JIMt twfjj i J iwpi»i 1 • /ty United States \ l Release Bents B VOLUME SIXTEEN Farm Officials Discussj Emergency At Meeting The Yancey County Agricul tural Council held a called meeting Monday afternoon be cause of the serious condition farmers are facing from the lack of rain this crop season. Merchants from different parts of the county and othes busi ness men met with the agricul tural group to discuss the sit uation. Because of the feed and cash crop outlook, made serious by the worst drought on record for this area, the group unani mously recommended that Yan cey County be declared a dis aster area for whatever Feder al benefits may be available. Before the recommendation was sent to State agricultural officials, however, North Caro lina had been placed on the list of disaster states. To be declared a disaster area means crop farmers and dairymen who do not have suf ficient personal funds to carry on through the winter and con tinue in production may bor rou through FHA and other Federal lending agencies to take care of the emergency period. One county official pointed out that funds were not to be made as a gift to farmers, but will have to be repaid as in any other loan. Local credit is not available LAST RITES HELD FOR MRS. QUEENIE EARLY Funeral services for Mrs-. Qseenie Belle Early, 70, who died in a rest home near Celo Friday following a long illness, were held Sunday at 2 p. m., in Higgins Memorial Method ist Church here. The Rev, D. B. Allerman, pastor t and the Rev. Charles B. Trammel officiated. Burial was in Holcombe Cemetery. Surviving are two sisters, Miss Maggie Honeycutt of Burnsville and Mrs. Ed Ram sey of Cincinnati, Ohio; and one brother, Ed Honeycutt of Brooksville, Ind. : . - ■■ ••• . .v. • ,■ - - . :■' - \JKR aBHHBBBm j||| O-1 . , l K \' 1 ' * i •‘FLYING SAUCERS*' SIGHTED ON RADAR—For the i first time, mysterious “flying disks” materialize on a radar screen as reports of the strange objects mount from all sec tions of the country. Airways operation specialists James Copeland (left) and James Ritchey, shown manning ra dar-scope at Washington, D. C. control center, record scores of unidentified objects on the screen. Since the summer of 1947 flying objects, described as everything from imagination to cigars, have been sighted in the skies over the United Stales. Officials of the Army, and Air Force term the objects from time to time as nothing, reflections of lights on the SEE ‘Gulbranic’s Panic’ At The Playhouse This Week SUB. RATES $1.50 YEAR. to cope with the situation, it | was brought out at the meet ing. Many merchants, feed and seed dealers have already gone ‘ the limit on credit, expecting ! pay when crops are marketed. ' Farmers and officials esti mate that to date all crops in the county have been damaged over 60 per cent. And if the! dry weather continues, the percent of damage will in -1 crease at a rapid rate. Suggestions were made by ' farm officials to reduce the ■ gravity of the situation at ' present and aid in the future. Farmers should make plans ' now to purchase hay in car • load lots from sections where 1 there is no drought. A reduc -1 tion in freight rates will prob ' ably be made during the emer gency period, they said. Farmers were told to plan' to put more corn In the silo. Where a silo is not already ' available, it was pointed out that a temporary one could be constructed for as little as S3O. Seeding of more winter pas ture with oats, barley, rye and rye grass was suggested. Low producers in the dairy herd should be culled cut in looking to future years with probable .drought periods, it was suggested that more permanent pasture per animal nnit should be maintained, with supplementary summer and winter grazing for cattle if possible. Another good in surance may be provided by carrying a few months’ supply of hay or silage. Rians for irrigation of crop and pasture fields should be made where practicable. Although farmers are exper iencing the worst crop situa tion in many years, they were told not to get desperate, but to prepare for the worst and hope for the best. