>,• ■. *' • I •* TUB ViklifW DV’ADh me YANCcY R&COkP THVIW&AY. MAY 23, 1983 I THIS YANCEY RECORD Btfabliflhecl July, 1986 TOM HIGGINS, EOtor «* Publisher THURMAN U BROWN, Shop Manager PUBLISHED k'V'SRY THURSDAY BY Y ANCRY PUBLISHING COMPANY j Second Claae Postage Paid at Burnsville, N. C. THURSDAY, MAY 23. 1863 NUMBER FORTY SUBSCRIPTION RATES PER YEAR —" , 'il H j Wm IIMmI ■ BY TOM HIGGINS Any Yancey Countian posessing I extra rabfc/|’s feet, a field full of i four-leaf clovers or a generous ; supply of buckeyes Is requested t ito contact either Ransom Pate or < E. G. Adkins at Rate's garage in i Burnsville. ‘‘Up until sow I’ve never been EUpi'iiftt.iouA,”. .Pate said with ' y weak smile while making his i tongue-in-cheek plea for help. “But f with the luck we’ve been hawing, j it’ll take a truckload of buckeyes, j clovers etc., to break tire spell 3 We’re obviously unler. We’re really jinxed." r} ( Mechanic Pate and driver Ad- ; kins are the principals in an ] auto-racing team sponsored toy , Roberts Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. of Burnsville. ] At rieast, they're supposed to be 1 raqjp?. So far this season they’ve! '.uptime to do little more than try and fend off the blows Dame Fortune has thrown their way. They took one on the chin Sun- . day at AsbeviUe-Weaverville Speed way, and this latest setback Js what prompted Pate to atari look- 1 ing for gremlins. 1 Here’s what happened: 1 Adkins went onto the track .lor 1 warmups prior to the a -rich National Modified Sportsman Championship race. He reported back to the pits that the car was in peak condition. Optimism oozed from the Bur nsville outfit’s spot on pit row. Then, during a final lap, prac tice dis, disaster struck and cruelly spattered the optimism to tjhe Yancey Counttems’ faces, Adkins roared out of the final turn and sped down the . atauAghb away at an estimated 100 m. p. h. Suddenly, near the first turn, a spectator walked leisurely onto the track. ,' Adkins had two choices: he could take no evasive action and hope mat the spectator would get out of the way; or he could take no chances and pile his nuter into the wall; It was really no decision. Ad kins sent the car Into the wall. The machine was virtually de molished . Adkins sustained a slight band injury. “What really hurts,” said Ad kins, shaking off his injury, “is that after the race the winner. Runt Harris, came by and told us that in warmups we were beating him two-car-lengths on the fctraightaways. He said he felt we had the fastest car on the track.” It’s been virtually the same story all season. During April, Adkins was lead ing a feature event at the New Asheville Speedway, of which he Fas the 1962 track champion. Just as he started to pass a slower car, the latter machine spun out, causing a collision. Out of the ilace went E. G. and into a major rebuilding job went Pate. In another race the Burnsville driver was running a close sec- , end when a tire blew, forcing j him from contention. An older of i hew tiies had failed to arrive in t'lme tor the race; they [showed lip the following morning.. On May 4 a truck towing one of the Pate-Adkina duo’s ears t» a >ace at Bristol, Va„ went out of control on a steep modfifiain grade near Burnsville and Bustled over a 45-foot embankment, • pulling the car along. The truck was 8 total loss. It took several days to get the car tuned to satisfaction again. “If .things don’t change I (don’t know what we’ll do.’^'PateTS!!! glumly. Then with a wry smile he added: “I guess our only hope is that our luck rubs off on somel others. Then we can organize a race for cripples.” #* * • Random Rumblings: Several Yancey speed enthus iasts 'Will go Go-Idarting this sea son. . . Bobby Silvers of Burns ville, holder of the track speed record for one lap at Marion Go- Kart Raceway, is planning to re turn to competition in the junior division. . . Max Fox, Randall MfcCtonry and Carl Stamey fc>f Burnsville, who dominated the senior division at Marion in 1962, are also 'Set to race again. . . Races are run at Marion on Saturday nights. The Yancey Countians will also race frequently at Old Fort on Sunday after noons. . . Teams from the Celo-South Toe .River section and Cane River- Rafnseytown are reported Interest ed in Joining a Burns villa Men’s Chdj-sponsored Yancey SotftJbal' League. Several more entrants are needed. If interested, contact The Record. . . High School graduation time is recruiting time for many college altMetic coaches. As it’s that time of year, I’m reminded off the story about the coach who was trying to ! persuade a terrific football pros 1 pcct to attend the coach’s univer sity rather than an agricultural and technical school. “Why, especially, do you want to go to A & T?” asked the coach “I can take forestry there,” re plied the youngster. “Why do you want to take fore