GRAHAM PERSONALS BY JO DEAN PHILLIPS . Ben F. Parker la on leave I from Fort Euatia, Va. On return to baae he will be aent to Green Miaa Anne Sue Deyton, who haa been vial ting her mother, lira. R. C. White in Dixon, Tenn. haa i turned home. Her brother, Jimmy returned srith her to apend a few daya with her. Miaa Jackie Bryaon visited friends and relatives in Tellico Plains, Tennessee last Sunday. Miaa Hildred Hollowny of And rews visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Walsh last Sunday. Manrlce Walters la vial tins his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. John ny 8huler for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Warrick and family are vacationing In Rob binsville this week. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Kernodle from Burlington, are viaiting Mrs. die Martin thia week. Mrs. Ker lle la the former Miss Ramona Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Budd are ting Mrs. Budd'a parents, Mr. nd Mrs. Paul Lovin. R. L. Crisp graduated from |Wake Forest last week. He is now employed with G. S. I. at Fon Mlas Mary Lee Lovin graduated I from WCUNC last week and Is j ? now employed with G. S. I. at | Fontana. She plana to teach in j | Greensboro next year. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Farley of I Greensboro are visiting their fam-! (llies here. Miss Ann Oolvard Is attending ! summer school at WCUNC. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | Frank Colvard. Miss Peggy Griffin, daughter of I Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Griffin, gradu ated from University of Tennessee on Monday June 7. Mr. and Mrs. Griffin attended the Graduation I Exercises. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Griffin. Jr. [ of Greenville, S. C. are visiting ! Mr. and Mrs. Griffin this week. The Robblnsvllle Home Demon | stration Club is attending Home | Demonstration Club Week in Ral eigh this week. Patrolman and Mrs. Ben Dan iels announce the birth of a (laugh ter. Lou Lynn, in the Bryson City hospital. 2nd Lt. Jimmy Ayera, soil of Wayne Ayers will return to Nor folk, Va. Friday, after spending a few days with hie family. fid. Lt. Ray Worley, graduate C. State, plana to eater ac tive service in September. Mr. and Mrs. Debnar Wiles and family have returned to Bobbins "vine after visiting In Kannapolis. Mrs. Grace Tatham and daugh ter, Patricia, spent a few days visiting in Franklin last week. Jack Mocpnew is home after after spending some days as patient in a Franklin hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hyde an children, Martha Ja I tea, of Salisbury, end with Mr. Hyde's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hyde tat ville. Wallace is assistant ooach ft Salisbury. He Is spmiWiM the [ summer at N. C. Stats CbHege, Raleigh, studying toward Ida doc I tor's degree. [ degree. alnSHcr B-qN NU 1L O A Jim Owens U ill at Ma home Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Balsa aad I daughter Susan are STperted to I arrive soon to spend their vaoa Itkm herewith Mr. Balsa* parsota, Mr. and Mrs C. A. Balsa. Ttagjr | will soon move from their home Penngylvania to LaPayette, Mrs. Key Phillips, whs ha a broken arm, is ra te he recovering nicety. Gene Bade, son' of Mrs. Boy Oar lager, Jta home after serving |three years M the U. S. Navy. fet. Bugena Walsh is spending | a 10-day furlough with his family i friends hers. He wfll returu to | Cherry Point Marine Base. i Mrs. Lauren Lyons have home after spending a In Marion, N. a , . and Mrs. CUrl Phillips and visited to Tellico Plains last sad. Noah snuisr is recovering from la broken log. Ha is ropotred to be (doing nicely. Carolyn Sue Phillips, who to Charlotte, Is visiting ? Doris Leigh, is visiting I Agayan Club Com. Heads Announced The Agayah Club, formerly the I Junior Women's Club of Robblns vUle, met Monday night at the Community Hut with Mrs. Aleentf Campbell, president, presiding over the business session. The club voted to repair the hut | basement for the Boy and Girt Scout troops. The club also pledged tTB yearly j for the upkeep of the library. Fifty dollars was given to the summer recreation program. The constitution was revised' and the following chairmen were named: American Home, Mrs. Norvell Howell; communications, Mrs. Ruby