Attractive MURPHY ______________ rhe Leading Vol. IILv?No. 27 RED CROSS FUND J OF $600 RAISED ] IN THIS COUNTY Clothing, Food Are Sent To Flood Victims, 41 Volunteer / Nearly $600 has been raised by two Cherokee county Red Cross Chapters for flood relief victims in the MidWest. W. M. Fain, chairman of the Cherokee county chapter, of Murphy, said Tuesday night. The Murphy chapter has exceeded its quota of $300 by almost another $100, Mr. Fain stated, and two shipments of food and clothing have been sent to the relief fronts front here. The Andrews chapter has raised nearly $250 and also sent two loads of food and clothing to the victims, according to Mrs. Luke Ellis, of Andrews, who was in charge of the drive there. Forty-one Murphy volunteers offered their services to the Red Crosts but were not called upon. One check for $300 has already been sent to Red Cross national headquarters from Murphy, Mr. Fain revealed, and another check for $100 is expected to be sent 4'within a few days." Rural communities of Cherokee county have contributed heavily to Murphy's quota, the local chairman said. Amonn outstanding contributors here were; the Brasstown community, $124; the Murphy school, $93, and the Murphy Lions club, $2. Members of several ladies organizations in Murphy were in charge of the direct canvass here. The Rev. E. F. Troutman, chairman of the | Andrews chapter, placed several women in charge of the canvass there. 4,1 have never seen people respond to needy call so generously in my life", Mr. Fain declared concerning the success of the drive here. *Tt was remarkable at the number of dona, tions we got from the rural communi| ties of the cou lty where no canvass or direct appea. was made." Although the floods had greatly subsided Wednesday and it appeared that those towns not already affected would be spared the ravages of the surging waters, the Red Cross is still asking for aid for flood victims. POSTAL RECEIPTS HERE REACH HIGH PEAK OF $10,710.80 Receipts totaling $10,710.80 for 1936 have beei. announced from the Murphy post office indicating the most prosperous year here since 1927 when receipts reached a high of $10,968.11. Howard Moody, postmaster, said that a large part of the 1936 business was transacted during the month of December. The current figure represents a gradual increase from $7,174.73 that was recorded in 1932. MARSHALL BELL RETURNS Mr. Marshall Bell, member of the faculty of Clemson college, of Clemson, S. C., returned this week to renume his duties as a professor of I mathematics at the institution after orion/liwe. ? nccfc? vacauon nere with J his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. BelL OLD MAN GROUNDHC JUMPS BACK ? The weather cleared up here Tuesday long enough for Old Man GroundF hog to come out of his hole, see a very Ije and very ominous shadow starhim in the face and scoot back his underground retreat for six re weeks?of very bad weather. Those who believe in the lowly tundhog as a true prognosticator of ather conditions saw everything in to of the chipmunk Tuesday. For ter days and days of warm, wet ather which made January one of ; darkest and dreariest months in ars the sun shone brilliantly Tuesy morning just long enough for en the latest-rising groundhogs to t a good peek at their likenesses. AD the old-timers in this section ft ff< Weekly Netospmper u> IT ester a Mori Mi Aldermen Will Meet Here Thursday Night The town board of Murphy will meet here Thursday night with W. M. Fain acting as mayor in the place of J. B. Gray who has gone to Raieigl: to attend a session of the Supreme court now being held there. The naming of a successor to W. G. Owenby alderman who recently moved to Marietta, Ga., is slated to come before the group along with other matters. o Eastern Star Is Organized Here Thursday Night Mrs. Haltie Gray has been installed as the worthy matron of the newly-organized Murphy chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star, according to an announcement by Mrs. Ann Phillips, secretary. The local chapter was organized Thursday night with Harold R Mm. ? ?