Many Local Students Attend Warren Wilson College Miss Lynda Cher-y, daugh ter of Mrs. Kathryn B. Cherry SummJtt St., Burnsville; Miss Melody Ann Howell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. How ell, R-2, Burnsville; Miss Ran la Kay Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Robinson, Mlcaville; Miss Wanda O. Styles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Styles, R-3, Burns ville; Miss Brenda Whitson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Whitson, R-4, Burns ville; and Miss Frances Louise Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wilson, Mlcaville, are members of the Freshman Class, Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, N C. Misses Cherry, Robinson Sgi ,- ar % } m Hj I I CHEVY’S BUILT FOR I I BIGGER THINGS IN ’66! I NEW CHEVROLET WORKPOWER IS HERE! '=’ VROLETj i- aHit Here’s low-cost Chevy-Van—economy champ of Chevrolet's long, strong covered delivery truck line. Telephone your Chevrolet dealer about any type of truck. 1 " Franchised Dealer No. 1019 32 1114 1 ROBERTS CHEVROLET - BUICK, lit. I West Mai» Street, Burnsville H.C. u«™> no no I THURSDAY, SEPT. 3#, 1965 and Wilson are graduates of East Yancey High School and Misses Styles and Whitson are graduates of Cane River High School, all of the Class of 1965. Miss Patricia Arm Tipton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Al bert J. Tipton, R-l, Relief, N. C. has returned to Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, N. c. as a member of the Sophomore Class. Miss Tipton is a graduate of Cane River High School, Class of 1964. , Warren Wilson College is owned and operated by the Board of Satlonal Missions, United Presbyterian Church, U. & A. jt• Funder Promoted To Specialist Four FORT HOOD, TEX. (AHT NC)—CIark F. Fender, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Fender, Rt. 4, Box 147, Bu nsville, N. C., was promoted to specialist four, Sept. 14, while serving with the 2d Armored Divis ion at port Hood, Tex. Specialist Cla~k, a parts clerk In Headquarters Com pany of the division’s 17th Engineer Battalion, entered the Army in May 1964 and completed basic combat tra ining ot Fort Knox, Ky. The 22-year-old soldier is a 1960 graduate of cane River High School. NEW HEAVYWEIGHTS UP TO 65,000 LBS. CCW! The all-new Series 70000 and 80000 models are here—the biggest Chevies J ever built, out to do the biggest jobs any Chevrolet trucks have ever done! f§ They’re ready to cut costs with new V 6 fasoline engines, new V 6 and V 8 diesels. If hey offer, also, a new 92" cab that’s ■ the best yet for working efficiency, new higher capacity frames and axles and 8 a high 65,000-lb. GCW rating. m NEW UGHT-DUTY WORKPOWER! The most widely used of all truck engines i -the famous Chevy light-duty Six is built ■ for bigger things in ’66 with a big new 8 250-cubic-inch design. It’s the standard ■ power plant in most light-duty models. 8 Also, users of ‘/Hon models can now 1 specify a big 327-cubic-inch VB-the 8 most powerful engine ever offered in a # VHon Chevy truck. See the new Chevies m now, at your Chevrolet dealer’s. 8 THE YANCEY RECORD Girl Scoat Fluid Muutiags To Bu Held Oct. 4 Th# Neighborhood Service Teams for Girl Scout activi ties in Yancey County will join service teams from 25 neighborhoods in 16 Western No th Carolina counties at the first field meeting of all neighborhoods on October 4 from 10:00 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. in the Canton Y. M. C A. Mrs. Tania Rollman, field Vice-Pre ident of the Plsgah Council, explained the change from district meetings which were held formerly in the council and new plan where by volunteer workers from each neighborhood will meet together twice each year. Be tween meetings the neighbor hood teams which work with •troops In organizing, helping with program ard other ser vices in the community, will work closely wth the dist-lct advisors of the council staff who are assigned to the nei ghborhoods The field vice chairman said she felt the new plan will bring the neigh borhood per onnel into a c’os er association with the board of directors and help the many areas of the rou~ , cil work In a more coordinated manner. Mrs. O A. Gregory of Marshall is council presi dent. Mrs. John Plemmons of Canton Is hostess for the meeting which more than 100 