Our Aim ? ^ A Scout In fd"|B I Every Heme j I In Cherokee THE LEADIN Voi. 50.?i o2. Work Begun Camps Near Contract Let After Judge Nettles Dismisses Court Action Contract has been let for the construction of a new prison camp five and one-half miles from Murphy on the Hayesville highway and work was started on the project Wednesday. It is estimated the cost of the permanent camp will be around $40,000. It will be similar to the one nowbeing used near Bryson City. Completion of the project is expected with t in several months. When completed the temporary camps, which have been maintained at Andrews since i;*32, will be moved to the new location which is in the Peach tree community. An action again, t the highway department restraining them lioinj building the new camp was dismissed 1 by Zeb V. Nettles, Supeiinr court, judge of the 20th judicial district, of! Aslieville, on February 28. A gioup of Cherokee count ia 11s I filed the ? ction, and hear??g was held before him in llaywood Superior court on February 12. The petition- ' ers, most of wnoni were from And- j lews, charged, among other things,' that refuse and waste from the camp' would contaminate the water supply | at Murphy which is taken from the H iawassec iiivcr. Following reports from state and j federal sanitary engineers advising j that septic tank-sand filters, such as 1 were being planned for the camp,' would protect tile water supply, Juuge Nettles dismissed the action. An appeal was taken. Some 80 acres of property were purchased from the M. L. Mauney I heirs about three months ago for the building of the camp. It will he modern in every detail. It is situated on the Ilayesviile highway r.bout 14 miles west of the Clay county seat. The property purchased lies between the ' highway and the lliawassee river. SPEAKER'S CLUB IS REORGANIZED The Murphy Speaker's club has | been reorganized and a change of policy has been effected, it was anK nounced Wednesday by Earl Van j Horn, official of the club. I Beginning Thursday night at 7 :30, | the club will meet every other Thurs* j | day alternating with lectures bv Dr. 1 I A. R. Parker, of the Western Caro- i lina Teachers college faculty, at the j Murphy Carnegie library. Under its new policy the Speaker's j club will be concerned with actual in- j struction classes and discussions in1 effective public speaking and parliaI n.entary procedure, rather than with a program of speakers. "The club is of the opinion", Mr. i Van Horn stated. "That certain basic fundamentals are necessary before | practice speaking is attempted. Those i who desire to improve their faculties of self-expression along these lines! are urged to attend." 1 The newly-elected officers are: Mrs. T. A. Case, president; Miss Hope ; Yeager, secretary, and Mr. Van Horn, ; parliamentarian and instructor. Welfare Superintendent Distributes Checks A total of $2159.40 in checks to needy aged and to dependent children have been distributed for the month of March by Linnetta Dean, Cherokee county welfare superintendent. To 175 residents of the county i went $1,602. 40 in old age assistance I payments, while dependent children received a total of $557.00. Weather Vane Listed below are maximum and minimum temperatures and rainfall for the past week compaiod with similar data for last year. B TEMPERATURES 1639 1938 | March 1 58 30 56 14 1 2 4!) 34 61 24 2 .3 54 32 66 51 I 4 51 3!) 65 40 * 5 74 47 71 48 | 6 72 48 66 39 I 7 63 24 57 20 I RAINFALL INCHES 1939 1938 I Since March 1 2.95 1.20 . I Since January 1 18.24 6.86 | G WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN WEST Murph; i On Prison Peachtree | Mrs. Bell, 84, Of Brasstown, Dies Wednesday Funeral services for Mrs. Sar?b Viola Bell, 84, of the Brasstown community, weie conducted from the Hickory Stand Methodist church fhursday afternoon with the Re;. J. C. Gentry and the Rev. J. A. Fiy officiating. Interment was in the church cemetery. Peyton G. Ivie was in charge ot funeral arrangements. Mrs. Bell died Wednesday afternoon after an illness of two years. She was born in Cherokee county but aad spent most of her life in Clay county. Mrs. Bell was the daughtei ; i the late Col. Hugh Harvey Davidj 011. She was married to Abel J. Hyatt", ol" Cherokee county, who died ! n 18U.*>, and later married Reuben M. Bell who died in 1900. Shi- was a i member of the Methodist church. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. E. S. (,'hastain. of Douglas, Ga.; foui sons, llarvey N. Ilyati, ? 1' Atlanta, , Ga., Bass Hyatt, of Brasstown. Victor II. Bell, oi Brasstown, and Allen li Bell, of Ilayesville; two sisters, Mr.