Ef I? Tin OmnIm* Son*, Thursday, U. 25, 1M0 ' t - 1 the chebokee scoot My. tm ?very TWidi; at Murph) Cfcmfce* County. N. C JERUE BABB. Kublutw , PHYLLIS B BABB CARL CARROLL JR. Editor Mechanical Supervisor SUBSCRIPTION RATES la Cherokee Cmmty Out Year. BH; Six Month*. ?.? Outside Cherokee County One Year. ?.?. $171 Paid At Marpaj. N. C in Hickary SL OPENING SOON . . . SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRY CORNER OF CHURCH AND WILLOW STREETS (Across from Vincent Stiles' Grocery) We Are Sorry To Have To Delay Our Opening In Murphy. Laundry Equipment Has Been Ordered But The Weather Has Delayed Construe tion. Natch For Opening! MRS. G. C. FARMER, Owner THIS WEEK ? la TuUiftM With Clinton Davidson Several mow hi ago we called attention to the fact that member* of government (faciei frequently sit at judges in important case* without observing Judicial proce dures required under the Consti tution. We pointed out that if members of those so-called "independent" agencies are to exercise judicial powers granted them by Congress l hey should be subject to the same rules as judges in an established court of law, . This view was re-emphasized recently when Louis J. Hector resigned as a member of the Civil Aeronautics Board and wrote President Eisenhower that it is absolutely necessary for board members and commissioners, in determining policy, to discuss the subject before them with all in terested parties. In many cases a government agency investigator first exa mines. under oath, the defendant who is not permitted to have his stenographer present or to secure a copy of the testimony. Kangaroo Court The pf jecutor 'investigator! then selects from the testimony whatever he wishes in preparing a summary and presents his version of the interrogation to the board members. The members then may invite the defendant in for a con ference or. in some cases, they may decide against him without a conference. After the defendant has stated his side of the case, the prosecutor A new low priced 3-T NYLON TIRE by GOODYEAR the people who know the most about NYLON TIRE CORD! ?v> Pt 3-T HYLON 1 All-Weather b|3? 7 Pay as low at $12S a week Not just another of those "100% NYLON" tires ? this is Goodyear B-T TRIPLE-TEMPERED NYLON ? NYLON at its v*ry best. Get this new 3-T Nylon All-Weather today. It's the low priced Nylon tire you can trustl ALL SIZES VALUE PRICED! size fJbl-Tyn' Tub^Trp*' 6.70 X 15 $13.95 $17.50 7.10 x 15 15.95 19.95 7.60 x 15 17.95 21.95 6.00x16 13.95 Blackwsll TUBtLtSS $15.95 SIZE 7.50 x 14 TUBEHSS $19.50 TUBELESS BUY! FOR LATE MOO El CARS * pricM plus tax and r*capp?bJ? Kre MORE FfOPU RIDE ON OOOOYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KINO I J. H. Duncan Tire Co. Peachtree Street Murphy, N. C. VE 7-2821 meat* lit* agency board, or witk its chairman the defendant be ing excluded > . and argues against the points made by the defendant. The defendant cannot confer with the board or its chairman during the time the ease is pending be cause "he must treat them as judges " The prosecutor, however, does not act as if the board mem ber were judges. Former Justice of the Supreme Court of Florida, B. K. Roberta, wrote us about an impeachment trial "where the defendant's office, emoluments and personal reputation were at stake." "Hie testimony." ha wrote, "was introduced over a period of weeks, and even when a quorum was present many of the mem bers were reading newspapers or were otherwise inattentive. Yet, when the roil was called, all of the members voted." Rale by Dirhw Right Judge Roberts went on to com ment that if members of a jury should leave the box while evi dence was being presented the entire proceedings would b* il legal and the trial a nullity. C. Frederick Meyer, a Mid western financier, wrote in re gard to the column: "During virtually all of the years of re corded history it was commonly accepted that the emperor, king or priest, ruled by devine right. "it was not until the 18th cen tury that a small group of men in the American colonies, dedi cated to the principle of personal and economic liberty for the in dividual, devised a system of gov ernment in which all powers rest- ( pd in the hands of the people with the exception of those that were specifically set forth in the original constitution. "While it is true that the Ameri can people during the past 180 years have unwittingly surrender ed many of these powers to the Federal Government, the Philo sophical concept within which the structure of our government was ; organized must necessarily gov ern our administrative agencies 1 if we are to remain a free people. Otherwise, we will be come a nation governed by fiat 1 and decree wilfiout regard to the will of the people." Recently two prominent men 1 took advantage of the Fifth ; Amendment because of the agen cy questioning them under oath'1 without their attorneys being pre sent. refused to give them a copy ' of the interview but used infor mation in it against them. They claimed this procedure is similar in part to the Russian secret trail 1 system. I Backward Glances Bj Hattie Palmer 10 YEARS AGO Cherokee County has almost reached its quota in the March d( dimes drive, according to the local Chairman, Hobart Mc Keever, who estimated that to late approximately $2,730 of the 53.000 is in hand. Around $l,S00i has been contributed in Andrews and $1,250 in the Murphy aream. The Cherokee County schools con tributed $3,312.78. The Cherokee County Trourist Association is making plans to publish a folder on the assets and attractions of Cherokee County, the initial order to be for 10,000 copies. TTie Rev. Delbert Byrum, pas tor of First Methodist Church, who is serving as chairman of the 1960 fund campaign of the Cherokee County Chapter of Amer ican Red Cross, announces that the chapter's quota this year is $1,570. He states that an organ ization for solicitation is com plete, and that it is hoped the full quota will be raised on the first day of the cmapaign, March 1. 