voluntee" workers are expect ed to attend. The program will re-interpret the respon sibility cf the board’s services to the neighborhood. A report of neighborhood plans and reauests for service has been complied and compared with plans for the year to ascer tain whether the needs of the individual communities are being met. A session on problem solving will be held by the neiahborhood teams which include the chairman, trooo consultants, trcop or ganizers, camping consult ants and public relations re presentatives. The traditional “nosebag lunch” wh’ch Girl Scout troops often feature will be a part of the program with re presentatives bringing a packed lunch. Mrs Jack Edwards of the Pisgoh Council staff, field ad visor for Avery, Madison, Mit chell and Yancey counties, will attend a workshop on “Reaching Girls In the Moun tain-” In Berea, Kentucky on September 22-25. Mrs. Elizabeth Alley, anoth er staff membe" will also at tend and be a consultant at the conference which Is spon sored by the National Girl Scout Organization and the Council of Southern Moun tains. Volunteers and Staff members from 11 states in Appalachia will attend the workshop which will Include sessions with representatives of many agencies In the mountains, shading their suc cesses and problems, a sess ion on Federal Legislation and government agencies working in the Appalachian Highlands, and some samp ling of the culture of the Southern Mountains. Some statistics have been compiled from the 16 coun ties of the Plsgah Council showing the highest Girl Scout membership In the 7 to 17 age group being ?3 per cent In Transylvania County and 22 per cent In Macon GARDEN TIME BY: M. E. GARDNER It is bulb planting time. How do you rate ttilbs In your garden? Mar y think that no flowers are more welcome than those produced by bulbs because they appear early In the spring and continue to bloom until golden bell and other early flowering shrubs take over. They are compara tively easy to grow and are adapted to so many situations around the home ln the garden, In the flower borders and naturalized among trees or other suitable locations. The soil should be well pre pa >ed. This may be done by deep spading or with a tiller. Work In organic matter If you have it, along with fer tilizer. It Is rather difficult to make fertilizer recommenda tions because the kind and amount applied will depend upon the general physical condition 6t your soli and whether it Is light or heavy. A ruggestlon or two might help. Bone meal is good. Use r bout four pounds per 100 ssuare feet. Use the same amount of dolomitlc limestone and work both into the soil to a depth of at least six Inches. A complete fertilizer Is al ways good because you have a better plant food balance. The most commonly used mixture Is 8(N)-8(P)-8(K). Uea libe ol sprinkling of 8-8-8 over the area to be planted, also a liberal sprink ling of dolomitlc limestone. Incorporate with soil as sug gested for tone meal. There Is good reason for deep placement of fertilizer because ca’cium and phos pho us do not move readily In the soil. For this reason plants cannot absorb these two Important nutrient ele ment? unless they are placed in the root done. Dolomitlc limestone Is re commended because It con tains magnesium. This e’e ment is essential for satis factory plant growth because It has much to do with the manufacture o f chlorophyll, the green coloring matter in leaves. The depth Os planting will depend upon the kind of bu’b. A general rule Is to cover the bulbs with soil to a depth equal to three times the dia meter of the bulb. The exact depth la not a matter of too much concern because a var iation of an Inch Or two will do no great hum Plant a little deeper than suggested in very sandy soils and not so deep in the heavy clays. County. Avery County has 15 per cent of girls in this age group in Scouting with an average age of 11. Madison has 12 per cent and an aver age age of 10; McDowell has 13 per cent in Scouting and an average age of 11; Yancey has 10 per cent in Scouting and an average age of 12. , PAINFUL AMAZING LIQUID RELIEVES PAIN AS IT DISSOLVES CORNS AWAY Now ftmovc corm the »* M . tmtj way with FrcczoneO. Liquid Frcnone re lirwi pain ituanciy. work) below the »Jrti» line io dissolve corns m just days Oct Frcczooc...«t all drug counters