Our Aims ? A Better Murphy A Finer County (Ehfrtte i>rnut Dedicated T o Service For Progress vol- ?',1 ? !so- 35 THE LEADING WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN WESTERN NORTH CAR OL1NA, COVERING A LAROE AND POTENTIALLY RICH TEURITORY Ml'RPHY. NORTH CAROLINA I III ltSl>AY, MARCH 26 1942 5c COPY? $1.50 PER VEAK CARDS AVAILABLE FOR REGISTERING OF AUTO TIRES Every Owner In County To Be Supplied Free In War On TKJ??vm Thaais to the Murphy Lious Club, re registration cards soon will be made available to every automobile a nor in Cherokee County. The cards are to be filled out and turned in to any policeman or deputy sheriff, or iailo<! to Civilian defense offices rither in Andrews or Murphy. All to be kept on file by the Civilian De nse authorities. There is no charge for the service the cost of printing the cards having been met by the Lions club. Pilling out and returning of these cards will :ccovery of tires far more likely .in ease of theft. In Andrews cards may be obtained at the Mayor's office .in the City Hall, from Chief of Police Frank Meliaffey, or at the American Le pion hut. In Murphy, cards may be obtain ed from the Sheriff, from the police, or at the Court House, or the May or's office. Constables and Deputy Sheriffs '.liroughout the County will be able to get cards for car owners, and so trill members of the State Highway Patrol. The largest distribution, how ever. will be made through the pub lic school*. Every teacher ,ln every school .will rive a card to every child whose par ents own a car. In the next few days it is expected that cards will be placed in the hands of every auto owner in Chcrohcs. The cartls list the name and ad dress of the car owner, the make, model and year of the size and kind o ftires used. There also is space for listing of private identification marks on tires. Several owners are brandng their tires. Sister of Dr. J. N. Hill Passes On, In Miami Miss Hattle Hill, daughter of the iate A. S. and Sarah J. Hill, of Mur phy. died Monday, March 2, in Mi ami. Fla.( where she had lived for Tha past three years. She is survived by three sisters, Mrs. J. r. Postell, Adel, Ga.: Mrs. W. J. Jones, Postell; and Mrs. I. L. Bhacler. Athens, Tenn. Also five brothers: W. P. Hill. Postell; Thos. J. Hill. Greensboro, N. C.; A. L. Hill. "Williamson. W. Va.; E. A. Hill. De troit, Mich.; and Dr. J. N. Hill ,of Murphy. Interment was at Miami. o One American steel company alone has more steel capacity than all of Germany. Grandaddy Of All Bass Caught By W. A. Cook j In River Near Murphy M: W. A Cook, who used to bi a preacher, and thedefore ought to be reliable, say.s he caught the grand ! (lady of all the bass in these ports ' on Tuesday. Aeocrding to his son Roy. who works for the Scout, the : be?utj reigned seven imuiiwi j eleven and one-half ounces The big fellow was caught in the Hiawassee riv< 1 not far from the Veterans' CCC camp Mi- Cook. I fishing from the bunk, was able to ! iand it only after a hard battle. He 1 used a plug bait. The fish was so big that it was i used to feed ti^ee families. The ex preacner and one tune Murpny Po i lire Chief gave one-third each to his | sons. Ray and Edwin. Schools Are Placed . I On "War Basis" By. iBueck and Wright .. ? ~ ; Superintendent H. Bueck and Principal K. C. Wright have put the Murphy schools on an all-out war basis. The pass-word is "prepared ness." There'll be plenty of first aid ex perts available soon, because all stu dents in the tenth and eleventh grades and all students 17 years of age or more, regardless of grade, are being given the standard Red Cross course. Teaching is done by faculty members who won diplomas at the recent Red Cross School. Meanwhile, students from the sixth to the tenth grade are being given the junior Red Cross course. Every student in the school has bee nenrolled in a course in phys ical education. All have been given physical examinations, and those with minor defects are required to tak special exercises designed to cor rect them. Finally, all students 'including boys) except tots in the "baby class es" are being given courses in war nutrition. Miss Lucy Sneed Dies: Rites Held On Monday Miss Louise Sneed died at her home at Peachtree Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. She was 69 years of age. Since the death of her sister, Miss MoUie Sneed. about a year and a half ago, she had lived alone at old Sneed family home. Funeral services were held at the home Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock, by the Rev. Thomas Truitt. Buna' was in the family cemetery Surviving are two brothers. W. B. of Tomotla, and Fred Sneed ,of Mur 1 phy, route 1. Nylon bearings for machinery have recently been patented. Grim Figures Prove "Peaceful" Farming Most Hazardous in all U. S. Industry Believe it or nofcj- the suposedly peaceful pursuit of Agriculture la proved, by figures, to be the most -rdous in all American Industry. "Hi - number of accidents on the farm - many of them fatal? is amazing, nd the records show that the farm home contributes largely to the huge total. Recent grim figures have caus ed Miss Ruth Current. State Home