boons WATA TIC \ OPTMOPR at ?? ** educ,uon*1 c^lo< w"ura North Y Vjljl A jlTl xJ vJxjL l^Il/iyiW\^XViTL X in *h~p pn?uction i i. ? i . iv i qqo 1950 Population 18,341 1*50 Population y73 An Independent Weekly Newspaper ? Established in the Year looo SIXTY-SEVENTH YEAR. ? NO. 8. BOONE, WATAUGA COUNTY# NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1954. TWO SECTIONS? 12 PAGES KING STREET BY ROB RIVERS , A HUNDRED YEARS . . . AMD MORE ' It is not given to a great many people to live five score years, and when a person does pass the hundred mark, with more than a year and a naif to spare, it does con stitute news, in deed. . . . And a9 in the case of of Miss Jennie Cof fey, who died in her 102nd year the other day, it is all 'miss i_uj.ii the more remark able when one retains a consid erable degree of reason after one hundred winters and summers have been counted. ... In the march of history one hundred and one years is not a long time, but in the measure of one human life it covers an age . , . a period of change unequalled in any other period In history. . . . From thfc primitive carts and wagons to the automobiles and flying machines, ffom rutted and muddy county roads to four-lane highways, and from sleepy country villages to bustling centers of industry, com morce and education. BORN IN CALDWELL Mis* JtniUi Coffey was bora in Caldwell county in 1SS2. Ihm years after the founding of Watauga county, in the same year Daniel Webster and Henry Clay succumbed, and shortly al ter Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin." to spark the emancipation move ment. . . . She was eight yean old when Abraham Lincoln was elected President, and was old enough to sing "John Brown's Body Lies A-mouldin in the Clay." when John was hanged. . . . She was a big girl when the Civil War flared and mem bers of her family marched forth to do battle under the banners of Lee and Jackson. Miss Jennie was ten when Lin coln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, and eleven when the Emancipator was shot down. . . . She was a teen-ager when Alaska was bought, and was twenty-four when General Custer and his troops were mowed down by Injuns, united under Sitting Bull, and when Wild Bill Hickok was shot in the back by Jack McCall in Deadwood. . . . She was 17 when the golden spike was lrammed down and there was a railway connection to the Pacific coast. AND HERE AT HOME . . . a lot happened during Miss Jen nie's lifetime too. . . . Even though she had grown old at the time, the muddy road through town was paved, through high ways had linked the bdekwoods area to the rest of the State, and pioneer schools which operated a few weeks in the year gave way to modern school plants and one of the South's great teachers col leges. . . . She was past middle age when Wilbur and Orville Wright wobbled uncertainly through the air in their flying ma chine to inagurate the age of air travel, and a few years later saw the first automobile cough and snort its way up King Street. . . . She was the town's oldest mer chant, and dispensed pencils and paper and text books to us when w# were cducatin' down at Prof. Dougherty's Academy. . .' . She taught Sunday School at the old Methodist Church on the site of the Boone Body Shop for a gen eration or so, and saw the small frame churches give way to big houses of worship, fashioned of brick and stone. . . . She watched the town change from a little country neighborhood to a place of many people and much com merce, but remained herselfa un changed in the age of the power ed wheel and the power politics and the quickened tempo of life. WE SHALL REMEMBER Mis* Jennie. who lived sim ply for more than a century ? ? ? who carried on without bene fli of hospitals, or of medicine* or without a complex pattern of life. . . . We shall remember her hat shop, and the pencils which came two for a nickel, if you wanted bettor than the pen ny number, and the elementary text books which sold for twelve cents, with an exchange price a good deal lower: and wo (Continued on pa?8 {our) GREEN VALLEY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Green Valley School Second In Watauga To Get Accredited Status W. H. Walker, superintendent of schools of Watauga county, and Earl Greene, principal of Green Valley school, recently received a letter from the Division of In structional Service, State Depart ment of Public Instruction, in forming them that Green Valley Three Watauga Lads Are Given Scholarships Marion Combs, Roy