_ ?MU Ukrary "fh" "rtr?c I>eachtr?e S 28906 ?urphy. ?-C" 4-73 i The Cherokee Scout 20 Poges-3 Sections 15-Copy and Clay County Progres8 Volume 79- Number 46-Murphy, N. C. 28906?Second Class Postage Paid at Murphy, N. C.?Thursday, July 1,19711 I mboree Coming . .. Jaycees install chairs in big tent. (Bill Gray Photo) M'alent Lineup Posted fFor 3-Day Jamboree Talent lineups for the irphy Jaycees Country Music ijiboree, scheduled for this ekend, were announced fesday. ,, Preceded by a stock car :e on Thursday night at Tri anty Raceway, the big three y Jamboree starts on Friday jht under the big tent on the [irphy High School campus. A clogging exhibition is the Way night show, featuring irphy's crack Carolina reethearts, who have inated competition in most ents in the tri-state area in sent years. The Senior team 6weethearts, who appeared Super Bowl festivities in &mi, Fla. last January, will with the Junior and ementary teams also slated perform. Visiting teams of doggers include two teams from Canton, the Country Store Cloggers from Burnsville, the Alarka Cloggers from Whittier, the Circle 4 bunch from Franklin, the Hiawassee, Ga., team, the Smoky Mountain Cloggers andthe A.C. Reynolds Smooth Dancers from Asheville, the Oconee State Park Cloggers from Walhalla, S.C., the Lost Mine Cloggers from Franklin andthe High Steppers from Hiwassee Dam. On Saturday there will be two big country music shows at the tent, one in the afternoon and one in the evening. More than 200 groups have been invited but the final lineup will not be known until showtime. A number of bands have accepted and the I -eamon Sisters, stars of tand Mrs. Harold E. Lance and adopted son John .. . operating new Pharmacy in Hayesville f 'harmacy Opens Hayesville Hayesville has a new irmacy, the Town and untry, located on the use square in the Tiger ling. Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. nee are operating the cy. They are presently at Wonderview Ranch, lance is a native of sville, Ga, son of the late and lance and Mrs. Ruby lie received a B.S. degree in pharmacy and also a B.S. in agriculture from the University of Georgia. lance is an Army veteran, having served three years with the 82nd Airborne Division. Mrs. lance is a native of (.lay and County, the former Anita Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M.C. Moore. She received her B.S. in home fronoink-K from the University of Georgia. their own Chattanooga, Tenn. television show, will headline both programs. Guitarist Henry tlibson of Murphy and the Country Sounds will be the staff band for both shows. On Sunday afternoon, the big tent will be the scene of a gospel sing. David Ledford of Andrews, a child star who sings and plays piano, will be there along with Bob and Betty ofHiawassee, the Sampson Family of Young Harris, the Calvary Quartet, the Shiloh Quartet, the Ledford Quartet and Basel and the Hogsed rwins, all of Hayesville, the Tri State Quartet, and Susie Rogers, of Murphy, the Gospel Carriers Quartet of Gainesville, he Snowbird Quartet from Robbinsville and the Wright Family of Chattanooga. The outboard motorboat ace , which has been held by he Jaycees on the Fouth of July weekend in the past, will be held he following weekend. A Jaycee advertisement ast week caused some ronfusion as it indicated that idmission to the Hanging Dog Campground would be free. ITiis is not correct, a Jaycee ipokesman said. Admission to he boat race is free and those ittending will have to drive hrough the campground, at no harge. However, anyone who ?amps in the Forest Service's ?ampground during the boat ace weekend can expect to pay be normal camping fee. 3amp Butler ferm Starts Camp Butler began its ourth season of operation this reek at Murphy Elementary ichool. according to Bill lughes, director. Hughes, principal of the chool, explained that the day ?amp will continue through July (0. for mentally retarded and roubled children. invited nterested persons to drop in ind observe the camp in iperation. The objective of the irogram this Summer, Hughes ;aid. will be to teach arts and rafts, shopwork and regular iassroom subjects, with mphasis on vocational training ind the jobs available in this irea. It is hoped, he added, that n this way the children enrolled aill return to school in the Fall .vith a more positive attitude Inward getting an education, ind eventually a job. \ Andrews Hospital Eyes Addition Should a 50-bed extended care wing be added to District Memorial Hospital at Andrews? The hospital's executive board recently ordered the administration staff of District Memorial to study the possibility of an extended care facility. And a just-released survey by the State of Franklin Service to Senior Citizens flatly recommends construction of the addition at Andrews. Fred Mashburn, hospital administrator at Andrews, is in charge of the local study and reported Postal Service Day Set Post Offices in Murphy, Hayesville Andrews and other communities in this area will celebrate National Postal Service Day on Thursday. It marks the end of the old U.S. Post Office Department, which was a Cabinet department, and the beginning of the U.S. Postal Service, a government corporation which President Nixon said in proclaiming the special day "will provide management and methods appropriate to a great and vital communications system in the 20th century." To celebrate the beginning of the nevt Postal Service, the Post Offices will be decorated with suitable posters and will be distributing free a souvenir envelope marking the occasion. Postmasters suggest that the new 8-cent commemorative stamp be purchased and fastened to the envelope and postmarked, for a historic keepsake of the day. Tuesday that an extended care wing would cost more than $1 million, according to the cost formula used by the North Carolina Medical Care Commission. Mashburn added, however, that the facility need not be built necessarily at Andrews. 