The News Record SERVING THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY -On thm Insldo . . . Tall tales flourish at Loafers Glory ... see page 6 77th Year, No. 45 PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE COUNTY SEAT AT MARSHALL, N.C. THURSDAY, November 16, 1978 15* Per Copy A BATCH OF FRENCH FRIES could be made from this 3-pound, 8tt-inch long potato Arthur Collins of Clyde dug recently. Collins, a former Enka employee and construction worker, raised a ' good crop of beans, com, okra and potatoes this year, but as he says, "These potatoes ju$t outdid themselves." Comment Period Changed For 1979 ACP Program Proposed procedures and practices for the 1979 ACP will be published in the Federal Register about Nov. 14 after which the public will have 30 days in which to submit written comments on the proposals, according to Ray Fitzgerald, administrator of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. Hiis is two weeks later than the earlier announced ten tative date of Nov. l for publishing the proposals in the County Hosts Committee For Aging The members of the Greater Ivy Lunch Club shared their beautiful new surroundings with Lknd-of-Sky Regional Council's Advisory Committee fer Aging last Thursday morning. : Dr. Grover Angel and Mrs. I4idle Burnette are the residents of Madison County on the committee. Dr. Angel (^presents the region's elected officials and Mrs. the Madison County on Aging, at its of the Federal Register - Because of the later publishing date, the comment period is changed from 60 to 30 days in order for the new program to be ready for operation by Jan. 1, Fit zgerald said. The agriculture, rural development, and related agencies appropriations act, for fiscal year 1979 provides that A CP assistance will not be used for carrying out measures and practices that are primarily production oriented or that have little or no conservation or pollution abatement benefits. Fitzgerald said im plementation of these provisions of the act will be achieved through the establishment of: criteria for determining the practices eligible for ACP assistance; guidelines for directing assistance toward situations in which practices can be expected to yield significant public soil or water con servation, or pollution abatement benefits; and procedures to facilitate ap proval of solutions to local soil conservation, water con servation, or pollution abatement problems not addressed by practices thought to meet the national criteria. Written comments may be delivered by mail or in person to Alan Durick, acting director, Conservation and Environmental Protection Division, Room 3096 South Building, USDA-ASCS, Washington, D.C. 20013. Fitzgerald said final details ' on the 1979 A CP will be an nounced about Dec. 26 and these guidelines, procedures, and practices will become effective Jan. 1. Little Pine Creek v ? A , Bridge Contracted 1,789.72. year (beginning of| fiscal year 1079), .... Jit administration has awarded *88,408,667 or special interest to Madison County was th* awarding of a contract to replace the bridge and ap ovet Utll Pin. | Go. o! drainage >nd paving wait. The culv.ft will be installedln the same place as the Misting bridge. The culvert wiH be constructed in stages to allow traffic through the con struction site. fork >s ed to begin in December of this yeer and is o to be August W7>. ,|'l Id Highway Division 13, Madisoi ty is repre nted ? he Beard Open House This Sunday Water Improvement i Facilities Completed The Town of Marshall has recently completed a $920,000 water system improvement project with justification of the project already evident. For many years, the town has experienced water system difficulties due to an inadequate source and a delapidated distribution system. As a result of the undying efforts of the town officials to perservere through a complex project, it appears as though the town will have a safe and reliable water system for many years to come. The improvement project included a transfer of the water source from the Hunter Creek Watershed to a deep well groundwater supply. The Hunter Creek Dam was condemned as being unsafe by the North Carolina Depart ment of Natural Resources and Community Development ? Land Quality Section in December, 1975. After much study and field investigation, it was determined that the cost of satisfactorily repairing tfcf dam was prohibitive to the t(iwn therefore wfcter couM no longer impounded behind it. As a result ?f a feasibility study completed by Butler Associates, P.A. a consulting engineering firm from Asheville, it was decided to develop groundwater as the source of water supply to the town. The town now has four deep wells in operation with a combined capacity of 850 gallons per minute. The present water useage averages 200 gallons per minute therefore adequate ater is available for future growth of the system. The remainder of the project in cluded approximately 21,000 lineal feet of pipe with ap purtenances, two major bridge crossings, a subaqueous pipe crossing under the French Broad River, a major booster pumping station with disin fection equipment and a floating cover installed on the existing one million gallon reservoir. The project was funded with a combination of grants from the U.S. Department of Commerce ? Economic Development Administration ($493,700); U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ($187,100); N.C. Department of Human Resources ? Division of Health Services ($118,821); Madison County ($60,000) ; and loan from the U.S. Department of Agriculture ? Farmers Home Administration (174,000). Many components of the project have been in service since February, 1978 with all work being completed last month. Although the completion of this project solves the major water system problems confronting the town, officials are making efforts to rectify individual water problems sporadically occurring on the extremities of the exisiting system. The town officials .consider the people of Mar shall somewhat fortunate to have this project completed, particularly in light of the water problems being ex