IF IT ISN'T IN THE SCOUT IT'S BECAUSE WE DIDN'T KNOW IT The O^lcial Organ of VOLUWW XXXVI. No. 25. WANTS TO BUILD CANNING FACTORY IN MURPHY Virginia Company Makes Inquiries About Growth of Ttomatoes In County The Chamber of Commerce was recently in receipt of a letter from a Virginia packing company making inquiry with regard t ? the establishment of a canning factory in Murphy ; for the canning of tomatc.es. This is a well established company oper-, ating canneries in season at a number of points in Virginia. Tennessee, and Florida. The company would like to come into th.s part of West- I ern North Carolina if it can pet assurances that tomnt - will he grown by the farmers and gardeners. This company suggests that it would establish a plant here if it could be assured of something like 300 acres of tomat . s. the growers entering into contra t sell all the tory. The packt-s indicate that a ; price of forty cents a bushel would i be paid. This price would be guar- ; an teed as the packers would be bound j by the contract. , A canning factory would be worth a lot to this county. It would proj vide a market for \.cetal?les dur- . ing the mid-summer season when the markets are ordinarily well supplied. It would turn ioose considerable money in the county and h o' tre- . mendouj t< refit to farmers aou gardener^. The Chamber of (' l unerce is at a loss to know how to reply to this com. munieaUon until some ? \ ression of < .-viilhmoi i? lnutlv lj, liio--- iiiusv V?t- ' ally concerned, nam y, th,? farmer-. ? If all the farmers wl - Id l"- will- ? ing to enter int.- ? v. tract to sell ( them to a cannery, wo .Id ommuni- < cate with the Chamber | Commerce. I es each, ' that would make up the required ? ucscage. Local jobbers say that a price of forty cents a bushel is a very ? satisfactory price for mid-summer buying. Undoubtedly. an a.-re plant- < ed to tomatoes for sal eat this price < would yield considerable revenue and < likely would prove much n. re profit- ' able than si me other cro; . This is > understood to he a go d tomato 1 growing section. JJ If all those who are interested 1 would immediately write n card or a 1 little note to The Scout or the Chamber of Commerce, it would give ] interested parties something to nite to work on. Here is a good opportunity for co-operation. Many New Industries Established In South " ' l! Washington, l\ C., January 26.? J Continued industrial development in the territory served by the South- ( ern Railway System is shown by the annual report of the Southern's Development service covering the year.1 1924. The report lists a total of 132 new! 1 industries placed in operation during the yeaT, 28 new industries un- ' der construction on December 31st, ?J84 enlargements of existing indus- | tries pjlaced in operation during the, I year, and 8 enlargements under construction at the end of the year, a * al of 253 new industries and en-! rgemcnts. ~ -? > fAs in former years, the greatest: J ivity was in the building and en-j ging of textile plants. __ew in-| llationg of textile machinery in tv mills and in enlargements at ints served by the Southern inded 172,473 spindles, 4,307 looms | i 1,38 knitting machines. ibrary Trustees \ ; Met Tuesday < The Boorjf. '~\Trustees of the Car- ' met Tuesday after- J J ' the lobby of the Regal Hotel ' -with Messrs. M. W. Bell. G. W. Candler, C. M. Wofford, J. B. Storey and 31rs. L. P. Kinsey present. The wel-1 i fare of the library was discussed ar^ some resolutions were passed rela- j tive to the borrowing of books and Regulating the uae of the library. I i Wt)t Murphy and Cheroke Presiding Elder Will Preach At M. E. Church Rev. P. W. Tucker, presiding eldei of the Waynesville district, will preach at the local Methodist churcl Sunday morning at 11 o'clock ant possibly again in the evening at "3 o'clock. Mr. Tucker was assigned to the Waynesville district by the Western North Carolina Conference ut the fall meeting in 1024. In a$ [much as this will be tne tirst time he has preached here, considerable interest attaches to his coming. Mr Tucker was here once before but dii: not speak. The public is invited tc hear him. Woman's Club Warts Booklist For Library In the near future the Woman's ' tun ?Ap have suggested lists for their fju'fiance and convenience. Anyone who has in mitul any particular volume i?r volumes that should be in the library are asked to make a note of the title, author and publisher, or lis much or this information as pos-iiile and mail or hand to any member of the club. County Beard Health Elects Health Officer At a meeting of the County Board i>f Health a few days ago the memUrilgg of the Board was complet .