The Appalachian Conference Topic Number One: Energy critical of Oct _ ,N.Y. . of the coo will be to define the will play in resolving the nation's energy crisis while ensuring that demands of increased energy production will not threaten health, safety or en vironmental standards in the region. The conference will also examine ways to contain the rising cost of health care, a serious threat to the Mountain Music Festival The Mountain Music Association of Western North Carolina will present the first annual Autumn Mountain Music Festival at the Asheville Civic Center Oct. 13 at 7 p.m. Tickets are $4. Senior citizens and children one-half price. In addition to other area musicians Byard Ray and the Appalachian Folks of Madison County will be performing. ..." Gospel Sing There will be a benefit -gospel singing for Walter ? Anders Oct. IS at the French - Broad Elementary School, beginning at 7:90. Groups participating will be the Old Time Way Quartet, Glory Dawn Quartet, Hansel Hensley Singers, Alexander Youth Group, and others. There will be no admission charge, but a free will of fering will be taken. Mormons Hold Open House i The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mor mon) will hold two open house meetings in order to acquaint people in this area with their teachings and beliefs. The first will be Oct. 13 from 7-9 p.m. at the Greater Ivy Community Center (old Beech Glen School). The program will begin at 7:30 and the speaker for the evening will be Clyde Mar sh banks, formerly of Mars : Hill but now living in Bir mingham, Mich. The second open house will J be Oct. 20 from 7-9 at the ; same location. The speakers i for the evening will be ? members of the Gerald ' Tomberlin family of Mars f Hill. 1 All interested families are ^ urged to attend. Revival * The Hopewell Baptist j Church will hold a revival ; meeting from Oct. 14-20. Ser r vices will begin each night at 7:30. !; The visiting evangelist will 1, be the Rev. Carl Presnell, '? pastor of Allen's Creek Baptist ?'Church in Waynesville. He ?; will deliver the message each night. There will be special singing ;? each night as follows: Sunday night, Belva Quartet; Monday ? night, Homer and Margaret {Thurman; Tuesday night, to ;be announced; Wednesday ' night, The Tokens; Thursday night, The Happy Travellers; Friday Night, the Baldwin Family; Saturday night, the Glory Dawn Quartet- There will also be a special singing by the Hopewell church. . The Rev. Ralph McDevitt, pastor, invites everyone to come and Join us in praising the Lord Jesus Christ who can meat your every need economic security of the Region'* people New York Gov. Hugh L. Carey. ARC States' co chairman and conference host, said, "Possessing a major share of the nation's domestic energy reserves, Appalachia is a key to any solution of our energy problems. The ARC federal state partnership can serve as a vehicle for the cooperation we must have between Frostbelt and Sunbelt to meet national energy goals and to guarantee Appalachian citizens their full share of the ff economic growth we expect from expanded energy production" ARC Acting Federal Cochairman William E. Albert said, "ARC and its member states are actively developing energy from ail the Region's rich resources: coal, water, wood and sun. The conference will help catalog our experiences in the energy field and demonstrate our readiness to lead the rest of the nation toward the energy goals now being developed by the Administration and Congress." The conference, to be held st the Holiday Inn Arena in Binghamton, will be attended by governors of the Appalachian states, delegates from each state selected by the governors, federal of ficials and citizens of the Region. Registration will begin on Oct. 22. On Oct. 23, conference participants will attend energy panels on: replacing oil with coal: coal switching and conversion; organizational arrangements and institutional barriers; unconventional aources and energy conservation; energy efficient transportation of resources, people and goods; and protecting life and the environment. A health pane) will deal with health care cost control. Panel findings and recommendations will be presented at a plenary session on the morning of Oct. 24. The Appalachian Regional Commission will meet that afternoon with recom mendations from the con ference as the major item of business. ? "? . ' ' . -- Cystic Fibrosis Campaign Will Open Oct 19 Wanda Carter and Gay Henderson, chairpersons for the Mars Hill area cystic fibrosis "Kiss Your Baby" campaign, announced that the campaign will be conducted Oct. 19 and 20. Every mother of a youngster is requested to kiss her baby with special attention to the taste of the skin. A major sign of cystic fibrosis is a high salt content in the perspiration. The local chairperson emphasized that the two-fold campaign is designed to alert parents to the symptoms of CF and other lung-damaging diseases of children and td collect funds in support of medical scientific programs at the care, teaching and research centers in the United States. Many of the 150,000 North Carolina youngsters who suffer with one or more lung diseases are treated at the Duke and N.C. Memorial CF Centers which are supported by funds raised in local communities. ILLUMINATING I WASHINGTON (i trie street lighting its 100th anniversary I On Sept. 2, 187?. " Brush of Cleveland i a patent for arc could be used for street _ Brush, who became known at the "father of electric street lighting," according to I Inc., a non-profit, public, educational group dedicated to preserving the patent system, successfully demonstrated tys invention in Cleveland with tie result that the city became tie first municipality to use arc lighting for thoroughfares. His system soon spread around the world. Brush was awarded more than 50 patents, most of them in the electrical field. fttgfes Cju JcdtneAjfCju \iltneij y.19 AoexpiCes io-i3-"?9 1 /STllllMiMin J Dtpl?r UfiOWPlMl ggyf [ iAPAMuyy^^^ WfarTiiia BACON Brc pmjmr i-39 ?/39 &kfgtoGS w tycHCON Mfftr HflMW(CHt-s fi2LwgUtfrc sn?sflc^|i9 FRFSH 5 LBS f*V FRYER BREASTS 07i fever. 5 lbs Qn, DRUMSTICKS 07^ r? n? ------ L0 ?i FRVER.Tsuis"' THIGHS 69u U SD ft W? , V ?v ' !4. SLICED. COUNTRY STVLE < IOQ PORK BACKBONES i?X CUB^O STEAKS LEAN- r?OMEL?SS- ? - , - nQ STEW BEEF ?|7i -TEMNESSEE pctpe. 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