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Cumberland Evening Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 12

Location:
Cumberland, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i Si hunting. Many Hunters Attracted To W. Neiv Accommodations Are Available It's a proven fact that West Virginia has more deer than hunters and more grouse, quail, squirrel and rabbits. While it may not hold true for black bear and wild turkey, these top-notch trophies still abound in many of the slate's 55 countries. What else is so special about hunting in the fabulous Moun- tain State? Plenty! West Vir- ginia's unique food and lodging for sportsmen program.

West Virginia not only pion- eered this new look at an old concept in hunting, but boasts 78 farm-family participants to make it the nation's leading farm-hunting stale. For years sportsmen have had to drive many miles to hunt, then return to their homes or commercial lodgings, tired and often empty-handed. Not only did they spend many hunting hours on the road, they fre- piiniiiiniiiiiiiMniimiiiniimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'l Broiled i Filet 1 Mignon With 2 Vegetables I SIRLOIN STRIP STEAK I IMPERIAL CRAB i DEVILED CRAB I HARD SHELLS I CRAB CAKES LOBSTER TAILS 1 I SHRIMP I riuently found themselves in an area without the benefit of a guide or a base of operation. Now the picture has changed, thanks to the efforts of the West Virginia Department of Agri- culture, the Department of Natural Resources and partici- pating farmers. The a hunting program was establish- ed on the two-fold concept that many sportsmen and fishermen enjoy the warmth and hospital- ity of the a home as part of a hunting or fishing trip.

The farmer, on the other hand, sees il as a source of additional in- come and at the same time is assured that a "friend" is using his properly. The farms participating in the program are located in 22 of the Stale's best hunting coun- ties. For a better picture of what the hunter can expect, four participating farms were selected at random. Here's the story: Kay and Ollie Shipe, Mathias, Hardy County. Mr.

Shipe's 500- acre farm enjoys a perfect loca- tion, surrounded on one side by the George Washington National Forest and on the other by the Monongahela National Forest. The area is rated excellent for STAVERN 523 N. CENTRE ST. LB. HAMBURGERS 1 KOSHER CORNED IBEER WINE-LIQUORS! 1 ORDERS TO CO 1 The Dolphin Bar i Liberty PA llllllimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllNllllllllllllllllllllllf? A great place for Saturday Fine Foods and Cocktails Visit Our Piano Lounge DINNERS 5 p.m.

to p.m. Monday thru Saturday Toll House Motel Lounge 6 mi. West of Cumberland an Route 40 Join A Bowling League Im Winchester Road, LaVale Golden Cue and Hi Way Pizza Shop Air Conditioned Pocket Billiards and Fresh Daily Italian Style Pizza Golden Cue Open Noon To Midnight Hi Way Pizza Shop 6 To Midnite 4 Southern Lounge Presents THE deer, squirrel, grouse, bear, and trout and bass. Rates are SS with meals. Wilson and Verdie Teets, Green Valley Farms, Lost Riv- er, Hardy County.

They actu- ally own three farms consisting of 3,000 acres, offering deer, grouse, squirrel, bear, turkey, trout and bass. Their guesls include a vacationers as well as sportsmen. Green Valley Farms have be- come a hunter's paradise. Last year on the opening day of deer season there was a total of 62 deer hunters registered as guests. Of the 62 guests, 43 hunted on the properly of Farm Number At the season's end, 23 of the 43 had bagged a i ouc far above the national average.

Mr. Teets serves as guide for his hunting guests and each morning places them at cross- ing points of the deer his properly. At the close of the day he even brings home the kills by jeep! All this, for only SO a day with meals. A i i a information i available from the Public Re- lations Division, West Virginia Department of a a Resourc- es. Charleston, West Virginia 25305.

The Sensational Sounds From Eastern Penn. Central Ohio "Don't Miss It" Go Go Girls! I Rtterved Available 8:30 Give your family a treat Take them out to dinner HILL TOP INN RT. 40 3 MUES EAST OF GRANTSVILLE Expense Cruise To Mediterranean Witti Matt Grove October 17 See Fascinating Places FRANCE ITALY SPAIN PORTUGAL GIBRALTAR MONTE CARLO Call or For Details CONLON TRAVEL AGENCY 163 N. Mechanic St. Phone 724-6776 New? England Clambake Adventure In Eating Nothing ofkrs a )IUU adventure in eating than a real, old-fashioned a damtKUC.

Although 'alk'd "clambakes." tin- main course of any such gunnel treat actually is steam- ed lobster. In earlier clays, though, clambakes featured only dams. The lobster occupies a high place in world eating esteem to- day, bul in Massachusetts il once was the symbol of social disgrace. Years ago you had to live on the wrong side of town in a state even to be seen in I he vicinity of a lobster. The crustacean was common, bul only those dose to poverty ate lie m.

Today, the once-lowly lobster is king at any Massachusetts clambake, ruling jointly with the clams themselves, corn cm the cob, swecl potatoes and. in the i watermelon for dessert. It is possible for anybody throughout the United Stales to enjoy a clambake year-round because, of a process developed by a Gloucester. lobster- man. Using his method, live lobsters and clams are packed in ice in a specially lined gal- vanized barrel, and the can is scaled tightly by means of a special ring.

