. ifir |3fl Attractive UEjFIV I ? That's? ^ MURPHY j The Leading W Vol. XLV.?No. 52. PLAN' OF PENSION FOR OLD PEOPLE DISCUSSED HERE Mass Meeting To Be Held For General Discussion Of T ownsend Bill. .Amas< meeting for the purpose of building sentiment in favor of a proposed bill that would provide all perrons over the age of 60 with $200 per month to be spent in the month, will beheld in the court iiouse here Monaay neon August 6th, at 12:30 p. m. j it was decided at a meeting of citi-j sens interested in having the national government enacting toe pro- j posed legislation. The Townsend plan, so nanud for| a practicing Long Beach, Cal., physician who has been working for the old, indigent sick, would have the national government enact legislation to the effect that all citizens of the United States?man or woman?over tho age of 60 years retire on a pension of $200 per month on the following conditions. They must not engage in any further labor, business, or profession lor gain. Their past life nfbst have bten free from habitual criminality. | They must take oath to, and actual ly do spend, within the confines of the I United States, the entire amount of their pension within 30 days after rc1 ceiving same. Toe plan would have the national government create the revolving fund by 1 vying a general sales tax just high enough to produce the necessary amount to keep the old age revolving pension fund adequate to pay the monthly pensions. The plan was first originated on the west Coast as a means of a permanent national cure for the depression. Of the 48 states, 33 have already made steps to have it brought up in the next session of congress. The first meeting in North Carolina was Aeld in the woman's club room of the Carnegie library Friday night. It was attend by a rgoup of local citizens and was presided over by Mrs. L. P. Kinsey, a native of Cherokee county who iras been for several years in California. An outline of the Townsmd plan ( (Continued on pago 8) "CREETUR" PASSES ABOUT SAME TIME ' AS HUCKLEBERRIES Interest in the "booger" that not long ago was reported roving the woods out about Cane Creek, seems to have died down a9 swiftly and as sadly as the huckleberries themselves. Now even as the huckleberries are carried to tho ,?????? ?? *?-- J J vuuucij, ana LI1 - ueau ones carried to the ground, reports persist that the "booger" still roams ?s wild?and as hairy as ever. Several parties underwent the first steps of organization to go out and scare it out. But elaborate plans to carry 30-foot chains, steel shotgun shells, and long range rifles were forgotten over night. Sometimes on clear nights the *boog?r" yells, we are told. We aven't heard it and what's more we don t want to. We haven't seen Mr. Will Ledford, *he first told us the story and gave as the r al "McCoy", in a long time. ?r. Hail, who at the time was hauling lumber from his saw mill in that section, said he had people to tell him about it. That was all. sir, the "booger" might have crawled in her filthy hole until next year about the time berries come ripe again, but \vefre not going out to kok for it. j NOTICE | I i * The Scout goes to press early, , Y Thursday morning. We are always* | ??lad to receive news items and. Y contributions. We ask that all^ | news be turned into this office hy^ YWednesday afternoon, if posslble,X yto avoid a last minute rush. x Scout Circulati ft <Sffi eekly Newspaper in ff e stern North C Murphey, N. C TVA SURVEYORS I CONTINUE WORK ON LOCAL SITE Drillers, Geologists Work | In Conjunction With Basin Surveyors Twenty men working on the survey alone, no including one group of geologists and a group in charge of the drilling, continue to survey the basin of the Coleman dam site. I Those working under, Mr. Price, handling the drills, are half way finI ished with the third hole which i& be| ing drilled out in the river. The shafts I are being sunk to an apprpximate depth of 60 feet. The quality of the rock bed of the Coleman site could not be learned. Under the direction of J. D. Blagg, unit chief in charge of the survey of I the basin, four test pits just above Vie | axis of the dam have been