Jg, %^s8? sue1* Scout Xh.,o^ County's Bos. Buy' ^^ ^ *"9? M ? ^ 77 : ~ 7 ~ . - T 7 - . .. B ^ , SECOND CLASS POSTAGE PAID Volume 76 - Number 38 Murphy, North Carolina April 14, 1966 14 rages This Week at murphy, north Carolina coutlets "J" We paid a visit on a very good friend last Thursday down at Blue Ridge, Ga., Ray Joseph. Ray and his wife, Mary have a lot of friends in Murphy. In fact Ray said he didn't realize how many friends they did have until Mary got sick and his phone started ringing. Although Mary is in die hospital, we're happy to report that she is ex pected to be back home with her family, healthy as ever within two months. If you would like to cheer Mary up with a card, her address is: Ward 306-B,Battey State Hos pital, Rome, Georgia. -J Over in Ebinger, Germany, the agony column of a local newspaper carried an ad from a husband: "No longer res ponsible for my wife's debts." She responded with an ad: "Dear Theo, have no sorrow with name there's nothing one can borrow." -J We can't think of but two tilings that will make a red blooded American male come into a photography studio and have a picture made - politics and his wife - in that order. With politics running hot and heavy, we sho have made a batch of pictures In the last few weeks, and if we do say so ourselves, some of 'em look pretty good. So, ladies, if you have been trying to get that grouchy old husband to have a picture made, we may already have just the one you want. Give us a call and we'll be glad to make you an enlargement, in color if you like. Sign <n a restaurant in Fair banks, Alaska: "Clam Chow der, SO cents. Texas size bowl, 95 cents." -J We don't want to give the impression that we want to start a lonely hearts club, 'cause the last thing we want to do is put some unsuspecting widow in the hands of a Blue beard. We noticed in a daily paper that folks had been writ ing in telling how many widows were in the different churches and the Methodist won. Won der how many there are in Cherokee and Clay County churches, litis could be sway to get some bachelors in church, ya know. I'll bet on the Baptist. -J There just ain't no way to run off and hide anymore. A color brochure came in die mail the other day advertising the Varsity Drive-In in Atlanta as the world's largest drive in. Lo and behold, in one of the color photographs stood Scout Advertising Manager Red Schuyler and his family munching on them good vittles. Everybody wants to get in on the act. -J You really shouldn't have to be reminded again, but Friday April 15 is tax filing deadline. Unless you have a friend in government and he'd better be a good one, you'd better get with this filing business. -J Betcha Didn't Know that Abraham Lincoln died Ap ril 15,1865..... that the Ti tanic struck an iceberg and sank, April 15,1912 that War was declared on Spain April 20, 1898 that Adolph Hitler was born April 20,1889 -J TODAY'S THOUGHT: Not only is die horse becoming ex tinct: so are the people who work like one. -J Correction Reporting the Superior Court news in the March 31 Issue of The Cherokee Scout It was stated that David Pul 11 um of Andrews was given a 30-day suspended sentence and fined $50 plus cost on charges of drunk driving and leaving the scene of an acci dent. The court records show that the drunk driving charge was non-suited and the State took a nol pros with leave con cerning leaving the scene of an accident charge. The 30-day suspended sent ence and $50 fine plus cost levied at Mr. Pullium was for resisting arrest. The management of ? he Scout regrets mis error. B & PW Seek To Increase Scholarships The Murphy Business and Professional Women's Club, in an effort to increase their scholarship fund, is holding an Auction April 22. In the past they have been giving a $300.00 scholarship to a deserving girl graduating from Murphy High School. This year they are raising it to $400.00, hoping to give ei ther a larger one next year or assisting two girls in place of one. In the past scholarships have been given to the foll owing: Shirley Burrell, Wanda Timpson, Rosalind Johnson, Laurie Hardin and Wanda Ti mpson, who graduates from Bereau this spring, was awarded the fund for the second time. The Auction will be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday April 22, in the Old Rock Gym. There will be door prizes as well as free gifts to the first 200 women present. Auction items include articles for men, wo men, and children. Some of the items can be seen in the win dow of Murphy Tire and App liance. A drawing for the G E Color Television set will be held during the auction. Andrews By-Pass Gets Approval Mayor Percy B. Ferebee has received a letter from the State Highway Commission in Raleigh advising that the Commission's Thoroughfare Advance Planning Department has approved the preliminary Andrews Thoroughfare Plan as recommended by the Town Board of Aldermen last Jan uary 24. Under the proposed plan the State Highway Department will take over the maintenance of certain streets, and the build ing of a by pass. The by pass would start at a point on U. S. 19 east of Andrews near Valleytown road intersection and proceed north and west rejoining U. S. 19 near the bridge west of And rews in the vicinity of Dis trict Memorial Hospital. This route would enable thr ough traffic to by pass the town's business section there by alleviating downtown con gestion and