The News Record SERVING THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY On tha Insld ? . . . ? Walnut Booster's Club Is Undefeated This Year ...Turn To Page 3 TVtti Year No. 5 PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE COUNTY SEAT AT MARSHALL, N C THURSDAY, January 31, 1980 15* Per Copy Hunt And Scott Both Visit Madison Scott Addresses Meeting At MHC Attacking the growth of state government and calling for higher salaries for teachers, former Gov. Bob Scott brought his campaign to Madison County on Monday when he held a breakfast meeting at Mars Hill College cafeteria with a mixed group of 30 supporters and interested listeners. Scott recalled the many county roads his father helped to pave and the political friends he has made here over the years &s he criticized "too many programs attached to the educational system" and the "proliferation of govern ment bureaucracy" under the Hunt administration. Scott has been criticized for challenging Gov. James Hunt, Head Start Gets HEW Funds For 12 Months The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) has approved a grant of $399,884 to the Opportunity Corporation of Madison Buncombe counties, Con gressman Lunar Gudger an nounoed today. The funding is {qr Head Start Programs in the area and was authorized by HEW's Office of Human Development Services, Administration for Children, Youth and Families. An HEW spokesperson said the grant will be for continu ing present Head Start Pro grams for the next 12-month period. a fellow Democrat, to a primary battle that could weaken the party state-wide. A dairy farmer by vocation, he returned from a poet with the Appalachian Regional Commission in Washington to seek the top job in the state community college system, which he failed to get. Calling himself a "strong believer in the free enterprise system," he charged Gov. Hunt with poor spending priorities. "One of the main reasons government exists," he said, "is to help the poor and the elderly and the handicapped who can't help themselves. Yet the handicapped services people tell me that their funds are being cut back. At the same time the governor has ordered a <1.4 million jet helicopter to fly industrial pro spects around the state. I understand that this helicopter will be able to fly in bad weather and at night. Well, they don't have any business flying in bad weather, and they can't see any industrial land at night, so I don't see why this expensive helicopter is needed. "I would also question all the money being spent to ex pand thegoveroor s staff This administration has increased its staff by 130 percent. I want to discourage the proliferation of government bureaucracy, which is a nonproductive seg ment of our society. When I'm governor, you can count on me doing a right good pruning job down there in Raleigh. "A few years ago we saw the (Continued on Page 6) GOVERNOR' HUNT, right, presents a check for im provements to the Hot Springs water system to Mayor Swan B. Huff outside the Hot Springs Com munity Center. Later in the day he announced a grant to help repair erosion damage at Madison High School and presented a check for $53,750 to Commissioner James Ledford at Greater Ivy for the new industrial site's water system. CHATTING WITH former Gov. Bob Scott are, left to right, Doug Robinson, Scott, Otis Duck, and Warren Ponder, who was named Scott's campaign chairman for Madison County. The occasion was a breakfast meeting with Democrats at Mars Hill College cafeteria Monday morning. Older Citizens Offered Tax Breaks North Carolina's senior citizens are offered a number of special tax benefits when they file their 1919 Federal in come tax returns, the Internal Revenue Service uyi For thoae who are 65 or older and single, they are not required to file a tax return unless their groaa income ia at A-B Tech Schedules Course On How To Build With Logs The Continuing Education program of Asheville Buncombe Technical College wifl offer a course in log hqrthftwg construction beginn ing Feb. 11 at ManbaU Ele m n v School. The course will meet each Monday night (ram 7 to 10 fer lb weeks. and modern took. Certain basic took will be required, including a aaw, axe, tape or ride, framing AMIIAMk ]AlrA| A IL 1 ! ?j, scjUo n ?' v - i * ' j iK line, There will be a material* fee of approximately IK and a IS registration fpa. ? Peter Gott, a Madison Coun ty craftaman, will be tbe 1ft leart $4,300. If a couple U filing Jointly, they can make (7,400 tax free if both are 6S or older ; and if one is under ?, the in come amount is IS, 400. Many North Carolinians began receiving Social Securi ty pensions for the first time last year. The IRS says that monies received from Social Security are not taxable. This year the personal ex emption has been Incrsaamd to $1,000; howeuM, for taxpayers 85 or older, the exemption la doubted Hunt Stops At Hot Springs , Madison High , Greater Ivy Gov. James Hunt Jr. swept into Madison County on Mon day like a political Santa Claus, bearing gifts totalling some >190,000 which he dispensed in Hot Springs, Marshall and Greater Ivy. The largest check he brought with him was for Hot Springs' water system. This grant, for $88,400, is part of funding recently obtained to construct 11,450 feet of water mains, 11 fire hydrants, a chlorinator, a master meter, and an equipment house. The total project cost is $353,600. Another check, for $53,750, Farmers Are Warned Of Blue Mold Return Burley Day 1960 was held Jan. 22 at the Great Smokies Hilton in Asheville. Some 350 farmers, researchers, agri business people, and extension agents attended the day-long event. Madison County was represented by approximately 50 farmers and wives. The morning portion of the educational program was highlighted by the blue mold story as told by Professor Furney Todd of N.C. State University. Farmers were told that the problem could again be very serious in 1900. They were urged to spray their plant beds on a weekly basis with Ferbam or Maneb, to destroy plant beds after