Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 7, 1951, edition 1 / Page 7
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r SPORTS PAGE 01 The Waynesville Mountaineer Thursday Afternoon. June 7, 1931 tgion meets mideseM .opening game eere Havood County ln Junior baseball f place Saturday al Pmeet the Valdese Waynesville High harreled loss to jshes Monday here Forest City, the part in the festive-arranged this year Knee Pants -, TAKES OVER THE KING'S CHORES League sUrting lineup wjim- tof and Lee Art L rl 11 Tihe battery, and Dave p. cmll Swanger. Bob- Rurrell. Bob- fiw Swanger and Ray 1., game Rutherford $ the heavy artillery to rHlyood 23-10. In the r T,,psdav night Hay- np from behind to tie (the eignm, uui ouu Monday, June 11 Frogs vs Sinclair. Waynesville ScouN Tevuo Tuesday, June 12 Mains vs Thorobred . A. C. Lawrence vs Haz Scouts. Thursday. June 14 Unagusta vs Five Points. Goodyear vs Underwoods 1 r L'i Bob Lemon of the Cleveland In dians is the only pitcher in the ; mapor leagues to win 20 or more games in each of the last three years, themselves edged out in the las: of the ninth. 9-8. DEPARTMENT STORE OiSSlO EADQUARTEBS For HEM'S WEAR SPORT r SHIRTS LIGHTWEIGHT SUMMER STRAW HATS P Your Style From K Wide Selection t4 " 1 1 Cl H V n J I 1 1 . L Wt I tir 4 In A Wide Variety of' Colors aim m . Knee Pants Boys In Doubleheader Knte Pants teams played a I double-header Wednesday making ' mi the sanies postponed from Mon- jday because of a conflict With the Lesion schedule. In the opener the WaynesvKIe Swots swamped Sinclair 20-7: and in the windup the Waynesville Merchants wallop- d Texaco 13-1. Tuesda'.s sanies, postponed on account of rain, will be played next W ednesday unless managers can arrange a schedule for this H'lday. Weather permitting. today g.uiies will feature Underwoods vs, Unagusta and Thorobred vs. Oeod-veai'. Here On Leaye Wi'vncsville Scouts Sinclair t . .. .i . j iici euauis l Tcvaco R 2i 7 13 1 II 14 6 9 4 ffl (Mil inter' JlJ m pM'ir. wlwr 111-. rY-tor ( styles I j" to! ' pra Si Hoost For Middle Agors MlNNF.VPOl.lS .Al'v lirady Clark. vice-pveMdenr ol Investors niversitied Scriccs. Inc. here, savs he has tigiires to prove that a; useful productive life can really bei'in .it 40 for men and women w i!h sales capabilities Clark slates that representatives of the compnnv who are more than 4(1 produced about 4 per cent of the total 19M sales. "This is proof," says (Talk, "that the seasoned competence of mature men and women is a definite asset for business " f ps's.' ""Sf ft .1 -i - 1 . s I ' Vllf ' Id IMI Answers Tonn 01 Waynesville About The Water -Sever Bill SUBSTITUTING FOR HER FATHER, King Georgt VI ot England, who li con. fined to bed with influenza. Prlncesi Elizabeth takes over some of the monarch's duties Top. the Princes. InspecU WRAF (Women s Royal Air Force) personnel In London. Below, she presents tin King I colors o the Royal Air Force at a special Hyde Park ceremony. (International) Cherokee Drama Revives Buried History Of Area (TIKHOKKK An overlooked chapter of American history is liv- 1 ine asiain in the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina and making theatrical history. U i&ihe ti'agk.,sVQij'..uf the em . -htiiklinfi white man" betrayal (if the -Cherokee Indians, which is rescued from almost-forgotlcn files of history by "I nto I hese nius . Kcrniil Hunter's authentic folk drama From its premiere performance last year, the drama was a sensa tional success. To meet the de mands of playgoers, prformanees were increased from five to six nit!lits a week. In all. 107.140 persons saw the drama in lis first season An even lunger season is in pros-tn-il this year. Beautiful open-air M.iuuiainside Theatre, built speci fically for the drama, has been im- proven. nun ine spoiiMiium v ...... l,i -e Historical Association has IcTHienedcd he . engaRement. l-'i.MowiiT! the opening perforni ,,.,. .lune 23. the sho wis sched n'nl f'U' Hi successive nights and I! . ,f..-r six nights weekly Hiroiigh Labor Day. All of the 2.1)00 scats in the thc-i- v.liir'i is at 1he Indian village ,.i .