PAGE TWO -■ ■ jraE YANCEY RECORD Established July, 1936 LESSOR ARNEY FQX EDITOR and PUBLISHER ERLING TONESS Published Every Thursday By YANCEY PUBLISHING COMPANY A Partnership .Entered as second-class matter November 11th, 1936, at the Post Office, Burnsville, North Carolina, under the act of March 3, 1879. EDITORIAL COMMENT After World War II a young man was discharged from an Army hospital with both legs amputated. His future looted so black that he gave up all previous dreams' or ambi tions. Since he had not com pleted high school, he settled down to living on his pension jmd earning a few cents selling newspapers on street corners. One day a man, a total stranger urged him to finish his high scool training. After much urg ing and persuasion, he finally agreed to complete his high school work by correspondence. He made such high gradeg that he received a scholarship to a small college. A few years later, the strang er wrote, “This js a red letter day. The young handicapped soldier whom I talked into finishing his high school, just graduated from one of the country’s leading universities with a doctor’s degree.’’ This is a true story and an ex ample of what a little education counseling can do. Undoubted ly a number of very bright youngsters in our own county are missing an opportunity to get started just for the want of a litle encouragement and guidance on a brilliant career. Who knows but that one of the ! boys or girls in Yancey County who is allowed to drop out of school this year might, if en couraged to continue, become a person of whom we would say proudly, “He came f,rom our county.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE RECORD ——Will—mniißiiMiiinß—nnwimTiißmMiinißiiiiißiiiiiß: ; iyiiißi[!iiff;iiiiß::iiiff'’iMiimwiiiiiff A I* PEYTON FARM SUPPLY Yancey County CHECKERBOARD _ Os Deyton and ’ Royce Lee Howell Are your pastures good this fall? The cheapest source of feed for a dairy cow is good pas ture but in the fall they gtet tough and it is harder for cows to get enough to furnish as large a part of the necessary nutrients as earlier in the year. 'Dry cows are often neglected and they actually need better feeding and care than one that is milking. She has a big job to (do then —the calf to be grown and her body, to be rebuilt for a long lactation. Don’t neglect this important time, il men tioned Wentz Mclntosh last •week. He religiously feeds hi 9 dry cows on D&F and ’his cows are beginning to show re sults that were hard to im agine a year ago. His dry cow feeding is paying big divi dends. f Vi| . WHEN SOWS FARROW 1. Wash and disinfect hands and all instruments to be used in Purina Disinfectant solution. Dip again before each use. 2. Take up each pig, wipe a way slimy mucus, especially from nose and moutd. 3. Clip neddle teeth, using sharp clippers, to prevent pigs from injiuring each other and sow’s udder and teats. } . 4. -After they are clipped, paint Deyton Farm Supply PHONE 189 /£,. BURNSVILLE, N. C. — -- *»***-»*■*»>»->»-* a-*-*-4 » POETRY CORNER Conducted By Edith Deaderick Erskine (Poetry for this corner should be sent direct to Edith Deaderick Erskine, Weaver ville, N. C. ) MATERIAL GOODS I shall not .see again, nor many another, That cloud so frail in gold and. rose, As the lacey yvisps evaporating Fade forever-where beauty goes. Material and the work accruing Has place, but backs bend un der its size. The fragitegce of lilies, the •magic of*nature Puts blood in man’s bones and joy in his. eyes. Lena i.lsarle Shull, Asheville ♦I-*.*-*-*-**-#-**-*-*-*-*-**-*-*-**-**-*-* DECORATION There will be a decoration at the Smith Cemetery, 1 mile East of Burnsville, Sunday, Sept. 4th at 10 o’clock. All relatives and the public are invited. do False teeth Rock, Slide or Slip? FASTEETH, an improved powder to be sprinkled on upper or lower plates, , kolas false teeth more firmly In place. ' Do not slide, slip or rock. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. FAS- 1 TEETH Is alkaline (non-acid). Does 1 not sour. Checks “plate odor" (den ture breath). Get FASTEETH at any ( drug counter. gums with. iodine-gly%erine mixure. If ear are notched, paint notches with iodine. . 5. each litter in crate or box first 2 or 3 days. Place wih sow every 2 or 3 hours. 