Stye Clfrrukrr ftnirt Established July 1889 Published every Thursday at Murphy. Cherokee County. N. C ADDIE MAE COOKE Editor and Owner V. RS. C. W. SAVAGE Associate Editor * SUBSCRIPTION RATES In Cherokee County One Vear, $2 >0; Si\ Months, $1 AO: Outside Cherokee County: One Year. $3.00; Six Months, $1 75 * ' . Entered in the Post Olfice at Murphv. North Carolina as second cla> '? ^ matter under the Act of March 3. 1879 Meditation Children, obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right Honour thv hither and mother: which is the first commandment with promise: That it may be well with thee, and thou ma vest live tony on the earth. And. ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but briny them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Servants, be obedi ent to them that are your masters according to the flesh, with tear and trembling. '? singleness of your heart, as unto Christ: So, with eyeservice. as menpleasers: but as the servants of Christ, doing the will of Cod from the heart With good will doing ser vice, as to the l ord, and not to men: Know ing that whatsoever good things any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord, whether he be bond or free. .\,id. ye masters, do the same things unto them, forbearing threatening knowing thai your Master also is in heaven: ?neither is there respect of per sons with him. Finally, my brethren, be si ong in the Lord, and in the power of his might.-y-F.phesians 6:1-10 Builds Success Advertising is'perhaps the most wonderful development of the modern commercial age. It is maker and breaker of business, big or l It is the one factor of successful sales that is most apt to be overlooked by the merchants ol small towns and cities. Advertising is not the elusive weapon of big business; it is the power that will make little concerns grow into larger success. It is a science that requires study and. be it said, character. It cannot succeed if it is untrue. It must build upon faith and honesty. The Cherokee Scout is prepared to assist lo cal business men in their advertising problems. Growing Larger The Census Bureau has reported that be tween 1940 and 1950, L. S. farms became fewer but larger. While 713,000 farms disappeared in the decade, the average size of farms in the Uni ted States increased from 174 acres in 1940 to 210.5 acres in 1950. While part of the.decrease in the number of farms may be attributed to a change in the defi nition of a farm, as made by the Census Bureau, there is positive proof that farms are growing fewer but larger. Although 870.000 fewer persons were working on U. S. farms in 1950 than in 1940, the acreage being farmed did not show a corresponding decrease. The number of horses and mules showed a rapid decrease. More than a million additional tractors we - reported on farms in 1950. as compared w th the 1940 total, while the number of horses and mules decreased 3,700.000 in the last five years of the decade alone. Despite the decrease in farms, the decrease in the number of horses and mules reported on farms, and a decrease in the number of persons working on farms, produc tion totals in many areas have lemained high and. in some cases, have iricreased. This is a reflection of the trend toward me chanization of the farm, without which the Amer ican housewife would face not only food short ages but severe price increases. In fact, farm mechanization is considered so important bv many congressmen that they have often requested the Government to allocate steel for farm equip ment on a priority second only to emergency de defense equipment. Their argument that the only way farm production can keep pace with the in crease in metropolitan population is through mechanization is supported by the latest statistics of the Census Bureau. Looking Over A Four-H Clover By FRANCES PUETT And M. B. WRIGHT CAKE MEANS PROFIT Jimmy Mintz, a 4-H club mem ber from the Hangingdog section of Cherokee County, is doing a fine job of growing out the pull ets which he received from the 4-H Poultry Chain, sponsored by the Farmers Federation. He has his pullets in range Shel t-s on a.good ladino clover pas ture, which has cut his feed bill in half. )?>, }, .'/'A J Me wed at the alamo, fighting for the pioneering FREEDOM THAT HE LOVED AND LIVED. THE KIND OF FREEDOM DAVY CROCKETT AND HIS FELLOV-> PIONEERS GAVE OUR COUNTRY HELPED LAY THE FOUNDATIONS FOR THE FREEDOM WE ENJOY*TODAY IN OUR DEMOCRACY. HOME OWNERSHIP The real pillar of our national existance Is a stable society. One of the greatest factors for creating a stable society Is home ownership. The more home owners possessed j by a city or community the more permanent will be its business. Home ownership creates an in terest In schools and churches. Floaters rarely take much Interest in the upbuilding of their sur roundings. No man cares to fight for a dilapidated shack for which he Is paying an exorbitant rent. He ! would gladly retreat and leave it in the hands of an enemy. But the ^ humblest home owners feel they j have a part in the nation. The , greatest inciters to destruction are ' those who have not stakes invested in a home and stable community There Is need for insistence that every person possible own their own home. Too many sacrifice for things of much less value. The first line of defense for America and democracy are the people who have establishd them selves in a permanent abobe. They have a home to defend. At least when you come here you can appear to be one?if you will invest in the following manner: you can rent a Cadillac with chau ffeur for about $<"0 an hour; a full dress suit for $15 an evening, in cluding shoes, shirt, tie and studs ?no socks, for some reason; then you can turn out at some smart night club, tip the doorman and waiters * to page you loudly and some folks will think you are a VIP (Very Improvident Person) if that is what you are interested in. Frank R. Hunt, dean of students of Lafayette College In Easton, Pa. stopped his car and picked up a hitch-biking student. The man talked so Intelligently and was so likeable. the dean asked him what class he was in at Lafayette. He