Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 30, 1925, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE CAROLINA MOUNTAINEER ANNOUNCE BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schulhoffer an i nounce the birth lot a daughter, Mary Louise, on Friday, July 24. Qjaufrence rflaulthcrnc 11 ..i ATM El may roam 2mwm$ the joy he'll find -T TP Oh, the sun shines bright and the skies are blue And all nature, it seems, is gay! And a eolden elow floods my spirit too, 'k As I hasten alone the wav &-?& rmn a . .a Mm kail HI l o a little house in, the inenaiy runs Where tha treasures of childhood wait- Yes, the road to home brings the sam old thrills As it leads to the old farm gate. Though the hills are lonely and bast in snow And the wind moans across he plain, Still I love those srenes that Mised tn know For the winter's cold brinjM the thought to mind That wherever a man j There, is no delight like At the end of the Vance Business College ASHEVILLE N. C, er new Management. Additional Instructors, Modern Courses And Prices within tneVtlach of everyone. POSITIONS GUARANTIED AND DIPLOMAS ISSUED Inquire about Our Special Courses. For any Information Related to Vance Business College SEE MISS MAMIE CLAYTON Firt National Bank Buildings Wayneeville, N, C, Write P. O. Box 1395 Department B. fames of the Carter- 'Waadell studio of j. y. School ofS&iincuig ., kUo. "ft ay nesoille, JTulysfugust Tuesdays and &hursday& at Qo mm unity (Blub. Jnntruttion given in SSaltet, Jnterpnetiee, Oriental, Stage Step, SBusmian, mJeroSatie, National &otk and todern SB a UfJi.oo m SDaneing. &or J7n formation, SPkone H.im Cee, S7 You Can Double The Life Of Your S ll o jt s CHAMjpy OE SHOP E. T. DUCKETT. P&p., Main Street Prices Are Low . Waynesville, N. C. ANNUAL BOAT PAGEANT FINE The annual carnival obsei conceded to its history, at pageant and water red what is generally the best celebration in lursday evening. Win ners of the tltree prizes offered were the boat "Kai 'yland", entered by Mrs. ! J. B. Ivey, of Charlotte; "The Light of the World", i aft entered by the Mis 1 sion Building , Nasheville, Tcnn., and , "The Dragor Queen", joint entry of; Mrs. Courtli nd Jerolman, Knoxville, I Term., and . ack Gerrold, of Tampa, Fla. Honori ble mention was made of I the boat entc red by Miss Kittie Stubbs, I of Sumter, St C. I Following the spectacular water ' pageantry, a program in which th' 1 crowning oil Miss Josephine Coman a.. ! "Queen Junpluska" and the award of i prizes was Witnessed by approximate -! ly 5,000 pecjple in the amphitheatre. ! First and, second prizes were silver ! loving cups presented by the patron- esses, and the third prize, a five pound ; box of cancjy was the gift of the ; Southern Assembly. j Points considered in awarding priz-' es were beauty and general effective- j ness. Judges were Dr. A. W. Ander-J son, St. Petersburg, Fla., Judge Ivy j Hamilton Burney, Forth Worth, Tex-; as, Mrs. T, C. Banks, Lakeland Fla., Mrs. Shaw, Mrs. Mason Crum, Colum-I bia, S. C. ' Thursday evening, at seven o'clock, . siiw all kinds of queer craft on the wa- j ers of Lake Junaluska mnrke the an-1 nual observance of the water pageant and coronation of Miss Josephine Co man, as Junaluska's queen for 102".. Following in the wake of the big boat "Cherokee" gaily decorated and its up and lower decks filled with musicians, beautifully gowned patronesses, the queen and her attendants, could he t-een boats of many kinds, carrying out in elaborate decorative schemes, all sorts of ideas representing fairy legends, religious themes, strange beasts and birds, tableaux and original conceptions from many lands. There were the graceful swan, the realistic big fish, Venetian gondolas, Indian dugouts, Japanese pagodas, Chinese dragons, and gaily decked canoes and row boats portraying activities of camp and school, all of which together with the thousands of people who lined the banks of the lake to view the spec tacle made a brilliant and colorful picture. After all of the boats had passed the reviewing stand