TRANSYLVANIA— An Industrial, Tourist, Educational, Agricultural and Musie Center. Popula tion, 19G0 Census, 16,372. Brevard Community 8,500. Brevard proper 4,857. THE TRAN SYLVANIA TIMES A State And National Prize - Winning A.B.C. Newspaper K 18 PAGES TODAY * TRANSYLVANIA— The Land of Waterfalls, Mecca for Summer Camps, Entrance to Pisgah Na tional Forest and Home of Brevard Music Festival. Vol. 27 — No. 10 SECOND CLASS MAIL PRIVILEGES AUTHORIZED AT BREVARD. N. C. BREVARD, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1961 PRICE 7c PUBLISHED WEEKLY O-M Official Speaks Some 250 persons heard Philip C. Brownell, vice president and general manager of the paper and film divisions of the Olin Mi* tieson Chemical corporation at Pisgah Forest, tell of the fine relationship that exists between tl>e company and this community at the annual banquet of the Bre vard Chamber of Commerce last Thursday night in the Masonic temple. “I doubt that any business or ganization could have a sense of nore solid support from the com munity in which it is located than we at Olin have,” he said. “I doubt very much if there are many places where there is so little line of separation between the citizens of the community and the employes of a business enterprise.” In discussing the relationship between the company and its em ployes, he mentioned the recent plection in which e.nplo’ es voted against union representation. “Wat feel that this election show ed nnce again that most of us who belong to the Olin organiza tion at Pisgah Forest put a high value on personal independence, mutual confidence and friend liness,” he stated. I^e company, Mr. Brownell ex plained, has achieved greater strength as an organization by reason of the fact that leader ship, responsibility and expert ness are dispersed among a great many people. A climate where individuals can develop as individuals and win the satisfactions that come from individual accomplishment ,!s one of the greatest aims at | custa, he continued. Another aim of the company is to provide steady employment. To do this, “Ecusta will always give the highest priority to ful filling the needs of its customers in the cigarette industry . . . without whose continued patron age the Ecusta operation cannot survive,” he declared. But in addition to supplying cigarette papers, the company —Turn to Page Five PRINCIPAL FIGURES at the an nual Brevard Chamber of Commerce banquet last Thursday night in the Masonic tem'ple are shown in the two pictures above. In the top photo, Philip C. Brownell, the principal speaker, is in the center looking over publicity material that the civic group mails out each year. At the left is Ray mond F. Bennett, who was master of ceremonies on the program, and at the right is Robert W. “Buddy” Mel ton, the new president of the Brevard Chambei of Commerce. In the lower photo, left vO x'ight, are Dr. Emmett K. McLarty, who gave the invocation; Rev. B. W. Thomason, who pronounc ed the benediction; and Charles F. Himes, the outgoing president. (Times Staff Photos) CountyBoard Brevard Aldermen Call For [Holds Meet in” Election, New Registration Transylvania County Commis Lior ers held a busy session at |ieir regular March meeting this £ in the Court House, [hbirman Bob Boyd presided, the other commissioners at lg were Dwight Moffitt and few Lyda. resent in their official capaci _were Owen Lee, Registrar, , ho serves as clerk of the board; ■k Hudson, county attorney; C. Lewis Osborne, tax su tat the request of Mayor Austin fogsed and Chief of Police .harles Owen, the Commission ers decided to station a deputy sheriff at Rosman each weekend. ► They also made plans to meet with the school board for dis cussion of budget for coming yei# Various delegations appeared before the Board, and the Com niiAoners discussed other mat ersit length. (CALENDAR OF COMING EVENTS Thursday, March 9 — Class oom Teachers meet at Pisgah 'orest school at 3:30 p. m. Jay ettes meet at Colonial Inn at :00 p. m. Masons meet at Ma onic temple at 8:00 p. m. Friday, March 10 — Pancake amboree at Brevard Methodist ‘ ch. Ace of Clubs meets at ,, p. m. iunday, March 12 — Attend :hurch of your choice. Or ,4-ecital by Stephen Farrow Brevard Methodist church at fonday, March 13 — VFW per meeting at 6:30 p. m. fry club meets at Gaither’s at 7:00 P- m. Transylvania Shrine club meets at Berry’s Restaurant at 7:00 p. m. Suzari Marionettes at Junior high school at 7:30 p. m. Transylvania District Scout committee meets at Brevard col lege at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, March 14 — Ace of Pieets at 7:30 p. m. esday, March 15 — Toast meet at Gaither’s at n. WOW meets in Wood ill at 8:00 p. m. The Brevard Board of Alder men adopted two important re solutions at the regular March meeting this week. In one they called for an elec tion for the purpose of electing a mayor and five members of the Board of Aldermen on May 2nd of this year. In the other they called for a new registration of the eligi ble voters for municipal elec tions held by the Town of Bre vard. In the future Brevard voters will have two precincts in which to ballot. No. One will be located at the City Hall, and No. Two will be at the Court House. For the May 2nd election, the officials will be: Precinct No. One, Mrs. Free man Hayes, registrar; Jack Gravely and Ernest Smith, judg es. Precinct No. Two, Mrs. Dor othy Kizer, registrar; George T. Perkins, Sr., and William Leo nard, judges. Deadline for filing for the May 2 .J election is April 15th at 12:UU noon. Registration will