- ? "-o? worthy grand patron, of Greensboro, officiating. He was assisted by Mrs. Nellie Wynn Carroll, grand deputy, of Bryson City. Other officers named were: W. A. Hembree, worthy patron; Mrs. Flo Mallonee, associate matron; Grady Crawford, associate patron; Mrs. Phillips, secretary; Mrs. Marcella Smith, treasurer; Mrs. Cora Carter, conductress; Miss Hattie Palmer, associate conductress; R. R. Beal, chaplain; Mrs. Myrtle Evans, marshal, and Mrs. Ida Savage, organist. Star Points installed were: Mrs. Louise Rogers, Adah; Mrs. Kate Axley, Ruth; Mrs. Roberta Dickey, Esther; Mrs. Fleta Browning, Martha; Mrs. Dixie Palmer, Electa; Miss Ada Harshaw, Warder, and Franklin Smith, sentinel. ReDresentat-ivpc n# ? ?. ?? ux xjucilc XH Ot*Tchapters from Dillsboro, Waynesville, Bryson City, Franklin, Andrews and Hayesville were present. The local chapter will meet the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. TWO LARGE STILLS FOUND IN COUNTY BY SHERIFF MASON Two large stills were captured by Sheriff L. L. Mason and deputies in Cherokee county Tuesday. One still was found in the McClellan Creek section of Valleytown township Tuesday* evening. Six hundred gal- J Ion of beer was poured out. and a small ] quantity of liquor was confiscated. Those making the raid were: Sheriff Mason and deputies Ezra Price, John Jones and G. P. Robinson. The other still was found in the Shoal Creek community Tuesday morning by Sheriff Mason and depot-1 ies Price and Robinson. About 200 gallon of mash was found at the still. No arrests were made. MISS MALLONEE IMPROVING Mii>s Mary King Mallonee, attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Mallonee, of Murphy, who is a student at North Carolina State College for Women, at Greensboro and who has been suffering with a fractured ankle received in a sports contest several weeks ago is greatly improved, it has been learned here. XI SEES SHADOW 1 HOLE FOR 6 WEEKS seem to agree with Jim Miller, of Robbinsville, that this section will continue to witness the same kind of winter it has been experiencing so far ?wet (not to wet), moderately warm and dark. "The Weather Vane" reveals that Cherokee county has not experienced as much rainfall this winter as was recorded last winter, although murky skies have been in evidence more continuously. Too, the figures show that during this week last year Cherokee county was experiencing sub-zero temperatures?the coldest weather of 1936 ?and it was this freeze that led to the disastrous floods expe--jrreeC here last winter. erutoi k Carolina. Covering a Large and f urphy, N. C. Thurs., Febr SENATE FAVORS REPEAL OF BLUE LAWS IN MURPHY Cooper Measure To Regulate Train Crews Is Introduced Raleigh, Feb. 4.?The senate committee on counties, cities and towns Thursday approved Representative j Harry P. Cooper's bills to legalize Sunday baseball, Sunday movies, prize | fights and poolrooms in Cherokee (county, but directed the sponsor and Senator Kelly E. Bennett to work out certain restriction to be incorporated in the measures before their passage. Cooper and Bennett were conferring this week on the restriction, which will include provisions that prize fights cannot be held and pool rooms operated on Sundays or in any objectionable maaner; and provision that Sunday movies and Sunday baseball must not interfere with religious servipos Raleigh, Feb. 4.?Representative Harry P. Cooper, of Cherokee, is the author of a bill desinged to "promote I the safety of the traveling public and iemployees of railroads." The measure | is before the house committee on | manufactures and labor headed by Uzzell, of Rowan. The measure would require that only regularly examined firemen be permitted to assist the engineer in locomotives on main lines. His bill follows: "Section 1. All locomotives, or other devices used to move a train in this State, which require the use of a locomotive engineer and locomotive (Continued on back pufe) -o Daily News In Review The news of the expulsion of sitdown strikers from the