Nell George; fine arts, Mrs. Oleeta Wilson; education, Mrs. Blanch Ghormley; welfare, Mrs. Rebecca Odom; public af fairs, Mrs. Mildred Humes; inter-1 national relations, Mrs. Jean Veach. Refreshments were served by | Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. Beatrice Post ell. Soil Samples Termed A Must Like ouying a pig in a poke? that's the way H. D. Godfrey, j State Administrative Officer for' the Agricultural Stabilization and ( Conservation, describes the carry lag out of son conserving or soil, building practices without the ben efit of a soil analysis. Hit or miss methods have no place whatever in modern-day farming. For that reason, the 1984 Agricultural Con-' servation Program makes the tak ing of a soil sample and the re ceipt of a soil analysis mandatory before federal cost-sharing may be allowed on many A CP practic es that will be carried out this fall. Godlrey reports that under the1 1954 Agricultural Conservation all practices Involving the estab-' lishment of a permanent cover ofj perennial legumes and grasses or' the initial improvement of an es abllshed grass?tlegume cover will require a soft analysis show ing the amount of limestone re quired before the producer will he eligible for cost-share assis tance under the program. Records at the State A8C Office indicate that there are thousands of North Carolina farmers who have signed up for ACP practices requiring a soil sample, says God frey. He requests that these farm ers take their samples at the first opportunity. Mail them directly to the Soil Testing Laboratory, Stats Agriculture Building, Raleigh, North Carolina. The Boil Testing Lab is now caught up on sea samples and can rsoder prompt analjiilsss: how ever. Godfrey urges farmers to take sad submit their samples now while this condition exists stooe the Soil Testing Labortary expects to he flooded again be fall-seeding time. GRAHAM BIRTHS PAKRETTE CLINIC Mr. and Mr*. Charlie Ada ma, a daughter, Kathy Irene, April 22. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Grindstaff, a daughter, Catherine Anne, Ap ril 28. Mr. and Mrs. Malcom George, a daughter, Glenda Mae, May 3. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Jennings a, eon, Jimmy, May 6. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rose, a eon, Allen Hall. May 18. Mr. and Mrs. David Holloway, a son, Harold Cecil, May IS. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Phillips, a son, Tlmmie Lee, May 21. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pilkington, a son, Steve, May 20. ROBBINSVILLE CLINIC Mr. and Mrs. William Conlcy, a] son, Randal Ernest, May 29. Levin Serving In Korea IX Corps IX CORPS, KOREA?Army Pvt. Jimmy H. Lovin, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Lovin, Route 1, Robbinsville, N. C., la serving with the IX Corps' 101st Signal Battalion in Korea. Lovin, who arrived in the Far East last month, is a member of the Battalion, which maintains communications within the corps area. ? He entered the Army In Septem ber 19S3 and completed basic train ing at Fort Jackson, S. C. Club Social Held At Wilson Cabin The Agayah Club spring social was held Wednesday night at the Wilson's cabin on Snowbird. A covered dish supper was enjoyed by the some 20 members and guests present. Hostesses were Mrs. L. W. Wil son, Mrs. Johnny Veach and Mrs. Warren Humes. Wheat Allotments Are Explained Farmers on land on which no wheat was seeded for grain for an of the years 1M2, 1968. and 1964 may aqpiy tor a 1965 wheat acre age allotment, according to Ron ald R. Orr, Chairman of the Gra ham County Agricultural StaMllsa tion and Conservation Committee. To be considered tor an allotment on a farm which had no wheat aeeded for grata for any of thoae years, the farmermay apply In writing to Ida coi^ty ABC com mittee by June 90,1964. Blank application forms are] available at the county A8C of fice tor use in filing requerts tot] allotments. Lodge Guest Grows Tomatoes Professionally The following article on toes was sent in by Fred maim of the Blue Boar Lndf% Rt 1. Robhinsville. Tin story stall published in the OnctnnaU Times1 Mr. Bruckmann uld Mr. ai Mrs. Moeier. of the article are annual Tin tors of the Blue Boar Ld^e. The article follows: Xhs last word In tomatoes can be found clinging to vines in the glassed-in farm of William f Moeller, *414 Banning Road. (Cincinnati. O.) Under S.000 square" fast of glass of Moaner's greenhouse to mato farm, are 11,000 tomato plants which, from last month un til July IS. will bear 18,000 eight peund baskets of tomatoes. ?hot with hormones, pink toma toes, green tomatoes and red to Xn In cooperation Ohio Department of Object of the reeearch Is to set ance to witting* to also canning tqmatoes, while ore pushed to elmlnste mosaic leaf spots, other mo? tdmtto l>! rhts. ? ?