Section B WATAUGA DEMOCRAT J, s-k"B VOLUME LXXV?NO. 43 BOONE. WATAUGA COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1M3 PRICE TEN CENTS Junior Champ Day Is Feature Of Saturday Junior Champ Day haa been set tor Saturday. It la to be beld on the college baseball practice held, beginning at 9 a. m. Both boys and girli may par ticipate in two division, or age groups. The two group* will conaist of the Pee Wee division (ages 10-11) and the Junior di vision (ages 12-13). Competition will be in the fol lowing events: Boys ? 90 yard dash, football throw (distance), Softball throw (distance), standing broad jump, running broad jump, high jump. Girls ? 90 yard dash, Softball throw (distance), standing broad jump, running broad jump, high jump. Ribbons will be presented to first, second, third, and fourth place winners in each event. Trophies will be presented to the boy and girl in each division Henry Edwards Dies In Sparta Henry Edwards, 68, of Spar ta, brother of Mrs. Glenn R. Andrews of Boone, died Satur day night at the Alleghany Hospital from a heart attack. Funeral services for Mr. Ed wards, who was employed by the State Prison Department, were held Tuesday at the Un ion Primitive Baptist Church at Whitehead. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Blanche Edwards of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Grace Bankert of Fawn Grove, Pa., Mrs. Avalee Duncan Of Galax, Va., and Mrs. Peggy Dancy of Winston-Salem; three sons, Wayne Edwards of Fallston, Md., Wade Edwards of Fawn Grove and Bill Edwards of the Army, stationed in Germany; four sisters, Mrs. Jennie At wood of Sparta, Mrs. Glenn An drews of Boone, Mrs. Cornelia Cheek of Southland, Mich., and Mrs. Selma Kilby of Bel Air, Md.; and brother, Charlie Ed wards of Sparta. . ? who accumulate* the highest total points. Each hoy and girl should en ter as many of the events as possible in order to try (or high individual points. All events may be entered by all contestants. Participants must ? furnish their own transportation and should be at the practice field between 8:30 and 8:45 on the day of the event Recommended dress is "T" shirt and shorts or bermudas. Tells Of Fish Which Fetched Him $100 Prize Jim Moore of Sarasota, Flor ida, and western North Carolina returned to Boone last week and told about the fish he didn't let get away. Seems that a beer company in Florida turned loose 100 spec ially marked red fish off the Sarasota coast and offered $100 for each of the tagged swim mers. Proving that a North Carolina Floridian can't be outdone, Mr. Moore snsgged one of the prized fish, weighing pounds (give or take a few ounces). ? Now a hundred dollars to the better and seversl degrees cool er, Mr. Moore and his wife are relaxing at their Yonahlossee home ? telling fish tales, no' less! League Women Voters To Meet The League of Women Voters will meet Tuesday, April 30, at 8 p. m. in the Youth Fellowship Room of the Boone Methodist Church. There will be an elec tion of officers followed with a program on the recently com pleted town study. Easier Than Ever To See North Carolina New Roadways Make Areas Accessible By MIRIAM RABB (Travel Editor) It ii easier than ever to reach the scenery, history and re sorts which make North Caro lina a Variety Vacationland ex tending from the Atlantic Ocean to Eastern America's highest mountains. A new section of the Blue Ridge Parkway climbs to 6,000 feet enroute to its junction with the Great Smoky Mountains Na tional Park near Cherokee. Skimming across the rolling Piedmont countryside to link up with the Parkway and other mountain routes is Interstate 40, already noted for its pan oramic views of mountain rang es north of Asheville, "capital of the Land of the Sky." On the coast, new roads and bridges combine with State automobile ferries to give ac cess to seaside resorts and the Cape Hatter as National Sea shore. As North Carolina observes the 300th anniversary of the Carolina Charter, Tercentenary celebrations from coast to mountains add historical inter est to the vacation calendar. . In Raleigh, the State Legisla tive Building designed by Ed ward Durrell Stone and com pleted early this year is a brand new travel attraction sharing honors with the historic Capitol Building on the newly marked Capitol City Trail. New in the Piedmont is 32, 510-aere Lake Norman. There are now 173 golf courses in North Carolina, of which more than ISO are played year around. Four Seasons North Carolina is a four-sea son vacationland, with most at tractions and accommodations open all year, and others de signed especially for spring through autumn or autumn through spring use. Seasons are being extended. For example, the famous winter 'resort of Pinehurst now has a hotel as well as one of its five 18-hole golf courses open through