Page Sixteen Dunes Club Opens With Brilliant Show The Dunes Club, home of fine food and fine entertainment in the metropolitan tradition, open ed last week for the Sandhills spring resort season. Besides the excellent cuisine for which The Dunes is noted, a floor show of brilliant variety is being presented as opener. Stars are The Visionaires,> singing quartet from the Arthur Godfrey-Kate Smith television show, and Mitzie Joyce, ballet dancer extraordinary straight from an engagement at the Hotel Roosevelt, N. Y. Music is provided by Dave Les ter and His Orchestra, recently featured at the Latin Casino iri Boston and the Latin Quarter, Mi ami. The Dunes Club is located on the Midland road, between South ern Pines and Pinehurst. Dickie Renegar Makes Friends With Korean “Shoeshine Boys” By Mail Friday, February 22. 19S2 Letters Exchanged Through Brother Stationed Overseas KENTUCKY WHISKEY -A BLEND Dickie Renegar, 12 years old, liked hearing about Korea in let ters from his brother, Pfc. Elmer Renegar, Jr., and best of all he liked to hear about the “shoeshine boys”—Korean lads close to his own age, waifs of war who clus tered about the camps and did odd jobs for the soldiers. Elmer wrote him about two in particular he called “Hank” and “Happy,” though their Korean names were quite different. Hank was tall. Happy was short. They had had tough breaks in life be cause of the war, but they re mained cheerful, and were very helpful, and eager to be friends. Dickie would like them fine, El mer thought. So not long ago Dick, a seventh grade student, sat down and wrote them some friendly notes. This week he had their answers, en closed with a letter from his brother. Elmer had read them Dick’s letters through his inter preter, he said, and the boys an swered the same way with the interpreter writing in English vhat they dictated in Korean. The interpreter had a little trou ble with the language but despite that the messages are clear, and •Dick’s new friends are seen as having tastes quite similar to American boys of the same age Football gets a vote, and so does fishing, though “last year I coxdd not fishing because it is war time.” Each boy signed his name in Korean: From “Hank”: $2.05 pint Students Make Honor Roll, Earn Holiday 86 PROOF. 70% GRAIN NEUTRA|,^PiR|TS; 8CHENLEY DISTILLERS, INC., FRANKFORT, KY. “Dear friend, “I had your letter yester-day evening. I think very thanks for your letter. I have heard you be fore from your brother. I like your brother because he is very kindness. I am 15 years old. And I like to play football. I am very intention to see to see you if I can. But it is very far from here M B.E Goodrich TabelessTins that Protect Against Blowouts and Seal Punctures Because ic has no inner tube, the B. F. Goodrich Tubeless Tire does what no tire—no tire and safety tube combination — has ever done before. That’s why hundreds and hun dreds of inner tubes are piling up at B. F. Goodrich retailers as motorists toss away their inner tubes to get peace-of-mind at last. Every patch and hole in those tubes tells a story you know' of delay and inconvenience due to punctures, of the fear and danger that go with sudden blowouts — twin hazards that lurk in every conventional tire with inner tube. So add your inner tubes to the pile — get new B. F. Goodrich Tubeless Tires that seal punc tures and protect against blow outs! They fit your present rims. Convenient terms. COST LESS THAN REGULAR TIRE AND SAFETY TUBE Brown’s Auto Supply Co. Aberdeen Soulhern Pines B.F. Goodrich B.EGoodrkh Honor roll for the second quar ter of the school year 1951-52 was released this week by Principal Irie Leonard of the Southern Pines High school as follows: “E” Students (earning a day’s holiday as their reward)—Doris Bowles, Betty Jane Worsham, Da- maris Doser, Frances Pearson, Jon Speller. “S” Students (earning a half day holiday)—David Bailey, Mar garet Bailey, Charles Baker, Ger aldine Bethea, Gladys Bowden Charles Bowman, Norma Bowles, Bobby Butler, Betty Jean Cad dell, James Collins, Charles Co- vell, Jerry Daeke, Pete Dana, Wil bur Dickson, Louise Dom, Betty DuPree, Patty DuPree, Kathren Dwight. . Irene Easton, Shirley Garner, Barbara Guin, Barbara Hackney Sandra Harris, Jce Horner, Bill Huntley, Elaine Johnson, Mark King, Ronald Luketz, LaNelle Kirk, Jqe Marley, Mlary Matthews, Alex McLeod, Catherine Medlin, Jimmy Menzel. Linda Moore, Betty Jean Moore, Dorothy Newton, Roy Newton Barbara Page, Garland Pierce. Paul Propst, Bertha Ramsey, Jean S afford, Teddy Smith, Robert ■'•noiipr. Shirley Stuart, Patty Wopdell. Mrs. W. A. Leonard’s home ■oom earned the attendance hol- day, which was taken Friday February 8. '■o your house. “I am hate communists and I want ■•o fight against them, and I kill aU them, if I were a man. Because they kill many our good people and destroy all our country too. I am' going to study hard and I wish T make myself a great nian. “Good-bye, from Jo Yong Wan.” From “Happy”: “My dear friend, “I