1 w;l:
fit November II. 1171 Marshall. N. C.
Deaths, Funerals
MARVIN A. CLARK
Marvin A. Clark, 59, of 1
Linden Avenue, Asheville, died
Friday morning. Nov. 12, B71 in
an AahevUle rest home after a
long illness.
A' native of Carrboro and a
resident of Asheville since 1937,
Mr. Clark retired three years
ago due to ill health. He had
been a sales representative with
Associated Transport Co. for S
years. He was a member of St.
Paul's United Methodist Church
and the Western North Carolina
Traffic Club.
Surviving are the widow, Mrs.
Edith Fleming Clark; a son,
William A. with the Army at Ft.
Bragg; a daughter, Mrs. Mary
Ann Engles of Bruceton, Tenn.;
two sisters, Mrs. Edward
Sparrow of Durham and Mrs.
Bynuiii Riggsbee of Carrboro;
and two grandsons. He was a
brother-in-law of Mrs. Ron
Sprinkle, of Marshall.
Services were held at 3 pjn.
Sunday in the chapel of Morris
Funeral Home.
The Rev. James E. Rink
officiated Burial was in Forest
Lawn Cemetery at Enka.
Pallbearers were James
Roland, William J. Bradford,
Robert Taylor, Harry
Giezentanner, Jack Wbitson
and Oiarles S. David, Sr.
CHRISP.SORENSEN
Chris P. Sorensen, formery of
Marshall, died on Nov. 11, 1971
in a Ft. Lauderdale hospital,
following a brief illness.
Mr. Sorensen owned and
operated the Sorensen Bent
wood Corporation in Marshall
from 1953 through 195S when the
operations were moved to
Marion, Va., after which Mr.
Sorensen retired to Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla. Mr. Sorensen
moved here from Pawcatuck,
Conn., having been involved in
some form of the wood business
throughout his lifetime ending
with his bent wood operation
which was started in Con
necticut in the late 1800's. Mr.
Sorensen was born in Hadsund,
Denmark on Oct. 8, 1889 and
came to the United States in
1913, settling in Omaha, Neb.,
from when he moved to Lit
Uefork, Minn., living there until
1939. Following the big
JESSIE ROBINSON
Jessie Lee Robinson, 88, of
Locust Grove Road, Weaver
vUle, died Tuesday, Nov. 16, in
an Asheville hospital after a
short illness.
He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are three
daughters, Mrs. Homer Rad
ford of Mara HB1, Mrs. M. E.
Darling of Hartford, Conn., and
Mrs. William P. Link of Enka;
five sons, Robert of Leicester,
Donald of Enka, Troy of Oteen,
Claude of Atlanta and Frank
Robinson of Weaverville; 30
grandchildren and 21 great
grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p. m
Friday in Locust Grove Baptist
Church.
The Revs. Clell Fisher and
Horace Honeycutt will officiate.
Burial will be in West Memorial
Park. Pallbearers will be Robey
Haney, Bascomb Honeycutt,
Brooks, William and Tom
Robinson, Carl Ed Murray, Jim
Kilpatrick and Jimmy
Arrowood.
MRS. ORA JOHNSON
Mrs. Ora Johnson, 65, of Rt. 1,
Mars Hill, died unexpectedly
Wednesday morning, Nov. 17, in
an Asheville hospital.
She was a lifelong resident of
Madison County.
Surviving are the husband,
Jeter Johnson; two daughters,
Mrs. Gerald Griffin of Macon,
Ga., and Mrs. Phillip Mull of
Weaverville; a son, Finley
Johnson of Mars Hill; five
sisters, Mrs. Ada Hunter of
Cartersville, Va., Mrs. Kate
Scott and Mrs. Zura Metcalf,
both of Mars Hill, Mrs. Faye
Messer of Asheville and Mrs.
Lillian Thurman of Harrison,
Tenn.; nine brothers, Carl,
Hobert, George, Alonzo, Zeb,
Eugene, Charles, Calvin and
Curtis Edwards, all of Mars
Hill; and seven grandchildren.
Services will beheld at 2 p. m.
Friday in Trinity Baptist
Church.
The Revs. Homer Tomberlin,
David Roberts, and Wesley
Sprinkle will officate. Burial
will be in Mars Hill Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Howard,
Hugh, Lionel, Leonard, Bobby
and Harold Dean Edwards,
David Metcalf.a and Allen
Hunter.
