THURSDAY. DECEMBER 1. 1955
THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
PAGE NINETEEN
; P
PINEBLUFF NEWS
By MRS. EHRMAN PICKLER
Family Reunion
The annual reunion of the Pe
ters clan was held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Hudson with 50 mernbers present.
A picnic dinner was spread on a
long table on the lawn, with tur
key, chicken and country ham
and all the trimmings.
At Camp Durant
J. Douglas David, Harry Howie,
Jr., and Freddie Pickier went to
Camp Durant on Friday to take
on Ordeal in “The Order of the
Arrow” in Boy Scouting. Harry
Lee Howie accompanied his lath
er. Prof. J. D. Ives went up on
Saturday to complete his ordeal in
the Order of the Arrow.
Brief Mention
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Brooks
and family spent Thanksgiving in
Laurinburg with Mr. ajid Mrs.
Clayton Brooks.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Moshier
and son Ricky went to Oxford,
Mich., for the Thanksgiving holi
days with Mr. Moshier’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Moshier.
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Smith
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Simpson, in Sanford Sunday.
Mrs. Della Ramsey, Sammy
Ramsey, Mrs. Frank Neyman and
Teressa Neyman of Chattanooga,
Tenn., visited Mrs. Ramsey’s sis
ter, Mrs. Emma Blevin, in the
Tesses
Luce(
-For-
POPULAR UNES FROM
REGULAR STOCK
, offered you
at
PRE - CHRISTMAS SALE
McLean’s Style Shop
South Street
ABERDEEN, N. C.
DON’T
AWAY!
Don't go away to do you Christmas shopping
until you see our complete assortment of Holi
day Goods, consisting of Perfumes, Toilet Wa
ter, Fountain Pens, Billfolds, Kodaks, Clocks
and many other items.
We shall appreciate your checking our store
before going out of town to shop. We are one
of many local merchants who are interested in
Southern Pines and who are working to make
it a better town. If we don't have the articles
you want, we can get them fast, or if you need
them at once, we are sure you can find them
at some other good store in Southern Pines.
TRADE AT HOME
Try your Drug Store first where you
get personal service
Southern Pines Pharmacy
"The Friendly Drug Store"
Brady Brooks home over the
Tfianksgiving holidays.
Miss Pauline Lampley of Char
lotte was at home for, the week
end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Lampley.
Mrs. Lucile Oliver and daugh
ter, Miss Mary Ellen Oliver, went
to Washington for tha holidays for
a visit with Mrs. Oliver’s niece,
Mrs. Don Naismith, and Lt. Nais-
mith.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Marts of
Fredericktown, Ohio, stopped
over for a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Marts. They were en route
to Lakeland, Fla., where they will
spend the winter.
Miss Alice Moss of Chapel Hill
and Misses Sue and Josephine
Moss of Charlotte were at home
during the holidays with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Moss.
Murdock Hewitt of Shallotte
was a guest of Mr. and Mrs.
George Hudson during the holi
days.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Adcox spent
Sunday in Norwood with Miss
Louise Avitt and in Albemarle
where they visited Mr. and Mrs.
J. L. Pickier.
Miss Becky Moss of Cherryville
visited her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Moss, Thanksgiving'.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Lamp-
ley and children of New Bern
were at home for the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Collins
and Mrs. J. R. Lampley.
Gerald Foushee of Durham
spent the weekend with his cous
in, Lester McCaskill. His mother,
Mrs. L. L. Foushee, joined him on
Sunday after spending the week
end in Raeford with her sister,
Mrs. John USsery, and Capt. Us-
sery. They returned to Durham
Sunday afternoon.
Sgt. and Mrs. John H. Carpen
ter and daughter Marsha and Mrs.
Ehrman visited Mrs. V. F. Tarlton
in Sanford Sunday.
Mrs. J. R. Lampley and Mrs.
Earl Lampley visited Mrs. Lamp-
ley’s brother, George Melton, at
Lee County Hospital in Sanford
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Leavitt spent
Wednesday and Thursday in Ral
eigh with their daughter, Mrs. T.
Warren Goldston, and Mr. Gold-
ston.
Msis Shirley Tyner of Raleigh
spent the holidays with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wade H. Tyner.
Fewer daylight hours, fogged
windshield and leaf-strewn pave
ments add up to a greater need
for caution and alertness as win
ter light fails. Reduced speed and
increased alertness are the key
answers to traffic problems in
volving poor visibility. Motorists
should make it a practice to clean
headlamps, windshield and car
windows cf accumulations of
traffic and weather film before
the driver’s view is obscured.
Korea Described
For Rotary Club
By Col. Kiunisou
Col. Paul Kinnison, a member
of the Southern Pines Rotary
Club and a staff officer at the
USAF Air Ground Operations
School here, illustrated a talk on
Korea with colored slides of
scenes in that Far Eastern nation
when he spoke to the club last
Friday.
Meeting at the Country Club
for their regular luncheon ses
sion, Rotarians were told by the
speaker that the recorded history
of Korea goes back to the year
50 B. C.
Colonel Kinnison traced this
history through the introduction
of Chinese culture in the fourth
century A. D. to the recent con
flict between North and South
Korea in which the United States
took part.
Ninety per cent of Korea’s 22
million population depend on
agriculture for a livelihood, with
fishing the next most important
source of income, the speaker
said. Korea is about 600 miles
long, 135 miles wide and has an
area of some 35,000 square miles,
he noted, tracing the involved
history of the nation’s relations
with Russia and Japan and vari-!
ous features of Japanese rule in j
Korea which began after Japan
won its war with Russia in 1904-
’05. ^ rj
Korea’s widespread and intense
interest in education, and its va
riety of religious beliefs were told
by Colonel Kinnison. Hunting
experiences there—with the chief
game deer and pheasants—were
related and were of special inter
est to club members.
Guests included Major E. B.
Crew, of the Marine Corps, who
is an instructor at the Air-Ground
School; George Casey, Sanford;
Frank 'Warner, Garden City. N.
Y.; Jerry Lynch, Jamestown, N.
Y.; Fred Howland, Titusville, Pa.;
Dick Heilman, Scarsdale, N. Y.;
arid James Lightbourhe, Jr., Hol
land, Va.
Though a thesome task, fallen
leaves must be raked up, not only
for beauty but for safety. Heavy
rains can reach flood proportions
by clogged gutters, drains and
sewers. Young and old alike re
ceive serious inury from falls on
slippery leaves.
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O Men’s Dress Shoes 4.95 - 10.95'
d] Children’s Slips 49 - 3.00
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ABERDEEN, N. C.
n Ladies Nylon Panties 29 - 1.25 I □ Boy’s Sport Coats 3.98 - 5.95
□ Ladies Orion Cardigans -_3.98 - 5.95 □ Novelty Ceramic Gifts 59 - 5.95