20 YEARS AGO While Murphy and Cherokee County in general hugged the tire and thought about bursted plumb ing, twelve workmen and a fore man working daily through the entire sub - zero, digging a found ation lor the proposed new school building. Much of the time the weather was cruel, and all of the time the ground was frozen so hard that going at it with a pick must have been something like trying to dig a cave in Stone Mountain with a toothpick. The final pouring of cement was made at the Hiwassee Dam Wednesday. Seventy yards of ce ment oozed a slow way into place, there to harden into granite-like strength. Today water is slowly deeping where no longer ago hundred* of workmen toiled. Back from Washington where he held daily conference* with Sena tors Reynolds and Bailey and Rep. Zeb gweaver, Charles May field declard Wednesday that Murphy's chance of getting an auxiliary dam are better than bright. "Comet -seeker" is ? small telescope made to aecure the greatest brilliancy af comet lights. CAMPAIGN MANAGER Bert L. Bennett Jr. (right), discusses plons with gubernatorial candidate Terry Sanford. Bennett, Winston-Salem businessman, was named to direct the former state senotor's campaign Tuesday. Raleigh Roundup By KIDD BREWER < ABOUT SEA WELL ... An edi- I torial in at least one of the State's 1 leading papers has taken Malcolm ' Sea well to task for his statement ' at the time of his announcement for Governor to the effect that 1 if be is nominated for Governor j that be wiU request his friend. Governor Hodges, to call a special 1 session of the Legislature to make ' available the necessary funds to replace the cut in the State wel fare allotments. The editorial pointed out that. , as Attorney General, it would , have been appropriate for him to have made this request for a special session when the matter ' First came up. And. as a mem- , ber of the Council of State, he could have recommended that the Council join him in such a rec- , ommendation. This would have j carried some real weight. RECORD . . . The record does ( not show that Mr. Seawell showed , any real interest in the plight ol ; these needy people? until such | time as he needed them . . . \ needed them to vote for him for . Governor. BACKFIRING ... As one < astute political observer remark ed: "Mr. Seawell is saying vote ' For me and I'll do something for i pou." I But the people have a habit I ?f saying: "If you had done some- i thing for me we would now vote ' tor you." Another remark heard on the i subject: "Malcolm Seawell's statement i that, if nominated for Governor he will request Governor Hodges to call a special session to re store welfare cuts is as hypo- < critical as General Eisenhower's < statement in the 1952 campaign i that, if elected President, he > would 'go to Korea!' " From all we have gathered so i Far, it spears that Mr. Seawell's ! remarks are backfiring. BASES . . . Incidentally, i wouldn't it be a novel political < change if all candidates for Gov ernor would really base their campaigns on the following three items: 1. What they have already done for the voters. 2. What they propose to do for the voters. 3. From whence and from whom will come the money to do with?. PROMISES . . . Most office seekers tell about all the things they are going to do for the voters, but have no record of having already done anything . . . and, most important, they do not say v *n they will get the money from or how much it will cost. The voters just might not be able to afford all the good things promised them. CAN WE? . . . Take the teach >rs for example. They have been promised the moon. Now they should also be told how much the moon is going to cost . . . and who is going to pay (or it! A tax on cigarettes? Then the candidate loses at once the sup port of the multi-million-dollar to jacco companies in the Piedmont section of the State . . . and the small tobacco farmer down east. An increase in the general sales ax from three to say five per :ent? In this case, the teachers 'hem selves will have to pay out n taxes almost as much as they -eceive in salary increases. The simple question is. can we afford all the good things the various candidates profess they want us to have? "MY NEXT CLASS" . . . This reminds me that when I took Mrs. Brewer to my jeweler friend and asked her to select the stone she would like to have for her en gagement ring, the jeweler show ed her several large and expen sive stones. He dangled them be fore her eyes and turned them so :he lights made them sparkle and shine. Holding a large one