begin Satur day, April 8th, and will continue —Turn To Page Four Background Given Herbert F. Finck Retires, Is Active Community Affairs HERBERT F. FINCK Herbert F. Finck, who served as power and water superinten dent at the Olin Mathieson Chem ical Corporation at Pisgah Forest from 1940 through 1960, has re tired. Actually, Mr. Finck went to work with the company on April 2, 1934. A native of New Jersey, he came to Pisgah Forest in 1938 as resident engineer during the construction of the Ecusta paper plant. The Finck family was the first to move to Pisgah Forest after the site was chosen for the mill. ' During the years he has been responsible for the substantial growth of the power and water plants. He has also been extremely active in community affairs and during 1956 and ’57 he served two terms as Exalted Ruler of —Turn to Page Ten Bradburn, Pearce Named To Education Posts -, _ i c. WAYNE BRADBUBN | C. Wayne Bradbum, superin S tendent of the Transylvania | County school system, has been elected Western district presi dent of the North Carolina Edu cation Association. Donald D. Jones, principal of1 Lee H. Edwards high school in Asheville was elected vice presi dent and Charles A. Pearce Jr. of Transylvania county was elect : ed secretary. Results of the recent election were announced by the NCEA board of directors following the I canvass of the ballots. Dr. Lloyd Y. Thayer, assistant superintendent of High Point city schools, was elected state NCEA president and Dan S. Da vis, Unio^i County school super intendent} was elected vice presi 1 —Tara to Page Pew \ CHABLES A. PEARCE, Jit A : WNC Regional Planning Board Makes Plans Accomplishments at the quart erly meeting of the Western! North Carolina Regional Plan-1 ning commission on Tuesday at! Brevard college were twofold, ! (1) Action was approved to extend the Blue Ridge Parkway from Tennessee Bald, the most southern point, in a southwestern direction toward Atlanta, Georg-1 ia, and (2) A better insight was gain-j ed into howto progress in water resources planning in Western North Carolina. Percy Ferebee, of Andrews, the chairman, presided over the meeting which was attended by some 100 representatives from the 14 counties served by the planning commission. A background on the extension of the Parkway was given the group by John R. Hampton, planning director, and he also gave a brief progress report on the various programs of the com mission in this region. Highlighting the afternoon program was a panel discussion on water resources. Comprising the panel were Gen. Henry C. Wolfe, head of the Division of Navigable Waters of the Department of Water Re sources of North Carolina; R. M. Dailey, state conservationist; and Richard Kilbourne, coordinator of small watershed tributaries program of the T. V. A. The thrae ipen pointed out that Western North Carolina must proceed in its water re source plai ming on an integral comprehensive approach for full ; resources ievelopment. Each panelist underscored the significance of local support and understanding. Other facts brought out in the three talks centered on flood control, costs of dams for flood prevention, various prerequisites for the project, and it was point ed out that 12 such projects have already been authorized in North Carolina .1 Considerable discussion fol lowed which centered on the Commission’s request to Gover nor Terfy Sanford on February 21st, to/sign an executive order which would designate the body as an instrumentality of the state to work directly with the housing and hones financing agency of the federal government. Duri:ig the meeting, the ac tions of the executive committee were approved by the commis sion, and authority to act was given. Pancake Event! Planned Friday An Aunt Jemima Pancake Jamboree will be held on Fri day, March 10th, at the Brevard Methodist church. Sponsored by the W.S.C.S., pancakes will be served in the Fellowship Hall from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Proceeds from the event will go toward improving the rear parking area of the church. Tickets may be purchased from any circle member or at the door. The public is cordially invited to attend. t : The Weather 3 n0 The weather took a turn for the better this week. Cloudy skies gave way ti> clear weather, and temperatures were unsea sonably high. Onlv twice did the mercury dip below the freezing mark. Total precipitation was only .35 of an inch. Daily read ings are as follows: High Low Pre. Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 69, 35 59'' 28 71 75 72 74 25 42 51 57 0 0 0 0 0 0 t35 A REV. DAVID SMITH, of Edinburgh, Scotland, will conduct a series of Evangelistic services at the Brevard-Davidson River Presbyterian Church be ginning Sunday and continuing through next Fri day evening. Mr. Smith was the summer pastor of the church in 1958 wrhen he and Rev. Ben F. Or mand exchanged pastorates. Born in the Highlands of Scotland, Mr. Smith was educated at St. Andrews University and served as a pilot in the Royal Air Force. Mr. Smith was chairman of the “All Scotland Crusade” -which made arrangements for the Billy Graham Crusade. Large congregations heard Mr. Smith when he was in Brevard in 1958, and the public is cordially invited to attend this series of services. Schedule Given Pre-School Clinics To Begin In County Tuesday Dr. Prugh To Open Dental Practice Here Dr. John Prugh has purchased the dental practice of Dr. Carol If. Johnson, and will begin his I practice here on Monday, March 13th. His offices will be in the same location, at 15 