Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / April 28, 1960, edition 1 / Page 4
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Help Insure Your Children * Future 1 Give Them The 1960 WORLD BOOK ?NCYCLMPIBU Now in 20 Volume* WORLD BOOK tiwrnM m SO Volumes a. Amuct.. Binding ?T? 34K (oldituuuai u"?"d,"Sl^a JoU $10 don kJUlMfl 1 *? Wimp Order the combination Work) Book/Childcraft Plan at a huge earing! Both mU just tit down fit a month Your youngsttrs will live and grow with these impor tant educational works in your home! Childcraft offers the very finest help ia child training and prepa ration. World Book Ency clopedia ha# long been first in sales. Now. the brilliant I960 World Book has been revised, enlarged, brought completely up to date? an even greater value than ?ver! Inquire today. ?md Childcraft CH1LDCRAFT 16 Volumes in hojidaom* HeriUfe Binding LUTH1* D. HYDK, V. O. |M 741 Brysofl CWy. N. C fltoM im Ihot I q?? Inforwalloii ?n 1960 World took and what tf tm do for my child. Nam S?roo? , Ci?y. NANCO ... A Dolomitic Agricultural Limestone With The Highest Naturalizing Value Of Any Limestone Available To This Area. Pulverized To Pass 100% Through A Ten Mesh Sieve And 50% Through A One Hundred Mesh Sieve. Ready Now In Bulk At Our Plant At Hewitt F.O.B. Trucks Or Railroad Cars. By Fall We Will Have Completed Our Bagging Plant And Warehouse And Will Then Be In A Position To Furnish NANCO Bagged One Hundred Pounds To The Bag. NANTAHALA TALC & LIMESTONE COMPANY Plan* ? Hewitt, N. C. Phone Bry*on City 2952 Main Office ? Andrews, N. C. Phone* 132 or 104 I Cub Scout Awards Made Awwdi were made to vahaw Cub Scout! far achievement* since the March meeting at the 1 April pack gathering Monday night in the primary school audi tori urn Den No. 2 under Mrs. Ray Smith gave a skit on the Five 1 Great LAers. Donald Ramsey, pack leader, announced a picnic gathering (or the next meeting of the group. May 13; and named a committee to arrange the re chartering o I the pack. Apply SPRED SATIN in minutes... < Enjoy for years! $6.49 GALLOM $2.10 QUART LIFE ? So easy to use with brush or roller ? Dries in 20 minutes A ? CtMfi op with soap and water a ? Looks new after washing, even scrubbing e Tough finish withstands hard knocks ? In fresh, new soft pastel color* GIBBS HARDWARE ; and Auto Supply jj i ! VE 7-2122 MURPHY, N. C. ;< s Area Obituaries mm CORA SANDERS Mr*. Cm Sanders, tt, died at 140 p.m. Friday at the home of a md. Charles Sanders of Marshy Rt. 1. altar a loot illness. She was a daughter of the late Mr. and tin. John Swint, natives of Troupe Couaty, Ala. Surviving in addition to Charles Sanders are 11 grandchildren; tlx great-grandchildren; and five great-great-grandchildren Service* were held Sunday at S p.m. in Peachtree Methodist church. The Rev. Al Smith and the Rev. tester Stowe officiated, and burial was in Peachtree Cemetery. Active pallbearers were; Ed English. Clarence Wilson, Ben Palmer, Wood row Hembree. Ralph' Rogers and John Mallanee Townson Funeral Home was in :harge of arrangments. MRS LASSIE MARGRETT COLEMAN ' HAYESVILLE? Mrs . Lassie Ma irett Coleman. 84. of Hayesville tt. S. died Monday in the Happ Memorial Hospital at Hiwassee. ia. alter a short illness. She was a daughter of the late 3hilitus and Lou Renee Crawford Rogers, was a native of Clav bounty and a member of the First dethodist Church. Services were held at 1 p.m. ruesday in the First Methodist :hurch of Hayesville. The Rev. Claude Young, the lev. R. T. Houts Jr., and Rev. Senjamin Stee>e officiated, and mrial was in the church ceme ery Surviving are the husband, fames B. Coleman : one daughter, ?Irs. Gladys Cope of Harrisburg. 