As a part of the continuing
scries of prognms on “The
Protestant Hour'’, heard each
Sunday evening atfB:30 p.m.
over WPNF, the Presbyterian
U. S. series is now Doing heard
and will continue through Sep
tember 26th.
Featured speaker on the Pres
byterian • series will be Dr. H.
Louis Patrick, pastor of the
Trinity Presbyterian Church of
Charlotte. His series of sermons
will be entitled: “Man At the
Tiller of the World . . . God
Knows Why . . .” Also heard
on the programs will be the
outstanding choirs and orches
tra of the Harvey Browne Me
morial Presbyterian Church of
Louisville, Kentucky.
Record Party
Summer visitors as well as
residents are reminded to tune
1240-radio for WPNF’s nightly
“Record Party” each week
night.
Frankie Capps and George
"
Abercrombie are hosts on this
popular show, and they play all
the latest chart hits which are
being heard across the country.
Record Party starts at 7:05
p.m. each morning, running un
til 9:55 pan.
Other Programs
The schedule for the Farm
and Home hour is as follows:
Brevard vo-ag dept John Brad
ley; Friday, Station Program;
Wednesday, Home Agent Miss
Jean Childers.
Speaking this week on Morn
ing Devotions is Kev. Donald
Hicks. Next week Rev. Albert
Bishop, pastor of the Mt. Mo
riah-Calvert Baptist church,
will be heard.
The Sunday morning church
services are being broadcast
through the remote facilities
of WPNF from the Lutheran
church of the Good Shepherd.
Dr. J. Lewis Thomberg is pas
tor.
City Of Brevard
BUDGET ORDINANCE
Fiscal Year 1971-72
AN ORDINANCE TO PROVIDE FOR APPRO
PRIATIONS FOR THE OPERATIONS AND
MAINTENANCE OF THE VARIOUS DEPART
MENTS OF THE CITY OF BREVARD AND FOR
THE PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICE CHARGES
ON THE OUTSTANDING DEBT OF THE CITY
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JULY 1,
1971, AND ENDING JUNE 30, 1972.
BE IT AND IT IS HEREBY ORDAINED BY
THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN OF THE CITY OF
BREVARD:
Section 1. For the purpose of providing for the
operation and maintenance of the various depart
ments of the City of Brevard and for the necessary
expenses of the government and other lawful
functions for the City of Brevard, there are here
sy appropriated for the fiscal year beginning July
1, 1971 and ending June 30, 1972, out of revenue
available for the respective purposes, the follow
ing amount in accordance with the following
schedules: .
GENERAL FUND APPROPRIATION
Administrative Department
Recreation Department
Police Department •
Street & Sanitation Department
Fire Department
$ 92,964,32'
4,631.00
109.633.00
137.213.00
18,745.68
$363,187.00
&
TOTAL
UTILITY FUND APPROPRIATION
Water & Sewer Department $126,897.00
TOTAL $126,897.00
DEBT SERVICE APPROPRIATION $ 53,977.00
TOTAL $ 53,977.00
GRAND TOTAL - FISCAL
YEAR 1971 - 72 BUDGET $544,061.00
Section 2. It is established that revenue will be
available during the fiscal year beginning July 1,
1971, and ending on June 30, 1972, to meet the
foregoing appropriations, in accordance with the
schedule shown and summarized as follows:
General Fund Appropriation $363,187.00
Utility Fund Appropriation 126,897.00
Debt Service Fund Appropriation • 53,061.00
TOTAL $544,061.00
Section 3. That the tax rate for the City of Bre
vard for the fiscal year beginning on and with
July 1, 1971, an<J .ending on June 30, 1972 be and
the same are hereby fijced, levied and assessed
upon all taxable property in the Oity of Brevard
at the following rates or tax for each $100 valu
ation of property as listed for taxes on January 1,
1971. ; i * r'*'?©’'“a, '
For the General Operating
Expenses of the Town of Brevard
(General Fund) $ 1.0401
For the Payment of Principal and
Interest on Outstanding Debt .3399
}b TOTAL TAX SATE * 1.3800
Section4. That in ocderto raise farther revenue
for the general operating expenses of the City,
there is hereby levied a poll tax of $1.00 on all
male persons betyaapthe ag£s"o£ '21 and 50 un
less exempt as provided by* I&V. v ~~
Section 5. That jn^or^r .to rai&S farther rev
enue for the general o^ra^ieg exBenaes of the
City, there is hereby Ie%da tax 31.00 on all
male dogs and spayed female dogs And a tax of
£J.OO on all female dogs.
