Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / May 2, 1957, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
ILL, II. C, It AY 2, 1. u c v; 3 . r: z c o n d -.l"v.r.: wJjfs? . V... V . 1 1 n f : i. t If it'' .1 I 1 1 FOB TOUR PAINTING NEEDS See Builders Supply Co-who handles a complete line of Amer ; lean Marietta Paints, including no-drip, no-stir paint products. BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Marshall. N. C. 4-12-58 WANTED Full time company employed salesman for Buncombe, Madison, Henderson, and Hay- i wood counties. Established ter ritory in rural areas. PORTER'S Proprietary Medicines, 419 Cald well, Fiqua, Uhio. 4-18 S-2p CAN YOU BEAT THE QUIZ CHAMP? Charles Van Daren, winner of $129,000 on a TV quiz show, lists 50 questions' and challenges you to answer them. See how you make out . . . and learn how it feels in a contestant's booth on TV. Be sure to read the quiz feature in May 5th issue of BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN On Sale at Your Local Newsdealer WANTED Man or woman to sell McNess Products part or full time. Pleasant work. Many old customers. Big profits. No ex- perience needed. Will teach andi finance you. Write McNfc.i5i CO., Dept. C. Candler Bldg., Baltimore 2, Md. 5-2,9p FEMALE HELP WOMEN 18-65. to address and mail our circulars at home on commission. Write GIFT FAIR, (Dept. K), Springfield, Penna. 5-2, 9, lGp FOR SALE 1952 Ford Trac tor t- $745.00 ; Ford Ferguson Tractor $395.00; Dearborn Mowers $130.00 to $165.00; Pickup & Trailer Disc $50.00 to $95.00. Also other tractors and farm equipment. ADAMS WAREHOUSE Greeneville, Tenn. 4-25 5-16p WANTED: Secretary with know ledge of shorthand. Please state age, qualifications, experience and training'. Salary open. Mail application to Box V, Marshall, N. C. 4-25tf 50 acres Rood .pasture land for rent; located Mouth of Ivy. , STEWART METCALP 4-25 6-9e BUSINESS OPPORTUNltlES $400 MONTHLY SPARE TIME Refilling and collecting money from our 6c High Grade Nut ma chines in this area. No selling! To qualify for work you must have a car. references. $690 cash secured by inventory. Devoting 6 hours a week to business, your end on percentage of collections will net up to $400 monthly, with very good possibilities ot taxing over full time. Income increasing accordingly. For interview' include phone number in application, write j National Vending Company. o27 . Lexington Avenue, N. Y. lte New York 17, LEARNER INJURES TWO 1 Bow-! Salisbury, Md. Roland den, 22, and his 18-year-old wife, Joyce, were admitted to the hos pital with severe lacerations and possible fractures. Bowden ex plained he was teaching his wife to drive their automobile when she MM The Madison County Board of Equalization will sit in a' body to hear complaints at the courthouse from 9:00 a. m., to 4:00 p. m., on the following dates: . May 13: Townships 12, : , May 14 Townships 15 JUDSON EERNARD BRIGMAN EILL WIIITTEN Conservation Judges Are Named For N. C. RaleighC. M. Ladd, former president of the North Carolina Association of Soil Conservation n;afr;t ho named iudees to determine North Carolina's win1 ners of the 1966-1967 annual na tional soil conservation awards program. Judges Raleigh. Doggetit, vationist, selected are They are: J. extensive soil N. C. State all of Frank William C. LaRue, associate editor of Progressive Fanner; Dr. C. Brice Ratchford, assistant direct or of Agriculture, Extension, N. C. State College; and Edniond Ay cock, manager, agriculture de partment, Warthovia Bank and Trust Co. Outstanding district of the state for the year ending April 30 se lected by the judges will receive a bronze plaue for permanent pos session -and the right to name one member of its toard of super visors and the outstanding far meico'rraor. The two nwn they select will be guests of the program's sponsor Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., on an all-expense vacation trip to the Wigwam guest ranch and Goodyear Farms Litch. field Park, Arizona, next Novem ber or December. Scoresheets of N. C. districts entered in the program should . be sent to Doggett in Raleigh j postmarked not later than May 15. 