Our Aim: ? A Better Murphy A Finer County ?hp Dedicated To Service For Progress THE LEADING WEEKLY newspaper ,n WESTERN NORTH CAROUNA.COVER.NU a LARGE AND POTENTIALLY RICH TERRITORY \OL. 53? SO. 17 Ml Rl'llY. XQRTII CAROLINA i m nsiiw, nqvkmbkk jo. imi .V ( lipy ? si II 1-1 I! ykar NEW INDUSTRY LOOMS FOR THIS SECTION TRIPLE MURDER ! GREETS WORKER ON RETURN HOME TVA Man Finds Wife, Woman Roomer, And Baby Shot To Death Two young women and a baby girl were murdered, while a fcaby boy escaped unharmed In the Greasy Creek section lust across the Ten nessee line Tuesday night. Pour men are under arrest. Tile double crime was discovered when James Hedden, a TVA tunnel worker employed on the Ocoee pro ject. returned home shortly before midnight to find the body of his 20 yenr-old wife, Lecia, lying across threshold. She had been shot through the heart. Lying across a bed. inside the house was the body of Mrs. Irene Dillard. 30. who had been living with the Heddens. On the floor, near the bed, lay the body of Mrs. Dillard's one-ye..r-old daughter. The only sign of life in the blood spattered room was the gentle breathing of Hedden's 18-month-old baby son, who lay sleeping beside the dead body of Mrs. Dillard. The' boy had not been harmed. Mrs. Hedden, Mrs. Dillard and the latter's baby daughter, had all been shot to death with 32-calibre pistol bullets. Mrs. Dillard, separated from her husband, who is reported to be in Detroit, had also been beaten ov er the head with a pistol butt, or some blunt weapon. Immediately after discovery of the triple claying, police of Hiwassee Dam were notified, and a call was put in for Sheriff Carl Townson, in Murphy. Townson was off on anoth er case, and before he could be reached. Sheriff Broughton Biggs, of Polk County had been summoned, and had sent to the Tennessee State | Prison for bloodhounds. Before the dogs arrived, however, four men had | been placed under arrest; They are ; Bill Hedden. 40, brother of James Hedcen and a constable of the Polk i county Second district. Lawrence Breeden, 26, and his first j cousin. Floyd Breeden, 20. Julius Goforth, 30. Sheriff Biggs declined to express' himself as to the motive for the ; crime. j o Defense Begins Listing All Trucks And Buses T. B. Ward, North Carolina Com missioner of Motor Vehicles, has an nounced that 150,000 questionnaire i cards to truck and bus owners were mailed Nov. 17. Each truck and bus owners Is ask ed regarding the season of the year when he most urgently needs the vehicle in his own business and whether In an emergency he would be willta3 to hire or lease the ve hicle to a Government agency. Former Resident, Hurt In Crash, Stops Here On Way to S. C. and Ore. Mr. D. S. Davis, formerl;. of Mur Piiy. returned lor a short visit last week to recover from injuries he received in an automobile accident October 31. Mr. Davis was thrown through the windshield of the car his nephew. Zane Davis, was driving when the! vehicle was crashed into by another I 40 miles from Columbus. Ohio. He' was in Columbus General Hospital five days. Zane Davis, also was injured, re ceiving lacerations of the body and internal Injuries. While here, Mr. Davis stayed with a sister, Mrs. R. L. Abernathy. He will visit Miss W. P. Hass in Pickens. ?. f.T and then go to Salem, Ore., to visit Mr. and Mrs. W. Panther, also formerly of Murphy. After that, Mr. Davis says he is coming back to Murphy, to stay! Ex-Con Confesses Shoooting Out Eye Of Allen Owenby, 63 With a hearing set for Saturday morning. Nov. 22, Bert Beasley. 19 year-old escaped Georgia convict, is reported to have confessed to Jailer Patton Coleman that he shot out the left eye of 63 -year-old Allen Owen by in the latter's cabin in the Liber ty section. Beasley and his 18 year old broth er "T. J.", who also admits being a fugitive from a Georgia chain gang, and Homer Cheatham, 22, of Hi ?wassee Dam, are all being held in connection with the assault. Cheat ham also faces charges of stealing the gun with which Owenby was shot, and with stealing the automo bile in which he and the Beasley brothers escaped. Bert Beasley admits he fled from Pickens county. Ga. after serving eight months of a two year sentence for assault. His brother escaped also from Pickens County, after serving fialf of a two months sentence to the roads, for being drunk and dis orderly. Mr. Owenby was shot in the head, at close range, with a 16-gauge sin gle barrel shotgun. Pellets tore out his left eye and riddled his forehead. An instinctive ducking, as the gun exploded was all that saved his life. Jailer Coleman says Beasley said he and Owenby quarrelled over the price of liquor, and that Owenby came at him with a 22 calibre rifle, ordering him to leave the cabin. "I fired twice trying to scare him" Beasley