JOHN C. PARRISH Plumbing and Heating Day Phone 6893 Southern Pines Night Phone 6814 $^40 '3 4/5 QT. $ni5 JkPl. SEVEN STAR Blended whiskey. "The straight whiskies are 4 years or more eld. 37!4% straight whiskey. 6214% neutral spirits distilled from grain. 15% straight whiskey 4 years eld. 15% straight whiskey 5 years eld. 754% straight whiskey 6 years eld." OOODBRHAM & WORTS LIMITED, PEORIA, ILLINOIS Southern Pines Restaurants OPENING HOURS CLOSING HOURS DANTE’S Italian RESTAURANT Spaghetti Steaks Chicken Open Evenings 5 to 12—Daily except Mondays JACK’S GRILL "Where Dining is a Pleasure" Breakfast 7 to 11 Lunch 11:30 to 2:30 Dinner 5 to 9—A la Carte All Day Open From 7:00 A. M. till 11 P. M. REYNOLDS & CO. Pinehursi, N. C. Carolina Hotel Telephone 2082 M e m b e r s NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE and Other Leading Exchanges PRIVATE WIRE TO NEW YORK THE DENES (A Chartered Private Club) HELD OVER Two Shows Nightly—8 p.m. & 12 m. Featuring JIMMY BURTON The Irish Minstrel MICHAEL AND PEGGY ARNAUD Ballet Sensations of the London Music Halls HARRY JARKEY How Silly Can You Gtet? Music for Dancing by CYRIL MANSFIELD and his ORCHESTRA French Cmsine Dinners from 7 p.m. FOR RESERVATIONS; PHONE PEPPO AT 4604 (MEMBERS ONLY) ON MIDLAND ROAD BETWEEN PINEHURST AND SOUTHERN PINES One FuB Troop, Part of Another Will Attend National Jamboree From Moore Leaders Take Training Course At Camp Durant One lull troop of 33 Boy Scouts and a fraction of another troop, from Moore county, will attend the National Jamboree to be held at Valley Forge, Pa., in late June and early July. They will be among 260 Boy Scouts and lead ers from the Occoneechee Council participating in the huge national celebration of more than 40,000 from all over the United States. Seven full troops of 33 boys and three leaders each, plus a small group which will be thrown with another Council, will represent the 12 Occoneechee counties. The all-Moore troop will have Cecil Stewart, of Aberdeen as scoutmaster, assisted by Wilbur Currie of Pinehurst and Archie P. Farmer of West Epd.' Arthur Rowe, of Aberdeen, will serve as an assistant scoutmaster for a troop composed of boys from Moore county, Harnett county and Fayetteville. Scoutmaster will be C. B. Tillinghast, with Allen El liott as the other assistant. Both are from Fayetteville. Leaders came together from all counties of the Council at Camp Durant April 1 and 2 for training for their part in the Jamboree. Clarence Weldon, of Durham, field executive, was in charge of the training program, assisted by W. Y. Compton, Tom Durham and Norman Suttles, all of the Council staff. The leaders received their as signments, set up as a troop to use regulation Jamboree equipment, studied methods of packing and unpacking and lived in advance so far as was possible the troop routine they will supervise at Valley Forge. Flag ceremonies, physical ex aminations, health regulations and many other phases of the project were discussed. The leaders will meet with their scouts May 5, 6 and 7 for the first time at the Council Camporee at Camp Durant, where a skeleton troop organization will be set up and plans laid looking toward a successful participation in the Moore Breeding Cooperative Gets Good Start In Life The Moore Breeding Coopera tive, organized in June, 1949, in seminated 250 cows during its first seven months of operation, from proved sires whose offspring should greatly raise the level of cattle breeding in the county. Through the Cooperative, serv ice from these great bulls is avail able to every dairyman, small or large, at a nominal charge. The office is located in the courthouse at Carthage and may be reached by calling the County Farm office phone. The Moore Cooperative is one of 87 cooperatives and private breeding associations being serv ed by the Southeastern Artificial Breeding association, one of four great organizations under one management. The others are in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Indi ana. All together, the four last year provided material for the ar tificial breeding of 250,698 cows, using approximately 70 high in dex proved bulls. The record of the Southeastern association, whose headquarters are at Ashe ville, was boosted last year from 17,189 cows artificially bred, to 44,561. The Moore County Cooperative is considered to have made an ex cellent start, according to a re lease from the Southeastern or ganization’s office at Asheville, giving Moore herd owners a de pendable increase in purebred stock at far less than the cost of keeping a bull. Horner To Speak On Radio Tuesday W. E. (Bill) Horner, Sanford publisher seeking the Democratic nomination to congress from the Eighth Congressional District, will address voters over a district-wide radio hookup from 6:15 to 6:30, Tuesday evening, April 18. This is the first district-wide hookup in the history of the Eighth District, and will include stations WWGP, Sanford; WSTS, Southern Pines; WEEB, Southern Pines; WEWO, Laurinburg; WMAP, Monroe; WAYN, Rock ingham; W B U Y, Lexington; ,W T N (I, Thomasville; W K B C, North Wilkesboro; WADE, Wades- boro. Listen in. (Pol. adv.) Court Disposes of Nine Cases On Jury Trial Day Out of eight drunken driving cases docketed for jury trial at recorders court Tuesday, April 4, three asked for jury trials, and of these, two were acquitted of the drunken driving charge. James Clyde Cooper, of Ashe- boro, convicted of drunken driv ing and also of careless and reck less driving, was given a three months’ road sentence suspended on payment of $150 and