VOL. 2, NO. 45 United Fund Honor Roll The Yancey United Fund has now passed the SIO,OOO mark toward raising the $14,990 goal set for the 1973 campaign. The second publication of the UF Honor Roll, shown be low, is known to be incomplete, owing to the slowness of reports to reach Mrs. Ruby Smith, the UF treasurer. Hazen Ledford urges businesses and offices where all employees have con tributed to report either to him or Mrs. Smith. UF PATRONS (contributors of $300) Northwestern Bank Dr. Garland Wampler UF PATRONS (contributors of $200) First Citizens Bank Dr. Melvin W. Webb Mr. and Mrs. Mack B. Ray Pollard's Drug Store Bob Helmle CENTURY CLUB ( contributors of SIOO to $200) The Country Store Styles G Company Automotive Supply Dr. Fergus Pope Deyton Farm Supply Yancey Builders Burnsville Fum. G Hardware G. D. Bailey Holcombe Brothers Hazen Ledford Mr. and Mis. John M. Martin Dr. W.A.Y. Sargent Mrs. B. R. Penland Milton Weiss a Dr. E. R. Ohle Roberts G Com and Roberts Insurance Students of Cane River High School BUSINESS G OFFICES where all employees have made con tributions, and SCHOOLS where all teachers have contributed: Yancey County Department of Social Services Yancey County Child Develop ment Center Yancey County Health Dept. Cane River High School Bible Ledures Will Begin God's Kingdom of a Thou sand has approached. This is the stirring title of a new Bible Study aid. It contains 412 pag es of information on the com ing of God's Kingdom Rule of a thousand years. Beginning this November 11th a series of Bible lectures will start, running through December 30th. They will deal with God's Kingdom and the thousand years of Peace it will usher in. All are invited to attend, Sundays 9:30 a. m. at the Kingdom Hall, located East of the Radio Station across from Carroll's Market. Woman’s Club fleeting Set The Burnsville Woman's Club will meet on Thursday, November 8, at 8:00 p. m. at the Community Building. Mrs. Joan Reeve is the program lead er and the guest speaker will be Mrs. Sue Koch. Hostesses will be Mi*. Mack Ray, Mrs. Dover Fouts, and Mrs. Phyllis Bailey. THE YANCEY JOURNAL i American Legion Award Given Mr. Ralph G. Faulkner, Supervisor for Services to the Older Worker, Employment Secur ity Commission, Raleigh, presented the American Legion Citation Annual Award to Spruce Pine Mica Company at the regular monthly meeting of American Legion Earl Horton Post 122, Burnsville, in October. Mr. Hugh Wiseman, President of Spruce Pine Mica Company, accepted the award. Pictured (1. to r.) are Bill Payne, Veterans Employment Representa - tive, Mr. Wiseman, and Mr. Faulkner. This award is presented annually to employers se lected by the American Legion Posts throughout the nation from a list submitted by the offi ces of the Employment Security Commission. Areas considered are number of older work ers, number of veterans employed, veteran-non-veteran ratio, and male-female ratio. f - *■ v Duke Endowment Gives Blue Ridge Hospital Program $750,000 In Aid Since the conception of the joint effort by Yancey and Mitch ell Counties to join medical fa cilities and attain better patient care, the Duke Endowment has followed the progress with great interest and last week Mr. Don ald B. Carlisle, Executive Dir ector of the Blue Ridge Hospital System received a letter from Mr. James R. Felts, Jr. Execu tive Director of The Duke En dowment advising the Trustees of The Duke Endowment appro priated $750,000 to the Blue Ridge Hospital System for assis tance in the construction and equipment of additions and al terations to the Spruce Pine Community Hospital and a new 60-bed hospital in Burnsville. The Grant will be appropria ted over a period of three years, $250,000 each year for the three year period, according to Mr. Carlisle. Mr. Carlisle also noted pre vious support from Duke for the two hospitals is $90,149 for oper ating and building purposes .This amount would include the mon ies appropriated for the con - struction of the two present hospitals in the two counties, totaling $27,000. The remain der is payment cost for statisti cal data and subsidy for losses in free service paid on yearly basis over the intervening years. Subject to availability of funds Duke Endowment assistance will total over $840,149 by the end of 1975 for our two counties. Hospitals are among major beneficiaries of the Duke En dowment, founded in 1924 by James Buchanan Duke. They are assisted in the financing of construction and equipment of their plans, paying for charity care, and expanding patient services. Duke Endowment also pro vides hospitals with services of two national information and statistical organizations through which they are informed on a current basis of what other hos pitals in their respective cate gories are doing,thus they can judge their own records and make changes if necessary in the interest of more efficient operation and better patimt care. There are also other non profit institutions in the Caro linas that are assisted by Duke Endowment such as child-care and educational institutions— Duke, Johnson C. Smith, Fur man University and Davidson College; rural United Metho dist Churches in North Carolina are assisted also, retired Metho dist ministers, as well as widows and dependent orphans of de ceased ministers who have serv ed United Methodist Churches in the state. At the end of 1972 total ap propriations from Duke