TRANSYLVANIA— An Industrial, Tourist, Ed ucational, A g r i c ultural and Music Cento*. Popula tion, 1050 Census, 15,321. Brevard Community 7,394. THE TRANSYLVANIA TIMES A State And National Prize - W, inning A. B. C. Newspaper TR ANSYLV ANIA— The Land of Waterfalls, Mecca for Summer Gamps, Entrance to Pisgah na tional Forest and Home of Brevard Music Festival. Vol. 69 — No. 22 Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Brevard, N. C. BREVARD, N. C., THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1958 28 PAGES TODAY PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE SPOTLIGHT at the court of honor last Thursday night in the Fellow ship hail of the Brevard-Davidson River Presbyterian church were the two groups above. In the top photo are Benet Kol man and Benny Ormand. who became Eagle Scouts at the honor court. Forrest Gardner, of Hendersonville, was in charge of the ceremony, and at the left are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kolman, and at the right are young Ormand’s parents, Rev. and Mrs. Ben Ormand. In the low er photo are the five Scouts from troop 718. Cherryfield, who were promoted to Life rank. Left to right, they are: Larry R. Waldrop, Loy Waldrop, Jr., Jimmy Whitmire, Michael Whitmire and Oren E. Matthews, II. On the left in the back ground is their scoutmaster, Ralph Wal drop, and at the right is Duncan Hunter, chairman of advancement in Transyl vania county. (Times Staff Photos) ' Primary Slated Saturday, Demos And Republicans Vote "Off-Year Election Polls Will Be Open From 6:30 Until 6:30. Light Ballot Expected An “off-year" primary, in which Democrats and Republicans will vote, will be held in Transylvania on Saturday. Democratic voters will nominate a sheriff, a member of congress and a solicitor, while Republicans will vote only in one race, that be ing for the congressional seat, in which Ray H. Kimel opposes W. Farold Sams. According to George Shuford,. chairman of the Transylvania coun ty board of elections, the polls will1 open at 6:30 o’clock Saturday morn ing and close at 6:30 o’clock that evening. Registration has been light for the primary-, Mr. Shuford reports, and political observers are predict ing a light vote in the town and county on Saturday. Supplies are being distributed to the various polling places. In the sheriff’s race, the incum ibent, E. V. “Scott” Dillingham, is being opposed by Claude E. Mel ton, Eugene S. Wilson and Lloyd L. Wood. For solicitor of the 18th solici tors! district, Clarenee 0. Ridings, the incumbent, has as his opposi tion. Leonard Lowe, also of Forest City. Congressman George Shuford, in —Turn to Page Six CALENDAR OF COMING EVENTS Thursday, May 29 — Safety check lane opens on East Main street. Teen Center Party, 7:30 till 10 p. m. Masons meet in Masonic temple, 7:30 p. m. Friday, May 30 — Memorial Day service at 11 a. m. Offices and post office close. Saturday. May 31 — Primary election day with polls open 6:30 a. m., to 6:30 p. m. American Legion dance, Legion building, 9 p. m.. till. Sunday, June 1 — Attend the church of your choice. Baccalaur eate sermon for college gradu ates at Brevard Methodist church, It a. m. Graduation at the college, 4 p. m. Baccalaureate sermons for —Turn to Page Six Voluntary Project Brevard Jaycees Sponsoring Safety Check-Lane This Week The Brevard Jaycees will oper ate a safety check-lane Thursday, Friday and Saturday on East Main Street in Brevard each day from 1:00 to 5:00 p. m. The check-lane, held in coopera tion with the State Highway pa trol. is a free service to all motor ists and will take just a couple of minutes to complete. Qualified me chanics are being supplied by the local garages to make the 10-point Changes Noted In Closing Hours Of Some Local Stores For the shopping convenience of local citizens and the many sum mer visitors who are already arriv ing in the town and county, sever al local merchants are changing their opening and closing hours. One group, which includes the larger super markets, has discon —Turn to Page Six check-up, and a window sticker will be given to all motorists who pass the inspection. The State Highway patrol is fully endorsing this project in the state, as it may reveal simple mechani cal faults in automobiles, of which the driver is not aware. It is fully a voluntary project, and all motor ists are urged to drive by. The lane will be located on East Main —Turn to Page Six Many Graduate At Brevard, Rosman, Brightest Outlook For School System CONSTRUCTION TO BEGIN SOON, NEW NIGH SCHOOL HERE All Plans Approved By State Boards. Bids Are Announced BRADBURN QUOTED With graduation time approach ing, the future for Transylvania county schools is exceptionally bright as all hurdles have now been cleared for the construction of a new Brevard high school. The total bids for the new Bre vard high school, amounting to $800,895.78, were approved last Friday by the state board of educa tion. County Supt. Wayne Bradburn reports that contracts are now be ing prepared and should be signed I on Friday. This means that con struction can begin next week. Plans are now for the building to be ready for occupancy in the fall of 1959. Mr. Bradburn points out that this of course depends on the weather and also providing all ma terials remain available. The general contract in the i amount of S506.706.80 has beeni awarded to the W. E. Dale com pany of Morganton. Other contracts are as follows: Electrical, United Electric com pany. Asheville, $83,280.09: Plumb ing, Statesville Plumbing and Heat ing company of Statesville, $61, 847.00: heating. Sanitary Plumbing . nd Heating company, Greenville, S. C.. $110,924; and fees amounted to .