iwv'L u The Cherokee mm Scout ?Ck.,.k.. Couni/'t B*st B.,' ^?OTi ' a"V Courttg Volume 77- Number 23 Murphy, North Caroline December 29, 1966 8 Pages This Week ^Mi^r?MyA?jn^T^i?)UNA jrOUTH SUFFOCATES IN RAILROAD HOPPER CAR wo Dead, Two Hurt n Wreck Near Topton 1 Two Cherokee County res Jents were Injured and two wain County women died In a rte-car wreck Friday night LUS 19 In Macon County, wreck happened about a Wile east of the Cherokee Co nty line at Topton. Miss Lenora Jane Martin, ,0, and Miss Brenda Morgan, 1, both of Rt. 2, Almond, were Vooouncod dead on arrival } District Memorial Hospital a Andrews. Robert Boze Hardin, 26, was tie driver of die car. He was leld at the hospital for over sight observation. Hardin is a inner Cherokee County res lent now living in Elmlra, N.Y. He was reported to be In the area for a holiday visit. Tommy Holloway, 17, of T opt on, was treated for minor Injuries and released. Patrolman Z.V. Hawes said Hardin was driving east on wet pavement when his car failed to make a left-hand curve. It ran off the road and traveled 121 feet before hitting a tree. The vehicle then went another 35 feet and struck a second tree and traveled an additional 46 feet before hitting an emb ankment and coming to a stop. Hawes said Hardin was dri ving too fastfor existing cond itions. Mailing Of License Renewal \* Largest In Stale's History ?, RALEIGH - The largest tulk mailing In the history of |he North Carolina Depart ment of Motor Vehicles took ilace Wednesday, December M, when 2 million 532 thous and registration renewal ;ards for 1967 were turned >ver to the Raleigh Post Of lce. A miniature mountain of nail bags weighing more than 10-thousand pounds was load ed onto mail trucks for deliv ery to every registered motor rehicle owner in North Caro (na. The registration cards pust be presented when the >wner purchases his 1967 lic ense tags. The postage bill for the luge mailing will total 73 housand dollars, says W. D. :ox. Director of Supply and tervice for the Motor Vehic ps Department. A special >ulk mailing rate results in br. saving of 20-thousand dollars under the regular ^our-cents per letter rate, registration renewal ds are sorted and bagged etarded Children (roup Meets Monday > The recently organized Cherokee County Association for Retarded Children will meet Monday night at 7:30 at the Murphy Power Build ing. Officers will be elect ed. George Clayton, president of the Jackson County Assoc iation for Retarded Children, (rill be the -guest speaker. , The public is invited to attend the meeting. according to the city or town to which they are addressed. Addressograph machines in the basement of the Motor Ve hicles Building printed the more than 2 and one-half mil lion cards. Miss Foy Ingram's Registration Division super vised preparation of the cards which are mailed a few days before the beginning of the new year. 1967 license tags go on sale the first working day af ter January 1. Another new record in ve hicle registration will be set for 1966, says Miss Ingram. By December 31, the final fig ures are expected to total about 2 million, 600-thous and. Registration in 1965 totaled 2 million, 409-thous and. Cox says the registration card mailing is timed each year not to interfer with the post office Christmas rush. By December 21, the P?st office has passed the peak of its Christmas mail handling, he said. Although the more than 2 and one-half million regis tration cards comprise the largest single mailing by the Motor Vehicles Department, Cox's Supply and Service Div ision handles an additional 2 million, 600-thousand pieces of mail yearly. The Depart ment's annual postage bill to tals approximatley 425 thous and dollars. Cox reports that the mail sent out from the Motor Ve hicles Department accounts for more than seven percent of the Raleigh Post Office's annual revenue. * MjC. BR1CKBY ha* been a member of the Murphy Police Force line# May, 1965. Prior to Joining the force, Brlckey 'worked with the North Carolina Prison Department at Peach tree. He 1* retired from the UJS. Air Force. Brlckey has been *a resident of the area for four years and Is married to the for mer Irene Pipes of Peachtree. BRENDA HUBBARD is busy making a date for Monday night. See what this Georgia Peach is so excited about on The Scout's Sports Page. Woman Bound In Assault Case Mrs. Helen Hancock, Rt. 1, Copperhill, pleaded not guilty last Thursday to charges of assault with a pocketbook,pro fanity and causing a distur bance in a hearing before Magistrate Hugh Brittain. The charges grew out of an incid ent at Hiwassee Dam School on December 19 when she al legedly assaulted faculty member Ray Sims. Brittain bound the cases over to District Court onjan uary 10. Mrs. Hancock is free on her own recognizance. Mrs. Hancock had gone to the school to talk to Sims about charges that her daugh ter, Gwen, a 16-year-old jun ior, was indecently dressed when the alleged assault occurred. Traffic Situation Reported Improved Police Commissioner Wally Williams said today he is "pleased vjith the cooper ation" displayed by the public as the Murphy Police Dept. began making a full-scale effort to enforce traffic regu lations four weeks ago. Over the past four weeks, Williams has issued instruct ions to issue citations for traffic violations that have generally been ignored