-. W. B. Pass of Hayesville, and .di>. Ellr. Rich, of California; a brolhc, Ed Davidson, of St. Louis, Mo.; nine grand children and one great grandchild. Honorary pallbears were; Joh.i I Brendh , Fred O, Scroggs, Will Mason, Jim Zimmerman, .John Davidson, j Pink Ledford, .1. B. Byers, John Hyatt I ind W. K. Brendle. | Active pallbearers were: Fled Pass, | Dillard McCombs, Winslow Mclver, j Moil Davidson, Paul Scoffield aad Arthur Jones. nDiriMA i r? a nrv a OAI\L/rtl1 PHOTOGRAPHS ARE EXHIBITED HERE A group of original photographs I belonging to Mrs. Bayard Wotten, well-known Chapel Hill photographer, which are being used to illustrate William Cannier Hunt's new book,] I Southern Frowers", are on display in j I the Murphy-Carnegie library here. j [ The exhibit is being sponsored by | the garden committee of tne Murphy Womans club. Mrs. R. C. Matt ox is chairman and .Mrs. Dixie Palmer is publicity director. Mrs. Wotten was made a member of the National Artists ciub in N ,w York early this year. Distinguished I work in some field of art is necessary' for eligibility in the club. Mrs. Wotten is now illustrating a book written for the North Carolina Garden club, "Old Homes and Gardens of North Carolina". It is being published by the University of North Carolina press. Garrett and Massey are the publishers of Mrs. Hunt'.* book. In obtaining the illustrations now | I or. display at the library, it was nec- I essary for Mrs. Wotten to travel over 9,000 miles. She is scheduled to appear in Murphy this summer and give a lecture j on the Charleston Gardens with colored slides. The lecture will also be sponsored by the Woman's ciub. Man Is Injured On Highway 64 Tuesday Bill Cook, of Kinsey, was slightly injured early Tuesday morning on Highway No. 64 near the entrance to thet Kinsey community when he was i struck by a car of TV A employees going to work. Mr. Cook was said to be filling thi radiator of his car when the other car struck him and knocked him off the highway. He was taken to Petrie hospital where it was found that his wound were not serious. He was dismissed from the hospital later in the day. GOES TO MOTHER'S FUNERAL Mrs. J. H. Pitzer returned from Corbin, Ky. Friday ngiht where she had been visiting her mother who was seriously ill, but was called there again Monday due to the death of hei mother. Mr. Pitzer left Tuesday to join her in Middlesboro. N ^ N N ^ ERN NORTH CAROLINA. COVERINC y, N. C. Ihu -sday, Mar. I ijiiii VC RAISE : $1,500 TO KEEP | CANNERY HERE TVAC Will Match Fund With $1,500, Official States j. Murphy business men, Cherokee county larmeis and local citizens were M? -.1?a-i in, ? ? j wornrvi iTL-unesaay nignt to raise ?1,1500 in common and preferred stock to assure maintenance of the Mountain Valley Mutual cannery here for the next year. Mr. John E. Barr, Tennessee Valley Association cooperatives administerater and head ol the Land U' The Sky Mutual Association, of Waynesville, appeared at a mass meeting and stated the TV AC would supplement the money by ?1,500 to aid in maintaining the cannery here. It is necessary that a new building be erected here to house canning operations as the building formerly o... <1, which belongs to W. M Fain, is situated in the liiwassee Dem reseri voir and has been ordered removed. The! Town of Murphy offered a lot for a site for the new* building but J. ij. Mallonee, local attorney, appeared at the meeting and said that citizens living in the vicinity of the proposed j site objected to the erection of a canneiy there but were anxious to keep j the cannery in Murphy and were will| ing to aid in purchase of a new site j l'j insure its continued operation. | Mr. Mallonee offered another site that will be considered. Of the necessary ?1,500 required locally about ?1,000 had been raised Wednesday night and officials were t eking to raise the rem uir.der this week. Common stock at $5 per share is offered to farmers singing contracts with the local cannery and preferred j stock at ?25 a share is hoin?