-it the entrance to the' r.'ial Smoky Mountains National ;,vk. arc reserved and may be pur chased bv mail from the Box Oil ice ;:l ( :. ii.kii. Prices range irom $1 to S3 00. including lax. , The l rami- and moving story of 111,. Cherokeis is played out in two ads and 14 scenes by a cast of 120. headed bv experienced actors and :Kin.sscs of the famed Playmakers ,,f ib,. University of North Carolina Descendants of the Cherokees who lived the story are cast in prin- eioal roles Still other Indians are seen in the re-creaien nun cen tury Indian village scenes and darircs. Including the colorful Eagle Dance, handed down through a thousand ' years of Cherokee ritual as an expression of freedom and triumph, Straneelv. the Cherokees' story has not found its way into history iim.bu vi.i u is a story that has stood on tlu? American scene since DeSoto came into the Croat Smokies in 1 540 in search of a fabulous golden city It reached its climax in 1838 with the removal of all but a remnant of the Cherokees to the west and in the death of Tsali. a simple In dian who gave his life so that a handful of his people might re main forever in the land of their birth. ; It is the sjorv of Sequoyah, the ! illiterate Cherokee who taught his! people to read and wide and who gave his people the only Indian al iilmhel in existence. II is the stoiy I of Junaliiska. a Cherokee chief who saved the life imd Andrew , Jackson at the Baltic of llorse-i shoe Bend only to he betrayed. More than a century ago the Cherokees existed as a nation, with , a constitution fashioned alter our; hoi now onlv a remnant of, H.i' nnee-miuhtv tribe remains in i the North Carolina highlands This .remnant about. 3.000 -lives on a 57.000-acre reservation, the largest organized Indian reservation in Eastern America. The Indians support themselves on their small mountain farms by farming, basket making and wood i. irvitM! Thev often till fle d: where a low-lander would find it hard to walk without los.ng his balance. Cubic service is available i.i visitors who want to see the Cherokees at their homes and farms. Cherokee lies near the largest ,. ... i-... i remnants ,,i wuoeiuess m ern America, and is an access point to uiaiiv areas of untouched beau ty. At the eastern entrance to the Creat Smoky Mountains rsauonai Park, the village aho is al a point where boundaries of the I'isgah and Nanlahala National Forests al io, ,vi .onvi'i-iic It is reached h a good network of highways, includ ing the Hhie Hidge Parkway C.ood lishing, for trout in rush ing streams of the Cecal Smoky Park and the National Forests and for bass and panlish m lakes, is V it liin L.isv reach. Accommodations are available at Cherokee and al nearby low lis. Information l'111 mountain tours to Cherokee and accommoda tions may he obtained tree upon request to the Stale News Bureau, Depl. Conservation & Develop ment. Halcigh. ,; June 6,. 1951 . .- - 'r 'vV: Mr. J. R. Morgan Attorney for Town of Waynesville Waynesvvllo, North Carolina ' Dear Sir: . Your lotter concerning the settlement of water charces .hie the Town of Wavnesville bv the Town of HazelWiKid has boon received. This matter has been discussed by the Board " of Aldermen of Hazelwood and they have instructed me in reply to your letter to state their position in this matter. .-. You mention the extra water bill that Waynesville has boon charging Hazel wood over and above the former rate which amounts to about $5,000.00. but you do not mention the bill that llazelwood has charged Wavnesville for the use of its sower system by citizens of Waynesville which also amounts to about $5,000.00. This bill has been rendered to Waynesville monthly. We will have to insist that this be taken into consideration when "this matter is settled, and not summarilv disregarded. The Town of Hazelwood is at pres- PlTTSBUKC.il iAP' For a ; ont rendering an essential service to certain citizens of Way- ; long time Pittsburgh's Mill City j n,svjniv an(j wjii iave to continue to do so unless an expensive system is installed by Waynesville. Hazelwood is aid McKinncy is trying to liml i be glad to render this service to a neighboring municipality, but ....... ...u., li.io llui ( . - . x - l-.-.i: - ...v...,,i;ii.m I .i n it'nn imi Mm wm n nisisis inai some consiiuMuuun ami iwikhiu-mi ZlZuZ ZiZ-M tins fact in the settlement of the present controversy. Then there is the question of the water and sewer line from near Royle-Pilkington Company to the Dayton Rub ber Company. This was a part of Hazelwood's water and sewer system. The right-of-way was in HazeKvooil's name. Ihi.'.clwooil's money, as well as others, was used in its con struction. Hazelwood had been administering and maintain iiip these lines for eight or nine years. It had he-en a profi- 1 !l table operation for Hazelwood. Waynesville had never lam any claim to this water and sewer line. No one had ever ipiest ioned Hazelwood's t'itle to this property. Jl.T. THOMAS . 