is quoted as saying, "but he wouldn't scare ? so I let him have it." Owenby says that, after being shot and left helpless and alone, he was robbed of his rifle and six dollars in cash. This may mean new charges at the hearing. Magistrate Reese Now Using An Alias, Appointment By Gov. Broughton Reveals The Scout, last week, printed a list of Prominent County residents ap pointed by Governor Broughton to serve as a local Advisory Council to the State Unemployment Commis sion. The list came from Unemploy ment headquarters. In Raleigh, and Tas turned over to the printer "as *as." Among the Cherokee Countians aa?ed was one "D. M. Rocco". No '**'7 could be found who had ever heard 0f him, but It was taken lor l^anted that the Raleigh authorities taew "ho had been appointed. ??t they didn't. Shortly after the Scout appeared on the streets. Mag istrate D. M. Reese came into the office bringing a letter from Govern or Broughton naming him to the Ad visory Council. Putting two and two together, it was decided that Mr. Rocco and Mr. Reese were one and the same. The answer probably Is that when Magistrate Reese wrote accepting the appointment, his handwriting was so "bed" that the folks in Ral eigh couldn't make it out. Mr. Reese denies this, but anyone who has ever seen his chlrography will admit that the explanation is reasonable. TWO MEN DYING AFTER BLAST AT APPALACIIIA DAM Stick Left Near Portal Of Tunnel Explodes As Shovel Lifts It Two men were so terribfcr injured. Tuesday, 1 1 ui t neither is expected to live, following a dynamite blast at the Turiletown Adit of the Appa laehia Dam. The dynamite exploded in a steam-shovel. One of the victims was Fred Huff man. aged 30. of Waynesville. a steam shovel operator. Huffman, his wife and five weeks old son came to this section to work only about two weeks ago. Tlie other victim was John Bla lcck. 30. Jiving in Turiletown. Both men were taken to a hospital in Chattanooga, with death regarded as almost certain. The blast was the result of dyna mite having been left on the ground at the portal of a tunnel. Huffman was preparing to load the truck with his shovel, and the driver, in ac cordance with TV A rules, liad dis mounted, and was standing by the truck's hood. The big shovel picked up tlie dyna mite along with some rock. In lift ing the load, the rock set off the explosive. Rock is said to have torn a great hole in Huffman's chest; perhaps to have torn out both eyes, and to have caused other injuries. The truck driver is said to have been almost disemboweled, and to have been oth erwise injured about the face, head and body. Immediately following news of the accident, the young wife of Huffman left Murphy for the hospital. It is reported that T. V. A. will conduct an investigation seeking to learn who left the dynamite Meanwhile, latest reports from Chattanooga, as the Scout went to press were that both the victims were still alive. Physicians refused to pre dict, however, that either would re cover. o Thanksgiving Date Decreed For State Ignored By Many Thursday. Nov. 20 is the official Thanksgiving day in North Carolina, according to proclamation of Pres ident Roosevelt, backed up by a con firmatory decree by our own Govern or. Nevertheless a good many persons throughout the County decided to stick to the old custom and celebrate on the last Thursday of the month. Pew turkeys have been seen on sale in this section. Merchants shun them because, they say, they have to sell them quick or "get stuck". Fifteen states have refused to abide by the Roosevelt decree, and will pay no official attention to Thursday Nov. 20. They are: Arkansas. Delaware, Florida, Iowa, Kansas. Montana. Nebraska. Nevada, New Hampshire. Oklahoma, Penn sylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Vermont. Those states which supposed to celebrate the earlier date are: Alabama. Arizonia, California, Colorado, Connecticut. Idaho, Illin ois, Indiana. Kentucky. Louisiana, Maine. Maryland, Massachusetts. Michigan. Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri. New Jersey, New Mexico. New York. North Carolina. North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina. Utah. Virginia, Washington. West Virginia. Wiscon sin. Wyoming and the District of Columbia. Land Is Found Rich In Olivene Deposits Needed For Defense Len Lenderman, 20, Slain; Crime Is Laid To Dillard Morrow Leonard Lenderman. 