rout Consolidated with GRAHAM COUNTY NEWS VOLUME 57 ? NUMBER 19. MURPHY. NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1945 TWELVE PAGES THIS WEEK Larse Quantity Talc Occurs In Cherokee By Dr. A. F. Greaves-Walker < IN. C. State College) RALEIGH ? Among the min erals occurring in North Carolina in commercial quantities which sre common to only a few states in the country are kyanite, talc, and pyrophyllite. These minerals have been mined in the state for many years past, and some manu factured products have been pro duced from talc and pyrophyllite. Talc is a silicate of magnesium. One of its most important physical qualities is its "greasy feel" or slip. I All the deposits of true talc are | in the western part of the state. | Deposits are known* to occur in Cherokee, Swain, Graham, Jack son. Ashe, Buncombe, Alleghany, Madison and Yancey counties. The niost important deposits that have been worked commercially are in a belt extending from near Hew itts. Swain county, in a southwest uard direction into Cherokee coun ty to the town of Kinsey. The deposits parallel the Mur phy branch of the Southern rail way and occur in leng-shaped mas ses varying in length from a few fiet to about 1,500 and in width up to about 100 feet or more. Pure talc has a great many com mercial uses but as the North Carolina mineral usually contains impurities, it is limited to paints, paper fillers, roofing coatings, tire powders, metal crayons, and weld ing rod coatings. A small amount of carefully selected material has been used in steatite bodies. Dur ing the war, practically the entire output was used in the manufac ture of metal crayons. North Carol in*, has a !1 estate | lishei metal crayon industry | which should be expanded, and there appears to be no reason why J production of ground talc of good j color should not take care of the j demand in the Southeast for fill- ' crs. tire powders, and roofing coatings. Barker To Speak At Ministers' Meet The Rev. Robert Barker will be the p incipal speaker at the meet ins of the Baptist Ministers con ference at the Baptist church here ; Monday. Decembeer 4. His sub- s ject will be: "The Pastor and His Everyday Problems". The pro gram will open at 10:15 with the Rev. Algie West conducting the devotional, which will be followed by a business session. Following Mr. Barker's talk, an informal dis cus-ion will be held, and the bene diction will be pronounced by the Rev Will Hedden. Couple Injured In Automobile Accident Tuesday j Marston Bingham, driver of a Roberts cab, and his wife are in Murphy General hospital suffering I from injuries received in an acci dent Tuesday night about 8 o'clock ' when the car struck the end of the bridge near Tomotla, officers reported. Hildred Waldroup of Andrews and Billy Crawford of Murphy were the other occupants 'cf the car. Miss Waldroup was treated for a head injury and re leased from the hospital. Crawford was not injured. Davis' Jewelers To Have Opening Friday Evening Formal opening of Davis' Jewel ers, in the Regal hotel store, on the square, formerly occupied by the Cherokee Scout, will be held on Friday evening of this week. The hours will be from 7:30 to 10 o'clock. Tlic store will be open for business, beginning Saturday morning. The joint owners of the new jewelry store are J. P. Costner and Howard B. Adair of Lexing ton and W Merle Davis of Mur phy. Co-managers of the store will be Mr. Adair and Mr. Davis. Mr. Costner, who is the owner cf Cosner's Jewelers in Lexington, has !.\;d many >iaa:? of experience in the Jewelry field. Although he will not be in the store, he will be in charge of the buying. Mr. Adair recently returned from overseas duty in the air force in which he served for three years. He lived in L :xington and worked v. i;h Mr. Costner before going into service. Since his return, he has r.rain taken his position with Cost ner's Jewelers. Mr. Davis, sol of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis of Murphy, received his high school education in the local scho'l and later graduated fiom Western Carolina Teacher's college. After graduation, he went to Lexington as sanitarian of Davidson county. Early in 1941 he enlisted in the army and went immediately to the Hawaiian Islands where he served in the Medical C ?:ps for about three | 5'ears. In the summer of 1944 he went to Saipan. where he served for seven months. Last February he returned to the states and was leleasei frcm the army in Sep tember of this year. Farmers Elect AAA Committeemen Friday Cherokee County farmers will have the opportunity on November ! 