agent for the N. C. State College Extension Servicc to suggest the fol "ins: safety rules: Sharp-edged tools should be kepi away from play placcs. Stairways with more than three steps should br. equipped with hand rails. Free use of both hands should be Stairways should be kept clear of toys, tools ,and boxes. The State home agent also pointed out that the annual cost of farm and rural fires is $200,000,000, two thirds of the nation-*' fire loss. And in addition to this property damage these fires cost 3,500 lives. To com! at the fire menace. Miss Current uises that: Every open fireplace be equipped I with a screen. | Kettles .pails, and tubs of hot Ilq | iitds be kept off the floor. House dry cleaning: be done out- ; ; of-doors. j Matches be kept away from chll- ; | dren. Saucepan handles be kept away from the edges of stores and tables. The State Home agent, also cau tioned that cuts, bruises, and Infec tions should never be regarded as minor. Many people have died from a slight scratch that became Infect ed. REYNOLDS URGES CURBING UNIONS AND CAPITAL TOO Both Are Equally Guilty Senator Declares In Letter ; To Editor For a Ion* Ions; time Senator Bob i Reynolds \?a:; just atvim tv- wrong i in his views a.s a man could bo. He, I i :d io 11 led those who > id war was on , the way. He had been to Europe, he j ; ^nit! and he knew better. Nobody was going to attack US. ' He opposed the lea < - lend bill. He I I opposed many other defense meas- ' ; tires, one after the other Some call- ] t ed him a pacifist. Some called him I worse. A letter to this newspaper, recoiv | id Wednesday, however, voices a .stand which will find general I i nthis section. The letter in part | follows : "Outlaw strikes. Suspend the forty hour week. Ban overtime payments , and prohibit double time payments. I Suspend the closed shop on war contract. Permit any America to work unmolested for the war pro gram regardless of whether or not he is affiliated with any labor organi sation. Place a six per cent maximum ceiling over all war profits, for the duration of war." "We Americans should oe think ing more in terms of 'giving' and not so much in terms 'getting,' Insofar as our war production program is ! concerned. "Reynolds explained." "Phillip Murray .president of the CIO, told a Congressional Committee that those who are advocating labor legislation such as I have suggested are enemies of our government'. X disagree with Mr. Murray. I do not believe that thousands of signers of telegrams and letters I have received are enemies of America simply be cause they favor certain proposed labor legislation." "The rank and file of labor organ ization* are as patriotic as any other group. They should not be subjected to the vicious criticism heaped upon their shoulders. The fault lies large ly in the hands of many of their of ficials and representatives. I refer to labor agitators and tohse primarily interested in their own selfish at tainments. "Capital .in many instances, is equally at fault. If we regulate la bor. then we must regulate industry by eliminating war profits. "I favor a limitation of six per cent upon all war profits, direct or indirect, wherever they may oe found." John Queen Visits County To Remind Voters of Primarv Solicitor John Queen paid a purely personal visit to this section this week. Hp just wanted to remind the folks, he said, that he is a candidate for re-election, subject to the Dem- 1 or ratio Primary on May 30. Most of the voters in this county. . regardless of politics, take it for granted that. John Queen will run every four years. He has held the post so long and so ably that the "word. "Solicitor" means John Qiiecn ?and vi?e ver-a. Invariably he draws a big vote from both parties, j Queen will be opposed in the prl- 1 maries by Baxter Jones. Bryson City ! Attorney who ilso ran against him in 1938. Queen is one of the most popular men in Western North Carolina, and : has a reputation among both Demo- ; crats and Republicans for being a i square shooter who is 100 per cent efficient. He proseci'tes hard ? but never with any personal animosity. o Use Classified Ads Murphy Gets a Portia As Winifred Townson is Admitted To Bar Murpiiy . .v *ias U ?? i p : : . in iht person of Miss Win if ml Townson. The piettv daughter of 1 Mr and Mrs. Dave Townson. one of two girls tudying law at the Uni versity of Tennessee, in KnoxviUe. on March 20. She will not graduate until Jun? , Her father is willing to fc*'t that she marries before she gets a clicnt. The 22 year old feminine barrister is a leader on the University of Tennessee Campus, being a member of the Woman's student governing : bod.