had your letter yesterday evening. I am very happy now, because I have a friend in Ameri ca. I am 14 years old, and I like fishing too. I am very sorry that I can’t fishing now. Because it is winter, and all rivers and lakes have ice now. I shall go out and fishing again if I have summer. Last year I could not fishing, be cause it is war time. “Many communists come down to Seoul and kill many people, so I was escape from them for a long tirpe, and I could not walk out side at my will and was afraid they kill me. “Good-by from Yun Chyul.” Moore Schools Plan Weekly Broadcasts Schools of the Moore County system will present a series of weekly radio broadcasts over WEEB' starting today (Friday) at 10:30 a. m. and continuing at the “13 me time every Friday through May 2. Teachers and pupils will take 'art in the half-hour programs, -tarting with a group from the Carthage school today. Thereafter orograms will be heard as fol lows: Aberdeen school, February 29- Bobbins, March V, Farm Life. March 14; West End, March 21: Carthage, Mbrch 28; Cameron, April 4; Westmoore, April 11- Vass-Lakeview, April 18; High- falls, April 25; Carthage, May 2. John Beasley Touring With Duke Glee Club John Beasley, Jr., sophomore at Duke, is appearing with the famed Duke University Men’s Glee club during its longest tour in history, which opened last Friday. The club will give concerts in ' 8 cities throughout the East from New York to Miami, appearing o*' a nationwide broadcast over the NBC network March 29, and or a CBS television show March 31 The singers are all members o^ the 200-voice Duke University Chapel choir. The touring group of 45 men is chosen from the choir and the 150 men who make up the club at its home concerts. John is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Beasley of East Indiana av- nue. He graduated at Southern Pines High school in June 1950 A course to train men for Dairy Herd Improvement Association testing work will be held at N. C State College, Raleigh, from^ March 10 through 22. There is a* ood demand for DHIA testers throughout the State. Drs. Ne*il and McLean VETERINAHIANS Southern Pines. N. C. Collision At Cameron May Be Last; “Cloverleaf” Will Eliminate Hazard What may be the last accident to take place at one of the state’s most dangerous intersections—or one of the last, at any rate—was a collision last Saturday after noon on US Highway 1 where it is entered by NC 27 at Cameron. Materials are already on the ground for the construction of a “cloverleaf” overpass by which traffic may flow safely from one of these important traffic arteries into the other. The accident occurred when Sgt. Samuel R. Bower, 35, of Fort Bragg emerged from NC 27 and tur;ied south on Highway 1 just in time to collide with a north bound car. The second car was driven b^ William T. Bird, Mor- ven school superintendent, who had his wife with him. No one was hurt but the impact knocked both cars a considerable distance and damaged each to the extent of several hundred dollars. According to the State Highway Patrol report, no one was found at fault, as Sergeant Bower had stopped and signaled correctly, and neither car was going too fast. However, neither could see the other coming until too late to avoid a crash. The “cloverleaf” overpass, it is believed, will be the first on any North Carolina highway. It was hastened along by the fact that NC 27 is now a main road htto Foit iiiagg, carrying much traf fic and destined to carry more, in cluding Army convoys. Many accident? have taken place there in past years, includ-, ing several fatal ones. The inter section has lately been widened and remodeled but is still, partis ly “blind.” PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS INSULATED BRICK SIDING ASBESTOS SIDING & ROOFING Completely Installed — 36 MONTHS TO PAY State Engineering & Sales Co. Southern Pines, N. C. Phone 2-8932 244 N. West Broad St. ¥ SEVEN SmR 90 PROOF 0 $3.(>5 4|5 quart $2.30 FuUPint J IMri mun H praoL Till ttnitM wlusUtt an 4 nan ir am id ftv»% tMgd Bittiy. UVk% nitnl syirite tttfflii baa inAL tSySstn^takhkiy 4yHaiML lift straiiM wUskii S |ian id VA% itn^U vkiskq I yiaa M OOODERHAM a WORTS LTD., PEORIA, ILUNOtS Bill Littlejohn and The Three Silhouettes 'AMERICA'S MOST EXCITING COMBO' Featuring Bill Littlejohn, Jesse Grant, Ernest Chesson and Chester Saunders -will be atr The Village Inn Saturday Night, Feb. 23 Though scarcely six months out of their Richmond, Virginia habitat, these four men have already tasted their entree to musical stardom. Critics in every section of fhe country have acclaimed them the most refreshing unit to come before the public since King Cole first stirred audiences with his exciting renditions. Although not generally known, Littlejohn is the original creator of the Slam Stewart type of bass playing. He is credited with having “sung along with his solos” long before the Stewart version caught public fancy. The Village Inn U. S. Highway 1 Southern Pines, N. C,