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Fouts, Jr of Lafayette, Ind., are visiting Mr. Fouts’ parents here. D. R. is studying mechanical engi neering at Purdue University in Lafayette. ground, and refraction of light rays. The Air Force refuses to investigate flying objects, then sends planes aloft to chase them finally announcing noth ing was really in the sky. Tne nearest evidence to a concrete claim of actually knowing something of the ob jecls was made by a man in ( North Carolina. The disk-lik object he saw hovered close by for several minutes. He also ; reported seeing a man or a dummy in the object. The Yancey Record “DEDICATED TO THE PROGRESS OF YANCEY COUNTY” NATIVE COUPLE LOSE BUSINESS IN FIRE A large gift and novelty shop outside of Luray, Va., owned by Mr. and Mrs. Vance Silvers, formerly of Swiss and Burnsville, was destroyed by fire last Thursday, according to information received here. The fire was discovered in the 100-foot long building housing the gift shop around 3:15 a. m. by a bus driver who ! aroused a neighbor. The neigh i bor called the Luray Fire De partment. By the time the fire men arrived, the building was almost completely gone. Noth i ing was saved. Mr. and Mrs. Silver were in this county at the time of the fire, buying more stock for their business. They lived in part of the building and lost all their be longings in the fire, except what they had with them here. It was estimated that the v loss amounted to between SIO,OOO and $20,000. HUNTS PLANNED BY WILDLIF EjOFFICIALS Officials of the North Caro lina Wildlife Resources Com mission and the U. S. Forest Service have set rules and re gulations for big game hunting on western U. S. Forest Areas, Clyde P. Patton, Execdtive Director of the Wildlife Com mission, announced today. As usual plans have been made to hold public drawings to determine successful hunt-1 drawings for deer hunts un necessary. First, quotas for the number of hunters have been raised on all areas except Standing Indian and Wayah, where quotas have been xe ■moved entirely. Secondly, where last year there were series of three day hunts, this year will have series of two, three and four day hunts, thus giving hunters participating in later hunts an advantage of more hunting time. Bear hunts will be held in series from October 15 through November 28, except in areas where deer hunting will be al lowed. In these areas the bear hunts will close November 16. No wild boar hunts will be held in the Santeetlah Area. Hunting for bear only will be conducted ou Pisgah, Sher wood, Mt. Mitchell, Daniel Boone, and Hmteetlah Areas, with bag limits as prescribed in the general hunting regula tions for that section of the state. Bear hunters will orga nize into parties of not more than twenty-five, and party leaders may apply for permits for the entire party by submit ting names and a fee of $50.00 for residents and SIOO.OO for non-residents for twenty-five hunters or less. Applications for bear hunts must be sent to Raleigh in care of the Wild life Resources Commission, and postmarked not later thau September 10. Deer hunting will be conduc ted in blocks of two, three, and four day hunts, extending from November 17 through Decem ber 6. Applications must be made in advance for hunting deer on all western manage ment areas except Standing Indian and Wayah, where daily permits costing $2.60 may be obtained at checking stations. On other areas, deer hunters must send applications to Ral eigh postmarked not later than October 4. The cost of these permits will be $7.60 per per son. Deer hunters in the Pis gah Area will be allowed one deer or one bear. BURNSVILLE, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1952 ■— 11.,,, 111 mmm —i■ . ' ” ■- ' Preparations For Alumni Meeting Baing Made | ’ Officers of the Y. C. I. Al ' , umni Association are busy t making preparations for the r annual meeting Saturday, Aug \ ust 16. Apypximately 500 in , vitations have been mailed out _ to former students, teachers . and officials, of the schoil. Al _ though nam|s of students are , added to the roll each year, . the list is hot yet complete. Former students of the Baptist j institute wßb do not receive , invitations fb attend the af ' fair this year should attend and register so that the secre . tary may get your names on '. the roll. c As in the past years, the program wiH be carried out by > alumni an4> faculty members, i Herrick Roland, Superintend ent of Wilmington City Schools will be the principal speaker. Remarks