Thanks for the pictures. Things appear to be in mostly unmolested, original condition which is a good thing. Some observations:
the carb is a stock Holley 2210 2bbl. I see evidence of raw fuel seepage around some of the gaskets. The black soot residue in the throttle boars indicates an overly Rich (too much fuel, not enough air) fuel mixture, which is a common issue with this particular carb model. An internal part known as the power valve is meant to enrich the fuel mixture as the throttle is opened and the vacuum signal drops under load. These valves are susceptible to failure. When that happens, the valve is stuck open constantly, which makes the engine idle like dog crap with dark black smoke visible from the tailpipe. There is no possible way to adjust the idle mixture lean enough to compensate for this issue, and in fact doing so has little if any effect on overall idle quality. This is less of an issue while driving, as the engine is able to more easily consume the excess fuel at higher revs, although fuel economy does suffer.
So what all that means to you is that the carb is in dire need of a complete tear down, surgical cleaning, through inspection, and rebuild with a quality carb kit. This carb can be a bit finicky for the novice to make play nice, so if you and your Dad feel out of your comfort zone, there's a tech moderator on this forum by the name of michael mayben who rebuilds these carbs in his sleep better than most can wide awake. He does this type of work on a contract basis for IH Parts America, which is the light line vendor who makes this website possible. Depending on your locality, if this Scout is not subject to smog certification, and you're not doing a strict, by-the-numbers restoration, you May elect to upgrade that carb by purchasing an aftermarket Holley 2300 list #0-7448, which is also available from ihon and comes to you fully ready for plug-n-play installation on your engine.
Your ignition system is as expected, a Holley breakerless distributor combined with a remote ignition control module, which is the gold-colored item on your firewall with the red & white label which identifies it as such. This system is more commonly referred to as a Holley gold box ignition. Those control modules do have a reputation for failure after so many years of exposure to tremendous underhood heat. I'm not saying that yours has failed. That is yet to be determined.
Based on the visual condition of your carb, your non-start issue could be either fuel or ignition related, or a combination of the two. Even if your ignition system is up to snuff, that engine will never run properly with a mungy carb in full failure mode.
I could not clearly make out from the supplied pics which loose wire near the coil you're referring to. Have you tried tracing it to see where it goes?
That should be enough blabbing for you to digest and ruminate on for awhile. Don't worry, we ain't done brainwarshin' ya yet, yung'un!