before her, lie said: "How do you like this one?" Mrs. Brewer, who incidentally was a school teacher at the time said. "I like it fine? it is lovely? jut I've got to get back to school For my next class. Now I wonder if you could show us something WE CAN AFFORD." My jeweler friend turned to me and said, "Kidd, congratulations. Vou are about to outmarry your self." I did! TERRY OR JOHN? . . . Heard an Fayetteville Street here: "Rob ert Morgan can take his Lake and so jump in the Governor's race." Get it? Incidentally, if Beverley Lake I does get into the race, someone has sized it up thusly: "Lake and Seawell will kill one another off on the segregation issue and the question to be settled in the sec ond primary will still be what it was a year ago. Will the next Governor be Terry Sanford or John Larkins? We heard somebody say on the day Seawell announced: "Well, Hodges has gone through the al phabet from B? (Bernhardt) to G -(Gill) to H? (Hewlett) to L ( Larkins) to P? (Pearsall) and now to S? (Seawell) . . . anybody named Zimmerman want* be next? INTERESTING THOUGHT . . . Wonder if Add Hawlett is now as mad at his friend John Larkins as he was when he thought Gov ernor Hodges was going to sup port John instead of him for Gov ernor? THE LOSER . . . TC>ere is a lot of heartache and friction be hind the resignation of Dr. Hollii Ed ens as president of Duke. And Duke is the loser; not Dr. Edens. TUIM ram INTO MONIY. tfi mwf l"? Hfw PWTWRV WH. rVRI uMB up to i t?t In Ifcww. Cuts xr tr*M In li MPlnil HIOH QUALITY LOW COST GEAR DRIVE CHAIN SAW i AU HOMEUTE BARS IGuorantNd f?f 60 Oaytl COM IN NOW KM A m MMONSTtATtON RADFORD SAW SERVICE VI 7*2419 MURPHY, N. C. Words of Life I CABS" has lead lai type ?f Possibly misinterpretation o f tfcs "BibU" as mm do in (St. M:U-lt> may lead our our dty. our nation to monarchy type flf relig amnd Thou art tha Christ, tho Son of the living God And Jesus answered and laid unto trim, "Bleated art thou. Simon Bar-Jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed It unto thee, but my Father which la in heaven. And I lay also unto thee. That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it'." Here are some facts to help make this scripture very clear. Peter means a stone. "Jesus said. Thou are Simoo the son of Jona: thou shalt be called Cephas, which is by interpretation, a stone." (St. John 1:42) In the original manuscript Rock in this verse meant a very large rock and "that Rock was Christ." (I Cor. 10.4) Christ is referred to as the Rock and Peter as the small stone. Church refers to the body of Christians, Christ being the Rock or head of the Church. Church does not refer to a particular sect or denomination but wrong usage has confused many. Know ing these facts will help each one of us to see the real truth. No organization or denomination can be "The Church" for Church re fers to the body of Christians as a whole. Considering these facts an org anization calling themselves "The Church" that makes their organ ization as the authority and re place Christ with man made ideals is as clever as the devil himself. Hence, this places the organization as the saviour, in directly or directly. Such tragic ignorance ? "Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures nor the power of God." Man made relig ious organizations are seli righteous, very zealous, extreme ly clever, and have a tendency to desire complete control and force all people to belong to their deviltry. An organization of this type is trying its handiwork in Murphy and surrounding areas. They are working on the handicaps of oth ers, the poor, the ill, the invalids, the ignorant, and those who are less fortunate to gain converts by surface flattery and by bribery fulfilling material needs. They work themselves in as clever as possible appearing to be unselfish, completely governed by God with only a desire to be of service to mankind, but instead they are a sugar coated bar of unrighteousness and bitterness. When they gain a hold in this area we will lose our present freedoms and their selfishness will guide them to do that which Is unseemly. Awake ye that are asleep ? especially those in authority at the present time ? do you realize your freedoms are at state? If we have only one religious order ruling our hospitals in this city our doctors would be limited in many ways. They may become se lective as to what doctors should or should not have full hospital privileges and the prat doctors will lose patients to other Hu becaiiM not all typos o I opera tions romrnonly accepted hi pub He ?r inrteinnrtaMt hospitals an allowed eithsut a let of red tap*. Patients will alao suffer due to tlMaa inconveniences ooo* thu religious body gains a foothold. You muat fight to keep your free dom* now aa God gave than to ua.ar we will bo another Spain This is only the beginning when thia religious body gala* political control of a city. They encourage their msmberi to patroniie only tboaa of their own net. It they need money and make a request to all business men for a certain donation and a hnrineas Baa re fuses to take a hint this religious body has bean known to boycott all such busineeaes. Especially when they know that moat of your trade Is from their sect and then business in general will suf u- ? "