The News Ri MADISON COUNTY LIBRARY GENERAL DELIVERY MARSHALL NC 28753 SERVING THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY SINCE 1901 ?2nd Year No. 21 PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE COUNTY SEAT AT MARSHALL, N C. WEDNESDAY. May 25. IMS 15' Per Copy ^ HES" Special Graduation Day Edition ? f ' ' Four-Page Senior Salute Begins On Page 9 Patriot Pride Staff Prepares Senior Salute THE PATRIOT PRIDE STAFF poses for a pic ture after completing work on special Senior Salute. In front row, from left to right, are staff members Lisa Shelton, Hell? Bailey, Julie Allison, Cathy Pack, Karen Johnson, Laura Broyhill and editor David Sprouse. In back row, from left, are sponsor Cindy Himes and staff members Cindy Buckner, Sheila Capps, Tam my Treadway, Sandy Robinson, Sandra Hensley and Rebecca Edmonds. * t Marshall Woman Killed In Sunday Shooting Husband Charged With Murder By ROBERT KOENIG A Madison County woman was killed Sunday morning by a single gunshot wound to the head. The victim's husband has been arrested and charged with murder in connection with the shooting. Betty Dillard Gosnell, 38, died after being shot above the left eye in the early morning hours of May 22. The victim's husband, Clayton Gosnell, 33 of Marshall was apprehended short ly after the incident at his mother's home out side Marshall. According to Madison County Sheriff E.Y. Ponder, a report of a shooting at the home of Angeline Dillard, the victim's mother, was received at 2:11 a.m. Ponder and deputy Frank Ogle and a unit of the Madison County Emergency Medical Service arrived at the home at 2:25 a.m. and found the victim ap parently dead. The Madison County EMS took the body to the Bowman Funeral Home in Mar shal). An autopsy revealed that she died from massive cerebral hemorrhaging caused by the .32 caliber bullet. Less than an hour later, Ponder arrested the victim's husband at his mother's home near Marshall. Gosnell surrendered to police without incident and was taken to the Madison County jail where he remained Tuesday. A hearing to set bond was scheduled for Tuesday in District Court before Judge Phillip Ginn. Ponder reported he recovered a .32 caliber handgun, believed to be the murder weapon, from a handbag found in the back seat of a car owned by Gosnell's mother. There were three people inside the home at the time of the shooting besides the victim. Sheriff Ponder reported that the victim's mother, Angeline Dillard, and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hollifield of Burnsville were in the home when the shooting took place. Although Mrs. Gosnell died from the single gunshot wound, police inviestigation of the scene uncovered several spent cartridges. Funeral services for Mrs. Gosnell were held Tuesday in the Hopewell Baptist Church. The Revs. Ralph McDevitt and Lonnie Crawford of ficiated. Burial was conducted in the Norton family cemetery. She is survived by two children, her parents and three half-brothers and five half-sisters. New Businesses Are Blooming In Marshall Five new businesses on Main Street are now open, the Rock Cafe has reopened under new management, and a tourist home in back of Main Street has reopened ? all amid signs of growing economic health inW Mar shall business district. The new businesses are: Rob Amberg and his wife Laura Ball have opened Main Street Studios, on the third floor of the building where at torney Richard G. Milder hangs his shingle. Rob does photography and Laura specializes in fabric design. A landmark in downtown Marshall, the Rock Cafe, has reopened under the manage ment of Randy Graves, his wife Greta and his Mike Lusk. with a menu rang bread and beverage for 95 cents to "Kountry Style Steak" for $3.60. The new owners have renamed the restaurant The Kountry Kitchen. Randy was formerly the manager of Deer Park Restaurant on the Biltmore Estate for two years but said he wanted a business of his own and was attracted to Mar shall by the "down-to-earth and friendly people." All three partners are from Leicester. Randy says he sees a poten tial in the Marshall area for more tourists, attracted by the river. The new owners have remodelled the inside of the Ro^k Cafe themselves and have assembled a staff in cluding Irene Worley as prep cook and waitresses Debra Anders and Lo??e Branam All three partners