motor noise, as well as being a benefit to local motorists and shoppers. MtGlamery Announces His Candidacy far House Seat Rep. Wiley A. McGlamery of Clay County, announced that he would seek that nomination from the district which is comprised of Cherokee, Gra ha, Clay and Macon Counties. A dairy and poultry farmer of Hayesville, McGlamery has wide business interests in Clay County and is a director of Citizens Bank and Trust Co. of Hayesville. A Democrat, his current term in the General Assembly is his first elective office. His father, the late Ben A. Mc Glamery, served as Clay County register of deeds for six years. McGlamery is a native of Hayesville, and is a district steward in Oak Forest Meth odist Church there. He and his wife, the former Miss Ora M. Killian, have one son, Wiley Dan McGlamery of Western Carolina College. He served during the 1965 session on die appropriations committee, die committees on banks and banking , employ ment security, institutions for the deaf, manufacturers and labor, public welfare, roads and water resources and con trol. His main interest being in roads, McGlamery worked for the Appalachian Road Pro gram and has been influential in getting the new proposed corridor from Sylva to Atlanta. Jim Sprung New Civitan President Jim Sprung was elected President of the Murphy Civ itan Club at it's regular meet ing, Tuesday, April 5, at O'Dell's Restaurant. Other officers elected at this meet ing were: Charles Castor, president - elect; Roy Chan dler, secretary; Bill Taylor, treasurer; first vice - pres ident, Lillard Walker; second vice president, Bud Alex ander; Sgt. at Arms, Lonzo Sheilds; Chaplain, Rev. Clark Benson; assistant chaplain, Howard Martin. The Board of Directors elected were: Walter Smith,John Thompson, David Shields, Ben Palmer, Sam L. Davidson, Royce Hughes. W ley A. McGlomery Bunch Nugent was in charge oi the program and introduced Mr. Herman Estes of Brass town, who told of his recent trip up through the Eastern part of the United Sutes and into part of Canada. The Murphy Clvitan Club is sixteen years old this year. During this period it has aw arded approxmately $4,000.00 in scholarships to Murphy High School seniors to get started in college. At the next meeting the Awards Comm ittee will be in charge of the program and will discuss the schoi irship program telling jomohirj about each rec ipient d each scholarship. Don Gentry was taken into the club as a new member. Aerial Photo by Srout Studio Grading Gets Underway At American Thread Plant Site Near Marble^ Summer Construction Planned Grading, draining and lev eling the sites of American Thread Company's new plant to be built near Marble has been started with 10 workers under the supervision of Her man H. West and Company and Harold Wells, both of Murphy. The above aerial photo of the plant site was taken look ing east toward Andrews with Highway U. S. 19 on the right and Columbia Marble Co. in the background. Grading machinery, includ ing four bulldozers and five scrapers, are being used to move a total of 15,000 cubic yards of dirt to level the site. This work is expected to be completed, weather permitt mg, by May 15. Construction of the main building is planned to start early this summer. Unofficially it is reported that the new plant is expected to be in operation sometime in November of this year. E. B. Shaw, President of American Thread, announced that the engineering firm of C. T. Main of Charlotte, N. C. has been retained to design the ultra-modern 250,000 square foot plant. "These planscoinprisepart of the program of planned ex pansion and when this mill is completed, it will provide our company with the additional production facilities necess ary to accomodate the rising demand for our thread and yarn," Shaw said. American Thread now oper ates two plants in North Car olina as well as four other plants located in four differ ent states from Maine to Ga. It's newest plant is located near Brevard, N. C., and is said to be one of the South's ten most modern spinning mills. Scout Studio Photo A 1965 Ford (foreground) came to rest in a ditch after sldeswlplng a 1964 Falcon (right). There was only minor damage to the Ford, but damage was extensive to the left side of the Falcon. Frank Charles Green Grooa Announces For CoHstoblo Frank Charles Green, 47 has announced that he will be a candidate for constable for the Kotla District at the May Democratic Convention. Green, a Democrat and a native of Cherokee County, is a widower and has been em ployed at Hitchcock Corp. for the past 17 years. He is a mason, and a mem ber of Snow Hill Baptist Mission. Haney Makes Deans list Rebecca Hoover Haney, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Hoover and wife of Garland Haney, Jr., made the Dean's List at Wake Forest College in Winston-Salem, N. C. Becky is a senior, majorlqg in Mam, and has made A's for all of this past semester. One Is Injured In Two Car Accident A two-car accident Friday, April 8 about 6:30 p.m., sent a Cherokee County woman to the hospital. Mrs. Birdie Montgomery, 64, a passenger in a 1964 Falcon, was admitted to Pro vidence Hospital with possible back injuries. Her condition was listed as good as she awaits the results of x-rays. The accident occurred 4/10th of a mile north of Mur phy on theJoeBrown Highway, when a 1965 Ford driven by Chester Herman Jones went out of control on a curve and