stry?” The hulking lad, a gridiron terror but a classroom flop, scratched his head for a moment and then replied hrightly: “Well I like to hunt and fish.” Really happened. Mr. Merchant: Picture Your Ad Here ■ nnwHwirite. ititS&fn- Pil jcoivtJnue. I islt jmßKmS*x,zc&3. to ii# -1 • rxi-vi* t 1 I *»:• * I *//te tyaHcey. Record \ New Boating Law Is A Welcomed Addition | BY ROD AMUNDSON N. C. Wildlife Commission Recently ratified toy the General | Assembly is an amendment to i North Carolina’s 1J59 boating saf- 1 pity law requiring persons operat ing boats pevered by machinery of ten horsepower or less to have j aboard one approved lifesaving t ’ device for dach person aboard. : | Furrier required is a stern-mount-! ! ed white light for night operation, 1 or a usaibie flashlight to warn off other boats. This amendment brings state law into line with Coast Guiard re gulations. It does not, however, re . quire the boats involved to be re gistered or numbered. Law or no law, it makes good common horse sense to have saf ety devices aboard any boat. We live in an age of surveys, polls and statistics, and here are some statistics put together by the O’uP’ board Beating Club of AmerkJa l as a result of a nationwide sur vey of boating accidents. For instance, c° 795 persons who as a result of betting be came imperiled, 529 perished. Os these, 447 dead by drowning anc 141 of those who drowned had nc ! lifesaving device available. Okay, so statistics are cold; so ■ is death! A Hot Trick To Scale Fish Here is a slick way to get the scales off a mess of small panfish: Grasp them by the lower jaw and dunk them into a 1 bucket of scalding water- This will loosen the scales enough so that they may be easily wiped off in a bucket of cool water- Be careful not to leave the fish in the water too long, though. A litle experience will tell you the proper length of time. o Photostat Copies OF IMPORTANT PAPERS OR VALUABLE DOCUMENTS MOW MADE WHILE YOU WAIT. SEE John Robinson PHONE d»U 2-2)64 BURNSVILLE, N. C. I 11 - t ■■■MHUBEMi New! Gillette sum #• Adjustable I “i"*nV MM «. i,h l U t P !i r I beard MfW Blue Blades - - , - •* • • As an aid to boating safetjjr the Wgdlife Commission recently pass ed a regulation prohibiting jug fishermen from -using glass jugs as floats in this somewhat unique - lagafH 1 - m'm? HR- " .v 5 J> IT COMES NATURAL - Janie Wilson, 5, daughter of Mr. and ' 1 IS . „ ’^ rence Wilson of Pensacola poses LGipplly with the “homy heads she and her mother recently ca.vght in Cane River. Janie’s i.. -ca mg ability comes nationally. She is a great-great-great' gi-anadauightsr of Big Tom Wilson, the storied Yancey County woods man and ‘bear-hunter. (Staff Photo) | fc Graduation ts a high spot I ■ want to celebrate lt’s not- 1/ B I oral. Here’s Hoping Yoor ' ’Ajm \ I I Port- Graduation F.rtivities I ■ ****** clouds, keep yout H I 3§|y On graduation night make £ 9 THIS ad sponsored as a public service I I [ JjgZ : BY THE FOLLOWING FIRMS: - I \mj The Burnsville Mill I I Glen Raven Mills I type off fishing. Jug fishing, as it 4s commonly known, consists of tying a book and line to a jug, and letting /t)he rig float downstream to take cat fish. A gallon glass jug floating in the .water Is difficult to see from a fast moving boat or by a waiter skier, and it could easily crack la boat bull or a shin bone. Plastics, however, are softer, lighter, and won’t strew broken glass on the bottom off a stream or lake. So many liquids come in plastic coa. 1 ainers these days that ’ it should not hard, to find suit able fi-oai's. or Luke Guppy can concocts i T ien: s wh'ch, I irier stand, di .-.olve plastic materials. *•• » j Spriak’rg c-f Luke, this letter came from him i;.e other day: Dear Mr. Rod: 1 Me a'd Elmo Cooler been out in wt ‘'"'n Texas Icoki.'ig t> toy n1 ne (‘order cattle. They been M.wisv' a reel dry, windy spring out (that way. It was so dusty one dav ‘titoat -the prairie doy-s dug their holes up instead of down, and tlr n when the wind went down 11 left them branded I front six fret ip in the air. W? bad-(V» •/heat j them -down t> keep them from j sl.-v v'og .to death. I Mr. Red, we -ore had ee.me |re 'il good western soaks bat : thsre. Old Elmo decided he mas goto <0 try ” him a real rare steak. Well, when the -whiter brought it out Elmo looks at It « minute then -stock' his knife in it. I. was nice and red and juv inside, but Elmo cased the wai ter lack and to’ ’ him to fry it I seme more. He ...J the wiaiter he seen crittf” ■ -ui't worse than that and git v. '! Me, I like my steak just cooked so it don’t beller whenever I stick my fork in it. And let’s me and you and old I Elmo go fishing one of these days. A Jewel Peycrd Price Yee, He ma Is A Jewel Because it is the First Great A chie cement of your life. We hope it is the First Jewel to greater success- BLUE RIDGE HARDWARE CO.