Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Jan. 14, 1965, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Tkt CHEROKEE | SCOUT 1 - and Clay County Progress ESTABLISHED JULY, 1 889 JACK OWENS Editor and Publisher RED SCHUYLER. . Advertising Manager Published ovary Thursday of Church Street, Murphy, North Carolina. Socand Class Postoge Paid At Murphy, North Carolina. SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.09 On* (1) Yaar in Cherokee, Clay and Graham Count tas, N. C-, and Nontaholo, N. C.; Towns, Union and Fqnntn Counties, Co., and Polk County, T a nn. ALL OTHER AREAS 1 Yaar 14-00 6 Months J3.S0 All subscriptions delivered in North Corolina in clude tha stata's throe per cant solas ta?. Brasstown 4-H'ers Meet BRASSTOWN - On January 4, the Brasstown 4-H Club held their holiday party at their club house, The building was decorated in holiday colors. After the devotion, pledges, and singing of "Silent Night", musical games were played. Prizes were awarded to the best contestant in each game. Cookies and chocolate milk were served to the 14 boys and girls present, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Tipton, club lead ers, Mrs. Wayne Holland and Mrs. Ralph Myers. The club officers are Presi dent, Cris Ressell; vice president^ Wayne Holland, Jr.; secretary and treasurer, Karen Watson; song leaders, Linda Myers and Brenda Car ringer; recreation leader, Dennis Myers; and report er, Becky Myers. Deed Transfers Pearlie and Martha Corn well to Quenton Lovingood, property in Cherokee County. W. M. and Frances Fain, Jr., to Alex and Mary Owens, property in Murphy Township. Taylor and Lola Henson to Juanita and John Hampton, property in Notla Township. Cherokee Scout & Clay County Progress, Thurs. Jan. 14, 1965 S/Sgt. Ivester Now Stationed In Arkansas BL YTHEVILLE, ARK. - Suff Sergeant Charles L. Ivester, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Ivester of Route 1, And rews, has arrived for duty at BlytheviLle AFB, Ark., after a tour of service in Korea. Sergeant Ivester, an air pol iceman, is assigned to a Strategic Air Commanc (SAC) unit at Blytheville. His organization supports the SAC mission of keeping the nation's intercontinental mis siles and jet bombers on con stant alert. The sergeant is a graduate of Canton, N. C. High School. His wife, Charlene, is the daughter of B. Taylor of 1627 Collins Street, Wichita Falls, Texas. Lake Hiwassee Develop - ment Co., Inc., to Robert Lynn and Marjorie Canady, pro perty in Shoal Creek Town ship. C?ms $ Corn tr By Bajliy A Serious 8 Year Old If any of you lave long t memories thin you probably recall ray mentioning a little boy, Johnny Crawford, In this corner before. He Is the youngest son of that Fire Escape Salesman, Arvel Crawford, ray former pastor, and a very serious minded little eight year old. Johnny practices this early to bed early to rise business. Shortly before Christmas he awoke one morning, as usual, before the rest of the family. He had to string some pop corn to take to school that day. To prevent awakening other members of the family by turning on the lights, he lit a' candle so he could get on with his popcorn stringing. He put the candle on his bed beside the window and PDQ the curtains were afire. Then he tiptoed to Mom and Pop's room, gently shook his Mom's shoulder and whisper ed, "Mama, Mama, 1 set the curtains on fire in my room." Mama asked if he'd put the fire out and he replied, "No, Mam, they're still burning." This brought Mama out of bed along with the fire escape salesman to put out the fire. If that had been me I would not have been tiptoeing or whispering. I'da been running and hollering as loud as I could, "Fire, fire, run for your lives". But Johnny don't, know nothing about no panic buttons. Last summer their oldest son was getting up early going to work. His Mom and Pop thought he was fixing his own IS YOUR CITY OR COUNTY SHARING IN THIS REVENUE? The State of North Carolina's 1964 tax bill on the sale of beer was $11,292,974.98 $3,781 ,269.45 went back to the counties listed below. Counties and municipalities having legal sale and control of beer divided over $31/2 million in tax revenue last year. They also gained revenue at the local level through license fees and franchise taxes paid by North Carolina beer wholesalers and retailers Obviously, communities and counties not permitting legal sale and control of beer did not share in this revenue Yet their citizens doubtlessly contributed thousands of dollars to the revenue of neighboring counties permitting legal sale and control Look the list over for your city or county. If you don't find it, remember this advertisement next time your taxes go up Thttt cities and counties received $3,781,269.45 from state beer excise tax. Listed below are the amounts of the above excise taxes allocated to the counties and municipalities where the legal sale of beer is permitted. Fijeures for counties also