are active in the operations of the restaurant, but Mike Lusk will continue part-time to shoe horses as part of his trade as a farrier. Pharmacist Cynthia Niles has opened New Dimensions in a store next to the drug store that will handle records and tapes formerly handled in the drug store and have video games as well. The partners in Dodson's Grocery are opening two new businesses on the second floor of the Dodson Building on Main Street; a furniture store to be operated by partner John Dodson, and Cross-Stitch At tic, being run by partner Doug Dodson's 4rile. Linda. Cynthia Niles reports she's "all psyched up" about the ?downtowr^MarjjMiJ revival wife LINDA DODSON works sh site in because of the town lift plan, worked out by a committee on which she served. She plans to have family nights at New Dimensions when kids will get discounts if they bring along a parent, and fellowship nights when local ministers will be invited. Young people in the Mar shall area need more con structive entertainment, says Cynthia. Niles. who adds she plans occasional live enter tainment, says Cynthia Niles, who adds she plans occasional live entertainment at the new place. "The kids have nothing to do outside of school," she says, and just "hang out and drive around. They need a place to get together and enjoy themselves. " Bobby Ingle and Betty Wilde, both of Marshall, are in charge of the new place. While John Dodson's fur niture store is not yet fully open, his sister-in-law's Cross Stitch Attic has been open since May 2 selling cross stitch materials and all the various articles that can be us ed to decorate pillows, pic tures, towel-holders, neckties and more. Linda Dodson reports the business has been going really well, and "I am really pleased." Even her two young children are helping out - from I p.m. they return from day-care, until 6 p.m. Rob. Some of his pictures are in the Southern Appalachian photo archives at Mars Hill College. Folklorists from as far away as London collect Rob's pic tures of old traditions, and he also exhibits in galleries and museums. An article in an up coming issue of Carolina Lifestyles magazine will in clude his photos of Peter and Polly Gott of Shelton Laurel. But "I'm as interested in what's new as in what's old," says Rob, adding that the kids who enjoy the video games downstairs interest him, too. He has been taking some publicity stills for the Nashville TV Network of Madison County musicians the network plans to feature, such as ballad singer, Delli Norton ; fiddler, Tommy Hunter; and fiddle and banjo player, Byard Ray. Rob also hopes to give photography classes at the studio starting in the fall Rob's wife, Laura, is from the Ball family of Asheville ? her grandfather, Ewart Ball, has taken .pictures of his native Madison County that are in the University of N.C. at Asheville archives. Her new business is designing and making cloth objects ? cur rently some animals to be sold at a new shop, Funny Farm America, being opened by her half-brother and his wife at FZ., at the new a personality create a to ? .. r *i .*?> -v., ,? , RANDY GRAVES and Mike Lusk stand out-, side their newly opened restaurant in Mar shall. . ik : l has been selling her work at fain. If the Funny Farm pro ject turns out as expected, Laura hopes to parcel out some of the sewing to other Madison County Both partners in Main Street Studios hope their new i will be a also thinking about showing old films Rob aayt he feete be and Laura are part of a change in Madison County - Bankers Foresee Slow Recovery Signs of a gradual economic improvement are starting to be seen in the Marshal] area, with banks reporting growing inquiries about home mor tgages and with new businesses starting up in town. "We see evidence of things picking up here is Marshall, economic activity we haven't seen before,'' said R Bryce Hail of First Union National Bank, adding, though, that the pickup is slow and that "we would hope it continues to be gradual" so as to minimize aqy inflationary effects Hal Buckner of the Wachovia Bank noted that the area's economy had been hurt by the withdrawal of the American Greeting Card Go. proposal for a new plant in the area, but that ha now sees some signs of a pickup ? the effect* of the new road to WeaverviHe, at least one local plant rehiring people it had