- .president of one of the girls' ! dormitories, and active in social ac- i tivities. Before goinp to Tennessee MLs.s j Townson graduated from Murphy ! High and attended Young Harris ColleKe Joiiitnie Hass Dead, . Widow In Hospital . After S. C. Tragedy . Funeral services were held Wed nesday morning in the White church, at Grandview. for Johnnie Hass. bom and raised In the Grandview section but for the past two years working and living in Pickens, S C Hass was shot through the heart in his South Carolina home Saturday night. While funeral services were being held, his wife "RT". daughter of Mrs. Ben Posey lay in the Murphy Gen eral hospital suffering from bruises ?nd shock. Mrs. Hass was brought to Murphy in a taxi cab acrt. to Pick ens by her mother. Mrs. liass and previously been exonerated by a Coroner's Jury. o School Glee Club Plans Palm Sunday Program The Glee Club of Murphy Graded Schools will present a program of Sacred Music at the Church of the Messiah on Palm Sunday at 11 A. M. In addition to the regular chants of Morning Prayer and the traditional hymns, there will be several anthems. The Glee Club will be under the di rection of Miss Elizabeth Phillips and Mrs. Duke Whitley will be at the organ. The Rev. Grant Folmsbee will con duct tho service and preach on the j topic: "Rejoice Evermore." We part more aslly with what ] we possess than with our expecta tions of what we hope for: expecta tion always goes beyond enjoyment. : I ? Home. MAN'S LEG TORN OFF AT THE KNEE BY DAM'S SHAFT v'icti mSaves Own Life By Closing Up Wound With Bare Hand* <;ii" f the mot oii!anding cases of c Mil .i"f .ttir r'vM'THt of mind 111 tin* iu>;<?r\ (. tins section is rpvewlril in I ; ) ? ? sto " of Wile;. Crawford, a patten; of IJ. Bryan Whitfield <U Murpli\ Ocncrnl hospital. Crawford. af?d 4-1 a resident of Cullowhee and an employe*' of the Nanthala Light and P '\er Company will go through tin rest of his life with only one leu. Wen- it is.st for hu onrage he would be dead With ins left let: torn completely off at the knee ,and also U.okcn be ; wec-n the fcne. and hip. and wltii his right leg slashed and torn. Craw ford saved himself from deeding to death by holding the jagged flesh of the stump of his leg together wlt.h his two hands Had he lost conscious ness or even faltered from the ter rific pain he would have bled to death: for he was alone in a boat in the Hiawassee river. It happened at the Mission nam. on the old Hayesville road, above Peachtree. Crawford's leg was torn off when it was caught In the drive shaft, while lie was attempting to make repairs Trying to kick himself loose, the right lee was slashed and came near being torn off also. Two other men in the boat, terri fied when Crawford finally pulled himself and his bleeding leg 3tump to safety, are said to have left him, alone while they went to seek help. With blood spurting as If from a hose. Crawford seized the torn flesh with both hand* and squeezed it to gether until the bleeding became only a tiny trickle. Despite his ag ony. too. he was able to call for aid Assistance soon came, and he va.> rushed to the hospital where. Thurs day evening .he was reported as be ing entirely out of danger. According to Dr. Whitfield, the ii.sock alone would have been fatal In many cases. "Crawford owes his life,' the physician said "largely to his own iron nerve " o Gar Hunsucker Wins Stripes of Sergeant From Camp Stewart. G?.. comes word that Garland Hunsucker, of Marble who enlisted in the army In July. 1940. has Just been promoted to the rank of Sergeant. Sergt. Hunsucker is In the Quar termaster Corps, and had been serv ing as a clerk in the commissary section. He is the son of Ijonnle Hun sucker. Sugar Rationing Brings Plea to Farmers To Raise Sorghum for "Sweetnin"' There are men and women, still ( living in the County who ran remem- I ber. back in their early childhood days, when sugar was a "company dish" served only when the pastor came to dinner, or on some other notable occasion. The i-est of the time, mostly, the family got "sweet enin" with good old sorghum Well, they say that history re peats Itself, and if the war lasts long enough, those days may come again. Rationinsr cuds allowing an average of about two pounds a week per fam ily will be ready soon: and next year the amount may be less. After that, if the war is still on ? who knows? Anticipating the day when sugar will be in the class wit hautomohlle tires- ?or worse ? comes a statement f-om E. C Blair. N. C. State College farm expert, urging every farmer to plant, at least a small patch with sorg'.ium. He says the best planting time In this section is from May 15 to June 15. Ho recommends the Orange, the Re<l Amber, Black Am I ber. and Sugar Drip varieties are ; best adapted to the mountain coun ties. I State records show that the aver ! asp yield is 70 gallons to the acre. ' However, under good management ] farmers have found it easy to secure i 100 gallons, and there arc several 1 cases on record nf yield'; of more I than 400 gallons per acre. 1 In general, experts s.iy. sorghum ; docs well on any adequately drained -oil that is suitable for com. Sandy | loams and clay loams of medium I to high fertility give the hlRhesr, 1 yield.-. Dark hravy soils produce i darker syrup than light colored san dy ground. Sorghum has shallow root- which draw rather hcovily on the top four o" five inchcs of 9t.il. For "his sea son it is declared advisable to apply stable mar.'i re. or to crow a winter legume aft?r the crop. The county sftent will adivse rou as to the best tp tio for fertilizer.

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