Miller and Jack Simpson have been granted $100 00 scholarships to N. C. State College, according to W. C. Rich ardson, who is Watauga County chairman for the Talent for Ser vice Scholarship to N. C. State. These boys were recommended for scholarships by their princi pals. Dr. J. R. Shaffer of Appa lachian, who recommended Roy Miller,, and Mr. Sam Horton, who recommended Mari6n Combs and Jack Simpson. These scholarships were award ed under a new program which was set up last year at State Col lege. Less than one-third of the high ranking graduates of North Car olina high schools attend college. Less than one-half of the techni cal personnel needed by industry and agriculture is being trained and supplied today in North Car olina, Mr. Richardson said. An average of six jobs were avail able to each member of the latest graduating class at N. C. State College. For these reasons North Caro lina State College has established a new scholarship program as an incentive for many more prom ising high school, graduates to continue their education. Mrs. Ray Aids In Credit Clinic Boone's Credit Bureau mana ger, Mrs. Roberta Ray has been appointed a member of the atten dance and publicity committee of the Southern Consumer Credit Clinic. The Clinic is holding its sixth annual meeting Wednesday September 15 in Charlotte. More than 300 credit managers and executives from the South will be in attendance. ? Most of the program will be in panel form, with four moderators and 24 panel members. had met the requirements for an accredited school and was being placed on the State's list. This school is the second elementary school in the county to meet the requirements. Appalachian Ele mentary was first. To meet the requirements of accreditment a school must have a plant with facilities adequate for the enrollment and must own equipment and instructional sup plies, such as library books, maps, globes, art prints, supplementary readers and other items, suffici ent for effective teaching. The organization must meet the States' requirement in providing relat ively equal teacher load, and a curriculum schedule that meets the daily schedule suggestions of the Division of Instructional Ser vice. The letter from the State De partment states in part: "Much commendation is due to the, Joint efforts of the teachers, principal, community helpers, supervisor, and superintendent in that area for the interest that they have shown and the won derful support that they have giv en in helping to provide that school with the needed instruc tional materials over and above the building which is such a cred it to any community. "Your report indicates twenty five items, such as 16" globes, art prints, pitch pipes, that have been a joint project in your community in working for this school to be come accredited. ?While you have worked to gether for accreditment, you have also pooled your resources, your interest and study for the im provement of instruction in the school. This accomplishment should be a stimulation to con tinue to grow and to make the Green Valley School a more pur poseful living experience for ev ery child in the school. "With best wishes to your school and community for the school year, 1954-55." Green Valley is at present a ten-teacher school. The faculty consists of Mrs. Sinesca Wright, Mrs. China Lavendar, Mrs. Daisy Adams. Mrs. Florence Greene, Mrs. Nora Greene, Mrs. Margaret Hagaman. Mrs. Ruth Winkler, Mrs. Susie Buchanan and Mr. Earl Greene. Mr. John Marsh will serve as principal for the 1954-55 term. Winners In Flower Show Announced Boone's eighth annual flower show closed Friday evening after more than 1300 guests had visit ed it during a two-day period. The show committee was well pleased over the reception of the many exhibits which exempli fied the many glories of Caro lina from the landing of the Ra leigh colony to the present day developments. The stage portraying the gar den of the Colonial period with the young ladies of Boone in the garden lent an atmosphere to the occasion while the "tiny" minia tures were most cleverly display ed in a large frame bearing the map of North Carolina on which were placed at intervals a "Tar Heel" which served as a mount for the dried and fresh materials in fifteen miniatures. Pirates treasures depicted eight unusual and different interpre tations of the infamous pirate, Blackbeard, who haunted the North Carolina coast. From Tryon on the enst with the elegant period arrangement to the Blue Ridge shadows