transplanting, and to spray the crop ip the field with a fungicide or with Strep tomycin if the disease enters the area. The new material called Ridamill has not been cleared by E.P.A. Farmers will be kept informed by their Agricultural Extension Office on the status of this material. An early warning alert system will keep fanners in formed of the danger of a blue mold outbreak. The alert system, with headquarters at N.C. State University, will consist of members in all tobacco-producing states and Canada. Each county will ask key farmers to report disease outbreaks to the county exten sion office. During the Research-on Wheels luncheon, sponsored by the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., six Madison farmers received awards. These six, Burgin Buckner, Gay Merrill, Claude Cody, Charlie Zink, Roy Amnions, and Walter Gosnell, were recognized for growing cm-farm test tobacco in 1979. Madison County received a third-place award for par ticipation in the R-9-P pro gram. The R-9-P program if one which encourages farmers to plow under all tobacco roots with a turning plow in the fall. By eliminating nine pests, burley farmers can make an addi tional (200 per acre from their crop. Farmers are urged to contact their tobacco agents for answers to their tobacco questions. The Madison Coun ty tobacco agent is Wiley DuVall. Madison County Doctors Set Record Quietly, two Madison Coun ty physicians, Dr. Otis Duck of Mars Hill and Dr. Lawrence McElroy of Marshall, have been working on a medical record of sorts. Dr. Duck has been president of the county medical society since 1951 and Dr. McElroy has been secretary-treasurer for the same period. This year they enter their 30th year in these positions ? longer than any other county leadership team in the state. Dr. McElroy has practiced medicine in the county since 1932, and Dr. Duck since 1946, but the Madison County Medical Society was mori bund during and immediately after World War II. It was ful ly reactivated only in 19S1, when officers were elected. Since then, the membership has remained quite steady at around 10 members. Today there are nine members and two associate members, who are dentists. The county medical society is an affiliate of the N.C. State Medical Society, which, in turn, is a unit of the American Medical Association. All AMA members must first be members of the local organizations. Dra. Duck and McElroy are also charter members of the American Academy of Family Practice, founded in 1MB. The function of the society is primarily educational. The John Lawrence of Asheville gave a talk on pacemakers. Both doctors are natives of Madison County. Dr. McEIroy was born in Marshall, in the house next to the Baptist Church ? a pre-Civil War house. He went to college at the University of North Carolina when that school only offered two years of medical education, then finished his degree work at Washington University in St. Louis. He did his internship at. Harper Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., then returned to Marshall in 1932, at the nadir of the Depression. "It was rather tough then," recalled Dr. McEIroy. "The banks closed here about the time I started. A lot of people couldn't pay when they were sick, and a lot of others could only pay when their tobacco money came in. "The diagnoses have chang ed a good deal since the '30s," he went on. "There used to be a lot of what they called catarrh of the atomach. No one really knew what that was, bat anyone who had anything wrong with their stomach said they had catarrh. "There won many more DRS. LAWRENCE McELROY, seated, and | Otis Duck met in Dr. McElroy's office in ff?r?hall to reminisce about medical frac tice in Madison. Dr. McElroy has been prac ticing here since 1S32, Dr. Duck since tm. the county medical society. Like Dr. McEroy, Dr. Duok has mw many changes in the practice of medicine since his will provide water service to the Madison County industrial park near Marshall and the nursing home in Mars Hill. Ac tual construction at the in dustrial site will include a 500,000 gallon elevated water storage tank and 2,800 feet of water main connecting the tank to the Marshall water system. The total cost of that project will be $215,000. He also announced a grant for $48,000 to help repair ero sion damage at Madison High School. Unlike former Gov. Bob Scott, who visited the county earlier the same day and who is running against Hunt for the gubernatorial nomination this spring. Hunt launched no cam paign attacks. He did not even mention re-election, confining his talks - at the Hot Springs Community Center, Madison High School, and Greater Ivy Community Center - to county projects and people Throughout Gov. Hunt's visit he was accompanied by virtually the entire Democratic hierarchy in this Democratic county, underlin ing the difficulty of unseating an incumbent. "I can't think of any reason," Mid Zen# Ponder, co-chairman of Hum's county campaign "why another can didate should challenge ? the first governor of this state to get along with a president since FDR, and who has had the courage to face a tough issue like succession. There's no reason why Bob Scott couldn't have waited four years." The governor was accom panied on his speedy drive from one end of the county and back by Zeno Ponder, Sheriff E.Y. Ponder, State Sen. Larry Leake, Probation Officer Roger Haynie, Wayne McDevitt of the State Depart ment of Natural Resources and Community Developers, State Rep. Lis ton Ramsey, and State Rep. Ernest Messer of Canton. He presented the Hot Spr ings check to Mayor Swan B. Huff, and paid tribute to Com missioner Virginia Anderson, Day Care Supervisor Teresa Zimmerman and Nutrition Site Supervisor Dorothy Shupe. Among the others pre sent were Court Clerk James Cody, Register of Deeds Jena Lee Buckner and Tax Col lecter Harold Wallin. Wayne McDlevitt is the se cond co-chairman of Hunt's Madison County campaign, while Roger Haynie is the friends of Jim Hunt co ordinator, having charge