Over 8,000 people attended the
drat week's performance of "Wild
erness Road" at Berea, Ky. .
The "Wilderness Road" drama
at Berea, Ky., has the largest or
gan In the United States.
WALLHIDE 5.53 Gal. V'v '/^fl
SATINHIDE 8.13 Qt.
MURPHY HARDWARE CO
Phone 25
1 REFRIGERATION DOES THE TRICK
COBLE DAIRY HAS YET
TO GET its first complaint
from a Cherokee County
Merchant about the quality
of our product.
AND REFRIGERATION la
the answer! Our products
are kept in a refrigerated
storage room, shipped out
daily in refrigerated trucks
and placed in merchants' re
frigerated show cases.
That's why you pick up the
best when you reach for
COBLE'S. * t;
Our friends, The Cherokee County merchants, handle all our
products, but if you can't always find what you want, mention it
to your grocer. He'll mention it to our driver and we'll have it
there for you next time you shop.
And thanks for thinking of Coble.
COBLE DAIRY
When you buy insurance . . .
? . . buy from an agent . . ?
. . . who operates a local business, who
supports local enterprise, and who pays
local taxes? ? just as you do.
The money Km agency makes
M it slays here and circulate*,
toalJy winds hi yoor pocicef
i more nwiwy cifcukrtbfl in
be the financial states of every person
CITIZENS BANK and TRUST CO.
INSURANCE DEPARTMENT
UNAKA
Mr. and Mrs. John Jones have j
returned to their home in Akron, O.
Mrs. Reba Jenkins and chil- 1
dren. Jackie, Danny and Linda,
and M. F. Kilby from Akron, O.,
are visiting their father, Albert
Kilby who is a patient at Petrie
Hospital.
Austin Martin visited his mother |
and father from the Marines overl
the week end.
Miss Mary Rose of Hickory is I
visiting her son, Clifford Rose at |
Unaka.
Joe Brannon from Virginia is]
visiting his family at Unaka.
Apple Crop
Near Failure
RALEIGH ? The first forecast of
the season for commercial apple
production in North Carolina is for
a crop of only 40.000 bushels ? ap
proximately two percent as large
as the 1.900,000 bushels harvested
in 1954.
For all practical purposes this
year's crop was completely destroy
ed by the severe freeze of late
March, according to the North Car
olina Crop Reporting Service.
Reports from commercial pro
ducing areas indicate that later
blooming varieties set a very light
crop in some of the better protect
ed orchards.
In most of the orchards, how
ever, trees were in full bloom, or
buds were swollen at the time of
the freeze. Losses in such cases
were complete.
For the United States as a whole,
production of commercial apples is
Forecast at 105.560.000 bushels ?
anly four percent below production
>f 109.512.000 produced In 1964.
VN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING
THR ISSUANCE OF S1M.M0 OF
RONDS OF THE TOWN OF MUK
PHY FOR THE RECONSTRUC
TION, ENLARGEMENT AND
EXTENSION OF THE WATER
HPPLY SYSTEM OF THE TOWN
OF MURPHY
BE IT ORDAINED by the Board
>f Commissioners of the Town of
Murphy, as follows:
Section 1. The Board of Com
missioners of the Town of Murphy,
das ascertained and hereby deter
mines that It is necessary that
said Town reconstruct, enlarge
ind extend the water supply sys- 1
tem maintained by the Town to"
provide a supply of water for the
Town and its inhabitants, and ac
quire the land or rights in land,
furnishings, equipment, machinery
jr apparatus constituting a part of
said improvements or properties at
the time of such reconstruction,
enlargement and extension, and
that it will be necessary to expend
Tor said purpose not less than
*190,000
Section 2. Said Board of Com
missioners has also ascertained
and hereby determines that the
purpose hereinbefore described is
a necessary expense of said Town
Krithin the meaning of Section 7
of Article VII of the Constitution of
North Carolina, and is a purpose
for which said Town may raise or
appropriate money, and is not a
current expense of said Town.
Section 3. In order to raise the
money required for such purpose. (
bonds of the Town are hereby au
thorized and shall be issued pur
suant to The Municipal Finance
Act. 1921. of North Carolina. The
maximum aggregate amount of
bonds authorized by this ordinance
shall be One Hundred and Ninety
Thousand Dollars (S190.000).
Section 4. A tax sufficient to
pay the principal of and interest ?
on said ! rds shall be annually
levied and collected.
Section 5. A statement of the
debt of said Town has been filed
with the Town Clerk and Treasurer j
of said Town, as required by said I
Act, and is open to public inspec-l
tion. .
Section 6. This ordinance shall
take effect when approved by the
voters of said Town at an election
to be called and held as provided,
in said Act.
******
The foregoing bond ordinance
was passed on the 5th day of July,
1955 and was first published on the
14th day of July, 1965.
Any action or proceeding ques
tioning the validity of said ordin
ance must be commenced within
thirty days after its first publica
tion.
