I Advisory Group (Continued from Parr 1) Ernest Kirkman. Merchants' As sociation; Mrs. Charles Edwards, Beta Sigma Phi; Rev. Calvin Thiel nian. Ministerial Association; Betty Jo Crocker, Secretaries' Club; Mrs. Floyd Rippetoe, United Daughters of Confederacy; J. T. Russell, Am erican Legion Post No. 47; Ben J. Sioan. Fire Department; Eugene Howell, Sheriff's Department; Jack Arrington. Health Department; Ar thur Paul Evans. Police Depart ment; Ken Fry, Radio and Com munications; Bob Conway, news paper publication: Dr. Tom String fold. medical society, and Mrs Charles McDarris. Red C>-os.~. A few others will be added to the eouncil to represent various organ izations which have'not yet report ed the names of the persons to represent them. Industries will be contacted to set up an industrial committee on civil defense to cooperate with the local council. The present Civil Defense organ ization of Wavnesville consists of James II. Hovtell, Jr., Director, and Bob Winchester, assistant director. A meeting of the ngw advisory council will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Waynesville Town Hall. Council members are asked tf^^^rosent. /^ftntleman WILKES-BARBE. Pa. (AP>? i John Tripak knows that somewhere ir. Wilkes-Barre there is a very honest man but it may eost him some money because he doesn't know just where. Tripak's car was struck by an other car and damaged while parked. The motorist who struck the Tripak ear was gentleman enough to leave a note with his address. Tripak lost the note. Largest world producers of tin and tin-plate are Malaya. Indo nesia. Bolivia, Belgian Congo. Thailand. Nigeria and Texas. HACK FROM MONTANA with a haul of 70 trout are these four Waynesville area anglers: Max Rogers, Jim Rose, David Riley, and Archie Sale. The quartet of mountaineers made their haul of rainbow, brown, and speckled trout from streams some 50 miles south of Butte, Mont. (Mountaineer Photo). | Approach Of Fall Brings Promise Of Bright Foliage 4utumn flowers and the first I bright splashes of autumn color on rmile-high mountains are foretell ing North Carolina's spectacular iautbnin foliage parade which will be seen between now and early : November on the highest moun tains in Eastern America. With every highway and resort a showcase for autumn foliage in the Blue Ridge and Great Smoky Mountains of Western North Caro lina. almost all tourist facilities re main open to accommodate the in creasing numbers of visitors who are. discovering the beauty of the highlands when their vast forests of hardwoods turn to crimson and gold. i Western North Carolina, where | there are 223 peaks of 5,000 feet I elevation or more, is the meeting place of the two most-visited Na tional Park facilities in the land: the Great Smoky Mountains Na tional Park and the Blue Ridge Parkway. Both are so popular dur ing the autumn color season that October attendance now rivals that { of mid-summer. Travelers can enjoy North Caro- I tina's autumn beauty without leav ing main highways?many of them new or newly improved during the past year. For those who want to get off the beaten path there are numerous side roads and hiking trails connecting with paved routes! through Pisgah and Nantahala Na-I tional Forests, and the Great Smok-! ies Park, and along the Blue Ridge Parkway. The Parkway, designed solely for vacation travel and in North Caro lina following a right-of-way aver aging over 3,000 feet in elevation, s is famous for the close-ups and sweeping vistas it affords motorists, Openod during the pa-1 year is a new ll-mile spur of the Parkway soaring from I S 270 in Pisgah National Forest near YVaynesviife to Beech Cap in the remote Dev il's Courthouse Country of the Balsam Mountains. This section of tho Parkway, a link in the route which will eventually eonnect the Shenandoah National Park in Vir ginia with the North Carolina entrance to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, is built at an average elevation of over 4.000 feet Ths' Parkway offers a paved motor route from the Vir ginia line to Ashcville. Paved motor roads and main highways connect the Parkway with resorts and scenic attractions, and the summit of Mount Mitchell, highest peak in Eastern America, is accessible from the Parkway by a paved state highway.1 Other mountain peaks accessible by motor roads are Grandfather and Koan Mountains abd Mount Jefferson, near the Parkway: and Wayah Bald Mountain in Nanta hala National FoirM Whiteside Mountain near U. S. 64 in the Sap ohire Country, and Clingman's Dome, highest peak in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. From Soeo Gap on U. S 19 west of Waynesville, a spur of the Blue Ridge Parkway lead.s tip to Mile High Overlook, where it meets the Great Smoky Mountains and con nects with a paved Park road up to Heintooga Overlook in the Park Statewide, fairs and festivals are important autumn attractions. At Cherokee, on the Indian Reserva tion at tho entrance to the Oreat Smokies Park, the 39th annual Cherokee Indinrt-ffitir will be held October 2 through 6. Danny Kaye Wins Praise [ In Capital By I \ \l I Alls WASHINGTON - It s doubtful if any visiting VII' ever won tpore friends or tickled Capital funny bones more exnertlv than agile-wit ted and eonipl/telv unpredictable comedian Danny Kaye. He wowed his audiences at the Carter Barron Amphitheater where he was appearing lie amused th ? socialites al numerous parties giv en in his honor. He impressed the bigwigs with his serious reports on his 32,000-mile trip through the Middle East for th.' benefit of the United Nations International Chil dren's Emergency Fund. Even the critics adored him. Sylvia, his wife, who with their daughter Den a. 10. joined him here, said Damn loves parties-. Mrs. Kaye. who -elects and edits her husband's script- and writes the musical lyrics, says they often give supper parties for 80 at home in California. Danny, -he said., clowns as much at hrtmo as in pub lie. lie likes to horse around in silly, small-sire hats which he hoards, tie's been promising a hat to jiist about every crowned head in Europe before whom h-vs ap peared and, Sylvia says wistfully. "I'm just longing for the day when he keeps al] those promises." Kim Novak, lovely blonde Hol lywood star, also captivated the townsfolk she ni't, She welcomed the press in her hotel suite in silk pajamas abd barefooted She sat on the floor and talked about her passion for pointing. She has a way of interpreting different personalities in color. She sees ! herself in blues and purples! | Then there was big Carr Hart ley. famed big-game hunter and , trainer from East Africa. En route j to Hollywood to see about supply ing wild animals for another vnovie. i he was a guest of Dorothy Lee Ward, photographer and writer, | who met him on a visit to Rumti- j ruti, his 22.000 aere farm in Ken ya, where he now has 500 animals The average eost of drilling a natural gas well is $100,000. Disruption FOR PIERCE, Fla. ? A five-foot aligator disrupted play in a hurry when he waddled on to the diamond during a boys' Pbny League baseball game. There was an immediate uproar which subsided only ? alter Ken Gordy, a team manager, managed to lasso and tie the reptile and turn him over to police The saurian apparently was flush ed from a nearby drainage ditch by dogs. ??? " ? ? 1 ' | ^^^Hot, Cold^ ^^rUSS j Bottled Starch 111 igKL Sa ve $ 3 0 on nationally advertised (PuO-ThERM oil heater) Reg. $144.95 y> *>>-.. 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