TH1 CLASSIFIED ADS WORLD'S LARGEST JAMBS ALLEN 649-2104 (Home Marshall. N. C. FOR SALE - Wood, Corf. Lim Call or aat CLINf .AIJLKN JAKE IMNBTVXV, mmm. 6-21tfc credit to luuso. P"?1" ""-to moat now cabinet model AUTO MATIC ZIG-ZAG Sewing Ma chine to thio area. Total balance $49.20. Detail where seen. Write: National's Credit Dept., Box 6126, Charlotte, N. C. 7-9 8-20c FOR SALE at the Fabric Center on Marshall By-Pass little girls shift dresses, size 10 and U Price $2.89. Also nice selection of materials. 79, 16 pd. WANTED IMMEDIATELY Two Insurance Salesmen for this area, age 21-60, no debit All leads furnished. $160 weekly earnings. Write to Insurance Box oll AsheviUe, N. C, stating age, ad drees, and telephone number or call Mr. Buff 253-7665. 7-9, 16chg. HELP WANTED Be a Raw leigh Dealer. Good year round earnings. No capital necessary. Write Rawleigh Dept. NCG-680-870, Richmond, Virginia. 7-9 & 7-2Sp LAND AUCTION Tuesday, Juyl 28, 10 a. m., rain or shine Harry Ramsey Property, former ly known as Tom N. Ramsey Es tate; located 4 miles southwest of Marshall on NC 63. Tract 1: 58.9 acres; tract 2: 64.3 acres; to be sold in separate tracts or as a whole. "Dube Ramsey," Auction eer For further information con tact HARRY RAMSEY, RFD 1, Marshall, or "DUBE" RAMSEY, Walnut. 7-16, 23p WE TRAIN YOU quickly, easi ily. You start earning immedi ately. A pleasant, friendly activ ity for you. Nationally establish ed cosmetic company. Write Avon Mgr., at name and address below or call AL 8-8592. MRS. DOROTHY BRUTON or call AL8-8592. 801 Ford Diesel, $1696.00; Ford Dexter Diesel with line shaft anc new tires, $1576.00; 660 Ford Trac tor, $1296.00; 800 Ford Tractor, $1860.00; 20 Ferguson Tractor, $660.00; Cub Tractor with culti vator, $495.00 ; 20 other Tractors $96.00 up; Mowers, Rakes, Balers, Plows, Disc, Tiller, Grader tii ttaIa nbnfoM nnH other Farm Equipment New and used Tractor ana mower rara. P. A. RAMBO 8 miles south of Greenville, Tenn Phone 639-S412 Camp Creek 6-26 7-16p EXCITING READING IN PARADE MAGAZINE Tkor.'j a vnKnc treat in store for you in the exciting pages of Parade Magazine distributed ev ery Sunday with the Baltimore Maura Ameriram. Take the "Per sonality Parade" feature, for in stance. This is where you'll find out the answers to questions you've been asking yourself about important personalities. Be sure to read PARADE MAGAZINE every week with the THE BALTIMORE NEWS AMERICAN on sale at your local newsdealei "OVD c ATI? A Tri-nv Tin Q f pi V 28 acres land, located at Alexander! Rt. 1; partly ciearea; roaa on nu of property; fine site for build im, Alan for sale, one acre land with 6-room house; bath; elec tricity; phone; also located at Al exander HZ. I. nnw or CHARLES F. ISRAEL Alexander, N. C, R-l 7-2,9,16p ATTRACTIVE young women, no experience) necessary, good start ing salary. Nutritious meals and uniforms furnished. Time and half pay for over 40 boors, op tutrfmnifcr to meet people, vaca tion with pay. Gsoup insurance and hospitalization. A trade ucation, hrtptnl an pieaaa sw Wo Sunday work. Ap ply SAW Cafeteria, Aahevffle, North Carolina. 7-9tte CHAIN LINK FENCE Toe) Rail Inetaded As low as 80e a foot WESTERN CAROLINA FENCE COMPANY 109 Rook Hill Road mj turn SPARS HUB INCOME Refilling and collecting money ftSHlBW TYPE higl quality coin operated dispense m -araa. No selta. To quaWy ... Kav mt. reference. aaa ... tionn ruh. 8evcn to twelve hour, weakly can net - ii . WK. ItiNun. Mora full ii i.v. mmim interview. write P. O. BOX 41W, PITTO- mmr.H. PA. 16203. mciuuo phone number. 7-16p I llil" a .a.f aTa-i sjj ' M ar-V M I 50-ACRE FARM "K bauj Good 6-room nouse: z oarua other building. Well rasd ad fenced. 79-one hundredths tobac co base. Would swap for small farm with tobacco base and good k.,iii;r nrt difference. oee LUTHER HAGAN in Rector Corner 7-13, 20p MANAGER WANTED Nation ally established organizauun. r fer woman with direct-to-home sales experience. Management experience desirable but not re quired. Car necessary- Salary. For interview write or wire L. H. MacDonald, 1 1 ii Manning Drive, 1 Charlotte, N. C. 7-16c FOR SALE Two pairs of fine Beagle pups 9 weeks old iblack, white and tan out of a fine bitch and aired by a regis tered field champion. Beautiful mouth and ears. Per pair, $25.00. PAUL A. TUGMAN Mars Hill, N. C. 7-16p I960 VOLKSWAGON with heater and sun roof; clean; in good con dition. Phone 689-3881 or see DAVID M. ROBERTS Box 515 Mars Hill, N. C. '-16tfc ROARING FORK MRS. HUBERT P ANGLE, Correspondent Several families are home on va cations. Some are as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Wein Bru yn, Starla and Bob of Iowa. They are spending their vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvtt Wyatt. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Pangle and Mr.' and Mrs. Thomas Allison. ' ' ',' Mr. and Mrs. Billv Foster and son and Mr. and Mrs. Edd Foster and children of Ohio are spending their vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mehrtn Foster and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Allison. Mr. and Mrs. Foster's daughter, Opal and her husband and daughter are also at home at this time . Mr. and Mrs. Rot Parker and baby of Indiana are spending his furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rochelle Parker. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Allison and children visited her parents over the weekend. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Roberts of Haywood County went back home Sunday on a pic nic. Thev were as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Pangle and two children of this place; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Roberts and three chil dren of Marshall; Mr. and Mrs. Junior Sams and children, Mr. and Mrs. Handy Allison and children of Soring Creek; Mr. and Mrs. Don Waldroup of Bluff; Nathan, Dale, Rogers and David of the home. Visitors were Mr. and Mrs Charles Sams, Mrs. Carolina Pan ele. Garv and Stevie Frisbee. All reported a good dinner and a nice time. Mrs. Lillie Bryant and son, Wil lie Friabee, returned home Mon day after spending some time with relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Brown and children of Michigan are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trantham at this time. On Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Hu bert Pangle were visited by the following: Mr. Wein Bruyn, Star- la and Bobby, Mr. Edward Wyatt and Mr. Arthur Fowler. Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gar- din, July 6, a son, Jacky Ray, Rattlesnakes (Continued from Page One) onnnArhaml ia another matter. He is well camouflaged in dead leaves and roekly ledges Where he pre fers to live. Moat of the poison snakes are easily identified by their hkk body and' flat diamond ahaned heads. It is typical of poi son snakes to be shy and prefer to run rather than attack, yet flim ! always the exception. In this dry period, ail snakes am nu- rrw toward water, so chil dren playing along streams ana m.v, honld he constantly alert and everyone should be briefed on the procedures to follow in of snake bites. . A MR. MERCHANT READS TOOK AD m THESE COLUMNS Used Cars 64 JEEP Truck New, Heater, Red 64 CJ5 JEEP Green 63 FORD Fastback, 2-door, S. D.. RAH. Burgandy, 390 Motor, Sharp $2395.00 61 VOLKSWAGON, R&H $1095.00 61 FALCON 2-dr., RAH, Black $995.00 61 FALCON 2-dr, RAH, White $895.00 61 FORD 2-dr., H.T., R&H, Automatic $1495.00 60 FALCON 2-door, New Overhauled Motor $695.00 fifl FATION Station Waeon, 4-door, R&H, Automatic $795.00 57 FORD 2-door H. T.; S. D. White $445.00 60 CORVAIR 700 Coupe; Red & White; R&H; automatic $895.00 66 FORD 4-door: Automatic; Blue & White $295.00 67 MERCURY H.T.: RAH: au tomatic $198.00 t 68 FORD tt-ton; V-8; speed transmission $395.00 60 FORD 2-door; Bad Trans mission & next motor; uoou Body $75.00 69 FORD 2-door, H. Tv, R&H, Automatic, wane $995.00 69 FORD Galaxie, 2-door, R&H, Automatic, Black and wmte $895.00 59 FORD Galaxie, 4-dr., R&H, Automatic $895.00 59 CHEVROLET Belaire, 4-dr., K&H, Automatic $995.00 57 FORD H. T. $195.00 57 OLDS H. T. $345.00 57 FORD 4dr., S. D. $295.00 57 FORD 4-dr., Automatic $345.00 66 MERCURY H. T., Rough $95.00 66 CHEVROLET 4-door $145.00 55 CHEVROLET 4-door $145.00 66 CHEVROLET 2-dr., Rough $85.00 47 lMi-ton clean for model $445.00 60 CHEVROLET -ton $345.00 SEVERAL OLDER AND CHEAPER CARS SHOPPING l CMY Motor Solos Inc. Phone: 649-3381 MARSHALL, N. C. I Dealer FrancKU No. 19U I (Coathned from Page One) ed Democrats m the precinct ware listed oa the registration book more than one time many oi them three or four times. The registration book showed at most of then were cheeked as having voted nor than ones in the May 66 primary. Those showing on the book as havine- voted more than once vot ed as both Democrats and Repub licans, if the registration book was Included among more than 800 names on the registration book were several who were dead or Ion? removed from the precinct hut. who still mw raannlad HI having voted usually more than once on May 80. Big Pine is the fifth precinct to be contested by Norton's attor neys. They told N. C. Elections Board Chairman William Joslin Satur day that they had evidence of fraud to present in several other precincts. If