in the past. Center street parking, double parking in the square, parking in no-parking zones and u-turns have been the chief targets in efforts by the police to create a more or derly traffic flow in the down town area. The two-hour limit for use of parking meter spaces is also being enforced since off street facilities have been made available for those who work in the business area and must leave their cars in town all day. Williams said the traffic situation downtown has been improved in the four weeks since the directives were issued. Scout Office To Close Monday The Scout office will be closed Monday in observance of the New Year's holiday. D.B. Un-Nobel Prize Winners Announced By Dave Bruce The curtai v will soon fall on 1966 and this year will then become the permanent prop erty of history. Now is the time to look back and make the first annual presentation of the Dave Bruce Un-N'obel Prizes. The winners for 1966 are: Hide'n'seek Champ?Adam Clayton Powell. Top Skirt Tail Rider-Geo rge C. Wallace. Best Hairdo-Phyllis Dill er (Would you believe Ev Dirksen was second?) Opportunist of the Year? All the quick-buck artists who wrote books questioning the judgement of the"? Warren Commission. Mr. Butterfingers-Willie Davis. Fallen Dynasty of the Year?The once proud New York Yankees. New Dynasty?Sen.-elect Howard Baker of Tennessee: his father-in-law. Sen. Ev erett Dirksen of Illinois and his brother-in-law Rep.-elect Bill Wampler of Virginia.Go vernors Nelson and Winthrop Rockfeller of New York and Arkansas can't be seriously considered until their nephew Jay, marries Sharon Percy and gets elected gbvernor of West Virgnia. New Fan of the Supreme Court?Lester Maddox. Hero of the Year?Max Smart. -UB Things you're sure to hear in 1967: George Romney, Ronald Re gan, Richard Nixon, Mark Hat field, Charles Percey and Bo bby Kennedy willhold press conferences at least once a week to deny that they have any intention of seeking the Pre sidency in 1968. The television networks will assure us that the new 1967 shows will be the best ever. Somebody, in some large city will suffer some real or imagined insult by the police and will send hundreds of demonstrators into the streets to shout "Police Brutality". Twenty major league mana gers will predict in April that their teams will all have a chance to win the pennants. -DB The year 1966 is what I would call a non-year I It was one we lived through simply because. syi.iehow, (VP had tohridge the gap between 1965 and 196'i. It is douotful that historians will find any major break throughs or historic turning point to record in 1966. Fur thermore, it was a year, after several great ones, in which the cause of progress suffered a slowdown in the United St ates. Perhaps, after thespec tacular gains of the Kennedy J ohnson era, a period of mark ing time was inevitable. Before the new year is over we will have passed two-thirds of the way through the twen tieth century and it is obvious ly no time to mark time. We can only hope that our nation will not be slowed too much by the crowd of conservatives that managed to win in Novem ber. -DB 1 have but one resolution to make as the New Year arrives. That is a pledge to continue to report on the people and ev ents of interest to our readers in the same honest and im partial maner I have used in the past. Area Tomato Grant Made WASHINGTON ? Federal grants totalling <59,813 have been approved to provide six weeks of training in the grow ing ot trellis tomatoes for un employed workers in five W estern North Carolina coun ties, Congressman Roy A. Taylor announced. The tra i ning will be conduct ed by theAsheville-Buncombe Technical Institute. The fed eral funds are being made available under the Manpower Development and Training Act. The counties, amount of each grant and number of trainees, listed in that order, are: Buncombe, <14,682;thirty. Cherokee: <11,357; twenty five. Clay: <11,357; twenty five. Graham: <11,357; twenty five. Swain: <11,060; twenty five. Two Hour Rescue Effort Foils At Ranger Siding Fifteen-year-old Jerry Stiles, Rt. 4 Murphy, suffo cated to death Tuesday when he fell into a hopper car con taining corn. The accident happened on a Louisville and Nashville Railroad siding just off U.S. 64 a short distance from Ranger. Harvey Payne, an employee of Brown's Deluxe Hatching Eggs, Inc., had been unloading the car and returned to begin filling another truck with the corn. Each hopper car contains several truck loads of cargo. Payne heard some one shout for help just as he began unloading machinery. He turned off the auger which removes the grain from the car and climbed to the top of the car. Payne said that when he looked into the opening on the top of the car, he saw hands sticking out. There was another unidentified boy in the corn who managed to stay above the corn by holding on to a ladder which is inside the hopper. Payne jumped into the corn and tried to get air to the boy by scooping corn but this effort failed. When he saw that further assistance would be needed, Payne ran to the highway-to flag down help. It is reported that the first car to stop was one driven by the boy's father Harvey Stiles, who ran to the scene to try to aid in the res cue. An unidentified motorist was stopped and he summoned aid from Murphy by telephone. Payne drove the truck away