dug to a | depth of eigth feet to classify the over-burden, or the depth-and amount of soil in top of the rock bed. The control traverses, or basic I lines of survey have been half finished, as well as the survey of the other levels. Indications are that the parties of suiveyois have been stationed litre I for at leust one year. George D.! Whitmort, director of surveys for the ! TVA, comes here often on official J business. As tO tho ~ . mc atiuBi | construction, definite information is | j bring closely withheld by TV A offi| cials in Knoxville. Publicity sheets coming frcm TVA advertising headquarters fail to give any infoimation on the local site. However general sentiment, both irom the Authority and local citizens who have eagerly lollowtd the developments here, is optimistic toward the feasibility and possibility of building t?he dam on the I local site. MR. PATTON ~ BURIED HERE ON TUESDAY Died Sunday Night From Gun Wounds Inflicted By Atlanta Negroes. Funeral services were held here Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock for Tom Patton, 47, a native of Cherokee county, who allegedly was shot by| two negroes in Atlanta, Ga., Saturday night. He died Sunday night at 8:3"5 at i*ie Grady hospital. The body was brought here by C. B. Hill, local mortician, and funeral I services were held at the Patton house j with Rev. T. F. Higgins officiating, j Burial was in Sunset cemetery. | Mi. Patton was well known here .vhere he had many relatives and I friends. He was born here and had lived here up until about seven years years ago. Pallbearers were: Fred Dickey, Lorwy Gentry, Tom Mauney, Sheridan Heighway, H. E. Dickey, Hayes LeaVierwocd, Ed Burnett and Ben Posey. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Evelyn Patton; one daughter, Miss Edna Patton, of Murphy, and one sisxer, Mrs. J. J. Hastings, of Sylva. Atlanta officers are seeking the two negroes whose descriptions were given by Miss Norma Logan, of Atlanta, who was Patton's companion !ai the time. According to information received i heie, Patton and Miss Logan were | walking on the street when two nei 4roe? came up. One of them walked ! between Patton and Miss Logan and ! Patton reprimanded him. The negro then pulled out a revolver and fired five times, three of the s.iots taking tffect in the body. Hearing Miss Logan screams, Herman Logan, her brother, who lives nearby, rushed out and the negroes fled. Logan took the wounded man I to the hospital. on Doubled Di tmkt\ arolina. Covering a Large and Pott Friday, July 27, 1934 TWO MEN HELD i CHARGED WITH ROBBING STORE Willie Strange And Her-' man Logan Apprehended By County Officers Willie Strange, of .Murphy, N. C. was lodg d in jail last week on a charge of breaking and entering the store of Garland P. Messer, country meichant whose store is located in t.he western section of Towns county near | Young Harris, about two weeks ago. Strange was taken into*cirstody by officers of North Carolina when they arrested .John Queen, Cherokee county youth, at his home near Murphy on a warrant from another county, and found a quantity of the stolen goods identified by Mr. Messer and belonging to him. Following his arrest. Queen is said ! to have told officers he purchased the | goods from Strange and two other J Cherokee county youths, whose names ! Were withheld by officers pending i an est. Clyde Messer . son of the merchant.! was with the North Carolina deputy whe.i Queen was arrested, and officers | said he discovered Queen wearing a I paii cf i hoes very much like Uiose stolen from his father's sto: . He is j said to have asked Queen where he i fcund shoes of that kind, and Queen ; answered that he bought them from J a group of men on a certain night! some two weeks ago. The date coincided with the night his father's store | was robbi d. Queen told officers he bought some other goods from them at the same time. He showed tin goods and implicated Strange as one of the men from whom he had made the pur-1 chase. The goods weie seized and car- j ried to Murphy, where Mr. Me*ce?