the state board finds enough weight in Norton's evidence, it can rale invalid all the ballots counted in contested precincts and declare Norton the winner of the Senate seat. Meantime Ponders attorneys have started legal maneuvering to head off such a decision and to tie the state board's hands. No matter how the decisions go in all the preliminary court pro ceedings, it is considered a fore gone conclusion here that the con tested Ponder-Norton election will wind up in the N.C. Supreme Court. EBBS CHAPEL Testimony Friday coming from the Ebbs Chapel precinct gave the State Board an almost perfect ex ample of how an election should not be held. The ingredients: an absence of voting booths, poll books and reg istration book: the presence maybe of a little bit of liquor to keen things lively around the polling nlace: the informality of a neigh borhood cookout; and the secret ballot bedamned That, according to about half a dozen witnesses, is iust about how the election was held on May 30 W ie upM V&apei precinct. According to testimony from persons who visited or worked at the 1IIUmMl-4 arecinct officials didrt-t bother keeping a poll book showing the names of all persons who voted. If a registration book was kept in the Ebbs Chapel precinct, it did little more than collect dust dur ing the day, according to the tes timony. Several times during the day the polling room was left vacant by election officials for as long as 80 minutes at a umhe. The collective effect of testimo ny presented to the state board was that almost anybody in the county could have wandered into the polling place and voted At least one member of the state board, Joseph Zaytoun of Ra leigh, was impressed. One thing about it, he said, "I call that a free election." CALIFORNIA CREEK A key witness Thursday after noon from the California Creek nrecinct. James Rkunsey, a 32- year-old farmer, testified 35 votes too many were counted. In one of their strongest moves of the week, Norton's lawyers pro duced affidavits from at least 25 California Creek residents who said Uliuuiina v . 1 1... &,ct...w..Vu they did not vote May 80 although II 1"VA Study (Co tinned from Bag One) the survey, a detailed Inventory of resources In the five-county area, has bean completed. The second nhaae. an analysis la depth, will be completed In October, he said The third phase will be an eval itton of growth possibilities, Kit- banrna noted. The preliminary report includes an inventory of the problems and opportunities of the area in peo ple, agriculture, . recreation, wa ter, minerals, industry and public and private institutions. When completed, the entire sur vey is expected to cost some $260, 000. In the development of water resources, the TV A favors con struction of multi-use dams and impoundment for flood control, recreation, municipal and industri al use, Kilbourne said. Committee members attending the session Tuesday were Edney. Masburn. B. W. Thomason of Bre vard, F. C. Green of Haywood County. Thomas H. Sawyer of Weaverville. Chairman Coke Cand ler of the Buncombe County Board of Commissioners, AsheviUe City Manager J. Weldon Weir and George M. Stephens of AsheviUe. Baptists Vote (Continued from Page One) ly five votes. The board also approved partici pation of its seven colleges in the Higher Education Facilities Act Congress passed last year. The vote, by a 37-12 margin, followed 1-hour discussion. The Rev- Mr. Ferguson was a principal spokesman against the proposal. Both measurea had1 the backing of the Baptiat State Council on Christian Education. The act paaaed by Congreaa en ables the federal government to provide one-third of the cost of certain campua buildinga. Earlier, at the final session of the meeting at Fruitland Baptist Assembly near Hendersonville, the board approved creation of two new staff positions an admin istrative assistant to the general secretary-treasurer and a statis tical secretary, , of the assistant to Dr. W. Perry Crouch will be primarily in th field of pastor-church re lationships. The position will be filled at a later date. Ralph M. (Continued From Page One) history and political science at Mars Hill College since 1926 and has been dean since 1942. He is past president of both the South ern Association of Junior Colleges and the North Carolina College Conference. Two years ago he was honored by his alma mater, Wake Forest College, for "distinguished service to education." they were checked off as voting in the precinct registration book. Ponder's attorneys tried to dis credit Ramsey's testimony with witnesses who said Ramsey was disorderly at the poll and quoted him as