S/ Charles E. Johnson
Town Clerk and Treasurer of the
Town of Murphy, North Carolina..
S2-2tc
NORTH CAROLINA
CHEROKEE COUNTY
The undersigned having quail
fled as executrix of the the estate
of R. C. Mattox deceased, late of
I Cherokee County this is to notify
all persons having claims against
said estate to present them to the
undersigned on or before the 10th
day at June, 19M, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their re
covery.
All persons indebted to said es
tate will please make immediate
payment to 0>e undersigned.
HS-ttc Murphy Htrtk QvoMh
CHAMBERS IN KOREA
Army Sgt. Grady Cnambers, son
of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Chambers.
Route 1, Murphy, Is a member of
the 24th Infantry Division in Ko
rea. ~ j
The 24th is one of two American!
divisions stationed in Korea. It |
was the first U. S. unit to fight in |
the Korean conflict.
Chambers, a supply clerk, en- 1
tered the Army in August 1952 and j
was last stationed at Fort Ben
Drinking Speeding.
Cause Most Fines
RALEIGH? Drunk driver* and
speeders ? almost evenly divided
- made up the bulk of a mid-year
tally of traffic offenses issued to
day by the Motor Vehicle Depart
ing, Ga.
He was graduated in 1952 from
Murphy High School.
CLOSE OUT SALE
All merchandise reduced 10% beginning
Thursday, July 21st through Saturday,
July 23rd.
ARMY STORE
Murphy, X. C.
FRANK P. RIGGS
Certified Public Accountant
ANNOUNCES
The Opening of A
Public Accounting Practice
Masonic Temple Bldg. Telephone
Waynesville, N. C. Glendale 6-3472
ment.
Required to surrender their legal
driving privileges during the first
six months were 8,89# drunk driv
ers and 3.302 speeders.
i
Other license revokable offenses
reported by the Agency included
transporting intoxicants 241, un
satisfied judgment 212, habitual
violator 290, two offenses of reck
less driving 181 and larceny of auto
? United States exports of all to
bacco products combined during
1984, which were valued at 63.2 mil
lion dollars, were about one per
I cent lower than those of 1953 but
I still were above the level of pre
' ceding years.
87.
The total number of licenses with
drawn for the period came to
13.629 the agency said.
?
MAKE UP TO
$800 A Month Profit
' ON YOUR WOODLOT
Po* orful, light weight Homelite
M.Jcl 17 rhan saw is helomg
farmers everywhere turn their
woodlot into a cash crop during the
slack season. Per acre yield can
average up to five times the income
of any other crop. The Model 17
with its dependable power and low
maintenance can help do many
other chores around the farm
whether slicing through silage or
bucking heate/ wood. With the new
low-cost clearing attachment it
makes quick, easy work of clearing
or reclaiming fields or pasture.
Drop in and ask for a free demonstration.
Good Used Chain Saws $50 & Up
FOR COMPLETE & DEPENDABLE
SERVICE cn All Makes of Chain Saws See
RADFORD HOMELITE SERVICE
Phone M Murphy, N. C.
No wonder
' this Hardtopis the
HIT OF THE YEAR f
/rs 4-DOOR HANDY
?8nd pr/aeaf fy- set/on /
m
A his one you *11 just have to see.
If* a beauty. It's a brand-new kind of ear. It's
a Buick Riviera with four doors. And to top it
all ? it's a SPECIAL ? the lowest-priced of all
Buiok Series.
Know what that meansP
It means you can hare the newest hit in hardtop*
?die most advanoed new body design yet? and
you can have h in the price range of America's
smaller cars.
It means you can have a steel-roofed car with the
loaf, low, sweeping aportinees of a convertible
?with m center poets in the side window areas
?and with two uioratt doors to the rear.
And you can have all this hardtop beauty with
sedan oomfort and convenience at the easy-to
take modest extra coat of a 4-door modal over a
2-door model.
So here you have the soft, firm steadiness of
Buick'a all-coil-spring ride and torque-tube
stability. Here you have Buiek brawn, Buick
solidity, Buick handling ease, Buick styling and
visibility and interior luxury.
And here you have the lift and life of vigorous
new V8 power of reoord might? and coupled to
the spectacular performance of Buick's Variable
Pitch Dynaflow.*
Why wait a day longer? when you can oome in
right now and try the first true hardtop with die
extra comfort, room and convenience of a full
sized 4-door sedan?
Drop in tomorrow, first thing? for a look at the
price, and an idea of the whopping-big trade-in
deal our huge sales volume permits us to make.
?VfriMt Pitch Dyntfow it tit onij Dymtfow Bmtk imUf
tod* jr. It it ttmdmd on ROAD MASTER, optiomM M mod**
MflAf fiott oo otbof StfitJ.
Out d you think tbara ?11? Ha ten:
W1U BUIU> TMIM
??
rnmfy
AIRCONDITIONER
Ms
FRANKLIN MOTOEGO.^
RdL Murphy, N. C
' _ / ? - V i<
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