juaaur Wifflr lie SAMPLE 12 PAGES The Cherokee Scout and Clay County Progress 10 Cents Per Copy * Volume 80 _ NUMBER 12-Murphy, North Carolina, 28906 ? Second Class Postage Paid At Murphy, North Carolina ? THURSDAY? OCTOBER 9, 1969 INSIDE EDITORIAL .PAGE 4 SPORTS .PAGE 9 SOCIETY .PAGE 6 CLASSIFIED PAGE 11 Another Moore Dodge For Driver Education E. C. Moore Company presented a 1970 Dodge to urphy High School this week for use in the Driver ducation program, the sixth consecutive year the impany has provided a car. At the presentation were j-R) James Evans, salesman; Cloe Moore; Murphy mayor and an owner of the business; Superintendent of Schools, John Jordan; E. Ray Moore, an owner of the Dodge dealership, giving the keys to Jordan. (Staff Photo) herokee nited Fund rive Begins The Cherokee County ited Fund drive officially ; under way with a kickoff akfast in Murphy Tuesday irning and the news that re than half the goal has sady been pledged. Campaign leaders met at ell's Restaurant to receive ir instructions and materials 1 were told tha a telephone kitation effort by President I.. McKeever has resulted in 3,000 pledged against the d this year of $30,000. The campaign workers will to reach the goal for >rokee County in October, month set aside nationally United Fund campaigns. Among the solicitors in the rphy area are: Doug Carlson Clifton Precision; Bill ickett, American Thread; race Cannon, Levi Strauss nager; Dave Moody, district ilth officer; Rev. lliomton wkins, pastor of First thodist CHurch; Gene rmer, manager of lins-Crain. Officers, in addition to Keever, who will also be kiting contributions are Dr. aries O. Van Gorder and Joe Khouri, vice presidents; nes T. Gentry, secretary; 1 the treasurer, John Jordan, lerintendent of schools. The solicitors will be phasizing that one gift will a contribution to 22 local 1 14 state and national ncies. A pledge is preferred tr ready cash because a small ount, given regularly, is ier on the individual and the ncies can then look forward i full year of support. The local agencies include ins Clubs at Murphy nd drews for their aid-to-blind I white cane projects, rescue tads in both towns, midget itball programs in both rns, Little League baseball Andrews, Boy Scouts, Girl nuts, Red Cross, 4-H, iiphy Kiddie Park, Murphy fi School Band, recreation igrams in both towns and ristmas cheer for needy lilies and children. Public Housing Loan Approved For Murphy A federal loan of $740,037 was approved in Washington this week for construction of 40 units of public housing in Murphy. Ben Palmer, director of the Murphy Housing Authority, said the original application was made in April of 1967. The confirming telegram came this week from Lawrence Cox, director of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. A similar announcement was made Tuesday by the office of Congressman Roy A. Taylor in Washington, saying the loan had been approved. Palmer says the local housing authority will begin advertising for bids, "possibly by next week," and construction will probably start early next year. The project will take about 18 months to build, he said. There will be 10 units for the elderly. Palmer said, to be constructed on Hiawassee Street, near the old L & N depot. All these will be one bedroom apartments, constructed in duplexes and triplexes. The other 30 units will be low-income housing on Park Avenue near the Rimco plant. These will be two, three and four bedroom split-level apartments. Some will be duplexes and the others will have four or six units under one roof, some buildings being three stories tall. Palmer said all of the units will be equipped with a refrigerator and stove, tile floors and electric ceiling heat. The exterior will be a combination of brick and vertical wood siding, according to plans by the architect, Henry M. Whitehead and Associates of Atlanta, Ga. When completed, the new housing will be rented to the elderly and to low-income families by the housing authority, the rents to be based on the tenant's income. Rates in similar projects in other cities now range from $30 to $70 a month, Palmer said. C. L. "Bud" Alverson is chairman of the housing authority and other members are Ben Warner, Frank L. Mauney, Duke Whitley, and J. H. Duncan. Country Music Shows Slated At Hiawassee The Georgia Mountain Fairgrounds in Hiawassee will ring Friday and Saturday with the sounds of string bands in the Fall Country Music Festival. The two-day festival will be followed with a big gospel sing on Sunday afternoon, featuring the Sego Brothers and Naomi, the Blue Ridge Quartet and Jimmie "You Are My Sunsine" Davis, former governor of Louisiana. More than 100 musicians are to participate in the festival, led by fiddlin' Howard Cunningham. Singers, banjo pickers, fiddlers and guitar pickers wili be holding forth in the big tent on the fairgrounds in a show Friday, 8 p.m. until midnight, and two on Saturday, 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. until midnight. Hie Hiawassee Cloggers will entertain at each of the three shows. The sounds of of the strings will be challenged on Saturday as old-time muzzle-loading hog rifles are fired in an all-day match, shooters expected from several states. American Thread Holds Family Picnic American Thread held an all-day family picnic on Saturday for employees and friends, with more than 1,600 people attending. The site was a grassy area behind the Marble plant and there were free