Fisher Body plants which hundreds of automobile workers have occupied in Flint, Mich., since Dec. 30. seems to ho crowding the flood news from the front page of the daily press. Not that the strike situation appears more valuable than the flood situation but it is the reading public's demand? "we like our news like our eggs? fresh and cooked differently now and then". The strike involves the livelihood of some 60,000 persons while flood concerns a million families left destitute and still running as the swollen waters ! crack against the levees of the Mississippi. The strike that has crippled General Motors for over a month seemed no rearer a solution Wednesday night than it did when it started. The story behind the strike is the old question of "can labor unions control labor". While William Greene, head of the Federation of Labor; | John L. Lewis head of the commit!ee for industrial organization and chief strategist in the strike, and seere tary of labor, Francis L. Perkins, ' seek to iron out the difficulties of the the automobile workers union, Alfred P. Sloan, head of the General Motors corporation, stands pat on his contention that there is no other (Continued on back page) o Weather Vane Following are maximum and mini- ; mum temperatures for the past week compared with temperatures for the ( same period last year: j TEMPERATURES 1 1937 1936 1 Date Max. Mtn. Max. Min. Jan. 26 58 42 34 28 ! 28 50 43 30 1 29 67 41 31 17 1 30 55 44 30 23 ' 31 51 43 24 4 ' Feh. 1 *3 46 40 4 RAINFALL 1937 1936 1 Since Jan. 1?9.62 in. - 11.49 in. ? #?0 'olcntiolly fiicn Territory m This J nary 4, 1937 TVA Sends Men And Equipment For Floods Hiwassee dam equipment ar.d workers made up part of the TVA's personnell and shelter units dispatcher in large quantities to flood victims last week. As the Ohio and Mississippi river* :ose officials at the local dam site were called upon to send a crew of men and equipment consisting of 19(J cots, 300 mattresses, 2000 blanket? and other bed clothing to Memphis. Dynamite Blast Set Off At Home Of T. C. Gray Hayesville, Feb. 4.?A charge of dynamite, believed to have been placed by someone seeking to intimidate T. C. Gray, Democratic political leader, was exploded in the front yard of the Gray home here at 8 o'clock Thursday night. No one was injured. Mr. Gray, a brother of Mayor J. B. Gray, of Murphy, had entered the house a few minutes before, having just roturnfH , .1UII1 Aknittgu W1IC1C lie went in behalf of the Bennett bill which would increase the membership of the Clay county board of commissioners to seven by adding four Democrats. The board now consists of three Republicans. Threat* Received Mr. Gray, in commenting on the blast, said he could assign no reason for it other than that it was an attempt to intimidate him for political purposes. He also said he had received a number of threats recently, but did not say who made them. Mr. Gray is a prominent Hayeaville attorney and was a Democratic member of the Legislature from Claj county in the 1935 session. He is al so a former county attorney and : former chairman of the Clay counts Democratic executive committee. Hi. home is on Gray street. Following the explosion, Mr. Graj left his wife and child in the houst (Continued on back page) COMEDY-DRAMA TO BE OFFERED ON FEBRUARY 16 "Eyes of Love", a three-act comedydrama will be presented by the ladies of the Methodist church Tuesday night, Feb. 10, in the high school auditorium. Rehearsals began Monday nighl under the direction of Mrs. Mar\ Cobb, talented member of the Mur nViv K!i?U ~ 1 ' * - * ociiuui sciiooi iacuity, ant will continue each night at 7 o'clocl until the production is finished. A partial list of the members ol the cast include: Miss Martha Nel Wells, Elbert Mallonee, Jr., Mrs. J H. McCall, Mrs. E. C. Mallonee, In B. Jones, Miss Miriam Stillwell, Johr Jordan, Miss Laura Overton ar.d San Carr. SHIPS CATTLE Sheriff L. L. Mason of Cherokee county, erstwhile cattle dealer, reported this week having shipped 95 head of cattle to Plains, Va., lasl The sheriff will ship three car loach of cattle which he is now buying: tc Kentucky Saturday, he announced. 