Our Aim:? A Better Murphy / g A Finer County the leadinc vol. si.?no. is ^Tf\N" OLMSTED DIES SUDDENLY IN WASHINGTON j Novelist and Musician j To Rest In Mountains He Loved So Well Slank J Olmsted is dead. The eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Olmsted and grandson of the late Dr. J. '.v. I'atton, of Murphy died suddenly in a Washington D. C. hospital early Wednesday morning, after havjni been stricken at the home of his motn< ! . " Arlington, va. Funeral services will be held in Murphy, following cremation of the body :i Washington. Mrs. Olmsted is expected to arrive with the ashes today ?Thursday). Stanley Olmsted was born in Murphy. 61 years ago. Although he went to Washington with his parents when 1 a child, and spent many years in New York City and the great capitals <>i Euro] he always considered Murphy his "home". It was his own wish , that hi be buried here?if pos sible . i i Methodist graveyard where t f his kinsmen sleep. He I raveyard, as he loved the i nionntai'. - he came back to so often, j s Ho was a novelist, a poet, and a j musician?and he came very close 1 to genius in all three. Three of his ' novels were published; one of them "Top of Tobin" having life in Murphy : its theme. This book was praised by the greatest literary critics in the land. Many ?>f his poems also were published in book form, as were more than one hundred magazine stories; tnc lauer invaraoiy appearing in trie Continued on Back Page WHO SAID BEARS j ARE COWARDS; MM R ARER ! Wounded Bruin Chases Him Miles Around Big Mountain If anyone doesn't think that a bip black bear will come after you , just, ask Jim Baker. Last Wednesday morning A. M. Simonds gathered in his bear dogs .1 and toj : her with Jim Baker, Bill : Dockorv. Uley Farmer and others: 1 started f<?r the big mountains. On the | < way they picked up Garfield Rhodes j with ihi two bear dogs and headed J for their ramp, arriving about 6 o'- < dock in the evening. The following morning, bright and ( ?arly they headed for a bear drive | and an all day hunt was without avail.? Next day they headed in another di-j recticn nod hunted all morning with-1 ?ut starting anything. Then, about ; > one o'clock old Zero gave a few yelps j and the chase was on. i bown the mountain and through tbe laurels they went, while Jim Bak- ! Cn and A. M. Simonds patiently await- I ('d in stands a few yards apart. About j two o'clock they heard the dogs | beaded their way and it wasn't long | until they came near Baker who fired j down on Mr. Bear and brought him to ? ? ground. In the meantime the dogs, had separated and had two bears going at the j same time. In a short time the party , heard the last pack coming and soon the bear came in sight of Simonds j n'ho cracked down with his rifle and inflicted a severe wound. The bear rushed and started directly toward .Tim Baker. The latter took his heels around the mountain? ' *n<l the bear chased him. Simonds finally got another shot and brought hlr- Bruin to the ground. Simonds then fired the dead bear "flial and all men came in, except aker. Part of the men started a ^?r ^a^er' tracking him ^ugh the leaves; and finally they him about two miles away on Clessee side, perched on a big Ihe Oil 1 WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN WEST Superior Court Opens Here Monday, Nov. 6 TT*e November term of Superior court for Cherokee county opened here Monday morning in the Murphy courthouse with Judge J. Will Pless presiding. 231 cases are listed on the docket for this term. Monday and Tuesday were devoted to disposing of several small cases of liquor, drunken and reckless driving and small assault cases on the old docket. The grand jury is still in session and the number of true bills they will find will not be available until the end of the week. The murder case involving Charlie Frazier, charged with slaying Kimsey Wyke, Andrews policeman, opened Wednesday morning continued through the day. A special night session was conducted Wednesday night for this case. and due to the rush all evidence was in at noon Thursday and the jury retired at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. No verdict had been brought out when the Scout went to press. MINISTERS MEET MONDAY; BIBLE STUDY DISCUSSED Rev. H. L. Paisley Leads Discussion; Baker Presides A large attendance marked the Minister's Conference conducted in the First Baptist church here Monday and an excellent discussion of the current topic, "The Church's Responsibility for Weekday Bible Instruction", was given led by Rev. H. L. Paisley, pastor of the local Presbyterian ihurch. Rev. E. F. Baker. of Andrews, presided over the meeting- and Rev. Fred Stiles acted as secretary. Rev. Paisley, acting in the absence of the ro;,ram leader Van B. Harrison who had to be absent, led the discussion, using the Chattanooga school and church cooperative movement as a model. In discussing the week-day Bible study in Chattanooga, that program war explained in detail and discussed and approved by the conference. In this program the Chattanooga schools, both city and county, have entered elective courses of Bible study open for all students, and a survey shows Continued cn Back Page Local CCC C Arnprimn I * ?