wort by the hour ! or by tbe )ob See J M. Hughe* and son or call 244. Murphy. N. l?-tfc OUR REPRESENTATIVE will be tn Murphy each Tuesday l" id Wednesday. Used Singer Ma chines for *39 50 New singer electric machines from $M.50 up. All types of repairs. Write Singer Sewing Machine Co., Box 188. Murphy. N. C. 26-tfc A PIANO PLAYER can be put In to your old silent piano. No pumping. It is electric. A. R. Bell, Murphy, N C. 2#-Stc WANTED TO BUY: Clay Peas Any amount. Also buying black walnuts. Farmers Federation. Phone 62 28-3tc FOR RENT 2 room furnished apartment. Private bath. Elec tric stove and refrigerator. 231 Peachtree St. Phone 324-J or 83-J. 25-3tc FOR RENT McCall apartments Two furnished apartments all modern conveniences. Rent reas onable. Phone 106. Mrs McCall Elliott, 218 Hilton Ave , Murphy, N. C. 28-3tp FOR SALE : Fair Bank Morris hammermill. Have been less than 200 bushels of corn run through it. Cost new $261.00. Will sell for $130.00. G. S. Har din. Andrews, N. C. Rt. 1. 27-2tp FOR SALE: One hair dryer, one shampoo chair and board, one permanent wave stand. See Otis Jordan, Robbinsville, N C. I At give-a way price 27-6tp FOR SALE : 1939 one ton Ford ' truck. Stake body, good tires, good mechanical running condi tion. $125. Can be seen at Cal vin Brown's, r>ne mile beyond i Unaka Post Office. 27-3tp FOR SALE : One registered Pekin ese dog. Also one male boxer Call Mrs. Wilson Palmer, 332-W, Murphy, N. C. 27-Stc j RELIABLE MAN with car wanted to call on farmers in Cherokee County. $25.00 a day cr more, possible. No capital required. Write Mr. P W. Sawyer, 2141 Cowper Drive, P.aleigh, North Carolina. 27-3tc WANTED family histories of early settlers cf Cherokee County. Name and date of first settlers, nationality. occupation, resi dences, military records, offices held, number slaves, descend ants to present time and ets. A1 so the loans of old papers, letters pictures of historical value. Material needed for preparing a i history of Cherokee County. Mail Box 421, Andrews, N. C. TOR SALE: Toyal typewriter with 15 inch carriage. Practically new. Perfect condition. Low cash price. Call Robbinsville 101 Day or S5-R-3 after 5 p. in. ,27-2tp FOR RENT : 3 room furnished a partment, private bath. Phone 96-W, Mrs. Nettie Axley, 432 Hiawassee St., Murphy, N. C. 27-1 tc MAN WANTED: Are you dissatis fied with your work? Would you I like a business of your own? If .so, write Rawleigh's Dept. NCA 750-GG, Richmond, Va. 27-41} With just the thought of its name... - ...\our eyes reflect the / Y *? \, anticipation of its Special Flavor KE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Cherokee County Board of Education, Murphy, North Caro lina, will receive revised proposals (or a school building on a site near Hiwassee Dam, Cherokee County in accordance with plans and spec ifications prepared by Ronald Greene. Architect, for the follow 1 inj, work : (1) General Construction (2) Plumbing (3) Heating (4) Electrical , (5) Excavation and Rough *? Grading All contractors shall be licensed to execute work in their classifi cations In accordance with the laws and regulations of the State of North Carolina. Draw'ne-s and Specifications may be obtained by licensed Con tractors from the office of Ronald Greene. Architect, at 303 National Bank of Commerce Building, Gas 'onia. Norfh C?i-olina on Mondav January 17, 1955. A deposit of Twentv-Five dollars Is reoulred for Plans and Specifications, which will be remitted on their re turn to the Architect In good usu able conditions. Proposals for tb<> atxve listed branches of the work will be re ceived in the office of the Cher-! ikee Countv Board of Education. I Mumhy, North Carolina, at 11 .00 A M. o'clock, January 26, 1955. All proposals shall be accompan ied by a certified check or accept- 1 able Bid Bond in the amount of 5% of the bid. Education shall maintain the right tr\ or t anv or pll *ids \ and to awanj all or such portions of any or all contracts as it d? cides. <? ^?-nk?e County Board of Education Hembree, Chairman T lovd W. Hendrix, Superinten dent 27-lto GARDEN TIME BY ROBERT SCHMIDT We usually think of our supply of garden plknts about the time I that they should be set In the gar j den. Then it is too late to grow our j own and we must depend on com ) mercial plant growers and seel 1 stores for our supply. This means [ that we have little choice of var ; letiee and sometimes the quality of the plants is poor. | It is not aimcult to grow your j own plants if you have a hotbed or coldframe available. A few plants could easily be grown In a I shallow box in a kitchen window. | It usually takes from five to ten weeks to grow plants from seed [ ready to set out in the garden, de pending on the kind of crop and on the temperature and growing con ditions. Hotbeds and coldframes are structures used to grow early plants from seeds for tr&nsplant . ing in the garden after danger of I frost is over, or in some cases to give sufficient protection to cer tain kinds of plants to allow them to mature during the late fall or winter seasons. A coldframe is built like a hot bed but has no source of heat ex- ! cept the heat from the sun's rays. ' A hotbed is supplied with some ar NORTH CAROLINA CHEROKEE COUNTY ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE The undersigned. having quali- i fied as administratrix of the es- ' tate of Harry Zervas, late of Cher- 1 okee County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un dersigned at her home in Murphy. North Carolina, on or before the 6th day of January, 1956. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt ed to said estate will please mnlte immediate payment to the under signed at her home in Murphy, North Carolina This 4th day of J anuary, 1955. Lennie Zc-vas, ! 2J-6tp Admir'stratrix No Limit Sef - On Vegetable ; Acreage in '55 Tar Heel farmers c%n prpduce all the vegetables they Wftftt to this year without worrying about acre a g? Previously proposed limitations til.cial source of heat such as eleo tricity, steam, or liot air or ma ure. The frames may b? covered with glass sash, cellogiass, glass cloth, plastic materials or heavy muslin cloth. Glass sash are the moat ef ficient covers, but they are rather 1 expensive. However, If given good care they will last for many years. The kind of heat to be used will depend on what is mostly easily available. On' farms very often manure la easily obtainable. Fresh horse ma nure is the only kind that will give satisfactory results. Where electri city is available, that Is the most efficient and dependable source of ^eat because it can be controlled by means of a thermostat so that the heat control problem will not be as great as In other types of beds. An electric hotbed six by six feet in size will require 60 feet of cable as a heating unit and 2 standard glass sash for cover. A hotbed of this size should grow suf ficient warm season plants of all kinds for the average home gar den A coldframe without heat but with glass or other type of cover will take care of the production of most cool season crop plants such , as cabbage, lettuce, broccoli and cauliflower. ToRdiam - ^ G?*666 >i ?+*? ? ? ; . oa , the producttoa of commercial vegetables, pot* tow, and sweet po tatoes, on acre* diverted from al lotment crop* will not be in effect for IMS according to a recent an nouncement by the U. S. Depart - j ment of Agriculture.. ? The proposals limiting acreage j of these crops originally grew out of the prospect that 1964 crops might add substantially to some serious surplus problems. The prospect of more flexible price sup } ports next year, plus the effects of widespread drought this year, have erased these fears, Secretary j of Agriculture Ezra Benson ex- ' Control of temperature, watering | and ventilation are the important j operations in the care of hotbeds ' and coldframes. Temperatures | should not be allowed to go too high, and watering should not be excessive if yeu wish good plants. Both of these operations are con trolled by ventilation as well as by thermostats. Have a good soil thermometer ? don't guess at the temperature. Bulletins on construction and management of hotbeds and cold frames may be obtained by writ ing the N. C. Extension Service. Department of Horticulture, N. C. State College, Raleigh, N C. WILSON Of J A* Alt Cpi. Richart} Wilson, son of W. U Wilaac, Andrews, recently par ticipated in the IfTth Airborne Regimental Oombat Team's "Oper ation Climax" on the Japanese la land of Kyushu Wilson, a cook in the military, police battalion, entered the Army in January 1861 and com pleted basic training at Fort Campbell, Ky. He joined the team lr December 1983. plained in announcing the change. Preliminary checks have also shown that vegetable and potato acreages were not increased in 1954 even though there waa no lim itation on the use of around 28 mil lion acres diverted from allot ment crops, Benson added. With relaxation of the regula tions on cross- compliance and to tal acreage allotments on basic crops for price support purposes, there is now greater opportunity to grow various other crops and less pressure to plant vegetables and potatoes on diverted acres, the secretary said. MOVING!/ Col... A AM MIC AN * RED BALL HtAMWT COMPANY, MC SAFE ? DEPENDABLE ? ECONOMICAL NATION-WIDE MOVING SERVICE AUTHORIZED A Of NT Palmer Bros. Trucking To. Inc. Phone 10: s Mur?hy. M ? When vou drove a Ford ? If you haven't stepped inside a 1955 Ford and tried new Trigger-Torque power you don't know how much fun driving can be ^ Of course, you've seen it . . ? and heard about it But when was the last time you actually got behind the wheel and drove a Ford? If 'you haven't driven a Ford lately, you're in for a thrilling experience. Ask anyone who has! For, this Ford is totally unlike any car you've ?ever taken for a spin . . . unless you've put a Ford Thunderbird through its paces. The Thunderbird, r you know, inspired the styling in all 16 of Ford's new models this year. Inside Ford's Luxury Lounge interior you'll find fresh new two-tone colors . . , rieb nrwr fmfcritr . . . totally new door paneling . . . and n inmterpiiig nif! control panel And the way this '55 Ford behaves is something which only a Test Drive can describe. But here's a hint: Ford's new Trigger-Torque power responds to your wishes in as little as 7/100 of a second . . . and this power is yours in Ford's new 162-h.p. Y-block V-8, 182-h.p. Y-block Special V-8 or a new 120-h.p. I-block Six. There are many, many more surprises in this completely new Ford. To get the ftdl story, why not accept our invitation and take a Test Drive? * Come in for a Test Drive j # and you'll want to drive it home
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 20, 1955, edition 1
6
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