ljL ARISTOTLE ONASSIS ; ' ' ' l A IIV H KjK M I IH vl Onassis, one of the -world'! richest men, uyi tnat toe mamorou w iwe reQ of is not the real one t . it is a myth. Read about the two lives of Onaseda as h denies the .publicity version in the Novem ber 22 issue of the American Weekly with BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN On sale at your local newsdealer. FOR SALE Nice Dairy Farm. Approximate ly 144 acres of good farm land 9-roam house in good condition Modern dairy barns and equip ment. 34 cows, large milk base r.nnj tobacco allotment. Good location. METCALF REAL ESTATE AGENCY P.O. Box 514 Phone 4051 MARSHALL, N. C. c 1 WANTED BLACK WALNUT LOGS r and Cherry Logs Cash on Delivery Call or Write: WOOD-MOSAIC CORPORATION Thompson St., Biltmore, N. C. Phone ALpine 3-0401 6-lltfc "CHRISTMAS IS COMING" Ladies, if you need extra money if you want to sell a product that is well known and well ad vertised, investigate the oppor tunity offered by AVON COS METICS. Write: Mr: Dorothy Bruton 183 St. Dunstan's Drive Asheville, N. C. Guaranteed , , SHOE REPAIRING ' Best Material Used .' v Price Reasonable CHAMPION SHOE SHOP Located At EDWARDS CLEANERS Marshall, N. C. 6-4tfc '' FOR SALE Unclaimed Dry Cleaning Some Shirts 35c Some Pants 50c ALL PRICED TO GO! EDWARDS CLEANERS MARSHALL, N. C. 6-4 tfc FOR SALE Benrus, Bulova, and Elgin Watches. See FAIN or JIM SPRINKLE at Sprinkle- sneiton uo., juarsnau. 9-3tfc WANTETl Lares Furnished Room for light housekeeping by a bachelor at unr,. References exchanged. Notify SHERIFF PONDER 6-4tfp .WT.rtOTFfRS for WdittntrS. Birth days, Funerals, Holidays, Memo rials, Anniversaries and every occasion. " - '':'' SHADY SIDE FLORIST Phone 8072 f Marshall, N. C. .10-15tfc FOR SALE 14 acres rich, cul tiva table land, 6-rootn house in 1 . u1uiA i hn ' i fnhtalr Afl ' house, plenty of water, young orchard. ? Six-wnwie wwacco a lotment. ? Priced reasonable. See - CLYDE MoCLURE Walnut, N. C. 10-29fcfe PLANTING TIME is here. Write for free copy 5Ug. ' Planting ClniA. oafjilnip fl flnr B.tlH SOS- cial r all prK-e im f omerea oy Virginia's largest growers of iruit trees, nut trees, erry 1 plants, grape vines and landscape plant material. ;. Salespeople : wanted. "r; '" ' WAYNESBORO NURSERIES, Dept. NCI, Waynesboro, Virginia. ll-5,12,19,2Gc . ' . ' ' F03 DRAFTSMEN'' Position or-cned in 1 ''irial - engineer- sec-t.-n f-r i i.-man and draftinsr t: - '. 'i f ' "!v, please send r ' . . '-'P to I r G. CO., INC. , . .L, N. C. ; I-- J e'tx'trot- ie fr il.r, t :K1 J SAVE ON . GAS KEROSENE ECONOMY OIL CO ALEXANDER, N. C, U.S. 25-70 at Panther Branch ; GASOLINE Regular Premium Quantity Discount to Trucks 2c Per Gallon Kerosene - 14.9c gal. (In Drum Lots) Permanent Type Antifreezel.89 gal. (Nationally Advertised Brands) $2.17 per gal. Texaco Motor Oil-.$1.19 can 2-gal. cans Rath's Pure Pork Sausage 29c lb. Rath's Breakfast Bacon 39c lb. Fresh Eggs From 29c to 49c doz. ECONOMY OIL CO. ALEXANDER, N. C. At Panther Branch NO shoe m. REPAIRS Check all your shoes. Stop in today. CHANDLER HARDWARE CO. Marshall, N. C. FOR SALE 1953 Pontiac 8; 4-door; R&H, good condition EDWARDS CLEANERS . 10-29tfc CHURCH OF CHRIST I INVITES YOU Listen each Saturday over WMMH at 11:45. Visit with us each Lord's Day. BiMe Study and services at 11:00. This church ft located on the Jupiter-Red Oak Road near the Rod 'Oak School, and three miles from "Marshall . 17 Road.,' &'l''I:'&A;;,-rM'iVi' HELP WANTED WANT 0 RFTTRll 'Yntl'RiiEf.Fti lt Tne explain ' and ; . show yon how I have (prospered - a Rawleigh Dealer for past years.i? Vacancy adjoining mo m Madison txiunty. Already established. I will help you get started. Write W. T. RAWLEIGH. CO, Dept. . NCK-610-698, Richmond, Va. ' ' . 11-6,12,191) ? 