* t.. tin business men. The following statement was given out by the cannery officials at the meeting. During the past four years, the Mountain Valley Mutual Canning Association has spent in Murphy for produce $24,190.56, for labor $10,378.39 land for other expenses such as inj direct labor, telephone, telegraph, I field work, repairs, coal, electricity, I and a hundred other expense items $10,979.99, making a total of $57,1548.94. During this time, the busi| ness started from scratch and had to I educate its growers and workers how to do the job. The packs have grown ! fro-iii 7,000 cases of finished products in 1935 to 20,500 cases in 1938. The total amount of money expended in Murphy in 1938 for produce, labor, and expenses amounted to $21,766.83; so if the business! can go ahead on the same basis as it did in 1938 (and it is possible for it io increase), it will spend in the next five years, right here in Murphy. $108,834.00 or an average of $21,767.00 per year. This does not take into account the j pqrchase of cans, boxes, labels, ma-1 chinery, and machinery repairs that i are purchased outside of Murphy and which amount to about 40 *'< of the total expenditure. Now let's look at the benefits from a local point of view. It is likely the I money spent in the past four seasons ' by the Mountain Valley Mutual Canning Association for produce, labor, and expenses found its way into the | business houses of Murphy, and let us say the business houses receive | the small profit of 10% on the Continued on back page COUNTY SCHOOLS C< DAY PROGRAM TO BE The Commencement Day program for the schools of the Cherokee Countv unit. Knvo 1? ,r - - wvvii ci.iiuuhvcu uy rars. John Shields. The first annual field day will be held at the Martin's Creek consolidat- j ed school on Thursday, March 23, beginning at 9:30 a. m. with all the 1 schools of the county unit cooperating. | The following events will be held: Declamation contest, one boy from I each school from any grade, L. W. j Shields, Murphy, chairman; recitation contest, one girl from each school ! from any grade, Douglas Smith, Unaka. chairman; Arithmetic cover- . ing the fundamental processes, each j grade from second through seventh ' may have a representative, R. C. ] Pipec, Peachtree, chairman. 10m ; A LARGE AND POTENTIALLY RICH i, IS39 5c County-Wide Centered On Stockholders Of j Federation To ! Meet Saturday Cherokee stockholders of the Farmers Federation will hold their an nual meeting at 2 o'clock Saturdi-j afternoon in Murphy warehouse, according to notices sent out by Federation officials. James G. K. McClure, president, and other executives of the farm cooperative are expected to attend. Reports will be submitted on last year's business ami plans discussed for the current year. Also to come up at this meeting vviil be the election of a county advisory committee and the nomination! of a director. Each county where the Federation j functions is entitled to two representatives <?t its board of directors. They serve for overlapping terms of two ycais. They are nominated at coumy meetings and elected at the annual meeting of stockholders of the entire organization. L). Withers] 0011 and J. II. Hampton are the Cherokee directors. 1 he la Iters terms expires this month. Music will be furnished at Saturday's meeting by the federation string band. TAX LISTERS ARE APPOINTED HERE BY COMMISSIONERS ! New lax list takers for Cherokee county have been appointed by the board of county commissioners. The board was vested with the authority to appoint the lister's in a bill introduced into the legislature {by Representative Clyde II. Jarrett and passed last week. \V. A. Adams, former county commissioner. was named to supervise the work. Others named were: | Murphy township, P. II. Lovingood, j Fred O. Scroggs and John E. Hall; 1 j Valleytown township, P. M. Reagan. : Victor Raxter, and T. J. Bristol; j Not la township, J. C. Anderson and 1 j Frank Silvey; Beaverdam township, 1 IF.. W. Bates; Hot House township, i I ('. C. Forrester, and Shoal Creel. * i township, F. E. Sparks and Edgar j Taylor. Only routine business was discussed II y the commissioners at their meet- I ing Monday. J' Mauney To Help File Tax Returns In District i i Tom J. Mauney. of Murphy, d?s-:i trict deputy commissioner for the ' i state department of revenue, an-j 1 I bounces that he will be in the various i towns of the district to aid in filing j income and tangible personal taxes , during the next week. | \ The following schedule has been an- j j noujiced: Robbinsville. Thursday,'; March 9; Hayesville, Friday March ' 1 10; Andrews, Saturday, March 11:!? Bryson City, Monday, March IS:; Franklin, Tuesday, March 14, and r Murphy, Wednesday, March 15. Mr. j, Mauney maintains his office in the J | Woods building in Murphy. Income and tangible personal prop- < erty taxes must be filed on or before March 15 as required by law. }MMENCEMENT i I HELD MARCH 99. i Written spelling- consisting of 25 i words from text-book, one person 1 | from each grade from the second | through the seventh grades, E. R. [White, Grandviow, chairman; grammar; grammar parts of speech only, 1 'one sixth and one seventh grades 1 students to enter. Ersa McNabb, J Suit, chairman; art appreaciation on 1 I ptetuyes listed in the hand-book for * elementary schools to be scored as ' I follows: 1. naming picture, one point. 