Newspapers / The pilot. / Oct. 4, 1946, edition 1 / Page 9
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1 a 4 Friday, October 4, 1946. THE PILOT, Southern Pines. North Carolina Page Nine Appearing at Scottie’s Sunday Night — It’i Ba.'ic- — u it’s a wea' alw a> s— «e «• 11 it’s stunning— u n this all-wool— dresmiikfi suit fittocl i to suit you' jL •4 44 Black crepe with Empire lines — ap ron. Jet applique. Five Cent Airmail Rate Now Covers All US Territories Appearing above is a member of Virgil Whyte’s all-girl band, consisting of 20 pieces. Comfortable Days, Cool Nights Made September A Month To Remember The very essence of breath-taking splendor is in the new silhouette. Skillfully inter preted in our new, wondrous and curvace ous dress collection. THE TOWN SHOP STEELE ST. SANFORD. N. d SUMMARY NO. 254 By Charles Macauley Apparently September, the month that passes from Summer to Autumn has decided-to shower blessings upon the Sandhills in the way of comfortable temper atures and delightful days. With the highest temperature register ing only 90 degrees, against for mer records of 100 or more de grees, and a low of 55 degrees, cool enough to bring blankets out of storage, though not as frigid as the sometime 37 degrees, pic turesque beauty of the foliage, red, gold and russet leaves set against the blue of the autumn skies, the ninth month of 1946 passes with appreciative com ments from all. Twelve days were all clear, 14 days partly cloudy, 7 days cloudy and 8 days or nights with more or less rain, the heaviest fall .90 inches on the night of the 17th and morning of the 18th. Total precipitation for the month was n Recapping and Vulcanizing ONE DAY SERVICE Grade "A" Truck Rubber Used TRUCK RECAPPING PASSENGER RECAPPING REPAIRING Aberdeen Tire Service ABERDEEN. N. C. EARL FLOWERS. Mgr. Phone 8561 I HOSPITAL INSURANCE { may be obtained at the office of J. D. Hobbs (Carolina I Theatre Building) each Wednesday afternoon from I 1:30—5:00 ’ B. C. DOYLE Box 625 Southern Pines, N. C. g/"anJlitlls ^^uneral ^^iome AMBULANCE SERVICE SOUTHERN'infaES. N. C. TELEPHONE 0111 A. B. PATTERSON. MOR. PROMPT MODERATE DRY CLEANING SERVICE V ALET D. C. JENSEN Telephone 5651 Southern Pines I HELP SAVE FOOD! 2.95 inches, .63 inches less than normal. This registers a loss of three quarters of an inch for the year. Charlotte reports a defi ciency of 6.18 inches, Raleigh an excess of 6.11 inches. Lest we for get, four days of last September passed with torrential rains ap proximating nine inches. Twenty one days ranged from 80 to 90 degrees, the high on the 9th and 10th. Twenty three days recorded lows ranging from 55 to 65 degrees, the low on the 18th. Maximum temperature was 80.3 degrees, 4 degrees less than normal, minimum, 64.2 degrees, 1.7 degrees more, average 72.2 degrees, 1.1 degrees less than the long time normal. Labor Day was clear and cool. Autumn entered at 10.41 o’clock on the morning of the 23rd the day partly cloudy with rain during the afternoon. Long time Max Min. Aver average 84.5 62.3 73.3 1945 85.1 66.1 75.6 1946 80.3 642 72.2 On October 1, domestic airmail postage was reduced from eight cents to five cents an ounce, for all United States territory and the armed forces abroad. The Post Office Department antici pates that the reduced domestic rate will bring unprecedented airmail volume, and active pro motion is planned for the future. Under the new bill all United States territory is included, and the new rate is extended to mem bers of the armed forces, regard less of whre thy are located, as well as civilian personnel author ized to receive mail through Army or Navy post offices. Air mail for United States territories is to be treated as domestic. The reduction in cost will be considerable, for under the pres ent plan airmail postage between the United States mainland and the Canal Zone is ten cents a half ounce; Caton Island, 25 cents; Guam, 35 cents; Hawaii, 15 cents. Existing airmail postage between Puerto Rico and Guam is 45 cents a half-ounce. The new rate will thus tend to encourage greater use of the air for Uncle Sam’s postal business. A new 5-cent airmail postage stamp and an imbossed airmail stamped envelope No. 13 are ;now in opeijation. The new stamp of special delivery size, with a design arranged horizon tally is in red, featuring a modern type four - motored transport plane in flight. trator, C. T. A. to close up the said estate and be discharged as Administrator. The said defen dants will further take notice that they are required to appear before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Moore County at his of fice in Carthage, North Carolina, within thirty days from October 23, 1946 and answer the Petition of the plaintiff in the said action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Petition. Dated this 23rd. day of Sep tember 1946. JOHN WILLCOX Clerk of the Superior Court S27-018 Auto Body Glass Cut To Order In Stock For Most All Cars ... Window Regulators Channels and Door Handles. KING RADIATOR & GLASS CO. SANFORD Phone 213 J NORTH CAROLINA MOORE COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT BEFORE THE CLERK NOTICE OF SERVICE PUBLICATION BY Italian Lawn for Winter Lawns AGRICO and AGRINITE Lawn Fertilizers BURNEY HARDWARE CO. South St. ABERDEEN Phone 9301 Angus Cameron Of Vass Fills Triple UNRRA Role As Preacher, Sailor, Cowboy On Ship To Poland Angus McKay Cameron of Vass is engaged in an occupation this summer, in surprising contrast to his usual daily round. Whereas he spends the winters diligently studying for his career as a min ister of the Methodist church,he is, for these summer months, fill ing the role of a sea-going cow