S.'. TarJ..y, June 19, I97S, The j t :.t. 1 . JLeartnoV" ' The Mar Hill, Sodom, and Sprinkle Shelton team continued their battle (or ' second place in the first half of the season. Mara Hill led by ; Harrell Wood's three home rum and outstanding hiking by Jerry Gault won twoof three game to take the lead going into the final week. They must win two of three games this week to end up in second place! The, North Carolina Farm Bureau team won two games to continue undefeated and to sew up the first half lead. The league should be stronger in the second half which begins on June 25. There will be four new teams. RESULTS (June 11-15) Mars Hill, 11; Madison Jaycees, 2. Sprinkle and Shelton, 11; Sodom, 3. Sodom, 10; Mars Hill, 2. Mars Hill, 21; Sprinkle and Shelton, 3. N. C. Farm Bureau, 7; Sodom, 3. N, C. Farm Bureau, 7; Madison Jaycees, 0. Sodom, 15; J. and J. Tire, 5 Madison Jaycees, 10; Sprinkle and Shelton, 6. What looks like the newest Cadillac and is priced lower than the newest VW? Ford Granada 1975fc best'selling newcomer: 7 Ford Gr.inaJ.1 - nh Cadillac's 51 2 000-UxA at a price like V V is a real cni;incrnni( .vhtcvcmcni But its nnl (me .-f (he rrav-ns Granada it lTS hrsf-srllinfi newcomer Btvauu- Granad.i hrinc totiether fejtures so many people tr lo4inK for Uniav This diMincriv c nc -i:e design provides full vale room fw hvc Granada comhirtc i smtmfh quiet ride nh prrtiv our hanJIinif and a high Icel ofclegancr The engine choice ranKes tnm a 200 CID Six to .in acn.-n p-'cd Sl CIO V'-H There s loiv more vou 11 like aKut (r. in.nl. i ( ru ck it ui .it ur F J Dr tie r s. - n Look close and compare. PIONEER -FORD, WE'RE Newt Record Page 4 . f r- STANDINGS N.G Farm Bureau . 104 MarsHiU M Sodom M Sprinkle and Shelton 0-5 Madison Jaycees 3-s" Petersburg 1-7 J. and J. Tire 1-1 SCHEDULE Thursday, Jnae 19 5:30 - Petersburg vs. Mars Hill 6:30 Tire 7:30 8:30 Mars Hill vs. J. and J. Mars Hill vs. Sodom - J. and J. Tire vs. Madison Jaycees 9:30 - Madison Jaycees vs. Sodom Walnut Little League All boys in the Walnut area between the ages of 9-12 in terested in playing Little League Baseball for Walnut School please contact either Elsberry Wyatt, 649-2636 or Wayne McDevitt, 649-2512. It is extremely important that you notify these coaches if you wish to play as league play is beginning immediately. Practice has already begun, so getting in touch with them is very important if you wish to play. 5 flit X- u-ij--- e s&mm MARSHALL, N.C. GOIIM' YOUR WAY ! MISS PELLA EDWARDS ; V Miss Delta Thelora Ed- wards of Bone Camp Road, near Mars Hill, died Tuesday, June Vk 1979, in a Western North Carolina hospital after a long illness. A native of Madison County, she was a daughter of the late Marlon Jack and Mary Ann Hensley Edwards. Surviving are two brothers, Frank and Wade Edwards of Mars Hill; two sisters, Mrs. Pearson Roberts and Mrs. Martha Anders of Weaver ville; and several nieces and nephews. Services were held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Old Bull Creek Baptist Church, of which she was a member. The Revs. Clifford Cable and Stanley Peek officiated. Burial was in the church cemetery. Nephews were pallbearers. Capps Funeral Home was in charge. MRS. JOHN REEVES Mrs. Irene C. Reeves, 75, of Hot Springs, died Thursday, June 12, 1975, in a Morristown, Tenn., hospital after an ex tended illness. A lifelong resident of Madison County, she was a daughter of the late Wesley I' T' "Bate attcker pnees excluding atle. taxes and detnnarion chargr Dealer prep extra on Gra nada and VW Prce comparison baaed on sticier pruet evcludini title, taxes and deakrr prep which may arteel companion in tome areas Granada shown with optional WSW tires l$)J) and paini stnpe ($241 INC. OA' DeatlioY Funeral and Sue Barrett Church and was the widow of John Hoke Reeves, who died in 1970. Surviving are three sons, John Reeves of Hot Springs, Harold Reeves of Morristown and Ed Reeves of