$38,137.89. The heating contract was award-j ed following the opening of bids at the board of education building last Thursday. The heating bid was originally too high and after a re vision in plans new bids were call ed for. Both times the Sanitary —Turn to Page Six The Weather The past week gave indications that warm weather might be here to stay. Readings were generally high, both night and day. Most of the week’s precipitation occurred over the week end. The total for the week was 1.41 inches. Daily readings are as follows: Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 79 78 84 78 79 80 75 44 42 42 58 60 57 58 .02 0 0 .01 1.38 0 0 Special Travel School Will Begin Here Monday Forty managers and supervis ors of local restaurants and tour ist service businesses will at tend school for a week here be ginning Monday as a part of the state-wide plan for improving re lations with the traveling pub lic. The school will be held in two New Lutheran Minister Arrives, Ordination Ceremony On June 8 Rev. Alfred D. Rhyne, the new pastor of the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd here, has ar rived with his wife and two chil dren, and he will preach his first official sermon on Sunday morn ing, June 1st, at 11:00 o’clock. Rev. Mr. Rhyne was one of the 15 candidates receiving Bachelor of Divinity degrees at the Lutheran Theological seminary this spring, and he will be ordained in Trinity Lutheran Church at Vale, near Lincolnton, on June 8th. He succeeds Rev. Keith Beam here, who resigned last year to ac cept a pastorate at Walhalla, S. C. Prior to entering the seminary in Sept., 1955, Mr. Rhyne received his AB degree in religious educa —Turn to Page Six REV. ALFRED RHYNE sessions — morning and after noon beginning Monday and con tinuing through Friday. Classes will be from 9:00 to 11:00 in the morning and 2;00 to 4.00 in the afternoon. The classes will be held in Gaither’s Rhododendron room. The faculty will include rep resentatives of the N. C. Distri butive Education of State col lege, the State Board of Health, a representative of the North Carolina Travel council and N. C. Association of Quality restau rants. The last named two or —Turn to Page Six Seven Communities Enter WNC Contest Seven Transylvania communities are included in the 111 organized rural communities in 15 counties officially entered in the ’58 WNC Rural Development program. The communities are all compet ing for local and district cash priz es amounting to approximately $3. 000. They will be judged this coming November on the progress they have made during the year. Communities entered in WNC competition from Transylvania are: Little River, Blantyre, Cathey’s —Turn to Page Six THE THREE MEN in this lay out will award some 237 diplomas in graduation exercises in Bre vard and Transylvania county during the next few days. At the top, left, is Robert T. Kimzey, principal of Brevard high school, where 112 boys and girls will graduate on June 6th. E. F. Til son. principal of Rosman high school, top right, will present dip lomas to the 36 members of the Rosman graduating class next Tuesday night. At the right is Rev. Emmett K. McLarty, presi dent of Brevard college, who will present sheepskins to 89 graduates at Brevard college on Sunday afternoon, following the graduating address by Leslie S. Grogan, manager of Du Pont’s new silicon plant in Transylva nia county. Three Members Of Pisgah Forest Family Killed In Wreck In Georgia! KOLMAN, ORMAND ARE EAGLE SCOUTS Impressive Court Of Honor Is Held. Varied Program Is Given Two Transylvania youths, Benet Holman and Benny Ormand, be came Eagle Scouts at the quarterly court of honor, which was held in the Fellowship hall of the Brevard Davidson River Presbyterian church last Thursday night. In charge of the impressive Ea gle Scout ceremony was Forrest B. Gardner, of Hendersonville, who is chairman of advancement for the Daniel Boone council of Boy Scouts of America. Duncan Hunter, the chairman of the advancement committee in the Transylvania district, presided ov er the court of honor, which was attended by a large crowd of Scouts, parents and others inter ested in the Scouting movement in this county. Another impressive portion of the program was the awarding of life Scout rank to five boys from troop No. 718, Cherryfield. Luke Harrison, of the Transylvania dis trict advancement committee, pre sented the life rank to the follow ing boys: Larry Waldrop, Loy Wal drop, Jr., Jimmy Whitmire, Mich ael Whitmire and Oren Matthews, —Turn to Page Six Triple Rites For Mr. And Mrs. Bud Anders And Son Held Wednesday The grinding crash of an auto-! mobile