6. pigs warm, clean, dry. 7. Remove damp bedding and manure dailey. “ Fast-Start ” Twins right „ 7 start for Baby Pigs Work on more than 200 litters of pigs at the Purifia Research Farm over a 5-year period proves that new and super pal atable Baby Pig Chow is right for starting pigs. It tempts pigs to start eating and gaining early, has just the growth booster young pigs need. New Baby Pig Chow and Pig Startena have now teamed up to become Purina’s “Fast-Start’’ Twins. We’ll bet you grow and wean heayy pigs on these fine products, too. HEALTH HINT Clean Sow’s Udders Before putting the sow into her clean farrowing pen take a few minutes to wash her sides and udders with Purina Disinfect ant mixed with water. Kills germs and worm eggs that might cause scours, disease or , worms in baby pigs. VIOLET RATS ON 00 R WAYS By H. if. AUey •• • • Note: This column is written with malice toward none, but, with the common good of n ’l in mind. * .» *. * A LITTLE VINEGAR AND SALT. The boasted eight-hour day for many officials and business executives includes a two-hour ", lunch period: ** * * Many golfers have been blam ing their poor scores this sum mer to the presence of pretty girls strolling aound the greens clad in shorts. f ** # # Girls who depend on costly perfumes to attract men, would be surprised to know how many more men may be attracted and held by the simple and less ex pensive perfumes .emanating from the kitchen in the prepar- I x 1 ation -of an appetizing meal. *** * 1 • A dictionary is mostly used r by those who "love to solve crossword puzzles—rarely , by. - those who get cross when ac cused of misspelling a word. “ •* » • Few housewives ever go on , a reducing diet without putting their husbands on one too. ** * * Doctors claim that over-eating makes some people grouchy. How about under-eating, doc, do you think that would make . ‘em happy? "*■ ** * * A teacher says that breath- 1 ing is very important to sing ers and speakers. Well, and we’d been thinking all along it was •important to everybody. ** * * Many a Baby Sitter will tell you that sitting is the least part of her job. ** * * People who display too much fervor and emotionalism i n church are called FANATICS. But those who yell their heads off and toss their hats in the air at a ball game, wrestling match, or boxing bout are only ealled FANS. ** * * The fellow who doesn’t know what to do with himself, usu ally doesn’t know what to do, period. ** * * To many modern kids, home is just an extra filling station, when they no longer have mon ley to “filler up” at the < jSandwich Shops, Hot Dogger- ' ies, and Hamburger Joints. i *** * 1 Why is it that smart people i receive so much publicity, when most any fool ask questions that smart ones can't answer? • * i# * * Two opposite extremes: What a man’s mother thinks of him versus what his mother-in law thinks of him. ** * * Judicial Leniency: A man guilty of two capital crimes was sentenced to life imprison ment on one and death on the other. However the Judge de creed that he should serve the NOTICE OF SERVUCE BY PUBLICATION In the Superior £ourt NORTH CAROLINA YANCEY COUNTY Louise Higgins Briggs, Plaintiff ; Vs. Charles B. Briggs, Jr., Defendant The Defendant, Charles B. Briggs, Jr., will take notice that an action entitled above, has been commenced in the Super ior Court of Yancey County, North Carolina, for a divorce absolute on the grounds of a two l year separation; and that the / ■ said Defendant will futher taMe i notice '.at he is required to ap . pear at the office of the Clerk ■ of the Superior Court of said County, in the Corthouse in Burnsville, North Carolina, within thirty days after the 9 day of Sept. 1955, and answer or demur to the Complaint in said action, or the Plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said Complaint. This 3 day of August, 1956. Lowe Thomas, Clerk of super ior Court. I Aug. 11, 18, 25, Sept. 1, ' . .. .. -3' THE YANCEY RECORD life sentence first. ** « • Most people insist upon Grade“A” when it comes to cows milk, but are not nearly, so particular in seeking or dis pensing the milk of human kindness. ** * * They tell us that “no news is good news.” But one wond ers what a Ladies Club meet ing, Bridge Party, Rummage Sale, or Cake Bake would be like if there were no nAws to pass around. ** * * We could endure autos being so thick on the highways—but