Day'* Noil Up GOLD MEDALLION Award The Tom Day Home Receives Hallmark Of Quality Award HAYESVILLE - Town or country, you can new have a home that fills all needs for modern living. It's the Gold Medallion Home and can be yours in any style and in any price range. The Tom Day home on the Fires Creek Road near Hayesvllle, is a country home of quality. What gives the Gold Medal lion Home its difference from other homes is its built-in qualities ? qualities that make it stay ig>-tD-da?e long er, that makes it more live able. The Days' Gold Medallion Home has electric heating. Electric heating- is clean and efficient. It requires no work or attention ? you set your thermostats and forget it. It gives your home new value, new comfort, and new con venience. The Days' Gold Medallion Home has adequate wiring. Adequate wiring in your Gold Medallion Home keeps your electric appliances and equip ment working at top per formance. It gives you the convenience outlets and the switches that you need to make full use of your electric equipment at all times. Its reserve capacity permits you to look to the future for still further use of electric equip ment for comfort, for con venience, and for saving work. The Days' Gold Medallion . Home has good lighting. Light ing in the Gold Medallion Home is adequate for all after-dark seeing tasks. It creates a , pleasant atmosphere and make! the borne more attractive. INSURANCE TIPS from HYDE AGENCY SPRING CLEAN-UP GOOD TIME TO ELIMINATE FIRE HAZARDS Sprint;, traditionally, has been tha time of year to rid your home of fire hazards by removing trash, making re pairs and continuing regula checlng)S of electrical equip ment and appliances. It's not difficult ? just start in the attic and work your way down to the base ment. The National Board of Fire Underwriters suggests: Throw out those stacks of old ma gazines and newspapers and die broken chairs and other tirick-a-brack you've been keeping in attic or base ment for years. In the bedrooms, check the cords of bedside lamps or radios and replace them if they are worn. Be sure they do not irun under rugs or over hooks. In the kitchen, be certain you haven't: allowed grease to col lect ini the broiler or oven. Examine the appliances and their cords; if repairs arc needed,, call an expert. Don't pull alll appliances on one electrical circuit and don't overload a single outlet. Check curtains to make sure they do not blow across the flames on the stove. Be sure the children can't reach the kit chen m.atches. In due living room, locate the television set so that it has proper ventilation. The set can generate enough heat to cause a fire. Too many basements are nothing more than hatcheries for hazards. Every home - owner padnts and mostof them save the paint they don't-use. If ft! a paint saver, make sure the cans are tightly cov ered and sored away from the heating unit. Under no conditions should you save old paint rags. Get rid of them. And don'tforgetto clean out the garage. It can become a catch-all for old, useless materials. This column will be glad I answer questions you may hi about property jpid casual! insurance. Send them to Hyde Insurance Agency, Murphy, North Carolina. The Days' Gold Medallion Home has electric appliances. Efficiency counts in the home just as much as in other work ing areas. The electric ap pliances in the Gold Medal lion Home assure you of more productive and pleasant work in running your home. Basic appliances in all Gold Medallion Homes are the elec tric range, refrigerator, and water heater, plus one other major electric appliance. To these, you'll add other elec trical appliances and devices to assure your family a com fortable, pleasant, modern home. Your Gold Medallion Home may be new, designed to meet the gold medallion standards. Or you may remodel your pre sent home to meet the stand ards. Your local power sup plier, Blue Ridge Electric As sociation, Young Harris, Ga.i is among the national sponsors of the Gold Medallion Home program and will be glad to assist you, without charge, in meeting these standards. Old Men's Club Is Organized MURPHY - The members of the "Old Men's Organizat ion" met at the Courthouse on April 27, 1963, Those pre sent were: Gail A. Anderson, Murphy, J. M. Verner, Rt. 4, Murphy; O. C.Payne,Murphy, Suit Rural Station; J. B, Baine, Farner, Tenn.; V. L. Wlllson, Murphy; Paul Mar Rt. 2, Murphy; H. A. Bar ton, Rt. 1, Murphy; N. T. Penland, Rt. 2, Murphy; George Chastain, Rt. 2, Mur phy; W. A. Boyd, Rt. 1, Mur phy; J. E. Graves, Rt.3,Mur phy; R. M. Moore, Rt. 1, Murphy; Homer Ricks, 10 Sunset Drive, Murphy. Motion was made and duly seconded that a Finance Com mittee be elected. Those elected are as follows: V. L. Wilson, H. A. Barton, and J. M. Verner. J. M. Verner was appoint ed chairman of the Finance Committee. A collection was taken which amounted to $16.70 ?which will be used toward the prospective reunion. The next meeting was sche duled for Saturday, May 18. Motion was then made and seconded and approved to in vite wives of all the old men attending meetings. Plans were made for future meet ings. There being no further business at this dme, the meeting adjourned. Cherokee Scout & Clay County Progress, Thu., May 16, 1963 Clay Native Dies MIDDLETOWN TWP, New Jersey - Mrs. Viola Rigtp Myer, 69, of Hayesville, N. C., died Wednesday morning. May 8, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edward L. Harburn, 72 Apple Farm Rd., Apple Farm Village, with whom she had been visiting the past three months. Mrs. Myer was born in P on syl van! a, a daughter of the late Abram and Lydie A. Mc Cloud Ripp, and had formerly lived in Normandy Beach, N. J., and Nutley, N. J. She was a member of the Epis copal Chapel of the Good Shep herd, Hayesville. Her late hus band, Richard W. Myer, died in 1946. Besides her daughters, she is survived by a grandson, Richard L.Harbum;and a sis - ter, Mrs. C. P. Hackman, of Elizabethtown, Pa, Services were held Friday, May 10, 1963, at 2 p.m. at the East Ridgelawn Cemetery, Delawazma, N. J? with the Rev. Fredrick McQuade, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, Mlddleiown,N.J.,of flciating. Watch This Newspaper Ti Sci How Yoi Cai Bo COOL Ibis Sinner!!! Mm Ridgo Eloctrlc Association, Young Harris, Co. DEQUATE WIRING featured ? in the Tom Days' of Hayesville, N. C. Gold W& Medallion Home Mr?. Day Serves Coffee To Her Husband From The Attractive And Conveinent Electric Cook Unit Counter In Her All-Electric Gold Medallion Home. THE updallioN GOLD HOME .better living for your family Electric Appliances To qualify for Gold Medallion, your , home must contain modern electric appliances. Included must be an electric water heater, range, refrigerator and at least one other electric appliance. If a heat pump is installed, it can count as the additional major electric appliance. Light for Living There must be adequate lighting throughout smur home for every seeing task. The minimum require ments for lighting are the "Light for Living Standards" as establish ed by the American Home Lighting Institute. Adequate Wiring There must be enough wiring: for economical opera tion of present appliances and lighting ? ana for future needs. Wiring must meet the minimum re quirements of the National Electric Code, local codes and the Residential Wiring Handbook of the National Wiring Bureau. Electric Heat To earn a Gold Medallion, your home must be heated electrically. Any type of electric heat may be used, including the year-round heat pump. Mr. Day Point* With Pride To The ADEQUATE WIRING CERTIFICATE Awarded Hi* New Gold Medallion Home We'll work with von, your architect, builder abd contractor in planning electric heating, wiring for full housepower, and Light for Living for your C.old Medallion home. CALL US FOR THIS SERVICE?ITS FREE TOR THE ASKING. The Tom Day Homo, Hojrosvillo, N. C. BLUE RIDGE ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION YOUNG HARRIS, GA.

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