*?! and county health officers were . lected. The board is automatically . > imposed of the County Superintenlent ?.f Schools, the chairman of the Board of County Commissioners and the mayor of Murphy. These three ?lect the other members. At a former meeting, Dr. E. E. Adams was ?!ected but declined to serve and at this meeting. Dr. W. C. Morrow was lected to fill the vacancy. I)r. J. N. Hill, of Murphy, was again elected county imy.vician. Mr. Wilson Elliott was elected lunmntine officer, succeeding Mrs. ,'allie Tilson. Members of the board explained that the health law passed jy the legislature last year imposed such duties on the county quarantine officer as a woman could not very veil carry out. For this reason it tvas deemed advisable to appoint o nan. FAMOUS PICTURE COMING HERE ON FEBRUARY 5TH The Hunchback of . .Notre Dame, Taken from Victor Hugo's Undying Classic "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" will be shown at the Bonita Theatre, Murphy, Thursday, February 5th, afternoon and night. This picture is hailed by French, Scotch, Spanish, Italian, German, lewish and American newspapers, public men, teachers. preachers, theatre-goers and women's organizations as the "peak of motion picture production and presentation." in tnus picture the cathedral of Notre Dame, the Bastile, the Palace of Justice, and the court of Miracles have come into being again before the all-seeing eye of the camera. Magnificent, glorious, gorgeous, thrilling and dramatic are some of thq adjectives applied to this production. Beauty, romance, intrigue, good acting, drama, grandeur and pathos are all combined in this production. To give some idea of the reception it has received over the country, it ran for twnty successive weeks at the Astor Theatre in New i'ork and then just across the harbor in Brooklyn enjoyed a similarly successful preesntation for a period of several weeks. It has been shown in most of th larger theatres in the country and wherever it has been lias always received the same warm degree of praise. A California minister says erf it "The film production of Victor Hugo's 'Hunchback of Notre Dame' is a masterpiece of drama and photoarphy. It holds one's interest at the keenest pitch uninterruptedly foi three hours." The San Francisce Cfjerc e County, and the Lead MURPHY. NORTH CAROUN Bori And McCorn , Unseen Millioni For New Et John McCormack and T.ucroxla1 Borl iani; lo their greutost auili on cos on N ? \v Year's night. Mil-| Hons heard their gold?-n voices ovlt the radio, inaugurating the first stop in an extensive plan to give radio fans an opportunity of i hearing the musical notables of the world. ? The voices of Mr''ormack and Borl came as a 1>_1 New Ycout Section of Western Nortl Moon Partially j S. Eclipsed The Sun Last Saturday The sun had no more 'i-'-n al.? ve Wa the hills in the Fist la>t Sa'ur :a\ morninir until the pale moon nx ved over his face ami shadowed, much of hi.- otherwise plor:ous splendor. S, The process of partially efacing the vt >an began about sew-n-thirty o'clock and lasted until approximately nine kilU ' most nearly eclipsed, it being; esti- uty mated that from sixty five t<> seven- Furl I ty percent of its face be in;; obscured, Mail Th.- eclipse was total in Conn> '1- Yon cut. Western New York, aero.-- the ' p ; Great Lakes. in Northern Michigan and and Minnesota ar.d ir. Southern (': n- won ada. Extending- oui from a n irr??w g-'in bank alone this lire -f totality, th. *w" degree ??f the eclipse gradual!;. 1? --- whei , etied until in the extreme S<.uti. i: Th was no more than visible. The s tn'- You rays reached the earth but dimly here' oner a-tire a yellowish pale light a- to ?" of the United States where the ion eclipse was total, was t, tally in tli that shadow of the mo?>n. the complete ?x-nl shadow being known t ? science as hibit the umbra. Points outside of this ernl band, as for instance. in Murphy. .and were in only a partial shadown. or the penumbra. . Ft The mi- satellite of the sutj I'-Mt following it around frotn year t.? year in its daily r tation or. its axis er" and ts annual revolution of the sun. Whenever the moon ooiv.e- in be- ro>tween the sun and the earth. there er;*I is an eclipse, totul in some places ( and partial in others. Less than two 1 years ago the ellipse \%.?- total off only the coast of South Africa. It will a '"a be many years before it is total in the l;a'United Stages again. The eclir- ian interesting phenomenon 'of the pe!>u heavenly bodies and is alwavs looked cou' forward to by scientists as it gives *>ut thorn an opportunity ? > study the sun U;i> and other heavenly bodies and their " influence on the earth. ers and Bonus Insurance Being i.ra Received By Veterans banc During the last two or three w-'oks bonus insurance policies have bee:, received by a number of W rid War soi,r veterans in Murphy and Cherokee ^ . County. Applications for insurance under this law v\ :v sent in a!! dur- 4{t ing the last six months of last vcur &im but no policies were mailed out un- ) til the first of this year. App ier-.- four tions are still being filed by some |-ft. of the soldiers. They may be until jn li>2(?, but it is t ; the advantage of ^ j soldiers to get their applications in as early as possible as the policies seve | are worth much les the older the vet- jje j [era., becomes. l.ndor the law passed bv t ongress last year every World War veteran. i i i >'car , sailor or marine, \va sgranted a bonus of $1.00 a day for each day served jj-__ in American and $1.25 a day for each govt i day served over seas up to $.">00 for ferCl home service and $625 for overseas ture service. Since the policies have no . 