'a.; one son. Waiter Coleman of lurphy; nine grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren; two bro hers, Robert Rogers of Rifle, :olo., and Lester Rogers of Car ondale, Colo.: two sisters, Mrs. ?anford Medford of Hayesville and Irs. Leeta Jones of Reno, Nev. Pallbearers were Porter Holli ield, Claude Long, Lee Penland. i F. Padgett, Horace Garrison nd Ed Herbert. Ivie Funeral Home was in harge of arrangements. Benefit Bridge Pnrtv Held Mrs. Don Will-ersooon. Mrs. R . Parker. Mrs. H. G. Elklns, itrs. W. M. Fain and Mrs. Fran ks Bourne Sr.. entertained last Saturday with a bridge luncheon it the New Regal Hotel. The lining room was decorated with [ladiolas and azaleas. Bridge was ilayed following a three-course uncheon. 20% off SALE! 51 Gauge- 15 Denier -REG. $1.15 ^3 mm 3 Pairs . . . $2.70 BUY NOW AND SAVE UP TO $4 00 per X BOX 400 Needle ? 15 Denier Seamless, Plain Stitch 08 or Mesh. REG. $1.35 . . . ? 3 Pairs . . . $3.15 Agilon Seamless S-t-r-e-t-c-h - $4 20 J REG. $1.50 ..... X 3 Pairs . . . $3.50 Full-fashioned or no-seams-Your once a-year opportunity to buy these lovely McCrary nylons at a km, low price! Donl miss this annual sale! TIm stocking with f.1 the anwl 4 Collins-Cram Department Store "Shop At Tht Stof With TK# Hid M 0" Tk Pwr" ww1 .ijiii w'D" Jerry Moor*. IT, ? native o f Murphy, died Saturday in Varo Beach. Fta. after a tag lltniwi Mr. Moore had reatad in V?t> for iereral yean Surviving are the paraots. Mr. and Mrs. Jeae Wiilard Moor*.; three sizars. Patrida, Sandra and Ann; two brothen, Lynn and Bill of Vera Beach. Fla.; the ma ternal grandmother. Mrs. J. W. Dyer of Murphy; and the paternal grandmother, Mrs. Georfe W. Moore o I Oregon. Hie body is being returned to Murphy for services and burial In a cemetery here under the direc tion of Townson Funeral Home. RICHARD L BURRKLL HAYESVILLE - Richard L. Burreil. 73. of Hayesville vas found dead on a creek bank near here Saturday afternoon, April 23. Clay County Coroner Dr. L. R. Staton attributed death to a heart attack. Burreil had last been seen Friday by his son, Paul. Mr. Burreil was a native of Clay County, a son of Brack and Sara McClure. He had been a member of Philadelphia Baptist Church. Services were held at 3 p.m. in Philadelphia Baptist Church. The Rev. Verlin Thomas and the Rev. Verlin Martin officiated, and burial was in the church cemetery. Survivors include four daugh ters, Mrs. Lucy Spivey and Mrs. Roy Foster of Hayesville, Mrs. Maud Gibby of Greenville, S. C.. and Mrs. James Barringer of Anaheim, Calif.; four sons, Paul. Wyner and Jay of Hayesville and Royal of Greenville, S. C.; two brothers, Robert and Louis of Hayesville; three sisters, Mrs. Eva Lowe and Mrs. Bell Marr of Hayesville and Mrs. Seva Nich olson of Hendersonville; and 22 grandchildren. Ivie Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. MRS. MAY TAYLOR |i ANDREWS ? Mrs. May Taylor, ; 64, of Andrews died near Chat- J lanouga, Tenn., Tuesday, April 19 at 3: SO p.m. She had ?uffered a stroke while , en route home from a shopping ( trip with her daughter, Mrs. , Grady Pullium of Andrews. ( Surviving in addition to Mrs. , Pullium are four other daughters, j Mrs. Howard Whitehouse of Her- | bert Springs, Ark., Mrs. Robert | Knapp of Riverton, N. J., Mrs. ; Tom Pritchard of Williams, Ariz., and Mrs. Gerald Mathis of An drews: two sons, Woodrow of i Bloomfield, N. M., and Daniel of Asheville: 13 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. Mrs. Taylor was a native of Andrews, a daughter of the late Daniel and Sally McKee Whtse hunt of Andrews, and a member of the First Methodist Church of 1 Andrews. Services were held at 2 p.m. ' Friday at the First Methodist I Church. The Rev. D. P. Smother man officiated, and burial was in Vallevtown Cemetery. I Pallbearers were Walter Brown, Tommy Axlev, Olen Stratton, Neil j Matheson, Charles 0 Frazier and i Ray Hogsed. t Ivie