include all amounts allocated to the municipalities therein COUNTY Alamance Alleghany Beaufort Bertie tuncomM Camden Carteret Caswell C*tawba Chowan Crawi Currituck Dart AMOUNT $111.890 44 9,49245 46.973 45 31 .296 79 169.151 93 6,788 35 39,954 34 26.390 47 97.059 24 15,122 94 77.253 80 8.753 65 6.844 07 COUNTY Ourham Edgecombe Forsyth Franklin Gain Granville Greene Guilt ort) Halifai Hertford Hyde Iredell AMOUNT $118.026 26 71.365 88 247,154.81 38.132 26 1 2.006 59 43.151 59 21.742 88 323.08481 78.182 08 29.958 12 6.848 67 82,056 97 14.593 83 COUNTY Ln Lenon Martin M?ckl?nburg Nash . N?w Hanow Onslow Orange Pamlico Pasquotank PomJer Perqutinans P*rwwi AMOUNT ( 16.248 81 72.81001 35.924 29 357,436 7b 80,862 15 95.137 71 109.677 16 56,982 90 12.182 96 33,988 1 7 24,543 62 12.17103 35,001 32 COUNTY AMOUNT Pitt $ 91,480 30 Richmond 50,012 87 Rockingham 92,335 64 Rowan 106,035 67 Stokes 29.375 96 Surry 63.925 08 Tyrrell 5.85102 Vance 42,438 14 Weke 210,74215 Warren 25,898 90 Washington 1 7.8 86 56 W.Ikes 59,355 30 Wilson 76.537 70 See map [|||j[!j J:;:;:-.:;! In addition, the following 21 cities received amounts luted by legalizing sales in municipal elections in otherwise "dry" counties. MUNICIPALITY AMOUNT ? 3,080 55 10,033 34 62,467.69 2.13371 1 .609 90 38.288 74 MUNICIPALITY AMOUNT Henderson* I It S 7.838 63 Lenoir 13.60190 Liberty 1.908 94 Mo?finton 1 2.181 .64 Mount Pie* unt 1.380 48 MUNICIPALITY AMOUNT Pifwhufit t 1,490 55 Srtm * 4.113 59 SmitMieM ?.H1 11 Soutlwrn Pints 6.893 11 Swthpwt 2.697.31 MUNICIPALITY AMOUNT Tryw. ? 2.W 94 Wwtnton 4.H4.M W?llact 3jnj.lt Waymsnll* 1.167 50 M10.1T CMm aa * cmdMm iwt H?M cm atar* In Bin rwwm ky l?faliiia( mtfar nMtof L TUntA (2*%olinA "TfMt Sewuxfc (^attxal htiMutt l?. O. Box 2473 RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A DRY COUNTY ireaktast every morning. They could see the evidence >f his having done so. But they earned that it was Johnny, nstead, who was doing all the ireakfast cooking for both of em. The rest of thai bunch, the azy ones, were about to sit lown to breakfast one nornlng. They Invited Johnny 0 come on and eat. I thought his was right sociable of 'em. ie said, "Naw, I done eat." When they suggested that le sit with them while they ite. And Johnny said, "Ididn t see none of yawl getting up to sit with me while I ate mine." Summer before last we vis ted these folks and about 150% >f the time Johnny's B. M. Beautiful Mama) and my B. W. slaved scrabble. 1 11 tell you it got so bad ihat neither one of 'em would even look up when anybody spoke to 'em. I asked, "Johnny *hat in the world are we gonna do about these two women slaying scrabble so much? Johnny said, "Looks to me like we re just gonna hafta separate 'em." J ohnny & Co. visited us dur ing the Christmas holidays. After all the neck hugging and handshaking, and everything, they all came in where Missy, our vicious chihuahua, greet ed them with a lot of ferocious barking. Johnny went over to her bed to pet her. I reckon she thought he was gonna get her bone cause she was about to bite his hand off. 1 tried to explain about her unseemly conduct and Johnny said, "I guess she didn'tknow that I don't like bones." Not long ago they were all having dinner. Johnny had been doing some hard playing so he was kinaa tmrsry ana ne was taking some good healthy slugs of his tea. His pop, of course, knew that if this continued he wouldn't eat his dinner so he took Johnny's tea and put it in the middle of the table. He told him he could have it back as soon as he finished eating. Some time after the meal he confided to his Mom, "You know when I get grown and married, and Daddy comes to see me at my house I'm not gonna let him drink a drop of his tea until he eats every bite on his plate." We were all sitting around the table one night during their recent visit. Rowena, little Smarty's sister, was sortt picking at her food. We were trying to encourage her to eat when Johnny's admonition to her really gave us an insight into the Baptist preaching in fluence in that family. Johnny said, "Rowena, if you don t eat you'll die of SALVATION." He corrected that to STAR VATION after all the laughter sorta died down. But Johnny is a completely normal youngster, in spite of his seriousness. One last summer his Mom was reminding him about his bath. Reluctantly Johnny submitted with this wry comment, "Sometimes I just wish I was a dog so I wouldn't ever have to take a bath." Yep, this is the same little lad who very candidly inform ed me once, when he was about four years old, that "My daddv is not as ugly as you are. Of course, I already knew that, but he probably thought I didn't, so he told me. Local Boys To Compete For Morehead Scholarships CHAPEL HILL - Twenty ? five high school male seniors from 17 counties In this area will be interviewed Wednes day, Jan. 30, at the Battery Park Hotel In Asheville by the Morehead Awards OUtrlct VI Committee. The 36 nominees from Dis trict VI for coveted awards to study at the University of North Carolina are being interviewed in statewide com petition with 173 boys from the other six Morehead A wards Districts. District VI Is composed of Avery, Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Hen derson, Jackson, Macon. Mtilson, McDowell, Mitchell. Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, and Yancey counties. Morehead Awards provide four-year, all expense-paid undergraduate educations at the University of North Car* olina, Chapel Hill. They were established in 1961 by John Motley Morehead, UNC grad uate and native North Car olinian who resided In Rye, N. T., until his recent death. Nominees for district Inter views from this area are Terry Gene Marr of Andrews and Kemeth Hayes Martin of Hayes ville. Each of the seven More - head Awards District Com mittees will nominate six can didates to be Interviewed In Chapel Hill by the Central Morehead Awards Committee, along with 33 nominees from 16 private preparatory schools on the Morehead Foundation's selected list. Those chosen as scholar ship candidates by the Central Committee will be Interviewed Murphy Personal Held Over From Lui Wedi -M Mr. and Mrs. Max Cunning ham of Lynchburg, Va., and Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Robert son and children Lynn and Guy of Flint, Mich., have returned to their home after spending Christmas here with their par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Ell iott. -M Mrs. W. A. Bell and Mrs. R. S. Bault spent last week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bell and family of Greenville, S. C. and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bell and family of Ashevllle. -M Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hounsom and daughters, of Atlanta, vis ited Mr. and Mrs. F.C. Bourne, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. F. C. ' Bourne, Jr. over the week-end. by the Board of Trustees of the Morehead Foundations, who makes the final awards. Last year, the trustees selected 67 young men for Morehead Awards. "Can a small-town girl find happiness (married to a man who's in love with his new Dodge Polara?)" "A man who talks in his sleep about such nonsense as a 383 cubic inch V8, a 121 inch wheelbase. and over 17 cubic feet of trunk space? A man who even smiles while he dreams about the money he saved by buying a Polara instead of big-car X? Can she? She can if he shares it with her once in a while!" And now a word from our sponsor: "Polara." POLARA Two tons of body beautrful 383 cu. in. VB {regular gas). FuH foam seats. Plus)) carpeting. Poiara-at your Dodge dealer's. 65 Dodge Palara ? Ossra See all the new Dodges on display at your nearby Dodge Dealer's. E. C. MOORE COMPANY Dealer No. 600 207 Valley River Ave. Murphy, N. C. WATCH "THE BOB HOPE SHOW," NBC-TV. CHECK YOUR LOCAL LISTING. ? 45th ANNUAL STATEMENT HAYWOOD SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION OF WAYNESV1LLE. N. C. AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1964 ASSETS Cash on Hand and in Banks $ 461,289.93 U. S. Government Bonds 599,081.25 Other Investments 30,000.00 Stock in Federal Home Loan Bank 122,900.00 Mortgage Loans 13,464362.80 Money loaned to shareholders far the of enabling them to own their Bach loan secured by tint mort gage oo local improved real estate. FHA. Title I Loans 42,742.98 Share Loans 105,156.85 Advance! made to our shareholder! against their shares. No loan exceeds 90% of amount actually paid in. Office Furniture and Fixtures 7,250.29 Office Building 78,275.18 Prepayment to Secondary Reserve ofFSXiG 116346.61 TOTAL ASSETS $15,027,405.89 LIABILITIES To Shareholders $12,365,012.12 Full-Paid Shard *3.953.900.00 Option Shares 8,611,112.12 Other Liabilities 12,775.33 Notes Payable 1300,000.00 Escrow on F.H.A. Loans . . 628.10 Reserve for Federal and State Income Tax 45,949.61 Specific Reserves 1,000.00 For uncollected interest Reserve* 896379.57 Reserve required by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurancr Corporation and gen eral rutin set aside for contingencies and looses. Unallocated Reserve 85,238.00 Earnings of die association over and above the reserves, held as a further assurance of the safety of the association Loans in Process 120,423.16 TOTAL LIABILITIES 115,027, 405.89 GROWTH Of ASSETS December 31, 1931 December 31, 19)2 ? December 31, 1933 December 31, 1954 December 31, 1955 December 31, 1956 December 31, 1957 December 31, 1958 December 31, 1959 December 31, I960 December 31, 1961 December 31, 1962 December 31, 1963 ?1. 1M4 $1,737362.21 _ $1365,206.89 $2,125,224.71 $2,465325.46 $3364,172.58 $3321,751.70 _ $4,197,482.83 $5376388.41 $6,218,903.55 $7,420,190.77 $8,717384.37 110/49638611 $12300309.72 S18.01T.40Mt CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE 1o 4OT
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1965, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75