PAGE 2
THE YANCEY JOURNAL
WiHifir#[Mi||iiii mmmmmmm ■■■ « .jm ~ -m. m® m„
[Missionaries To Visit Area Churches j
Reverend and Mrs. Arthur
Billows and their three child -
rcn, Danny, Brenda and Glenda
will be conducting services in
local and area churches Sunday
evening, August 6 through Fri
day evening, August 11.
The Billows are veterans of
about 13 years service in Old
Mexico and have witnessed the
conversion of thousands of peo
ple and the establishment of
m any churches throughout Mex
ico. They have recently accep
ted an appointment as Cross
beams missionaries to open up
a Crossbeams work in Mexico.
Their schedule for the week
is as follows* Sunday evening,
August 6, Green Mountain Free
BUFFERIN „
Reg. sll7 ‘
OUR 77-
PRICE // c
V ALLEREST~
I • 1 **\|
allerest
V".[/
- 24's Reg. I 49, .
OUR 19
PRICE ■ *
DRAMAMINE
' o
R OUR ro
95c PRICE
I _ - i>
DONNAGEp
Q(V
$1 22 PRICE. **
skINNY^DIp"
Lemon
a Spray
*jf COLOGNE
£E“ 2 0,
Reg 225
OUR PRICE
5i.77
V y )
BRECK SHAMPOO
OUR OOi-
PEARL DROPS
TOOTH POLISH
Reg. 1 59
275 OUR $ 1
Oz PRICE I.IV
TsoterFca"’
ORIGINAL
■ 2 R y O PRICE 1.99
BAYER ASPIRIN
FOR ch.ldren
36 s_ oy R _
f-? c PRICE eS«JC
RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT
■ bronze
3, Oz
| ! 85c /
I
UJcl’Tl OUR PRICE
- 59 c
■*OLLARD,S|
1 DRUG STORE I
AUGUST 3, 1972
Will Baptist Church, Route 1,
Burnsville (Rev. Charlie Milled
pastor); Monday evening, Au
gust 7, Patterson Branch and
South Bend Churches at South
Bend Free Mil Baptist Church,
Rt. 2, Green Mountain ( Rev.
Frances Radford and Rev. Char
lie Miller, pastors); Tuesday
evening, August 8, to be an
nounced. (Either Yancey Coun
ty Prison Unit or Terrys Fork
FWB Church in Madison County.
Wednesday evening, August
9, services will be held at the
Red Hill Free Will Baptist
Church near Marshall, N.C .(Rev.
Casie Thomas, Pastor); Thurs
day, August 10, a Union Ser -
vice with both Pleasant Valley
jl TltyfLV
OFFER FROM
kqdj(k
A*
/ ,V * A
NRglj
v iter's Cbotce Calendar
e VV.it:hes ohly $4.95
. ■> both, end panels from
h' . three Kodak color film
u" ,sis (6 end pat els)
Your cho ce of three <je
-1 ir->' In, red, white-, and
Ernie Entirely a'.sentitnd m
America' with a one-year
, ij-.arjntee.
Stop m so/ additional
details of this . tt Ar d •
.. remembei towse Kodak ,
film for winning snapshots
and siides.
This offer expires
December 31, 19/2
t» -I
\
. - .
GOING BACK TO SCHOOL GIFTS
I
MAX 9
HAIR DRYER
THD-2 Reg $ 1 6.99
OUR Aft
PRICE IZ.OO
DESENEX
SPRAY ON
POWDER
AEROSOL
OUR 1 AO
c . c PRICE 1.0/
metamucT
OUR »>
c;Y PRICE J
For
Sunburn Poin—
* NOXZEMA
SKIN CREAM
Reg OUR PRICE
Sl2O OQc
60 z. . 00
GILLETTE
TRAC II RAZOR
Reg
BUttSlafl $2
OUR
* p I PRICE
§A r
am SBESSSBBSS
GILLETTE"”
TRAC II Cartr’dge
I 88c
'
and Riverside Baptist Churches
participating. Services to be
held at Pleasant Valley, Rt. 3,
Possum Trot Rd., Burnsville
(Rev. Harlan Ramsey is pastor
of Pleasant Valley and Rev.
