Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1 / Page 3
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THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, I*sl BM^faiißuaiiaHwiaKßiiaimiiaiiaiiaiißiißiißiißiniuaiißMßiißiuMHUisnananmßiiwiwißUßiianiMrainimfaHninnt^^HßHi^^B Down Main Street ■nwi*.tßNMiAiiaHai/*ii»iiaiiaii«iiiii«n«MßiiaMM«««auaua4iaii«iiafla]iaiiaiianaiiaiißiiaiißnaiiaumtmi«iiaivMnuia«aiiiaiM«.aiftf Born to Mr. and Mrs. Don! Burhoe, a son, Don Jr., Sunday August 12th, at Victoria Hos pital, Asheville. Bruce Westall, Lon Roberts and Dr. Melvin Webb spent last week end at Douglas Lake fishing. They reported a catch of 43 bass and crappie. The Methodist church choir entertained Mrs. Duane Cline, who has been directing the choir for the past six weeks, with a picnic supper Wednes day evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Ray. The 20 members of the choir and! their families attended. j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Piercy and chilhren of Asheville and Mr. and Mrs. Fenton Piercy of Pa. are visiting their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Piercy of Day Book. Rev. and Mrs. F. R. Barber and children visited friends and relatives in Eastern North 1 Carolina this week. James Anglin, Lonnie Allen' and Suel Anglin are spending several days at Douglas Lake' this week. I " _____ r _ | YANCEY THEATRE Cecil B. DeMiile s Masterpiece lySr ; /llj} am OtMUI S SWBO* io( KllUft Kami HIBT IMUn • WMt IttlM • HOKi SMKB-AMIU UASWUHOT KiCfUM Jjjfe »< End* ti Call DiMiWi . dlw l» Tictocalw • lemndn tr turn i I|»| t M>«M.(ah<l tatmati ti t—sM Ual ui niton lamiih • tea is* Ua kam * Sam mi Mkk a m M, MM Msti 1) I /***" « hllMWt hclW Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Aug. 26, 27, 28 ~ = ~ J A Lost Weekend? LOST BECAUSE YOU HAD TO RUSH AROUND AND - PAY BILLS WITH CASH? BE SMART FIND MORE TIME FOR PLEASURE OPEN A CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH US TODAY AND PAY ALL BILLS BY CHECK THE NORTHWESTERN BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation BURNSVILLE, N. C. —~J ] Mr. S. H. Banks entered th Baptist hospital, Winston-Sal em, Monday to undergo an op eration. Mr. and Mrs. John Hames and children of Jonesville, S. C. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Mack B. Ray ths week. Mrs. Hames is Mrs. Ray’s sister. Mr. Paul Ball of Asheville' visited his sister, Mrs. Roy Ray this week. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sty les and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Styles have returned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs Van Masters of Mansfield, I Ohio. Mrs. Masters is the for mer Miss Alma Styles. Mrs. Julia Mclntosh is con fined to her home here due to illness. Palma Leo Bennett and Jess | Fox of Green mountain attend ed Appalachian Christian Ser vice Camp last week at Milli gan College, Tenn. Bennett, received his diploma for a 1 three year attendance. They were there from August 5th 1 to August 11th, and reported a wonderful time. RIVERSIDE NEWS A McKinney reunion wa held Sunday, August 6th at thl home of Mr. and Mrs. Dave McKinney. Those attending wife: Mrs. Blanche Brook,! Louella Glenn and family andj Clyde McKinney, all of West Asheville; Mr. and Mrs. Carrcjl Smith and Mrs. Lewis Melton 1 3of Asheville; Mr. and Mrs.l J John McKinney and Warren of .j Baltimore, Md.; Mr. John Bar-! . nette of Little Switzerland and j Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Wilson and : children of the home. r — t N. C. BIG GAME SEASONS WILL OPEN OCTOBER 15 s! Raleigh, N. C.—Big game^ I hunting seasons in North Car-j ,'olina this year will open on • October 15. Regulations adopted by the , Wildlife Resources Commik > sion will permit hunting from that day through January 1 for ( bear, for deer (in eastern counties), and for the rare 1 Russian wild boar in the San-| teetlah country of the Great . Smoky Mountains. ’! The popular deer hunts in' ! the Pisgah and Nantahala Na- 1 • tional Forests of western Nor-j | th Carolina are expected to be held in late Noevmber and early December. Dates and re- 1 gulations for these will be es-) tablished later by the Wildlife Commission and the U. S. For- » esf. Service. The Commission and Forest Service also will announce re- : gulations for supervised wild boar hunts. i The quail, rabbit, wild tur- key, and ruffed grouse seasons g will run from November 22 1 through January 31, with local \ exceptions. \ A split season for squirrels has been adopted for the cen tral and some mountain coun- , ties of the State—September 15 - October 1 and Novdtaiber 22 - January 15. In most of the rest of the State the season ] will extend from October 15 t through January 1. j Waterfowl hunting seasons ] for North Carolina are still 1 to be announced. They are set ; by the U. S. Fish and Wild life Service. “KING SOLOMON’S MINES * i TO BE SHOWN HERE One of the most breath taking thrills ever pictured on a motion picture screen was caught by the Technicolor cameras in the terrific stam pede of six thousand frenzied animals of the jungle, shown in , “King Solomon’s Mines,” M-G-M’s spectacular adventure drama, coming to the Yancey Theatre, Wednesday and Thur sday, August 22-23. The sequence, one of the many thrill highlights of this unusual picture, filmed on a 25,000 mile safari through the heart of Equatorial Africa shows Deborah Kerr, Stewart Granger and Richard Carlson caught in a narrow pass thro ugh which the frightened ani mals, fleeing a brush fire, hur themselves. The signal for “Action” was a small wisp of smoke in the histance. Gradually it grew larger, then it was hidden by a billowing cloud of dust. All awesome roar reached the camera crews, the earth began to shake under them—and they knew the