ittll be made by others. Registration will begin at 10 a. m, and the program, i^clud VA TO KOREAN . G I TRAINING PROGRAM - L Preparing for administra tion of the education and tra ining benefitsvof the new Kor ean GI Bill, the Administrator of Veterans Affairs has re suested the Governors of all 48 States to appoint agencies within the. States to handle the approval of schools and business for training eligible veterans. ' Under the' new law, schools and training establishments must have approval of the State in which they are located before they may offer training to veterans who served since the outbreak of Korean hostili ties. This requirement also uas a part of the original GI Bill for World War II veterans. The Veterans Administra tion requested early receipt of the lists of State approving agencies t so that VA can start handling veterans’ applica tions before August 20, the date on which the new train ing program goes into effect It was suggested to the Govern ors that the same approving agency may be designated for the Korean GI Bill that already had been doing the job under the earlier World War II act. Meanwhile, VA issued ad vice to Korean veterans who expect to take advantage of the act’s education provisions that they should provide them selves at the start with suffic ient funds of their own to tide them over at least the first two months of training. .VA explained that the law provides a veteran in training may not receive his monthly Government cherk until some time after the first month of training has been completed; also, that for each month VA must receive a certification from both the veteran and his school or training establish ment that he was actually m training during that time. Fol lowing this, the VA will have to examine the report and com pute the proper amount of payment to the veteran, based on his number of dependents, if any, the type of training and similar factors. Nurses Association To Meet In Asheville Wednesday District One of the North Carolina Nurses Association will hold its regular monthly meeting in the Buncombe Cou nty Court House, Asheville, at 4 p. m. Wednesday, Aug ust 13 - ing a short business will start at 11:30. At 1:00 p. , m. lunch will be served. Every one attending is requested to - bring a basket lunch. This year will mark the fourth annual meeting of the | alumni. The first was held in 1949, with hte greatest numbtr of persons attending to date. Last year, however, the attend ’ ance was greater than the previous year. Approximately [ 200 attended the affair last 1 year. The memorial roll call of de ceased members was given for the first time last year and will be carried out again this year for those who have pass ! ed since the last meeting. The third Saturday in Aug ■ ust was established last year as the permanent meetins date of the association. Invitations mailed to indivi dual members include the en tire family, -the secretary said, and everyone is urged to at tend this year. REV. SWARTZ TALKS TO LIONS ON SWIMMING FACILITIES HERE Rev. David Swartz, pastor of ’ the First Presbyterian Church r here, was guest speaker at the regular meeting of the Burns j ville Lions Club last Thursday night He spoke on plans for * swimming facilities here and i on the lifeguard instruction program being carried out He pointed out that plans were being worked out where * children will have excess to * the local pools here before ! summer is over. Boys who took the course in lifesaving recently at the Camp Mt Mit ! chell for Girls pool, along with ' volunteer workers, will serve 1 as life guards. Rev. Swartz was inducted as a new member of the Club and was assigned to the committee on civic improvement Elmer Day, a summer visitor living at Cattail Community and a member of the Coral Gables, Fla., Lions Club, in vited local members to a bene fit square dance at Cattail Community Hall next Tuesday night. The proceeds from the dance will go to the Yancey Hospital Fund. FINAL CANCER DRIVE REPORT MADE Mis. Troy Ray, chairman of the Cancer Fund Drive in this county, has made a f { nal re port indicating that the coun ty quota was reached. The to tal amount contributed for use by the American Cancer Soc iety was $332. A break-down of contribu tions is as follows: County officers, $11.00; municipal, in