'r FOR SALEi-. ' 125-cre Farm ; .9-acre tobacco allotment; tobac co barn and, stock bam; well watered; two dwellings. Call:, 3401 or 3391 or ' Write: Box 384. Mars Hill, N. C. 11-5, 12tfc 1 HELP WANTED Want to malt i :1 or more in a day for part or fall tim route wrV? ' I a woman. V.'rite FUUST-'--: - 'Co., P. O. Box 371, 1 I rvy l a i r '?a: " am f : (per i your timet Must Is willing to w , If interested, tot appointm. . call AL 2-7260.1 1M9.26C - WANTED Girt or woman to itva i witn laoy wno cwo mu . pankmship ' Everything furnish- ed Xdgnt nousewons. iy yk alone albout eight mUes , f rom Mars Hill on Terrya Fork. Near church; on school bus and mau route. Giv age, references, etc. Write: ;- tv n,M'..iji..vjv ., CLASSIFIED ' . ., P. 0. Box 867 :.; Marshall, N. C. , ; 'f' n-iotfdh ' FOR SALE 59-acre farm in Washington County, Tenn., on Chuckey River j hard ton road through the farm; would make an ideal dairy farmi 4J acres tractor land; 1.27-acre tobacco allotment; 6-room house wired for stove; large barn, crib, smokehouse . and chicken house, good terms. See: REX McINTOSH Bee Log1, N. C. 11-1912 3p ' Integrated School (Continued From Page One) loom in his home. Finer hand writing hardly can be found to- day. "Strange as it may seem to is, keeping fire was one of the most ImDortant necessities of that time. But this is better under stood if we realize that it was a good quarter of a century before anything like the match came into use. "Mv srrandifather gives in great detail the kinds of wood best suited to preserve fire. And if the fire were to go out, here are his own words how to make a new one: "Take a piece of cotton no larger than the palm of your hand, pull the fibers till it becomes a loose mass. Place it on the ground in the midst of dry shavings. Then sprinkle' a few grains of gun. powder on the cotton. Then take a flint i and a piece of metal and strike them together so the spark will strike the cotton. Caution, use but very few grains of powder. "My grandfather was opposed to slavery all his life. Yet, he was1 of the opinion that it was not freedom from slavery the Negro wanted, but security from ill treatment. He said that if ; a slave Was treated decently he would seldom leave his master. He 1 mentions, several slave owners he knew, !ven in South Carolina and,! Georgia,' who never sold a slave, but took the best of care of them in their old age," . - Miss Elizabeth Goforth of 125 Spears Ave., Asheville, is a grand daughter of George Goforth. George died in 1887 and is buried in Payne Cemtery in Madison County. Tobacco Cards (Continued From Page One) mail as a means of issuing mar keting cards for the past two years thereby providing a special service to the farmer which few ASC offices follow. The success and future use of this method of issuing the cards will depend to a great extent on the cooperation given by the farm operator in the care he gives the card after it is placed in his mail box. Ramsey further explained that a market ing card is issued for each farm on which tobacco is produced and that the card is to be used only for identifying the tobacco mar keted from the farm for which it is issued. Any misuse of a card by false identification of tobacco is a violation of the marketing quota regulation for which a pen alty and reduction in farm allot ment will be imposed on the Vi olators. There is also a penalty involved for failure to return the card to the ASC office after mar keting hair been completed. Pro ducers who lose or misplace "'their card prior to completion t of mar keting moat go through a three- day waiting period before, being issued a replacement crd. C J In conclusion, the office man ager urged all farm operators to become lamtiiar with tneir re sponsibilities ' which are printed on the back of each card w that they might comply with the regu lations. , ; , ' JAPAN DUILDS " ' DLDTnOYER ' ' '' T 1 yo Japan has completed ' r ist pTTT-war destroyer, the 1,7- J-ton Ayamnu, it has been an- rvyof 1 1 en ' e 1 TrL.d r.fc9 CO s'ertuU "not n that C, opportu t Cobb's charges were . in good faith," and had ''only seized on an 7 to . embarrass i the Democratic A M party in Madison "We charge that it's entirely a publicity