Clarence Ledford is pastor of
Riverside.)
The final service in the area
will be at Prices Creek Union
Church, Rt. 3, Burnsville where
Rev. Ellis Ray and Rev.Franoes
Radford are joint pastors.
All friends of Christ and His
Mission of seeking and saving
the lost are urged to attend
these services each evening
at 7*30.
•f ’ KODAK
FILM
No CX 1 .
Rpq OUR 1
140 PRICE LIV
KA 464
Kodachrome
* Color Movie
Film
Reg OUR
$3 20 PRICE 4L.Oy
KINDNESS
Custom Care
"K3OO '
Re 9 $21.88
SOMINEX
Tablets 32's
Re 3 OUR *1.49
GERITOL
40 Tablof%
Z" M. 99
VISINE
EYE
I DROPS
For Summer
, First Aid Use
CAMPHO
PHENIQUE Liqu d
' ° Z - OUR M^
59?' PRICE 49c
j - life ] M 'SS
Hair Spray
- Reg $1 09
P| PRICE 77c
Mate. Lili Kraus Welcomed,
Receives Standing Ovation
Lili Kraus came to her home
town of Burnsville last Friday
evening as a wonderful and cber
ished artist, and a capacity au
dience in the First Baptist Oiurcl
bade her a warm welcome. As
she made her regal entrance,
she looked lovely, distinguish
ed and elegant, and her perfor
in ance was the same.
The program opened with
two Impromptus by Schubert, a
composer whom she described
as "unsophisticated, a pure and
■single-minded artist. " Her se
cond selection was the Mozart
Sonata in E-flat (K. 282). "terri
bly difficult but so sweet one
cannot notice it. " Techniques
perfected for the harpsichord
were combined with technique
for piano, an instrument which
at that time was relatively new
in its development.
Mme. Kraus has a breathtaT
ing command of the keyboard,
and her hands seem perfectly
matched as her superb timing
and control melt into the artis
try of interpretation.
The Cycle of 15 Peasant
Songs and Dances by Bela Ihrtok
the great Hungarian composer
with whom Mme. Kraus stu
died, was enlivened by he:
translation of the texts (not all
because , as she explained,
"some are too naughty even if
we were not in church"). Thesi
earthy and humorous folk thane
gave her an opportunity to dis
play a rugged, grass-roots qua!
ity that distinguishes herplayin
To end the program, Mmi
Kraus chose the Schubert Son at
in A Minor, and she spoke o:
the questioning soul asking re
peatedly throughout the work
THE YANCEY JOURNAL
Burnsville, N.C.
Ed Yuziuk—Publisher
Carolyn Yuziuk-Editor
Pat Briggs—Manager
Jody Higgins—Assoc. Editor
Published every Thursday
by
Twin Cities Publishing Co.
2nd Class Postage Paid at
Burnsville, N.C. 28714
Subscription rates:
*3/yr. in county
‘ *5/yr. out of county
Thursday, August 3, 1972
Number 18
: r 1
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Unicom 'Va T?O«NT ft)?C«£kV gft OVEK ,J- V tSR i
♦ CtHV' n J |2i x - ’ 2
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"What is my destiny?" A few
petsons in the audience may
have noticed a momentary hes
itation in the midst of the pro
found and demanding second
movement. Mme. Kraus had
the misfortune to split a finger
nail which not only hindered
her passage work but was
painful as well. It is incredi -
ble that this accident caused
her neither to stop nor to slack
er the intensity of her playing
which never deviates from the
spiritual plain.
Following a standing ova -
tion, Mme. Kraus gave two si
cores, the Mozart Sonata Fa
cile, and two dances by Schu
bert. She was presented with
a bouquet of yellow roses by
Claude Vess and chatted with
the audience after the concert
at a reception in the Fellow -
ship Hall provided by the wo -
men of Burnsville.
