ggfttgy. Starling
Marshall, N.C
MARSHALL, IN. C. THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1970
10c PER COPY
VOL. 69 NO. 35
Snpnial Term P.nurt
Starts Here Monday
A special term of superior
court for the trial of criminal
cases will begin here Monday
morning with Judge P. C.
Froneberger presiding. Clyde
M. Roberts is the solicitor.
Among the cases on the
calendar are the following:
Charles W. Goforth,
defraud and forgery; William
McKinley Ramsey, III,
manslaughter; Johnnie Bon
Sawyer, judgment; Clendon
Honeycutt, possession; Doris
Carroll, possession; David
Ronald Ogle, DUI; Jimmy
Hurst, AWITK and assault
inflicting serious injury;
Stanley Norton, public
drunkenness; Ted Floyd
Payne, Jr., DUI and reckless
driving; Mamie Boley Deaver,
DUI; Ottis Ellison, DUI; Ted
Floyd Payne, Jr., stop sign
violation; Thomas Burrell
Riddle, AWDWWITK;
Edward Williams,
non-support of child; Jackie
Tweed, receiving stolen
goods; Jimmy Hurst, Johnny
Cupp, John Gahagan, II, Joe
Emerson Franklin, Merman
Franklin, breaking, entering
and larceny; Donald Norton,
non-support of children; Ray
Tweed, carnal knowledge of
female child; Doris Carroll,
sale of liquor; Edward Ray,
larceny; Geraldine Griffith,
peace warrant; Kermit
Hensley, DUI; Gary Lee Ball,
abandonment and
non-support; non-support of
child.
Jurors drawn for the term
are: Iva Glen English, James
Enelo Boone, Sharlotte
Mars Hill Crushes
Marshall By 44-0
Ken Castelloe ran for five
touchdowns and picked up
173 yards in 12 carries to
lead the Mars Hill Wildcats to
a 44-0 triumph over Marshall
in a non-conference football
game at Mars Hill Friday
night.
Castelloe, a veteran
halfback, scored his first
touchdown on 10-yard
sweep, the second on a
one-yard plunge, the third on
a 35-yard run, the fourth ona
two-yard plunge and the final
one on a 75-yard scramble.
Man Hill' i other two TDs
cam on a four-yard run by
DafTeD Boone and a 26-yard
pus from quarterback John
Roberts to duffles McGee.
Aaon Bell scored the only
two-point conversion on a
run.
. The victorious Wildcats
compiled 288 yards rushing
and 77 yards on passing
compared to the 70 rushing
and 10 patting for the
Chandler, Margaret M.
Edwards, Mrs. M. A. Revis,
Troy M. Honeycutt, C. E.
Metcalf, Georgia Moore,
Herman Luther Robinson,
Phyllis Louise Niles, Eddie J.
Tomberlin, Mrs. Beulah
Haney, Elma C. Anderson,
Shelby Hamlin, Clyde C.
Wallin, Julia M. Rice, Fred
Blake Bentley, Reva E.
Flemming, Walter S.
Chandler, Annie Mae
Thomas, Frank B. Shelton,
Cumi Edwards Barnes, Eddie
Joe Cody, Nepel N. Adams,
Joe Daniel Massie, G. E.
Briggs, Jr., Alene Swaney,
Barbara W. Franklin, Lena
Hensley, Win. Boyd Cutshaii,
Quentin W. Sprouse,
Woodson M. Metcalf, Thelma
L. Justice, Avery Ramsey,
Flora Chandler, Ruby P.
Fowler, Larry Don West.
Young GOP Club
Organized Here
The Madison County
Young Republican Club met
at the Madison County Court
House August 24, at 8 p.m'
Approximately 45 members
representing all sections of
the county attended. Officers
elected were: David Freeman,
chairman; Judy Silver,
co-chairman; Billy Briggs,
treasurer; and Lucretia
Freeman, secretary. In
addition to the election of
officers, the Constitution and
By-Laws were adopted during
See GOP, Page 8-
Tornadoes.
Marshall never did seriously
threaten and only once
managed to cross the 50-yard
line into Wildcat territory.
Mars Hill coach J. C. Moss
said "Castelloe deserves a lot
of credit, but I also had four
other boys who played vital
roles.. .guard Jim Eller, tackle
Joey DeBruhl, end Bruce
Murray and linebacker James
Shook. They did a whale of a
job."
The only bright spot in the
game, as far as the Tornadoes
were concerned, was the
second quarter when the
Wildcats were held scoreless.
Firet downs 4
RttiMnf fucfapi 70
PlafctfyanStfi 10
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L. H. Cutshaii
Again Jailed
In Marshall
Leonard H. Cutshaii, an
East Tennessean whose
murder trial was declared a
mistrial in June after evidence
showed juror tampering, was
returned to ji il without bond
Thursday after he was
arrested in Tennessee for
attempted murder of the
brother of the man he is
accused of killing.
CutshaU had been fret pn
$50,000 bond since June
after Superior Court Judge W.
K. McLean declared a mistrial
when evidence was presented
showing that juror Charles
Wayne Goforth of Madiscn
County had met with the
defeandant during the trial.