30 to i;o to their community cen ter's and vote in the annual elec- J tion of AAA committeemen who will si; down with them and help ' Plan a conservation program bas ed on actual needs of their farms | to speed reconversion of the State's I farmland from the strain of war- 1 time production. Three county committeemen will be elected to administer produc- . tion and marketing activities. Two alternate committeemen will also be chosen for each community. Voting will be held In the fol- 1 lowing townships: Murphy, at the courthouse; Marble, school; An ?tows, school; Peachtree, Metho dist church; Hangingdog, Grand View post office; Unaka, Odom's store; Notla, Ranger Baptist ?hurch; Martins Creek, school; Hot House. Chastain's store; Suit, Baptist church; and Shoal Creek, Verner's store. A large 'vote of confidence' will enable elected AAA Coonmifctee ""n to do their job with the kixvw that their neighbors we ?up Bureau Federation. "One of the main programs that the newly elected AAA committee men will administer during the coming year is the 1946 Agricul tural Conservation Program", he declared. "The conservation pro gram, this year, has been decen tralized. with counties and com munities allocated funds for de veloping their own soil and water conservation practices", he con tinued. "To speed reconversion of the State's farmland from the strain of wartime production, the most capable farm leadership in the counties and communities are needed", he explained. "The AAA always has taken the position that those operations which are intimately tied up with the farmer's economic welfare can best be administered by the farm er himself. Many grave problems lie ahead for agriculture and I )?ope that every eligible farmer in the State will attend his local elec tion meeting and voice his opinion for the men of his choice to re present him considering the profc TO PLY ROBOT PLANE ? Residents of Cherokee and surrounding counties will be given an opportunity to see a radio controlled target plane in operation at the Andrews-Murphy landing field on December 8 at 4:30 p.' m? when a unit of seven men, known as Radio Controlled Aet ial Target team No. 40, will come to Andrews from Ft. Bragg, bring ing the robot plane with them. P. B. Ferabee, chairman of the victory loan, announces that the plane is being shown here in connection with the promotion of the sale of bonds. Lt. J. E. Gambill will te in command, and seven enlisted men will accompany him. During the war the plane was one of the army's closest guarded secrets. It is nine-feet long and has a wingspread of twelve feet. There are no strings or invisible wires attached to it; it is strictly radio controlled . It weighs approximately one hundred pounds and is driven by an eight horsepower two cycle, constant speed gasoline engine. The team which operates the model plane from the ground rolls out a thirty-six foot launching ramp onto a large field and catapults the model target plane into the air and proceeds to put on a spectacular performance. M. E. Lovingood Taken By Death t Millard Emory Lovingood. 41, ?aied suddenly Saturday morning ai 4 o'clock- at ?.hp home of his fath er, J. M. Lovingood at Marble. Funeral services were held Sun clay afternoon at 2 o'clock at Marble Baptist church, the Rev. Algie West, and the Rev. Robert Barker officiating. Burial follow ed in Marble cemetery with Ivie funeral home in charge. Pallbearers were. Junior Moss, Forest Abernathy, Jack Roberts, Wilbur Griggs, George Hughes and Fred Barton. Mr. Lovingood had been a mem ber of the Baptist church fjr a number of V. ars. He had served with the Seabees two years in Australia and later entered the merchant marines where he had served one year. Ho had been home for three weeks when he died. Mr. Lovingood was former man ager of the Dickey Hotel in Mur phy and Terrace Hotel in Andrews. Surviving are his father; five brothers. Stanley Lovingood of Asheville, Wendell and Ralph of Marble, the Rev. Paul Lovingood of Thomasville, and Harley Lovin good of Bryson City; two sisters, Mrs. P. A. Arrowood of Marble and Mrs. Carl Ledford of Murphy. 13 Men Leave For Examination Thirteen Cherokee county men left Murphy Tuesday morning for Ft. Jackson, S. C., for preinduction examination for armed service. Included in the list are; James Drew Taylor, elader; Claude Jack son Monteith, James Wesley Whit ener, Glen Henry Beavers. Robert L. Dockery, Howard Scott Brad ley, Jessie Ray Whitener, John Dockery, James Frederick Ballew, Martin Eugene Anderson. James Haven Ledford. Clyde William Morris, Charlie Lawton Crowder. Local Men Enlist In Regular Army The following men from Murphy have enlisted in the regular Army: Sgt. Ernest E. Elliott, and Pvt. William W. Coffey. Sgt. Elliott is the son of William P. Elliott, Route 3. He received his discharge September 24, and re enlisted in the regular Army No