Thomas To Display Bark
taskels And Gemstones
J. Luther Thomas, a well
known gem and mineral crafts
man from Micaville, will be
display ing and selling bark
bakets at the Festival in ad
dition to his very popular min
erd specimens and gemstone
jevelry .
Luther Thomas was asked
* by Dr. Greene, the first year
■ coordinator of the annual Mt.
Michell Crafts Festival, to
briig his rocks to the Fair. Dri
Crejne also asked Thomas if he
knav anyone who could make
theold timey bark berry bask
ets. As it happened, Thomas
was an established hand at this
crift of basket making.
While climbing over the
uuuntains as a youth, Thomas
*hd his dad, while looking for
minerals, would sometimes
c*me upon a nice patch of wild
strawberries, blackberries, rasp
beaies or huckleberries. The
pai ■ would take out their
kni ®s, cut some bark from a
txe and make up a very sturdy
ba ket with shoulder straps from
str ps of hickory bark. It was
al\ ays surprising how mich these
ba kets would hold. The berries,
ts c uree, were earned home for
caning.
mart R TLf FJB# Bn : Ry
McWhlrter Shows Pottery
A traditional feature of the Mt. Mitchell Crafts Festival has been the pottery exhibitions
and demonstrations of James and Kore McWhirter from the South Toe River section of Yancey
County. Again this year, the MferWhirters will be on the Town Square/ Mr*. McWhirter will
have her potter's wheel and will be giving demonstrations of how pottery is made.
The original baskets, how
ever, had a tendency to roll up
into a useless rcdl of drv bark
after a day in the sun or the air.
So to make them more practi -
cal and endurable, Luther de
signed one in its original form
but with a hoop around the top
and hickory bark lacings up the
sides.
In 1971 Luther designed ano
ther type of basket, a bark bas
ket with a flat bottom that can
be used for all sorts of decor" -
tive ideas.
This year during the Festival,
Luther plans to display and sell
his mineral specimens, gem
stone jewelry, and both types
of bark baskets. But most im
portant of all, Luther is looking
forward to seeing old friends
and making new ones.
Women Past 21
WITH BLADDER IRRITATION
Suffer Many Troubles
After 2j, common Kidney or Bladder
Irritation: affect twice is many women
as men and may make you tense and
nervous from too frequent, burning or
itching urination both day and night.
- S&ondarily, you may lose sleep and
suffer from Headaches, Backache and
feel old, tired, depreased. In such irri
tation. CYSTEX usually brings fast,
relaxing comfort by curbing irritating
germs in strong, acid urine and by anal
gesic pain reiki. Get CYSTEX at drug
gists. See how fast it can help you.
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■
SeAutuU Os S
■
Friday, August 4th. 1972 s
10:00 a. m. Qaening—Honorable James A. Anglin, Mayor of I
Burnsville; O.W. Deyton, Chairman, Yancey «.
County Board of Commissioners; and Mack Ray, ■
President, Chamber of Commerce
10:10 Entertainment, Dancing
10:30 O pening Craft Displays and Exhibits 1
10*45 Gaft Performance
11:00 Hot Dogs Concession Opens g
11:30 Entertainment, Singing ■
12:00 Entertainment, Dancing
1:00 p.m. Game, Egg Throwing Contest
1:30 Game, Pie Eating Contest M
2:00 Gaft Performance J
2:30 Entertainment, Singing $
3:00 Entertainment, Dancing I
3:30 Game, 3-Legged Race J
4:00 Game, Ping Pong Ball Contest
5:00 Exhibits Close *
8:30 P arkway Playhouse Damn Yankees „
Saturday. Ammst sth. 1972 ■
10:00 a.m. Entertainment, Singing and D a ncing
Horseshoe Tournament All Day
11:00 Chicken Barbecue $1.50 t
12:00 Craft Performance
1:00p.m. Games, Sack Race, Egg Carrying Race
2:00 Entertainment, Singing and Dancing
3:00 Craft Performance S
4*oo Games, Seed Spitting Contest, Egg Rolling
5:00 Festival Closes ®
8:30 Parkway Playhouse Damn Yankees £
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