THE YANCEY JOURNAL ; ;. ' ' -i VOL. 2. N 0.17 East Yancey FFA Team Wins Meet The East Yancey Chapter of the Future Farmers of Ameri ca won the 19th Annual North Carolina FFA Land Judging Meet this past weekend at Franklin, N.C. high school. The Yancey County team received a plaque and check for $750 toward their travel expenses to Oklahoma City, Okla. .where it will represent the state at the International Land Judging Meet next month. Shown from left: team advisorH. Dollar, Larry McMahan, CP & L ag engineer Joe Gregory, Rex Geouge, Thin) Annual Bluegrass Festival To Feature 'First Family Os Country Gospel Music,’ May 12 The Lewis Family of Lincoln - ton, Georgia will be one of the featured attractions at the third annual BluegTass Show Saturday, May 12 at 2:00 and 8:00 p. m. at Mountain Wilderness Park in Pensacola. Bluegrass artist Mac Wiseman will also appear. The Lewis family is aptly recognizecTasr "The First Fami ly of Country Gospel Music." (Onstage, th ls group of enter - i 1 I I * i H ,; IS - ffg i| # | k jljki : ji Jmm*d jgliv -m BPi ffH ff ■ ,fe-L - jH§‘: : *ri OjHE; , m IjlffHßjHßu JBHffHHBr' '■ nHB 4 ' B» t ■.ljf . Hk &rtnl IBm jf' S? •'*''**' _ff ft Ji / '-' Bfap** MB. .: |S| mSttn . W W m The Lewis Family Os Lincolnton, Georgia Entertain With Country Gospel Music 1 ' ■ H tainers perform with the great est variety of entertainment ever presented by a gospel singing group. They belt out a fast-moving show that's bound to please both young and old. In the two and one-half horn stage show they present just about every type of gospel song along with, the old hymns as well as the old southern spiri - tuals. The natural bom crea Vic Tart, chief consultant for N.C. Vocational Education; Tony Eubanks, Ronnie Wilson, and Charles Dyson who is CP&L Asheville district manager. The annual competition is spon sored by Carolina Power & light Company and the N.C.Bank ers Association in cooperation with the FFA and various gov ernmental agencies to help future fanners develop their skills in soil classification and management. tive artistry of the Lewis Fami ly have made them great fa vorites wherever they have appeared. All proceeds from theßlue grass Festival, May 11 and 12, will go for a Volunteer Fire Department for the Pensacola Community. The Festivalwill include a Bluegrass Band Con test to be held Friday n i ght, May 11. All interested persons 7 '"At 'tyoKcecf IRecoxd THURSDAY, APRIL 26,1971 should contact Mrs. Ron Eubanks at 682-2700 no later than the 9th of May. Friday, May 11, admission will be $1,50 for advance tic kets and $2.00 at the gate. On Saturday, May 12, advance tickets for the 2:00 p. m. show will be $2,50 and $3.00 at the gate. Tickets for the 8:00 p.m. show will be $3. 00 in advance and $3. 50 at the gate. Dairy Poster Contest Set The North Carolina Dairy Poster Contest provides an op portunity for boys and girls to leam more about milk and milk products and to encourage others to take advantage of the benefits related to their con - sumption. Any boy or girl in North Carolina under age 19 may participate by making a poster which tells the story of the value of milk and/or milk products and displaying it at least once in a public place (school, farm store, grocery store, etc). Extra credit will be given for newspaper articles • or programs given to go along with the poster. Posters should be done on poster board or a similar mat erial, and should be 22" x 28" in size. Each contestant may make and display as many pos ters as he wishes, but must do his own work. Copyrighted materials such as cartoon char acters may not be used. Posters must be completed by May 31 and displayed during June. They should be turned in to the Yancey County Extension Office by July 2 for judging with the following informa - tion on the upper right comer of the back; 1. Your name, address and county. 2. Your age as of January 1, 1973. 3. Where your poster was and far how long. 4. If you made any talks or wrote any articles concern ing your poster include this in formation. Judging will be done on three levels: Division I—Under 12 years; Division ll—l 2to 14 years; Di vision Hl—Over 14 years. For more information, con tact the Extension Office. Finance Co. Merger Plan The president of the North western Finance Company an nounced today that negotiations are underway between the North western Finance Company and the Northwestern Financial Cor poration looking toward the merger of the Northwestern Fi nance Company into the North western Financial Corporation. The Board of Directors of the Northwestern Finance Company in a special meeting authorized the officers of the Northwestern Finance Company to proceed with the negotiations with the Board of Directors of the North western Financial Corporation and to finalize plans for the ex change of stock in the Northwes tern Finance Company for stock in the Northwestern Financial Corporation. The plan when completed will be submitted to the Board of Directors of each corporation and if approved by the Boards of Directors, will then be submitted to the stock holders for approval and will be subject to the appro ai of t'll governmental and supervisory agents. New Central High School WHERE WILL THE MONEY COME FROM? 1. 