FRIDAY, JUNE 11. 1954 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Phone 2-5804 GEORGE W. TYNER PAINTING & WALLPAPERING 205 Midland Road SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. DID YOU KNOW lhat you can buy or trade for a brand new Rocket ‘‘88” 2-Door Oldsmobile For $2438,00 Complete with deluxe steering wheel and solid chrome wheel covers at PHILLIPS MOTOR SALES Southern Pines. N. C. Come in and ask about this car Phone 2-4411 ROOM See us NOW for your CONDITIONER be ahead loo with Free Installation • SAVE MONEY NOV/ — and a lot of sweltering misery thjs sum mer — by ordering your new G-E Room Air Conditioner within the next 2 weeks! By acting at once you’ll get FREE INSTALLA TION (*special wlrjng, if neces sary, or use In other than double- hOng windows not included.) BARROW - PAGE APPLIANCES Southern Pines, N. C. ^Metros* L>o m»J^ompanf Bsro Ills Melrose CVvsSle.'jX) HAMJ^ ^^JfyMe/nse and &"PaV $050 PINT ninety QQ proof straight whiskies 7 years blended with grain neutral spirh^ tmAISHT WHISKIES 7 YEARS OLD; 60% GRAIN NEUTRAL MELROSE DISTILLERS. INC.. NEW YORK, N. W 4-H Club Girls Spending Week At Swannanoa Camp Assistant Home Agent, Three Other . Adults With Group Forty-two Moore County 4-H Club girls left by bus Monday morning for a week at the 4-H camp near Swannanoa in Bun combe County. They will return Saturday. Adults accompanying the group are Mrs. Ruth Muse, assistant Home Demonstration agent; Miss Peggy Blue and Mrs. Bernice Ragsdale, both of Carthage, Route 3, and Miss Nancy Snider of Rob bins, Route 1. Girls attending the camp are: Nancy Auman, West End; Patsy Lou Baker, Carthage; Ella Mae Blue, Vass, Route 2; Janet Blue, and Rebecca Blue, Carthage, Route 3; Juanita Mae Bost, Eagle Springs; Jo Anne Brewer, Vass; Sarah Bost, Eagle Springs; Edna Lorraine Caddell, Carthage; Jane Caviness, Carthage; Julia Eliza beth Comer, Cameron, Route 1; Elizabeth J. Cockman and Lor- na E. Cockman, Robbins; Judy Cameron, Vass, Route 2; Dorothy Joan Davis, Robbins, Route 1; Ann Edwards, Vass; Margaret An nie Hinson, Cameron; Julia Han- ner. West End; Marie Marsh and Carol Marsh, Carthage, Route 2; Barbara Matthews and Doris Mat thews, Carthage, Route 3; Sarah Ann McAnulty, Robbins, Route 1; Sue McKenzie, Pinehurst. Ella Ruth McLeod, Carthage; Grace Marie Nall, Robbins; Betty Oldham, Glendon; Mary Lynn Oldham, Vass; Jane Owen, Sea- grove, Route 2; Linda Parker, Cameron; Kay Patterson, Cam eron; Sally Ferguson Phillips, Cameron; Carolyn Ragsdale, Car thage, Route 3; Dorothy Mae Rit ter, Cameron, Route 1; Geneva Shields, Bennett, Route 2; Betty Lou Shaw, Cameron, Route 1; Norma Lugene Smith, Cameron, Route 1; Margaret Swaggerty and Carol Swaggerty, Cameron, Route 2; Loretta Grace Thomas, Jackson Springs; Dana Thomas, Cameron, Route-1; Carolyn Sue Williams, Robbins. Farmers Home Administration Changes Designed To Improve Agency’s Service Measures to speed up and fur-"* ther improve Farmers Home Ad ministration services to farmers have recently been developed in Washington under the direction o fSecretary Benson, Horace J. Isenhower, State Director at Ra leigh, announced this week. The information was brought to Moore County farmers by C. C. Linger felt, FHA supervisor for the county. Many of the decisions formerly made in state offices will now be made in the counties. County su pervisors, the employees who deal directly with the farmers, will have final approval on a larger number of loans and will have more authority in working with other creditors and in taking steps to help borrowers solve their fi nancial problems. Greater use will be made of state and county committees. New state committees, to be appoint ed in the near future, will be called upon frequently to review agency operations and make sure they are efficiently serving local needs. County Committeemen will be relied upon to an even greater extent than in the past to help adapt national policies to local needs. Services of other public and pri vate organizations will be used to the maximum extent possible. County Home Demonstration agents will help Farmers Home Administration borrowers with their family living problems. Every possible step will be taken to make sure that no Government funds are advanced when private or cooperative credit is available