DO THIS QUICK! Il takes j us t ONE HOUR to M BQ-6. Take two tablets M while, one brown) each tlf hour unal 3 doses are |h*a. Then in another half our, if not pleased, get your % back at any drug store. May at Mauney Drug Store. Lov? never loaea light at loveliness Mary B. Eddy How little ds they see what really la. who frame their has ty judgement 14*0* that which seems. -Robert Southey A wlae man sees as much as he ought, not as much at he can. -Montaigne 'I'll be a little late I ' but don't worry' Even tha beat plans and arhedulea are aometimes aubjact to laat minute rhangea or delaya. When thia happens, call and let ' the people who are wait- | ing know that you'll be j lata. >( It'a the polite way to Mve them needless worry .?nd to insure they will be waiting when you do ?rriye Western Carolina Telephone Company Backward 30 YEARS AGO J ANUARY 23, 1931 Road 1 provement work In Cherokee County was discus sad ai a ?> eenng of cidzcns and officials In die Regal Hotel here. David Daden, representing John Mitchell, chief State Bank Examiner told the stockhold ers and officers and citizens committee at a called meeting Wednesday night, that the Bank ct Murphy was not going to be allowed to open, but the Corp oration Commission had de cided to liquidate the Insti ? tution. Mr. Frank Ellis, who has been home for several days, returned to Cecil's Business College in Asheville Sunday. A wedding of Interest to friends In Western NorthCar ollna and East Tennessee took place in Erwln, Tenn., last Sunday morning when Miss Irene Bailey became the bride of Mr. William Wilson, In a quiet home ceremony. Mr. Wilson formerly resid ed at Murphy and was associa ted with the A & B 10f and 25< Store here. Little Miss Jean Dickey ce lebrated her Sth brithday on Tuesday of last week with a party. 20 YEARS AGO JANUARY 23. 1941 The $18,840 community re creation center recently ap plied for by the town of And rews has been approved to announcement Tuesday by A. F. Weaver, Jr., area supervisor of the WPA. The local canning factory of the Land 'O the Sky Mut ual Canning association will operate on full schedule dur ing the 1941 season, J. B. chocolate MILK COBLE The Breakfast Starter rnrith Staying Power Mad* from rich, pure Grade-A milk, Coble Chocolate milk hits the spot when you serve it hot Try it at breakfast or snack time. Simply pour and heat. Order from your milk man or ret some at your favorite store. Glance Shield*. Manager, has an nounced. Mrs. W. O. King spent Mon day In Sylva. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Car nnger announced the Urth of a son. Raymond Edward. on January 14. Ben Palmer and J. H.Dun can were visitors In Atlanta on Thursday. The Rev. and Mrs. R. C. Cornwell have announced the marriage of their daughter, Mae Cornwell to Jack Nich olson, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Nicholson of Richland, Georgia, on January 20. In Blue Ridge. Ga. The Rev. O. H. Maxey performed the cere mony. Miss Mary Lee Roberts and Miss Enla Baker, students in a beauty culture school inAshe vi lie, spent last weekend here. Mrs. Ralph Harbin and Mrs. S. S. Christopher arrived last week to visit here with rela tives. 10 YEARS AGO JANUARY 25, 1951 The visit of the American Red Cross Bloodpioblle to Andrews broke all previous records for a single day op eration In the Asheville rel glon. The people of Andrews, Marble, Topton, and Nanta hala donated 151 pints of blood for hospitals and the armed forces. Thursday. February I, the new A & P Supermarket on Peachtree Street will be open for the service of Murphy's housekeepers. Townson Lumber Company announces the expansion of their facilities due to a greatly enlarged volume of business. Two plants will be opened in Lenoir, one In Bryson City, and one at Blue Ridge, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Akin of Ranger announce the marriage of their daughter, Audrey, to Guy Rich, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Rich of Culberson, on January 6. Mrs. H. G. Elkins, Mrs, Francis Bourne, Mrs. B. W. Whitfield, and Mrs. Don Witherspoon spent Wednes day in Atlanta. Mrs. Mary Lee Hardlson has joined her husband, Sgt. Leland B. Hardlson at Camp Stoneman, Calif., for an Inde finite visit. , Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ram sey and children have moved here from Akron, Ohio, to make their home. KIDKEY DANGER SIGNALS Getting up nights, burning, frequent, or scanty flow, leg pains or backache may be 1 warning of functional kidney disorders - "Danger Ahead.