campaign looking to ward: the , general election,", ,n . declared, y,; j sy; The two I Republican ' members of the stats board joined the three Democratie members in 4i board's rding.vwhich said: ; v ' "No evidence has been develop ed here which indicated any fraud in the T Madison County special bond election, "We're asked to poll 3,600 peo ple who Voted in Madison County ... . on the suspicion of fraud based on the fact that the returns seemed large and lopsided to the Republican State chairman. "No evidence of any fraud has been introduced. "The State Board of Elections with the State Bureau of Investi gation made an investigation in Madison County and could find no fraud or irregularity in the elec tion. "The Board finds no fraud and the certification of the Madison County Board of Elections will stand." , Cobb made a lengthy presenta tion of his charges in which he specifically alleged that returns from 12 of 23 Madison precincts were falsified. In the Marshall precinct, for example, he pointed out that the vote was 905 to 30 against the armory bonds. To back up his charge, Cobb presented an affidavit from Ray mond Shelton, Republican judge in the - Shelton Laurel Precinct where the armory bonds were de feated by a 240 to 0 vote. Shelton.. said on the affidavit the 240 figure "is bad wrong" and "there could not have been over 40 (voters) while I was there."" Shelton said that at 5 p. 'm., the precinct registrar told him and other poll officials they could go home because "there was no use of staying any longer that there wouldn't be anyone else in" to vote. Shelton said the registrar told' him "to sign- the papers and he would finish up." i.In pther affidavit presented by vkk -ihfjir iv- 't v. 27 voting was very light in Mad ison. .'.; ' I 'Cobb asserted that thr Demo cratic party in Madison rigged the election returns as a means of "striking back f at T Governor Hodges" because Hodges had ac cused the Madison representative in the legislature of kck of coop eration. ' ;',- "They euccessfuilly slapped the Governor in the face by hitting hard against the bond issues ho supported, Cobb declared. "But they went too far in actually de feating two bond issues support ed by the rest of the voters in the state." Cobb took note of a statement by Trotter which pointed out that Republican precinct judges in Madison had signed the election returns and that Cobb's charges amounted to "an indictmentt' a gainst Republican judges. Cobb said that in Madison the Democratic contolled elections board had ,? selected persons , rec ommended by the Republican par ty as judges in only 8 of 23 pre cincts. "The Republican party does not endorse; support or - necessarily trust any of the so-called Repub lican judges hi most of the pre cincts In Madison ' Oounty,"r Cobb declared. At the end of hist presentation, Cobb agreed with Trotter that It all boiled down to this: "You think ftere was fraud because the vote was much too great and much too lopsided." .-, ' ' .' " i v.. .... . Masc-3 l 't P (Cont'nue' From Page One) Charles S. Roth of Mt. Hermon Lodge cf Asheville. He will be introd;; who sr Broad 1947. 1 l y Jesse James Bailey, 1 ss master of French in 1917, 1936 and " ister W. C. Silvers Jr, i -in W ' in for the meeting. : 'i Carolina Mason. 'a Dt M. E. : -i i ter: II Cf t I ' r C. If t r (C ' Oa Gettln Up Time, -;' vKf New Weataeej:-':i!;:. Hymna For Yrt)tifyH' Farm Newa ( ' . 