Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Aug. 27, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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Monday, .Afternoon, Aust 27, 1831 THE WATNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER '; . 'tin -- st to Visitors m acac Mews oi Brothers And Sisters of The Brush and Swish Pause In Waynesvilf Bookmobile CherohoGs Come Oach To The Big Smokies Schedule Monday, August 87th IHON DUFF, CRABTREE, HyDER ' -. mt. . . Frog Level ... '...:.: 9:25 Mrs. Fannie Davis ........ 9:50' Willie Green 10:10- jG. H. Hill 11:00- M. ,H. Kirkpatrick .-.. 11:45 ,Mrs, Willis Smith '12:30- 9:40 10:00 10:30 11:15 12:13 12:45 1:15 1:45 ym -.''A .Mrs, Fred Noland 1:00- -C. .T; Ferguson's Store 1:30 Jack Long 2:00- 2:15 0 1 In lomaii 1. .; i.'i ,.11, p. f ... 'i'.J Si'.-J .'.'1 is ' Tuesday, August BETHEL -Mrs. Henry Francis Mrs. Wiley Franklin ... -Mrs, . Walter West John M. Kigdbn ......... 'Ed, Blalock's Groc. ..... Mrs. Welch Singleton . 'Mrs, Hugh Terrell Mrs. Weaver Cathey 28th 9:10- 9:20 9:30- 9:45 10:00-10:15 10:45-11:00 11:30-12:00 12:15-12:30 .1:00- 1:30 145- 2:00 Friday, August 31 CECIL and CRUSO Parris Store Mrs. James Reeves .. Mrs;. Edgar Burnett'... Mrs. John Johnson Burnett's Cash Groc. ,Springdale School .... Henson Groc Mrs. Robert Freeman ; 9:30- 9:45 . 10:00-10:15 . 10:25-10:40 . 1 1:15-1 1:45 . 12:00-12:15 . 12:30- 1:30 .. 2:00- 2:30 .2:45-3:15 Appendectomy Performed On Mark Hoglan Mark Hoglen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Hoglan, was stricken with an attack of acute appendicitis yesterday while on his way to Church. He was rushed to the Hay wood County Hospital where an ap pendectomy was immediately per formed. Mr. Hoglan, who graduated from the local high school this spring, was "doing quite well" at last reports. "' Sea anenomes resemble delicate flowers. Their dainty "petals" are actually tentacles reaching out to trap unwary shrimps or other small marine prey, according to the Na tional Geographic Society. 'Ok - ' St (! r J, - " r 4 RITUAL DANCE seen in Cherokee drama "Unto These Hills." AP Newsfeatures CHEROKEE An almost forgot ten page of American history is being dramatized in the Great Smoky Mountains: It Is the story of the Cherokee Indians told through the medium of Kermit Hunter's folk drama, "Unto These Hills". '..' . " '' "UNTO THESE HILLS" plays six nights weekly, Tuesday through Sunday. The. summer season ends Sept. 4. It Is presented in Moun tainside Theatre in this Indian village. More than 107,000 persons saw the production in Its first sea son last year. The premie? season broke' all attendance records for qutdopr dramas. This year It seems to be on the way to a new recprd. The Cherokee story hjs lound its way Into few school books, yet it is a story that has moved con tinuously across the American INSURANCE REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS RENTALS Waynesville'g Newest Real Estate and Insurance Agency HARRY LINER & ASSOCIATES 131 Main Street JOY SMATHERS, Manager Phone 363 scene since De Soto's gold-ravenous party pushed into these val leys 400 years ago. -,.,' THE RE-CREATION has been made possible by the Cherokee Historical Association, a non-profit organization whose aim is to per petuate the history and customs of the Cherokees." , ' ,. "Unto These Hills" Js an pgiy story. It began with the coming of De Soto in 1540- supposedly 'the first visit of a white man to the Cherokees. In the years that fol lowed, hordes of white men surged Into the mountains seeking land and its treasures.. It had its climax in the removal of all but a remnant W the Cher okees to strange lands In the West in 1839 and In tl)e death of Tsall, a simple