Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 14, 1955, edition 1 / Page 13
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h 7 THE WAYNESVILLE MOIINTATNFFR -=~ tinual 3-Night Folk Festival Gets Under Way Tonight In Canton Stadium mi ? ? ? Kitrants In Ity Contest I By Saturday Hi Wednesday, there were Bits in ^he annual Canton K Festival beauty contest, ?expected abqjjt 15 would Hcontest by the time the Htaged Saturday night, at Ht the Canton Memorial Hterest is being shown in ^nl festival, and in the Kitest division, each con Bn receive a handsome ^Be complete for staging annual Canton VFW ^Hal at the Canton high ^fctic field the nights of and 16. ^Hal event will feature a Hy of contests in square Hog dancing, buck danc ?g. string bands, banjo ^?Idling, etc. ^?rector C. C. Poindexter Hit advance registrations ^record number of square Hns and other entertain ^Bquare dance teams are B Valley Springs, defend Hiions in the smooth di nkier dance teams already Hiclude Bethel,-Candler, ? Y Elementary and Jun Ba, Enka, Hall Fletcher Hie Valley. H of entertainers will be H "Panhandle Pete", the Hiand from Asheville. He H to the festival by popu Bt and is boing sponsored Brmers Federation. "Pan- I Brill be in Canton all af- I i nese, jraus Utfters. Are Contestants In The Annual Canton VFW Beauty Contest I ...JM?VMirill HSU Ill" ?111 ' ? iImiinMiBri" I -II I II I M W? MISS ARBY JO JONES MISS RENE SMATHERS MISS CAROLYN BRYSON wxjjt* .a-,?ara.<.g^.auS^tva MISS GAIL WOODARD MISS VIOLET POTTER MISS KYLEEN CAMPBELL (All Photos by Guy T(i|?e) lA V'C dept. hi j store nniversary BALE CONTINUES HIS WEEK ARGAINS I EVERY DEPT. ? ? Shoes and Sandals l# Children's Wear I* School Clothes K ? !? Household Goods f ? Piece Goods ? Ladies' Goods ? Underwear ? Work Clothes Y NOW and SAVE I ?? "Chapaco Council" Will Hear National Leaders i ? One of the nation's most distin guished clergymen, Dr. George D. Heaton, minister of the Myers Park Baptist Church, Charlotte, is to be the principal speaker before the fourth three-day "Chapaco Council" meeting of management men from The Champion Paper and Fibre Co., opening Sunday, July 17, at Lake Logan. Dr. Heaton will address some one hundred conference registrants, Tuesday evening. The fifth and final three-day parley, getting underway July 20, with Robert M. Hanes, president of the Wachovia Jlank and Trust Co., Winston-SaLem, as the guest speak er, will climax the first of an an nual series of management confer ences planned by the Ohio-Caro lina-Texas company. Over five hundred management men will have participated this year, with a like number to be enrolled in 1956. Maynard D. Conklin, Champion Paper assistant treasurer, will' serve as chairman of the fourth conference session, while the firm's president, Reuben B. Rob ertson, Jr., is to introduce Dr. Henton, whose topic will be cent ere ] around the role of religion in the coming years. The noted clergyman has talked before simi lar groups nation-wide on a num ber of occasions during his 25 year career. ternoon the opening day of the festival to entertain around town. Preliminaries will be held Thursday and Friday nigsts in contests, with, finals booked for Saturday night Saturday night's program will also feature two beauty contests; one for girls in bathing suits, the other for girls in their square dance costumes. A long list pf prizes and awards will be given away each night to spectators and contestants. In the event of rain, programs will proceed on schedule each night in the Canton high school auditorium. W ? ? ? ? v nWl-1 ? ? Annual Shope-Burnette Reunion Set July 24 The annual Shope-Bumette re union will be held Sunday, July 24, at the Bee Tree Christian Church at Swannanoa on the Bee Tree road in Buncombe County. Members of the two families In Western North