ny Items Are Report IthNews From Quebec Ar By - Mrs. Paul M. Fisher (Too late last week) QUEBEC — A birthday din ner was given Satuhray night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Whitmire honoring Mr. Whitmire’s father, Jess Whitmire. All his children were present. They were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cash and chil dren ot Pickens, S. C., Mrs. Donald i Aiken and son and Sheila ’ Whitmire of Rosman and Mrt and Mrs. Steve Whi mire of Balsam Grove. We extend our sympathy to Clyde Jones and family in their recent bereavement in the pass ing of Mrs. Jones. The “Sunshine Sisters” or “Secret Pal” club held their annual party Saturday night at the parsonage of Faith Bap tist church. There were several attended and everyone enjoyed a social hour together and ex changing of gifts. Rev. Jack Plemmons has been sick with flu and was unable to When you think of prescrip tions, think of VARNER’S, adv. attend church Sunday. Mrs. Plemmons was also sick with flu last week. We wish each of them a speedy recovery. Mrs. Helen Middleton and Mrs. Paul Owen attended fun eral services for Mrs. Maxine Rufty, aunt of Mrs. Owen, in Hendersonville Sunday. Vernice McCall visited his grandmother Mrs. Della Hall, in Saluda Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Rebecca Clark and daughter Rachel visited the former’s son Garfield Clark and family of Penrose Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Bill McNeely, the for mer Myrtle Chapman, left Monday morning with her hus band going to Reinelle, West Va., to live for a while, where Mr. McNeely and his father have accepted a logging job. Mrs. Alma Alexander, her daughter and son-in-law and their little daughter of S. C., all were Sunday guest of the formers brother and sister-in law, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Chap man. TJncommon Mountain Condominiums Now available at \Blue Ridge Mountain Resort Furnished Models Open ♦ Carefree is the word for Countryplace Con dominiums. You get complete exterior resi dence maintenance, protection from vandalism, 24-hour security. If desired, we’ll open and i dose your residence, furnish maids, deliver! meals . . . and more. Elevation 3,300 feet. ' Highlights of lures: finest golfing, tennis, alpinei hiking, riding, skiing, children’s activity coun- j selor, dining and dancing. J ! One, 2 and 3-bedroom residences. Big. Beau tiful. Many with fireplaces. Dazzling views of forest, lake and mountains. See them or write: SiIapphireValle^ J COUNTRYPLACE'- CONDOMINIUMS Sapphire, North Carolina 28774 Location: short stroll from the Sapphire Taller1 Inn, U.S. Highway 64 (3 miles east of Cashiers, 60 miles southwest of Asheville). Telephone (704) j 451-2110. j Ab achievement of REALTEC INCORPORATED a subsidiary ef '- CERTAIN-TEED PRODUCTS CORPORATION OPEN ALL YEAR Ray Simmons Named To Head Banking Project In County Ray Simmons, Vice Presi dent of First Union National, has been named by the Young Bankers Division of the North Carolina Bankers Association to coordinate the activities of Project TELL (Teach Econom ic Literacy Lectures) in Tran sylvania County. Project TELL is the primary public service effort of the Young Bankers Di vision. The statewide program was developed by the Young Bank ers Division in cooperation wi*h the State Department of Public Instruction. Project TELL makes available the ex perience of young bankers as resource people for classroom lectures on economic subjects. It is designed to supplement economic education programs offered through the public school' system. Each county representative is provided a kit of approved classroom lectures on economic related subjects, but flexibility of presentation is one of the chief assets of the program. “We encourage all of our representatives to work close ly with the teachers and try to deal with whatever economic related subject they feel will be most helpful as a supple ment to the courses they are teaching,” said J. Curtis Hen drix of Greenville, president of the Young Bankers Division. Project TELL was originat ed by the Young Bankers Divi sion in 