symbolic | Throngs Gather For Annual Horse Show More than (our thousand people ' gathered over the week end for Blowing Rock's famed horse show which drew the largest crowd in its history. Some of the top winners were: Horses and riders of the C. Y. Thomason stable at Greenwood won championships in .equitation, fine harness and three-gaite^po ny classcs. Sissy Burg of Colum bia won the five-galted pony class riding her Dee Dee Tee, and M. Wright rode Miss Burg's three gaited Jovial Kalarama, to anoth er win. Stepp Stables' Black Wilson and Cray Cold of Winston-Salon placed one and two in the Tenne ssee Walking Horse championship while jumping honors went to the Meadowbrook Stables of Char lotte with Spunky Fisher riding .Hershella's Happy Birthday, a five-gaited horse owned by Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Mitchell of High Point, won what is considered the finest class in the show. The Thomason stable's winning began when Suzanne Thomason won in equitation. Walter Keck. Miss M. Smith of Atlanta, Carol Cathey of Charlotte, Beck Harp er of AsheviUe and Franklyn Noll of*Lenoir were popular com petitor i during the three-day of the western area in the Ho garth curve or better known as the S design, to the "Old North State Heritage" showing the highlights of the historical de velopment, including the Edenton Tea Party, Ancestral Heritage, Duke University in education, Wright Brothers first in the air, Mecklenburg Declaration of In dependence, Indian influence, re ligious prominence, and the Civil War period of the Blue and the Grey; into the forest* with na tive plant materials to the echoes of the west, the pioneer treasure brought to the homes by the mountain peoples. And to herald the fruitfijjness of our ever present bounties, a special exhibit highlighted the far end of the show floor with a large driftwood and fruit dis play also carried out in the indi vidual niches with many exhibits of fruits and plant materials na tive to the state. Winners in the various classes are listed below, with 1st, 2nd. and 3rd places winners listed in that order, except when designat ed otherwise: PETUNIA 1 bloom, ruffled. Mn W. R. Richardson. 2nd; Mrs. Wiley Hartzog, 3rd. ZINNIA? 1 bloom, large flowering white. Mrs. Wiley Hartzof. ZINNIA? 1 bloom large flowering pink. Mr*. Wiley Hartzog, Mrs. W. R. i Richardson. ZINNIA? I bloom, large flowering red. Mrs. Wiley Hartzog. Mrs. Mae Miller. I ZINNIA ? 1 bloom large flowering. ! lavender. Mrs. Wiley Hartzog. 3rd. j ZINNIA? I bloom, large flowering ) yellow. Mrs. Wiley Hartzog. 2nd. I ZINNIA ? 1 bloom, any color not mentioned above. Mrs. Wiley Hartzog. Mrs. W. R. Richardson. Mrs. Lee Reyn olds. ZINNIAS? ? blooms, one or more varieties. Mrs. Wiley Hartzog. Six blooms or stems of annuals not listed above. Mrs. Reynolds, two 1st places. Specimen of any annual not listed. Mrs. Lee Reynolds, 1st and 2nd. DELPHINIUM- 1 stalk. Mrs. W C. Oreer. Mrs G. K Moose DELPHINIUM? 3 stalks, one or more varieties. Mrs. Hale Vance, 1st, Mrs O. K. Moot*. 3rd PHLOX? 3 m talks of one or more (Continued on page two) Baptist Church In Charge Of Vesper Program Community Vesper Services at Horn In the West Theatre Sun day afternoon at 5:30 o'clock, will be in charge of the Boone Bap tilt Church. Guest speaker for the occaaion will be the Rev. M. O. Owen, Jr., pastor of First Bap tist Church, Lenoir. Special music will be provided by the cKoir of the Boone Baptist Church, under the direction of Hoyt Safrit. Mrs. Graydon Egg ers will accompany at the organ. In event of rain, the service will be held in the Boone Baptist Church. Everyone is invited to attend the services, which con tinue to grow in popularity. At the services on last Sunday, the largest attendance of the sea son was observed, when more than four hundred people were present. Feeder Calf Sale To Be Held Friday, Oct. 8th . The Boone Feeder Calf Sale will be held on Friday, October 8, with all calves graded and weighed in on Thursday, October 7. < The farm committee elected to manage the Boone Feeder Calf Sale are as follows: B. W. Stall ing, Lester Carroll, R. G. Ship ley, Henry Taylor, Tom Law rence, Tom Ward, A. W. Greene, G. D. Barnett, Charles Clark, Russell Farthing, Lynn Norris, Howard Gragg, - Billy J. Cook, and Wade Tugman. All nominations must be made by September 10 and advertising fee of 50 cents per head paid. Blanks may be obtained from the County Agents' Office. Buckland Gets Ed. D. Degree At the summer graduation, on August 