Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / May 31, 1946, edition 1 / Page 5
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Friday, May 31, 1946. PILOT. Southern Pines. North Carolina Page Five f TO THE VOTERS OF MOORE COUNTY: My Friends and Supporters ■4' Please accept my thanks and ap preciation for the wonderful vote you gave me in the Primary held on May 25. Sincerely, Carlton Kennedy Citizens Bank And Trust Company SOUTHERN PINES Nothing would please us more than to congratulate each of ou in person. As this is not 'possible we take this oppor tunity of extending our heart iest congratulations and best wishes for your success. Agnes Dorothy Beauty Shop <3. P service to m ^ \ \ , / /V many of you boy and girl jgraduates in the past. We hope to serve still more of you and with all good wishes for your success. Mack’s 5 & 10 CARTHAl by Ruth Harris Tyson Rabies Dr. Willcox, our county phy sician, is looking for more rabies to develop in the county right away. He says it is time for a new outbreak, as all the dogs that were bitten in the last rabies scare were not rounded up. No one knows how many dogs, cats, or foxes there were which were bitten at that time. The ones no body knows about may at any time now start a new rampage of that dread disease. Therefore, he urges all persons who have not had their dogs vaccinated to take them to a vetinarian at once and have it done. The most insidious thing about rabies is that a dog is dangerous fifteen days before he shows any symptoms. If a person gets any of the saliva of his dog in a broken place in his skin, rabies may develop before he notices anything wrong with the dog. Vaccines for rabies have been much improved quite recently. TS--x>sii&itg’avi''5,.so na.va- hurst Theatre, Sunday Night, June 2nd, at 8:30 and to the Car olina Theatre, Southern Pines, Sunday,. Monday and Tuesday, June 2-3-4, at 8:15 p. m. with a Tuesday matinee at 3:00. Youth and beauty, love and laughs, opera and swing, all com bine into one glorious musical for “Two Sisters From Boston” returning to the Sandhills at the Carolina Theatre, Southern Pines, Wednesday through Saturady, (4 days) June 5-6-7-8, at 8:15 with a Saturday (Only) Matinee at 3:00., with Kathryn Grayson, June Ally son, Lauritz Melchior, Jimmy Durante and Peter Law- ford, a quintet of atomic propor tions, and backgrounded by the story of a girl who makes a hec tic beathless climb from a bowery beerhall floor show to the opera stage, lyholly delightful, a gor geous blend of Bowery beer-hall music of the 1900s, grand opera, slapstick’ comedy andi rom(anae and there is a production number at the finish, with Melchior and Miss Grayson doing a duet with a symphony orchestra accompan iment that should lift an audi ence out of the seats into a burst of spontaneous applause. Locals Drop Saturday Game After Comfortable 6-Run Lead Then Bow To Star Wednesday Fisher Left Too Long Loses Ramseur Game Star Wins 6-0 For the first four innings of last Saturday’s game practically all of Southern Pines’ rooters felt sure they were tasting a long- over-due victory. The local bats men knocked Ramseur all around the lot and were leading by a fat 7-1 margin. I In the last of the third, “Red” Vest rapped out a three-bagger, “Jackrabbit” Harper had pre viously practically stolen home, s4 YUGOSLAV MOTHER holds her baby which she has managed to ^eep alive by feeding it her own meager ration. Both are typical of millions suffering from acute malnutrition in Europe and Asia wha 'will die unless more food is provided immediately. You can help by' i^iving money e or canned food to the Emergency Food Colleciion. 'Seven Negro Nurses Graduate At North Carolina Sanatorium Two Girls From Here One From Aberdeen RELEASED FROM SERVICE Ralph M. Stephenson, Y2c, re- 'ceived his discharge on May 24 The nineteenth class of Negro Naval Personnel Nurses to graduate from the, Separation Center, Jackson Nort Carolina Sanatorium School j jjg ^j^g of Nursing, Sanatorium, received Lnd Mrs. John Stephenson of their diplomas on Friday, May' Sunrise With almost every other film coming out of Hollywood being heralded as a “psychological drama,” and wading knee-deep through the subterranean pas sages of strange and disordered minds, the new 20th Century-Fox picture, “Sentimental Journey,” is bound to come as a welcome deviation for the legion of movie goers who seek surcease from a screen peopled by lurid charac ters whose inhibitions invariably find release in only the goriest of “psychological murders.” ^Walter Morosco, producer of “Sentimental Journey,” which plays Sunday and Monday at the Sunrise Theatre, starring John Payne, Maureen O’Hara and Wil liam Bendix, with brilliant little Connie Marshall, has his own ideas of screen entertainment. And despite his bucking of the current trend, his production of “Sunday Dinner for a Soldier” made critics’ “best ten” lists throughout the country. “Sentimental Journey” tells the unusual and heart-warming story of a glamorous stage star, pas sionately in love with her hus band, who, in an attempt to add to his happines, adopts a nine- year-old child. When the plan backfires with unexpected reper cussions, the swiftly-paced drama is brought to a thrilling climax of tremendous emotional impact. Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Glenn Langan, Mischa Auer, Kurt Kreu- ger, Trudy Marshall and Ruth Nelson appear in featured roles. 24. The members of the class are: Misses Doris Manette Brown, Aberdeen, Fannie Belle Cogdell, St. Pauls, Willie Helena Fuller, Southern Pines, Mattie Mae Hodge, Wendell, Evelyn Louise Hughes, Tarboro, Claire Eliza beth McNair, Southern Pines, and Christine Catherine Perry, Zebu- Ion. These girls received their first two years of training at the N. C. Sanatorium School of Nurs ing, Sanatorium, and their third, at Kate Bitting Memorial Hospi tal, Winston-Salem. Dr. J. N. Mills, staff member of Lincoln Hospital, Durham, and physician for the North Caro lina College for Negroes, Durham, delivered the commencement ad dress. Dr. P. P. McCain, Superinten dent of the N. C. State Sanatoria, extended congratulations to the class. Dr. McCain stressed the im portance of early diagnosis in tu berculosis and suggested that all take advantage of the clinics and X-ray facilities now available in North Carolina. Dr. L. A. Marks, Resident Phy sician, at the Negro Division of N. C. Sanatorium, presided over the exercises, and presented the class pins. Dr. J. S. Hiatt, Assoc iate Superintjendent and Ajpsis- tant Medical Director of the N. C. Sanatorium, awarded the diplo mas. The invocation was made by Reverend L. R. Bennett of Sou thern Pines. Music for the occasion was fur nished by Levon Haithman at the piar^q, ,and vocal arrangements were rendered by the student nurses. . Southern Pines. ABERDEEN GIRL PEACE COLLEGE GRADUATE Miss Belle Elizabeth Caviness received her commercial diploma at the 74th annual Peace College commencement which was held Monday night in the James Din widdle Memorial Chapel at the college. IMPORTANT SCHEDULE CHANGES Effective June 2. 1946 NORTHBOUND THE SUN QUEEN, TRAIN NO. 108, and THE COTTON STATES SPECIAL, TRAIN NO. 10, for Portsmouth, Richmond,' Washing ton, and New York, are consoli dated and will leave Southern Pines 5:16 AM. forty minutes earlier than at present. Robert Hawk Dies Result of Wounds TWO BELLES OF '76 Mrs. Evaline Blue of Carthage and Mrs. Belle Pleasants of Aber deen were honor guests at Peace College Monday at a luncheon given by the College. It was just seventy years ago that they were there as students. Mr. Talbot Johnson drove them up to Raleigh in his car. Mrs. Gil liam Brown of Carthage and Mrs. Malcolm Plegsants of Aberdeen accompanied them. The pictures of these two ladies appeared in Tuesday’s NEWS AND OBSER VER, and their youthful looks be lied the caption that said Mrs. Blue was 88 and Mrs. Pleasants, 91. Simply impossible! These pic tured likenesses seemed to say. Fortunate Peace to have these gracious ladies grace their com mencement program! Robert Arthur Hawk, 24, died last Saturday at his l^ome in Aber deen. Young Hawk was wounded in Belgium on the 4th of Novem ber, 1944. Bursting shrapnel pierced his side, and it was from these wounds that cancer later developed which could not be controlled. Popular throughout the Coun ty, and to his friends in uniform all over the world, a great sense of loss is felt by the family and friends of Robert Hawk. Hawk was a sergeant with the 501st Paratroop Infantry and on the 18th of December, 1943 mar ried Grace Klabbatz, of South ern Pines. Mr. and Mrs. Z. G. Hawk, pa rents of Robert Hawk, drove up from Tampa, Fla. when the news reached them. The funeral was held Thursday at 2:30 pt the Church of Wide Fellowship in Southern Pines and he is now buried in the Mt. Hope Cemetery. THE PALMLAND,'TRAIN NO. 192, for Raleighv Richmond, Washington, Baltimore, Philidel- phia. New York and intermediate points, will leave Southern Pines 7:33 PM, twenty-three minutes later than at present. THE ROBERT E. LEE, TRAIN NO. 6, for Raleigh, Richmond, Washington and intermediate