sideswiped a 1964 Falcon, dr iven by Mrs. Hazel Pauline Cornwell, 36, cf Rt. 2, Mur phy. Jones told investigating State Trooper E. N. Hooper that he applied his brakes Dr. Malone To Speak At YHC "The Amazing Cherokee" will be the topic Dr. Henry Thompson Malone will speak on at Young Harris Convoc ation April 20th, 11 a.m. in the Clegg Auditorium. Dr. Malone, a native of Albany, Georgia is Director of Development, Professor of History, and Alumni Execut ive Secretary, Georgia State College. He received his ele mentary education in South Carolina, his BS degree from Clem son, his MA and Phfrom Emory University. Dr. Malone serves as con sultant on Cherokee History, Georgia Historical Commiss ion. The college cordially in vites anyone interested to attend. approaching a curve and his car began skidding, sideswi ping the Cornwell vehicle. Jones has been charged with driving on the wrong side of the road. Two Year Old Morphy Boy Attacked By Large Dogs A two-year-old Murphy boy was attacked by two large dogs Monday afternoon while play ing in his yard on Wells Street. Eddie McDonald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude R. McDonald, was rushed to a local hospital suffering numerous wounds of the face and neck. Mr. and Mrs. McDonald told the Scout that the dog's vicious attack on their son opened a gash in the corner of his left eye to the lower part of his cheek, another across his cheek to the ear,and made a hole in the roof of his mouth. Mr. McDonald, hearing the scream's of his son, ran out into the yard and beat the dogs off. A neighbor, also hearing the screams, brought a gun and shot one of the dogs, and six or eight ran off. Shortly after the incident, several of the dogs returned and another one was killed. In the past two days a total of 14 dogs have been killed in the McDonald yard. Mayor Proclaims Clean Up Week MURPHY - Mayor L. L. Mason has procliamed May 2 - 14th as clean up week. Everyone is asked to place rubbish in a convenient place and call the Town Hall for rubbish removal. The tele phone number is 837-2510. "Let's make our town a more healthy and attractive place in which to live during this clean up week and at the same time eliminate any fire hazards that may have de veloped during the winter months," Mayor Mason said. The heads of the two dogs killed Monday afternoon have been sent to Raleigh for rabies test. Truetf To Run For Register Of Deeds Henry F. Truett, 58, of Rt, 2, Culberson, announced this week that he will be a candid ate of the Register of Deeds at the Cherokee Democratic Convention in May. He is a native of Cherokee County, a mason, and chair man of the Board of Deacons at Shady Grove Baptist Ch urch. Truett, a life-long Dem ocrat, has been active in Ch erokee County politics for many years, having run for Clerk of Court in 1954 - 1958. He was Postmaster at Suit Rural Station during 1962-63. He is married to the former Miss Griffie Cline of Culber son and they have two child ren. Scout Columnist General Taylor Meet After 43 Years Ernest P. L. Schoeler, an ex-army Sergeant, who now writes the weekly column 'Both Sides Of The Coin' for the Cherokee Scout, met with another old soldier, General Maxwell D. Taylor, in Ashe ville last week. Two old soldiers, whose paths last crossed 43 years ago in Hawaii, met again in Asheville when Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor spoke at Asheville Biltmore College. In 1923, Ernest P. L. Sch oeler was a sergeant with the Third Engineers at Schofield Barracks when a young second lieutenant fresh from West Point joined the regiment. "We didn't hold 'shavetails' in very high regard at that time," Schoeler, who now lives in Skyland, recalls. "And when the colonel asigned Lt. Taylor to give us calisthenics, we really cussed that young guy from West Point. Schoeler's Army career en ded in 4928 after he suffered a broken back playing service football. A native of Germany, he had been serving aboard an old German square rigger when World War I broke out. His ship was interned in Chile and he jumped It .stowing away on an oil tanker bound for San Pedro, Calif. He recalls he got along fine in the United States until this nation entered the war and he became a registered enemy alien. After the war, in order to obtain U. S. citizenship, he enlisted in the Army and was sent to Hawaii where the sergeant first encountered the young lieutenant. When World War II came along, despite die injured back, Schoeler went back into the service - this time with the Coast Guard as a boats wain's mate where he served until an accident on board a destroyer escort left him with an injured leg that eventually had to be amputated. When Gen. Taylor began making his brilliant World War II record, following that with service in Korea and as ambassador to South Viet Nam, Schoeler started follow ing the general's career clo sely. And when Taylor's talk was scheduled at A-B College, Schoeler said "I think it'$ the same man who gave us calis thenics at Schofield, but I'm not quite sure." Now he is. You've Done Right R.r^L P' SchoeJer (rlghg was in an engineer outfit sutiooad at Schafieid ^ T*ylor (left) WAS ? second lieutenant, handed the task cf gletng * **J" t? Schoeler s unit. They met again, the first tune in 43 years, Wednesday nutw when . -ylor spoke at AsheviUe Biltomcc* CoUagd Y Wednesday night

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