costs, and also lost his driver’s license for a year. James Hardin Allen, of Robbins, Rt. 2, was acquitted of the drunk en driving charge but found guil ty of failing to stop when ordered to do so. Judgment was 30 days, suspended on payment of $25 and costs—$83.65 in all. Daniel Laverne McCaskill, of Carthage, Rt. 3, won an acquittal. Joseph Max Pickier, of Pine- bluff, only one of the lot to plead guilty, was fined $100 plus costs and lost his driver’s license for a year as provided by law, but with out any road sentence, suspended or otherwise. Richard Jerome Almond, Aber deen, failed to answer when call ed in court. Judgment was nisi sci fa, with capias issued return able Tuesday, April 11. Aubrey. Lee Brewer, of Mt. Ver non Springs, and Edward Allen Rowe of Robbins persuaded the court to accept a plea of careless and reckless driving. Each was sentenced to 30 days on the roads, the sentences suspended on pay ment of $25 and costs. Nol pros with leave was taken in the case of John Robert McIn tosh, as was done also for Billy Franklin Blake who was charged with speeding. PINEBLUFF Miss Marguerite De Yoe of Dur ham visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. De Yoe, over the week end. Mr .and Mrs. Herbert Van Bos- kerck and family and Mrs. C. S. Palmer spent Monday in High Point with Mrs. Van Boskerck’s sister, Mrs. C. E. Jordan, and Mr. Jordan. Mrs. M. F. Butner returned to Pinebluff Tuesday from Siloam, where she spent the winter with her mother, Mrs. S. J. Atkinson. Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Wells spent Tuesday in.^ Durham. Mrs. LeRoy Cochran and daugh ter, Rebecca, of Charlotte, and Miss Juanita Perdu of Burlington visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. V. Perdu, last week. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Die- terle and daughters, Gwen and Judy, spent Sunday in Rocking ham with Mr. and Mrs. Wade C. JohnsoW, Jr., and Mrs. Lottie Sed- berry. Mr. and Mrs. George Bartlett and daughter Claudel of Alexan dria, Va., were week end guests of Mrs. Bartlett’s aunt, Mrs. Irving G. Wylie, and Mr. Wylie. Mr. and Mrs. T. Warren Gold- ston of Raleigh were guests Sun- Jamboree. The Boy Scouts will be at his toric Valley Forge over July 4. One troop of Negro Boy Scouts will attend from the Occoneechee Council, headed by Field Execu tive George Newell of Raleigh, with three volunteer leaders as as sistants. day of Mrs. Goldston’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Leavitt. Mr. and Mrs. Hector Lee and children of Burlington spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. J. F! Combs and attended the Hewitt- Lee wedding at Community church, Pinehurst, Sunday eve ning. At home' with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Hearn, for ,the week end were Misses Janie and Ruth Hearn of Charlotte, Miss Dixie Hearn of Burlington, Mr. and Mrs. Lacy Hatchell gnd Jay Francis Fisher of Fayetteville, and Mr .and Mrs. Robert Hearn of Southern Pines. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. (Budge) Lea vitt of Bridgewater, Conn., are guests of Mr .and Mrs. C. F. Lea vitt. Miss Maxine MeInnis of Samar- cand was at home for the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy MeInnis. Mr. and,, Mrs. E. J. Austin have returned home after spending the winter in Lakeland, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Foushee and children of Durham visited Mrs., Foushee’s mother, Mrs. J. R. Lampley, over the week end. Mary Ellen Oliver of Little Women’s school, Sedemburg, and Doug Oliver of Fort Bragg spent the Easter holidays with their mother, Mrs. Lucille Oliver. Mrs. John Burns and Mrs. Ed-, win Palmer attended a luncheon in Sanford Saturday, given by Stanley Home products. Mr. and Mrs. AUison Creel and Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Creel and daughter Doly spent Sunday at Fort Bragg with Capt. and Mrs. Larry Celluci. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hutchinson and daughter Patsy spent the week end in Candor with Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Williams. Miss Pauline Sproul of Durham visited her mother, Mrs. Florence Sproul, during the Easter holi days. FOR RESULTS USE THE PI LOT’S CLASSIFIED COLUMN. DON'T PUSH don't PANT iiluiuiiiiiiiuiiiimini(iumlDiiahi]nnffliiuiiiiiuiiiiiiiinfiMmiriiiHi)\! Toke it easy with a TORO Save work, save time, save health ... make mowing FUN with a precision* engineered Toro, made by America’s leading maker of championship golf course mowing equipment. $1.95 Pints $3.15 Fiftfis 21-inch SPORTLAWN... big, faat and powerful. Cuts thickest greiss, climbs steep slopes, mows your lawn to carpet-smooth perfection. Quick starting ... fingertip controls on handle ... all you do is guide! 1.5 h.p. engine. Disston tool steel blades. 86 Proof $117.50 Delvd la-Inch SPORTLAWN ... foe average lawns. Gives you most of the larger Sport- lawn’s precision features, including ball-bearing mounted reel with Disston tool steel blades. 1 h.p. engine for ample power. Safe, dependable .. * even a child can operate it! $104.50 r tnosKm M TMBI 14 VMM OR MOn OIB. MX mAMHT ■OM; MX MURAL IPIRinL BttRUB Southern .Pines Warehouses, Inc. Southern Pines, N. C. Uab a Data with a "Dackat 8"! * U htrlaway Hydra-Matic Drive, at reduced price, now optional on all Oldsmbbile models. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE OLDSMOBILE r— PHONE YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER — CHERRY MO TOR SALES SOUTH BROAD ST. SOUTHERN PINES. N. C. ■ YOU GET THE BEST DEAL FROM AN AUTHORIZED NEW-CAR DEALER! -