Election Of AS!S
Committeemen ;
''.) ''T-'.'V'''
Nominees Named
rouowing me uig Gunter
hurricane of 1339, he relocated ,. '
in Connecticut serving the U. S. I
Forestry Department in .
recoverine fallen timber, i hiring I
those vears. he was mainly
engaged in logging and milling
operations, owning and
operating several lumber and
dimension mills. During World
War, II, he was an inspector of
housing for the military and
eventually was a specialist in
the manufacture and
development of elider
Sorensen is survived by
his widow, Asta Ibsen Sorensen
ol Ft. Lauderdale; four
children, Ted Sorensen of
Pipersville, Pa., Herbert
Sorensen of Newington, Conn.,
Earl Sorensen of Asheville and
Helen Sorensen McElyea of
Candler and four step children.
One brother, Martin Sorensen of
Argentina also survives.
I
ED6EH00D I
Restaurant J
1415 Merrimoa Ave.
AahevUle. N. C.
Breakfast -
Supper
Dinner'
Regular Meahi
Short Order
Sandwiches
Homemade Piei
AIR-CONDITIONED
OpenSa.m. 10p.m.
It's now lime for Madison
County farmers to vote their
choice for ASC Community
Committeemen says Emory
Robinson, Chairman of the
County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation
Committee.
Ballots were mailed to far
mers on Nov. 18 and they must
be properly voted and returned
to the County ASCS office by
Dec. 1 in order to be counted,
Robinson said.
Farmers in each ASC Com
munity will vote on its own
slate of Community Committee
Nominees. Farmers may vote
for no more than three of the
nominees listed on their ballot
or they may vote for "Write
ins" so long as they do not mark
their ballot for more than three
persons. A farmer who fails to
receive a ballot through the
mail may secure one by visiting
the ASCS Office in Marshall. An
eligible voter is a person of legal
"voting age (18 years or older)
who has an interest in a farm as
the owner, operator, tenant or
sharecropper. The spouse of a
farm owner or operator is
eligible to vote if their name
appears on the farm deed as
joint owner.
Votes in this election will be
tabulated publicly by the
County ASC Committee on
Monday, Dec. 6, in the ASCS
Office beginning at 8:30 a.m.
The three farmers receiving the
most votes will be declared the
elected ASC Community
Committee for 1972 in the order
of Chairman, V ice-Chairman,
and Regular Member. Fourth
and Fifth place winners will
serve as first and second
alternate members of the
committee.
Following are the slates of
nominees for the 16 ASCS
Communities in the County:
Community A-l Cecil Briggs,
Carl CaDtrell, Bert Flynn,
Sidney Hensley, Hermon Pegg,
Everett Rice; B-2 Clarence B.
Cutshall, G. M. Cutshaw, Keith
Gosnell. Walter Gosnell, Bobby
Glen Hensley; C-3
Vance Edwards. Arnold
Garrison, Howard Green, Grant
McDaris, Hardie Merrill,
Carson Roberts; D-4 Warren
Anders, Ralph W. Briggs,
Wayne Eatmon, Everly
Robinson, Hix Robinson,
Grover Tomberlin; E-5 J.
Walter Cody, George Hamlin,
Jennings B. Murray, Roger V.
Murray, James F. Ramsey,
James Shelton; F-6 Nealey
Randall Buckner, D. J.
RaNDALL Buckner, D. J.
Graham, Conley T. Sprinkle,
Chester Teague; G-7 Bob Boyd,
Cleophus Davis, Floyd Hen
derson, Berlin W. Payne, Frank
Payne, Jr , Glen Riddle; H-8
Handy Allison, Hugh Balding,
Albert Caldwell, Joe Duckett,
Cline Fowler, Jimmy Moore; J
9 Wallace Cook, Eugene Goode,
Perry Gowan, Boyd Strickland,
Charles E. Wills, Eugene Wills;
K-10 Joe Bullman, Joe Chan
dler, Ruben Gosnell, Homer
Griffee, Wayne Griffin, Earl
Rice; L-U Wayne Bumette,
Jasper Jenkins, Cash Phillips,
Aaron Ponder, Temple Shook,
J. E. Woody: M-12 Clement
Buckner, Leonard Buckner,
Loy Buckner, John W. Hen
derson, Ted Massey, Sam
tfeleaJtyoftd
Dy wroara weDer
fashion and beauty director
holiday magic, inc. lS
Personality Inventory
There is nothing more at
tractive tod a v than indivi
duality Hut do ou really
know yourself0 Manv people
w ho ha ve ac h ie t d success
find that one of the hest ways
to begin is hv taking a per
tonality inventory Oraw up
a list of questions, such as
those suEKsted he low An
swer them as honestly as pos
sible, then ask a close friend
for an opinion of our an
swers' If somf of the answers don't
please you, at
least you will
f have heffun to
3tA ,leveloi an
rfr flwareneHS '
A Mi 'he areas you
3 y JSkw JJ have to
trWI4 improve If
1 ou can an-
h w e r tne
iupM ion in
lhe affirmative, however, you
; probably are an attractive
i. .person in your wm ial an well
a your huMne life.
