ruift - \\ PROMOTING MURPHY AND ANDREWS \ Trade Week 65 Shopp'ng Days 'Til Christmas Trade Week Come MLRPHl For ? Trade W eek I VOLUME ?J?NUMBER 1J MURPHY, NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY. OCT. I, ItM C % EIGHT PAGES November Jury list Told For One Week Term Here A 32 man Jury liet fo ra one week term of Superior Court op ening here Nov. 9 wu released to day by the Cherokee County Board of Oo Cherokee County Farmers with corn ready to be entered in the county-wide $85 corn yield contest today were asked to contact Coun ty Agent G. H. Farley. A committee will inspect the acres entered in the contest, Mr. Farley said. All corn must be re ported to the agent's office by October 16, he asserted. The prizes, awarded by the Citi zens Bank and Trust Co., Include a $50 Savings Bond for First Prize; $25 Bond, Second prize, and $10 cash, Third Prize. I To compete for the prize, Mr. Far ley said, all corn must be left In the field until a committee has in spected it. The county has a good chance of being represented in the state corn yield contest, Mr. Farley said. There are two groups in the state competition-Adult and Juvenile, with duplicate prizes being award ed. Tallent Makes Good Use Of Timberland Here W. O. Tallent Coperhill, Term, businessman, is a good neighbor to Cherokee County's tlmberlands. Tallent has purchased some 1, 200 acres in Notla and Murphy township* for the timber. Last spring he put out some 1,300 seed lings, as well as cutting out the waste. iMr. Tallent is the owner of two drug stores. Blood Program May End Here-No Funds; Red Cross Meet Set The problem of how to financed the blood program in the .Murphy ( area when no funds are available , will be the main topic of discuss ion at the annual Murphy Red Cross Chapter meeting Tuesday, I Oct. 13, at the library. Miss Ruth Lock man Red Cross Western North Carolina field wor-' ker will be present at the meeting. 1 Board members and physicians j here have been contacted and all interested persons are invited to; attend the meeting. I For the past year the Red Cross blood program, by "skimping" ar ound, has managed to operate in ' the County. However, there are no 1 more funds available at present. Official Masonic Guest Visits Ranger Sat. Gordon L. Butler, District Dep uty Grand Master of the 43rd Dis trict of the Masonic Lodge, will make his official visit to the Mont gomery Lodge, 426, AF and AM. at Ranger, Saturday, October 10, at a stated meeting at 7r30 p. m. Supt Huneycutt Be Here Sundav The District Superintendent of the Waynesville District of the Methodist Church the Rev. W. Jackson Hunneycutt, will preach at the 11:00 worship service at the First (Methodist Church Murphy Sunday, Oct. 11. Immediately fol lowing the Morning Service he will hold a brief Quarterly Conference with all members of the Church in vited to remain. At 2:30 in the afternoon Mr. Hu nneycutt will hold the First Quar terly Conference for the Murphy Circuit at Martins Creek Method ist Church. Representatives from all the Churches of the Circuit are urged to attend this meeting. At the Sunday evening service at ?the First Methodist Church the two lay represenatives to the An nual Conference, Tom Case and C. R. Freed, will join with the pastor in presenting the results of the re cent Conference. Automotive Buying Tops In County More Money Is Spent On Autos Than Food Here (Special to the Cherokee Scout) Cherokee County, as revealed by the buying ImjKs of its people, stands out as a more prosperous and progressive county than most in the country. It is one of the limited numb ier of communities in which more was spent last year for cars and i other automotive equipment than for any other item, even food. The data is contained in the current, copyrighted survey of Sales (Management, covering all 48 States. Cherokee County chalked up a sales volume In the year of *2,322. 000 In stores selling new and used can and trucks, tires, batteries 'and other automotive equipment ' including farm machinery, motor cycles said boats. In all, H was equivalent to 27 cent* out at ovary dollar spent In local retail stone In the year, and was more than was spent propor tianteiy elsewhere in the Country, where the average was 17 cents. In the South Atlantic States, 18 cents of the dollar want for automotive purchase. Big spending for automotive equipment is normally am index of good times and a high-standard of living. With families earning more ) as was the case in Cherokee Coun ty last year, more was spent on luxury items. Retail activity generally was at a high level jn Cherokee dourly during the year, with the local stores compiling the tidy sales polure of $8,716,000. The activity carried over into the other classes of retail business covered by the survey. Local stor es selling food, another important index, accounted for $1,047,000 of the volume. They garnered 22 I cents of each retail dollar. Places selling general merchan dise, including variety and de | partment stores, had sales of $531, 1000 In the year, amounting to an other 6 cents. The stores dealing in furniture, household supplies anr radio equip did twain us to the tans of $672,000, equal to nearly 8 cents' of tile dollar. Drug store operations came to I $100,000, representing an addition al one cent. Brooks Announces Auto Dealers' Drive The annual membership drive of the North Carolina Automobile Dealers Association will be beM Oct. 14-15, according to announce ment by Association President, T. L. Black of Pinehurst T. Jeff Brooks of Andrews la the area Chairman for this county. Chairmen and their wives will be entertained by Che dealer assoc iation at Che Forth Annual Area Chairman Day In Raleigh In Oct ober. Betty Kate Wibon Heads 4-H Club Rev. S. D. Stover Dies bi Georgia Funeral services for the Rev. Sher man David Stover, 64, who died September 30 in a Gainesville, Ga. hospital, were held at 2 p. m. Thursday, October 1, in Mt. Leb anon Baptist Church at Suches, Ga. " He was a native of Union Coun ty Ga., a farmer and a mWater of the Harmony Church of God. The Rev. Boy Phillips, and the Rev. A C. Doreey officiated and burial was in the church eematary. Surviving are the widow, Mr*. Treade Mae Andaman Stover; aev en eons, Sidney, Sherman, Jr., Hmt man, Billy and Jamea A of I and John of Detroit, Mkh. Alao eeven daughters, Mfg. Bag Pro Stover of the Garrett of of