Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / March 8, 1951, edition 1 / Page 2
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HAS OF it aoMfttn Gender 1 Shift this worry Don't try to carry the load of financial risks against loss by fire, Windstorm, theft, bur glary, accidents, liability1, suits, etc. When you have a loss, you want the matter cleaned up in a jiffy( with a minimum of mental anguish to you. You want to shift the burden to broader shoulders than your own. Let us anticipate this possibility for you by writing the right America Fore poli cies to cover you against all such losses. Your losses may be months or years away, but, mean while, insurance will give you mental peace that is worth far more than it costs you. BenG. Gregg Dies At Age 48 O.Onn,?ii IJMn at Andrews, ?M la ?!?jr at bit home la Br?on 0*j altar a Umatlm Wares He moved (a Btyaoa Ottjr Andrew* about 14 year* ago. He ?tl field leprae*ntattre of Woodmen at the World when he became IB. Funeral services were Wedneeday afternoon at 3 p a l-i Flr*t Baptlat Church with the nee. Joseph Miller, the Bee. Robt F. Cordefl Taken By Death ANEKBWS?Robert I CordeU. 65, former owner of the Cardell Hotel la Biyeon City, died la * Bryton City Hoepttal teat Tuesday ctfter a lingering lllneee CordeU elt one time operated Junahiska Terrace Hotel here, moving to DillSboro about three years ago to the J arret* Springs Hotel where he and Ms wife were living at the time of his death. funeral services were held Wed nesday afternoon at 1:30 In the Presbyterian Church with the pne tor, the Rev. Everette Brown offi ciating. Surviving are the widow; two sons R. J. of AsheviUe and James at Evsnsville, Ind.; two step-chil dren, Arnold Phillips of AabevHIe and Mrs. W. T. Hyams of Bryson CSHy and five grand-children. %ir New Homes TInder Construction ANDREWS?J and T Properties, Inc., are erecting two asbestos shingle four-room houses on corn er of Laurel and Valley Streets. Work started on these dwellings Wednesday (today) and they are expected to be completed within thirty days. Work baa started on a new home for A. L. Fancher located near Junaluska Hotel. The house is to be a four room stucco. Alder Purser is building a 5 room brick house near the place he now resides. JOINS AIR FORCE ANDREWS?Truett Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Gray, and Charles Freel, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Freel left last week for Charlotte where they will enter the air force of the U. S. Array. Horace McSwain and the Rev. H F. Donnelly officiating. Burial was in the Bryson City Cemetery with members of the Andrews Woodmen of the World in charge. Surviving are the widow; the father. C. L. Gregg of Blade Moun tain; three brothers Paul of Black Mountain and Vincent of Swan nanoa; one sister, Mrs. Lee Ellen Waldrup of Bat Cave, and a num ber of nieces and neptiews. i ? *? Terry Mart red At Party i ct> I il ANDREWS?iMrs. Evelyn Martin dill entertained with a part; Satur day ?tftarnoon. March 3, honor! liar eon. Tarry, on Ma aevtntb birthday. After games were played and picture* taken oI the group, t children were brought Into * end refreshments served to Harol dette Adams, Terrell Chandlers, Carolyn Wyke. Gall Anderson.' Brenda Wheeler, Larry Bracket!, Johnnie Adams Julia Cantrell and the honorpe, Terry Maitindill. Rev. G.B. Lane To Conduct Class will be a Young People's BDMe study ogam gi Free Mothodlat Church Starting Sunday. March M, and rontinutng The Rev. Q. B. Lane. 88, a graduate of Teacher's Bible School and tracblng aince he waa 18, will conduct the class This Is not a study of doctrine, but of the Bible. The only book needed to bring to the dm is the Blbie. Classes Start at 8:80 and irtll last about one hour. Prior to the study period there will be slngtng. I hwakr otter a Uhanl I tor Information ?voo to tha i or pouea lootUm to ?bo into of Mart- to! N. C. Si?Md: Frank L. M.unoy I America Fore INSURANCE CROUP ? T. W. Axley, Mgr. Insurance Department CITIZENS BANK A TRUST CO. MURPHY, N. C. Dr. Wm. R. Gossett Optometrist Eyes Frs?lacd?Visual Can Mauney Bldg. Office Bonn 9-lt 14 Closed Wednesday afternoons Enslsn by appointment Office 46# Bes. 464-W Mnrphy ? ? ? they deserve theAEST f Start Yomr Chicks on WAYNE CHICK STARTER Ut Today Smoky Mountain Hatchery, Inc. Phone 447-J MURPHY, N. C. L876I 75th Annlptrtary 75 Years of Service to the Nation 1951; "Mr. Watson, come here. I want you." "Mr. Bell, I heard every word you said?distinctly!" ...and the Telephone.was born! On March 10, 1876, In a boarding house