STATE ACCEPTS THREE 4-H PROGRAMS OF INTEREST TO GIRLS Three national 4-H awards pro grams of special Interest to rural girls have been accepted for the current year by the North Caro lina State Club office, it is an nounced by the National 4-H Com mittee. They are ftirlB' Record, Canning and Drew Revue. County winners In each will re receive honor medals, and State champions will get educational trips to the National 4-H Club • Congress in Chicago next Novem ber. National awards are $300 col lege scholarships in Girls' Record and Canning, and leather-cased scissors in Dress Revue. Donors of awards in the respective pro grams are Montgomery Ward, Kerr Glass and Simplicity Pattren Co. The programs are conducted under the direction of the Coop erative Extension Service. North Carolina state winners in the programs last year were: Doris Strickland of Halifax Canning, and Carolyn Miller of Statesville in Girls' Record. They also Won national honors. State winner in Drees Revue was Audrey Pearce of Fort Plain. County Extension agents will furnish full information on these programs. — Indian Drama Opens In Great Smoky Lafid Cherokee,—Under a full moon and a canopy of stars in the cool Mountainside Theatre, nearly 31 000 persons gave a thrilling ova tion to the great Cherokee drama, "Unto These Hills," which opened here Saturday night for a sum mer-long run. Under the direction of the Carolina Playmakers' veteran Harry Davis, the premiere of Ker mit Hunter's tense and brilliant drama gave promise of many years production. Performances will continue nightly through July 9th, then go on a five-night schedule, Wednesdays through Sundays, until Labor Day, Sep tember 4. Indian dances, folk dances, U.S. WARSHIP SET FOR SEA DUTY RECENTLY RETURNED from an eight-month tour with the Seventh Fleet, the USS Toledo stands at her dock in Long Beach, Calif., as crewmen carry cases of food aboard in preparation for a quick run to Pearl Harbor. The USS Toledo, together with the heavy cruiser, USS Helena, will Join the carrier Philippine Sea and other fleet units. (.International) colorful and authentic coBtumes, brilliant lighting effects, native scenery, stirring music written by a Cherokee and sung by the choir with organ accompaniment — all these blended to give vivid excite ment to the play. Visitors from every section of the country were on hand for the gala opening. Numerous dignitar ies were seen in the audience, and plans are being made for a dedication ceremony early in Au gust by President Harry Truman. Saturday night, however, the au iience as watching the tragedy md triumph of the Cherokee Story. From the stormy and reckless Shawnee chief, Techumseh, all the way to the great peace-lov ing genius of the Cherokee, Se quoyah, the audience witnessed a cavalcade of impressive characters that included Andrew Jackson, Sam Houston, Daniel Webster, William Henry Harrison, and such famous Cherokee greats as Junaluska, Drowning Bear, Tsali, and a host Of others. With easy access to the theatre, with comfortable and convenient seating, and with perfect accous tics, the Mountainside Theatre nestles in a lush setting of moun tain greenery which is a thrill to see. As the house lights were dimmed, the audience could glance around and see sky and mountainTtops bathed in clear songs of whippoorwills. The music of the organ rose, then the choir, and finally the galaxy of colorful lighting effects, as the perform a nee began. The vast stages of the theatre were suddenly filled with Indian dancers, trained un der the expert supervision Of Fos ter Fltz Simons, well-known au thor of "Bright Leaf," and cos tumed In elaborate and authentic 'creation of Suzanne Davis. The scenery, also authentic in every detail and deftly arranged to blend Into the great log palisades and the surrounding forests, was created by Lynn Oault. The music, a blend of the Chero kee mood and. the modern manner, was written especially by an Okla homa Cherokee, Jack Frederick Kilpatrlck, Of the music faculty of Southern Methodist University. This thrilling drama, sponsor ed and produced by the Cherokee Historical Association and the Western North Carolina Associ ated Communities, is considered to be a new and Important step In the social civic life of the Great Smokies, and the recreation life of the Nation. • n Alfalfa Crop Talk Of Wake Community Willie Chavis, Negro farmer of Route 6, Raleigh, gave ail alfalfa harvesting recently that was the talk of the community. Farmers from both the Jeffries and Fletchers Grove Community of Wake County laid aside their work and gathered on the Chavis farm because they "just had to see" the demonstration that every body was talking about. Before starting to mov the al falfa, Chavis told the group just how the crop had bene grown. He said he began last fall by turning under a heavy growth of lespedeza, applied lime at the rate of two tons per acre, disced the land three times, and added 800 pounds of 2-12-12. He used inoculated, certified seed at the rate of 35 pounds per acre and covered the seed in a firm bed. "After doing all this," he said, "I left it to the season." After a brief period of ques tions from the visitors, Chavis then grabbed the reins, spoke to his mules, and began cutting his fine crop Of hay. Each time he made a round the farmers stopped him to ask more questions. They stay d to watch him cut the entire plot. According to W. C. Davenport, Negro county agent for the State College Extension Service, the seeding of Chavls' one-acre plot cost about $35.25 — far less than a ton of hay would <6»t him on the retail market. Chavls figures on a minimum of four cuttings this season, with not less than a ton per cutting. .He plans to seed an other acre and a half in alfalfa this fall. Davenport says the farmers Id every community of Wake are growing alfalfa and are highly pleased with the results. Latest Civil Service show that the U. 8. Bureau of Indian Affairs employs 12,741 pepole to care for the 333,969 In dians in this country. This is an average of one bureaucrat for every 27 Indian*. HEAP PLENTY BURBA ■ ■O