9-YEAR-OLD TENNES MIXED BLESSING Sneedville, Tenn., Feb. 4.?Shy Eunice Johns, nine-year-old bride oi two weeks, alternated between smiles end tears today as her scripture-reading mountaineer neighbors bestowed mixed blessings upon her marriage to a man 13 years her senior. Rawboned Charlie Johns, the sixfoot bridegroom, sat by in nervoudlence. But not his 33-year.old mother-in-law, who had plenty to say in defense of the union. "The Bible says not to disturb those peacefully getting along, and I don't believe in going against the Bible"', firmly declared Mrs. Lewis Winstead. "If they love one another, then Setting married is the th-rg to do. If they have to live together and he "A^wrtiiiii Doe i? 937 '( Jill C~t? * P?7?." B?own, lljl 11 peeially When It U re V V In The CHEROKEE h SCOUT. Stole $1.50 YEAR?5c COPY SEEK WPA FUNDS FOR ENLARGING 2 COUNTY _SCH00LS Three Cherokee County Men In Conference With Breese Wednesday Assurances were given three Cherokee county men Wednesday that any future available WPA funds for school building purposes would be put at the disposal of the Andrews and Murphy schools providing the county could meet their part of the obligation. The information came iro:.i W. Breese, WPA director at Asheville, in a conference with 1. B. Hudson, superintendent of the Andrews admiistrative unit; H. Bucc;:, ru.ierintendent of the schools of the Murphy unit, and D. H. Tillitt, county attorney, of Andrews. Neither the Andrews nor the Murphy schools are adequate to care for all the pupils attending them, it is generally realized, and civic leaders have long sought a means of enlarging them. On the trip to Asheville, Mr. Tillitt. said, the group inspected the new Alarka school recently built of mountain rock with WPA aid. The cost of the eight-room school was about $40,000 of which. Mr. Tillitt estimai ed, $9000 was made up of local funds. Mr. C. F. Carroll, superinendent of the Swain county schools, of Bryson City, accompanied them on the inspection trip. Due to the influx of TVA families into the county and general dilapidation of the schools, the need for improvements is a long felt want, Mr. Tillitt stated. He added he believed the county ' was in sympathy with the movement and would go any reasonable 1 part toward improving them. The group also inspected the new J 12-room Webster school which was built of creek bottom rocks with the ' aid of the WI'A. "Mr. Breese assured us that if another appropriation was given the WPA and the county could put up 1 their part that we would b? given aid providing the rules for dispensation of the funds are not changed*', ? Mr. Tillitt added. ?o ; County Votes To I Give Funds For : Fire Prevention 1 The Cherokee County Board of c Commissioners Monday voted to cooperate with the state Forestry serf vise in providing funds for the pre1 vent ion of fires in th?? mnnfu L. B. Nichols, the chairman was, ini structed to sign a contract with the i forestry service appropriating them i S600 to defray the county's part to July 1, 1937. It was also voted to appropriate $1000 for the 1937-3K period for the same purpose. Other routine matters were taKcn ! up at the regular, session. o i MAYOR GRAY IN RALEIGH , _ w.. Mayor J. B. Gray, of Murphy, is in i Raleigh this week attending a terrr. i of the Supreme court now in session there. SEE BRIDE GETS S ON HER MARRIAC.F ' happy, then people should leave them alone". i Herself married at 16, Mrs. Winstead is a grandmother and has another daughter who married at 13. i "Charlie is a good boy", .said Mrs. Winstead, beaming with pride as she talked of her new son-irvluw. i "He's a hard worker. He oought I 40 acres a few days ago so they could have a home. Of course, understand I haven't brought my chil' dren up to many what men has got ; but to marry for love". Mrs. Winstead heatedly denied Eu nice, bright-faced hlue-eyed little girl ! is interested in dolls. "Cbsrl-e bought her a nice, tig (Continued on page seven)