j JMi tti*l I ) wp**l I /hr MM Sates 1 ( fietme Boais I VOLUME SIXTEEN Shall We Expand Burns ville’s Tourist Business? By Mrs. Ira West i What could an expanded tourist business mean to Bur nsville and Yancey t County V In a State Advertising Bulle tin received recently from Ral eigh it was pointed out that last year 4,750,000 tourists to North Carolina spent $216,000, 000 while touring the State This is a daily average of $8.50 per person. It was also estima ted that in 1951 a final total oL 6,500,000 persons will have spent $250,000,000, making an' average daily expenditure of SIO.OO each. If we in Burnsville were en tertaining an average of 100 summer visitors at the aver j age daily expenditure rate of other North Carolina commun ities, it would mean SIOOO per day circulated in this area from an entirely new source than we have known before. The tourist dollar spreads quickly through the whole eco nomy as the hotel, restaurant, service station man and the re tail merchant passes it along for goods and services of all I kinds. Percentages of the dol | lar average spent for different items vary with the states, but here is the generally accepted tourist dollar breakdown made by the American Association: 20 per cent goes i for transportation (in motor travel, for gasoline, supplies and garage), 20 per cent for, overnight accomodations, 21 per cent to restaurants, 25 per cent to retail stores, six per cent to wayside vendors, and 8 per cent for amusements. j Editor Victor Meekins of the LAST RITES HELD FOR JOHN L. BLANKENSHIP John Lee Blankinship, 62 of Swiss died in Mission Hos- | pital Monday night from in juries received when struck by an automobile in Buncombe County around the first of August. He had not been con scious since the accident. Graveside rites were held at Chandler Cemetery at Swiss Wednesday afternoon with the Rev. Edwards officiating. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Della Blankenship; one son, Clarence; two daughters Willie and Agnes; one sister, Mrs. Virgie Shook of Madison County; two brothers, Andy of Asheville and Mack of Burns ville. His father, K. L. Blank enship of Madison County, al so survives. . | PERON QUELLS REVOLT IN ARGENTINA wßi II JPP iH 2sw JBb JxljaHiwM&w&tfggSf ( ■ -Sjt% s v-' %iP ■ • .’ ' g Mj ST JHSjR* JM| • Buenos, Aires—Dictator Juan J’eron is still firmly in the saddle in Argentina after crushing a revolt. Attempt to make his blonde actress wife (with him, above) vice president was “last straw” for foes. He holds, perhaps symbolically, two cigarette lighters, shaped like miniature pistols. • •*> The Yancey Record SUB. RATES $1.50 YEAR. I Coastland Times said of tour- ( ist trade: “One fine thing about the tourist dollar—lt is all cash on the barrelhead. No credits, no trade-ins, no re- j turns, and no bad accounts un • i Mess we offend or drive them ' away. Another thing, the tour-| ist requires nothing in return ( after he is gone. He doesn’t use our welfare, or our schools ’ and he will continue to adver ’l• • ' I tise us in whichever manner f ! |we have shown him we deserve ; to be advertised, by the treat-j ment we gave him when he was here." Burnsville has many more I atlvactions to offer tourists J than most people realize. 1 Next week there will be an ar-i v icle in this paper summam-' ing those attractions. SEI *' EMPLOYED PEOPLE NOW COVERED BY SOCIAL SECURITY Are you one of the millions of self-employed people newly [covered under Federal old-age | and survivors insurance? If ’you are, you need a social sec -1 urity account-number card, ac cording to Glenn H. Pittenger manager of the Asheville Soc- . 1 ial Security Office. J ( 1 “Self-employed people who ( ■ were brought under the Social 1 Security Act by last year’s 'changes in the law will report their net income from • self employment at the same time ' they make their Federal in come tax returns early next j year,” Mr. Pittenger said. At that time, they will enter their social security numbers on the J tax form, together with other , information. I Mr. Pittenger indicated that' although the numbers will not ( actually be needed until . arly ' next year, self-employed busi nessmen should apply for them 1 I now. This will help avoid any delay when the numbers are 1 ineeded. ' “If you have ever had a soc- ial security number, that same f number should be used,” Pitt-1 enger said. “If you’ve lost your ' card, we can get a copy of it ' 1 for you, bearing the same num ber.” Both new and duplicate cards can be obtained through the Asheville Social Security Office. The address is 203 Flat iron Building. Mr. Pittenger asks all self-employed people who have any questions about their coverage under social security to get in touch with j this office. “DEDICATED TO THE PROGHjSS OP YANCEY COUNTY” BURNSVILLE, N. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4,1951 EVERY TOP STAR TO APPEAR DURING ‘MOVIETIME’ “This isn’t an all-star pic ture,” Manager Lum Clevenger of the Yancey Theatre declar ed here today, in explaining 'the nationwide “Movietime, U. S. A.” program for all the na r tion’s more-than-23,000 movie 'theatres. “This is an all-star .'season.” Commemorating the half century since Talley’s Theatre in Los Angeles was built spec- 1 ifically for the purpose ofi showing films, the “Movietime U. S. A.” jubilee opens in Oct ober with an outstanding ar ray of Hollywood’s finest pro duct. 1 Outlining the plans made on la national and state-wide scale 'Clevenger said: “It’s Movie time, U. S. A.” is the name of 'a committee, and it’s also the title of an idea. This is the way lit works: All the studios in Hollywood got together to sign L their best stars, their outstand ing writers, their top directors and all their most distinguish ed technicians; then they made a determined effort to produce the very best films they could. These films will all be released in one top-notch jubilee season and of course, we’re going to show them right here in this theatre.” i The North Carolina “It’s Movietime, U. S. A.” commit-1 | tee is headed by H. H. Everett lof Charlotte with Manager i Clevenger spearheading the local drive. Made To Show Burnsville ThroTifch ' Television Mr. and Mrs. James Bing i ham, new owners of Camp Mt. i Mitchell for Girls, are deter- , mined to place Burnsville the tourist map if it is possible. I On Tuesday of this week i Clevenger of Lum’s Picture' ( 'Service spent most of the as-J ( ternoon taking moving color ( pictures of Burnsville and j business people to be shown ( over the television station in ( Jacksonville, Fla. I ( . The shooting of scenes star- , ted in west Burnsville and con-' itinued to the business section of town. Before shooting was 1 completed, Lum ran out of; film, but he expects to finish' the photography when the 1 , trees take on more color. |i About 30 or 40 minutes will ( be required to run the entire' film when it is completed, Mr.ji Bingham said. When televised' from Jacksonville the first moving color picture of Bur-1 nsville may be seen by most of Florida and southern states. Local Librarian Attends . Meeting In Asheville An In-Service Training Workshop for non-professional library workers in western North Carolina was held in the I Pack Memorial Library, Ashe ville, October 1-3. This work shop was the first in a series in a training program sponsored by the Public Libraries' Sec tion of the North Carolina Library Association. The subject so this workshop was The Public Library as an Information Center. Mrs. Ellyn Beaty, head of circhlation, Carnegie Public Library, Win-. ston-Salem, and Miss Gladys Johnson, librarian of the North, Carolina Library Commission, 1 made up the faculty, ans Miss Evelyn Mullen, field librarian of tie Library Commission, served as director. Miss Jane B. Wilson of Durham, Presi dent of the North Carolina Library Association, and Dr. G. B. Ehlhardt, president of Brevard College, were the guest speakers. Persons attending the work (Continued on back page) X-RAY SURVEY RESULTS The total number of persons X-rayed in jMjmcey County during the maltfjjt survey held during September was 3,859. The total for ,t|e Avery-Mit chell-Yancey flpairict was 11,885. This wra less than had been hoped for,, but it Is felt 1 that the survJt : was definitely! worth while. . Mrs. Harmon l Peterson of i.sane River is 1 chairman of the* County Tuber-j culosis Committee, and Mrsj 'Ernest Briggf\-■ of Burnsville' ! was the Survey ' Committee. The District Health Depart ment wishes' to thank all who helped in any jway with the survey. Thanks are due espec ially to the 'bounty commis sioners, who advanced funds to supplement thpse of the Tuber culosis Association; to the French Bi uadi Electric Mem bership Cordpration, which made all the Ateetrical connec tions without,any change; and to all who sai’Ved as volunteer hostesses. -Mi AYERS ON FURLOUGH FROM KOREA . Tommy Ayers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ayers