boy. Cameron, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Cameron, sailed on August 31, from Newport News, Virginia, aboard the S. S. Mount Whitney for Gdansk, Po land. He is one of the 85 men helping to transport 1500 horses to war-devastated Poland. The Mount Whitney is the largest in the cattle shipping service and after discharging her cargo in Po land, will niake a shuttle trip to Royjavik, Iceland, for an addi tional cargo of 1600 ponies, also for Poland. The entire trip will take about two months. These animals are a part of UNRR’s program for shipping 200,000 animals for the rehabili tation of agricultural Europe. Since June, 1945, over 5,000 “sea_ going cowboys” have helped make almost 200 trips transport ing horses, mules, and cattle to Greece, Yugoslavia, Poland, Czechoslavakia and Italy. The Brethren Service Committee, New Windsor, Maryland, has been assisting UNRRA by re cruiting the cowboys, who must be not only handy around ani mals but of good moral and ethi cal character, with a desire to help improve the world situation in a positive way. The 85 men aboard the Moupt Whitney are combining a human itarian service to needy people with a very informative trip; they will receive extra pay for the shuttle trip. A normal trip pays $150.00 to each cowboy, plus maintenance while on the ship, and requires from four to six weeks’ time. Angus Cameron, who, after his four years at Duke is now in his second year at the Garrett Biblical Institute, Evanston, lU., is caUing it a day after this trip and returning to school. Franklin Safford Pinehurst Racing Driver Wins $1,945 comes Franklin Safford, who from Keene, N. H., and spends his winters at Pinehurst, N. C., is high in his praise of Roosevelt Raceway at Westbury, L. I., and of the management of that busy plant. The long meet ing at that point started on May 24th and Safford and his stable of 30 head were on hand for that first night. This busy driver, who is not yet forty years old, has kept his horses in condition. Up to Sept. 10th his horses had collected $47,- 393.33 and for himself, in driv er’s prizes, he laid away $1,945. The management is very lib eral as for each dash, every , night the winner receives a $25.00 prize, the second driver receives $15.00 and the third driver re ceives $10.00 Safford has collect ed 34 of the $25.00 prizes, 43 of LEVI PACKARD, Administrator, C. T. A. of the estate of Harriet P. S. Achorn, vs Mary L. Hadley, Clara B. Hadley, Florence M. Hayes, Ruth Hayes Bingham, Mildred B. Hayes, Edith Hayes Wheeler, William Hayes Skinner, Frederick Hayes Jones and Frederick Hayes Jones, Guardian for Arthur A. Jones, in competent, Mabel Hayes Brown, George Hayes Hadley, Margaret C. Hayes, Edith Hayes Crawford and Mrs. R. B. Hayes, Heirs-at- Law of Harriet P. S. Achorn, and all other persons interested in the subject matter of this action. Mary L. Hadley, Clara B. Had ley, Florence M. Hayes, Ruth Hayes Bingham, Mildred B. Hayes, Edith Hayes Wheeler, William Hayes Skinner, Freder ick Hayes Jones and Frederick Hayes Jones, Guardian for Ar thur A. Jones, incompetent, Ma- now bel Hayes Brown, George Hayes Hadley, Margaret C. Hayes, Edith Hayes Crawford and Mrs. R. B. Hayes, Heirs-at-Law of Harriet P. S. Achorn, and all other per sons interested in the subject matter of this action, defendants, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been com menced in the Superior Court of Moore County, North Carolina, to sell a lot or parcel of land in McNeill Township, Moore Coun ty, North Carolina, belonging to the estate of Harriet P. S. Achorn, deceased, said sale to be made for the purpose of raising assets to pay debts, costs of administra tion and to enable the Adminis- $10.00 prizes. Back in 1942 Safford won more heats than any other driver in the $15.00 prizes, and 42 of the the United States. Rom where I sit Joe Marsh\ Going Fishing? Here's Howl YOU CAN If 70ur home is mortgaged, here’s something you can do right now to guarantee that your beloved wife and children will own the home you have built for them. At an amazingly small {Cost you can have a Jefferson Standard Mortgage jQancellation Plan which will pay off the mortgage ^ full in the event of your death, and probably leave g little extra besides. You owe it to your family to investigate this plai£ Ihoroughly. At your convenience, and at no cost to you, it will be a pleasure to show you exactly, hoB! pu£ Mortgage Cancellation Plan works. BURNEY R. McCOTTER Box 753 AGENT Southern Pines. N. C. To hear Willie Wells and Basil Stmbe arguing about trout fish ing, you’d think it was more im portant than the atom bomb. Willie favors dry flies, Basil poqh-poohs anything but wet flies. Wiiiie swears by a Royal Coach man; Basil won’t hear of anything but a Silver Doctor. And by the time it comes to steel rods versus bamboo rods ... But on Saturday, each got back from Seward’s creek with a catch that couldn’t have differed by more than several ounces! Each had used his favorite kind of fly, his favorite rod and his favorite place to cast. So over a friendly glass of beer, they al lowed as how maybe they were both right . . . which is how so many arguments should end. From where I sit, if we all re spected one another’s different opinions—^whether about trout flies, or drinking beer, or voting, life would be a whole lot pleasanter. ©1944, UNITED STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, North Corolina CommlHM Suit* 404-607 Inturanco Bwilding, Rolaigh, North Carolina. For Fine Work Try Carter’s Laundry and Cleaners SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Telephone ClOl
Oct. 4, 1946, edition 1
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