-w* m, ? JUI v Murphy's new COC ("amp near Cool Springs put the final touches on all building and construction work Tuesday and launched right into a round of activity. Although the new camp i* made up of 183 World War veterans, it would appear that they were the youth of the CCC organization in the country. The entire camp, teeming with activity and making plans for more, was a literal beehive after completion of building. In completeness the camp now has more than twenty buildings including barracks, a welfare building, garages, officers and technicians quarters, forestry and army offices, dispensary, mess hall and recreation building. Plans for beautifying the site are well underway. Grass and flower plots will be set out in a pattern most bene iiviai IpU uinu^r. All those and social activities are under the direction of commanding officer Oecile P. Hall, and project superintendent A. M. Diotz. The natural beauty of the place makes it \ tmikri ERN NORTH CAROLINA, COVERING MURPHY, N. C. THURSDAY, NOV Loop In Murphy Street Completed: Open To Travel Relocation of part of Tennessee ; street leading: to the Factorytown sec- ; lion of Murphy has been completed j and is now open to traffic with a new { overhead bridge spanning the south- ; i n raiiroad at that point and a beautiful new loop drive, from the over- j Ihead bridge to the Valley River bridge has resulted which will be a I I beauty spot for Murphy after Hiwas- ; see Dam reservoir is filled. Certain sections of this street would have been inundated by the back waters of the dam and it was found necessary to rebuild part of the street. The new stretch of street is elevated far above any level the waters will reach extending upward as high as was necessary for the overhead bridge. This street is paved with concrete. No new bridge was built for th" river but the old one was reinforced and moved upstream about thirty feet. In the process of putting a new foundation under this bridge it was raised "eight feet higher than before so that it would easily clear the lake waters. The foundations of the railroad trestle just above this bridge j were aiso reimoreen ana rip-rapped against the erosive forces of the lake waters. From the river bridge the highway Continued on back page last Bites He] d For D. C. Hall, 69, At Mt. Pisgah j Final rites for D. C. Hall, (59, of Warne, who died Wednesday night a*. H o'clock were conducted from the Mt. Pisgah Baptist church Thursday afternoon at o'clock with the ! Lev. Henry Brown officiating. Intcr ment was in the church cemetery. i Townson Funeral home had eh irge of i ; arrangements. 1 M:\ Ik.11 was probably one of the | mcst widely known and well-liked j men in all Chero .ee county, having ' a host of friends all over this entire section. The Hall family is one of the oldest in the county. Surviving are his wife; four daughters, Mrs. Lucy 'Hawkins, Mi's. Vilirm ; Kimsey and Miss Cordia Hall, all of I Clay county, and Mrs. Naomi Elliott ! of Franklin; seven sons, Virgil Hall | of Murphy, Lee Hall, of Winston| Salem, and Bill, Claude, Albert and 1 Dee Hall, all of Clay county. limp Hums \ igion Meets \ I unique without improvement in its majestic site overlooking the Hiawassee river from a sleep and precipilons bluff, which will later be a good view of the Hiwassee Dam lake. On Saturday last the local post of i the American Legion held its meeting at the camp. The meeting was purely social ana was carried out more in the form of a reunion than a called meeting. Some of the local members found old buddies in the camp; others reminisced, and the "good oP days" | were discussed in general. During this meeting 65 of the CCC j veterans became members of the local j legion organization and others exi pressed the desire to join. Plans were made at the meeting to | ; hold all meetings in the future at the j camp and a request was made to th? district office of the Tusquittee district of the Nantahala National forest in Atlanta, from which authorization must be given before these meetings in the camp can be affected. Plans were also made to hold a I k A LARGE AND POTENTIALLY RICH EMBER 9, 1939 TV A Power Permanently SAFE LOOTED IN HARDWARE STORE WEDNESDAY NIGHT The Sheriff said esndt. lpw rf h Professional .safe-blowers, artists , of their trade, successfully opened the j ? tj?i ? 1 here Wednesday night and escaped | with six dollars in cash and some valuable documents. An attempt on the gulf Oil company warehouse failed when no safe was found to blow. According to Sheriff Townson. three men apparently entered the hardware company building late Wednesday night, blew the safe and then, continuing to the Gulf plant and en ? iing that building made their escape when they found no safe. The Sheriff said it was wihtout doubt the work of exports. A small hole had been drilled into the working parts of the combination, the hole loaded with powder with a fuse leading out and the opening sealed with soap. After the explosion, the thieves took out six dollars in cash and a steel box containing insurance policies. notes and other papers. However, nothing else was touched. The same