1.1NF.K. son of Mrs Marv l.iuer of Wavnes ville. is spending a,15-da leave at home lie has lust completed hghter-guuncrv school at Nobis Air Force Base, Nevada and is due for assignment with the Far Fasti rn force Tuba Fever The YM(' w;ls loiindcd in l-"n-don in 1844 sav slie winilil uoiiaie a iiiim io . the band that lie forgot to write j down her name and address Now j Mi Kinney and the tuba player j have a new worry "What, oh what, is that woman's name"" The P C. A il'iofessionel Colt ers' Association of America i pro vides each member wilh a $1,000 life insurance policy Duke Snider. Cene llermaiiski and Carl Fui'iHo are the only cur rent Brooklyn outfielders who trained wilh the Dodgers at Havana ill 1047. WANT ADS (VOl'l.l) The lu'V who borrowed my tennis mill t roller please re ....... ti n,,ni Hi-nil .17 11 mi ,. p()lt HF.NT Furnished apart menls; four rooms, hath and lame port-lies. Clean and cool. Si ason or yearly Central. Holi day House 114 Welch St. .1 7-11-14 AT RAY'S WORK CLOTHING IS A SPECIALTY And We Are Featuring As a Very Very SPECIAL BUY BIG DAD It's A Two-Headed Snake Seeing Things? ? 7jf OVERALL 8 ().. Sanforized LET US IlELP YOU SELECT A GIFT FOR DAD fhX day JUNE 17th MSSIE'S EPARTMENT STORE 'y $3.29 MM Mm .- Full Cut Sizes :10 to 42 VALUE SPECIAL $2-88 eNvM". a snake with two heads. Mrs. Fred Thames of I t I hes Texas caught it while fishing. Her two sons, 6 and port Neches, lexas, caufcui .rritterrt is llVfc inches The government, has just allowed hhie denim to advance 3' c per yard. A 30th Anniversary Value RAY'S DEPTlSTORE At a meeting several months ago when this controversy .1... n. .,f A U,mnn iif 1Tn7iiKimod asked that the ari.c tin iMi.iiw in iiniunivii . - - matter of increasing the water rate to Hazelwood be de ferred during the term of office of the present Board of Alder men. The Board of Aldermen ot Hazelwood gave permission . to Waynesville to tap into" the' line, to Dayton 'Rubber Com pany with the understanding that it be deferred. There seems to have been a misunderstanding because the tap was made hv Wavnesville, the water customers that had former-, ly been buying water from Hazelwood were taken over by r Waynesville and Waynesville still insisted upon increasing" the water rate. We regret this misunderstanding, but in an ellWt to co-operate wilh a neighbor, we did not demand that -the tap be closed. The question of the title to these lines was not affected bv the main line being tapped into by Waynes-,, .ville This question will have to bo considered in the final,, settlement of this matter. Your recent letter demands t!. it Hazelwood pay Way- nesville an accumulated water bill of approximately $5.000.00. " without giving consideration to the bill that Hazelwood has;; against Waynesville for approximately $5,000.00 and without settling the question of Hazelwood's rights to the water and sewer line to Dayton Rubber Company, If the Hoard of Aldermen of Hazelwood pays this bill,. thev have weakened the position of the incoming Board of Aldermen in working out a new long term agreement. Hazel- wood might just as well demand that Waynesville pay its sewer charge of $5,000.00 and leave the other matters to be 1 1 .... T"i . .. 1 TU. - settled in the long term contract ty tne new tsoara. Hazelwood Board cannot put its successors in this position. It does not believe that the people of Waynesville and the friends of Waynesville that live in Hazelwood expect the"; Board of Aldermen of Waynesville io lane cms siauu. H.-.elwood has never objected to paying a reasonable - rate for its water to Waynesville. It has only asked that the matter of the rates be left to a new Board elected bv the nolc with the understanding that they were to negotiate I the new water rate and settle xne oinei m.iui-ir, ..i i... time We think this is the democratic way. We believe that -the present Board, who will be in office less than a month, : i.i i. n5,iiofl nnon to prejudice the bargaining posi-.. v If II i it i i u u tv . - - i - i ,io of its successors about a matter as important as this. We therefore, request the Board of Aldermen of Way- n,.,v,ll,.to allow the matter to stand just as it is until after ; ' . . . 1 . TT 1..rsi 'I'll ICS ' the election of a new Board of Aldermen in nacw, . ..... . matter has to be settled. The peop.e ... n.r.w-.- . . . x nl. tUA w Mitni I no nect their newlv elected Aldermen io seuie uw - wo Boards of Aldermen should be able to sit dowrr around a conference table and with mutual -h rights arrive at a water rate mat is id.i i matters that are outstanding. We hope that you will take ,u-... m.,r ,m with them and that they will grant this re- ! quest. The Board of Aldermen have asked that this letter be published so that the people of Hazelwood and the people of Wavnesville will know their position. Yours very truly, William Medford Attorney for Town of Hazelwood, WM:jw (Paid Advertisement) l,AQHa ha TWO eCS OIW ww.--.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 7, 1951, edition 1
7
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