1 winners oi me jrrm oluo .... t- e il I ,.,. in the national competition will be announced from Akron, Ohio, dur ing July. The current program is the fourth on a national basis and the fifth annual program will begin May 1 and end on April 30, 1958, with similar awards offered. Soil Bank (Brought From First Page) Stabilization and Conservation Committee, cautioned growers to day. x :' A list of crops approved by the State and County Committees for protective cover was given to each fanner at the time he signed hisjg ee Caldwell, Frances Gail" agreement to take part in the Acreage Reserve program, the eia'rman explained. H emphasized, however, that apiproval of a cover crop on Acre age Reserve land does not void the agreement not to harvest a crop from the designated acres. If a grass, legume, or other crop is approved for protective cover on Acreage Reserve land and would mature a crop in 1957 which could be harvested for grain or eeed, it must be disposed of in such a manner that no part of the crop can be harvested. September 30 is the deadline for disposing n . of such a crop in Madison Coun- I ty. .v i Farmers are urged to check I with the Countv ASC office if I they have any question about this ; ' , ... o:i x i, . , or ouier pnases oi me oou un , i program. , turned suddenly to the right, veer off the highway, into a ditch and struck a pole. The Bowdens were thrown through the windshield. 13, and 14. and 16. V EDWARDS ; , Honor Roll Is Announced For Sprin Cgreek School , n ' ' w - bacco, 12 acres of rice, and 67,850 Following are the perfect at- acres of winter wheat The whea tendance and honor roll reports . includes winter wheat agreements for Spring Creek High School as signed last fall, less' cancellations, released by Mrs. Jack V. Joyce, sine only winter wheat is allotted reporter:' ;, in North Caroltna . The tobacco PERFECT ATTENDANCES? acreages includes bothJ burley and 1st grade: 'Sharon Plemmons,' flue-cured, which are, the two el Linda Kirkpatrick, Judy Henry, igible types grown in ! this state. Brenda Green, Willie Faye Fowl- er, Mike Duckett, Ray Duckett, Harold Finley," Jerry Green, Rob"' ert Sexton, Dale Roberts. , , ments which were cancelled be 2nd grade: Nancy Clark, Mar-.. fora the signup deadline.. garet Lou Plemmons. 2nd-3rd grade comb.: Phillis Brooks, Bobby Price, Reva Sue Suttles, Mike Suttles, Bennie Rob erts, Glen White, Phil Price, Eva ' Allen, Linda Meadows, Grooms. 3rd grade: Donald Lee Kent, Roger McCarter, James Thomas, Benny Willett, Gary Williams, Ray Ripps, Maggie Kirkpatrick, Ethel Meadows, Helen Shelbon. 4th grade: Dean Coward, Joe Ferguson, Dallas Gunter, Norman Moore, Harold Roberts, Charles Stamey, Ronnie Williams, Eugene Woody, Danny Vance, Peggy Fleming, Yvonne Fortner, Linda McCarter, Sue Ann Reese, Mary Ann Suttles, Brenda Gates. 5th grade: Ricky Jo Meadows, Cauley Davis, Charles Ray Fin ley, Richard Plemmons. 6th grade: Carroll Askew, Floyd Fish, Charles Holt, Dennis Plemmons, Judy Kirkpatrick, Margie Meadows. 7th grade: Doris Lankford. HONOR ROLL 1st grade: Ray Duckett, Jerry Green, Sharon Plemmons, Jerry Price. 2nd grade: Patty Balding, Nan v i a i n, abulia ivuun iivib, uuiua Holt, Ala Mae Kent, Marguerite Kimberly, Connie Lowe, Margar et Lou Plemmons, Annie Sams, Virginia Lee Wills, Wanda Lou Woody, Glenn Meadows, Billy Moore, Larry Moore. 3rd grade: Donald Lee Kent, Roy Gene Riddle, James Thomas, Gary Williams, June Allison, Jo Ann Duckett, "Ethel Meadows, Sonja Lou Moore. Minnie Pearl Seay, Willene Kirkpatrick. 4th grade: Philip Henry, Linda McCarter, Sue Ann Reese. 5th -grade;- RiekyUo, Meadowa'iSST tS2l.v.,n. . pr0."J strPi,ler,, lB the 'IH ?!? Joyce Williams, Richard Plem- :'ductwj ' Jffljse basi s crops, (coming one of the, mosl popular' mons. Wilma Jean Waldroup, Bob- TT3L - ! machines in. the county.-. Mr. and Kent, R. D. Gunter. 6th grade: Margie Meadows. Shirley Moore, Charles Holt 7th grade: Deanna Kirkpatrick. HIGH SCHOOL 9th grade B: Gail Beasley, Ma ry Ruth Coward, Polly Justice, Doris Trantham, Donald Ray Waldroup. 10th grade B: Wilma Reese, Ed ward Reese, Betty Plemmons, .Iccf: :: Acrc- c.Goah-r-r s' (Brought Prom First -Page) cotton, 45,577 acres of fhe-eured i tobacco, 423 acres of hurley to- The ; report also includes correc- tions in county signup reports and soma cancellations of agree- - Deadline for 1967 Acreage Re serve agreements were March 1 for cotton and tobacco, and March 8 for corn and rice, but farmers mrlm :. J .J I. .. .1 .., w were permit ) milt WAM hA 1 1 W. I , " nA.anA n put "over the limit acreage in the program, after these dates. Most of this "over the limit" acre age has now been accepted. Pro ducers were not permitted to can cel their agreements after the closing dates as funds for Acreage Reserve compensation were obli gated on the basis of farmers' agreements at the time of the applicable closing dates. j According to Avent, the final report from the State ASC office, 60,621 Acreage Reserve agree- ments have been signed. This in. ! eludes 27,001 agreements on cot- ton, 10,016 agreements on corn, 13,949 agreements on flue-cured ! tobacco, 1,010 agreements on bur- ley tobacco. 