in Boston, the telephone carried its first intelligible sentence. Alexander Graham Bell was about to try to send his voice over a new transmitter he had devised. His assistant, Thomas Watson, was In another room, holding a receiver to his ear. Suddenly, Mr. Bell upset the acid of a battery over his clothes. He called out, "Mr. Watson, come here; 1 want youT An instant later Vouon burst into the room, shouting, "Mr. Belt, I heard every word you said?distinctlyr ?n the 75 yeau since then, the Tele phone industry has grown up to transform our everyday pattern of Irving. For millions, the telephone has be come an indispensable aid?in business, government, the home, the farm, and in maintaining family and community ties. ? These 75 yean have brought an i parade of advancements in < switchboards, cables carrying hundreds of wires on poles or underground, die vacuum microwave radio relay for transmitting hun dreds of simultaneous calls or television programs, telephone service to ships and vehicles. Todajp America has 62% of the world's telephones and enjoys the most and the best telephone service in the world . . . another great achievement of American ingenuity under a system of free enterprise and indi vidual incentive and reward. Each year the telephone becomes more useful, and more essential to the prosperity and security of the nation. Today it unites the country, playing a vital role in mobiliza tion and production for defense. Here in the South, mote than 52,000 skilled employee* and nearly 314 million Southern Bell telephones are on the job more than twice as many as we had when World War n began. And there are four timet as many Long Distance circuits. In all, we have built more than $670 million worth of new facilities in a little over five years, and we're still busy at die job. All this growth?and maintaining the financial strength to keep on expanding? will be increasingly important to die South and the Nathm in the days ahead.?-Scyithem Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company. CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES ? IRISH COBBLERS REP BLISS ? ESSEX SEQUOIAS GREEN MOUNTAINS (Prtace Edward Allen) 100-LB. SACKS ? WE DELIVER AVAILABLE AT ALL FARMERS FEDERATION WAREHOUSES - ,/rsmys s/ie#r-ois7Xaw*** to know th*t on ? tothmLM it trwmm witk do I 7^6 GA?_ F.efrigeraf?' SMOKY MOUNTAIN GAS CO, INC. Phone 76 Murphy, N. C. fr&S FOR RURAL AND SUBURBAN HOMES <8%OKd'iuw feiavl ofe Special IfelwK/uf Get your hands on this strapping honey and hold onto your hat and heart. For this sparkling new car ? and we mean completely new?is the smartest, the richest, the highest-powered automobile Buick has ever provided at its bedrock Special price. Literally, everything here is new but the name. There's a brand-new X-member frame that's brawny and rugged, and a weight saver in the bargain. There's a brand-new chassis?but still with the buoyant cradling of coil springs on all four wheels, the solid keel of a torque-tube, the soft steady going of Safety-Ride rims and cushiony low-pressure tires. There's a brand-new body of spacious dimen sions and a stunning interior richer than any thing in Special history?a lighter, ruggedly strong steel body in a full array of styles, including a Convertible and Riviera. "Yes, all this and brand-new power, tool It's walloping new straight-eight valve-in* head Fireball power from an engine entirely new to this Buick Series?the high-economy F-263 Fireball engine. With more power to call on, and with less weight to carry, this nimble traveler zooms to new performance even greater than that of most cars beyond its price range. Better come in real soon and meet this brand* new kind of Special delivery?and the low delivered prices that go with it. DYNAFLOW DRIVi*-saves train on dHvor and ear FfUIAU POWFA?high-compression. ?vary drop of hoi PUSH-BAA FOAAFAONT?combines smart WHIJt-GLOW INSTAUMiNTS - greater -i?,f|., ?a _? i* aanry or ntgnf proros driving control OVAL VINTILAtlON?outside air fed sop arahty to right or hSt of hoof compartment ?Standard an HOAOMASTgt, op# Jo* WHM BCTTB AlffOMOUll AM : ?: \ 4-WMfU con SMINWNO - euthJoM rido, mm unldiij coifs : DMAMUNI irrum-^md, carl?gHt ftndcn, qImmJiiq iwM^MpMn m ntf ? I1 2 I,L- !,?? ?????? ' ? - - I 1. y l-fc, parung vniftV; rwv-wuj lywwn nm, ?id. iHIMWi far! &uU4c & FRANKLIN MOTOR CO. Murphy, North Carolina
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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March 8, 1951, edition 1
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