those thick headed things un der many of the steering wheels, —they are what gives us a pain in the neck. * i* * * Generally the people who are always hunting for an argu ment lose most of them. *# * * It is estimated that it costs American Business one billion dollars annually to fill out government questionnairs. That is extra of headaches! Liederkranz cheese is made only in Van Wert, Ohio. The tangy, soft ripening cheese was discovered ac cidentally by ah apprentice 63 years ago and named after a New York singing society to which it I wn* first served: } *• The southermost source of the Nile River, the world's longest, is ten tiny springs 6,700 feet above sea level in the central African highlands. - NOTICE OF SALE UNDER DEED OF TRUST NORTH CAROLINA YANCEY COUNTY Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a deed of trust executed by Clarence Ray and wife, Marilyn Ray, to the undersigned trustee for the Northwestern Bank on December 30, 1952, to secure an indebtedness due said Bank and default having been made in the payment of the same, the undersigned Trustee will, on the 28th day of September, 1955, at 10:00 o’clock A. M„ at the Courthouse door in Burnsville, North Carolina, offer for sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, the following described tract or parcel of land in South Toe Township, Yancey County, adjoining the lands of Clyde Huskins and others, and described as follows: •(BEGINNING at a birch just below Clarence Ray’s house and runs North 47 y 2 degrees East 430 feet to a stake on a ridge; thence South 53 y> degrees East 300 feet, South 43 degrees East 304 feet to a stake, in Clyde Huskin’s line; thence with said line about North 80 degrees West 815 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 4 acres, more or less. This August 27, 1955. BILL ATKINS, Trustee for The Northwestern Bank. Sept. 1,8, 15, 22 LAND EXHANGE NOTICE Eugene Autrey and his wife, Jane Autrey, applied for an ex change under' the Act of March 3, 1925 (43 Stat. 1215), offering 3.6 acres in Yancey County North Carolina on the waters of Locust Creek, tributary to South Toe River, bounded by lands of Herman Murphy, Eugene Aut rey, and the United States, de scribed ia deed from M. G. Er vin and wife, Mr 3. M. G. Erviri, to Eugene Autrey and wife Jane Autrey, dated August 5, 1944, and recorded November 9, 1944, in Deed Book 88, Page 388, records of Yancey County, in exchange for 2.6 acres owned by the United States in Yan cey County, North Carolina designated as a part of U. S. Tract No. 116 acquired from the Finland Heirs described in Case at Law No. 503, styled United States of America vs. 1717.63 acres of land in Yancey County, North Carolina, W. J. Weaver et al. District Court of United States, for the Western Disrict of North Carolina, Asheville, N. C., de cree filed August 30, 1921. Per sons claiming said properties or having bona fide objections to such application must file their protesf “with .the Regional For ester, 50 Seventh Street, * At lanta, Georgia, before October 1, 1955. Sept. 1,8, 15, 22 - " * mill (UksMagle) I . • : ; ONE OF OUR TRICKS IS 1 \ SELLING FOR CASH... ' 1 APPLIANCES, TOYS. FURNITURE. ANTIQUES- I ANYTHING... YOU NAME IT! PLACE AN AD IN OUR CLASSIFIED SECTION TODAY.. THE YANCEY RECORD BOND ORDER AUTHORIZ ING THE ISSUANCE OF f $300,000 SCHOOL BONDS OF THE COUNTY OF r YANCEY WHEREAS, the County Board of Education of the County of Yancey has determin ed that existing school plant facilities in the Yancey County School Administrative Unit are _ not adequate for the mainten- r ance of public schools for the £ nine months’ school term pre- a scribed hy law, and has reques- | ted the Board of Commission ers to provide the sum of $300,000 to finance additional school, plant facilities such as are described in Section 1 of this bond order and which said County Board of Education has determined are necessary to enable the County of Yan cey, as an Administrative ag ency of the public school sys- tern of the State of North Carolina, to maintain public schools in said Yancey County School Administrative Unit for the nine months’ school term prescribed by law: NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDERED by the Board of Commissioners of the County of Yancey as fol lows: Section 1. The Board of Com