Newburg, N.Y.; three daughters, Miss Sue Reeves of Knoxville, Tenn., Mrs. Reed Woody of Liberty, S.C., and Miss Margaret Reeves of Hot Springs; a broyther, D. G. Church of Hot Springs; and six grandchildren. Services were held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Hot Springs United Methodist Church, of which she was a member. The Revs. Baxter Proffitt and Don Turman officiated. Burial was in Fairview Cemetery. Friends were pallbearers. Bowman Funeral Home, was in charge. WILLARD PRICE Services for Willard Price, 66, of Marshal Rt. 7, who died Sunday June 15, 1975 at his home after a long illness, were held at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lower Big Pine Bap tist Church. The Revs. Charles Stockton, Ray Roberts and Marvin Ponder officiated. Burial was in Crooked Ridge Cemetery. A native of Madison County and a retired farmer, Mr. Price was a member of North Fork Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nora Capps Price; two 'Fantasticks" To Be Presented At Mars Hill The Southern Appalachian Repertory Theatre, a new professional theatre company located in Mars Hill, will open its premiere season with the enchanting musical "The Fantasticks." The play is new Yorks longest running musical and is being directed by James W. Thomas. The musical features performers from California, Georgia, and many other states. Tbe male lead. El Gallo, is played by Earl Leininger. He sings the shows number one hit "Try to Girl's Softball RESULTS (June IZtb-lSth) Marshall Reds, 10; Greater Ivy, 11; Marshall Braves at Hot Springs rained out to be rescheduled; Marshall Reds, 7; Marshall Braves, ; Hot Springs - 4; Greater Ivy 28. SCHEDULE (Week of Juae 21-8) (June tlst) 1 00 Hot Springs vs. Marshall Reds on the island (Juae 23rd) 6:15 Hot Springs vs. Walnut Panthers at Walnut STANDINGS Marshall Reds 6-1 Marshall Braves 5-2 Walnut Panthers 2-4 Greater Ivy J-4 Hot Springs 0-5 1 I 8 daughters,. Mrs. Lyvonn Johnson and Mrs. Doyle Roberts of Marshall Rt 7; two sons, Fred of Atlanta and Billy Price of Alexander; three brothers, Jonah and Joe of Marshall Rt 7 and Claude Price of Roseville, Mich.; four sisters, Mrs. Ray Worley, . Mrs. Ethel Anderson and Miss. Carrie Price of Marshall Rt. 7 and Mrs. Everett Treadway of Candler; eight grandchildren and a greatgrandchild. Bowman Funeral Home was in charge. MRS. LLOYD DAVIS Mrs. Glenna Cody Davis, 50, of Rt. 1 Swannanoa, died unexpectedly Monday, June 9, 1975, in an Asheville hospital. A native of Madison County, she had lived in Buncombe County for 12 years. Surviving are the husband, Lloyd Davis; a daughter, Mrs. Judith Swinson of Swannanoa ; a son, Michael Plemmons of Marion; the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vera Cody of Hot Springs; three sisters, Mrs. Bessie Alexander and Mrs. Lucille Shelton of Asheville and Mrs. Nellie Norton of Hot Springs; and two grand children. Services were held at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at Hot Springs Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Fred Hembree of ficiated. Burial was in Fairview Cemetery. Friends were pallbearers. Bowman Funeral Home was in charge. Remember." Tbe theatre is sponsored by tbe Mrdlson County Bicentennial Com mission and the Theatre Arts Department of Mars Hill College. "The Fantasticks" will be performed June 18-22, June 25 29, and July 16-20. Each performance will take place at Owen Theatre on the Mars Hill College campus. There will be a matinee each Sunday at 2 : 30 and each evening per formance "rill take place at 8:15. The box office number is 680-1239. All seats are reserved. 'Old Fashun' Luncheon At Mars Hill The Mars Hill Women's Club is having an "Old Fashun' Luncheon" on Thursday, June 19 from 11 1 :30 o'clock at the Town Hall. Proceeds will benefit the Mars Hill Branch Library Fund. "Come Join the fun." $2 per person. Miss Chandler Wins In WCU Tournament Marilyn Chandler of Mars ANO LOAM I ASCOCIATIC f r-t , 11 fit i ' HAR8 HItfr - Mob. fuaa. Wad. Tbmr. fri. Set. Sua. C-LOS ED t : , i X p.a.