I k V ( 1 VOL.58 NO 44, 8 PAGES THIS WEEK MARSHALL, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1959 10e PER COPY i- $2.60 A Year In Madison A Buncombe Counties $4.08 A Year Outside These Two Counties . i J 'I i -i Girls Are Metered CHold After PIoa Ds fledGpted t)rvtll ' Rice .- And Harvey Proffitt Given 2-Year Road Term In a dramatic conclusion tot what began as a Superior Court capital , rape case, two Madison County men Tuesday were allow ed to (plead guilty to lesser charg es, sod the prosecuting witnesses were taken into custody along with two other persons. Orvilie Rice and Harvey Prof fitt, each 28, and both of Marshall RPD 2, entered pleas of guilty! to assault on a female. Each man was ordered to serve two years on th roads. The esse was being tried in AsheviUe. Each defendant also pleaded guilty to conduct contributing to the delinquency of. a minor and was given two additional years on the roads, suspended for five years. Swain Accept The pleas were accepted by Dis trict Solicitor Robert 8. Swain. Swain announced acceptance of the pleas following a statement in which he said "the state feels it would hot be proper- to pursue this matter to "Its ultimate end," , His refernce was to the cap (Continued To Page Eight) Industrial Development Plan Is Initiated At Meet Here Other ; Projects , Planned; Many Merchants At. ,:"-, tend Meeting . !-'' . 'A new plan" by which io build C"f' op a fund to be used to secure an m .t -.industry for Marshall was taina- . Marshall , Merchants . Association meeting held at the RE A build ing here. The industrial develop ment plan was explained by Frank T. Moore. Following Mr. Moore's 1 remarks, tentative by laws were read to the group which was followed by an open discus sion. It was suggested that seve ral minor changes be made in the original by-laws and a board of directors was elected. This board will further study the setup and report its findings at the next as sociation meeting on November 12. The following directors were elected: Frank T. Moore, tempo rary chairman; E. C. Teague, D. M. Robinson, Robert Chandler, John Conbett, C. E. Mashburn, and Dean Shields. Tentative plans call for as many firms and professional men (Continued To Page Eight) F Site GhosGH for rJcw ars Will Post .O'flte A. W. Huff, Mars HiU Post master, announced this week that a selection has been made; of . a site for concentration of bids for . a new post office building at Mara HiU. w - x , . - v v The site in located on the east side of Chestnut Street, north of Cherry Street The property Is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Briggs of Mara HiU RFD 2, Mr. Huff stated. - - The buirding plan for the new Mars Hill post office will be re presentative of mod-era facilities now being erected in other areas under the Post O-Vice lease pro gram. . Consideration will be given to "the rrovisions of our condition ing. Further negotiations at ftlars K.J including: posting: , of advert' ' eoeurir-T l i is etc., iil 1; i ' " tJ 3 1 e ste c'.-V' : i . - r. 0. : ' : 2, .. BURLEY SUPPORT FOR 1959 CROP SET AT 57.2c The U. S. Department of Ag riculture recently announced that the average loan level for the 1959 crop of Hurley Tobacco would be 57.2 cents per pound. This support level represents 90 of parity as of October 1 and is 1.8 cents higher than the support lev el on the 1958 crop, according to Ralph W. Ramsey, ASC office manager for Madison County. To bacco is the only basic commodity on which the support level is set at 90 of parity. Producers who market excess tobacco and pro ducers who fail to make timely applications to dispose of any ex cels acreage are not eligible for price support benefits on their to 'bacco. The method through which tobacco prices are supported va ries somewhat from that of the other basic commodities. After tobacco is placed on the warehouse (floors a Government inspector (Continued To Page Seven) NEW ROUTE NOW AT MARS HILL Flag Pond People , To Get - More Direct', v ..!. -j Service - 1 ! -V t A. W. Huff, "Mars Hill Post master, announced this week that a new route- Route 8-is now ad ded to the Mars Hill' office and that patrons will get more direct and Quicker service. The new route includes a bulk of the for mer patrons of the Flag Pond area. "The new route actually started on October 17," Mr. Huff explain ed, "but changes are about com plete now." Mr. Doyle Cody is the tempo rary carrier of the new route. EWood Waldrup' is carrier of RED 1 and A. W. HoUifield is is carrier of Mars Hill RFD 2. nr j 1 1 a. J . ti.i . 