4 '' GetUn' Up Time ' -' i . Weather ,;.; V" , if tyjrt-f Country Music 1 ' , '--'i : iA -i- f, is :": Morning Hymna Morning Devotion ' Pop ' Shop , ( . World News Roundup Income Tax (Continued From Page One) ember 30-Dec. 1, in Ashevidle; the third, December 2-3, in Charlotte; and the fourth December 7-8, in Greensboro. In addition to the regular pro grams, an advanced section will be offered- December 16-18, at North Carolina State College in Raleigh. The short courses will be con ducted by the State College De partment of Agricultural Econ omics in cooperation with the U 6. Internal Revenue Service, the N. C. Department of Revenue, the N. C. Society of Accountants the Social Security Administra tion, and the N. C. State College Extension Division. Bulletins containing complete details are available through the College Extension Division, Box 5125, State College Station, Ra leigh, N. C. Clothes, Shoes Are Needed Here If you have clothes or shoes that you don't need, the Marshall Parent-Teacher Association will be glad to accept them and distri bute them to school children from the first grade through grade five who need them. Contact the following ladies: Mrs. Kermit Cody, Mrs. John Corbett, Mrs. Frank Fisher, Mrs. Iioyd Slagle or Mrs. Talmadge McLean. Mrs. Margery Jenkins is chairman of the . committee. Her phone No. is 4231. v 6:C3 5:20 6:00 :05 8:30 :S5 7:00 ab 7:U 8:00 8:15 8:80 9:00 uyuuua Vol!' fire eDooEB TEne (Farm Contact Your Township sentative or Directors for This Is The Only County-State-National Organization , Main Objective: We Wish'to make the Madison County Bureau ' .one pf the largest and most active , 't Units in North Carolina f I Cervice CV.;V-,i,-: j'j'j: rarty Line f:'-4y' News 'uv. tV-B;;'-t Party Uu'tW-Pi 10:05 11:00 11:05 12:00 12:10 12:20 12:80 12:85 13:45 1:00 Sural ,Eouadupi-i'-i-H'-W Tradlne ,Iwt4;;t Dinner Bell ; Jamboree '4l Nawa Bulletia Boar4 Chuck Wagon Gang Farm Forma , -, , . Para Market ' Revert Basketball- (Continued From Page Four) Dec. 8 Cane River home Dec. 11 Laurel home Dec. 15 Fines Creek home Jan. 8 Spring Creek home Jan. 12 Cane River there Jan. 15 Hot Springs there Jan. 19 Mars Hill home Jan. 22 Marshall there Jan. 26 Laurel there Jan. 29 open Feb. 2 open Feb. 5 open Feb. 9 Mars Hill there Feb. 12 Marshall home Feb. 16 FinW Creek there Feb.' 19 open Feb. 23 open Feb. 26 open PLANE ON CITY STREET Atlantic City A biplane be- came disabled recently, then skimmed over telephone wires to land on a residential street, nick ing a street sign, house and car on the way in. No one was in jured. The plane had been aloft spray ing insecticide to eradicate mos quitoes thought to be bearing the disease encephalitis. Mars Hill FFA (Continued From Page One) Sonny Payne and Donny Smith. North Buncombe placed third. Its team consists of Dennis Whitt, Ronald Ball, Marshall Roberts and Mickey Payne. A. C. Reyn olds placed fourth; East, Yancey, fifth; Valley Springs, sixth; and iaareau :e Set Up For The Benefit OF FARMERS To Increase Income 0:11! 9:33 10:00 acta Mttv Gomnlel Details Membership Open To ALL Farmers i ,! - Regardless of Party Affiliation . 1 C:,".-'-'.aT Gospel Sing T.-.- The Rev. Robert Harris 'News ';:'v ';.':;-:::.;;; Hillbilly Hoedown 4 I ,,; blew '::'-'i 0;A !iU;0 Jerry,'JJve V''' , .Country Sundown " Serenade V VMWb Every uour on the Hour . l.'Xr.GMiHL HURTINO YOUT IK I 1 : ffflmexfJaf Relief f A fair 4rtp ol OUTOROS trHMM nllr from tonMot!iw po mitt illowithi ull to Ix ot u4 thai pr- Wade Huey (Continued From Page One) nor a single committee meeting of which he was a member. "I traveled all over the state from Hendersonville to the coast", Mr. Huey said, "and was associated with some of the finest men I've ever known". He has also served as Modera tor of the French Broad Associa tion since 1947, except for three years and has served on the exe cutive committee of the associa tion continuously since 1947. Named to the board of trus tees of Mars Hill College at the convention were: T. H. Broyhill, Lenoir; W. R. Cham bers, Marion; C. G. Fox, Hickory; the Rev. Carlyle Marney, Charlot te; the Rev." Robert Seymour, Ohapel Hill; C. C. Wall, Lexing ton; the Rev. W. F. Woodall, Spindale; Robert Wrenn, Gaston- Spring Creek, seventh. , The only contestant to make a perfect score in the regular con test and the runoff was Marvin q wiaiis. - wv - , The tools for the contest were - furnished and displayed by Citi-. zen8, Hardware Co., of Asheville. 51 of Every Farmer J in 1:C5 lilO 1:45 2:00 2:05 2:00 8:05 4:00 4:05 6:00 :i8 6:00 News E.cpre V