1963, and is rapidly gain ing recognition for its contribu tions to the improvement of economic literacy among the young people of North Carolina. A Project TELL representative has been appointed for each of the state’s one hundred coun ties. Tax Information Booklet Available At Post Offices A booklet that gives infor mation on how to fill out Federal tax returns will be sold at both the Brevard and Pisgah Forest Offices Post master Charlie Patton an nounces today. “Your Federal Income Tax” was written by the Internal Revenue Service and con tains many examples to illus trate how the tax law applies NOTICE Pursuant to the Zoning Or dinance of the City of Brevard, notice is hereby given of a pub lic hearing to be held at the Municipal Building in the Council Room at 8:00 o’clock P.M., February 7, 1972 to de termine whether or not the lands hereinafter described shall he rezoned by changing the same from an R-2 to A-l District: BEGINNING at a concrete monument in the Eastern mar gin of the Country Club Road, Northwest corner of the prop erty of J. I. Ayers; and runs thence with the margin of the Country Club Road, North 7 deg. 06’ East 150.90 feet to a stake; North 5 deg. 40’ East 77.59 feet to a stake; thence along the Fowler line, North 83 deg. 41’ East 537.37 feet to a stake; thence South 19 deg. 55’ East 70.88 feet to an iron pin; South 20 deg. 6’ East 265.28 feet to an iron pin; South 17 deg. 44’ East 120.50 feet to a stake in the center of Jumping Branch; thence North 87 deg. 39’ West 160.91 feet to a stake; thence North 10 deg. West 20.47 feet to a stake; thence along the margin of Hayes Street, North 87 deg. 39’ West 209.68 feet to a stake, comer of Ayers; thence with the Ayers line, North 6 deg. 56’ East 84.8 feet to a concrete monument; and North 86 deg. 27’ West 250 feet to the BEGINNING. All interested parties are in vited to attend said meeting. This the 6th day of January, 1972. Opal C. Armentrout City Clerk 1.1 suit* nmmrmk DOUBLE S$fJ4 GREEN STAMPS SHELL GAS FILL-UP AT MEADE FISHER'S PISGAH SHELL SERVICE nn.ru n to actual situations. A spec ial feature of the booklet is the sample filled-in return, Form 1040 keyed to pages where explanations can be found for each entry on the return. The 160-page booklet is now on sale and costs 75 cents a copy. “By selling inis booklet at postal facilities in Brevard and Pisgah Forest, we are of fering a convenient service to our customers,” Postmaster Patton said. “We are participating in a nationwide program to make the tax booklet available to the public in 15,000 postal facilities,” he concluded. NOTICE State of North Carolina County of Transylvania Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust execut ed by CHARLES EDWARD HEMPHILL and wife, JOHN NIE MAE HEMPHILL to Jerry H. Jerome, Trustee for Bre vard Federal Savings and Loan Association, which said Deed of Trust bears date of the 18th day of March, 1966, and is re corded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Tran sylvania County in Deed of Trust Book 76, Page 77, de fault having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, the undersigned substitute. Trustee. E. Gene Ramsey, will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Bre vard, North Carolina, at noon on Wednesday the 9th day of February, 1972, the property conveyed in said Deed of Trust the same lying and being in Brevard Township, Transyl vania County and more par ticularly described as follows: ALL of that certain pieces parcel of lot of land situate, lying and being in Brevard Township, Transylvania Coun ty, North Carolina, and more particularly described accord ing to a plat thereof prepared by William Leonard, R.L.S., dated August, 1959, copies of whjch said plat are on file with Brevard Federal Savings and Loan Association) Brevard, North Carolina, and more par ticularly bounded and describ ed as follows: to—wit: BEGINNING at a stake in the Western margin of Hillview Avenue, Northeast corner of Lot # 8 and runs thence along the margin of Hillview Avenue, N. 39 deg. 50 min. E. 70 ft. to a stake; thence along the line of Lot No. 10, N. 