1 ICca TM r ' ; .J H & - I M !'-' i i ft ! I 1 i I- ' ft ' A T 1 J nnn n r DIG Ltocd LliLiL) LiilUULlLjiLV" Space available for first round sales HO lillllT in HEUPOIIT, four to five days will clear our floors DO NOT LISTEN to )FALSE ( STORIES that we are running a RUMP SALE. WE HAVE A FULL SET OF BUYERS. Many of you sold with us last year and know. Tell your neighbors to come and see. PLEASE KEEP YOUR TOBACCO DRY: DO EOT PACK IT ON THE BASKET MIEN IT IS TOO HIGH IN OlER Tune your radio to WLIK Newport, 1230 P. M. daily for our program. BILL RUSSELL FRED EASTERLY DI6 BOOLE Y & FARL1ERS UflQE HOUSES Newport, Tennessee The unidenti- found the puree to Ke Kitehner return- to her, bat decided on ins asm' reward. . The puree, con taieJac, t9t wms received by Miss SCARED OF TEACHER' Detroit, Mich. After twelve driving lessons, Mrs. Ann Zetmnel Kitehner by mail. It contained (110 when it was lost. uuUnoed from rage Om) 'J:. li r), -"' t ' t ' , V .e ir 1965;'WtthWi' Packing Corv., not in the amoun of f 10,000 wiu'out giving credit to die account of fountain Packing Corp of any proceeds of the dote and crediting the proceeds to the Cox Department Store and the account of Lendon "June 16, 1963, the sum of $7,000, which he received as proceeds from a? note of J. T. Powell and J. N. Powell, which note was given Cox for the purpose of securing a loan, the proceeds of which were to be applied to the credit of J. T. Pow ell and J. N. Powell, but which Oox diverted to the Cox Department Store, and to Lendon Cox. "June 16, 1953, a note of J. T. and J. M. Powell for ?7,000, without crediting the Powells with any of the proceeds of the note and credit ing the funds and proceeds to the Cox Department Store and to his brother, Lendon Cox. "Sept 4, 1953, the sum of $10,000. which he received from the Asheville acceptance corp., in the form of a check dated Aug. 29, 1953, to be ap plied in payment of a note of the i Asheville Acceptance Corp., due to the Citizens Bank Sept. 1, 1953. Feb. 6, 1954, the sume of $7,600, and recording on the liability ledger of tile bank a fictitious note in the name of a fictitious person, one J T. Fender, RFD 1, Flag Pond, Tennessee. , Mrs. French Bolt, of Pulaski, Va. wae the week-end guest of her 'slater. Mrs, J." O.' Briggrand mother, 'Mr Gragg Metcalf. . , 1 t Mr. S. Lee Carter, who for some ttimte had been with his daughter, Mrs. Albert Sanderson and family at Wallace, returned to his home here last Saturday. His daughter came with him and spent' the night here. Dr. and Mrs. I. N .Carr and son Marion, of Jefferson City ,Tenn. Mrs. Judy Bridges and Miss Irene visited friends here last Sunday. Holcombe spent last week-end in ! Charlotte with Mrs. Bridges' relat ives. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Zeno Mc Mahan last week-end were two In ' Service E. l ist Dir. Germany Set L. Ponder 23, sort ' of f Mr. and "Mrs. Lewis : Ponder, Route . 1, Mars' HOI, and Specialist: Third Class Leonard Mnssey, whose wife, Faye, and par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Massey, live at Walnut, are scheduled to leave Germany for the U. S. late this month as part of Operation Gyro scope, the Army's new unit rotation. plan. Their unit, the. 1st Infantry Di vision, has been replaced in Europe by the 10th Infantry Division. The 1st will be stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas. Sgt. Ponder is a secton chief in Battery B of the Division's 33rd Field Artillery Battalion. He en- sisters of Mrs. McMahan, Mrs. Eva tered the Army in January, 1953, Winibisih of Stella, Va., and Mrs. i completed basic traininir at ' Came doing fine until she saw a man. She drove her car directly into .his car. In coup, Mrs. Zenunel explained that she became flustered when she saw this man he was her driving teacher, Allan F. Finnk. "June 30, 1953, the sum of $3,000, and recording on the liability ledg er of the bank a fictitious note in the name of one J. A. Baker of Ashe ville. "Aug. 4 ,1953, the sum of $2,500, Which was misapplied and embezzled in the form of a check dated July 31, 1953, to be applied in payment of a note recorded among the bank records as due the Citizens Bank on Aug. 1, 1953, from Yancey Enterprises. "May 25, 1954, the sum of $10,- 000, this in the form of a false and fraudulent note (No. 6025) purport edly executed by Phillip R. Elam and crediting the accounts of Yan cey Enterprises, the Asheville Ac- jeptance Corp., J. A. Baker and J. T. Powell. "May 24, 1964, the sum of $9,00' iy recording upon the note register -a xf the bank a false note (No. 6043) wyrte pyypted by R. B. Ram- vicvit;iif me accounts' oi Tancey Enterprises, the Asheville 'Accepianc Corp, J. A. Baker and J. T. Fender. "May 24, 1964, the sum of $3,000 Daniel Rae and Mr. Rae of Martins ville Va. Other guests of the Mc Mahan's on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs