Come To Church Sunday Murphy's Catholic Chapel Rev. Joseph Dean, Pastor Telephone SW Sunday Morning Services *:<& A. M Daily Morning Services 7:15 A. M. Wednesday Evening Services 1:30 P. M. Saturday Bible School 10MA.M. MOVING?, Col... f AMERICAN ? RED BALL TRANSIT COMPANY, INC. SAFE ? DEPENDABLE ? ECONOMICAL I NATION-WIDE MOVING SERVICE I AUTHORIZED AGENT Palmer Bros. Trucking Co. Inc. Phone Murohy. N. this laboratory plays ) football i" Skip Collins looks ready for anything. Is he ready for polio? Last spring he received a vaccine designed to pro tect him from infantile paralysis. Some time this I year, after studying records on Skip and nearly two million other youngsters, scientists will know If the vaccine works. Skip's a football-playing laboratory, helping them out. Your March of Dimes contributions not only make the vaccine trials possible, they also give a chance for a better life to thousands who have polio. PSTHE MARCH OF DIMES :The Notional Foundation for Infantile Paralysis NEW REGAL HOTEL Jr <$6T TM6 B6ST D6AC FOR AU. J CA$H Hk pnctmts BANK AUTO LOAN! ? ; ' J We'll furnish all cash above the dcVi Jk jj* payment, at moderate cost. Come see us. J Citizens Bank & Trust Co. Mufphy ? Andrews ? Robbinsville Hayes viTle World Traveler To Lead Epworth Church Revival REV. BERTHA McCALLlE Rev. Bertha McCailie of Indian apolis, Ind., will be the evangelist speaker at the series of revival services at Epworth, Ga., Free Methodist Church Feb. 1-13. Rev. McCailie will speak each ? evening at 7 :30 and the public Is in vited to attend. The pastor is the Rev. G. H. Guisler of Murphy. The ' church is located a half mile from the Epworth pest office near John j Waters store. Rev. McCailie has recently re- ! THE NEW YEAR BY XORA COBB SPENCER We hail thee, thou faithful New i Year, Full of the promise of gladness j alid cheer. I With rain to quench the thirsty earth And shows to afford happy child j ren mirth ? With trees and shrubs dressed in icy shrouds i As the melting sun's rays peep behind clouds. . With many spring mornings to ! quicken the step As the sun peeps o'er the moun tain's crest. With dancing, hurrying April showers That awaken the responsive buds and flowers. With the deep blue twilights in summertime. When the whipporwill calls in rhythmic rhyme. With the corn leaping up like a liv ing thing While the crows caw lustily as they take wing. | With autumn playing her noble ! part, | \s she paints the forests in skill j full art - With colors that arouse a feeling sublime. And hearts are grateful for His touch Divine. Then comes Christmas hastening along With the rush, the smile, the Car olers' song? With Santa Claus taking his part in the scene. With his gifts and toys about which children dream. Good Old Year, you have Enacted well your part! We greet the New Year with triumphant heart ! THI New MOOA 17 I HOM ELITE On* Mam Okjm Saw "o Other m can much it for all trpoM cgoiig on ? htm. Only ' pound* . . . mtf to opatan. id 3.5 actual dynaaoaaMr .ied brake horaapowar. . .Bach nora puaai mmd 4+tmdMlkj il>a?Mf oihar aaw to Aa. orhawtmm 9 RADFORD J. M. Payne Dies At Culberson ' John Milton Payne, 82, & retired! farmer died at 9:30 a. m. Wednea-J day. Jan. 19, in hia home, on j Route 2, Culberson after a brief illness. Surviving are the widow. Mrs. Addle Franks Payne; eight sons, Claude of Kings port. Tenn, Fred of Donalds, S. C., Wade of Sum ter, S. C., Clyde of Charleston, S. C. Edwin of Fayetteville, Tenn., Troy of A&ltnat, Ga., Earl of Creede, Colo., and Harold of Cul berson, Route 1. Also three daughters, Mrs. Maude Allen of Etowah. Tenn., Mrs Lattie Allen of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Mi 3. Wllma Puckett of Atlanta. Ga. Five step-children, Arthur Franks, of Asheville, Garland Franks of etroit. Mich., Jim Fran ks of Brevard, Mrs. Lillie Brown ' of Baltimore. Md., one sister, Mrs. J of Brevard. Mrs. Evelyn Matthews IJosie rtarris of Culberson; 24 ! grandchildren, and 10 great-grand 1 children. turned from the Orient on an evan gelistic campaign. She will show pictures of her travels during the revival. She has also been on evangelis- > tic tours through Egypt, where she testified to King Farouk when he I was the ruler of Egypt; the Baha mas, where a number of persons were reported converted and heal- 1 ed. She has led in the erecting of abernacles in Cuba, the Bahamas and Egypt. *??j mSI bwo"6(* ST ifttuZWimmtft, NONFAT. , f<r kr MU-K / QUART 2Exnania Mrs. Lance Dies At Hospital Here Mrs. Althea Marie Lance, 53, died at 1 :S0 a. m. Sunday, Jan. 23, In a Murphy hospital after a brief illness. Funeral services were held at S p. m. Monday in Hayesville Meth odist Church with the Rev. John Miller officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery. She was a native ot Clay County, daughter of the late Oonley and lee Trout Powers, and was a member of Sweetwater Baptist Church. She is survived by the husband. Earl C. Lance of the Lance Cove section of Clay County; two daugh ters, Mrs. Effie Lee Rowland and Mrs. Elvita Brown of Hayesville; one son, Harris of Hayesville; four sisters, Mrs. Alice Dills of East Point Ohio, Mrs. Leslie Lance and Mrs. Geneva Scroggs of Hayesville and Miss Delia Mae Powers of Pisgah Forest. Tvie Funeral Home was In | charge. Funeral services were held at 2:30 p. m. Friday in Harris Chap el. The Rev. Glover Ledford and the Rev. Robert Bell officiated, and burial was in Hopewell Cemetery with Townson Funeral Home in charge. mi! ?with COBLE Milk 3 Giotto ?( MUk m Day i? ?f yomt tot ktmltk kubitt Milk's value to you is far greater than its cost, because it helps you sleep better, end nervous tension and calcium starvation. And H builds strength, not fat. Drink glosses of Milk every day HOUSEWIFE: For that member of the family whose taste buds need a little teasing, try COBLE CHOCOLATE MILK. IT'S REAL \ MILK. It is full of all the value found in white milk and It is low on * ?agar content. IMPORTANT NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Unpaid Taxes for 1954 will be delinquent and penalty effective after Feb. 1. Pay your City T axes now and avoid the penalty TOWN OF MURPHY C. E. Johnson, Tax Collector Only in America's First -Oh o/ce Truck? ? JkH These First-Choice Features For YouT '55 CHEVROLET TRUCKS No other trucks offer you all these hour-saving, dollar-seving features. And Chevrolet's the lowest prtood line. So, naturally. AMERICAS FIRST CHOICE 1RUCK I saving higb-canipieuioti performance. Aluminum a Doy pistons. AO- weather ignitiiku system. Full-pressure lubrication. ?hackle-mounted to reduce vibratioo. Has one-piece curved windshield. wofK-wiving comroi rvuTurtii ex* elusive Recircula ting-Ball steering. Torque- Action and Twin-Action brakes.

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