Other evidence at the
hearing then showed that
CutshaU had association
with the husband of another
juror at a Hot Springs
restaurant.
Cutshaii was charged with
the murder of Richard W.
(Jack) Reeves late on the
nighV"f J11- 30 in Madison
County". Reeves was shot as
he rode in a car in the
company of Cutshall's
ex -wife.
At the time he was released
on bond in June, Judge
McLean filed an order,
consented to by Cutshaii,
that the defendant not
approach his wife or any of
the Reeves family.
According to the Greene
County, Tenn., Sheriffs
Department, Cutshaii was
arrested Thursday on a charge
of assault with intent to
murder after a bullet struck
the windshield post of a car
operated by William Reeves,
34, of Marshall Rt. 3, a
brother of the man slain in
January.
Madison County Sheriff
Dedrick Brown returned
Cutshaii to jail in Marshall.
Nancy Morgan
Probe Continues
Two State Bureau of
Investigation agents remain
on the unsolved death of
VISTA worker Nancy
Morgan, but P. R. Kitchen,
regional SBI supervisor said
nothing new has developed.
Miss Morgan, 24, was found
dead June 1 7 in a government
car she used. The car had
been pulled off the highway
going from Marshall to Hot
Springs and the body was
found hog-tied with
parachute cord.
A native of Baton Rouge,
La., she had been working
with the underprrvikged in
Madison County.
4 WaV
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THE FIVE-ROOM HOME OF MR. AND MRS. GEORGE TREADWAY, owned by C E.
Mashburn, was completely destroyed by fire on "Mashburn Hill" in the city limits here Tuesday
morning. Firemen were hampered by lack of water since there are no hydrants close by. Most
of the household furnishings were destroyed although several small items were saved. The home
may have been saved if Mr. Treadway could have notified the fire department quicker but two
persons refused to hang up on a party line when Mr. Treadway told them his home was on fire
After 10-15 minutes the line was clear and he finally contacted the fire department. (Staff
Photo)
Mars Hill Begins 115th Year
The hum and whirl of
modern data processing
equipment was heard this
week as Mars Hill College
began its 115th year of
operation as a Baptist
educational institution.
The equipment will relieve
some of the headache in
registering over 1,300
students who arrived on
campus for the start of fall
semester. Approximately a
third of the students are from
Western North Carolina.
Sunday afternoon, college
president Dr. Fred B. Bentley
and his wife hosted the
students and faculty members
at a reception in the parlor
of Edna Moore Dormitory.
Classes began Monday and
will continue until the
semester ends Dec. 18 and
Christmas holidays begin.
In just over a century the
college has grown from a
single two-story brick
academy to a four-year senior
college with 22 major
buildings spread over an
150-ecre campus. Established
in 1856 when there were no
public schools in the
mountains. Mars Hill offered
the children of the
community the rudiments of
reading, writing, history,
mathematics and religious
instruction. Now the school
offers instruction in 14
diversified academic
Football Schedule
Friday, August 28
Cane River at Marshall
Man HOI at East Yancey
Hot Sprinp (Open)
departments.
According to Dr. Richard
Hoffman, vice president for
academic affairs, an unique
feature of education at Mars
Hill is that it isn't limited to
textbook knowledge and
classroom teaching, but goes
on in tobacco fields,
churches, courtrooms,
community centers,
playgrounds-anyplace where
Cane River Defeats
Hot Springs, 38-0
The Cane River Rebels
utilized its depth and
experience to ramble to a
38-0 victory over Hot Springs
in a non-conference football
game at Hot Springs to
initiate its 1970-71 grid
season Friday night.
The Rebels dominated
ground yardage with 149
yards while allowing the
young Blue Devils only 70
yards. Cane River also took
an edge in the air with 45
yards to 25 for Hot Springs.
The scrappy Rebels began
their rampage as Ossie Parker
hauled in a 15-yard Jeff
Parker pass to notch the first
touchdown early in the first
quarter. Pate ran the
conversion to make the score
stand, 8-0, Cane River.
The Rebels again stung Hot
Springs in the first stanza as
Ossie Parker reached paydirt
on a 25-yard gallop following
a triple reverse. He also ran
the point after.
Danny Ray scored on a
people work and live and
play.
For instance, he said, last
year several business
administration majors spent
40 hours observing the
operations of a textile
manufacturer in Weaverville,
10 political science students
interned with various city and
county governmental agencies
See MHC.Page8-
two-yard plunge after a
sustained drive and Ossie
Parker again tallied on a run
for the extra two points to
give Cane River a comfortable
24-0 half time advantage.
Maney tossed a three-yard
pass to David Henson in the
third quarter to register the
Rebel's fourth TD of the
night. The run failed for the
points after. Jerry Parker
intercepted a Hot Springs
aerial and returned it 40
yards for the final Cane River
touchdown in the latter half
of the third period. Pate
threw to Peterson for the
two-point conversion to make
the final sane 38-0. Cane
River.
Can Hot
Mum Springs
First Downs 7 1
Ru thing cdi 149 70
Pmtnf yardaf 4B 28
Paw 84 . 8-18-1
Punts 247 4-3,
Fumbtattaat 1 1
YaftbponaHMO- .70 IV .
OfttRhwr 181 140 -30
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