wasn't. It was rival Lehigh Uni versity at nearby Bethlehem that he attended. ' Manhattan Musing: out at Con ey Island nowadays, the surf Is one-third water and two-thirds people. College Gives Hints On Plug | Protection Turn off the electric appliance before pulling out the plug, elec trification specialists remind housewives. This is a simple but important rule to prevent damage both to the plug on the electric cord and the convenience outlet In the wall. It holds for appliances large and small, from washing ma chines and vacuum oleaners to toasters and heaters, and even to portable lamps. Pulling the plug when an appli ance is running or heating shuts off the flow of electricity gradua lly so that it sparks or makes an ore between the prongs of the plug and the wall outlet. This burns the prongs, leaving them pitted, rough, and dark. Then they cannot make a good contact and eventually will bring in no elec tricity at all. The contacts in the outlet may also be burned out. But turning off the appliance by its own switch makes an im mediate, clean cut-off in current, and then the plug may be removed safely with no danger of sparking or burning. Some few electric appliances' are not provided with their own switch. For these the rule is: Pull ' out the plug as fast as possible when disconnecting. As for portable lamps, it pays to turn out the light before pulling the plug from the wall when mov ! ing them. Mrs. M. W. Bell and Mrs Her bert Hazelman of Greensboro were ' guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Case :cver the week-end.v They visited ' other friends in Murphy Saturday. and were joined Saturday after i noon by Marshall Bell of Clemson. S. C., and Mrs. Perle Day of Msr , ced, Calif., sister of Mrs. Bell. I . Mrs Bell returned with them to I Clemson Saturday and Mrs. Hazel man left Sunday to meet Mr. Haz | etanan in Brevard where he atten , ded a band meeting, and then re turned to Greensboro. BY DR KENNETH J FOREMAN SCRIPTURE II iamual ISTSMS; IS 5-13, 15 5. 31-33; lSb "dEVOTIONA-L READING; Psalsi ?>: After a man is dead, ?nd indeed while he U still alive, we ought to remember the best about him and forget the worst. Ihat is how we want to be treated, our selves. But human beings are so per verse that we often do just the opposite. We remember the worst, forget the best. This is so in the case of the great King David. A novel was once written about him in which his lie eras p,. Fortmoa pictured a' a curve high in tl. middle, bending down sharply at both ends. After his great sins of adultery and murder,' so the story went, he went on down and down hill to the end This is not the picture we get from the Bible. In many ways his later days were sad; his fortunes declined, as we say. But his soul did not decline. The latter days of David show us how even a man who has sinned can rise again; how even an ageing man can grow in soul. Signs ov Growth MOT THAT a man has to sin as ? * David did In order to grow. In order to be healthy it is not neces sary to be hall-dead with aver first; yet even after a lona stay In the sanitarium it is pors'Me for a man to make his way to f'fl health and strength. New DavM, t- ? be fell, "did net Mind t seal with clay." The experience strnrk down hia pride; he realised with ahame what he had dene. Seme men meat wake bitterly to the fact of their own weakness be fore they can begin to take bold of God's strength. At any rate, we can see signs of growth la David's seal. One of these signs Is humility be fore God. Take the story of his flight from his capital, for example. He could have hardly been in a worse state. His loved son Absalom h~ r-nr a rebel, his th-n-v was in ,' r '.? \ his friends were turning sg'ip.n h'm. even his life was not safe Another man might have ct.m mined suicide, or sat in his de serted palace bitterly awaiting the end. Another man might have re turned Shimei's foul language, curse for curse. But David moves through all this as a man who realizes he deserves his troubles, knows it is God who is bringing these hard things to pass, and bows humbly under whatever God sends. His kingdom was shrink ing. but his soul was growing again. ? ? ? Is th t Young Man Safe? ANOTHER plain sign of inward growth was David's attitude to his bad son Absalom. That young man had ceased to be * son, but the old man did not cease to be a father. The young man would have stopped at nothing, he would have killed his father without hesitating, in order to gain the kin^om for himself. But David wss willing to lose the kingdom. 4f by so doing he could keep from losing his son. General Joab. a professional killer, coald see ne point la David's generosity. He believed David shoald be a king first and a father afterwards. It waa Joab who against David's strict orders finally killed Absalom. But in death as in life, David loved that wild young man. No more tragic scene is found in history than David's lament, "Would God I had died for thee. A Absalom, my son, my son." It does not sound like a lament for a dead enemy, and it waa not; it was a father's grief for his son. The grief came late; David should long before those days have remembered his duty as a father to Absalom. But lata though it waa, David's tears show that in him his soul still grew. ? ? ? No Cheap Sacrifice /?\NE OTHER sign of soul-growth ^ comes to the surface: a single sentence from David oo the day when ha bought the land where the temple waa to bp built The earner Oman (Araunah) would have given the land free; but David insisted on paying the full value. "I erill not of fer burnt offerings unto the Lord my God which cost me nothing." he Na e? him fee taking advantage et the ewaer, eatttng the priee a little. Whaa davtd waa a yoaagar maa I ha aright have geae tt; bat aat perhaps; btri Oed weald knew It It was a sign that David waa no longer^ half-grown soul ha had ooce been. For a maa never really i grows up till he does what ha does, I not because et fear, or ambition, or reputation, nor tor any reason but | because ha kaowa how God to go tag to look et tt. Dr. Zdau Aldan of Baton Rouge, La., who apent a month returned to with