4 ewMM . wiui we TaTM 7: For 3069; Against, 590 service and beheve the PTlm 8: For. 258; Against, 8235 will be well satisfied; stated "Mother, It's Cold Outside" The Marshall PTA will meet Monday November 2, at 3:15 in the school lunchroom. , The PTA Welfare Committee is stfll con ducting a used clothing-outgrown dothing-drive, to help children who -do not have enough clothing on these cold morning. , .' - Please, parents, if Sonny's pants . Just come to the calf of his lgs tt his coat sleeves just pass his elbows, bring them to the PTA meeting on Monday. Look ' in closets and trunks for children's clothing you no longer need. Lcl'S all try to bring somcthir? to Ih'p gome other mother's chi'.J to f ' y -vrarm. It v 1 i ,'.'e you v urniT i:. " ', ! SPRING CREEK SCHOOL ENTERED; 3 BOYS IN JAIL Three Haywood County teen agers are in the Madison County Jail on default of $800 bonds each following charges of breaking and entering the Spring Creek school building Saturday morning. Doyle Teague 17, Jones Wal- droup, 18, and Robert E. Lee, Banks, 17, were arrested Satur day night. Teague and Waldroup were arrested in Blue Ridge, Ga, and Banks was arrested in Waynesvjlle. Sheriff Ponder said that $100 in cash was taken from the Coca- Cola machine and that $83 bad been recovered. SEEK FARM CENSUS TAKERS FOR THIS COUNTY - I Applications for employment as census takers for the 1959 Censusj of Agriculture in all but eastern edsre of Madison County will be accepted beginniug Oct. 29, 1959, it was announced by Field Di rector Joseph R. Norwood of the Census Bureau's regional office at Charlotte. Persons interested in these jobs should notify Mr. Olin Jarrett at MarsWl, N. C, who is serving as crew leader for this area. " The (Continued To Page Eight) COUNTY VOTERS FAVOR ITEMS TWO AND SEVEN State Favors Eight Items; - - Onef Remains In ', V-' 'Question ' ' , Official tabulation? Of votes cast Tuesday in the, special statewide bond election reveals that Madi son County voters favored" only two of the nine issues Item 2 (Improvements at the State's Mental Institutions) and Item 7 (Improvements at the State's Blind Rehabilitation Center). Unofficial returns from the en tire State reveal that all issues passed with the exception of Item 0, which is still in question. Below are the official results in Madison County: Item 1: For, 326; Against, 3202 Item 2: For, 3100; Against, 681 Item 3: For, 295; Against, 3221 Item 4: For, 332; Against, 3173 Item 5: For, 252; Against, 3232 Item 6: For, 319; Against, 3206 Item 9: For, 260; Against, 3236 HALLOWE'EN CARNIVAL HERE IS SUCCESSFUL The Hallowe'en Carnival, held Wednesday night at the Marshall school, was most successful, was stated today. ' ' Below are the winners in the various , "honor groups: Little Miss Marshall Billie Lynn -Roberts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill -Roberta of 1 Little Pine.'- : ;;. ?W 'mv'Mcni I Little Mr. ' Marshall Mike Bradley, son of -Mr. and' Mrs. (Continued To Page Eight) , CLYD2 HOST TO TwALhUTCJLC3? Kl.L. lUlUUili Clyde High, ur-?-ten in riah Conference co:, a t?.is S''-a-a"n, villi be j'.-'' ! t with af.ur c' i v Vrsii f i - ' J n t' ' ; " ; 1 ;;urs ( " ) Mar Hill Pastor i Rev. Charles D. Davis CD. DAVIS NEWPASTOR AT MARS HILL New pastor f the Mars Hull Baptist Church is the Rev. Charles D. Davis, 31, of Pulaski, Va., who will assume is duties there on November 15; ' A native of HawkinsVille, Ga. the Revj Mr. Davis was graduat ed from Mercer University in Ma con," Ga. and received the bach elor of divinity degree from Yale University. He has done addition al graduate work at Vanderbilt University' in Nashville, Tenn. For the last four and a half years he has been pastor of the First' Baptist Church of Pulaski. Mrs. , Davis, a native of Cand ler, is a graduate of Berea Col lege and, like '.her busband, holds a bachelor of divinity degree from Yale. ' C ' -t't In his tew -position the Rev. Mr. Davis will minister to a con gregation of approixmatelv 1,000, including 425 full-time residents of the community and, 575 stu dents v at Martt College. The ' Rev.; At T DavifS succeeds Dri lUjjAwux-WhV resid ed as minister of ? the church last March to accept an invitation to become the pastor of a new Bap tist diurch in Ohapel Hill.