1 agreement on rice. and 8,644 agreements on wheat, 1 ahnmn. fin K91 f.m,. n.rt;-i. pating in the Acreage Reserve ' phase of the Soil Bank Program ; in North Carolina. , If signatory producers comply 0,6 requirements of the pro-, gram, they can earn $17,84J,5K4 j on the 318,751 acres put in the program: $7,235,108 on cotton, $2,768,205 on corn, $5,998,856 on grade C producers. In three flue-cured tobacco, $130,830 on ytarg they have gone from no al burley tobacco, $564 on rice, and j falfa acreage to fourteen acres. $1,709,021 on wheat . They are planning on building an- Avent added that only farmers j other sila and a barn with a plat with acreage allotmens for wheat, j fomi milking parlor this year, corn, upland cotton, rice, and the when this is done Howard says twe types of tobacco are eligible they will purchase a milking m- to participate in the. Acreage set, rKn.iii, wuicu ta uaiKircu , Garrett Gardner, Jlmmie Roberts, Allen joyce 11th grade B: Joe Gentry, Bet ty Ann Fleming, Alene Waldroup, Eula Dean Stamey,' Agnes Mathis A: Emma Ruth McCarter, Shel ba Jean Moore. 12 grade B: Charles Coward, Wanda Beasley, Merita Keener, Nathan West. A: Vance Davis, I Betty Loai Ferguson, Ann Plemmons. r.:':! r':'J c&css Marvin Cock Killcd- ,4 Continued from page one) aid. ) J 5 ., J "h Adolpkus . Cook received 'unde termined Internal; injuries, Mrs, Callaghan received lacera tions of the head and face, a frac. tured wrist and fractured ankle. Callaghan' received a fracture of the left knee cap, Long said. Marvin Cook died of a broken neck, the patrolman said. Long said that the Cook auto, traveling north, left the highway. on the right side, went 122 feet on the shoulder, then 95 feet down the pavement and collided head-on with Callaghan's car in Callaghan's lane. Funeral services were conduct ed Sunday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock in the Chapel Hill Baptist Church. The Rev. N. H. Griffin was in the chuW)h cemete Pallbearer were friends. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Nellie Cook; the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Cook, all of Marshall RFD 3; five brothers, Dewey Jr., of Greeneville, Tenn., Adolphus, Odell, and Burns, all of Marshall RiFD 3, and Tasie of Cleveland, Ohio. Bowman-Rector Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Milk Checks (Continued from Page One) llurtion is climbing at a very raPid rate, and alfalfa production Just as rapidly. Shipped hay and shucks are decreasing to a drib Dle- Mllk routes r ff0" 10 ble. have o be changed for the trucks : nff-.-j: i serving Madison .producers are becoming overloaded before they ieach the end of the route, Ye8' the A picture is good, and the grade C or manu- factu red milk trucks are finding a more beavily ladened pay load on their trucks. Howard and Dorothy Payne of the Paw Paw section represent the spirit of the Re-chine to make the milking easier, The small eow-to-an milker , with Mrs. Troy Rice of the Franklin Mountain Koad are not only en- joying easier milking because of theirs but are saving a long haul to the highway because their in- creased production made the trip profitable to the hauler. , The golden tobacco leaf has long been the currency standard in Madison County but the month- ly and semi-monthly milk checks are adding to them now. i n nxTn n rivv JzjltUZAAviii Lfi U tBbrdi.i:FOi$lom pritcd ct SERVICE MOTOR MARSHALL, McCormick Field C Speedway ;,-TNews'f,-f Banjo Matthews, and Grady Cox, a couple of Aehevllle drivers who won feature races at McOor mick Field Speedway last .Sat urday, are primed to try for their second straight victories this Sat urday as the sportsmen and ama teurs roll again around the quarter-mile track. Matthews beat out Ned Jarrett of Newton by almost a quarter of a mile to take first money in the sportsman feature, but Banjo started from the outside pole po sition and Jarrett from the ex treme rar. Banjo and Jarrett won