points with connections for Bal timore, Philadelphia, and New York, will leave Southern Pines 10:33 PM, one hour and twenty- eight minutes earlier than at present. SOUTHBOUND after beating out to first what, ODD would have been a sure out with a slower runner. Things looked on the up for Southern Pines, leading 3-1 going into the fourth. The first three men up for Ramseur in the first of the fourth were retired in rapid fire order— struck out, pop-flew out, and called out. The last of the fourth was a debacle. Ramseur blew up. Haynes up first, got a clean sing le to short left. Newton sacrificed, advancing Haynes to second, and except for his bad ankle Newton would have been safe at first when Ramseur’s' thirdbaseman dropped the ball but still beat Newton with the throw. McNeill hit a double and the push was on. Fisher, Harper, Wicker, and Vest. . . everybody got on and most of them got homg. When the inning ended Southern Pines was ahead 7-1. But if Ramseur “blew up” in the fourth. Southern Pines plumb busted all over the place in the fifth. It started simply enough, with Brooks, pitcher for Ram seur, getting hit by a soft one for a free trip to first. Then followed a slugging fest. And before the Dwellers throughout the entire length of Ashe Street peered out of their windows in stark amazement, just be fore noon Wednesday, as they viewedi the quite odd appearing four room bunga low, supported by a heavy truck, slowly moving from the old Dickie place to a new lodging upon a lot owned by R, Y. AllredL But when another and equally comfortable bunga low crept past early Thurs day morning in similar fash ion, folks felt no surprise world! hooting and hollering and dust had cleared, Ramseur was ahead 8-7. Pitcher Fisher, formerly a southpaw, but now right handed due to shrapnel piercing his right hand in Normandy, had literally thrown in the glove after pitching a wild soft ball for the tieing run. When he sat down disgustedly on the bench, Fisher groaned: “And on that last throw I tried to pitch a drop!” Cole took Fisher’s place on the mound and squeezed through on ly allowing one run to score from the loaded bases, with two away. The score: 8-7. The rest of the game was close, with Southern Pines threatening in the last of the seventh, but the eighth and ninth innings were fruitless and disappointing —the game ending 19 for Ram seur and 8 for Southern Pines, as the silent backers of Southern Pines left the ball park in clouds of disgruntled dust. We Join With Your Many Other Friends In Extending Hearty Congratulations On Your Graduation. Southern Pines Pharmacy GRAHAM CULBRETH LOCAL PASSENGER, MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN NO. 4 for Raleigh, Richmond, Washing ton and intermediate points, will leave Southern Pines 10:12 AM, six minutes earlier than at pres ent. Happy journey, boys and girls. The road is long, but may the way be smooth. Happy journey every foot of the way. MIDLAND DRESS SHOP MRS. D. E. CROSBY JAMES CADDELL James Caddell, 90, died at his home here Monday morning fol lowing a long illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Graham Caddell; two sOns, John and William Caddell, both of Aberdeen, and two daughters, Mrs. Annie McDonald of Pine- hurst, Mrs. Alice McDonald of Jackson Springs and a grand daughter, Mrs. Don Jensen of Southern Pines. THE PALMLAND, TRAIN NO. 191„ for Hamlet, Columbia, Sav annah, Jacksonville, Miami, Tam pa, St. Petersburg and intermed iate points, will leave Southern Pines at 8:40 AM, forty-five min utes earlier than at present. THE COTTON STATES SPECIAL, TRAIN NO. 9 and THE SUN QUEEN, TRAIN NO. 107, for Athens, Atlanta, Birming ham, Savannah Jacksonville, Miami, Tampa and St. Peters burg, are consolidated and will ( leave Southern Pines 10:48 PM,' twelve minutes earlier than at present. ' Age forever cries, "It can't be done." Youth answers with a shout, "We'll do it." We know you'll do it. We are banking § on you, our hopes and our faith in you being grounded upon the splendid record you have already made. OF ^6 McNEHl & COMPANY SEABOARD AIRLINE RAILWAY us Nothing would please more than to congratulate each of you in person. As this is not possible, we take this opportunity of extending our heartiest congratulations and best wishes for your success. ClASS OF'46 THE VALET tmtatntaatwtfflfflnmtatamtatttattiamtataatawaatnttttunttHaama
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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May 31, 1946, edition 1
5
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