The lobsters and clams can live for more than four days under these condi- tions, and with air express the way it is today, anyone, a where can have an indoor bake. This calls for a copper boiler, into which are placed clams, 4 4- 4- 4 4- 4 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- Open Every Day Newly Reniodelfidl STAR RESTAURANT 31 Baltimore St. Saturday and Monday SPECIALS Itiotl or frirri QOc 90C A CUTLET Chopped Sirloin $1.25 Complete Dinner, tvoryday SPECIAl SUPPER Qg Every Evening 6 a.m. 'Ill 8 p.m. Closed Sundoy Good Food nnrl Service AM lobsters, onion, codfish or had- pickled tripe', pork sau- frankfurters, cars of corn, potatoes and water.

After 45 minutes lo an hour of sim- iiu-riiiR and steaming, a dam- bake is ready for enjoyment. Plymouth, where the Pilgrims landed from the Mayflower. Ions has been a center of yood New England cooking, and a old-time methods are de- scribed in the "Plimoth Colony Book," published by the Plym- outh Antiquarian i Ainons the hundred of "re- ceipts" in this handy book is tliis one: "Boil a chicken in as little water as possible until the meat falls oft the bones. Pick- off the meat, season well with sail and pepper, and put. into mold.

Boil down the water in which the chicken was cook- ed, until only a cup is left. Season well and pour over the chicken. 11 will sink through, forming a jelly around it. Chill well. To serve, slice and garnish with dish of celery." Another good seafood recipe for six is this one for Baked Stuffed Gianl Shrimp: "Take lb.

minced lobster meal, loaf bread crumbs, ii of a minced green pepper, Vi minced red pepper and Vi minced onion. Season lo taste with Worcestershire sauce. Tabasco sauce and salt and pepper. Add just enough mayonnaise to bring to a paste consistency. Split 30 giant jum- bo shrimp and stuff with the dressing.

Bake in a hot oven for about 15 minutes." Greeters Of Hawaii Is A Specialized Service By MUKRAY J. UPl Travel Editor HONOLULU (UPl) --When Peter Fithian came to Hawaii in the mid-1950s, he was a little disappointed. He had heard of the Aloha spirit of the islands in the Pacific for years. Bul no grass- skirted, swivel-hipped island beauty was on hand to welcome him--or the other with the traditional lei, kiss and Aloha. The handsome 6-fool-3 Fi- thian shrugged it off then.

Now he's glad he did--he's getting paid to kiss women. It was while working as an assistant manager at a hotel on Waikiki Beach that he became aware of how disillusioned some guests were because they had not been met on arrival by plane or ship either. "Those first few moments in Hawaii can bemagical," he said in a recent interview. "People all over the world have heard of the Islanders' Aloha spirit, the welcoming lei and kiss." So. he said, he decided in 1957 to do something about it.

He resigned from the hotel and formed the Greeters of Hawaii, a specialized service to give visitors the full Aloha treat- ment they had come- to expect. Fithian noted that greeting friends and family with the garlands of flowers and kisses is an "authentic, well-practiced custom" here. "Bul." he said, "sometimes there is a problem--somebody can't make it to the airport or docks to meet them on arrival. "That's where we come in." Fithian guarantees that he or one of more of his Greeter Girls in typical Hawaiian dress will be on hand "to welcome or say boodbye to visiting firemen. friends, friends of friends and long-lost aunts any any plane, any boat, any hour." The blond bachelor, who was 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- 4- For a Treaf ancf a Thrill IT'S AN ERCULIANI DINNER CALLITZIN, PA.

For lliB rent 30 years our hobby the continuous seorch for unusual foodv An avolonche of food awailt you at Erculiani's. Dinners served with 38 or more varieties of foods. Combination of Italian ond Froncli dinners. For a true experience in eating pleasure--plan now lo visit ERCULIANT! born in Massachusetts but is "really a Hawaiian at heart," estimates that he kisses about 5,000 aunts and other women of all ages each year. The greeter Girls, in flowered muumuus, do the honors for the men, naturally.

For as low as $10 per couple, Fithian or Piilani, Mamo or Mahealani will present leis of orchids or carnations, plant a kiss on the cheer, and deliver your message of greeting. They will also help with the baggage and transportation. For VIPs and those you really want to impress, there is the Royal Aloha service. For $25 per couple there are kisses, leis, color photographs, porter services and transportation to or from any Waikiki beach in a private chauffeured limousine. Greelers also has a wide range of other services de- signed to make visitors feel like they are wanted.

They will deliver to home, hotel, plane or ship corsages or baskets of flowers including the exotic bird of paradise, red ginger and anthurium; pineapples and other tropical fruits, nuts, Polynesian delicacies, cham- pagne and liquors. For $6.50 for instance, there is a woven coconut hat with a a a Chinese bananas, Kona coffee, Macadamia nuts, Hawaiian niu candy, raw sugar crystals and a ready-to-eat precut pineapple. For your drinking friends, Fithian has what he calls Liquor Leis--seven miniature bottles strung as a necklace for $8.00. For more permanent memo- ries of Hawaii, Greeters will make up an artistic arrange- ment of dried flowers and other vegetation from the islands, including wood roses, haole koa pods, volcano firegrass and wooden pikake. For Information, Call 8U.485.98il or 485-2281 DAILY: 4 P.M.