Funeral Home was in t charge of arrangements. ; ? NOTIC*~ NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA CHEROKEE COUNTY Under and by virtue of tbe power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed by Billy Clark and wife, Willa Mae Clark, dated July 12, 1958 and recorded in Book 212 at page 169, Records of Cherokee County, North Caro lina. default having been made in the payment of indebtedness there by secured and said deed of trust being by the terms thereof sub ject to foreclosure, the undersign ed Trust will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bid der for cash at the courthouse door in Murphy. North Carolina, at noon on the 25th day of May, 1960 the property conveyed m said] deed of trust which is described! as follows: A part of State Survey No. 16 in District No. 5, on Bates Creek in1 Cherokee County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Mary JO Dockery, U.S.A. and Dewey Mills, in Murphy Township, and describ ed as follows: BEGINNING on a stake in the East margin o { Highway leading from Murphy to Grandview and runs with said Highway Two (2) courses: North 11-90 East 232 feet; then North 2-15 West 274 feet to a stake on said Highway at the intersection of a 20-foot road as shown on map; then with tbe said 20-foot road two (2) courses: South 67-45 East 4S2 feet to a stake in the White Branch: then up the center of &aid branch as it meanders North 57 East 75 feet, more or less, to the East boundary line of State [ Survey No. 16, or Government lint; than with the said line South; 4-30 West 43S feat, more or less, to a cherry stomp and Govern ment Marker in the said line; then North 74 West 181 feet to a stake In Bates branch; than with the said branch downstream South 32-30 Wast 75 feat to a stake in the said branch; then leaving the branch North 7W0 Wert 119 feet to the Beginning, containing 4.71 acree, mora or leas. Bat this sale will be made sub ject to ail outstanding and unpaid tame aad any aad ail other prior Uans and ancumbrtaa TW? ard day of Afrfl. 11* 9 noAjttif, About You By Hwnz RoAmwi A LIVING WAGE? We aH have been doing a lot a i reading lately about the new minimum wage. Naturally, a 75 cent minimum wage is not enough for any oof to be able to live on. Now. I do not say that the peo ple who now have to pay a minimum of 7S cents can afford to pay a higher _ wage until w?, ROLLMAN the people, are willing to pay more for certain services. But we must remember something very basic and something very Fundamental: When the federal minimum wage was first intro duced and then gradually raided there went up a howl to high lieaven that business all over our nation would come to a complete standstill, that profits would be i thing of the past, that every body would be unemployed very soon. As always, when these prophets of doom yell the loudest, the opposite has been true. More People are working for a living We have more over-all prosperity than we ever had. Profits in most industries are better than they have ever been. To get some peo ple used to a change, obviously. | is much harder than to teach them to learn to dance on a tight rope. But in a free society, jeople must have the privilege to raise all kinds of fuss against any changes, even though the mo tives are always purely selfish. Many people nave not as yei -eached the point where they un lerstand that happiness multi plies as we divide it with others jnd the same is true with money ? that also mutiple if one spreads it and shares it more jvenly with others. If I would )wn a laundry. I would pay higher aages than what my competitors io now, and I would hang a sign >utside my shop telling the peo ple that my 5 or 8 employees have ;o pay the same prices for gro :eries as the workers who work in a big company: that my 5 or i employees have to eat at least twice a day and have to clothe and feed their children, and that they cant do it unless I pay them at least $1.25 an hour; tnat. therefore, starting tomorrow morning the prices for cleaning shirts and bed sheets will go up by 25 cents each. Do you know what would happen? I would get more traffic than I could handle, and I would have to hire another eight employees to come and take care of all the customers who want their pillow cases and under wear washed in a place Where people get a living wage. And if I would own a restaurant. I would just charge one cent, or Iwo cents more for a cup of cof fee. and 25 cents more for the steak. and tell the customers that my waitresses and the cooks can >ot very well live on love alone, j hey have to pay also for food. ' ihelter and clothing. Before three [ nonths. I would have to build' i bigger restaurant. The public! Mt be willing lo pay a (air tea alw to taaae people who ? very, vary small hiwtnsai a. and who do aot have the wer that one af the co-called ^ethical" drug companiee has to foroe the consumer to pay a dol lar ior a l-ceot pill. Free enter prise must have a conscience, and in a democracy people must thtak of their neighbor. If not. we automatically invite the state or the federal government to step in and tell us what to do. I only wished our last legislature would have stepped a little bolder and livelier when they voted on the minimum wage. Let's hope that in the next legislature there will be sufficient men and women who know enough about the facts of life to write legislation that will not be mockery for our peo pic nor (or our iuu It would be Interesting I* uk aask and mmy legislator whether he hat lately family on the present minimum hourly wage. iPaU Pol Adv.) Auxiliary To Sponsor Party The Providence Auxiliary will sponsor a card party Friday, April 29 at I pjn. at the New Regal Hotel. < Door and table prizes will be given and refreshments served Mrs. Cloe Moore is Committee Chairman. Tickets at $100 each can be obtained from Auxiliary members or at the Regal Hotel desk The public is invited to attend. SPENCER ADAMS BEST OUTSIDE WHITE PAINT . gal. s395 BEST FLAT WALL PAINT . . . gal. *3" BEST RUBBER BASE PAINT . . . gal. s475 With Two Gallon Purchase Of Either We Give FREE ? ROLLER-PAN SET ? Value $1.50 COLD SEAL RUGS . . *795 We Stock A Complete Line Of Wallpaper and Accessories Buy The Best ? Buy BIRD! BEST QUALITY Per Sq. INSULATING SIDING *1695 215 LBS. Per Sq. ASPHALT SHINGLE *5? 10 BAGS OR MORE CEMENT . . per bag m5 6-INCH Eachf CONCRETE BLOCKS . 18c DICKEY SUPPLY CO. Corner Tennessee and Depot Streets VE 7-2125 MURPHY, N. C. Last year's winner has won again ! )?#?? BIGGEST SALES SUCCESS IS GOING STRONGER THAN EVER IN I960. ONE LOOK AT THOSE BEAUTIFULLV PROPORTIONED LINES AND YOU'LL KNOW WHYI Within one year from introduction, the ford Galaxie, the Thunderbird of the low-price 6eld, has become the world'i best-selling aeries. For 1960 it M even more situational. Inside and out, in atyle and luxury, the Galaxie ia unmistakably Thunderbird. For power, you can have the "lightning " of the Thundcrbird's own V-8 engine. And for 1960, Galaxie hu more room for iix passenger! than ever before! Yet, all-new and elegant aa the Galaxie it, it still sports a low Ford price tag. So take a tip from all America. Come trst-drire the I960 Galaxie? the beet-ielling ear in the world. Com* ?? the Wonderful JV?v World qf Forda at your Ford AmIit'i ...f r.a.*.F. ? FOW-TI* FM F?* at < UMm *?? f?lCO?-T?. taMta NX IT IUII01H(?-T* ? BURCH MOTORS VI 7-2121 MURPHY, M. C. VI 7-2232 "T- ? Ttv?r- COLOR TUESDAYS. ON NBC-TV
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1960, edition 1
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