Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / April 27, 1972, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE 4 Ti* YANCEY JOURNAL ft' I USTEHTO 11 | Cross Beams ~ j==^~\ | O. W-KY* 1 Staday At 1 P.M. " ,/ / I WITH FRANCES RADFORD, MINISTER H • ’•; ; ; . t - X - * I “HEARD COAST TO COAST” '?ZT*' -*tt ’ • T ~ hf~ • - 4 1 T‘ r*\ *" ' Long illness: most hospital insurance gives out before you get out. Not this [fan. Before something happens, see your man from Nationwide. He can save your savings. H Cecil G. Anglin Under p ollard’s Drag Store B msville, N.C. Phone: 682-2170 Nationwide LIFE • HEALTH • HOME • C AR • BUSINESS • Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co.. Nationwide lile Insurance < «.. Home office: Columbus. Ohio Can we > ***&&*&lSwtfc give you alight? 1 This '" >( I k *1 ’ is free with a car. boat, or camper I m li\ loan at The Northwestern Bank So. ■ \ \ \ we re not only giving you the best ■ 'fWa loan rate in town we're giving you , : jf this sports and campmg lantern free! It's rugged dependable. Use it in your car. boat. camper ... or for hunting, fishing, and traveling . When you find the car. boat, or camper you want. 'j come to Northwestern. We'll give the best rate, and it will \ T take only minutes of yo"r time. We want your loan business! 1 Eveready Commander Sports and Camping Lantern HKB| \ A ' *” *“ • Single Push-Button Switch Control • Hermetically Sealed Lamp ; Flashing Safety Signal Light • Lamp Tilts 125 • 6.000 Candle Power Sealed Beam • Chrome Plated Lens Ring • Red Fresnel Lens • Push-Button Switch Control t THE NORTHWESTERN SANK % . T../''' ’. =-r~~ \■— Member FDIC T-",. i '••'--1r 1 ■ -- - ' ‘ . ■*-"■' < f ** . , U~ /• i» fi r L APRIL 27, 1972 • ■ V .. V • «• a The "no grazing" period far let aside acreage on farfnS, participating in the 1972 feed grain, wheat and cotton pro grams begins May 1 and will continue for five months end ing September 30. This announcement was made by Wayne Ray, Chain man of the Agricultural Stabi lization and Conservation Ser vice Committee, who explain that a condition for participa ting in the voluntary farm programs is that set- aside acre age may not be grazed during five principal months of the growing season. You may not set aside acreage to be harves ted except far designated al - temate oilseed crops and emergency hay. The alternate crop excep - tion to the non-cropping re quirement is for those farmers who have signed up to use set aside acreage for growing non surplus, non-price-supported oilseed crops and in return accept a reduction inset-aside payments. Crops approved far this purpose include safflower, mustard seed, sunflower, cram bel, castor beans, guar,sesame Gospel Sing A special Gospel Singing will be held at Middle Fork Independent Baptist Church, located four miles North of Mars Hill on U.S. 19. This singing will be held on Sa turday night, April 29, 7*30 p. m. (fifth Saturday night). We invite all gospel singing groups to take part and all who love good gospel singing to attend. and plantago ova to. The emergency haying ex ception for set-aside acreage requires a farmer first to apply at the County ASCS Office be fore harvesting the hay. If his ■j. application is approved, the hay must be stored for use in event of future emergency as such nature that it be official ly declared an emergency by the Administer of ASCS, U. S. Department of Agriculture. "Farmers may secure infor mation on the emergency hay storage Provision and apply for haying privileges at the Tfancey County ASCS Office, " Ray said. Farmers participating in programs administered by the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service should report to the County ASCS Of fice any sale, purchase, lease, _ or rental of farmland, accor - ding to Wayne Ray,Chairman of the Yancey County AS C Committee. '1 strongly urge those who have added to or reduced the size of their farms to get the information to the county of fice as soon as possible, " said Ray. He pointed out that when the size of a farm is changed, the ASCS records must be changed, including recalcula tion of a farm allotments and bases. "We call it farm re constitution, " he said, and if the reconstitutions have been made and approved hy county committee before the signup time is over, it saves time and effort for everybody." 1 £ i,:- f - ■ 6 -’ r '' . ' 1 Hi ■ liiiil A. m w I m .■NW: •.- ;.'W \4B9b c y-;-- jpyjSCW •• ----- qwjJHrr, 3KB JO;,; , ,■. Hp! m «—t| Yancey Burley Producers Honored Five Yancey Burley producers were recognized for their fine work with Extension Tobacco demonstrations last year. They, along with others W'ere honored last Friday at a Banquet at the Holiday Inn. The main speaker at the occasion was Dr. K. R. Keller, Director of Tobacco Research from Raleigh. Pictured above are Mike Riddle, Pensacola; F. W. Rickard, Girls Haven Needs Help; Over 200 On Waiting List State Bureau of Investiga - tdon director Charles Dima ,told a group of businessmen in Charlotte last week tint about half the boys and girls in the state juvenile corrections sys tem shouldn't be there. They aren't criminals. Mis. James Phelps of Ken- more Avenue, Charlotte, isn't willing to let it rest there. She wants the world to know—via Tell-It Line —that there's a place for teenage girls who need a home. And it ne£ds your help. Incorporated in 1970 by A. D. Peacock of Whiteville,vyho 38 k Jal ft a Scenic Area Spoiled By Trash Dumping Before Clean-up Vorfc By Concerned CitiuM jk v : k *, x •. \ JJH i.; li 4} r wM TJiSr C.^ Fj y v ~ \ t Jim Autrey Operates His Bulldozer To Aid In Clean-up Project In Nhlteoak Community Beauty Restored Through Local Effort The site as an ugly trash dump on White oak Creek, is the South Toe Valley, was re stored to its natural beauty lost week as the result of coopera - tlon of a number of neighbors. Over several years, tons of refuse had collected here. Ne well Oakes and Bud Trexell, who are developing a new camp ground for trailers and tent campers adjacent to the area, Winchester, Ky.; H. F. Ross, Extension Agronomy Specia - list, Waynesville, N.C.; Dr. K.R. Keller, Director of To bacco Research, Raleigh, N.C.; Jim Atkins, Relief; Britt Holloway, Ramseytown; and Lawrence Grindstaff, Brush Creek. Not present’for the picture was Lawrence Ray, also from Yancey County. gave Boyr Home its big push a few years ago, Girls Haven is a counterpart to Boys Home. Its first house, on a 13- acre tract in Burnsville, has three girls and house parents in resi dence. More houses are need ed there and elsewhere in tte state. - decided that the area should and could be cleaned up. Stu dents at the nearby Arthur Mor gan School volunteered their help. This led to the offer of the use of a bulldaser endload er by Floyd Autrey who resides nearby at Celo. Not only did - ha offer it, but he operated It for the clean-up project. By the time these people got together the U.S. Forest The need is great. Over 300 girls are on Girls Haven's waiting list already from so cial service departments around the state. They are girls with no place to go. A stable home may help keep some of them out of future trouble. Service, cm whose land the dump had developed, had been consulted and Assistant Ranges Harold Riven was on hand to supervise and help clean up a share o t the trash. Within a couple of hours the area was completely changed and the approach to nearby scenic White oak Falls once ajjdnwas a place of beauty. 4 !> * y
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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April 27, 1972, edition 1
4
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