20 year old son of David Lenderman. widely known throughout this section is urau. ailu 17 jtrar olii Faui morrow, son of Dillard Morrow, well known farmer, is in jail across the Tennes see line charged wltn murder, as a result of a quarrel last Saturday night. Tile quarrel took place near Telli co plains. Policc arrived to find Lenderman lying dead, with two bul lets in his chest, and Morrow stand ing. waiting to be arrested. He is said to have admitted the killing, declaring he shot Lenderman after | the latter had knocked him down. The slain youth's father will be I remembered as the Cokcr Crees postmaster who was bound, gagged, and left in the Buckfcerry school - : house by three bandits who robbed the postoffice. Mr. Lenderman freed himself, notified Lite law, and there was a gun-fight in which one of the robbers was killed by "Tobey" Fain, and the other two were captured. Young Morrow's brother was re cently shot, accidentally, while vis l iting in the County jail, in Murphy. o Two "On Gang" Escape But Are Soon Retaken News has just been made public of the escape, week before last, of two prisoners from the camp near Peachtree Both were recaptured near Etowah, Tenn., and returned to i the camp within two days. Fred Allen, of Barnesville. N. C., serving six months on the roads for assault with a dangerous weapon, and Charles Rumbaugh, of Ashe ville, serving eight months for lar ceny, walked off while working near the Hiwassee Dam. Both began serving time last September 18. o 20 Families Will Move To Hiwassee Dam Soon | Approximately 20 more families soon will be added to the population at Hiwassee Dam, TV A officials said yesterday. The new arrivals will come from Pickwick, Gilbertsville, Ky., Watts Bar. Tenn.. Wilson Dam, Ala., Wheeler, Ala., and Austin, Texas. New Process Found To Extract Magnesium From Ore And Soil Possibility of a vast now industry which will embrace all this section looms in construction ol the Pontana and other dams emb'.wced in the new TV A program, according to Maurice Henley, Chief of the In iOmwuuu SIa'i of t lie TV A . Mr. Henley, whose headquarters are in Knoxville painted a broad picture of the outlook during a vis it to the Scout office Tuesday. The new industry will be the pro duction of magnesium, which is es sential to manufacturing a particu lar kind of aluminum used in air planes, automobiles, and oilier ar ticles constantly used in peace-times as well as in war. A new process lias been discovered by TV A experts, working with the University of Georgia, whereby magnesium can be obtained from a mineral called Oli vene. TV A prospectors, after months of investigation, have reported that liuge deposits of olivene are to be found all through this section. A sin gle deposit, located between Mur phy and Asheviile, has been report ed to hold more than 200 millions tons. Other deposits, of varying sizes, have been found on farms all through this section. Production of magnesium, hereto fore, has been at the rate of 25,000 tons per year. The O. P. M.. in Washington, has decreed that this amount must be stepped up to 800, 000 tons per year. Until the Olivene deposits were found in this section, some of the magnesium had to be produced from sea water. Development of the Western Caro lina deposits probably would neces sitate constructio nof a huge plant, somewhere in this section. Comple tion of the new dam program is ne cessary to supply the power to op erate such a plant. Extracting the Olivene, and get ting It to the plant probably would be a matter of individual enter prise. The appropriation for the new TV A program, which includes the Fontana project, has been held up In Congress by Senator McKellar, of Tennessee, who is fighting against construction of the Douglas Dam, in the French Broad Valley, Just across the line in Tennessee. Building the Douglas Dam, Sen ator McKellar claims, would dispos sess hundreds of farmers from rloh (Continued on back page) Andrews Force Out-Jerseys Jersey As Two Are Sentenced, Day After Crime If all things are comparative ? * the oft-touted "Jersey Justice" Is but a snail beside the lightning swift ness of Andrews Apprehension. Two authorities on the subject were found guilty and sentenced Tuesday for the crime they had com mitted less than forty-eight hours before. This new chapter In the serial "Crime Never Pays" started staortl7 after midnight Sunday when the Whitaker store was broken into and robbed of boots, shots, blankets, and other merchandise valued at $136. Discovery of the robbery the fol lowing morning brought officers F. H. Mahaffey and Sam Jones hur ^iedly to scene. After a quick mr vey, they scurried away, vowing to return with the criminals before Mr. Whitaker could say "Jack Robin son." And the store-keeper hardly had time to utter that brief phrase before they policemen were bock. They bore the stolen merchandise. Tuesday morning. Robert and Gerald Jones, were brought before Cherokee County Superior Court to answer the charges. Both were con victed. Because of his previous record. Robert was sentenced to from three to five years in the State pen. Ger ald got a suspended sentence.