thieves, supposedly, successfully entered the building of the ulf company, and finding no safe, concluded that no money was kept there and continued on their way. Nothing was missing from the company's office. BULLDOGS MEET , FRANKLIN HIGH HERE FRRIDAY The Murphy Buildups clash with Franklin High's football eleven here Friday in what will probably he the hardest game so far this season or* the local field, the game starting at 1 o'clock. The Bulldog's have enjoyed * v r\ so-so season thus far this year and a win will boost their rating considerably, Therefore, Coach I'itzer Vuis been sending his boys through a sCff workout all week and gave them pro'.tbly their hardest offensive scrimmage practice of the entire year on Wednesday. In other words he intends to bring home the bacon. The Franklin team has a reputation of beinjt very strong and have sever- J al big scalps under their belt. The least the Bulldogs can look forward \ I to is the hardest game of their life. vith Activity; vith Vets /TO- i j uviucu uu.^uig tournament at camp sometime between the dates of January 1 and 20. Both this camp and the local American Legion post will i cooperate in this move, which will involve about eight camps in this district. According to the plan youths will engage in the tournament and from these class winners will travel to Atlanta. Ga. where state and dis! trict finals will be held. On Tuesday evening representatives of ten camps in District No. 3 met at the Murphy camp for the regular district conference. Also on this same night the reserve officers from this district held their regular meeting. Other activities are being planned for this camp in the near future. Visitors from all over the section are finding the camp to be one of the town's greatest attractions, and when beautification is complete in the spring it will probably be one of the scenic spots of the county, and certainly the home of a huge and happy family. I t Dedicated To Service For Progress TERRITORY Sc COPY?$1.50 PER YEAR Is 'Cut On' In Murphy Switch Thrown At 5:20 Wednesday; Sub Station Functioning At exactly 5:20 o'clock Wednesday afternoon workmen threw the switch cn the new TV A sub station in Murphy. illuminating the entire city for the first time with electricity direct from the TV A power lines, which is and will be the permanent source of power for Murohv. With the arrival and installment ?>f the regulator, which will keep the current at a constant voltage, the station was in immediate readiness to supply the. town. II. G. Elkins, manager of the town's electric department, said that about one and one half hours would be required to adjust the new regulator after the power had been cut on, after which it would be continuously and permanently supplied to the town. The new power source relieves a great impropriety in Murphy, the former source having been insufficient and erratic. Many times the consumption was far greater than the supply and output of the former source, causjmv the entire town to h- thrown into darkness on different occasions. Work on the new sub station was begun in August of this year and construction was complete some two weeks ago. However, officials wetv unable to cut in on the TV A line until the regulator had been installed in order that the power would alwa>> Continued on Hack Page FRAUD IS BARED BY GOVERNMENT IN WPA CHECKS Merchants Lose Over $2,500 As Result of Forgeries | Murphy, Andrews and Rolblosville Me ban especially the first named two have been victimized out of I more than $2,500 through frauds worked through the medium WPA checks, the Smut learned today. As a result, the United States Secret Service has issued, through its Charlotte office, a special warning to banks, storekeepers and business men men in general not to accept any WPA check unless the person prcsent' ing it is personally known, j This warning has been brought home with added force by a big advertisement appearing elsewhere in ibis paper, inset ed by President Ferebec of the Citizens Rank ami Trust Company. M.. Ferebee explained t.? the Smut reporter that fraud-* with \VnA checks had been found only too easy. Merchants, feeling that any 1J. S. Government check must necessarily be good, have been eager to cash them, when the person presenting them made a small purchase. ' Rut a lot of those checks have been stolen, and signatures forged'* Mr. Ferebee explained. "You see ttu> envelopes in which they com* are very distinctive. A thief can spot them without difficulty. Boxes on rural mail routes are not always gone to x'he moment the mail carrier arrives; and it has been a simple matter on many occasions, for some one to steal envelopes. forge the name of the proper payee, and then take the checks to another town, and cash them in some store. Naturally, the Graham Countv checks that were forged, were passed mostly in Andrews and Murphy. Checks stolen in Cherokee County and forged, were in turn passed over in Graham. "I hope the warning we have put in the Scout will he read?and heeded?for when a merchant cashes a forged check, it is the merchant himself who must make it good.*' j

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view