-IOj.a - v- lOa.a.-tp.a. 2p.a.-tp.a. lp.a.9p.a. loa.a.-jp.a. 2p.a.-bpa. MARS HILL MARSHALL KALHOT LAOREL SPRINO CREEK HOT SPRTWQ3 Hon. SIIPERWEEK DAT CLUSED CLOSED CLOSED 9a.a.-5p.a. CLOSED CAMP Tuaa. SDPLifrfEEK DAI lp..-9p.. lp.a.-9p.a. Xp.a.-9p.. lp.a.-9p.a. lp.a.-9p.a. CAUP Had. SaPERWEEK DAT lOa.a.-bp.a. iua.a.-bp.a. lOa.a.-bp.a. 9a.a.-5p.a. lOa.a.-bp.a. CAMT Tbur. SIIPERWEEK DAT 2p.a.-bp.a. lp.a.-5p.a. 2p.m. -Op. a. lOa.a.-bp.a. 2p.a.-bp.a. CAMP Tri . SOPEJMEEK DAT lp.a.-9p.a. 2p.o.-5p.a. Ip.a.-yp.a. lp.m.-9p.a. lp.a.-9p.a. CAMP Sat. 2p.a.-p.a. lOa.a.-bp.a. lua.a.-lp.a. ila.a.-bp.a. CLOSED lOa.a.-bp.a. Sua. CLOSED 2p.a.-bp.a. 2p.a.-bp.a. 2p.a.-bp.a. CLOSED 2p.a.-bp.a. DUBIN3 SDPERWEEX THE CEWTKR WILL BE OPES FROM XO a. a. - 3 p. a. OMLT. ALSO THE AGE GROUP MOST BE 9-1 APPLI DOB I NO SOPSRWEEK. BUT THIS DOES MOT APPLT TO THE WEEKEND AT THE CJiNTEd AS IT WILL BE OPEN TO CLASS HORSE RIDER OWNER 1. Lead Line (6 years and under) Ten (10) entries Blue Ribbons to All 2. Pleasure Ponies (50 Inches and under) Stormy Weather Christy Robinson Same 3A. English Halter 2 years and under Lady Masterpiece Pauline Carr Same 3B. English Halter- 3 years and over Shadow Playboy Paul Brlggs Same 4. Pepsi Cola Race Jimmy RoJo Ernie Treadway Same 5. Juvenile Racking (16 years and under) Derby T1m Chambers Joe Chambers 6A. Western Halter 2 years and under M1ss Laura Ann Ed Ponder Same 6B. Western Halter 3 years and over Two-Eyed Camby Ernie Treadway Ken Treadway 7. Open English Pleasure Joeatiob Elizabeth Hall Carol Banks 8. Ladles' Western Pleasure Holly Croton Judy Stubbs Same 9. Barrel Race Jimmy RoJo Ernie Treadway Same 10. Western Pleasure (16 years and under) Keeno's Sweetie Kevin Boone Same 11. Open Racking Horses Figure Joe Chambers Same 12. Appaloosa Western Pleasure Snowcap's DJ Ricky Sluder Same 13. Buddy P1ck-Up Race Little Star Wayne McDowell Terry McDowell, P1ck-Up Wayne McDowell 14. Western Pleasure (17 years and over) Two-Eyed Camby Sherry Williams Ken Treadway 15. Open Madison County Pleasure Keeno's Sweetie Kevin Boone Same 15A. Two-Year-Old Open Racking Horses Goldle Dawn Roger Wilson Same 16. Lead Line (6 years and under) Twenty-five (25) entries Trophies to all 17. Pleasure Ponies (50 Inches and under) Stormy Weather Lee Ann Robinson Same 18. P1ck-Up Race Championship Little Star Wayne McDowell Terry McDowell, P1ck-Up Wayne McDowell 19. Two-Year-Old Walking Horses Ebony's Sue Craig Bacon Mr. and Mrs. Owen Lane 20. Barrel Race Championship Robo Poco Garland McGuIre Same 21. Ladles' Racking Horses Prince Diablo Marsha Boyd Nancy Blankenshlp 22. Juvenile Walking Horses Duplicator's Demon Craig Bacon Bacon Brothers Farm 23. Pepsi Cola Race Championship King Burnette Ernie Treadway Kay Treadway 24. Ladles' Western Pleasure Jag's Junaluska Carolyn Brown Same 25. Three-Year-Old Walking Horses Sable Sun Steve Purdue Joe Robinson 26. Racking Horse Championship Bobo Bimbo Jimmy Shelton Kat Gillespie 27. Open English Pleasure Interstate Sabra Sprinkle Same 28. Four-Year-Old Walking Horses SCRATCHED 29. Western Pleasure (16 years and under) Keeno's Sweetie Kevin Boone Same 30. Madison County Pleasure Sonka Lucille Thomason Same 30A. Junior Western Pleasure (4 years and under) Joker Dan Wilson Lucy Wilson 31. Amateur Walking Horses Sun's Lightning Man Craig Bacon Mr. and Mrs. Owen Lane 32. English Pleasure Championship Interstate Sabra Sprinkle Same 33. Western Pleasure Championship (CHALLENGE TROPHY) Two -Eyed Camby Sherry W11 1 1ams Ken Treadway 34. Walking Horse Stake (CHALLENGE TROPHY) Delta Dawn Craig Bacon 1111 Farmer 35. Appaloosa Western Pleasure Sonka Lucille Thomason Same 36. Style Racking Imagine Me Ronnie Ramsey Mr. and Mrs. Tllson Rams 37. Ooen Halter Benny Cash Kevin Boone Same What do you do with tons of waste material when it poses a fire hazard? This problem is