the summer. Many accommodations in the mountains and on the coast are now open 12 months in the year. Open to visitors year 'round are Tryon Palace restoration at New Bern; the U.S.E. North Carolina Battleship Memorial at Wilmington; Old Salem in Win ston-Salem; and State and Na tional historic sites ranging from the birthplace of aviation to Revolutionary and Civil War battlefields. Spring comes early to the Mid-South golf and riding re sorts of the Sandhills and Ther mal Belt, and to the Southeast ern Coast with its fabulous gar dens. Azaleas and other spring flowers bloom profusely throughout the Coastal Plain and Piedmont in April. As the surf bathing season begins at the beaches, spring climbs the Blue Ridge Divide and lingers until June on mile-high moun tains. Summer brings the greatest visitation to the coastal and mountain resorts. Specialties like Tweetsie Railroad, Ghost Mountain, Grandfather Moun tain, and ocean fishing piers are open from spring through au tumn. Over 90 summer camps for boys and girls are open from June through August. Three big outdoor dramas and three summer theatres reopen in June. Fishing, enjoyed year around in meat sections of North Caro tin*, booms in spring as channel bass and other salt water spec ies are taken along the coast, the trout season begins in the mountains, and inland lake fish ing is prime. Offshore fishing along the "Gamefish Junction" coast is at its best from Hay in to November. Autumn decorates North Carolina with brilliant foliage and marks the beginning of hunting seasons, statewide. October returns the winter re sorts to the vacation spotlight. In early winter the ski slopes at Cataloochee Ranch in the Great Smokies and Blowing Rock in the Blue Ridge reopen. Autumn is enlivened by fairs and harvest festivals, unique among them the Cherokee In dian Fair in the Great Smokies. In December, the anniversary of Powered Flight is celebrated at Wright Memorial near Kitty Hawk. Hunting for deer, bear, wild boar, upland game birds and waterfowl is enjoyed between October and March. Thanksgiv ing Day marks the beginning of the season for riding to hounds at Southern Pines, T r y o n, Sedgefield, Charlotte and Ra leigh. In December, as sasanquas brighten the gardens of Eastern North Carolina, the World's Largest Living Christmas Tree glows with colored lights at W ilinington, and Moravian Candle Teas open the Yuletide in the 18th Century community of Old Salem. Special Events Every season has its full com plement of sports contests, fes tivals and other events. Largest of the spring festivals are the North Carolina Azalea Festival at Wilmington in early April, and the Dare Coast Pirates Jam borama on the Outer BAnks in late April and, early Hay. Steeplechase racing and golf tournaments are spring special ties in the Mid-South resort areas of the Piedmont. In June, the blossoming of rhododendron in the "Land of the Sky" is celebrated with the North Caro lina Rhododendron Festival atop Roan Mountain, site of the world's largest natural gardens of crimson-purple (Catawba) rhododendron. The 6,285-foot summit of Roan Mountain is one of the recreational areas in Pisgah National Forest. Outdoor historical dramas open from late June through Labor Day week end are "The Lost Colony" at Manteo on the coast; "Unto These Hills" at Cherokee in the Great Smokies; and "Horn in the West" at -NOTICE On Saturday, April 27, 1963 At Ten O'Clock I Will Sell at Public Auction The Property of the Late George Gragg One Five Room House, 4 Lots, Farm, Carpenter Tools On Highway Old 421? Now S21 Location V4 Mile from Cove Creek High School Terms of Sale Will Be Announced at Sale Doris McClain, Admr. Boone in the Blue Ridge. Sum mer theatres are at Flat Rock and Burnsville in the moun tains; Charlotte and Tangle wood Park (near Winston Salem) in the Piedmont. On the fourth Sunday in June, thousands gather at Grandfath er Mountain near Linville for the annual "Singing On The Mountain". July brings addi tional throngs of visitors to the Blue Ridge vacationlands for the Grandfather Mountain High land Games and Gathering of the Scottish Clans. Two famous summer events in Asheville are the Craftsman's Fair of the Southern Highlands in July, and the Mountain Dance and Folk Festival in August. August features the Brevard Music Festival at Brevard Music Cen ter in the Blue Ridge. The North Carolina Apple Festival at Hendersonville in early Septembebr hails the harvest season which culminates in the huge North Carolina State Fair at Raleigh in mid-October. To bacco auctions can be visited in Eastern and Piedmont Carolina from late summer through au tumn, and cigarette factories offer free gui.ded tours year around at Winston-Salem, Dur ham, Greensboro, and Reids ville. 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