of Rt. 1,1 Burnsville, ia home on fur lough for a month. Ayers, who is attached to the 629 Medical Clearance Company, has been in Korea fed* the past eleven months. s'■ £ He entered the Army in 1948 and saw L 5 months ser vice in Okiggj|KpAfter his re- — ~ ~ r ". : ” ■- Fouts Named WaKeTdYSst : Campaign Chairman Here mmmrnmrmmmmms President Harold W. Tribble of Wake Forest College has an nounced the appointment of Mr. Dover R. Fouts as chair man of The Greater Wake For est Campaign in Yancey Coun ty. Mr. E. Z. Stines, Manager of the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company for West ern North Carolina is General Chairman of the Wake Forest Campaign for Western North Carolina. Mr. Fouts will work in cooperation with Mr. Stines in enlisting the support of Alumni and friends of the college in this county. The campaign that is being j conducted by Wake Forest College is part of the program designed to move the college from Wake County to Forsyth j County in the near future. The i Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation in Winston-Salem has given I the college a guaranteed in come for the operation of the school in perpetuity after the school is moved to Winston- Salem. Since 1946 the college has been soliciting funds for the construction of the build I ings on the new campus, and l by January of this year appro ximately $7,500,000 had been ■ secured. In April 1951, the Trustees of the school estimated that it would take $15,500,000 to con struct the buildings essential to the removal of the school With $7,500,000 already raised," this left a balance of $8,000,- 000 to be secured. In the .Meantime, the build ing program is ‘getting under way. The road into the new ■ campus, which is being donat ed to the college by Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Babcock of 1 Winston-Salem, is being con structed, and ground-breaking exercises will be held on Octo ber 15th for the beginning of construction on the first build ing. The .Trustees of the school confidently expect to proceed with the building program this Fall. By early 1952, construc tion on several buildings shou ld be under way and it is hoped that by 1954, the initial group of new buildings will be ready REV. BARBER CALLED 1 TO LINWOOD, N. C. LA*’A • *— Rev. F. R. Barber will end , his fourth appointment as pas-' tor of Higgins Memorial Meth-Ji I odist Church here, and will | I move to his new church next . [Wednesday. At the annual ‘ (Western North Carolina Con- 1 r l ference at Greensboro which' [ ended Monday, Rev. Barber j was appointed to a pastorate i at Linwood, $L C. j [ Not only has Rev. Barber j been a leader in his church hut has taken part in all commun-'j ity and youth activities in', Burnsville. He first came to' Burnsville in 1944 and was re appointed the following year. Then at the Western N. C. Conference two years ago he was again appointed to fill the 1 pastorate he.-e an A was again 1 reappointed for another year. The Rev. B. B*. Alderman was appointed to the church here to fill Rev. Barber’s place. Rev- Alderman will come here from Emory University* Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Powell of ‘ Concord have returned to their home after a month’s visit in New York, Washington amt Belhaven. N C. turn to the United States for 1 a five-month period, be was 1 shipped out to Korea where he ' has been since. At the end of his furlough, Ayers will report to Ft. son for reassignment. ''a' : DOVER R. FOUTS : and that the college will be ( moved to the new campus in the summer of 1954. The Wake Forest Enlarge ment Program is attracting; widespread attention. It does not happen very often that a college that has served in one community for 117 years is moved 110 miles to a new com-j Imunity upon the offer of new and large resources for sup port. In addition to the College l of Arts and Science, Wake Forest also has a good law school, established in 1894, a good medical school, establish ed in 1902, (which was moved to Winston-Salem in 1941), a good school of business admin istration, established in 1949. The only condition attached to the gift frdm the Reynolds Foundation was that the col lege be moved to Winston-Sal em. It will remain, as at pre sent, under the control and ownership of the Baptist Con vention of North Carolina. The move means, therefore, that a fine Christian college is being moved into the western section