Section 6. All funds herein appropriated for the
Recreation Department shall be expended solely
oat of revere from sources other thap Ad
Valorum taxes.
Section 7. The proper City Officials of the City
Brevard are herein authorized to make expen di
" purposes indicated in this ordinance
with applicable provisions of the
City of Brevard and the Laws of
•’ Carolina.
Brevard
Personals
, ~
William R. (Bill) Siniard/son
of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Siniard
104 Outland Avenue, graduated
July 2, from the Naval Train
ing Center, Orlando, Fla.
Bill is a 1969 graduate from
Brevard High School and will
proceed to Dam Neck, Virginia,
where be will begin training in
the field of Polaris Submarines.
Martha and Lee Kellar of
Dayton, Ohio, and Mark and
Carol Hunter, of Charlotte,
have returned to their home,
after spending a vacation with
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Hunter.
Rites Held For
Odell Infant
Lessie Lynn Odell, infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
lard Odell of Brevard, died
Tuesday morning in a Brevard
hospital.
Surviving in addition to the
parents are a sister, Teresa
Leithann and a brother, Milton
Jr. of the home; the maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin W. Owens, the paternal
grandfather, W. R. Odell, and
paternal grandmother, ’Mrs.
Everett Whitmire, all of Bre
vard.
Graveside services were held
Wednesday in Pisgah Gardens.
The Rev. Terry Anglacos offi
ciated.
Frank Moody Funeral Home
was in charge of arrangements.
Reid Reunion
Successful
By - Mrs. L S. Sanders
OAKLAND — The Reid Re
union that is held annually at
the Sapphire-Whitewater Com
munity Center was well attend
ed, Sunday July 4th.
Specftf£ guests attending^Were'
Mrs. Lessie Pell and daughter
Miss Junetta Pell of Sylva, Mrs.
Bess Bigger and sister, Mrs.
Flora Brown of Concord. Mrs.
Ethel Reid and daughter, Mrs.
Georgia Ann Fowler and three
daughters of Cashiers.
Recent visitors of Mrs. W. F.
McCall were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mitchell of Miami and
Highlands.
Mrs. Hazel Burgess and grand
son, Pat of Jacksonville, and
her son, Charles McNeely and
W.ife of Kelso, Washington were
weekend visitors of Mrs. Al
berta Petrikin.
Mrs. Viola Qvyen is yisiting
with her friend Mrs. Sula Reid
at Franklin over the weekend.
The two ladies were anticipat
ing the pleasure of seeing the
Wagon Train come into Frank
lin for the July 4th celebration.
»y ■ Senator Cad »• Killian
If everything works put as
A Freshman In
expectea tne ,ls«i regular ses
sion of your General Assembly
will adjourn guly lg. -I expect
to spend about two weeks va
cationing, and then win get
down to the business of giving
you a formal account of my
stewardship. My plan is to re-'
view briefly my platform, my
eight months of campaigning
which consisted of listening to
the Rpople, the reports on my
activities (some of which you
have received), my voting rec
ord, and an ^valuation thereof
by such groups ^s the N.C.E.A.,
The Biblical Recorder, League
of Women Voters, etcetera.
above I plan tp uae
each subject,
of course,
IN THE TIMES
With First Citizens
Jerry Willis Leaving Brevard,
Goes To Washington's New Bank
Jerry T. Willis has been nam
ed Resident Manager of the
Washington Office of First
Citizens Bank & Trust Company
according to Lewis R. Holding,
president. S •’
The new facility of the state
wide banking system is current
ly under construction and is
expected to open in early Au
gust.
A Vice President of First
Citizens, Sir. Willis is a More
head City native. Since joining
the banking firm in 1964 after
serving several years with other
credit and financial institutions,
Willis has engaged in both com
mercial and installment func
tions in the Fayetteville, Fort
Bragg and Brevard Offices.
He goes to Washington from
Brevard, where he has been
Resident Manager since 1967.
Mr. Willis attended More
head City High School and At
lantic Christian College in Wil
son and the Carolinas School of
Banking at Chapel Hill. He is
an Army veteran.
Active in community affairs,
the young banker is the im
mediate past president of the
Brevard Chamber of Commerce,
a former director of the Rotary
Club and the Transylvania
County United Fund and of the
county-wide Junior Achieve
ment program. He has served
the Easter Seal Society, the
Schenck Civilian Conservation
Center and was chairman of the
Farm-City Committee for the
County. He is a past director of
Glen Cannon Country Club and
county chairman this year of
the Asheville Kemper Satellite
gold tournament.