7, of the Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, Mr. Golden T. Buckland, professor of mathema tics at the Appalachian State Teachers College, was granted the Ed. D. degree in mathematics. This was the 99th annual com mencement exercise to be held at the university. Dr, Buckland has been in the ! mathematics department at Ap- ] palachian for the past six years. He received his Bachelors and j Masters at Appalachian, the lat ter being awarded in 1949. RUMOR BACKFIRES Spokane, Wash. ? In answer to numerous childish questions as to "What're yo doin', mister?" Glen Aiken, bulldozer operator, an swered, "Digging for . gold." The kids told their mothers, who told other mothers and soon the whole neighborhood was in a tizzy. Con fronted with the rumor, Aiken laughed and said, "That was a joke for the kids; I'm helping put in a lawn." Italy maps a five-year speed- \ way building plan. Dr. Elliot To Speak As 163 Are Given Degrees Mrs. Doris T. Perry Rites Held Thursday Mrs. Doris Taylor Perry, 66, member of one of the county's most prominent families, and wife of Dr. H. B. Perry of Boone, died in a Greensboro hospital last Wednesday. MRS. PERRY Mrs. Perry had been in failing health (or a year, and her illness had been considered critical (or several weeks. Funeral services were conduct ed Thursday afternoon at 3:30 at the Boone Methodist Church. The pastor, Rev. J. T. Shackford, was fn charge of the rites, and was as sisted by Rev. O. L. Brown of Greensboro. Interment was in the Taylor-Mast cemetery at Vilas. The survivors include the hus band, one son, Dr. H. B. Perry, Jr., of Greensboro, and one daugh ter, Miss Gertrude Perry of the home. There are two grandchild ren. There are four brothers and two sisters: Bynum Taylor, Gordon Taylor, Boone; Henry Taylor, Vale C rue is; Gilbert Tay lor, Releigh; Mrs. Sue Taylor Murry, Valle Crucis; Miss Nancy Taylor, Durham. Her mother, Mrs. Lou H. Taylor of Valle Cru cis, also survives. Mrs. Perry was born in Valle Crucis, the daughter of the late Charles D. Taylor and Mrs. Lillie Veach Taylor. She had resided in Boone for 30 years, where she engaged in all religious and oth er worthwhile activities. She was a member of the Boone Methodist Church, and actively engaged in the work of the church as long as her health permitted. She was held in the highest re gard by a wide circle of friends in Boone and surrounding areas. National Teachers' Group To Meet Here Dr. Mildred Dawson, professor of education at Appalachian State Teachers College, has announced plans for the August conference of the National Council of the Teachers of English, which is to be held at ASTC August 16-20. Dr. Dawson is director of the con ference and national consultant to the Council. One hundred and six delegates have pre-registered from twenty four States: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, 111 t i.i uiuis, uiuiaiia, rvcnvutity , lajuidi ana, Maryland. Minnesota, Mis souri, Now York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, Wiscon sin and Wyoming. There will be 15 elementary teachers, nine from elementary teacher training institutions, (our editors, five elementary supervis ors, five elementary principals, seven junior high school teachers three librarians, one junior high school principal, one from a jun ior high school teacher training institution, and one elementary school psychologist. There will be 38 high school teachers, three high school supervisors, three heads of high school English departments, three from high school teacher training institutions, and two col lege English teachers Registration Plana. Registration for the conference will take place Monday, August 16, from 2 to 3:30 p. m. in the lob _ ' by of the college administration building. A reception is planned in the evening at the home of Mrs Grace Council), who is to be chairman of one of the elemen tary education panel discussions. Group discussions will be held each morning, with all sessions taking place in the Appalachian High School building. Afternoons will be devoted to interest groups and to sightseeing trips in and around Boone. (Continued on page four) HORN IN WEST STAB? Charles EUedge. of Marion, as Amos How ard in Hum in the West, now playing in Boone's outdoor theatre. Crowd* we increasing as the summer season approaches its bcighl Finals Are Set At Appalachian; The Local Grads Dr. Phillip L. Elliott, president of Gardner-Webb College, Boiling Springs, will be the speaker at the summer commencement