of the state, affording new and great opportunities for educa tion to the youth of this pari of the state. Perhaps no other single event in the life of opr state at this mid-century point will have greater significance for all of this area than the realization of The Greater Wake Forest Program. ~ ' ' - *** - " -X " ■ —1 - C. O. Ellis, A. C. Spivey to Open New Plant In Newport, Tenn. C. O. Ellis, Vice President,; Treasurer and general manag er of the Burnsville Hosiery Mills, announced this week that he is to be vice-president and secretary of a ,iew hosiery finishing plant at Newport, Tenn. The new organization, nam ed Car-Tertn. Textiles, Inc., is owned by Mr. Ellis and A. C. Spivey of Newton. Spivey, who, has been superintendent of the Newton Knitting Mills, will be 1 president and general manag-- er of the new mill. Ellis said fn announcing the new organization that the mill will consist of a finishing de partment, dyeing department and shipping department. The , plant will be housed in a three-j floor brick building with a| floor space of 12,000 square' feet. The building formerly housed a hosiery mill and was BALD CREEK P. T. A. HOLDS FIRST MEETING The Bald Creek P T A this week held its first meeting of the 1951 school, year. The meeting was held in the audi torium of the high school, with the president, J. J. Nowicki, presidiug. Thirty-six parents and teachers were present for the meeting. During the program, the nineth and tenth grades pre’ seated a pumber of songs re r!M a ri? VHnug nf W/,riH j Principal R. H. Howell spoke of plans to beautify the school lunchroom. The organization considered taking the lunch room as a project for the year, to make it more home-like for ( the children. Members voted , to contribute $50.00 for the in stallation of drinking foun tains and basins in the first, second and third grades. , During the business session! the following committee chair-' men were elected: Mrs. Maxi' Proffitt, ways and Means; Miss I Tensie Bailey, Program; Mrs.'' Pauline Hensley, Welfare;, Charles B. Tomberlin, Mem- 1 bership; Mrs. J. J. Nowicki, Lunchroom; and Mrs. R. K. .Howell, Hospitality. After the program and busi ness session, the faculty ser ved refreshments of cider and ginger bread topped with whipped cream. The next meeting will be held on Monday, October 8. Clarence "Buiton and son, Tommy, are visiting in Flint, , Michigan this week. WOUNDED MARINES HO BLE FROM FRONT i ' v JQredflt i i ■■*■ fir S 3. ■'■>»»llHfe; i jp ••JMjm r mMEBgmM jwmm Hffrap • sHltef' ■*.- - ■ Jgßflp. %. :|yy§ilß!li2 • i’- <..-*•* iillipjSij!} .BpiM;" , "&J| ' , m '~~ * .-• ----- ; East Central, Korea.~“Buddy’> is a word that means some thing when you’re at the front. Fighters of the Ist Marine Division, wounded in battle fora hill, support each other as they painfully struggle to the rear for treatment at a base hospital. « f I (2Z*? I ——.... j .. NUMBER FIVE F m WKt jahHHBHHBI C. O. ELLIS equipped with a boiler, steam j heat and a sprinkler system. ; Plans 'are that approximat ely 150 persons will be employ ed as loopers, inspectors, and in other departments when the plant opens in about three weeks. Mr. Ellis pointed out that it was his desire to expand the Burnsville Hosiery Mill plant here to operate the finishing department but the lack of facilities and personnel prohi bited the expansion. Mr. Ellis opened the hosiery mill here little more than five years ago with twenty-five machines and ten employees. Since that time 75 additional machines have been added and the number of personnel em ployed now i» around fifty. The mill has enough machin es to knit 7,§OG dozen pairs of looping process which' foiiows knitfing, only 4,000 dozen paii-s are completed each week. There are 11 looping machines in homes in Yancey County op erated by housewives during their spare time. Ellis said, Ik: ides the maeh.nes bem a used in the mill. \rd at le„ t twenty more persons are need ed to operate looping machines to bring production to its peak he said. He paid high tribute to his staff of employees for !their loyalty and high class of work. Mr. Ellis said the C'ar-Tenn . Textiles, Inc. will not be con nected with the Burnsville Hosiery Mills in any way other than to loop and finish their prod etion. Scout Court Os Honor Will Be Held Here Tuesday Night Announcement has been made that the Boy Scout Court of Honor will be held in Hig gins Memorial Methodist Church here on Tuesday night, October 9th.