1 . aire i cash value until after 20 years, their jr i face value is much greater than the above amounts for these amounts .. - , .. unicarn mutiphed by certain age fac! tor numbers to determine the face ^ of the policies. For instance, a vet- ^ ieran 2.r> years old would have an .... / ... Illin age factor of 2.;*.??, which mean? j ^ I that the face of the insurance policy j would be issued for an amount equal ^ to its present cash value, figured as ^ t outir.ed above, multiplied by the age 1 jj [ factor 2.537 for the 25 year old vet-' i eran. As the age increases, the age a | factor decreases. It is. therefore, ad. jvantageous for the veteran to get in | his applications as early as posible. While these policies have no pres- r ent cash value, yet their have a loan! ^ , value in three years equal to 00 per-, cent of their face value and they are' J | payable in full cash at the end of i 20 years. However, a bill is pending . in Congress now to make them pay- M able in three years. Spri These policies arc not negotiable, mor Director hines of the Veterans Bu- port reau, Washington, has recently sent Pair out a statement to this effect, the He statement being prompted by the in- brot j formation that certain veerans had (man I attempted to sell their policies. mou s ADVERTISE IN ? THE SCOUT I "IT WILL MAKE 1 YOU RICH" ; !i Carolina i 5c COPY?>1.50 PER YEAH GLEN YOUNG SHOT IN RIOT IN HERRIN, ILL. ? Well Known in Western North Carolina?Assisted in Arreat Of Rose Glen Young. former government 'nut officer and agent in roundup deserters: during the war, wat <1 in a riot in Herrin. 111.', last iiua> nifiiiu Besides Young:, Dep* Sheriff Ora Thomas. George and Homer Warren were also i. The shooting occurred when g and some of his followers met uty Sheriff Thomas in the street after the exchange of a feu* 'Is. i? tii men drew guns and be. , ' Led battli. Young and f his followers fell dead while re in- Utter succumber to wounds, mas wn- carried to a hospital :.g is said t have been a bitter t:y of Thomas and had been parg the streets all day Saturday " ?.>? to meet hi? fee vhe he learned, was back in Williamson ity. The shooting occurred it : o'clock. oung had been in Herrin severears in connection with the un> and r< n-union mine clashes in district, having gone there from tucky. where he was in the proion service. He figured in sevclashe. between Ku Klux Klan non-Ku Klux Klan Sympathizers, jung %vj> stationed in Asheville some months, coming there in '. fr-o-i which base he turned his ition to rounding up draft evadand dt seM?rs from the United i - Army. He figured in the arvf Ji:n liitsc- of this county SOVyeais ago. when Rose and Julius lure were wounded, the latter ig an arm. This arrest was made after a pitched battle between If a dozen or more men. Young's in it is not definitely known, 'vera! years ago he gained a wide nation in various parts of the ity as a law enforcement agent, his first act to startle the public las capture of the noted Crawley , a gang of world war draft cvad i n v? ii"in i. rilieu .-Males troopers Federal officers searched for ths ii. the m >untains of XorthGcurgia. Western North Caroand Eastern Tennessee. Young -k? d the draft evaders single led, captured them all and ght them to Knoxville, Tenn. iter as an unrelenting foe of li. he won prominence and the iquet of "man killer" through ictivities against moonshiners in mountains of Georgia and TennStill later ho was dubbed "two man" when he began carrying pistols, and sometimes three or after many threats against his had been made. ton years Young had a record iv-re than 3,001) arrests and aM to show for them were six or n scars. lie once estimated that iad killed more than a score of For 15 years he worked for department of Justice, and seven s of that time was spent in huntdown deserters from the army, activities, it was said, cost the irnmcn*. $60,000 ir. rewards ofd for the arrests of those capd or killed when they resisted st. i 1020 Young's crusade brought into Illinois ami almost front the he entered the State he was in public eye. He first startled people of tli State when he enterh home of a farmer at Madison, ois, in search of liquor and ald the owner to snap a pistol at three times before drawing his weapon and firing nine shots inhe man's body. c then invaded Williamson counnd added to his fame by waging ;leneless campaign against hooters. He was credited by his ids with having "cleaned up" the ity, but this was done only after i and the sending of troops into county to maintain order. W. Palmer, Boiling Springs, Died Saturday r. J. W. Palmer, of the Boiling ngs section died last! Saturday ning early. Heart failure is reed as the cause of his death. Mr. ner was about sixty years old. is survived by his wife, two hers who live at Marble, and y other relatives and friends who irn his untimely passing. .. * ""