exercises of Appalachian State Teachers College the evening of August l?th. The program will be given on the athletic field at the college at 8 o'clock p. m., or, in the event of rain, in the college auditorium. Music for the occasion will be by the College summer school band, under the direction of Wil liam Spencer. For the procession al they will play "Coronation March" by Meyerbeer, and for the recessional "Huldigungs marsch" by Grieg. They will also play 'Folk Song Suite" by Vaugn Williams and "Trumpet Tune" by Burcell during the course of the program. Degress will be conferred and diplomas awarded by Dr. B. B. Dougherty, President of Appala chian College. Marshals are: Gwyn W. Ram sey of Boone, chief; Kenneth Ray Greene, Concord; Lucy Barker of Roaring River; Hayes Hoover of Boone; Carol Howell of Todd; james ^,igiar or nurai nan; Min ryn Millsaps, Hiddenite; Robert Culbreth, Ellensboro, and Louise Mitchell of Zipnville. Seventy-two students are can didates for Bachelor of Science degrees, and 91 for the Master of Arts degree. From the Watauga county are* are the following: Bachclor of Science ? Christine King Bingham, William Wiley Blackburn, Mildred T. Bolick and Neva Ann Norris of Boone; Tru man Amos Critcher and Martha Ann Herring, Blowing Rock; Ann Henson, Sherwood; Willie FalU Sims of Deep Gap. Master of Arts ? Homer C. Lerttz Blowing Rock; Nora Austin Greene, Betty Lou Raines and Beatrice Culler Winkler, Boone. Commerce Group Told Of NW Area Progress Archie K. Davis, vice-president of the Wachovia Bank & Trust Company, Winston-Salem, and president of the Northwest North Carolina Development Associa tion, outlined the objectives and enumerated the accomplishments of the association as guest speak er Tuesday at the August meet ing of the Boone Chamber of Commerce, held at noon in the Gateway Restaurant. After being introduced by Al fred T. Adams, Mr. Davis said the association was formed last November to seek agricultural, industrial, and recreational growth in the nine-county area comprising the organization, through regional cooperation. All economic problems can not be solved at the county level, he declared, but many must be und ertaken on a regional basis, with aH counties and towns working together for the good of all. In discussing the agriculture division of the association, the speaker pointed to the fact that a total of 9,000 acres of the area's tobacco allotment was not plant ed last year, representing a farm revenue loss of three to four mil lion dollars. The association's goal to in crease tobacco planting by 20 to 25 per cent this year has met with excellent cooperation from FFA and 4-H groups, who have plant ed 15,000 square yards of new plant beds and made these plants available to farmers in the area, he said. Great strides have been made, said Mr. Davis, in North Carolina agriculture and industry during the past 50 years. As an example, he cited the fact that the state's agricultural products in 1900 had a total valuation of 89 million dollars, whereas in the past three consccutive years, they have been valued at more than one billion dollars. i The speaker said North Caro lina has a historical heritage sec ond to none, and lauded this com munity for helping to tell part of the North Carolina story (Continued on page four) Watauga Ranks 70th In Per Capita Sales Watauga county ranked seven tieth among the 100 countics in North Carolina in per capita re tail tales for the fiscal year end ing June 30 of this year. Total re tall sales for the year amounted to f7.28fl.000. which was equiva lent to $393.83 per captita, based on estimated population as of Jan uary 1, this year. Watauga's per capita of $393.83 compared with 1718.43 for the State as a whole and $1,058.83 for the Nation as a whole. Watauga was one of 85 coun ties in the State which had an in crease in total retail sales during the 1954 fiscal year u compared with 1953. The 1954 total of $7, 286.000 was an increase of 4.1S per cent over the 1953 total of $6,996,000. During the same per iod, total retail sales in both North Carolina and the United States as a whole increased less than 1 per cent. Watauga's per captita retail sales of $393.83 during the 1964 fiscal year was an increase as compared with the year before when the per capita was $378.16. The county also moved up in rank from seventy-third to seventieth. The per capita for North Carolina as a whole dropped from $723.53 to $716.43, as did ,thc Nation, from $1,079.91 to I), 056.66.