and had been admired by the spectators, the company, led by the Saxon band, of Spartanburg, S. C, went to the auditorium where the gala occasion was concluded by a bril Kant program, in which the queen was crowned, prizes awarded, and enter tainment furnished for the queen and her court by tha children of Junalus ka's playground, under the direction of Miss Louise Durham, of Memphis ienn., playground supervisor. Music, appropriate to the occasion was furn ished by the Junaluska double quartet. Mrs. D. S. Maffett, of Lott, Texas, chairman of the patronesses, crowned the queen and scorted her to her throne. The queen's party entered in elaborate processional, following the announcement by a mounted herald, who rode horseback through the open air theatre. The queen's entourage included: Herald, Miss Amelia Albergotti, Or angeburg, S. C, trumpeters, Joe and Atkins Shackfoid, Nashville, James Vann, Birmingham, Billy Coggins, At lanta, Maids. Misses Mary Morelock, Nashville, l.i.zabeth Aldrich, Durham, N. C, Kittle Stubbs, Sumter, S. C, Effie May , inslow, Greenville, N. C, Hattie McKay, Asheville, and Sadie Herbert, iiennettsville, S. C, Cherubs; little Jane Stentz, of Lake Junaluska and Shirley Sneed, New Orleans; trainbearers: Betsy Gilliam, High Point, N. C, and pavid Tillman, Ben- nettsvilile, S. C; crownbearer, David I Stentz, of Lake Junaluska, and a group of small girls carrying garlands, j Patronesses occupied box seats on tthe stage. They Were Mrs. D. S. Maf fel and Mry Gunnel), Lott, Texas Mrs. Russell Tarr, Tampa, Fla., Mrs. Geo. R. Stuart, Birmingham, Mrs. J. A. Vann, Birmingham, Mrs. J. B. Ivey, Charlotte Mrs. Katherine Veach Paynes, . St. Petersburg, Fla., Mrs Hoyt M. Dobbs, Birmingham, Mrs. James Cannon, Richmond, Mrs. S. D. Harris, St. Petersburg, Mrs. H. E. Adams, Tampa, Mrs. W. F. Quillian, Msr Andrew Hemphill, Fort Worth, Texas, Mrs. Mary Penner Ketchum, Memphis, Mrs. J. W. Perry, Nashiille, Mrs. Olive H. Stubbs, Sumter, S. C, Miss Pearl Saunders, Nashville, Miss Nell McLeas, Durham, Mis. J. M. Al bergotti, Orangeburg, S. C, Mrs. F. A. Aldridgc, Durham, Mrs. Estelle Woodward, Charleston, Tenn., Mrs. F. Dudley, Miss Allen' Moon, Nashville, Mrs. J. E. Winslow, Greenville, N. C, Mrs. F. 0, Daniel, Durham, Mrs. Lamb of Del Ray, Fla., Mis Anna Echols, .-nd Mrs. C. K. Ausley, Thomasville, Mrs. J. A. Baylor, Bluefield, W. Va. tsfhsiertoSdti NORTH G AROtWA. The Piedmont Femd for bright tobat eo, mm and cotton, and wutr rmntln for hydro tUetrio power, tpbuUet, loom aad a vaet indu trie! and commercial ex pantien in wkleh Jiffrr lon Standard mMy kao ben of tonttatU wrist Hundreds of thousands of dollars ann ually are being paid to North Carolina widows and orphans by the Jefferson Standard more than any other single Company! With Jefferson Standard's fourteen millions of dollars of investments work ing" in practically every hamlet and vil lage in NorthyCarolina, it is only natur al that right-thinking Tar Heels should Insist, more and more, that their insur ance needs pe covered with a Jefferson Standard policy. Doesn't it follow that the policies of this BIG H01VLE COMPANY are "Easier to$ell in North Carolina' We hare Agency opening for the right type of men in different sections of North Carolina. Write to Julian Price, President i Jefferson standard life OREENSBORO. N C. insurance in Jorce over a Quarter of a !Billion v ' iMButAnititee Look at the lines, finish and trim of the Oldsmobile Six. Then gine. Experience its remarkable get-away and flexibility in traffic. compare it with any car in its A look and a ride tell most of field. Then drive the Oldsmo- the story. The rest is told by bile. Try it first at a walking Oldsmobile's moderate price a pace feel the smooth steady pull of its powerful Lrhead en- price which enables you to save much while sacrificing nothing. BILE 0 aa aopucT or cihihai motor. if N01AND MOTOR COMPANY i - i I '0 4 i I i
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 30, 1925, edition 1
3
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