*jm ? Ada aOH are |iao? Hght hi Okie. Disease blights on the tomato vlnea start aa Tiros infections and their spread can he readily check ed by the eye, Moeller explained. The one-and-one-half-aere farm Moeller operates has been dabb ling In tomato research since 1M0. Moeller greenhouses feature underground tile tor sterilisation of the soU. Goals include developing a good strain of tomato particularly adap ted for growth in Southern Ohio. The perfect tomato win be crack free and have no blemishes on the His advice to backyard toma to growers, la ."Don't put nitro gen fertiliser on your new tomato plants until they start to bear, or you'll have an vine and an to Dress Revue Is Set Saturday The annual Graham County FjUr-H dress revue will be held Saturday, June 19, at 1:30 p. m. In the county courthouse. It was suggested that girls en tering the contest should choose cotton and use an easy pattern. Pajamas, gowns, aprons and dresses are expected to be shown. Prises and refreshments will be had. Everyone Is invited to view the style showing. TV A peak employment occurred during World War 11, on Septem ber 30, 1343. when 41,801 persons were employed. There are 63,000,000 acres in the Tennessee Valley, 14,000,000 of them forested. 7 Graham Co. i Farm, Home Week. Granam County had seven dele gates attend Farm and Home Week held in Raleigh June 7-10. The high lights of the weeks pro groma were: Study of Price sup ports program. The Challenge of Better Homes and Better Com munities, And a tour of John Har ris' home and grounds. Mr. Har ris Is Gardening and Home Beauti fication Specialist at State Col lege. Special classes attended by Gra ham County, women were the Well Dressed Woman. Family Rrecrea tion, Improving work habits. North Carolina Crafts, Home Furnishings for modern living. This years program included 4-years of growth with home demonstration work. The colorful Mitt Jenkins Is Bride Of Fred Hyde Miss Grace Jenkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Troy Jenkins of Tus keegee became the bride of Fred Hyde, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Hyde of Tuskeegee, on Juno 2 at the home of the Rec. B. F. Shope, officiating minister. The couple are making their home at Tuskeegee where he is a farmer. pageant "Green and Growing" completed the weeks special In-< terest meetings. The following persons including Miss Nellie Jo Carter, Home Agent, and Mr. W. H. Flake, County Agent attended from Graham County: Mrs. Wash Stewart, Mrs. Howard Carver, Mrs. Mamie Carpenter, Mrs. Clyde Colvard, Mrs. Oma Barnes. Mrs. J. D. Allen and Mrs. Robert Robbinsville Lions In Regular Meeting The Robbinsville Lions Clube met at the Masonic Hall (or lta re gular meeting and supper. The Eastern Star prepared the supper. Members present were: Doyle Brock, Mike Brown, R. L. Holland J. C. Collins, W. H. Flake, John T. Frazier, Jr., Elmo Ghormley, J. 3. Howell, A. L. Lee, Harvey Odom, Patton Phillips, J. B. Slau ghter, W O. Soderquist, James A. Stanley, W B Wiggins, Arvil Web iter, Leonard Lloyd, and K. S. 3ml The guest speaker was Arnold Syde. LOST OR STOLEN: One 12.00 fishing reel on Santeetlah while fishing with Verlie Maxwell, June 9. Reward. W. V. Jenkins. Robbinsville, N. C. 4?-ltc THE LONE RANGER i< By Fran Striker "?XSS* FREE AMD IMY] IN HONEST JOHNfc HOME. WHERE 19 HONEST JOHN? J |VE TAKEN K CASE OF HIM/ [WHAT ABOUT THE LONE BANGER?y VOU SWD HE'D \ B? UER?/J we/s HERE/ i tolp you ro TAKEN ORE OF HONEST JOHN. VmaM WHAT ABOUT THE LONE 1 RANGER?'J HE IS AMONG US, HIPING ' KNEATH ONE OF THE HOOPS' s+f J TO BE SURE HE IS UNARMED, I MUST ASK ALL OF TOU TO SURRENDER YOUR GUNS', a. YOUO OONg MP ggTVIBN-TQ-WgWU-j NOW REMOVE TUB HOOOS AMP SHOW YOUR RACES TO EACH OTHER. . I don't see the lone ranger/J >g| tvs