He is married to the former
Carol Brooks of Wilson and has
two children, Sydna, 7, and
Thomas Ashley, almost two.
The fajnily is Methodist with
Willis serving as a past presi
dent of the Methodist Men and
chairman of the Workshop Com
mittee.
Mr. Willis is expected to un
dertake duties in Washington
soon in anticipation of the
bank’s opening.
^ When ydO think of prescrip
tions, think pf VARNER’S. ?dv.
JERRY WILLIS
...0
With The Sick )
At The
Transylvania
Community Hospital I
S 1,11,1,111,1,1,11.I.mi iuit mi HUH in II HU Ilf*:
The following persons were
reported by the staff of the
Transylvania Community Hos.
pital to be confined at noon on
Wednesday:
Mrs. Regina Burke, Brevard
Mrs. Maude Hubbard, Bre
vard
Mrs. Jeanette Robinson, Pen
rose
Mrs. Nora Humphries, Kings
Mountain
Mrs. Alice Blackman, Brevard
Ira McCall, Balsam Grove
Jason Owen, Lake Toxaway
Mrs. Ann Cooper, Lake Tox
away
Mrs. Virgie Heath and
baby boy, Brevard
Mrs. Imogene Lance, Rosman
Mrs. Peggy Odell, Brevard
Miss Georgia Smith, Brevard
Mrs. Edna Wright, Brevard
Dee Wilson, Pisgah Forest.
9*ti4xS&
WASHINGTON
•MARCH OF EVENTS
tMET DISCIOHHMtS HURT
DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES
TODAY'S WAR OPPOSERS
SUPPORTED ESCALATION
By jHENRY CATHCAKT
Central Press Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—Few factions Jn American politics stand to
gain anything fr6m the recent disclosures of secret Penta
gon papers on tfre escalation of the Vietnam war.
But Jthe big losers appear to be Democrats—many of them
leading anti-war candidates for the presidency.
Sen. Hubert Humphrey, JJ-Minn., the Jonn
son administration vice president who would
like another crack at defeating’ President
Nixon, has been, hurt and hurt badly, say
leading Democratic strategists.
He may now assert that he was shut out
of Johnson administration decisions on the war
escalation, but Humphrey, still is remembered
here for his many statements of support of
early Johnson Vietnam decisions.
Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, also stands
to be hurt politically by the disclosures. With
the exception of Humphrey, Muskie is using
Humphrey more Johnson aomiiusirauon aavisers as pan.
of his brain trust than any other Democratic
Could be contender. . ____ .
a loser Many of these figures occupied high Penta
gon posts at a time when the decisions for
escalation were made. They include Cyrus Vance, who was De
fense Secretary Robert McNamara’s top assistant; Paul Warlike,
former assistant secretary of Defense whose wartime actions
ore highlighted in the disclosures, and Clark Clifford, the former
secretary of Defense*
yT„.icfr f<gced to publicly.admit the responsibility of
the Democratic Pasty in the escalation period. "I am disap
pointed,” toe said, “that these events should have been taking
my pocty controlled the administration.”
* Muaide was by CBS newsman Marvin Kalb if he felt
Ha ^t.^» of betrayal in tbe Democratic leaders following
one course of .pot.1"? at the same time they were telling the
American neoole they were following another course.”
XfoxenUed: “The result I deplore. The way in which the policy
iwpmoriami
In Loving Memory Of
T. Sgt. Charles C. Lance, Ret.
Who Died July 8t,h, 1970
Sad and sudden was the rail
As one so dearly loved by all.
A bitter grief, a shock severe
It is to part with one so dear.
Loving thoughts and silent
tears
Have marked the passing of a
year.
Some have forgotten, now that
you are gone
But we’ll remember no matter
how long
We sit and think of you, and
speak of how you died
To think you could not say
good-bye
Before you closed your eyes.
To all of us you were the best
May God grant you eternal rest.
Mother and Sisters
When in need of job printing,
call The Transylvania Times.
SSI?Y0U POISON IVY?
r% a.
FIRST, LEARN TO,
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IT HAS THREE
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TO A CLUSTER, V Ivy! J
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TO ELIMINATE:
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"'A
.IF CONTACT
* IS MADE,
.<5^1WASH OFTEN
AND THOROUGHLY
WITH NAPTHA 50AP.
FOLLOW DIRECTIONS.
WEAR PLASTIC
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