baloons, fortune-telling, bingo, rides for the children and plenty of free popcorn, hamburgers and hot dogs. A good time was had by all. (Staff Photo) Simonds Says Special Session By Commissioners Was 'Illegal' By Wally Avett Staff Writer Controversy, colored by politics, livened the session of the Cherokee County Board of Commissioners here Monday as Jack Sim o nnds charged a special meeting last week was illegal. "I want to protest-it was an illegal meeting," Sim o nds said. He said he was not notified of the special session, at which former state senator Mary Faye Brumby was named to replace Ben Scott on the Jury Commission. Sim onds, a Republican, said the law requires each commissioner to be notified and a notice posted on the courthouse bulletin board two days prior to any special meeting. No notice was posted, he said, even if the other five commissioners were notified and attended the meeting. "Even if you did notify the other commissioners, how about the public?" Sim o n ds asked. "They didn't know about the meeting." Chairman W. T. Moore, a Democrat, said he could not remember any notice of any meeting ever having been posted on the bulletin board and said county officials had tried to reach Simonds by phone but failed. Simonds lives in the Wolf Creek section near the Tennessee line and works for Tennessee Copper Co. A check of the law books proved Simonds ' quoting of the statute on notification and posting of a notice correct, but County Attorney L. L. Mason produced a copy of an amendment passed by the 1969 Legislature which reads "Written notice shall be deemed waived by attendance at and participation in a special meeting." Mason interpreted this as meaning, in his opinion, that since five of the six commissioners attended the meeting a quorum was obviously present and the meeting was legal and correct. Simonds said it was not the first time it had happened and, after the meeting, said he is "giving some thought to calling on the Attorney General for a ruling" in the matter. Meanwhile , Mrs. Brumby, who was expected to be sworn in by Clerk of Court Don Ramsey early this week, has not been given the oath of office and probably will not be until the dispute is settled. Her term supposedly began on Oct. 1, the deadline which figured in the special meeting. The other two members of the Jury Commission, both named when the commission was formed two years ago, were re-appointed. They are Joe Myers of Route 4, Murphy and Mrs. Helen VanGorder of Andrews. John Jordan, superintendent of schools, met with the commissioners to inquire about a new roof for the elementary section of Hiawassee Dam School. He presented figures from one bidder which showed it would cost about $9,000 and asked the commissioners if they could provide the money. Chairman Moore called the bid "outrageous" and suggested that if the county were forced to spend that much money on the roof, they could come out cheaper by hiring a competent workman, buying the materials and paying him by the day to install the new roofing. The commissioners instructed Jordan to get additional bids on the job and come back next month to talk about the project. Henry Simmons, manager of the First Union National Bank in Murphy, appeared before the commissioners to tell them of plans for a new building and ask for some of the county's banking business, presently all handled by Citizens Bank and Trust Co. On a motion by Emogene Nlatheson, seconded by Luther Dockery, the commissioners voted unanimously to give several smaller accounts to the new bank immediately. The larger accounts, it was explained, already have checks printed with Citizens Bank's name on them and these checks will have to be used before any of them could be changed. Opposing Army Units Maneuvering In Area The U. S. Army is maneuvering in the Murphy area again, this time setting up a mock Vietnam climate for a training clash between Airborne troops and Special Forces. Complete with newly-recruited civilian spies and secret camps, the Green Berets of the Special Forces have recently "assassinated" the mayor of Robbinsville and Wednesday night "attacked" the railroad between Andrews and Murphy. The Green Berets, just as they do in Communis t-controlled areas of Southeast Asia, have recruited civilians and are using them in guerilla operations. For instance, the Green Berets arrived by parachuting into Franklin on Monday night and were met by their guerilla comrades, members of the Job Corps. There are four or more teams of the Green Berets in this area, each team containing nine to 11 men. They rode away from the airport at Franklin in Job Corps busses and will attempt to discredit the Airborne troops, who represent allies of the local government, until the maneuver end? on Oct. 19. To assist in their operations, the Green Berets are passing out pamphlets urging local citizens to harass the Airborne regulars by throwing water baloons at them and letting air out of tires on their vehicles. .. J11? A'rborne troops, about 150 of them, will be occupying forces and their goal will be to identify and capture the Green Berets and their civilian accomplices. They are uniformed and move about in plainly- marked vehicles; they will also be using several airplanes when the maneuvers get fully under way. The regular troops see the Green Berets as the Viet Cong and may even engage them in battle, with blanks, before the maneuvers end. The next week may be very lively in some sections