East Jordan street. A graduate of the University of North Carolina, Dr. Prugh has —Turn To Page Five The series of pre-school clinics in Transylvania county will be gin next Tuesday, March 14th. The first one will be held at Rosenwald, and they will contin ue each Tuesday during the rest of March and throughout the month of April. The schedule is as follows: March 21 — Penrose; March 28 — Pisgah Forest; April 4 — Straus; April 11 — Brevard ele ( nientary; April 18 — Henderson; i and April 25 — Rosman element i ary. | They begin each Tuesday mom ! ing at 9:00 o’clock, and school of l ficials release the following in : formation regarding them: “All children who will begin I the first grade in the fall of 1961 are urged to attend the pre school clinic. Information will be passed on to their parents concerning enrollment, etc., at the pre-school clinics. “All children are urged to have a physical by their family physic ian, but those who cannot will be I taken to the health center by bus for a physical examination on the day of the pre-school clinic. “Before a child may enter school in the fall of 1961, he or she must have his or her polio shots. This is a state law and will be strictly enforced." Parents are urged to attend the pre-school clinics with their children. Program Highlights Panel To Discuss Religious Issues On Series Over WPNF The first in a series of panel discussion programs will be air ed on Sunday afternoon at 1:00 o’clock, Bobby Hoyle, manager of WPNF, announces. A special project of the Tran sylvania Ministerial Association, the program will feature open and informal discussion on a pre selected subject and will be mod erated by Rev. Mack Armstrong, president of the county Minis terial Association. Topic for the first program will be “Is Christianity in Retreat”. Comments on this new program from WNPF’s listeners will be welcome, Mr. Hoyle stated. OTHER PROGRAMS The schedule for the Farm and Home hour is as follows: Thurs day, Brevard home-Ec dept., Mrs. Glenn Burrell; Friday, N. C. Forestry, Clark Grissom; Mon day, county agent; Tuesday, Ex tension forestry, Leonard Hamp ton; Wednesday, home agent. Appearing on the Civic Hour are the following: Friday, Fort nightly club; Monday B & PW club; Wednesday, Elk’s Club. Speaking this week on Morn ing Devotions is Rev. Dan Wal len, pastor of Cherryfield Baptist church. Next week Rev. Ben Ormand, pastor of the Brevard Davidson River Presbyterian church will be heard. The Sunday morning church service is being broadcast through the remote facilities of WPNF from Brevard-Davidson River Presbyterian church. Rev. Ben Ormand is pastor. Plant Will Be Located On East Side, Paper Mill Construction was started this week on a new calcium carbo nate plant for the Ecnsta Pap er Operations of Olin Mathieson Chemical corporation, H was an nounced today by Arthur J. Loeb, division vice president. Calcium carbonate is a chem ical used in ttye manufacture of some of Errata's lightweight papers. The plant will he located on the east side of the paper mill, adjacent to the boiler house. It will have a calcium carbonate prcduction capacity much larger than facilities now in use. W. F. Taylor, Jr., assistant to the division vice president, has been appointed project manager for the new plant, which is ex pected to be in operation by early fall, Mr. Loeb said. The present pilot plant op erations were set up several years ago when the Bcusta Re search and Development depart ment developed a new process for the manufacture of calcium carbonate. The new plant will use basically the same process as now In use in the pilot op erations. It is anticipated that personnel operating the pres ent pilot plant will staff the new plant when it is completed. The general construction con tract has been awarded to Fiske Carter Construction Company of Greejviijp, ^utl\ Carolina. The contract for the fabrics tion and erection of the struc tural steel has been assigned to Dave Steel company, of Ashe ville, and Southern Engineering Company, of Charlotte, will build the tanks and silos. Resident Engineer for the pro ject is B. M. Nachman of the H. K. Ferguson Company of Cleveland, Ohio, designers of the plant. Scout Committee To Meet Monday The Transylvania district Boy Scout Committee’s regular monthly meeting will be held at Dunham Hall on the campus of Brevard College at 7:30 PJrf.r Monday, March 13, according to Thomas R. Mitchell, District Chairman. Andrew Gennett, president of the Daniel Boone council, and Joseph D. Edward, council scout executive, will be special guests at the meeting. The district committee com prises seven operating commit tees, institutional representatives from all institutions which spon sor Scout units and members-at large. All are urged to attend and to bring unit committee mem bers, Scout leaders and other interested adults with them. Among its items of business to be discussedat this meeting is the annual district camporee, which will be conducted in co operation with the Land-O-Sky district (Henderson county) on May 5, 6 & 7, in Pisgah National Forest. All Baptist Ministers Meet Monday Baptist ministers from all over Transylvania will meet at the Temple Baptist church' on Mon day evening, March 13, at 7:30* o’clock for the first in a series, of "Preachers Prayer Meetings” Rev. H. W. Burleson, presi dent of the . Transylvania Baptist Minister* conference, urges all Baptist ministers' to attend. These meetinci ate called, and planned in preparation for “Baptist TiililBamjfcMwr nlliTfc will start the «««.•( Bn.