McKinley Metcalf of West Asheville: Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Mc Mahan, of Wav4rvflle; Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McMahan, of Sylva; and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Metcalf of Beech Ulen. Private David Hal Buckner. of Fort Knox, Ky., was home last week-end. Ability Figures It's better to do a little task well than to be lost in a great undertak ing. by recording in the note register of uie bank a false and fraudulent note (No. 6018), purportedly executed by Jamie Anderson and crediting the accounts of Yancey Enterprises, the Asheville Acceptance Corp.. J. A. Baker and J. T. Fender. "May 24, 1954, the sum of $1, 300, by recording on the note register of the bank a false and fraudulent note (No. 6036), purportedly exe uted by George Lamb and credit ing the accounts of the Yancey En terprises, the Asheville Acceptance Jorp., J'. A. Baker and J. T. Fen der. "June 26, 1956, the sum of $3,000 in the form of a note purportedly executed by Robert Wheeler, and converting the funds obtained on note to his own use. "Aug. 6, 1964, the sum of $2,500 by entry on the records of the bank a fraudulent note purportedly ex ecuted by.WUUaan Greer under the date of Aug. 2, 1954." (Second Wheeler note.) These counts show the largest single day in the matter of excut ing "fraudulent notes" was May 24, 1954, on which date the bill of in diotment shows four notes were ex cuted for a total of $23,300. Chaffee, Arkansas, and arrived ov erseas in June, 1953. Specialist Massey, 21, is a cook in Battery A of the division's 33d F.A. Battalion. He entered the Ar my in May, 1954 and completed ba sic training- at Camtj Gordon. Ga. Massey arrived overseas in Octo ber, 1954. Fort Polk, La. Pvt. Lee R Briggs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clar ence Briggs, Route 1, Mars Hill, is participating in the largest Army Air Force maneuver sinc WnrM War II, Exercise Sage Brush in Louisiana. Some 110,000 Army troops are testing the latest concepts of atomic. bacteriological, chemical and elec tronic warfare. The exercise will end Dec. 15. Briggg, a former -student at Mars Hill and Western Carolina colleges. entered the Army in March of this year. SI you How to be sure are making the best buy in a new truck ' A new truck is an imrmrtnnt investment. Tf vrni want to be sure you're getting the beet buy, you've got to consider a lot of things: price, power, operating economy, good appearance to mention only a few. .".W- ."'V . ; .r 9 Take nrice. for iigfATvA WovlHn't it twin vnti ro jmow,xriai yourx)uy tor surpnangiy little money? Could beyou didn't know Dodge trucks cost leu than most other makes. ? WqukJaTt it beh? you,, too, to get the whole ptcune on racs; powerr ine laci mac iJoage J-owefr Dome yaouower every pther leading tmokin' flat low and. rrtPtihirn-Jtonageek jwrely. ia irnpjjrtant to your decision. ' - -' And there are other Dodge advantages you'll want to think about like the biinjnnw building beauty of Forward Look styling, and the long life that spreads low initial cost over years of dependable service. It all adds up to this: To be sure of your best truck buy, take a few minutes to talk to your Docfge dealer. Just a phone call will put the wheels in motion. Frankfurt, Germany, Army Pfc. John Maurice Rector, 19, son of- Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Rector, Route 2, Marshal recently took part in a field training exercise held by the n infantry Division in Germany. . Training received by the "Ivy" di vision, part of the U. S. Seventh Army, includes intensive maneuvers and realistic field problems. Private First Class Rector, a driver in the 22d Regiment's Com pany 1, entered the Army in No vember, 1954, and received basic training at Camp Gordon, Ga. He arrived in Europe in April, 1965. " Rector is a 1954 graduate of Mar halL.Hh School. P.V. T. D. Shepherd. RA 14-666-114, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shepherd, is 'stationed in Germany. tie nas been in the Army for a year. Fort Belvoir, Va. Pvt. Donald E. Taylor, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Tuylor, Route 2, Marshall, N. C, recently returned to Fort Bel- oir, Va., after helping construct the "DEW" (Distant Earlv Warn ing) line of radar stations north of the Arctic Circle in Canada. Private Taylor's unit, the 688tfi Engineer Construction Battalion, un loaded thousands of - tons of cargo from sea going ships to inland sup ply dumps. The men worked around the clock in twelve hour shifts be cause of the short, 40-day ice-free period in the Arctic. A 1963 graduate of Marshall High School, he entered the' Armv in July, 1954. Taylor is a mechanic n the battalion's Company C. SEND " The News-Record ra your son in service I ( SALES & SERVICE MARSHALL c ; Lowe! Cridge .Strt, ; '7 .- r? - lj "ti vr, T -f ,yt 1 , v ' ' - - -