saying: "The Communists are trying to take over." Norton's lawyers say they have already proven enough boxes should be disqualified to have the election reversed. They indicated, however, thev would call witness i es from other precincts when hear There's A First Citizens Bank That s Red . Farms YOU WILL HMD ON-THE-SPOT AUTHORITY FOR APPROVING LOANS and you pay LOW BANK RATES! Stroma 45 North Carolina CommuW W 90 Branchy. MON., THURS., 9 to 5 FRIDAY 9 to 6 Concerning Walnut Postmaster General Post Office Department Wangton6.D.a Dear Sir: We wish to strongl protest the proposal to do away with the Walnut, N. C, Post Office by establishing a rural route out of Marshall, N. C, post office to serve the area and reducing the walnut post omce w m rumi wu. The destructWh' of ihe Identity of this community and tha elimination of postal attriee to which this community Is entitled, is politically motivated and Is a backlash of the destruction of the Walnut School two. years ago by the political bosses who have recently brought nationwide publicity and shame to the county after having been exposed in their political conduct. We understand that some residents have agreed to this pro posal as a way to get rid of the present Acting Postmaster at Walnut who is a resident of Marshall. The majority of the pa trons of the Walnut postoffice including some patrons who have agreed to the proposal as a means of getting rid of the non-resident Acting Postmaster, prefer that the Post Office Department permit some of the local people who have offered to build a poet office here to do eo, and put a Postmaster in the office who resides at Walnut. If a rural route is necessary it should be established at the Walnut post office. We further understand that the Acting Postmaster at Mar shall endorses the proposal on behalf of his political bosses. This man has already fired two employees in the Marshall post office for political considerations and who were returned to duty by the Civil Service Commission. The Post Office Department in Washington ordered this Acting Postmaster's removal nearly itwo years ago . . but he hate been retained because of the political pressures of these political bosses. The present Acting Postmaster at Walnut has done his ut most to lower the status of the post office so that k could be eliminated. His belligerent attitude toward the patrons of the office; his refusal to use clerical assistance in the office and requiring the patrona to hunt him in order to get service. We tagree that we should have a new post office, which has been offered by the community. The Walnut post office was estab liahed in 1906 and we have had aatisfactory service with a resi dent postmaster until the present political machinery has seen fit to take over and ruin the community and county. It is requested that proper postal authorities meet with the patrons of this post office en masae to obtain the views of the pa trons on the proposal and to have exposed the true political mo tivations of this proposal. Paul H. Ballard Effie L. Ballard Mrs. Minnie Davis Julia E Roberts Carrie Prit'' Paul R. Randall Walter Roberts Gliftie Roberts L. D. Roberta OaUie Payne V McKinley Massey Noah Martin Jobie Fortner Lattie Fortner Richard Baker Baas Lunsf ord Kittie P. Lunsford Annie H. McDevitt Kenneth Treadway Emma D. Ramsey S. A. Ramsey Odessa V. Henderson Mrs. Tennie Henderson ings resume. The courtroom was usually packed last week and the atmos- nnprn t times was tense with op posing lawyers trading bitter re marks. But humor creeped into the pro ceedings many times. One witness testified that a Big Pine precinct resident was check H off as votinir Mav 30 twice as a Republican and once as a Dem ocrat. 1 A. E. Leake, one of Ponder's at Just Right For BANK LOAN Estate Auto Loans Cattle and Farm Eauipment HOME IMPROVEMENT 20 Sort Pock Sftfart AL2-5321 Walnut, N. C July 16, 1 Robert B. Henderson Alveda L. Henderson Roy Roberta Clyde Davis Bernice Da via Jonah Price Rata Price Curtis Marler Ray Buckner Doil Worley Nelos Roberts Loy Buckner Don Wild Earl Roberta Virginia D. McClure Myrtle Reed Clyde H. McClure Mary L. McClure Nell Thomas Ruby Davis John Davis R H. McClure Rev. Loyd Chandler Paid Political Advt. torneys, rose to his feet and said: "We object to him voting twice as a Republican and only once as a Democrat." Later on, however, another wit ness stated that a person had vot ed twice as a Democrat and only once as a Republican. Hiram Ward, Republican mem ber of the State Board, jokingly remarked to Leake, "That puts us about even, doesn't it Mr. Leake?" i H & Trust Co. Your Needs! UlllBiU I