Your personality inventory:
rflj I)o I enjov meeting peo-V-JnV-?
tthv? (2) I I PI
CinrrHv and enthuiatical
I'ly? h my wire pleasant to
"the ear of my liatenem? (3)
len my farial exprwuion
. :-hlp to convey my apoken
J Hie.MaW How of ten do I
f.wnile? frown? 14) Am I fon-
. ? lifter about mv appea ranee?
, Iimr grooming and twain-
' attract other to me? 5 Am
I I mnrerely avmpathetie to the
probtemx awl prehVamreit of
J thm? if,) l I look at other
a they npr-ak to me, and a I
- t rk to thf-m? f carefully :
5 listen? f 7 Have) I ilevHoneii
annoying ma nnerinn, ana on
t I try and -ortrt them? (M) '
1 attract the trmpnri. nl
Z ottwr ly keeing mv wofrl? .
Vou'll -njy making op
VnHitiof of ttHirinm. Huly
i-'irtni frm the irreirk, anrl
thm will h-lf yfMi rl-v-li an
-i" "" for a more allnar
FLORIDA FRUIT
Place Your Order Now
For Delivery About Dec.ltf
Tree-ripe Florida
Indian River Fruit
45 Bushel Boxes
Red TangeloeOranges
Pineapple & Naval Oranges
Standard Pink Grapefruit
White Marsh Seedless
Grapefruit
Direct From Grove To You
See or Call
Carl Bowman
Bowman Hardware Company
Marshall. N. C.
Telephone 649-2224
Night.649-2356
Roberts; N-13 Dale Balding.
Arthur Fowler, Vera Holt, Cecil
Pingle, Fred Trantham, Hardy
WUlett; 0-14 U F. Boone,
Wayne Clark, Johnnie R.
Coates, Uoyd Coates, Zack
Coates, Woodrow DiU; P-15
Jim Ammons, R. J. Ammons,
LatUe Ballard, Paul P. Briggs,
Sr., Dewey Phillips, Seam
Roland; Q-18 Claude A. Cody,
Edward Hoyle, Don Peek,
Woodard Riddle, Howard
Roberts, and J. B Roberts.
i
3
(
J
ON SHOOTING
rvnMT RE A TAlET.
''4 Whentransportlnabloavn
elttierbypacKiwi!
- MARK the game with
a patch of red :
or International orange.-.
- V7t - m vir "
TWO JUNIOR LEADERS, Rhonda Sprinkle, left,
and Nancy Treadway, visited at Grapevine Monday
night to tell interested parents the value of 4-H. Both
are cheerleaders and active members of the Junior
Class at Marshall High School. Rhonda is active in
the Hayes Run 4-H Club. Nancy is active in the
Marshall Helping Hands 4-H Club. They volunteered
to help with 4-H programs at Grapevine when
needed
Distributed
at public aervlca by National Rlfla Aaaoclattoi . ( f
I
fflll'
Securing And Use Of
Marketing Cards
iaM i in f
Operators of tobacco farms
within Madison County may
secure their marketing cards by
visiting, calling or writing the
ASCS Office at Marshall ac
cording to announcement by
Ralph Ramsey, County ASCS
Executive Director.
In making this an
nouncement, Ramsey explained
that burley producing Counties
within North Carolina had been
instructed to issue this year's
tobacco cards in person rather
than through the mail for the
following reasons: (1) "Hiis is
the first year in which poundage
only cards have been used; (2)
To give ASCS Personnel an
opportunity to explain the
purpose and use of the three
poundage entries on the cards to
the operator; (3) To inform
producers of data to be entered
on his card after each sale or
transaction; (4) To permit a
break down of the farm's
poundage quota when two or
more cards are issued; (5) and,
to answer any questions con
cerning the over or under
marketings including lease and
transfer of quotas.
It is most important, Ramsey
said, that each farm operator
and tobacco porudcer un
derstand the effect any over
marketing or under-marketing
can have on the farm's poun
dage quota for next year. It is
also important that the operator
or producer check his weight
shown on his sales bill against
the data entered on his card at
the warehouse to see that no
error has occurred in his unused
quota balance. To protect
themselves producers should
carefully follow the procedures
for marketing tobacco, thereby
safeguarding their marketing
cards from misuse. Any tobacco
marketings above 110 per cent
of the farm quota will be con
sidered excess tobacco and the
farm operator will be respon
sible for a marketing quota
penalty of 54 cents per pound on
such overmarketing. The
producer will also be subject to
penalty and quota reduction if
the marketing card is used to
sell tobacco from another farm.
The marketing card is to be
used only for marketing tobacco
from the farm for which it is
issued.