not easy to solve, and some industries consider it a real problem. But up in the Uni-Four Area of Western North Carolina away a way has been found, says State Director James T. Johnson of the Farmers Home Administration. This area Alexander, Burke, Caldwell, and Catawba Counties manufactures s considerable quantity of North Carolina's important wooden riill won third place recently In the 1975 On -Campus Forensics Tournament sponsored by tbe Department of Speech and Theatre Arts at Western Carolina University. Miss Chandler, a junior majoring in English, par ticipated in tbe prose division of the contest She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jonas H. Chandler, Reservoir Road, Mars HUL FARMERS BROKERS and REAL ESTATE Let me clean ip your property with a 7 ft Bush Hif md 04 Cat Roads, land clearing and fradinf. $11.09 ptf hour. Dozer with Bash Ho $20.00 per bonr. Uinimom 5 hours wort -1 ;'V .'MAn3HALL r ? CONSTRUCTION CO.-1 kasisos oooirrr jusrsatioh cwtks's boohs .flAHSHAU, ' Closed lp.a.-9p.a.V Wa.a.-fcp.a. 2p.a.-op.a. lp.au-9p.a lOa.a.-tp.a. 2p. a. -6p.au CLOSED ' ' V . , ' J. w lp.a.9p.at , M 4 10a.a.6a.a. 2p,a.-tp.a. . lp.a.-9p.. 10a. a. -bp. B. 2p.a.-6p.a. High Powered Garbage furniture. Wastes such as wiping rags, scrapings frmo spray booths, and finishing liquids are highly flammable, sometimes explosive, and very subject to spontaneous combustion. Fires often erupt from such materials stored outside in dustrial plants. A serious fire could lead to destruction of a plant and loss of employment to several hundred people. Such a happening occurred recently in one area of the state. State regulations do not allow sanitary landfills to accept these combustible wastes. Other methods of disposal have proven so costly as to justify plant closing or employee layoffs. Safety of tbe workers and economy of the area have been at stake. Some 238,000 people live in the region In volved. The first incinerator in North Carolina to dispose of such waste is to be located at the outhern end of Caldwell County to serve these four couties Region E of the state's multi-county planning districts. Funding is to be done by an li ft f ft ! t - ' .... . . ip.a.-9p.a. 9a.a.-?p.a. , 10a.a.p.a. ' lp.a.-9p.a. CLOSED CLOSED SDPEBWEEK DAT CAMP SDPUMUK PAT camp - , t SUPEHWIK SAT CAMP UPEBUEJtE PAT CAMP " ' ' ' SOPIRWBBC PAT CAMP CLOSED ' 2p.a.6pa. industrial development grant from Farmers Home Ad ministration, said Johnson, along with a planned grant form the Appalachian Regional commission, and the remainder form local sources of the area. A survey of the quantities of waste being generated in the area indicated that an average of over 12,000 lbs. of hazardous combustlbel and 544,000 lbs. of non-hazardous combustible material had to be disposed of each day. The proposed incinerator is a two chamber system which rapidly reduced all burnable solid or liquid wastes to a bare MOUNTAINEER aeaaasmoaa ta T ml mi wmvKti j 0y 4.S Ml H 11 Schedule Chanced at IIODERTS PHARMACY Effective Saturday JUNE 21st ; ; ROBERTS PHARMACY 1 WILL CLOST ON SATURDAYS J ' ! . , i.i ' CLOSCD ' lp,'a,-9p, , i, - 10a.a.-6p.a. 2p.a.-bp.a. lp.a.-9p.a. 10a.a.-6p.a. 2p.a.-bp.a. THIS WILL minimum of sterile ash. A hopyerwill be used for solid dry wastes not highly com bustible. A separate dock is to be available for materials subject to spontaneous combustion. The incinerator will meet area air pollution requirements, stated Johnson. Safety features built Into the incinerator Include a flame safeguard system and C02 cylinders or a water spray device to extinguish fires caused by wastes remaining on the end of the ram feeder. A spray system will also be used over the belt conveyor system. Mix Buslnsss, Pleasure Planning to talk busineu at dinner? Enjoy it m our con genial surroundings, whsrs wt ssrvt only the Best Prim betfl STEAK HOUSE W . J t. : AT 1:00 P.M.

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