MARSHALL, N. C, AUGUST 5, 1066 THE H! CORD Page Three Mars Hill News MBS. J. W HUFF. Corrtpondsat panM Mrs. J. A. Bills, the former Miss Jean Webster, with her three chil dren, Lynn, Jay, and Stephen, of Craig Air Fore Bast, Selma, Ala., recently visited her aunt, Mrs. L. LTvann at her bone here. Her hii)band, Cspt. ElHs, expects to leave soon for service in Okina wa, and the family is to accom pany him. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Cooper, Mias Hattie Edwards and Mrs. Leila Hodge went to Thomasville over the week-end for the annual home coming celebration at Mills Home. Mrs. A. E. Carter left Thursday of last week for a week's visit to her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. G rover Fowler, at their home near Gastonia. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bryan return ed recently from a six weeks' vis it in Detroit with their children there. Mr. end Mrs. Plato Reece and Mr. and Mrs. Cline West went down to Winston-Salem Saturday before last for the wedding of Aisom Worley, 70, Passes Saturday; Funeral Monday Services for Aisom Worley, 70, of Marshall Rt. 7, who died Sat urday night, July 31, 1966, were held at 2:30 p. m., Monday in North Fork Baptist Church, of which he was a member for the past 60 years. The Rev. Lloyd Ponder and the Rev. Eugene Moors officiated and burial was in the church cemetery. Pallbearers were nephews. Mr. Worley was a lifelong resi dent of Madison County and a re tired farmer. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Maggie Cogdill Worley; three sons, Foy snd Ray of Marshall Rt. 7 and Lewis Worley of Ma rion; a daughter, Miss Ruth Wor ley of the home; two brothers, Calvin of Marshall Rt. 7, and Crawford Worley of Marion Rt. 2; two sisters, Mrs. James Massey of Hot Springs Rt. 1 and Mrs. Robert Cogdill of Waynesville; and six grandchildren. Bowman Funeral Home was in charge. Renew Your Subscription To The News-Record ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT IN ONE HOUR T-4-L must stop the itch and burning or your 48c back at any drug store. In 3 to 6 days, in fected skin sloughs off. Then wstch HEALTHY skin appear! NOW at ALL DRUG STORES CAN YOU AFFORD TO LOSE HALF A YEAR'S INCOME? A big whopping medical bill will easily take that much ... and morel A prolonged hospital stay, a major operation, expensive round-the-clock care for months can cost thousands and thousands of dollars. WHERE WILL YOU GET THE MONEY? Your present hospital-surgical plan may help some-with benefits for hospital ex pense. But when these benefits run out . . . and when you run up big bills outside the hospital . . . what then? THE ANSWER IS--- CATASTROPHE H.E.LP. ', It's a whole new concept in health insur- ance, providing true protection against financial lots from huge medical expense, to keep you from years of debts to pay. GET THE FULL STORY On Health Expense Loss Protection, a tr.ir,irnn Plan that makes sense! The "Successor to mm JL AMI 1RIGAN HEALTH f NSUftANCe COMPANY CLYDE L. ENGLISH AGENCY EDWARD CARTER, Agent Office in Tugman Building Doug Robinson, Jr., and Misi Jean Carol Morgan, which was report ed last week. Mrs. Clou Lippard expects Col. and Mrs. James R. Williams, of Miami, Fla., parents of Mrs. Seth Lippard, to visit her snd Mrs. Ter rell ttiis week-end. Mr. snd Mrs. Jesse Fields, of Lynchburg, Vs., were guests of Miss Owa Bradley last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Burnette snd son of San Antonio, Texas are expected this week for a visit to his mother, Mrs. Susie Burnette, whom they plan to take with them on a trip to Norfolk, Washington, and New York. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith and children, Karen, Travis, and Kellye Jean, have returned from a two weeks' vacation visit to hie par ents in Pensacola, Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Ramsey of the Beech Glen section had as house guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bolt and young sons, Danny and Timmy, of Troy, N. Y. Prefix Name ,Is Reserved For Herd Of Lawrence Ponder Lawrence M. Ponder, Marshall, will have the exclusive use of the prefix "Merlin" in naming all Registered Hoistein dairy animals bred in that hard. Use of this prefix name has been granted by Heiatean-Friesian Association of America; it also becomes a part of official breed records at the national headquar ters in Brattleboro, Vermont. Nearly 1,600 prefixes are re served for Registered Holatein breeders each year. More than 38,000 are now on file for use in giving distinctive names to home bred cattle. Reservation and use of these prefix names became an active membership requirement in 1966. In using an exclusive prefix name for his animals, the pure bred Holstein breeder establishes a "tirade mark" which is used in all published information concern ing the performance of his dairy animals. The origination of nrefix names often stems from farm" names, family name combinations, or unique geographical or historical features of the farm operation. Thus, the exclusive nature of each prefix is preserved in selecting a "one and only" term. ALL PURPOSE 3IN0NE0IL Oils Everything Prevents Rust REGULAR -OIL SPRAY -ELECTRIC MOTOR Major Medical" ..dLIFB 1 . MAWYWAHO J BALTtMOKt. HJ I IIP S K ' Iff Shown left is Miss Flossie Elizabeth Ray receiving a scholarship certificate from Mrs. E. O. Burnette, a board member of the National Foundation Infantile Paralysis and representative in Madison County. Miss Ray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Travis Rajy, of Marshall, is a graduate of Laurel High School and Mars Hill College. Miss Ray is one of eight recipients who received the March of Dimes scholarships from the Pisgah Chapter. Miss Ray plans to study medicine at the University of North Carolina. Hot Springs News R. C KJKBY, Correspondent Mr. and Mrs. DowsU Bicker and children, Michael and Tony bars moved to Kinston. Dowel) bas ac cepted a position there. Miss Marianne Smith and sis ter, Nancy Thames Smith, of Fredriekaburg, Vs., are miring their grandmother, Mrs. George Lippard. Mr. Ghaa. Fowler of the Armed Forces, stationed In Alaska, haa been home on furlough for ten days. He left Monday to report to Fort Sill, Okla. Mr. and Mrs. U. M. Wilkie of Fletcher visited Mr. snd Mrs. Paul Mo Fa 11 over the weekend. Mr. snd Mrs. Hardy Woody are visiting1 relatives in Winston-Salem this week. Zeb V. Angel, 88, Passes Monday; Funeral Wednesday Zeb V. Angel, 88, of Mars Hill Rt. 2, died Monday, August 2, 1965 in an Asheville hospital af ter a short illness. He was a native of Madison County and a retired farmer. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Jerome Metcalf of Mars Hill Rt. 2; two sons, Fred of Waynesville and Arnold Angel of Asheville; a sister, Mrs. Nelly Hampton of Asheville; a brother, Willard An gel of Mars Hill Rt. 2; eleven grandchildren and 12 great-grand children. Services were held at 2 p. m., Wednesday in Paint Fork Baptist Church. The Rev. Willard Coffey, the Your Doctor certainly would not want you to take his prescription to the hardware store to be filled . . . nor should you trust your radio-television repair to people who are not specialists with years of training and expensive test instruments for this most complex job. We Have the Best In Equipment, Parts, And "Know-How" Picture Tubes Installed $29.95 up We also offer the best repairs at very COME We Are Now In The R. S. GIBBS BUILDING 1 I. V. Howell Radio & Television Co. Your RCA Dealer Miss Hassl Moore, our expert, has erected a nice on the hone let, sad will her customers to the new place. Larry Moors of Man everal days tola west wUft hii grandmother, Mrs. PuraaM Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Finley, Mis sionaries from Mexico, have been visiting their sister, Mrs. Sarah Thomas, and have (one to Louis ville, Ky., and will also visit their daughter in Virginia before re turning to Mexico. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Kirby visit ed Mr. and Mrs. G. I. Davis, in Bryson City the first of the week. Miss David Treadway of Knox- ville is the guest of Miss Libby Wright at this time. Rev. Frank Blalock and the Rev. Lyman Rich officiated and burial was in Gil'lis cemetery. Pallbear ers were J. G. and Robert Gard ner, Paul Carter, Virgil Metcalf, Joe Chandler, and Grover Gillis. Holcombe Funeral Home was in charge. in fine watches and watch reasonable prices. SEE US! A n --L. ; 1 'Vmtem rUTSHALL TOWN MRS. R. FRANKLIN, Correspondent Great progress is being made on toe new church at the Cutahall Cemetery. One more day is aM that k needed to finish laying the blocks to start the framework. All wishing to make a donation in memory of a friend or relative, would greatly be appreciated. Mr. G. M. Cutahall is treasurer; the finance committee is: Mrs. Chari ty Arrowood, Mrs. Carrie Gunter, Mr. M. P. Tweed and Mrs. Jancer Franklin. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Keith and children have returned to the States after serving a number of years overseas. Mrs. Keith is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Cutahall. Miss Patsy Hanks has returned to her Job in Gerton, N. C, after spending s week with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Tomfmie Banks. Her sister, Zella Rea, is there, also. Mr. and Mrs. Jancer Franklin and family were visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Ledford and Mr. and Mrs. Troy Ramsey and family Sunday. Mies Dicie Hensley and Mr. James I. Whitaker were married July 23, in Gate City, Va. Mrs. ZuU Franklin and son, aad Mrs. James I. Whitaker were visiting their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Ledford, Sunday. They also visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hensley and family. Mr. and Mrs. Landon Franklin and family have been visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Franklin and Mr. and Mrs. Grif fin. STUMBLING BLOCK Since the beginning of time in tolerance has been the biggest stumbling block to progress. HO-HUM MM What This PUo Needs. Polka Is A Few Good Ads In This NEWSPAPER bss , e sail t r m -j. i RO Every day he helps people enjoy new convenience and i of mind Dy providing tnem witn nationwide s All ln-One olan that includes all your insurance in one package, requiring only one monthly payment. To learn HI about this simple, complete protection, call your Nationwide agent Shown above is Clayton Wilson (left) son of Mr. and and Mrs. Wade Wilson, of Marshall Rt. ,1, with Charles Craine, Ranger, N. C. Forest Service, Marshall. Clayton represented Madison County at the annual North Caroli na Forestry Camp for farm boys held last week at Single tary Lake near Elizabethtown, N. C. The camp was con ducted by the N. C. Forest Service of the Department of Conservation and Development and was sponsored by the Southern Pulpwood Conservation Association. At the camp approximately 90 boys were given basic forestry techniques and enjoyed recreational activities as well. ROARING FORK MRS. HUBERT PANGLE, Correspondent Gary and Stevie Frisbee visited David and Danny Gardin Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tranthaan and Freddy visited Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Tranthasn Sunday after noon. Friday, Mr. snd Mrs. Hubert Pangle, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Pan gle. Ken and Angela, Mr. and Mrs. CHetis Pangle, Lisa and Teri, Gary and Stevie Frisbee aad Donna Whitson went to Cold Springs on a picnic. Bill Shetley visited Dan Gar- Bring this Coupon to Westgate Merchant Good FIVE For FREE KIDDIE DIDES AT WESTGATE AUGUST 5-6-7 ONLY Present This WESTGATE Shopping Center Merchant ASHEVILLE Who would have ever guessed what he really does every day? hP P&IHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHbI :liinwHDDDH REEVES, Agent sia mmm a.H rnoie.Q9-zuzi marsim, OFFICE OPEN EVERY DAY 9 a. m. 4:30 p. m. OVER ROBERTS PHARMACY today. i Ct. Istlanrist Hitnl Hn Nhmsm Ci-litiusiw llklwiaw li. -IUj llhuUlkaiuttit din Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. R Whitaon and Donna spent Saturday night witfi his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Whitson of Shutin. Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. att Pangle and children, Mrs. Garolint Pangle, Gary and Stevie Frisbee visited Chimney Bonk Perk, ao4 all enjoyed a nice lime. Mr. and Mrs. Bay Gerdm aad children visited his parents, Mr and Mrs. Dan Gardin, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cletis Pangle and girls of Chicago returned home Saturday. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Pangle, Ken aad Angela, who plan to spend a week In Chicago. Coupon To Any mm, n. i leweiiHUi aw life health homecar 660-3706 Phone 689-3136 Mart Hill, N. C Mar. HilL N. C.