- j later identified them. Queen was held under bond as a material witness pending the arrest of those he implicated. Strange was apprehended by North Carolina officers and returned to Georgia by Sheriff Ingraham of Towns county Saturday. He did not fight extradition. ' Herman Logan one of the several: others who were implicated in the alleged robbing was taken into cus|todr early t.his week when Cherokee I county officers saw his name in Atlanta newspapers which carried a story to the effect that he had been called to the scene of the shooting of Tom Patton, former Murphy resident. Henry Rose accompanied by Deputy Sheriff Messer, said they went to Atlanta and got Logan and brought him back. Logan, according to Rose, fougfct extradition and waived preliminary hearing Tuesday. Rose also said h: has received inIcrmation on several robberies in the county that should lead to arrests soon. |SCOUT DOUBLES ? CIRCULATION! IN ? PAST 8 WEEKS* 4 ' A public sworn statement *wasY xmade this week by the publisher A yuf the Scout, that the circulation^ !]of the Cherokee Scout has been*]> 4 ^doubled during the past eighth Xweeks. The management appreciates the!! Ihr enthusiasm wito which theY ]^Scout has been received and they many people that have used theY Xcolumns of the Scout for an al-y ; 'v.rtising medium that brings re-!! Xsults. 1 ' The Scout is carrying a large! ! Xnumber of local advertisement;-V I.this week end every week. We in-? vite you to go through the pages] ] A of this paper and look at the ads4 Yclosely. Th-ii bargains and sav-! ! ings are genuine. They are mess^ * j]a?es written to the public invit-? ying business and trade. Tthy are] ] A not twisted, colored, or contorted* f that they might mislead an unsus-X pecting public. They are genuine4 ' I!bargains offered to the pubile in!! Raiding the return of prosperity. >XK~xkkkK"XKKKKKK~:"X~X~X~X? iring Past 8 f ?>mi ntially Rich Terri tory in This State 7. " : CLOSE TO 9000 i GALLON BERRIES CANNED SO FAR Approximately $2,150 1 Paid Out For Berries Here During Past Week Murphy cannery checks for beriies will be car.hed Saturday by Dale Lee, secretary and treasurer of the Mur- ? phy Canning: Asociation, at Candler's store, Mr. Lee announced Thursday. . During the first seven days the new i Murphy cannery was open this season < 8,435 gallons of berries were canned, ^ it was announced by J. H. Hampton, } manager of the cannery Wednesday. Through Monday night, the com'oticn of the first week 6,773 gal- ' lons were canntd. Last Monday 1,350 j gallons were canned in one day, ac- , cording to the official figures. nnii< received, Mr. Hampton said, but the'e is a natural waste of 1 bit to possibly ,2 percent. On this basis it was estimated that close to $2,150 have been paid out lor berries so far. The cannery most of the time has 1een working near capacity output' and has been employing 26 people I of which number 16 aie women. Less than 10 percent of the berries canned, it was estimated, were huekleI beries. | Definite information as to when the Icanning of berries would give way t<> th canning of tomatoes has not been jannonced. J. A. Barr, head of the TV AC in this section, left Vurphy Wednesday j afternoon to open another cantry at | Cranberry farther up ir. the western j part cf the state. H- will return next j week. CURRICULUM OF COMING SCHOOL YEAR DISCUSSED! I Conference Of All City And County School Heads Held Monday A conference of city and county superintendents and elementary and high school principals was held in twhe office of county school superintendent A. L. Martin Monday morninc. I beginning at 9 o'clock with A. B. I Combs, high school supervisor; Miss Hattie S. Parrott, elementary school supervisor, and Mrs. Mary Peacock Douglas, library supervisor, participating as officials of the executive council of the State Department of F ublic Instruction. Mr. Combs discussed the new course of study for grades one to eleven, and outlined the plan of appointment of committees for reviewing these courses, while Miss Parrott teachers meetings and the new course cf study as applied to the elementary department. Mrs. Douglas outlined the library program and suggested methods for making the school library program and