to summon more aid and wrecked it at the intersection of US 64 and NC 294. He was not hurt. More trucks arrived to help unloading corn from the car and the Cherokee County Res cue Squad came to give assist ance. Due to the manner in which the auger operates, it was im possible to remove the corn quickly. There was danger of drawing the boy's body into the auger. The rescue operation cont inued for about two hours until the body could be brought to the top of the car. Coroner J.C. Townson ruled IIHWDA To Elect Trustees At Annual Meeting Friday The annual meeting of the Upper Hiawassee Watershed Development Association will be held Friday evening at 7:00 in the Fine Arts Center on the Young Har-is College Campus. Rep. Phil Landrum (D-Ga.) will ielivtr the main address at the meeting. The Nominating Committee of the Association has select ed candidates to be elected to trustee positions at the meet ing. The nominations were made at a meeting held Dec ember 7. The candidates from the five counties are: Cherokee County - Incum bent R. D. Bruce: Kenneth Godfrey, new two-year trust ee;Dave Bruce and John Gill, alternates. Clay County - Incumbent George Bowers: Carl Moore, new two-year trustee;Kenneth Woodard and Mrs. Elmer Greene, alternates. Fannin County - Incumbent Wilson Cobb; Loys Cook,new two-year trustee: Em men Jordan and Harold Hulsey, alternates. Towns County - Incumbent Jimmy Taff; Steve Holmes, new two-year trustee: T. B. Nichols ?ud Claude Presley, alternates. Union County - Wayne Thomspon, currently serving out the term of the late W.H. Do wis, new two-year trustee: Meek M. Cone, new one-year trustee: Ben F. Carr and Ray mond Scott, alternates. Reports on the activities of CopperhillGI Killed In Crash Capt. Wallace A. KeU of Copperhill, Tenn., was kill ed on Dec. 20 when the heli copter he was flying collided with a jet near Montgomery, Ala. The 29-year-old Kell was flying an Army HU1 helicop ter when it collided with a National Gurad reconnais sance jet flown by Capt. George W. Mobley, 32, of Elizabeth town, Ky. Another flier in the helio copterCWO Carl J. Crow, 37, of Tus con, Arizona, was also killed. Kell was stationed at Ft. Rucker, Alabama. Rep. Phil Londrum the Association's workgroups will be presented at the meet ing. No Traffic Fatalities In Year Cherokee County has gone a full year without a traffic death and can turn in a clean slate for the entire calendar year of 1966 if none occur between now and midnight Saturday. The last fatality recorded in die county was Howard En loe, 13, who died from inj uries received when he was struck by a car on die Whit field Road just outside of Mur phy on December 26, 1965. The youth was riding a bicycle when he was hit. Local Highway Patrolmen have expressed their thanks to area motorists for a year without traffic deaths in Ch erokee County ana ?Jidthey hope the record will be as good in 1967. Commissioners To Meet Tuesday The Cherokee County Board of Commissioners will hold their regular January meeting T uesday morning. The Courthouse will be clo sed Monday due to the New Years holiday falling on Sun day. Jerry Stiles the death accidental. In addition to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stiles, Jerry is survived by one bro ther, Jimmy, of the home and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Minnie Stiles. Funeral services will be held today (Thursday) at Oak Grove Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m. Rev. Frank Fisher, Rev. Milford Garrett and Rev. Douglas Heaton will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body was taken to the home Wednesday afternoon to remain until the funeral hour. Townson Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. Pallbearers will be Johnny Forrister, David Dodson, Ronnie Clonts, Merlin Ram sey, Lonnie Akin and Junior Stalcup. Letter To The Editor Dear Editor: I want to thank you for the prompt services we the boys from Murphy and surrounding areas are getting upon rec eiving the Scout. In fact, last night the copy I received was only seven days old which is real fast service and Viet Nam is not so far from home, just a couple of days ago a replacement came into my supply room and during the course of the conversation I asked him where he was from and found out he was from our neighboring state of South Carolina. Then I was amazed to find out that he. has a lot of relatives in Murphy and Brasstown. His Name is JOS EPH RAMSEY and he is related to the Martins in Br asstown and to the Howells in Murphy, 1 just thought I would let you know this in case you might want to send him a complimentary issue of The Scout as I am sure he would appreciate it very much like I do. In case you do his address is the same as mine. Once again I want to thank you for all the boys In 'Viet Nam who may be receiving the Scout like I do and It makes the long days seem a lot shorter to read the news from home and to know that you all still are behind us in our fight to stamp out these communist aggressors who are trying to take over this small country of Viet Nam. Well I must close but let me say again that I really appreciate rec eiving The Cherokee Scout over here in this war torn country. Respectfully yours S/SGT Alfred F. Kincaid HHC, 66th ENGR. BN (taf Div) APO San Francisco, 96336 m ^ " 0 I A ?*? O " " < Lriil . -li.