Ramsey said that ASCS's
main concern is to see that
fanners understand the rules so
that they may market all the
tobacco they are entitled to
market.
In conclusion, he stated that
the County ASCS Office in
Marshall is open from 8 am. to
5 p.m. each week day except
Saturday's and certain holidays
and that farm operators should
arrange to secure their cards
during those hours and that
persons sending others for their
cards should send writter
authorization by such persons.
The Sick
Emmette Plemmons of
Marshall, is undergoing
treatment in Memorial Mission
Hospital.
Call-Collect
Asheville, N.C. 254-3581
Hot Spriigs, N.C. 672-3484
Work Guaranteed
6
.a-fr.i
n
O
1 1
2
Clyde Martin
Martin New Deputy Director
State Blind Commission
Recent major administrative
appointments at the N. C. State
Commission for the Blind in
Raleigh, include the naming of
Clyde Martin as Deputy
Director of Business Affairs.
Martin, the son of the late
Rev. and Mrs. Jake A. Martin of
Madison County, is a veteran
state employee and veteran
officer of the U. S. Air Force.
Martin retired from the Air
Force, after 26 years of service,
with the rank of Leiutenant
Colonel. He then began his
career in state government,
which has included jobs with the
Department of Ad
ministration's Federal Surplus
Property Division and the
Department 01 corrections.
Just prior to joining the Com
mission, Martin served for five
and one-half years as controller
at Applachian State University
at Boone.
Martin is a native of Mar
shall. He and his wife, the
former Lillian Jones of
Weaverville, have four children
who are: Richard, 30, a nuclear
engineer in Pittsburgh; James,
26, a certified public accountant
in Charlotte; Betty Jean, 23, a
graduate student at Ap
palachian State and Charles, 21,
a senior at North Carolina State
University. The family is
Baptist. Martin is a member of
the Cary Civitan Club and the
Wake Community Lions Club.
yu
open
IS
CDHIIMt'Ui
i
ank you
for
1
r visit
to our
hous
WESTCO TELEPHONE COMPANY
MARSHALL, N. C.
An equal opportunity employer
3J
WESTCO TELEPHONL COMPANY WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE PEOPLE OE
MARSHALL EOP. THEIR PARTICIPATION OF THE OPEN HOPS!: AT OUR CENTRAL
OFFICE IN MARSHALL ON NOVEMBER 11, 1971.
TELEPHONE COMPANY OFFICIALS HERE VERY PLEM..I- WITH THE FINE
TURN OUT THAT THEY HAD AMD APPRECIATED THE OPPORTUNITY OF SHOWING
THE PEOPLE SOME OF THE "BEHIND THE SCENES" OF THE TELEPHONE COMPANY'S
OPERATIONS.
VISITOPS APPARENTLY FOUND THE TOUR OF THE CENTRAL OFFICE
INTERESTING A.iD EDUCATIONAL JUUHNG BY THE REMARKS MADE BY THE
.:;.,.
VISITOPS. 1 '
.
, v . i .-. . . . -
I
CALDWELL'S
ell Drilling Co.
USED
Car and Truck
Clearance Sole
COMPANY DEMONSTRATOR
1971 CHEVROLET Caprice, 4 door, hard
top, 400 cubic inch V-8 engine, automatic
transmission, power steering, disc brakes,
air condition, power window's, power door,
locks, power trunk lock, vinyl roof, low
mileage. . .
1971 VEGA, Hatchback Coupe, automatic
transmission, air conditioned, radio, one
woner, 11,000 miles.
1970 FORD Brougham, 4 door, air con
ditioned, low mileage. Extra clean.
I96K CIIEVELLE Malibu, 4 door, V-8
automatic, one local owner
1968 CIIEVELLE Nomad, 4 door station
wagon, V-8 engine, automatic transmission,
power steering.
1968 CHEVROLET I m pa la Custom coupe,
V-8 automatic.
1965 CHEVROLET 4 door sedans,
automatic transmissions.
1965 CHEVROLET Station Wagons, Priced
to move.
1965 PONTIAC Wagon. One Owner. A real
bargain.
1963 IMPALA, 4 door hard top, V-8 power
steering.
TRUCKS
1970 CHEVROLET, V-ton Pick-Up, 6
cytinder, wide bed, one owner.
1965 CHEVROLET -ton; 6-cy Under;
Stepside bed.
1966 CHEVROLET, -ion, FleeUlde,
camper shell.
WE HAVE SEVERAL OLDER
CARS AND TRUCKS THAT
WE HAVE TO SELL
COME IN MAKE AN OFFER!
FRENCH BROAD
CHEVROLET CO., INC.
.-. t ' . ...
- MARSHALL, H. C
Dmtm Frwtahaa Hm. l0t
(5