*' Help nature eliminate excess, acid and other wastes. Flush kidneys with BUKETS. Your S0< back at any drug store in 4 DAYS if not pleased. Now at Mauney Drug Com pany and Parker Drug Store. Now! Goodyear Auto Tires give you more protection than ever beiorel SENSATIONAL GOODYEAR ROAD HAZARD and QUALITY GUARANTEE 4 ftoW Ward Gu?antM-All now Goody** *utomot>il? frit ttt tut' intttd by wrltftfr lit WtM H?i?rd?- blowoull, t*br>c bre*ln. cuti-?c*pt ttvf-ttbtt punctures. Ou*r*n|?? limited to onjuul 0*n*r for numtMr of months ipoafiod. i Lifetime Guarantee -Art GaSdyw tire* 1200 Per Year By Grady Grubbs Field Representative Workers who are reaching retirement age in 1961 may now receive more in combined soc I?1 security benefi ts and earn - ^gs even though they exceed me! >1200 earnings limitation. This Is now possible because the method of charg i?i^XCeSS e,rnlngs over the H200 limitation has been changed by recent amend ments to the Social Security Act. The new method provides that $1.00 in social security benefits will be withheld for fff'L *2-?? earned between J1200 and $1500; and for every J1.00 earned over the $1500 $1.00 will now be withheld rrom total family benefits payable. This important change will now make many more work ers eligible for at least some social security benefits in 1961 ind future years than under the old law which disqualified ?*?:.ker f?r ??y P?ynents If he was working In all months af the year and his earnings exceeded $2080. Here are just two examples works'- *** ""rewenteest 1. A man and his wife re ceiving monthly social secu rity payments of $180. the Highest amount payable to a m,y rece,ve I? durln? ??>e year lh?n ?d k. Un?r *e old '?*? he "id his wife would have fa?n Qualified I ? he toZtZ ?11 montha of (he year at *ls level of earni*.. i 2m^tr?.rker p*crt*l'* ?20 ?month In social security Benefits could earn up o $2790 * . future year. ^5 \alT ?o?ve some of his benefits, ine provision still aoollea 11 monthly benefl^ jLKfJJ -rnlHls d? not .x :*d$1200 in the year. The Provision also remains ? benefit is payable in ?ny month in which die bej no' ?*"" "?o? * $100 In wages or render ?uhstantial services In self Science May Help Save "Aging" Great Lakes Premature "aging" of the Great Lakes, largest contin uous body of fresh water la the world, la of continuing concent to American conservationists. 1 Lakes Si^erior, Michigan, Huron. Erie, and Ontario are In no immediate danger of drying tqp. They will last for many more thousands of years. But sewage and Industrial waste may be speeding up the natural aging process by which a lake Is slowly converted Into a swamp, then dry land. The University of Mich igan's Insdtute of Science and Technology Is now trying to develop a technique for mea suring the rate at which lake plants convert sunlight into vegetadve material. The lake experts, known as limnolo gists, say measuring this rate Is vital to understand and eve ntually control a lake's aging. Lakes appear to be perma nent features of beaudf ul land - scapes, but they last hardly a minute, geologically speak ing. No sooner are they born than relentless forces begin to destroy them. Sediment fills the basin, and erosion tears down Its edges. Near the easterly edge of Lake Erie, for Instance, Nia gara Falls Is cuffing back into rock at the speed of a bout four feet a year. At this rate, the falls will have re treated to die lake in 27,000 years and unleashed Erie waters directly Into Lake Ontario. The clarity of water spil ling over the (alls suggests that a vast amount of sedi ment has been dropped on the