-' Since that time the Rev. Dean L. Minton, minister of education, has served as acting pastor. HERE TONIGHT The Hot Springs Blue Devils, Madison County football champ ions, will host the Rosman eleven on the Island here at eight o'clock tonight (Thursday). Hot Springs," with a 5-3-1 re cord, enters the game without the services of star halfback R. L. Cantrell, who bas recently undergone an appendectomy. J 1960 bounty UFO 9 Agencies Are Included ; . 1960 Drive .Starts Monday The Madison County United Fund directors ' adopted the 1960 UF Budget in a meeting held at the REA Building Wednesday. John O. Oorbett, chairman of the budget committee - presented the proposed budget and after care ful study, the directors adopted the budget published below. Dean Shields, president of the J SOT UNITED FUND DUDGET FOR MADISON COUNTY Salvation Army 1Tnrlisort ( Vllf fCU vuuuivu " heville Orthopedic Hospital Polio Fund Girl Scout - Coy Scou4 American Carolina T'adiscn I White C, rmenrc:: .13., Heart, Cancer Fund Lbr.s Clubs ".-ITc-t Trrirss) CLINICS ARE DISCUSSED BY HEALTH BOARD The Madison County Board of Health met Tuesday at the Mad ison County Health Center. Dr. Manrery Lord, secretary of the Board, discussed various phi of Health Department services a- vailable to Madison County , citi zens. The different clinics now in Deration at the Health Center were brought to the Board's at tention for their comments. The newest one, the Well Child's Clin ic, presented some problems from the standpoint of type of child who should be accepted. It was decided to have the two doctors staffing this cilinc, Drs. Knight and MoElroy, meet with the Health Director to determine what standards should be adopted. The Board of Health is com posed of a dentist, a physician, a pharmacist, the Mayor of Mar shall, the chairman of the Madi son County Commissioners, the Superintendent of Education, a public citizen and the Health Di- rector. The board meets regular ly each quarter. Attending the meeting were Dr. A. M. Ramsey, chairman; Dr. Lee J. Knight, Dr. Ed Niles, Mr. Fred Anderson, Mr. Troy Rector and Dr. Lord. The next regularly scheduled meeting will be held Tuesday, January 19, 1969, at the Health Center. JUDGE HUSKINS IS ASSAULTED DURING RECESS Newland Superior Courtr- Judge J. Frank Huskins was punched in the head four or five times here Tuesday afternoon, and his alleged assailant was sent to a state hospital Wednesday. ! . indgeJIiiRldriV a MMer. of Bumsville, was attacked from be hind in his own i of f ice during a recess in Averv Superior Court here while he was talking to Avery Sheriff Fred Banner and Chief Deputy Sheriff J. M. Presnell. The first blow sent the judge to his knees, and the attack was under wav before the officers could intervene. Though uninjured by the blows, the judge was advised by a phys ician to rest at home for two or three days to recover fi'ojm the shock of the sudden attack. , H. C. Peek Jr. Now At His Home H. C. Peek, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Peek, of Mars HOI, who was seriously injured in an automobile accident several weeks ago, in Mars Hill, has been re leased from the hospital and is now at his home recuperating. County UF, announced -that the 1960 pledging drive would begin in the county next Monday, Nov ember 2. Concentrated efforts to reach the . $10,000 goal will be initiated in the near future, Mr. Shields explained. ," , -'. v lis is noted that the overall bud get of 110,000 is less than the 1959 budget, . which was $15,000. Included in the new budget are nine agencies plus an emergency fund.' . -' . ' . - . i The Budget follows $ 1,300.00 ' 500.00 2,000X0 4CO.C0 4C3.C G l.CCXCO If uoget ff Still Explosion Believed Cause Of Fire Fatal To 2 EFFECT OF PUBLIC LAW-86-172 ON ALLOTMENTS The last Congress enacted agri cultural legislation under Public Law 86-172 which will have an important bearing on the estab lishment of tobacco and wheat