nobody who gave his life so that a handful of his people might forever live in the land of their birth. " . ; . The story of the Cherokee Is the story of Tsall. It is the story of Sequoyah, the illiterate Cherokee who gave, his people an Indian alphabet and, who became so great that the greatesttrees on earth were named for him. It Is the story of Junaluskay the chief from the Smoky Mountains . who saved Andrew Jackson's life at the battle of Horseshoe Bend. It is the story of Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, Edward Everett and David Crockett, men who raised their THE MAIN STREET WAYESVILLt OPEN YEAR ROUND ALL HOME COOKED FOODS GOOD FOOD AT TS BEST HOME OF THE ROTARY CLUB SUPERBLY SERVED TELEPHONE Jll-M ,AM H' J0NM owNiM-erwuTOM mrs. jam is t. jonu Palmer House Center of Waynesville COOL-QUIET.RESTFUL Enjoy our homelike atmos phere and our home-cooked v food. 1 Phone 220 Pigeon St. MRS. E. S. DELBRIDGE Owner - Manager REAL ESTATE We Have All Kinds of Property For Sale: Many Good Buys. We Have Rental Property. SEE T. HENRY GADDY ;:'" ;.-";";T'"::'f At' ;: r :" E. L. WITHERS & CO. BEFORE YOU BUY Phone No. 10Q Sportsmen Headquarters O Fishing O Golf O Baseball O Tennis Parkmans -Hardware MAIN STREET INSURANCE - REAL ESTATE SALES - RENTALS Carolina Mutual Insurance Agency Next To Library R. N. JOHNSON & P. L. JOHNSON Phone 331 ' Main St. HEADQUARTERS For Books 0 O Gifts O Stationery O Off ice Supplies . Nationally Known Brands ' . THE BOOK STORE Main Street f f:'!' . Ill ' ; ' ' . " " 1 kt1.! . mm, -! w If? lit!' - 1 " t ,"'.- "P..nnip"nf Wflvnp.tviiu thoueht that tho oast had caueht up with them Thursday when several hundred Visitors, enroute to a as part of the Jckson County -Centennial' Program,' stopped at the courthou,se, tp stretch" their legs and display their costumt centennial program begins on September. 2 acpntinues. throtfgh the 8th. If will feature, In addition to beards and colorful , . ... . . . . 1,. ' ..uii.u' ' .nj o cnoaxH hv C.nvprnnr Scott . nreworKS, Deauiy coniesis, 10m aanong, .exiHuiis, Ha'ou, " . . . -., . . Prize Winning Beauty Queen Photo 7 Y1 i is K J K2y A Sw- ' .T- i) , -in will begin on window displays; at 11:30 a variety program; at 1 p. m. a horseshoe tournament; at 2 p.m. quartet and group singing will be featured. String bands will be heard at 3 p. m., and another variety program held at 4:30. Various stunts , and contests such as hog calling and nail driving will occur at 5 p. m. At 6, another string band contest, and at 7, a square dance contest will take place. The program ends at 10 p.m. when a Dodge car will be given away by the American Legion. Other points of interest are the facts that prizes will be awarded in all contests, and that anyone is Utah Midget Fin;' OGDEN, Utah -sp the handiest men arouni bombers at Hill. Air F 80-pound Shorty Osborne Only 52 inches tall, si lnl-na nan ....... 1 : . . In bomber wings and ta repairs. He is a mecM years old. Some superstitious cf lieve that eating of dogs courage. ' eligible to enter the J they register in advance. 7 WLi V rK. wi m r i. .'. . Vv I, :'4i6wr' Lulong Ogburn of Smithfield, "Miss North Carolina of 1951," holds the prize winning picture of herself which she selected from 38 entries in the annual Miss North Carolina Photo contest. Miss Og burn was the sole judge. First prize of $100 went to R. W. Stephens of the Raleigh News and Observer. Second prize of $50 was won by Charles Cooper of the Durham- Herald-Sun and third and fourth prizes of $25 each were won by Hugh Morton of Wilmington and Bernadette Hoyle of Smithfield. (AP Photo)." Big Program Planned At Canton Festival WAYNEVILLA DINING ROOM ; FAMOUS FOR Fine Foods HOSPITAL HILL 7 ltnmt la qullty