i:
Miss Ann Hill, attractive
blonde who is employed in the
Mill Office, was chosen "Miss
Brevard” in the annual contest
sponsored by the Brevard Junior
Chamber of Commerce. The
beauty pageant was held Satur
day night, June 5, at the Brevard
Country Club.
Miss Jean Hall of Finishing
was among the final three in the
judging. Miss Hill will represent
Brevard in the state contest
to be held at Wrightsville
Beach. Last year, the Brevard en
trant, Miss Carolyn Kimsey,
placed high in the final judg
ing.
Big Cities Lure Endless Belt Folks
By Mary Sue Thorne
LOOSE ENDS: Frances Orr and Lessie Beasle
are getting back to normal after the time of their
lives in New York .... Lucy Smith returned
from an exciting ten-day trip to New Jersey and
Atlantic City all fagged out. But she said they
had a wonderful time .... Mildred Brooks and
Carolyn Fisher say that vacation time is ideal for
catching up with your sleep and odd jobs . . . .
Violet Patterson comes back from a fishing trip
with a bear story. ’ While they were camping, a
big fat woman went strawberry picking and met
a big black bear. She fled in holy terror from the
bear but found herself really between the devils
when she stepped on a snake .... Sherrill Allison
is just dwindling down to nothing on her diet
Jack Davies insists that he’s still having fun
"batching” .... Edna Rackley entertained for
Mildred Price with a linen shower at her home
on Boyleston Road Saturday afternoon, June 26
. . . . Sherrill Allison, Edna Batson, Lucille Mer
rill, Flora and Ed Perkins are leaving for Myrtle
Beach June 25 to spend their vacation. Others
taking vacations this month are Willa Miller and
Lela Baumgardner.
TRY THEM OUT
You can scent up a whole room inexpensively
merely by putting a dab of perfume on an elec
tric light bulb that’s been heated.
If you hold a pin or needle in your mouth while
peeling onions you won’t shed tears.
* * *
The original manuscript of "The Star Spangled
Banner” is now valued at $24,000.
* * *
The most concentrated form in which nature
supplies foods is in seeds.
* * *
The first railroad in the United States was
built in Quincy, Mass., in 1827, to haul granite
for the Bunker Hill Monument.
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