missioners of the County of Yancey has ascertained and hereby determines that it is necessary to erect either one new high school building or two new high school buildings as may be determined by qualified voters of the County in the manner provided by law, and tq acquire land and furnishings and equipment necessary for such new building or buildings, in order to enable the County of Yancey, as an administra tive agency of the public school system of the State of North Carolina, to maintain public schools in said school adminis trative unit for the nine mon ths’ school term prescribed by "" law, and that it will be necess ary to expend for such purpose not less than $300,000 in addi- -tion to other moneys which have been made available there for. Section 2. In order to raise the money required to finance the cost of erecting such new building or buildings and of acquiring land and furnish ings and equipment necessary therefor, bonds of the County of Yancey are hereby authoriz ed and shall be issued pursuant to The County Finance Act of North Carolina. The maximum aggregate principal amount of said bonds authorized by this bond order shall be Three Hundred Thousand Dollars ($300,000). Section 3. A tax sufficient to pay the principal of and inter est on said bonds when due shall be annually levied and collected. Section 4. A statement of the County debt of the County of Yancey has been filed with the Clerk of the Board of Commis sioners of said County and is open to public inspection. Section 5. This bond order shall take effect when approv ed by the voters of the County at an election as provided in said Act. The foregoing bond order was finally passed on the 24th day of 4-ugust, 1955, and was first published on the 4th day of August, 1955. Any action or proceeding .questioning _ the validity of said order must be commences within thirty days after its first publication. (S) Evelyn If. Pate, Clerk of Board of Commissioners of Yancey County. Q —C*» yoa tell me how muy timet Congress tans declared war? - I A—Eleven times. With Britain. 1812; With Mexico, 1846; With Spain, 1898; Germany. 1917; Austria, 1917; Japai' Dec. 8, 1941; Germany, i* Dec. 11, 1941; Italy. Dec. 11. 1941; Bulgaria, June 5, 1942, Hungary, is June 5, 1942 and Rumania, June 9, 1942. War was never formally yg declared with Tripoli in 1802. nor against the Confederacy in -1861, K, nor with any of the many Indian tribes, nor with Korea June'2s, r 1990. ... Q —Can yon tell me what a death tax Ist A—The inheritance tax is regarded as a death tax since it becomes payable, only upon the death of a person. Q—Were an the recommendations of the Joint Committee oa Organise- _ tlon enacted Into law by passage of the Legislative Reorganisation _ 1 Act? ' • AY A—No. Some of the Important recommendations not adopted included ~ a joint legislative-executive council; a Congressional personnel of §flce; a stenographic pool; an administrative assistant for every member; creation of a formal policy committee. The Senate ac quired authority, since passage of the act to employ administrative assistants. Q —Are committee records and files open to. public Inspection In I Congress? • I A—No. They are property of Congress, and are accessible to any mem ber of either house. Q—What is the difference between a “BiU” and an “Act" In Congress? A —”Bflr* is the technical designation of a measure Introduced in cither House. After a Bill has been passed by one House, it becomes an Act of that House. If it is passed by Both houses, it becomes an Act of Congress, tven If not approved by the President. 1 ■x “—““—“— : im portable TROUGH . . - Cattle trough is mounted pipe skids for easy moving with a jeep or tractor. Pipe frame abut pre vents cows from tearing up troughs by pushing up against them while feeding. Used 2-incfa pipe is welded at joints to assure sturdiness. *' A *^ n j ■I ay W *9 Mk i NOW!... I * Tj^AT«OHy i M l c D . e Sl j 15... .L •■n»*nsum*»sss**mmmmmm*mimßiuoßUi*n*nmßmunm*mnuanaßaßmonanm^mm*o»^^^SSSSHlfcfciltt44i^J Mildred L. Roberts, Agent PHONE 236 BURNSVILLE, N. C. ■* - ~ mmmmmm You’ll like the} Special Flavor «* C iQ m E ZZZZL.'' r r MONIT ON "OUSIHOCO (TIMS va.L—T~nilitif_ \ (Win, MM, teiihn ertktot. JFG C«Nm C* \ • ~ \ - .... • -I r THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 1, 1958 1