to meet the needs. Lenders will be urged to supply funds for insured farm ownership loans. To expedite real estate loan making, the engineering and ap praisal services of the agency will be placed in county offices, closer to the farmers to be served. En gineer-Appraisers were formerly stationed in State Offices. None of the basic policies under which the agency operates are be- George White, 29, Dies; Services Held Wednesday A young husband and father, living in Pinebluff, succumbed Monday night at Duke Hospital, Durham, to leukemia. He had been in failing health for some tihie but diagnosis of leukemia was made only two weeks before his death. Funeral services for George H. White, 29, were held Wednesday afternoon at Pinebluff Baptist church, conducted by the Rev. Ray GO'snell of Ashley Heights, former pastor of the church, as sisted by the Rev. Jack Ewart Of Aberdeen. Burial was in the fam ily plot in Old Bethesda cemetery. Mr. White was an insurance salesman, local representative of the Home Security Life Insurance Co. He was a native of Chester, S. C., but had lived in Pinebluff since he was 12 years old. His pa rents were the late W. A. and Belle Dove White. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Ruby Gilley of Spray; three daughters, Barbara, Louise and Lorna Mae of the home; two sons, George, Jr., and Harvey Mark, by a previous marriage; two brothers, Harvey, of Pinebluff, and Robert,' of Selma; three sisters, Mrs. Kath leen Ruth, Mrs. Lily Ruth and Mrs. Ella Mae Smith, all of Ches ter; a half-brother, Jim Dove, of Chester, and three half-sisters, Mrs. Katherine Brooks, of Pine bluff; Mrs. Mamie Smith, of Ches ter, and Mrs. Inez Roberts, of Rockingham. EVERYDAD Has His «r ' V. V.. <*> a GREAT DAY COMING FOR FATHER! ,, GET YOUR WINNING GIFTS HERE! Play your Dad’s day gifting safe! Shop here . . . where he spends his own money (when he has any left!) Every item is man-styled and man .approved. Any gift you select will be a tribute to Dad’s'good taste as well as to your good judgment. ing changed. The same amount of emphasis is placed on helping farmers obtain adequate land and equipment resources, develop good systerris of farming, and adopt proper farm and home man agement practices. RAMMER’S MEN’S SHOP SANFOHD. N. C. Production of strawberries in North Carolina this year is cur rently estimated at 168,000 crates (24-qt.)—about. 10 percent more than the 153,000 crates produced in 1953 but 11 percent less than the 1949-52 average. Conditions, as of May 1, point to an average yield of 105 crates per acre, com pared with an average of 90 crates last year and 75 crates per acre for the 4-year average yield. I At Hayes Book Shop I I I I Parker s new I ! ball point pen I TOP QUALITY FOODS AT I^PECIAL LOW PRICES — ■ ■ •—• - '— ■ ■ - — - ...only ball point pen to give you a choice of point sizes! 0. Choose the point that suits your writing best TO MARK THE OPENING OF McRae^s Super-Market Highway No. 1 J. A. McRAE VASS. N. C. Tel. 9462 and 2461 FRIDAY, JUNE 18 Hayes Book Shop Southern Pines FREE !!! t EIGHT $5 Food Baskets will be given away on Opening Day, Saturday. FOUR at 11 a. m. and FOUR at 7 p. m. Winners may select their groceries FREE DELIVERY YOU’RE INVITED!!! Yes, you are especially invited to visit us in our new building. We are grateful for the loyal patron age that has resulted in this ex pansion. and will continue to give our customers the best values we can possibly give. THESE SPECIAL PRICES IN EFFECT FOR TWO WEEKS SMOKING TOBACCO 2 for 25c LARGE RINSO 2Sc LARGE SUPERSUDS 2 for 49c MILK, large 2 for 23c TEA. Vi lb. 21c IVORY SOAP, 10c size 12 for 73c SWAN SOAP, 10c size 4 for 19c MEAT SPECIALS ROUND CUBE STEAK 69c lb. CLEAR STEW BEEF 39c lb. HAMBURGER 39c lb. THESE ARE SAMPLES OF OUR REGULAR PRICES CLOROX gallon 54c BREAD 17c FLOUR, 25-lb. bag $1.54 SUGAR, 5 lbs. 50c; 10 lbs. 99c PINK QQ SALMON, can 49c TOILET TISSUE. 4 rolls 37c FAT BACK. lb. 23c SMOKED SAUSAGE, lb. 25c BOLOGNA, lb. 38c GARDEN HOSE. 50 ft. $3.25; 25 ift $1.95 COME IN AND LOOK OVER OUR WIDE SELECTION OF ITEMS AND NOTE THE QUALITY AND PRICES Complete Line of Dulany Frozen Foods Sherwin-Williams Paints and Varnishes Dressed Fryers and Hens — Fresh Fish Canning SuppHes. including Spices ESSO GAS AND OIL FREE DELIVERY FREE DELIVERY \l