floors of the lakes. A study of Lake Michigan shows an accumulation there of about three Inches per century. Through the amassing ot vegetative material, a swamp slowly builds up and a very gentle gradient develops across the surface. Eventua ly streams form and cut channels. Excess water drains and dry land appears. The world would soon have no lakes if new ones were not constandy being formed. A lake may start in may ways -- bv a fracture in the earth s crust, a lava flow blocking a valley, or by a glacier, which is the most important lake-producing agent. A glacier moves across the land like a giantic bulldozer scooping up earth here and dumplnt it there. In the pro cess, it often creates lake basins. The great ice age which ended about 10,000 years ago, created thousands of lakes in northern regions of Europe and North America. Finland alone has more than 60,000 glacial lakes. Norway and Sweden, Ontario. Manitoba, and the Northwest Territor es of Canada, and Maine and Min nesota also are thickly setwith them. _ . At their southernmost ad vance, glaciers covered the whole Great Lakes area. As the ice sheet retreated under warming climatic conditions, lakes developed. Thelargestof North America's prehistoric lakes. Lake Agassiz. was al most as big as the State of Nevada. It sprawled across parts of Minnesota, North Dakota, Ontario, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan. Over the centuries, its waters drained into Hudson Bay. andthegreat lake disappeared. Today the flat basin is filled with wheat farms. The deglaciadon of North America involved the meldng of 5.700,000 square miles of ice, two miles thick in the center. The water would have caused a world-wide catastro phe If it had been released suddenly. Instead the thaw ing took place over 10,000 years. Boiling Springs News Mr. Rex Davis and family of Springfield, Ohio, are visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Davis. Mrs. Joe Martin of Murphy visited at Boiling Springs on Sunday. Miss Minnie Allen was the guest of June O'Dell Satur day night. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Arm* visited his parents. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Arms last week. Miss Lois Mull visited her grandmother, MagieCornwell, at Davis Creek last Tuesday. Mr. Junior and Edwin Aber nathy was the guest - of Mr. and Mrs. Jack O'Dell Sundy. Clinton Cook if Culberson visited in Boiling Springs on Sunday. employment regardless of his total earnings during the year. Benefits may also be paid for months in which a worker Is age 72 or over. All workers who are Hear ing retirement age (65 for men, 62 for women), or have reach ed retirement age and have deferred filing a claim for benefits because they were earning over 11200 a year, should obtain the pamphlet en titled "If You Work While You Get Social Security Payments." This pamphlet explains the new n U reman t teat in detail. Just write the Social Security Ad ministration, 40 North French Breed, Ashevtlle, N. C? and aak for pamphlet No. 23. ?Another Mag ? 1 wish you'd (Bp your ?rC? ptcMat my ciiQctim to piecaa.' Oops, how did this oMpili harai comfort-condition your home . . . with comfort-giving electric heat Electric heat gives pleasant, even temperature throughout your home. Individual thermostats maintain any temperature you want in each room. Whether your home is old or new, you can comfort-condition with clean, automatic electric heat. FREE PLANS Before you build or remodel, let us help you plan for electric heat. We'll work with you and your electrical contractor in planning your electrical heating system. And we'll estimate your heating costs. Just ask. This service is free. Murphy Electric Power Board Thursday 26 - Friday 27 House oy IfcHeR o??C ? cotc* ( Saturday 28 DOUBLE |j FEATURE 1^ Trapped 1 Tangier Saturday Late Show COVER GIRL KILLER Sunday 29 - Monday 30 - Tuesday 31 bihg CROSW G * * ? UK?; MlS'KHIt Iftl iWur in |? fuh . yg, M eoum + mtvm i Biaap ? ? i md Wednesday I - Thursday 2 JERRY WAIO'S sons lovers STMMKlL'lulil- ne- SUB