2 j 2. naming artist, one point. 2. naming 1 ' nationality of artist, one point, Mrs. John Shields, Culberson, cha:,*man. I Athletic contest of: Tug of War, ' running and standing high running and standig broad \ 50- ' yard dasfi, 100-yard dash, en,oiling ( the bar. basketball throw. Porter Raper, Brasstown is the chairman. ^ The Scout Brings You mi II Weekly Ail The News TERRITORY COPY?$1.50 YEAR ; Interest Is Weaver Bill , Would Return Five Per Cent of Power Sales 7 o County Cherokee countians art inuch interested in a bill which i.-* being considered by the committee on military affairs in the house of representatives, Washington, which provides for a five per cent return oi all power | sales from liiwassee Dam to the | county. Although the liiwassee Dam was authorized as a flood control dam and not ;% power dam, generating equipment is being installed. In the event of power sales from Hiwassee Dam, the return acquired by the federal government. Charles D. Mayfield, local lumberman and member of the town hoard of aldermen, has returned from Washington where iie conferred la.-'- week with Congressman /.ebulon Weaver and other officials 111 an < fi'ort to have the bill passed. A report ;rom tin- committee Is expected sunn time next. week. The amount of taxable land taken off the county books for const i action ol the dam has never oven revealed. Text of Bill Mr. Weaver'.- entire bill i- is follows: "lie it enacted by the Senate and the House of Itcpu seiiiatives of tin United States of America in Congress assembled, that section 13 of the Act entitled "An Act to improve the navigability and to provide for flood control of the Tennessee River; to provide for reforest ration and the proper use of marginal lands in the "lennessi'i; Valley; to provide for the agricultural and industrial development of said valley; to provide for the national defense by the creation of a corporation for the operation of Government properties at an near Muscle Shoals in the State of Alabama; and for other purposes" he amended as follows: "Sec. 13. Five per cant centum of the gross proceeds received by the Hoard for the sale of power gtnerated at Dam Number 2, oi from any other hydro-power plant hereinafter constructed in the State of Alabama, .1?o i. ? ?iaii oi- paid 10 tne State of Alabama; and 5 per centum of the gross proceeds from the sale of power generated at Cove Creek Dam, hereinafter provided for, or any other dam. located in the State of Tennessee, shall be paid to the State of Tennessee; Hiwassee Dam Affected "And 5 per centum of the gross proceeds from the sale of power generated at Hiwassee Dam, provided for under said Act. and situated in Cherokee County, or any other da;n located in the State of North Carolina, shall be paid to the State of North Carolina, for the use and benefit of the county or counties in which said dam or dams, including contributing storage dams, are now or shall hereafter be located. "Upon the completion of the Cove Creek Dam the Board shall ascertain tiow much additional power it thereby generated at Dam Numbered 2 and any other dam hereafter constructed by the Government of the United States on the Tennessee River, in the State o? Alabama, or in the State of Tennessee, and from the gross proceeds of the sale of such additional power 2 per centum .<hall be paid to the State of Alabama and 2ls per centum to the State of Tpn?ncMn Applies To Dams These percentages shall apply to any other dam that may hereafter be constructed and controlled and opcrated by the Board on the Tennessee River or any of its tributaries, the main purpose of which is to control flood waters and where the development of electric power is incidental to the operation of such flood-control dam. In ascertaining the gross proceeds from the sale of such power upon which a percentage paid to the States of Alabama, Tennessee, and North Carolina the Board shall not take into consideration the proceeds of any power sold or delivered to the government of the United States, or any department or agency >f the Government of the United States, used in the operation of any ocks on the Tennessee River or from ?ny experimental purpose, or for the manufacture of fertilizer or any of he ingredients thereof, or for any >ther governmental purpose. Provided, That the percentages to Continued on back page

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