vember 14. Pvt. Coffey is the son of Lucy A. Coffey of Route 1. He received Aronson Speaks On Dream Of Freedom Sam Aionson, manager of Mur phy Box and Flo 'ring Manufactur ing Company, who was born in Russ:a and recently received his American citizenship, was guest speaker at the meeting of Murphy Lions club Tuesday evening, in the Methodist church dining room. He was presented by Dale Lee, chair man of the program committee. Joe Bailey and Jim Hughes were welcomed into the club as new members, by Pres dent Harry Bis hop. Francis Bourne of Asheville , was a guest of W. A. Sherrill. P: esident Bishop announced that the district governor, E. H. McMahan of Brevard, will speak at the next meeting of the club, on December 11. The club has made a contribu tion of S250 to the State Blind Commission t ward the recondi ticn'ng of the old soldier's home in Raleigh for a unit of the Blind school. A blind clinic will be held in the county in the near future, and the Lions club will cooperate with the I health department in this project, according to announcement by Dr. W. A. Hoover. The club voted to furnish meals for five needy pupils at Murphy schools during the remainder of She school year. President Bishop announced that Rcger Amnions is new scoutmaster and that a re-organization meet ing has been held. \V. M. Fain announced that a meeting of the State planning board will be held in Asheville on December 10. Mr. Aronson, speaking on "A At Andrews The Rev. Fred R. Horton of At lanta, Ga? district superintendent ot the Free Methodist church, is in Andrews this week and will preach at the Youth Building on the high school campus Friday. Saturday and Sunday evenings at 7 o'clock. He also will conduct services Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Mrs. Horton accompanied her husband here and the couple are guests in the home of Misses Char I lotte Bishop and Ruth Qniber. FIRST SNOW The first snow of the season fell on Thanksgiving Day, November 22. While it was not deep at any ?tiliiUHMiiH Dream of Freedom", told of his youth in Russia, where at the age f seven he faced for the first time the fact that freedom is some thing not easy. He explained that to enter school one had to be out standing in ability and with means. "In the school we were under soldier's discipline. We hr.d to salute our teachers like soldiers every time we met them, even a dozen times a day." he said. "We had no right to appear on the streets after da k. nor to go to a theatre without a special permit fr m the so-called inspector of the school. Every time we changed cur apartments, we had to register the police. And we had no light to leave town without notify ing the police. "After 1905 revolu'.! n the czai ist regime came to a conclusion that to avoid revolutions the edu cation of the minorities has to be m i re and more restricted . . .After tight years in school. I entered the university, where police certificates of good behavior were required." He told of the Communists com ing into p w."r in 1918 and how the dream of freedom vanished. He got out of Russian to a Baltic .state ill 1918. "When I met for the first time an American. I listened to him with an open mouth. And after he told me that he is a journalist ol the Chicago Tribune. I thought. 'What a lair the fellow is.' He was very well known in Finland. Every time I appeared with him in public. I noticed the great re spect to him. "In 1939 the war caught me in Finland. I moved with my wife and little boy to Stockholm. Sweden. Here for the first time in my life I started to think how to get to America. I decided to fly ever Germany in a private piani st a high cost, to England. G d helped us (wife, child and himself* on the trip. "On the 28th of June, 1940, when I boarded the S. S. Samaria with the little Adir in my arms. I start ed to realize that my dream might come true and that it is the last stage of my trip to real freedom. After ten days' voyage in a heavy convoy we passed the Statue of Liberty . . . We are in America, and we are citizens of the great est democracy of the world ... a feeling which you born Americans cannot imagine. Being blind for 43 years, you suddenly get your sight again, and are able to see the I blue skv. the sun, the Joy of n> ?HMHB Cherokee Lags In Victory Loan Woman's Club Hears Review Ot New Books Mrs. Sarah Lloyd and Mis. Harry Miller reviewed a number of the newest books at the Wom an s club meeting Wednesday af ternoon. Mis. Lloyd had on dis play a number of children's books, especially suited for Christmas' gifts. Ac the business session, the club voted to give $30 from the treas ury for Christmas gifts for sold iers at Moore General hospital. Mrs. J. B. Gray, chairman of the