THEYANCEYRECORD V0L.35, N 0.9 FHA Aid laid Baik Will Jon Forces With Loais Plans for the Farmers Home Administration and Federal Land Bank to join forces in sup plying long term real es t ate financing needed by farm fa milies were outlined for Yan cey County in a meeting last week. State, district, and county staff members of Farmers I some Administration met at the She raton Inn, Asheville, North Carolina with a group of Fed eral Land Bank officials from Columbia, South Carolina,and their Land Bank and Production Credit Association representa tives in WesternN>rthCarolina. The two groups headed by Farmers Home Administra t ion State Director, James T. John son, and Federal Land Bank of Columbia and Federal Inter mediate Gedit Bank of Colum bia President, Robert A. Darr, discussed a Memorandum of Understanding on procedures for processing loan applicatias from the same borrow er. Their working arrangement will carry out an agreement signed recently in Washington, D.C., by National Farmers Home Administration Adminis trator, James V. Smith, and Governor E. A. Jaenke of the Farm Credit Administration on cooperation in lending between the two agencies. The plan provides for the agencies to make simultaneous World Day Os Prayer The celebration of World Day of Prayer, sponsored by Church Women United, will be observed Friday, March 5, at 7:30, at the Higgins Memo rial United Methodist Church. This service is being sponsored by the women of Higgins Me morial Methodist Church, the First Baptist Church, and the First Presbyterian Church. World Day of Prayer is ce lebrated in more than 8,000 communities and 155 countries Unite with Christians around the world celebrating the New Life in Christ. We urge all people to at tend. An offering will be re ceived to be used for Intercon tinental Mission with special emphasis on those efforts to proclaim the Gospel - such as the expanding ministries in our National Pads. Farmers Home Administration farm ownership loans and long term real estate loans to the same borrower with each loan secured by the same property. The Land Bank will hold first mortgage on the farm,Farmers Home Administration subor - dinatdng its mortgage to the Land Bank lien. "By simultaneously serving different elements of the far - mers' financing require m e nts," Johnson and Darr said in a joint statement here today, "our two agencies can help assure mare capable, diligent small farm families an opportunity to work their way to success on their own farms. We will be able to serve (Cont'd on page 3) Girls Haven Board Meets At a meeting of the Board of Directors of Girls Haven,lnc. which took place in Charlotte last Saturday, members jvere informed that Girls Haven has received its license to solicit funds. The license comes from the State Department of Social Services which had chec ke d out Girls Haven thoroughly be fore taking this step. According to Randall Pea cock, one of the Board me ru bers, they are now ready to receive their "Buck-A-Month 1 pledges from concerned citi zens throughout the state. "In addition," he said, "we are now set up to receive contribu tions made in. lieu of s ending flowers 'fa Sympathy' to a be reaved family. Special 1 y designed cards will be sent to the bereaved acknowledging the contribution made in me mory of'their loved one. Foster Homes are set up and ready to receive children now. Officials of Girls Haven are waiting to receive all applica tions before making the deci sion as to which child could better benefit by the type of care offered . The Board Meeting, termed the "best to date", was atten - ded by fourteen of the twenty two members serving. Attend ing from Yancey County were Mack Ray, Chairman of the Executive Committee; Robert Helmle and Dr. Garland Wamp ler, also on the Executive Com mittee; Reverend Don Elly and Randall Peacock. THURSDAY, MARCH 4,1971 Yanceys Official 1970 Census Figures Released By Bureau Os Celnsus (Special to the Yancey Record) Yancey County's official population in the 1970 Census was 12,629, down 9.8 percent from the 1960 figure of 14,008, the Bureau of the Census,U.S. Department of Commerce, re ports. The official population of the state was 5,082,059, up 11.5 percent from the 1960 population count; which was 4,556,155. The 1970 Census counted 12,379 white persons in Yan cey County, 98.0 percent of the total; 236 Negroes, and 14 persons of other races. In 1960, 99.0 percent of the population was white. The Census showed 1,014 children under 5 years; 3,041 in ages 5 through 17; 7,08 2 people 18 through 64; and of those 65 and older, 1,492. The population 14 years and over included 6,472 married people, 811 who were widowed, 188 divorced, and 2,099 who were never married. Yancey County's 1970 pop ulation was classified as 100 percent rural. There were 3,859 household, | Plaza To j S Be Built 1 The construction of a large shopping center of eight to ten stores, with Ingles Supermar - ket as its main building, has already begun on the Burns ville By-Pass at Highway 197, according to authoritative soir ees. Developer and promoter of this project is Harry Giezenta.