1963 State Bond Issue $338, 310.00 2. Appalachian Regional Commission Funds 480,000.00 (This "gift" from Washington may be lost if not used this year) 3. Revenue Sharing Funds (Specific amount to be determined) S j *4. local Bond Issue (To be voted on May 22, 1973). „SL, 500,L ' /v "' (The sum mistakenly reported in last week's paper as $500,000) *These bonds are to be paid off with income from the one cent sales tax which has been p in effect since May, 1971 and has already paid to the county $173,577. 33 during the first six quartets. The County Commissioners have pledged to use all revenue from this H source for educational purposes. The statement in the legal notice in the Yancey Jour ll nal which stated that taxes would be levied and collected annually for this purpose was H a legal requirement. The taxes are already being collected monthly for this purpose j| through the one cent sales tax. The County Commissioners have stated publically that t here is NO need nor plan to increase taxes for this purpose! si smmmnmmmmmmm mwmm. t mm'm mm m mwmmmmmmmmm - - - ■■ ' ' * y Three-Vehicle Accident Takes Life OF East Yancey High School Student A 16-year-old East Yancey High School student was killed and another youth injured near Burnsville late Tuesday night, April 19th, in a three-vehicle accident onU.S. Highway 19, according to the State Highway Patrol. Trooper R. A. Henshaw identified the dead youth as Jimmy Dean Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Fox of Route 2, Burnsville, who was opera - ting one of the vehicles. Henshaw said the crash oc curred at 11:45 p. m. when the Fox vehicle, traveling north at an apparent high rate of speed, attempted to pass another vs- Sales And Use Tax Report Local 1% Sales and Use Tax collections for Yancey County during the month of March, 1973 were reported by G. A. Jones, Jr., Commissioner, State Department of R eve nuq in the statement issued monthly from Raleigh. Yancey County collections amounted to $10,054.49 dur ing March, comparing favorab ly to just over $13,000.00 re ported from Mitchell County, and surpassing the $7,953.73 collected by Madison County. 'jjfak&jj&dt C. dUB-\ ' * *’ aNHfeff Mt Paper Boy For Biimsvillo Paper boys are an integral part of life in the "big city," but Burnsville has never had a paper boy to hawk its own newspaper, the Yancey Journal. The situation has been reme died, however, since "Sweet Pete" who operates a snack shop on the town square has taken the Job for himself and a more cheerful paper boy could not be found! hide and crashed into the rear of a tractor-trailer rig parked on the left hand shoulder. The Fox vehicle overturned, pinning the driver and David Laws, 14, of Burnsville in the car. The vehicle Fox had pass ed was operated by Richard Jerome Bums, 16, of Burnsville, Henshaw said. Laws was listed in fair con dition Tuesday at Asheville's Memorial Mission Hospital, where he had been transferred Bums and two other passengers escaped injury in the wreckage. Henshaw said the tractor trailer rig was unoccupied and had been moved several feet FDFDS #»-L6 7enPEK«Ta»t ©f The Ueek UPP eft foBcM O.OOUTKU Sft>W u - f*‘ 10* by the force of the impact from Fox's car. Surviving in addition to the parents are two sisters, Mrs. Vicki Hensley and Mrs. linda Hensley, both of Burnsville; three brothers, Gary Lee, Jerry and Rickey Fox, also of Burns ville; and the maternal grand * parents, Mrs. Lonnie Williams of Boone and Sammy Williams of Burnsville. Funeral services were held at 3:00 p. m. Friday in the chapel of Holcombe Brothers Funeral Home. Rev. Charlie Miller and Rev. James Fergus on officiated and burial was in the Fox Cemetery. taster tgg Hnnt Is Held On Thursday afternoon, the 19th of April, the Acteens and GA's of the First Baptist Chirch entertained the Child Develop ment Center with an Easter Egg hunt at the home of John ny McLain. Twenty one child ren enjoyed the afternoon hunting eggs. Refreshments were prepared and served by the girls. As the children left, the girls gave each child an egg to take with them.