Carolina are Invit ed to attend the event and bring a picnic basket. W. C. Shope is president and G. Parkway Travel Shows Increase Out-of-state travel picked up considerably on the Blue Ridge Parkway as the summer vacation season moved into high gear in the South. During the month of June, 538,054 "persons in 162.761 cars traveled the Parkway. This is an increase of 123,085 or 29.6% over May. During the first halt of the 1955 travel year the total visitation to the scenic highway was 1,588,661.: H. Shope is vice president of the group. Dayton Develops Flexible "Life Lines" For Airmen More flexible and lighter "life lines" to keep jet airmen alive at supersonic altitudes have been de veloped and perfected at Dayton Rubber Co. The new life lines are natural rubber hoses which will make fly ing at 50,000 to 60,000 foot alti tudes safer for modern let airmen. Each hose contains a wire spiral to pHWfHt TMttprtng or khiking.' When not in use, the ho6es hang down alongside the suit like a string. Old hoees were stiff, stuck } out at an angle, and often got in the way. The new hose has four impor tant applications. It feeds oxygen to oxygen masks at altitudes over 10,000 feet; it fills pressure suits with compressed air to keep blood from "boiling" should a cabin be come depressurized during com bat; It keeps air circulating Inside modern, complex flying suits; and it keeps fighter pilots from "black ing out" during tight maneuvers. Second Summer School To Begin Monday At WCC Dean W. E. Bird, Director of Summer School at Western Caro lina College, has announced that registration for the second sum mer term will be held on Monday, July 18, and will continue through out the week. In addition to the regular col lege classes, a number of short courses will be offered covering specialized areas. From July 18 through July 30, a course In Cur riculum Development will be taught by Dr. James E. HUlman, Director of Professional Service In the State Department of Public Instruction, Raleigh. Other courses to be offered in this same time period are: Audio Visual Education, Dr. Paul J. Hit ter; Supervision of Student Teach ing, Dr. Taft B. Botner; Children's and Juvenile Literature, Mrs. C. A. Hoyle. A second group of short courses wil be conducted from August 1 hrough August 13. These are: Supervision of Instruction, Dr. Taft B. Botner; School Finance, Dr. Raymond M. Alnsley; Reading and Speech, Dr. Paul J. Rltter. According to Dean Bird, pre registration for the second term aas already exceeded that of form j er years. GREW NEWS.' True filter -True Flavor OLD GOLD FILTERINGS KIMS SIZE (SR^ POPUUR I FUBR PWOe! DAN'S DRUGS MAIN 8T. WAYNES VILLE Think Twice I when you buy auto insurance L about sett. Compare Allstate'* low rates. Sec fufki much you can race. X. about sarvlsa... Allstate is famous for fast, fair claim settlements, with out red tape or quibbling. AUTHORIZED AGENT ROBERT 0. BRANNON *17 DEPOT STREET Phone GL CeftSlS WajrnesYille, N. C. _ You're in gse* hanSt with . allstate ? ?IM?l*SCf COM MRT IoOhSoS by Soars An Hbnoh corporation by Sean, ttoobucIr ao? Co. with ass*fi and So bt'/'>?> dht^clood lapW from the porart company. 'V / In motor transport , mm&M ! ? ? k v ? .. ? . ' , .THE HVDKA-MATIC VI TOWN AttD COUNTRY RUNABOUT \ 1 Sign of a going-ahead concern This Blue Chip cmc smartly tells the world that your business is doing very well, / thank you. And as you add up the sav ings resulting from Hydra-Matic Drive and other exclusive features, you'll find it does very well by you. Let us prove it! rw k<j a Bhtt Chip 111 ' S?? us, too, for Triple-Chocked used trucks n ? ? ? - HOWELL MOTOR COMPANY HAYWOOD STREET 4 WAYMESV1LL2 * ' ' " ATyVfinj
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 14, 1955, edition 1
13
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