Endow ment to beneficiaries totaled more than $362,000,000. First-Citizens Offers New 1 2 A% Savings Bond First-Citizens Bank G Trust Company will offer a new seven and one-quarter percent savings bond effective November 1,1973, These new savings bonds will be available with a deposit of SI,OOO or more, and the funds must be left on deposit for a period of four years. Interest will be paid either quarterly, annually or at matur ity, as the customer elects. Compounding of interest will be annually. These bonds are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to the maximum liability of the FDIC. In announcing the new seven and one-quarter percent four year savings bonds, Lewis R. Holding, president of Fiist-Ci / ■ -—" THJRSDAY, NOVEMBER 8,1973 Since this is not the first time Duke Endowment has par ticipated in health care con - struction in Mitchell and Yancey Counties, Mr. Milton Burleson. Chairman of the Board of Dir - ectors for the Blue Ridge Hospi tal System, says "It is only by further participation by Duke Endowment that we are now able to realize what the people of the area have been working to ward for the past two years, Duke representatives camp to all the meeting: during the mer ger of the two counties and lis tened to what the needs for the area were, then at all times during our Development Cam paign supported us morally un til such time we were able to show public interest and finan cial support. Now they have come thru in this overwhelm - ing manner with a Grant that has pushed our building program to realization," tizens Bank, explained, "New federal regulations permit the higher interest and in First-Ci ■ tizens' tradition of always pay ing the highest savings interest allowed, the bank will offer the program on November 1. "This is the effective date of the new interest rates. First-Citizens Bank will per mit early withdrawal on all or part of a savings bond, before i maturity, upon written notice of hardship. Federal regulations require that banks impose a substantial penalty on such withdrawals. It requires that you receive inter est at the regular savings rate for the period held, less 90 days interest. Mercedes From Hitler Era On Exhibit In Asheville j Ch: April 30, 1945, artillery shells horn the guns of an ap proaching Russian army slam - med into Berlin, Germany. In a private bunker deep berfeath the crumbling walls of %We burn ing city, Adolph Hitler and his blond wife of one day,Eta Braun, committed suicide. In the confusion following their deaths and the throes of the third reich, a Nazi Secret Service guard, his automatic machine gun on the seat beside him, slipped away in a black and silver Mercedes-Benz. The soldier was Eva Braun's personal chauffer, and the car was a gift from Hitler to his beautiful mistress. For 20 yea® the car sat co vered with hsy in a bam in Austria. In 1965, the by then a peaceful farmer,died of a heart attack; an American newsman interviewing the wi dow rediscovered the treasure. Today the Mercedes is at the Tunnel Road Shopping Cen ter in Asheville. It is being exhibited byMrs. Hilda Onofrey, a Detroit wom 'an’Vho bought tiro car from the and whojvfor the past twayears, has toured the U.S. shoeing her prize. And prize it is. The car, repanted in sparkling gold, is a sinster symbol of the power at tie inner circle of the Nazi regJne. It is imposing in both sizeiind design. The Mercedes weighs 7500 pot^ds —almost as heavy as twefCadillacs. Beneath the streamlined hood is a 400 hp. motor with two transmissions to Bush the machine to 175 miles per hour. large whitewalled tires en circle 22 carat gold hubcaps emtlazoned with the Nazi swas tika. Atop a sparkling silver radiator is a gold eagle perch ed on the symbol of World War II Germany. A sign outside the display booth expresses Mrs. Onofrey's feelings about the Mercedes. "It is not our intent to glorify Hitler or his regime," the sign reads in strict, black lettering. "We hope the showing will remind you of the atrocities of the era from which it emer ged. " "If this car is shown periodically, " she said, "may be what happened might not happen again. Maybe people will recognize another Hitler if one comes along. " Mrs. Onofrey logged 103000 miles on the road last year. She lias crisscrossed the country since she began a five- year exhibiting tour in 1970 after her husband's death. At each stop, she gives the local shopping center's mer chants association up to SIOOO to contribute to local charity. From donations at the exhibit, she must then pay the cost of moving the Mercedes and the salaries of her three-man tra veling staff. Any extra she f keeps. Merchants at the Tun t nel Road Shopping Center are donating the money to the United Fund. ' Mrs. Onofrey said she does not charge admission to see the car because "I don't want to r turn away anyone who cannot s afford to pay." Instead, she 7 relies on donations of "what - ever you can give. " She will be at the Tunnel Road Shopping Center through Saturday, November 10. From there she will head west, and eventually will exhibit the car in Canada, Australia andßnope. When she travels, the Mer cedes is hauled in a tractor trailer, although the auto is licensed and operable. "It is just too hazardous to drive on the open road," she said. "People get too excited when they see it. I saw one man lose control of his car and cross the median