farm allotments for 1961 and subsequent years. In short, this amendment to the Agricultural Adjustment Act requires a re duction in future farm allotments when 75 of the farm allotted acreage is not utilized within the recent three years period. The Act states that the 1961 farm al lotment shall not be greater than the largest acreage planted in the I three year period or the five year average in cases where the farm er failed to utilize 75 of his al lotted acreage in either of the re cent three years. The Act is ap plicable to the basic commodities now under marketing quotas. According to Ralph Ramsey, ASC office manager for Madison County, the first three year peri-J od applicable under the Act will include the years 1968, 1959, and 1960 which means that several (Continued To Page Eight) Annual Mars Hill-Marshall Game Friday On Island Here 1960 WOOL -INCENTIVE PRICE IS ANNOUNCED The price support or incentive price available to Tarheel wool growers will be 62 cents per pound in I960, according to Novile Haw kins, chairman of the Madison County Agricultural Stabilisation and Conservation Committee. This wool incentive price is es tablished under provisions of the National wool act of 1954, which directs the Secretary of Agricul ture to take into consideration prices paid and other cost condi tions affecting sheep production ing determining a support price that will encourage an annual production of 30o million pounds of shorn wool. The 1960 price of 62 cents per iffcunds is the same price that was (Continued To Last Page) Marshall Efigh School To BOOKMOBILE .' Beginning the first week in No vember, there will be some chang es made in the Bookmobile Sche dule. The Paint Rook, Antioch, Shutin trip will be made on tv.c Fourth Tuesday mornirz in eath month instead of the first Tues day. The Grapevine-rat F.-tk rw' will be run on t'-e f ! T. J,iy instead of t' e 1 ...I 1 C '"' v. :-.--s r::i ' ' . J. H. Williams, Jeter Gosnell Victims; Rites Held A Madison County teenager was burned to death Thursday night and an older companion died Friday night from burns re ceived in a house fire that was apparently caused by an explod ing still in the house. James Harold (Cotton) Wil liams, 17, of Marshall RFD 4, was fatally burned in the fire that started about 9 p. m., in an unoccupied house in the SpUJcorn section about 21 miles north of Marshall. Jeter Gosnell, 46, also of Mar shall RFD 4 and sometimes a res ident of Greenevtlle, Ten., died Friday night in a Greeneville, Tenn., hospital from third degree burns. The blaze, which destroyed the home, apparently was started when fumes from gasoline used as fuel for the still in tae house be came ignited and explosed, Sher iff E. Y. Ponder surmised. Sheriff Ponder said the remain of a 600-gallon still were found in the ruins. Ponder said that O. V. Boles, 21, also of the Spillcorm section, told him that -he had started to Claude Norton's home on business last Thursday night and as be (Continued To Page Seven) Both Teams Have Similar Records; Game Rated - r ; "Toss-Up . ' The annual Mars Hill-Marshall , football Vttl will W-jplavoA this , Friday night on the Island here. Kickoff is scheduled for 8 o'clock. :i The ' season's largest crowd is expected to be on hand as these county rivals clash. .Both, teams have almost identical season re- cords. Mars Hill has defeated Bakersville, Cane River, East Yancey and Walnut while losing . to Spruce Pine, Hot Springs, and Glen Alpine. , The Wildcats -tied with Clyde, with a record of four victories, three losses and one tie. ' Marshall has a 3-3-1 record, ' having defeated Walnut, East Yancey and Cane River, tying with Edneyville (0-0), and losing to Spruce Pine, NGSiD,. and Hot Springs. s Both bands are expected toxbe on hand to add "color" to the event. The game is rated as a (toSS-Up. .... -A' : :': . Marshall School ' is interested in being of service to the people of this school district by (1) of fering business courses to qualify the graduates and no -graduates of this school district for better Jobs, (2) offering regular high School courses toward a diploma. To do this, the following cours- eses are offered at a mln'.. i charge! . EUSIXES3 C0U""T3: Ty, -writing, CoU ; t - t-J count!" -. f'.k-t '" i. 1 r t"