suggested methods for making the school library a ready useful factor in the school curriculum. Tracts and pamphlets were disiri; oiited to those attending covering the various phases of the curriculum ! for the coming year, and educational! authorities feel that the meeting was 1 , a valuable aid in helping the principals and superntendents of the county to better understand the curricu; lum for the coming scholastic year. About fifteen attended the meeting. The state adopted textbooks for the yea: 1934-1935, which will be j published in the Scout next week. o Miss Harriet Berry 111 In a letter from Miss Harriet M. j Berry, "mother of the state highway commission," this week it was learned that she was taking sick just after she left here last Thursday and was advised by her doctor "to take a rest." Miss Berry is now in Little Switzerland, N. C. Weeks?See Sw wt X TODAY (1.00 YEAR?5c COPY MURPHY SCHOOL OPENING DATE IS SET FOR SEPT. 3 Preliminary Supplemental Budget Of $2000 For Unit Is Approved The Murphy schools will open on VIonday, September 3. H. Bueck, superintending principal of the Mur ny unit, announced today following i meeting of the board of education. In addition to setting the date for the schools to open, the board approved a preliminary supplementary budjet ol $2,000 for the unit. This budjet is made up to take care of plant maintenance. in&urr-nce, lepairs and janitor supplies, for the school year of 1934-1025, Mr. Bueck asid, and is yet to be approved by tht State authorities. The faculty as announced by Mr. Bueck for the coming, year includes, high school: B. R. Cairoll, Murphy, N. C.; Miss Ruth Holshouser, Sailsbuiy. X. C.; Miss Ruby Courtney, Williston, S. C.; Miss Fannie Hathcoek, Conccrd, C.; O. W. Ib aton, Robbin-ville. N. C.; E. V. Evans, Chj pel Hill, X*. C.; and K. C. Wright, Murphy. Elementary department: Miss Clara Mc Combs, Miss Martha May field, Miss Emily Swoid, Miss Addie Eeath ^ \t.. r.. ,i i?_.. m irwuou, .*irs. ijvc lyn rauon, mra. Fannie Witt Case, Mrs. Ltila Axley* all of Murphy; and Miss Margaret Hall, Newport, N. C.; Mis- Kstelle Mauney, Kinsey, N. C., and Miss Daif McCracken, Hayesville, N. C. Rural schools of the unit; Grape Cr ek, Frank Walsh, Miss Marnel 'Williamson and Miss Bessie Crain, Murphy; Tomotla, Mrs. Mc Falls, of Andrews; Miss Leila Hayes, Tomotla, N. C., and Miss Elizabeth Kilpatrrck, Murphy; Bates Creek, Mrs. Franklin Smith and Miss Loucine Wells, Murphy; Texana (colored), George L. Henry and Laura Ella Jones, Murphy. STATE OFFICIAL IS HERE WITH KETNER TO INSPECT CROPS H. R. Niswonger, horticulturist from the State College of agritculture at Raleigh, was iiere this week, on an spection tour of potato and tomato crops in this section. He was accompanied by A. Q. Ketner, Cherokee county agent. In the potato crop, Mr. Ketner said, they found leaf blight prevahnt. This disease causes them to rot and kills the vine. Mr. Niswonger recommended that in cases where it was serious to dig the potatoes now and stole them in cellars and in the giound. In every tomato patch, the county agent said, plenty of blight and wilt was found. For the wilt the only thing to do is pull up all plants so di seased and carry them out of the field. For the blight the tomatoes should be sprayed, it was advised by Mr. Niswonger, with a Bordeaux mixture 3-4-50. ' "In the meantime", Mr. Ketner added, "if we expect to grow tomatoes i in Cheioket county, we'll have to grow our own plants and buy a betIter grade of seed whioh will, help to resist these diseases. It will be neceejsary to spray them from the time th>y i are in the seed bed until th -y are on ' mhrket." Mr. Ketner said he would be glad to give any further advice at any time. AH tomato crops were reported affected by these diseases, and ii? some ' instances complete crops are destroyed. I CORRECTION x Last week the Scout carried a* ] 1 inews story to the effect that pow-? ixei :ates under th TV A were re-] duced as much as 790 percent.' XThis unavoidable, typogfrahpical] Yerror should have read, of course,' 1 <{ 70 per cent. ] ; ? f orn Statement

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