strip when he saw it. Luckily he wasn't hurt." Once, Mrs. Onofrey said, she determined to drive the Mercedes fast enough to feel it shift into its second transmis sion at 120 mph. "I lost my nerve at 90, " she said. Postmasters In Charlotte Seventy postmasters from throughout the Charlotte Dis trict of the United States Postal Service convened in Shelby, N.C. on October 29 for an in tensive three-day training school. Postmaster Howard Young of Burnsville is one of the designa ted postmasters enrolled in the training school which is design ed, according to the Postmaster William A. Lattimore,District Postmaster Training Officer, "to teach an experienced and quali fied postmaster to train new postmasters coming into the pos tal service." John J. Wise, Cl*arlotteDis trict Manager, told the postmas ters at the beginning of the ses sion that their mission was to "go into the field and use this learning experience here in the school plus your own experience in your respective post offices to train new postmasters com - ing into the service as well as continue to keep your assigned associate office up-dated on the new postal procedures that are constantly being implemented." "We welcome Postmaster Young into the ranks of those dedicated career postal manage ment personnel who are striving to bring about a more efficient operation of the postal service',' Wise said. Postmaster Young has been in the postal service for 10 years and was commissioned Postmas ter of Burnsville on October 14, 1973 and is one of the 809 post masters in the Charlotte District which comprises all of North Carolina and part of South Caro lina employing nearly 12,000 postal career employees. More than 20 instructors and postal officials from the Char lotte District's six Sectional Centers and from the Southern Regional Headquarters in Mem phis, Tennessee were on hand to conduct the school. ' wri/i ¥ r ' * 0 )oTr ;!k- : Aki William Daniels,Jr. Dental Health Edura tor Here William H. Daniels, Jr.has been employed by the Preven - tive Dentistry Education Prog ram as the new Dental Health Educator for Yancey County. The project, which is fund ed through the Blue Ridge Health Council with Appalachi an State University serving as the grantee, will be operating again this school year in Yan cey. Bill Daniels will be work ing with all sth, 7th and Bth grades in the county as the school year goes by. Mr. Daniels graduated from Newland High School in 1968, and from Appalachian State University in 1973 with a degree in Health and P.E. He is mar ried to Jane Greene, and they have one child. Fire Dept. Distributes Special Tot Finder Decals The Burnsville Volunteer Fife Department will be distri buting within the city limits of Burnsville Tot Finder Decals on Sunday, November 11,1973 between the hours of 2:00 p. m. and 5:00 p. m. Members of the Burnsville Volunteer Fire Department will come to your home to distri - bute these Tot Finder Decals, These are weather-resistant decals and should be placed on the window of the child's room facing out or at the bottom of interior doors facing into hall way. The Tot Finder Decals can also mark the rooms of in valids and other family mem bers who require special atten tion or are disabled. Hynij Kr* m A Day For Ricky Ricky Shehan, a 12-year-old patient at Western Caro lina Center in Morganton, had lots of excitement October 24th. Ricky has muscular dystrophy and doesn't get home for Ricky to spend the day in Burnsville where he visited with his brothers and sisters and had a real party. He re ceived some new clothes and what he wanted most a cap 10* sth Birthdoy Celebrated At High Pastures, the fifth birthday celebration began on Wednesday, November 7, with a supper at 6:00 p. m. followed by a 7:30 p. m. service. The main speaker for the ceremon ies of praise, celebration and thanks, is Floy Cox, pastor of Forest Drive Baptist Church of Columbia, S.C. He and his wife, Ruth, are widely known for the ministry of the Word, music and praise. The public is invited to participate at this special time of thanksgiving during which the new buildings at High Pasture will be dedica ted to the Lord. On Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 9:30 a.nvserviceswill be held and are open to the public. Thursday and Friday evenings, a 7:30 p.m. service will be held, and all are invi ted to attend. In the afternoons there will be free time to me-?, ditate and communicate with the lord on the many hiking trails. Tours will be conducted on Saturday afternoon for those who have not yet seen the new buildings. They will be dedi cated at the 7:30 evening ser vice on that day. On Sunday morning at 10:30, guests will partake of the Lord's Supper* These days of dedication and celebration at High Pas - tures will be memorable for those who participate. Children account for over one third of the nation's fire casualties. And no wonder. In the confusion of a fire, fa milies often become separated All too frequently the result is a child trapped in his room, cut off from, rescue. The Tot Finder Program is designed to help avert this tragedy. The basis for the program is the Red Tot Finder Decal. Highly visible during the day and reflective from a light source at night, the attractive decal clearly marks the loca - tion of a child's room. Should fire strike, the decal will alert your local firemen to clearly marked areas fust.