'The closest one is at Clyde and that's too faraway," he said. "As long as it was built anywhere in this area - Murphy, Hayesville, anywhere fairly close - it would be all right." An extended care unit provides treatment and beds for patients who need care hut not the same intensive care as is given for those acutely ill in a hospital. A diabetic, for example, may need his insulin regulated and a nurse to check on him periodically but he would not need the round-the clock nursing staff and doctors of a hospital. Mashburn said one patient at Andrews that he knew of stayed at the hospital for two years but could have been accomodated at an extended care wing, if one had been available. The hospital staff at Andrews estimates that 20 to 25 percent of the patients could be cared for in an extended care unit, he said. Extended care facilities don't need the same ratio of nurses and doctors to the number of patients as in a hospital, he added, and the costs per patient per day are about half that of hospital care. This would mean a savings for the area served by District Memorial of up to half a million dollars a year, he said. The Andrews administrator said the main advantage to building the extended care unit at District Memorial is that the present hospital kitchen could take care of the proposed new wing, "at a big savings" of construction costs. COURSE 18 HOLE CHIkMPlOHSW?' COMPLETE Ftt\L\T\ES BEHT CRlkSS GRtlNSj MEMBERSHIPS &VMLKBLE OPEH TEfcR ROUHO Golf Course Signs Handsome new signs advertising the Cherokee Hills Golf Course were erected last Friday at Marble and also at the intersection of US-64 West and NC-294. Smaller signs were installed in the intersection of 64 and Harshaw Road. All materials and paint for the signs were donated by the Cherokee Scout, with lettering contributed by Winston Craig. Forrest Johnson, left, and golf course manager Joe Ladd are shown putting up the Marble sign. (Staff Photo) *r*>. ? ?-< - > > ' ? . Fatal Wreck ... car crumpled on impact with bridge. Girl Killed In Wreck A Murphy girl was killed and four other teenagers were injured Sunday evening when their car collided with a concrete bridge abutment at Tomolta. Doris Ann Phillips, 15, was trapped in the wreckage for almost an hour before she was freed by volunteer workers, members of the Andrews Rescue Squad and N.C. Highway Patrolman. She was declared dead on arrival at Providence Hospital here. Others in the car - the driver, Carl Dean Newton, 18, of Andrews, Linda Gaddis, 14, of Murphy, and Larry Ray Applegate, 17, of Morristown, Tenn. - were broueht to Providence then transferred to a Gainesville, Ga. hospital, where they are now said to be doing well. The fifth person in the car, 14-year-old Kenneth Applegate of Morristown, suffered only cuts and bruises in the wreck and was treated and released Sunday night at the Murphy hospital. Highway Patrolman Don Reavis investigated the 6:45 pjn. accident, assisted by Patrolman Bob Ogle. They have filed no charges yet, pending further investigation of the crash. "The road.has just been paved," Trooper Reavis said. "And it has a low shoulder. He must have dropped a wheel off the edge of the pavement and lost control, there were no skid marks." The bridge crosses the Hayes Mill Creek on US-19-129 at Tomotla and has been the scene of several accidents in recent years. The troopers sstimated that Newton's 1967 Chevrolet was traveling at about 60 miles an hour, -emarking that "Even if he hit he bridge at the legal limit, it would do a lot of damage to the car." The impact collapsed the car and all the teenagers were Doris Ann Phillips apped inside, Trooper Reavis lid, for about 25 minutes. Then 1 were freed except Miss hillips, who had suffered vere head injuries. He said reckers were hooked to each id of the car and it was pulled lart enough to free her. Funeral services for Miss hillips were to be held on Icout Office Iloses Friday The Scout Office will close n Friday for the Fourth of July oliday but will be open as usual n Monday, July 5. commissioners Meet Tuesday The Cherokee and Clay Boards of Commissioners will meet Tuesday of next week, instead of their regular Monday meeting day, which is a holiday. Wednesday afternoon at 2 clock at Unaka Baptist Tiurch, the Revs. Ernie Young nd Raymond Carroll fficiating. Burial followed in he church cemetery. Pallbearers were Gene Farmer, Mike Honeycutt, Gary lohnson, Buzzy Scott, Craig ilauney and Rickey Ramsey. She is survived by her nother, Mrs. Helen Teague and step-father Wayne Teague, of Murphy; a sister, Barbara Jean Teague of the home; and the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Delsie Phillips of Murphy. Townson Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Blackout Explained The power blackout in this area during the storm on Sunday is believed due to lightning striking the power line between Hiwassee Dam and Murphy, according to a TVA spokesman. The surge was severe enough to operate automatic protective equipment and shut down the generators at Nottely and Chatuge power plants, and to cut off the main transformer in the Murphy switchyard, he said. As well as Murphy, the area affected included Marble, Hayesville, and Suit; also Blairsville and Hiawassee, Ga. The load lost was about 20,000 kilowatts. Power failed at 4:05 p.m. for about an hour. Those areas supplied from Nottely Dam were back in service earlier. A similiar occurrence earlier in the month was not noticed, because Nottely and Chatuge plants carried the load, the TVA man said. Reconstruction of the second power line from Hiwassee Dam to Murphy is now in progress, he said, which will give better protection in the future. JULY 1971 t M t w I t t .... 1 2 3 4 S 6 7 If 10 11 12 13 14 15 14 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 LEFT TO RIGHT FRONT ROW GREGORY JAMES MOORE ?Mr.AMrs. Harold Moor* SCOTT BRACKETT ?Mr.AMrs. William Brackatt BACK ROW MARK SIMMONS ?Mr.AMrs. Hanry Simmons GREGORY SCAGLIONE ?Mrs.Margarat Baal Scaqiiona MORRIS LEE COKER ?Mr.AMrs. Laroy Cokar GREGORY LEE BRUGH ?Mr.4Mrs. Jamas H. Bruqn WAGON TRAIN First Union National O