of "Smokeland," as the Army has dubbed this area for the exercise. The situation, as explained by the "Green Berets', is this: The Army of Virginia Land has invaded this area, (The Country of Nantahala, your government has asked the U.S. Government for assistance. You are asked to assist in this training by doing the following things: (I Refuse to cooperate with anyone in uniform. (2) Charge extreme prices to anyone in uniform. (3) Write resistance slogans on military jeeps and trucks with chalk or soap, anything that can be washed off. (Slogans) Yankee go home. Destroyed by the underground, destroyed by the resistance. (4) Let air out of tires of unattended vehicles. (5) Water ballons would be fun. (6) Give false information to the enemy send them on wild goose chases. You, as citizens, are urged not to damage these vehicles as this all comes from your tax money. While this is only a training exercise, the situation could actually occur and the training could help you as well as th? members of the Special Forces Group. Engineers Survey Hospitals Engineers provided by local industry surveyed medical facilities in Murphy last week with an eye toward making better use of present buildings. They ^nsfcaly woe dieckrig in to the feasibility of turning the now-vacant Murphy General Hospital into offices for doctors, moving present offices there from Providence Hospital and remodelling Providence, where space would be increased if offices were moved across the street. The engineers did the survey at no cost to the town or to the Murphy Hospital Auth ority, which will be given a full report in its meeting next Monday. Engineers were provided by American Thread, Rimco, Clifton Precision and Peachtree Products. School Share Marked The local option sales tax got a vote of support Monday from the Cherokee County commissioners, who earmarked 20 per cent of the potential new revenue for school repairs, equipment and construction. Commissioner Ray Sims ramrodded the action and voted for approval of a resolution of support and the 20 per cent designation along with Chairman W.T. Moore, Emogene Matheson, Luther Dockery, and Andrew Barton. Commissioner Jack Simmonds abstained on the vote. According to predictions based on sales during the 1968-69 fiscal year, if the whole state votes for the local sales tax Cherokee County would get $155,835 and 20 per cent of that would be about $31,000. School Superintendent John Jordan was instructed by the commissioners to send out a letter to ail teachers, advising them of the action, and several of the commissioners said they hoped the teachers would work for passage of the local sales tax. Fancy Flying Beverly "Bevo" Howard thrilled the spectators with some fancy flying at the Andrews-Murphy Airport Sunday afternoon. Before a crowd of approximately 4,500 people, Howard wound up the show with a performance which will not soon be forgotten. In the above photo he flies his Buecker Jungmeister inverted using the beautiful mountain as a back drop. Shown in the right foreground is the P-51 which was flown by Buddy Bryan in the show, giving the crowd a breathtaking performance of speed and skill. Hunting Season To Open, Forecast For Success Mixed Hunters head for the woods Monday with a mixed forecast for their success by J. J. Jeffries, Cherokee County Wildlife Protector. The season opens Monday morning at sunrise for bear, wild boar, squirrels and grouse. It is also the first day of the season for racoon and opossum, the starting time for these being sunrise rather than one minute after midnight Monday morning, as has been the rule in the past. Of the bear and boar outlook, Jeffries says "I think they may not be any less in number than last year but 1 believe the kill success will be less than last year because the bear and boar will probably stay back in the mountains. "There's loU of food for them, a good mast crop generally, and they wont have to come down for food like they did last year." he said. The failure of the mast crop last year caused the squirrels to much of Western North Carolina, he noted, and "the supply of squirrels will be very limited." No change was seen for the coon and possum population. "The grouse situation will be improved over what we've had for the past several years," Jeffries says. "From the number I've talked to, I think well probably have more grouse." He said he has heard the ruffed grouse, also known as native pheasant, drumming on Panther Top, in the Beech Creek section and also around Hiwassee Campground. This season the big game hunter will have to do a little more than buy a regular license, blow the wasp nests out of his favorite musket and start looking for bear sign. For the first time, Tar Heel hunters must buy a special $1.75 license for big game, the warden warns. The big game license is good for hunting anywhere in the state and is required for bear, boss, deer or wild turtey.^ ' "Wear some bright colorv-red, yellow or dayglo orange," Jeffries advisee, "Be very careful where you point your gun and dont shoot at anything you cant see well enough to identify as a game animal-it may be another hunter and he might shoot back at you." Materials Stolen, Officers lnvestifatii| The Cherokee County Sherriffs Department and the State Bureau of Investigation are looking into the theft of building materials at a house under construction in the Hiawsases Dam section. The house was hit by thieves shout thai in! North of 1 The