PAGE 2
TOE YANCEY JOURNAL
.
ALCOHOL
PROBLEMS?
*"‘ HELP
FOR ALCOHOLICS
AND THEIR FAMILIES
For Information
Call
The Yancey County
ALCOHOLISM TASK FORCE
682-6128
rr
tyVisine
=. 0 V
, Visalens
C ; | wetting solution
Bv f'' for corrtact senses
our $4 29
V PRICE
\ 2 FL. OZ.
Reg.
VISINE
EYE DROPS
fy.
pumtkoonu
*»-■■■ Vi Oz.
, Vising
SSBEOe r * ;
ntmu ssstm
U_• I
our AQc
PRICE JJ Jj
GERITOL
12 Ox. Liquid or
40'a Tablet*
OUR PRICE
$l9B «2 19
NEW WRITE BROS LINE <*«
c PRICE
STICK BALL PEN 2 /33c
Porus Point Pen 29c 2/49c
Retractable Ball Pen 39c 2/59c
MISS AMERICA CONTEST SPECIALS
ADORN
HAIR SPRAY
jflHt Reg.-Ex Hold
BffigUi Reg. $2.35
IHI OUR PRICE
m *1.77
GELUSIL
12 Oz. OUR s<« .09
Reg. 1.69 PRICE I
ALLEREST
Tablets 24's
Re » sll9
$1.49 |
POLLARI ,s
. SEPTEMBER 14, 1972
FHA Assists Non Farm Enterprises
The Fanners Home Adminis
tration can make loans to fami
ly farmers and ranchers aid give
technical and management as -
sbtance for development and
operation of a nonfarm enter -
prise. The ultimate goal ofthis
■■■■■■■■■■ BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaB|
sh regina's :
f| beauty salon ■
m ~f “ TAL K OF THE TOWN HAIRDRESSERS" !
■ For Appointment Cali: ■
: 682-6125 -
till ■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■ IflßinillliUtf
—
ton parties, frames, all outdoor™*
wash-up
Reg. Price Each Pkg. Is 98c
Combination OUR PRICE
Sole! ’ FREE SI 96 $1 66
With 2 Pkgs. 25's * ,y6
DESENEX
Spray-On Powder
6-Oz. OUR $*.69
Reg. 1,98 PRICE I
CRUEX
a SPRAY-ON
POWDER
Reg. $1.98
OUR PRICE
5 1.69
AYDS
Assorted Flavors
Reg. OUR PRICE
3.50 $249
WHITE
RAIN
SHAMPOO
Lemon
14 Oz.
Reg.
$1.15
OUR DDc
pR,CE 00
DIAL SHAMPOO
7 Oz. OUR QQc
R, * 5 PRICE OO
SOMINEX
Tablets 32's
Reg. OUR *■ 49
$1.98 PRICE I
'
loan is to supplement farm in
come. The enterprise must be
located or headquartered on the
borrower's farm. All applica -
tions will be considered without
regards to race, color,creed,sex
or national origin. Both veter -
DOANS PILLS
40's OUR
Reg. 1.15 PRICE //
SERGEANT'S
SENTRY DOG
COLLAR
OUR $149
PRICE
GILLETTE -
TRAC 11
PHI RAZOR
TRAC II
Cartridges s's
Reg. OUR QQc
sllO PRICE OO
_ - .
TAME
CREME 4§
RINSE
16 KM
Lemon - Reg.
With Body
Reg. 1.89 n&Mt
$139 [j™=.
TYLENOL-
Tablets 100's
Reg OUR $1 .95
2.85 PRICE I
ANUSOL
Suppositories
I 2s OUR $1 29
$i e 63 PI, ' CE * |
•<3
ans and non-veterans must meet
same requirements and (nullifi -
cations for loans.
Repair shop, welding shop,
Cabinet shop, riding stables,
beauty shop and barber shop are
all examples of non-farm enter
prises which may be adopted.