stampede was on First animals sighted were the zebras, always the front runners of such a rush. Then came thousands of wildebeeste graceful gazelles of all types, beautiful impala, fragile-look ing kongoni and bushback and hundreds of towering, lop ing giraffs racing right by the camera lens, sometimes leap ing right over them. Os the six cameras turning on the scene, four recorded it for posterity. Two proved less fortunate. One, wide on a flank missed out completely when a pack of lions suddenly appear ed between it and the first charge of zebras. Spotting the lions, the zebras swerved quickly away—but their new path took them even closer to the other cameras. Too close, in fact, to one, which was crashed to the ground and ruined under poun ding hoofs. Cameraman Gene Polite dove for safety behind the barricade and miraculous ly escaped being trampled. One Masai was knocked down unconscious by a runaway | zebra, consequently to become a hero among his fellow nativ , es for his bravery on behalf of j the White “Bwanas.” THE YANCEY RECORD ASHEVILLE DISTRICT MYF MEETS IN BURNSVILLE The Yancey County subdis trict will be host to the Ashe ville district Methodist Youth ! Fellowship at a Rally on Sun day, August 19, at 3 o’clock at i the Higgins Memorial Church.) ) Rev. R. W. Richardson of Edneyville will be the speaker. ! Special music will be provided i by Tommy Burton and a sex tette of girls from Bald Creek.! The public is cordially in vited to attend. j NOTICE TO VETERANS j The North Carolina Veter ans Commission will have' | Jack C. Winchester, District Service Officer, at the Court House, Burnsville, on Thurs- 1 day, August 23, from 11 a. m. to 4 p. m. to assist veterans and I their dependents. Mr. Winchester stated that there are at least four general ! classes of veterans who may still be eligible for training under the G. I. Bill—PL 16. First class are veterans who served WW II and discharged after July 25, 1947, as they have up to four years to enter or reenter training after their date of discharge from that en listment orvin cases where re enlistment made continuous service. Another class are veterans who had entered a course but were either called back into service or reentered service. They may resume training af ter discharge in a reasonable time. WW II veterans who had never entered training and were called back into service or reentered service have no rights now for training under the G. I. Bill. Another class are the disab led veterans who are voca tionally handicapped due to a service connected disability provided they are entitled to training under PL 16—they may enter training any time provided all training is com pleted prior to July 25, 1956. The next class are those vet erans who entered service be tween October 6, 1945 and October 5, 1946, as they have four years from date of dis-i charge to enter training but all training mast be completed jon or prior to July 25, 1956. j dhV/gp ■ ’ TIME-PROVED AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION : ft Chevrolet alone offers this complete Power Team! POWER r7lich Automatic Transmission* Extra-Powerful 105-h.p. Valve-in-Hoad Engine EconoMlsor Rear Axle Powerglide is first. . . finest .. . and only fully proved automatic tr nsinission in the low-price field. Gives you simplest, smooth est, safest no-shift driving at lowest cost. No clutch pedal—no gearshifting—not even a hint of gear changes in forward driving I And-outstanding as it is—Powerglide is only one member of Chevrolet’s marvelous automatic power team. •Combination of Powerglide Automatic Transmls * sion and lOS-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost. ROBINSON CHEVROLET COMPANY * Spruce Pine, North Carolina , " GARDEN CLUB On the evening of Friday, August 10th, the members of the Garden Glub and a num- 1 ber of guests enjoyed a pot-| luck supper on the lawn of Mr. and Mrs. Grady Bailey’s home. The supper, partly cook led over the outdoor fireplace, 1 was delicious and the glow of the open fire added cheerful ness to the social hours that followed. I Members and guests attend ing were Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Fouts, Mr. and Mrs. Mack B. Ray, Mr. and Mrs. George Rob inson, Mr. and Mrs. Troy Ray, Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Clarenre Burton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Proffitt, 1 Mr. and Mrs. Carter, of Mars Hill, Mrs. J. B. Hensley of i Asheville, Mrs. Holmes, Mrs. J. A. Watson, G. L. Hensley, George L. Hensley, Jr., Danny Fouts, Miss Hope Bailey. j j Buy U. S. Savings Bonds 1 I ...... . WARREN WILSON COLLEGE Swannanoa, North Carolina - ‘ 6 A (Fully Accredited Coeducational Junior College) ANNOUNCES The establishment of a special fund which provides TEN S2OO Scholarships To Western North Carolina High School Graduates With A Scholastic Average of B or Better The total charge for attending Wjarren Wilson College (which in cludes board, room, tuition and books) for one year is $360, plus part-time work. The S2OO scholarship awards will becredited toward the $360, leaving $l6O to be paid in cash or earned at the college through extra work. ! (For further information applicants should write —a- _ Dr. Henry W. Jensen, Dean) ! j£;' '"'" v: 3&, A Just press the accelerator to G 0... press the brake *° STOP# • • It’s the simplest/ smoothest/ safest driving you ever Imagined I ft Take your "DISCOVERY DRIVE" Come To ROBINSON’S DAIRY BAR For Your Ice Cream Milk Shakes Sundies Banana Splits 6 MILES {EAST OF BURNSVILLE ON SPRUCE PINE HIGHWAY Open Each Night Till f Eleven O’clock | ■ , PAGE THREE
The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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Aug. 16, 1951, edition 1
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