9 P.M.' SUNDAY 12:30 7 P.M. Rouic 220 to Ounconsvillr then Routa 22 lo Cresson and 4 milm north On Route 53 to Erculiani A 4C Jf 1T. Sofisticote School ot DANCE 1222 NATIONAL HIGHWAY LAVALE, MD. Betsy Hosack INSTRUCTOR Registration August 29 thru September 2 PHONE 722-7404 CUMBERLAND, Current Broadway Show And Ticket Situations NEW YORK Cur- rent attractions, leading play- ers, theaters and ticket situa- tions: "Barefoot In the Park" ilka Chase; Biltmorc: comedy about newly weds adjusting to married life; available. "Cactus Flower" Lauren Bacall, Barry Nelson; Royalc; a Don a dentist meets his match in his plain a assisl- anl; sells out.

"Fiddler On The Roof" Her- schcl Imperial; mu- sical play of Jewish father in Czarist Russia with problem of marrying off several daugh- ters: sells out. "Funny Girl" Mi mi 1-lincs; Majestic; Musical about early career and romance of Fanny Brice; available. "Hello. Dolly!" i Rogers. David Burns; St.

James; musical about a a a wealthy client for herself; available. "Luv" Barbara Bel Gccl- des, Larry Blyden, Dell; Booth; comedy of a man who palms off wife on a friend, re- marries, then wants first wife back; available. --Angela Lansbury; Winter Garden; musical ver- sion of "Auntie adven- tures of Gay hostess raising or- phaned nephew; large ad- vance, plan ahead. "Philadelphia, Here 1 Come" DonaL Donclly, Patrick Bed- ford; Helen Hayes: poignant comedy of Irish youth leaving home for United Slates; avail- able. "Sweet Charity" Verdon; Palace: musical com- edy of dance hall girl's roman- tic sad ventures: soils out.

"The Impossible Years" Alan King; Playhouse; comedy of psychiatrist who has prob- lems with bis teen-aged a ter: available. "The Odd Couple" Pal Hingle. Eddie Bracken: mouth; hilarious comedy of two buddies, separated from wives, who set up bachelor es- a i available. "Wail A Minim!" --South Af- rican Company; John Golden, i i a satirical revue; avail- able. "Wait Until Dark" Lee Kemick, Robert Duvall; Ethel Barry more: rousing melodrama of lilind woman outsmarting Ihrcc crooks; available.

"Man Of La a a -Rich- ard Kilcy, a Diener; A a Washington Square; major and excellent musical of Broadway calibre forced by circumstanc- es i off Broadway house; based on Cervantes' "Don Quix- sells a ahead. "Show Boat" a a a Cook, David a Music Theater of Lincoln Center; first rate re- vival of musical classic; through Aug. 27 only; Big demand. "it" Corner Volley N. Mechanic Summer Stock Attractions a i Playhouse at Jen- ncrslown.

Pa. "Oliver" August 27 and August 29 to September 3 'oarreU County Playhouse at Deep Creek Lake. a Mary" ends August 27. (Final production of year). Bedford Springs Playhouse at Bedford, Pa.

"South Pacific" August 27 and August 30-Septem- bcr 4. Shady Grove Music Fair at Gailhersburg. "This Was Bur- lesque" ends August 28. "The Boy Friend" August 30-Septem- bcr 4. Painters Mill Music Fair a Baltimore.

"The Boy Friend" ends August 2S. The Liberace Show August 30-September 4. Wayside Theatre at Middle- town, Va. "Ten Nights in a Barroom" ends August 27. "The Subject.

Was Roses" August 29- Seplember 10. The Don Wagner Combo playing for your dancing listening pleasure TONiTE Clarysville Inn i Eagles-A-Go-Go THE Eagles Home EVERY 12 AND SATURDAY-9 TO 1 STAC or COUPLE MUSIC BY Ronnie Wolford CONFIDENTIALS AIR CONDITIONED Eagles Home Ein Gedanke An Deutschland When you gather enough' pleasant thoughts you have a memory. Recently a lady from Germany who visited us said: "Having dinner here makes one feel like they never left home." Loti of folks build pleasant memories here. Join them! Air Conditioned For Your Comfort! annanO artier a German Restaurant CRESAPTOWN 729-2361 nnaonnDD ALL NEW WORLD'S GREATEST ICE SPECTACULAR 7 fabulous Productions featuring Huge Cist of International katmi Champion! and Start AUG 23 Thru AUG. 28 Evenings 8 P.

M. Mats: Sat. 2:30, Sun. PRICIS: $2, $2.50, $3, $3.50 Children Half Pries: Matinwet ONLY Johnstown, Pa. WAR 1.30 t.

fl P.M. ft Sunday 1.30 A .10 nt JntV. t. tlilli N(i W1.

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About Cumberland Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
213,052
Years Available:
1894-1977