department of Post War plan ning announced that these gifts can be left at the "Regal Shoppe" operated by Mi's. George Stauning at Regal hotel. A letter from Mrs. LePell Dick inson, president of the national federation of Women's clubs ask ing that the club participate in the Victory clothing drive which starts in December was read. It was pointed out that the clothing collected some time ago had not * pen sent away, and it was voted that this be packed and sent on this drive. Letters were read from Mrs. Carl Bishopric, state president, compli menting the club on its year book of programs, and from Congress man Zebulon Weaver and Senator I Clyde R. Hoey, promising to sup port the bills for Federal Aid to Education. The club voted to put up Christ- j mas lights in town this year for the first tim' since the beginning of tK> ,vai I The president announced mem bers of committees for the year, j At the close of the program. Miss Jane Hill and members of her lccds classes served refreshments ftnd a social li >ur was hold. Junior Red Cross Report Is Made ; f ollowing is a report of the j Junior Reu Cross in the Murphy j .lcols : M .-is McCombs, 1st grrade, | SO. 84: M.ss Dickson, 1st grade, 94c: J M Wells, l.s: grade, 74c: Mrs. Pa . n. S7.04: Miss Wilson, 2nd (trade, $1.86: Mrs. Shields. 3rd grade, $3.77: m:.?ss Holiday. 4th1 ?-?rarde, 36c: Miss Hayes. 4th and 5th grade. $1.38: Mrs. Adams, 5th r ado, S6.57 : Miss Leatherwood, 6'li grade. $3.25: Mrs. Davidson, 7th grade. $3.24: Miss Sword. 4th grade. $5.25. Miss Hill. 8th grade, $3.65: M' . Smith, 8th grade. $3: Mrs. Ward. 11th grade, $2.34: Miss Winston. O il grade, $3: Miss Gieseking, 11th grade, $2.75: Miss Curd, 12th S ade, $2: Mrs. Berry, 10th grade, $2.13: Mrs. Mauney, 10th grade, SI. 51: Mr. Pa ire, 8th grade, $1.65; Miss Morton. 9th grade, $3.02: Miss Hawk ns. 9th grade. 87c: Mrs. Miller, 8th grade. $1.55: Mrs. Dug Kan, 10th grade, $1. Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Brumby, Sr.. are visiting in Marietta and Macon, Ga., this week. Bjnd sales in Cherokee county in connection with the Victory Loan are lagging, according to Chairman Peercy B. Feretoee, who siates that the last report gives the county credit for the sale of only $20,148. only a small portion of the quota of $165,000 On November 24, only 26 percent of the county's E. bond qu >ta of $76,000 had been sold. Murphy schools are promoting the Victory Loan by undertaking to sell en ugh bonds for five hospital bed units at Moore General hos pital. a cost of $15,000. The schools-at-work program is being cjnducted by Mis. J. W. Davidson, who states that the grammar grades already have sold more than $8,000 and the high school more than $3,000. On December 8 a showing of a pilotless plane, at Andrews-Mux phy landing field, for the promo tion of the sale of bonds, will be held. Club Schedule For December Is Announced By Miss Cornwel! The Home Demonstration club schedule for December Christmas meetings is as follows: Tuesday. December 4 Violet. Mrs. W. L. Taylor, 1:00 o'clock; Wednesday, December 5, Postell, Mrs. Jim Allen, 1:00 o'clock; Thursday. December 6. Peachtree, Mrs. Noah Hembree and Miss F'orence Lovingcod as joint hos te-~: Mo.iday. December -10. Grand view. Mrs. Maynard Palmer, 1:00 oYlock; Tuesday, December 11, Bellview, Mrs. Bill Hatchett, 1:00 o'cljck; Wednesday Dec. 12. Unaka, Mrs. H. L. McDonald, 1:00 o'clock; Thursday, December 13, Slow Creek. Mis. Callie Morrison, 1:00 o'clock; F iday, D. c ember 14. Sun ny Point. Mrs. H. C. Tilson, 1:00 ? clock; Monday. December 17, Marble, School Auditorium. 1:30 o'clock: Tuesday. December 18, Mart n's Creek School. 1 :30 o'clock; Wednesday. December 19. Andrews 'to be announced > 2:00 o'clock; Thursday. December 20, Ranger, Mrs. Sterlin Aiken, 1:00 o'clock; Friday, December 21. Tomotla, Mrs. Gilbert Stiles. 2:00 o'clock. Mi Mary Cornwell. home agent, expects ;o meet wi.h all clubs this m nth. She was away from the county severarl weeks because of the illness and death of her mother. I ~ " Bound Over On Liquor Charge Will Rogers, Henry Rose, and John Strat:cn arrested Frank Hughes and Garland Warren and captured five gallons of whiskey cn Snow Hill Tuesday afternoon. Hughes and Warren were given a hearing before Justice of the Peace Fred Bates and were bound over to court under $500 bond each. w IRAN REBELS IN TEHERAN PUSH ->| RUSSIA BLACK SEA TURKEY SYRIA ) CYPRUS IONITINO A NEW If AM In the highly explodve Nau tut, arm ad many. , ben of th? icparatUt Democratic Pari/, revolting agalnat banian goi* ? eminent authority In territory garrlaoned by Soviet troope, an puahlng along a rail line from Mlaneh, which they have tains, to Teheran, oapt^ " - 1 ? ? 'irriirr r-r r r i tb ar 1