50 deg. 44 min. W. 121.6 ft. to a stake; thence S. 41 deg. 30 min. W. 70 ft. to a stake, Northwest corner of Lot No. 8; thence along the line of Lot No. 8, S. 50 deg. 44 min. E. 123.7 ft. to the BEGINNING. Being all of Lot. No. 9 of Hillside Terrace Subdivision, plat of which said subdivision is on file in Plat Book 2, Page 131, Records of Plats for Transylvania County, North Carolina. This the 10th day of Janu ary, 1972. E. GENE RAMSEY Substitute Trustee l/13/4tc Frtenne is for corns that hart Absolutely painless. No dangorous cutting, no ugly pans orplutera. In days, Frotzont •tut tho hurt...tofoly helps out off thp com. Drop on Frwont-nkt off coma. Smokej Saywt "1 Whals my message ? j f iA W i City Auto And Truck Stickers Now Available The City automobile and truck stickers are now on sale at the Municipal building. According to Mrs. Opal C. Armentrout, the code of the City of Brevard requires that all resident automobiles and trucks display a City license sticker on the lower right hand comer of windshield on and after February 16th. Residents are urged to pur chase their stickers at City Hall before the deadline and avoid penalty. The cost is $1.00. Mothers9 March Of Dimes Campaign To Be Held Sunday When your doorbell rings Sunday, January 23rd, answ er it. You won’t find a sales man, a repairman, or the land lord. You will find a fighter. You can recognize this fight er by the badge that, she wears — “Mothers’ March for the March of Dimes.” Many men and young people are also joining the fight to prevent birth defects and proudly identify themselves with a badge reading, “To day I am a Mother.” It’s a battle well worth sup porting. Nearly a quarter of a million babies are born each year with significant birth defects. The March of Dimes backs research, medi cal care and education aimed at preventing and treating these tragedies. Its chapters around the country work closely with many health departments and medical societies in rubella immunization drives and pren atal care projects. More than 100 medical ser vice programs are supported by the voluntary health or ganization. Contributions to the Mothers’ March help con tinue year round medical and research to combat this na- er of human life — birth de tion’s second greatest destroy- fects. DOWNTOWN BREVARD ; f j j ON SOUTH BROAD ST. I ) WINTER HOURS 6A.M.-3P. M. FOR THAT EXTRA SPECIAL TREAT! Flavorful — Juicy ROAST PRIME BEEF YOU WILL ENJOY EVERY DELICIOUS BITE ★ Gaither’s Phone 883-9470 You might have to pay $492 million more taxes. If the railroads go broke. Railroads paid that much in 1970— Southern’s part was $41 million. But money losers can't go on shouldering a $500 million tax burden indefinitely. And that's what many U.S. railroads are fast becoming. Of the nation’s 70 large railroads, 21* lost money in 1970. Between 1955 and 1969, total pre-tax income dropped by about 50%—despite nearly % more freight and abotit49%more total revenue. Which means that, precisely when rail roads must haul more and more goods and essential raw materials, most lines don’t have and can't borrow the money for nec essary repairs.and new equipment. That5 trend can't go on. Nationalization? The problems would be the same—they’d just be in someone else’s lap. The Govern ment’s and yours as a taxpayer. And ex perience shows that governments are not adept at running railroads profitably. Then there’s the cost: over $60 billion just to acquire and modernize facilities' and equipment. Plus more billions for operating deficits. Nationalized railroads wouldn’t pay tax dollars—they’d probably consume them. Surface Transportation Act Railroads can work out their problems and fill their role as a vital part of a balanced transportation system. That’s one aim of the proposed Surface Transportation Act, now before Congress. Who supports it? The trucking, railroad and regulated ■water-carrier industries, among others. We hope you will, too. Railroads want to remain tax payers.* Not become tax burdens. THE R/ULWAY SYSTEM THAT GIVES A GREEN LIGHT TO INNOVATIONS

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