perienced by other Western North Carolina towns. The town's new water system has not felt any effects whatsoever of the continuing drought with water useage curtailment measures being unnecessary. Without this project, the town would have been out of water two months ago. The town officials would like to thank all of the people in volved in the project, par ticularly the funding agencies, Butler Associates, P A. who designed and were responsible for the construction of the project and to McCall Brothers Inc. ; Mountain Shore Construction Cor poration; and Taylor and Murphy Construction Com pnay Inc. who were the con tractors on the project. In order for the people of Marshall to be able to see the water facilities and better understand their operation, the town officials would like to invite the public to an open house on Nov. 19, from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The open house will be held at the Lower End of Fortner Hollow along the banks of the French Broad River at the site of the water facilities. Why Do Leaves Fall? Trees Are Being Punished, Cherokee Legend Has It , Why do leaves fall? Not, as many might think, so wives can stick a rake in their husbands' hands and yank them from Saturday or Sunday afternoon football games on television. And not, like scientists say, Jaecaus*J?*e? sta? producing plant v hormone and chlorophyll, the leaves' food making green pigment, causing eventual suffocation. Riding Mishap Is Fatal To Youth Christopher Allan Buckner, 13, of Route 7, Marshall, (Big Pine community), died in a horse riding accident Monday near his home. The Madison County Sheriff's Department reported that the boy apparently fell from his horse and was dragged by the animal until noticed by a neighbor in the Big Pine section who sum moned the rescue squad. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wade Buckner. He was a student at Walnut Elementary School. Funeral services will be held Thursday at the North Fork Baptist Church on Big Pine at2 p.m. The Rev. Frank Plemmons and the Rev. Gray Fisher will officiate. Cousins will serve as pallbearers. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Surviving in addition to the parents is a brother, Richard, stationed with the Air Force in Michigan. The real reason is that trees that lose their leaves suffer a recurring punishment for failing to endure a task. So says a Cherokee legend, which in these parts can be considered fact. It goes like this: Back at the beginning of time when the world was being created (no one's sure by whom) the animals and plants were told to stay awake and stand watch for seven nights. All did through the first night, but by the second some had fallen asleep. More abandoned the vigil the third night and more the fourth. By the end of the seventh night, only the panther, the owl and one or two others of the animals were still awake. Those animals were given the power to see and go about in the dark and prey on those that had to sleep at night. Of the trees, only the cedar, pine, spruce, holly and laurel were awake. To them was given the power to be always green and greatest for medicine. To the others it was said, "because you have not endured you will lose your hair every winter." That explained, some may ask why leaves turn beautiful colors before they fall. There the Cherokees apparently let us down. No less a source than Cherokee folklorist Mary Chiltoskey knows of no legend explaining that phenomenon. Neither does Duane King, director of the Cherokee Museum. \ But maybe some poetic license can help. Probably instead of maintaining their vigil those trees were out painting the town red. Since then they've kept up the tradition; they've just ex panded their assortment of colors. Nursing Center ; V * - - ' '4 ?*" .'xftyflgg* f|&l Approval Sought Kenneth P. Gummels, Paragon Investments Inc., filed notice on Nov. 7 of intent to incur a capital expenditure for the purpose of acquiring approval of the $471,500 cost overrun for the proposed 100 bed Madison Manor Nursing Center in Mars Hill. The project proposal has been submitted to the N.C. Department of Human Resources, State Health Planning and Development Agency, for review by plan ning agencies under provisions of the Social Security Amendments of 1972. The planning agencies, in examining the proposal, will seek to determine whether the project is needed, if it can be adequately staffed and operated, whether it is economically feasible within prevailing rate structures, and if it proposes specific cost containment features. Copies of the proposal have been referred to the Facility Services Division of the N.C. Department of Human Resources and to the Western N.C. Health Systems Agency Inc. in Morganton for review as required by federal law. In its role as coorinator of project review's under Section 1122 of the Social Security Act, the N.C. Department of Human Resources, through its state Health Planning Agency, will receive the advice of the state and regional agencies about the conformity of the project to their standards and criteria The department will then decide on the recom mendation to be made to the U.S Department of Health, Education and Welfare concerning the project Examination Ordered For Buckner Judge Ray Braswell deferred judgment after a show-cause hearing here last Friday for John Kenneth Buckner, 40, of Route 1, Marshall, who is charged with murder in the fatal shootings of a brother and sister. Braswell ordered that the defendant be sent to Dorothea Dix Hospital in Raleigh for examination as to his com petency to stand trial. The suspect is a disabled veteran of World War II and has a history of treatment in state mental institutions. JAMES HIGHTOWBR, an 11 y ear-old Canton resident, found this bird stranded in the parking lot of Wells Funeral Home. It's a grebe, a swimming and diving bird related to loons, and was apparently on its way from north to south when it landed in heavy fog, perhaps mistaking the paved surface for a lake. Grebes are only able to take off from water, so James took this one to Lake M Junaluska after stopping for a