law IM DAI IVY P A H M I cordinlly tTlUt your pttrooaft, Phone 1289 snxK Burns ici ckiam COTTAGE CHEIBI BQQt voices in tne wnite man's ca in behalf of the Cherokee. ;, .' KERMIT HUNTER, the author, dug into neglected archives to ran. - j- lure me spirit of the story. He is native or welch, w. Va and an Instructor in English at the Uni versity of North Carolina. His new est outdoor drama is "Forever This Land." a drama of Lincoln's and is being produced this summer at New Salem, 111. The tragic, gay and movine story of the Cherokee is played out in two acts and fourteen scenes It has a cast of 120. headed bv an. tresses and actors of the Carolina Playmakers of the University of North CarollnaDf . these 53 -Ar Cherokee Indians whose ancestors lived the story that is being re created. Music for the play was comnos. ed by Jack Frederick Kilpatrick a young Cherokee Indian from Still well, Okla. He is a member of the music faculty of Southern Metho- aist university at Dallas, Tex. C. C. Poindexter, general chair man, has announced the program of Canton's 45th annual Labor Day and Fall Festival Celebration. Ac tivities, however, are ndt waiting for Labor Day. - - - - Window displays will be shown all week preceeding the main . events. Swimming will be enjoyed nt Memorial Recreation Park. On August 24, a pet and doll show will occur at the football stadium and at the armory; on August 26, a "model airplane circus will be the ; highlight at the baseball field. On Wednesday. Ausust 29. there i,rviii be a central Methodist nicnic bv xaiiiu nuue. ana. un me same day, a wesieyan Methodist picnic BILTMORE DAIRY OFFICE , Lake Junaluika ness, as indeed some of it 18 to hunters in a section still a wilder - PASTRIES PIES CAKE "The More You Buy - -The Happier We Are" We Get A Kick Out pf Baking Fine Fooi WHITMAN'S BAKE Main Street Phone 343- WayJ at the Recreation Park. Thursday will see a bicycle rodeo at the baseball field, and on Fridav it will be a baby show at the football stadium, followed, that evening, by a square dance at the Armory. All kinds of contests will Bet un derway on . Saturday. Scot. 1. Checkers', archery, horseshoes, mar- Dies, sottDaii, beauty, etc., all of Which will be climaxed at 9 p. m. by a Coronation Ball in the armory. ' Sunday .'will be largely elven over to religious services. At 3:30 a Un ion Colored program will be held at the football stadium, and 8 p.m. Senator Hoey vwiU speak at a Un ion White program, also in the football stadium. . The big day Is, of course, Labor Day, Monday, September 3rd. At 10 a. m. a parade; at 11 judging L.. " "ini ' ' . " I 8 . . : ill THE BEST GRADE "A" (The story above is an Associ ated Press newsfeature sent out to newspapers throughout the Uni ted States. Its appearance in many widely scattered papers should stimulate interest in the folk drama beins produced nnlv miles from Waynesville. That the ap should consider it of such gen eral interest is certainly indica tive of its value. Editor's Note.) CHARLIE'S TEXACO SERVICE OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY One of the most complete service centers in W. N. C. B. F. GOODRICH TIRES & TUBES " for . ROAD SERVICE CALL 817 DRIVE-IN . IN TOWN Breakfast Our Specialty! SANDWICHES DRINK Delicious Bar-B-Que Chicken , Ideal for Sunday Picnics and Dinners Opposite Pet Dairy Believe It Or Not ... IT'S TRUE V) '7 'I ' Laundry needn't be an expensive item on your Our automatic washers promise you bright, eiea results. Costs you only a few coins. Bring yourl1 in today! Complete drying service. HARRElj automat! And DRY CLEAN Depot
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Aug. 27, 1951, edition 1
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