the 10-lap heats and Tommy Boger of Concord took the 15-lap consolation. Grady Cox had a dogfight on his hands all the way as he sped home first in the amateur fea ture. At the end he was a scant four feet ahead of Perry Jones of Hendersonvilleu Clayton Hollar" of Granite Falls was another 40 yards back in third place. Cox and Pender Fox of Asheville won the 10-lap heat races. This coming Saturday the sportsmen again will run two 10 lap heats, a 15-lap consolation and a 40-lap main event,' and the amateurs will travel in two or three 10-lap heats, depending on the number of cars, and a 30-Ip feature. Time trials will start at 7 p. m., and racing at 8. Jarrett and Matthews both said they will be on hand this week to .- . . il !. x l. continue their fight for track points. Jarrett was last year's champion and the points he earn ed at MoCormick Field helped him place second in the national races for sportstmen honors. The local contingent of sports- men drivers, headed by Dickie plemmons, did well Saturday ntefot and will be back this week to try their hands again. Plem- mons, Lloyd Phillips, Andy Rob erts and Jack Sprinkle were among first 10 in Saturday's fea ture. Sportsman veterans Harold and Reed Moore, Tommy Boger, Jun ior Stewart, and various others will join the field for the coming race. Almost 40 amateur cars showed up for Saturday' opening races and 27 of theAi fan in the feature which was reduced by 11 cars af- ter the second lap. A six-car smaah-up took out six cars on the second lap and various forms of mechanical trouble accounted for ftn more victims, Although Grady Cox stayed in front all the way to Win, it was no easy victory. He had plenty of competition from Jones and Hollar and a few other drivers. J A strong contingent of Canton SALES, INC. N.C:. . : Darl!:t Hc:;Ilr! (Brouuht From Fiist fajje) StoniSalem. , . - Through thia offering, they w make it possible for their hoop to continue serving ' thousands men, women and children who aie in need of hospitalization or mdi-' -cal care but do not have the mousy to pay for it ; ' In, 1966, Baptist Hospital gave '' ' more than $500,000 'worth' of iwe care to needy sick persons from V "92 of North' Carolina's 100 count- ies. This figure does not include the free doctor's care received, by these patients. The generosity of 1 the coming Mother's Day offering ; will determine largely the amount - of free care that is possible this ; v year. , Hospital officials report 61,135 ; visits to the out-patient department in 1956. Operated for those who cannot afford the full cost of care, this department conducts clinics for many patients who, do not requiie hospitalization and thus ' Serves thousands who could not be ac commodated in the limited space of the 450-bed institution. How- y ever many of these patients need to be admitted as in-patients and the Mother's Day fund make it possible to. give them the hospital care they so desperately need. The slogan "Honor Your Mother by Helping Another ," is being used in preparation for the offer ing. Through informing all Bapt ists of the work jtheirr:JioB)ital dots for the needy sick aria stressing the importance of providing the funds for this work, Baptist lead- arc , j the foundation for what they hope will be their de nomination's most successful Bap tist Hospital day. Last year the French Broad Association won the distinction of being the first and only association in Western , North Carolina to be 100 in gifts to the Baptist Hos. pital through the Mother's Day Offering. It is expected to re tain this enviable record again this year. drivers including Forrest Messer, Charlie Blalock, Bob Browning, Johnny Rhodarmer, Jim Long and Carroll Pressley, will prove, tough to beat before the season gets toe- olid. Asheville's list of amateurs last S.tunlav "Included -' WiMe Dodd". Hariyf Clay, Cox, Ernest McTin- . dall, .Kenneth Long, BUI Bartlett, Ruf us Warlick, Charlie McGuiTyT? Floyd , WHHnghara, ; Carl Maynor ',. and Pender Fox, and will be swell. .. ' ed by other this week. , . " Hendersonville had several cars In the race W.Casey Jones, Jim ., Hoots, Toad Bradley, J. B. Oark- ; er and Perry Jones. Granite Falls, Hickory, Waynesville, Marion and Swannanoa were represented, by -several cars. ' o hv:-;::: :':' 4.i t Dealer Franeh; t ,
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 2, 1957, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75