cluding teachers, $76.00; resi dential workers, $97.40; clubs, $42.50; coin cans, Scouts and 4-H Clubs, $35.60; theatre, $21.50; business and proses- . sional men, $48.00. VESPER SERVICE TO BE HELD AT CAMP MT. MITCH ELL SUNDAY EVENING f Mrs. James Bingham, direc tor of Camp Mt. Mitchell for Girls, announced this week that a community vesper ser vice will be held at the camp Sunday evening at 8 p. rn. The Rev. D. B. Alderman, pastor of Higgins Memorial Metsodist Church, will be speaker. One community vesper ser vice is an annua) affair at the camp, and Mrs. Bingham invit es the public to attend Sunday evening. Playwright John Barry Kelly looks over the script of “Guloranic’s Panic” with his wife Blanche and sons, John (left) and Barry. Kelly’s play will be at the Parkway Play house this week for the first time anywhere. Staff Member’s Works Staged Here-This Week i , * Playhouse this Friday'nßl . Saturday nights will have the i opportunity of seeing an ori ginal production, “Gulbranic’s Panic”,'a comedy written by Jack Barry Kelly, staff mem ber and resident playwright at I the Burnsville School of Fine; Arts. The play will be seen here for the first time on any stage. Kelly, a spare Irishman, ! has the distinction of notonly being a playwright, but of being the first G. I. trainee to have his work produced. He has had enough of life’s experiences to qualify him to taye his pick of ideas on play writing, but he has been espec ially schooled in government work for the background of “Gulbranic’s Panic”, a politi cal satire. At 20, when he was fresh i out of Georgetown University law school, he began work as an undercover agent for the Fedeeal Bureau of Narcotics. “I’m no stranger to North Carolina,” he says. “I know every county —and I’ve put peo ple in the penitentiary from most of ’em.” Tnrough his work ah agent for the Narcotics Bureau, he finally landed in New Yo.k .City where the poing was tou- j gh and exciting. His biggest; coup came when, unarmed, he talked two mobsters into turn ing in their guns ahd going quietly with him. When they found that they were not com pletely surrounded with Fed-; eral agents, they warned him he was picking out away to die young. Months later he | learned that one of the mob 1 sters was the second man caught, and executed, in the. round-up of Murder, Inc. “Then,” he admits, “I was Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edw ard Buckner of Burnsvtlle a daughter, at Ost Clinic Hig- 1 gins, Wednesday.^ J rmrfrtof 1 ( (hletse Bonds B NUMBER FORTY-NINE j so seared I»y blood froze.” J"! 'fff&t' stfetch with j eminent in New York gave I Kelly hi s first look 'at the jtheatre. He saw all the shows j and sat ih on casting some of | them. | . Following his six years with the Narcotics Bureau, Kelly . | moved into the Department of ! Iht Interior asan investigator. Then he pulled five and a half years with the Navy Intelli : gence, a Beach Battalion, and |as commanding officer of the 1 shore patrcl on the West Coas:. This relentless pace began to tell cn him, and by the £me he was out of service he had I logged 27 months ih navy hos ; pitals. “I’m an authority cn them”, he says. After his major operation, he sold his house in Wyoming and moved to Florida with his wife Blanche and sons, John and Barry, for the final two years the doctors had allotted jrhim. At the University of Miami, he took eve/y available course lti writing, and “Gulbranic’s Panic” is part of the results of his study. Miami was a good place, for now the -two years are past and Kelly is feeling fine and still going strong. Mrs. Kelly was delighted at her* husband’s interest in writ ing plays, for she had acted in j many community dramatic ! groups. At the Parkway Play : house she has proved one of the most competent players. ! She has had a role in every j production except in “Midsum- I mer Night’s Dream”. But her i heart wag in that one, with ! son Barry— a chip cff the | block—scoring as “Puck” in the play. The cast for Kelly’s “Gul- I uranic’s Panic” is as folfows: | Mrs. Kenyon, Blanche Kelly; I commanding offiiaer, Lester I Moore; cadet, Jack Callaghan;' j girl, Anqe Miller; Mister ttul i branic, Dave Sterna and Col. j Johnson, Bob Gwaltfiey. Gordon Bennett, drama dir ector at the School of Fine | Arts,'*i a directing the play.