If ym are interested please
contact the FHA Office in Biros
ville in person or all 682-2319.
Head and use !
I WANTADS 1
r REGULARLY]
j BUSING
It's a dirty word. It deserves \o be.
A school lus is no longer something that takes a kid
to school so he cat get an education. It's something he catches «
before sunrise so te can be hauled needlessly out of his neighbor
hood, passing perfectly good schools along the way.
For what? Not for better education, but simply because
the bureaucracy jnd certain federal judges demand it. It makes
no sense, and it isn't fair to our children, black or white.
That is vhy Jesse Helms has been against busing since
the beginning, -le thinks education should be responsive to the
needs of a fast-noving, technological society. If it will take a
constitutional anendment to abolish forced busing'and get on
with the job of educating our children, then Jesse Helms favors
a*constitutional imendment.
The point, as Jesse Helms sees it, is that our attention has “
to be concentrated on giving our children the skills they will
need to deal witi the complexities of tomorrow.
That is the reasonable, sensible approach to education.
And, for our children's sake, we need to send reasonable,
sensible men to Washington. Men like Jesse Helms. Men who
know that education takes place in school. Not on a bus.
YES, I believe in Jesse Helms and I want | ;
to help elect him as our Citizen—Senator. mV JB
I’m enclosing my contribution of: t A|
□ SI.OO □ SIO.OO , '
Name , V W
Address I
City State Zip ' '
Mail this coupon with your contribution , ill
of SI.OO or more to the HELMS FOR 1 W *| j) V W W
SENATE COMMITTEE, P.O.DRAWER 589. I ii/JeJLJ' f _
RALEIGH. N. C. 27602. TOM ELLIS, i
STATE CAMPAIGN MANAGER. -■ V
P ascnoKoF * oc JmbKw
The people who have gone back to “Country
Living” now make up a “super” market for all
things electrical. We provide dependable
low-cost el metric power for everything from
the pop-up oaster to the electric heat pump.
& French Broad
Electric Membership Corp.
Working together to moke a change for the better.
J ‘
My Appalachia T %
By Rebecca Caudill, 90ppi, \
Holt, Rinehart and Winetcm, \
N.Y. 1966.
"Joy's recollection is no long
er joy, while sorrow's memory
is sorrow still. " This quotation
by Byron is a true index of the
feelings of Rebecca Caudill for
her beloved homeland as told
in her moving reminiscence,
My Appalachia. The joys she
once felt are now tinged with
sadness, but fortunately, she
has not let her sorrows make ter
bitter.
Miss Caudill believes that
the simple things of life are al
ways best. She experienced
simple, quiet, plain joys duriqg
\
■ - ' -1 •
BOOK CORNER ...
Mrs. Gladys^CoJ
IV ■ * —-
Ter childhood in Poor Fork, Ken
tucky, where people found their
P» asures in gentle activities.
Tlfere was time, and there was
freedom. No one was ever rush
ed, hurried. "They possess
ed askind of profound wisdom,
characteristic of those who live
close to nature, who walk in
step with nature's rhythm,and
who depend on nature for life
itself. " Such a pattern of liv
ing breeds security and content
ment.
——
However, progress with all
its attendant ills, came to Poor
Fork, Kentucky. Gone soon
were the lush green forests to
make way for the coal corpora
tions with the devastation “of
their strip mining. There were
ugly scars on the mountain slopes
from which millions of tons of
soil had been excavated and
pushed down into the valleys to
• bury the rich farmlands below,
■ pollute the streams, and create
a hazardous situation for floods.
letter T# . ,;
The Uitor ©
Dear Editor:
f
Education is the most important function of state gov zm -
ment. It is next" in importance to freedom and justice and
without Education neither of these noble objectives can be
permanently maintained.