- ner, who has also developed se veral other shopping centers in Western North Carolina in cluding the one in Weaver\ill& The Burnsville Plaza is the name by which the complex will be known. It is expected to serve the needs of all sur rounding communities in this area. The Ingles Supermarket building will be 15,000 squsre feet. Mr. Giezentaner de clined to comment on what other stores will be includ ed in the Plaza at this time. Construction started Tues day and building is expected to be completed in about three months. June Ist was given as the completion date. with 12,494 persons, including 421 one-person households. In addition 135 persons were liv - ing in group quarters. The 1970 Census counted 4,550 housing units in Yancey County, 2,985 of them occu pied by owners, 884 occupied by tenants, and 681 vacant. These included vacant units for seasonal use. The propor tion occupied by owners in 1970 was 65.6 percent, com pared with 69.0 percent, 1960. Among year-round dwelling units there were 4,017 single family homes, 124 housing un its in multi-unit buildings, and 260 mobile homes or trailers. The percentage of occupied units with more than one per son per room was 11.4, com - pared with 20.9 in 1960. Os all the occupied housing units, 2,676 had piped water, toilet and bath, while 1,193 lacked some or all plumbing. The median value of owner occupied houses inT&nceyCo. Heart Survey Efforts Pay, Sixteen Students Referred A total of 2,600 students in Yancey County were screen ed in a massive effort to de - tect heart defects in children, dining the Heart Sounds Screen ing Program just completed in Yancey County. The program, which involved nine County schools, was started in Septem ber, 1970. Os the 2,600 students who were screened, over 1,000 were up to 3or 4 times, in an effoi: to obta in a satisfactory rea< 'ing. Os these, 290 were referred to Dr. D. L. Phillips of Spruce Pine, Physician Direct rof the pro gram. Twenty eight students were referred, finally, to Dr. Tho mas B. Nolan oi Greensboro, Consulting Card >legist and of these, sixteen will be re ferred for advanced diagnostic testing to the Pediatric Cardio logy Center of North Carolina, at the N.C. Bapdst Hospital in Winston-Salem. This number compares with just eleven from Mitchell County and th irteen from Watauga County who were referred for the advanced testing. According to the Nbrth Ca was $9,000, compared with $5,700 in 1960. The median rent paid by tenants in 1970 was less than S3O per month , compared with S2B in 19 60. Half were over and half below the median figures. These results are from two 1970 Census Advance Reports for the State: PC (V 2), Gen eral population characteristics, and HC (VI), General housing characteristics. The reports which contain additional 1970 Census data for the State and various areas within it, maybe purchased at nominal pric es from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S, Government Printing Office,Washington, D. C. 20402, or from offices of the U.S. Department of Com merce in major cities. Further reports giving more ■ extensive statistics on the clar acteristics of the population & housing will be published in future months as the 1970 Ce nsus results are tabulated. rolina Heart Association, ap proximately 30 out of every 10,000 American youngsters suffer unsuspected heart disease Heart defects often remain hidden because most ab normal heart sounds are so subtle they can be det e c ted only by a specialist. It would be an impossible task for the relatively small number of trained physicians to examine all school children. Through extensive research and testing, a technique has been developed to listen to the sounds of the heart accurately and quickly through the use of a computer known as a Phono cardioscan. A physician is the only one who can diagnose a child's heart sounds and all children found with sounds outside the normal limits were examined by a physician. Mnw Eloise Briggs,speaking for herself as Chairman of the Yancey County Heart Screening Project and afro speaking for the North Carolina Heart As sociation, would like to ex press appreciation to all the volunteer workers in Yancey County who helped to make (Cont'd on page 3) 10<