into the locomotive of a southbound freight train at a small town in Georgia early Sunday morning left three members of a Pisgah Forest family dead and two others critically injured. Driver of the car, listed as Al void Anders, 23, was quoted by Georgia authorities as saying that he fell asleep while driving the family to Pisgah Forest from Co coa, Fla. He escaped with minor injuries. Dead are Alvoid’s father, Bud Anders, 67, his mother, Norma, 53; and an 18-year-old brother, Coy Anders. A sister, Louise, 15, and another brother, Harold, 11, were (reported in critical condition with head injuries in an Augusta, Ga., hospital. The crash occurred about 5:30 a. m. Sunday at a crossing in Mc Bean, about 15 miles south of Au gusta. The family had left Cocoa about 6:30 p. m. Saturday where they were employed on the gladi olus farm of A. P. Thomas. They had arranged to be transferred back to another such farm below Pisgah Forest because Alvoid was to be inducted into the Army this week here at Brevard, according to a statement made by the son to Na than F. Widener, Richmond Coun ty coroner. Alvoid was quoted by the cor —Turn to Page Six WPNF Program Highlights Local And State Election Returns To Be Heard All Evening This Saturday An election party will be fea tured Saturday evening over WPNF, and all persons are urged to keep their dials at 1240 for the latest local and state returns in the primary. Highlighting the evening’s broad casts will be the remote reports ‘rom the Brevard court house at various intervals. State returns will he broadcast from the station as they come in over the Associated Press wire and by other remote broadcasts. According to Bobby Hoyle, sta tion manager, the first remote o>-oadcast will be heard shortly af ter 7:00 o’clock. Sponsors of these reports will be Bikas restaurant, Jcnes news stand and Pearlman’s furniture store. The graduation address of Leslie S. Grogan at Brevard college Sun day afternoon will be recorded for broadcast at the more convenient hour of 7:00 o’clock that evening. Other Programs The schedule for the Farm and Home hour for the coming week is as follows: Thursday, station pro gram; Friday, ASC; Monday, coun —Turn to Page Six BACCALAUREATE SERMONS SLATED FOR THIS SUNDAY Upper County Grads To Re ceive Diplomas Tuesday. Exercises Here June 6 SPECIAL EDITION It’s graduation time in Brevard and Transylvania county. Commencement exercises are slated at Brevard college on Sun day, with the sermon set at 11:00 o’clock in the morning and gradua tion exercises at 4:00 o’clock that afternoon. Brevard and Rosman high schools have scheduled baccalaur eate sermons that evening at the two schools. Since the schools here were closed for a week during the win ter because of the flu epidemic, graduation at Brevard has been postponed until Friday night, June Gth, while exercises are slated at Rosman next Tuesday night, June 3rd. At both schools honor students will deliver the commencement ad dresses. At iirevara mgn senooi mere are 112 seniors in the graduating class, while 36 \yill receive dip lomas at Rosman. The college class totals 89. Special Issue The Times this week is publish ing its annual congratulatory edi tion with pictures and stories about tlu 1958 graduates at Brevard and Bosnian high schools and at Bre vard college. There are also a num ber of congratulatory messages from >ocal firms. The Times sa lute's the graduates and the school officials upon this important oc casion. At Rosman The Rev. Marvin Murpbree, of Greenville, S. C., pastor of the Mt. Moriah Calvert Baptist church, will preach the baccalaureate ser mon to the graduating class at Rosman Sunday night at 8:00 p. m. —Turn to Page Six MEMORIAL DAY SERVICES SET Veterans Graves In County Being Decorated. Offices To Close Friday The American Legion auxiliary is sponsoring Memorial Services on Friday, May 30th, at 11 a. m., in the Gillespie-Evergreen Memorial, plot. Veterans graves throughout the county will be decorated with a me morial flag, and memorial wreathe will be placed by various patriotic organizations at the service. Members of the sponsoring aux iliary extend an invitation to the public to be present for the se** vicp. A spokesman for the auxiliaiy had this reminder about the obsen* vance: “Memorial Day, 1958 should be a day of thanksgiving far the courage and sacrifice that has preserved our freedom through great dangers, a day of rededica —Turn to Page Six 129 On Teaching Staff In County During This Year The faculty of the county’s nine schools consists of 129 teachers | and principals, plus a school sup ervisor and superintendent of public instruction. Of this number 98 of them teach in the seven elementary schools and 31 in the high schools With a staff of 34 the Brevard elementary school has by far the largest number. Rosman elemen tary is second with 19. There are 22 members of the faculty of Brevard high and nine at Rosman. The number of teachers is de termined by the average daily at tendance. Teachers and principals are now being named by the board of edu cation. but the list is not yet com plete enough to be released. It will be published at a later date.