The key to the educational system qf North*Carolina is
qualified and dedicated teachers. No one knows where their
influence stops. „
Teaching personnel must demand a greater role in deci -
sion-making in their school system. Collective bargaining
is fast becoming an accepted means of pressing demands in
a number of states and North C arolina will sooner or later
be affected by this technique toward the achievement of ed
ucational goals. R must be recognized that .educators are
underrated and deserve a better deal.
To avoid the teacher militancy typical of large industrial
areas these conditions must be alleviated: poor working con
ditions, inadequate pay for services rendered, (Setty politics
in the school system, requests for contributions from the po
litical'fcampaign kitty, and unrealistic certification require
ments.
A sound teacher tenure bill can help insure .teacher securi
ty. The lack of security for teachers in the past has done lit
tle for morale and has destroyed aspiration and nullified hope
for the young teacher just entering the profession.
A uniform method of electing school boards is an impera -
tive that state educational leaders should work for in the next
session of the General Assembly. Instead of the nondescript
present system, all counties must be brought under the state
wide law. Ideally school board elections should be nonparti
san. Politicians divided Yancey County into two districts for
the election of School Board members, one district consisting
of four board members and one district that will elect only
one board member. This is obvious gerrymandering for the
purpose of one party domination of the Yaicey County School
Board. The people should upset such political manipulation
of their educational system in November by voting Republi -
can for school board membership. This would send a message
to the Democrats who tinkered with the schools of Yancey
County for political gain.
Education transcends in importance all partisan and selfish
considerations.
Sincerely,
Joe Morgan
™^TT£NTION^"
All copy for the Yancey
Journal must be turned in
by sp.m. Monday. Urgent
last minute items must be
in by 12 noon on Tuesday.
♦ ¥ *
All classified advertising
must be paid in advance.
* * *
All display ads must be
in by sp.rn. on Monday.
the YANCEY JOURNAL
Burnsville, N.C.
Ed Yuziuk—Publisher
Carolyn Yuziuk-Editor
Patßriggs-Manager
Jody Higgins-Assoc. Editor
Thursday
by
Twin Cities Publishing Co.
2nd Class Postage Paid at
Burnsville, N.C. 28714
Subscription rates:
*3/yr. in county
*5/yr. out of county
Thursday, September 14,1972
Number 24
How to get your
refrigerator to cook things.
g~ \
j Stir ithe right things into
Sk . your refrigerator will fix
IWr. ! crunchy salads, interesting
m fruits and new side dishes.
W- ■ For over 250 exciting ideas,
4 send 25c (in coin) with your
i name.addressandzipcodeto:
■ Joys of Jell-O, W"«mi«iim
Box 8074, Kan- I 'mfff
kakee,lllinois, H
*■■■■■■■■ 60901. jJELi‘O
WU*t> MLATIW I
J Jdl-0 i» • r*yi«trred trademark of the Gener*) Forf, Gtrporaoon ||
k
- The economic patterns and stan
dards of the people were quickly
uprooted and changed. Resent -
ment flared, and in many areas
violence occurred.
However, the author states
that there is a ray ©f hope for
the future. The government
has at last become aware of the
situation at Poor Fork, Kentucky,
and is trying to do something
about it. Truly, Miss Caudill
states, we can all be our brotheft
keeper —especially our Appala
chian brother--as we protest
the way in which he has been
abused, and as we restore to
him what is rightfully his, so
that he~may regain, his spirit of
self-respect, and make his con
tribution to the world.
Dream
Power.
£9
Every person that lives
has some kind cf dream.
The day he doesn’t, he’s
dead. The ability to im
agine is one of the most
precious powers we have.
Dreams change things.
Some dreams may
change your world. And
some dreams may call
for money.
U.S. Savings Bondsfe
are the safe way to make
sure some of your dreams
come true. And, they’re
easy to buy. Your bank
sells ’em. Or, you can
probably buy them
through the Payroll
Savings Plan where you
work. Bonds build you a
sizeable nest egg. While
you build a dream.
Bond power. That’s
real dream power.