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■ -B i I i 03 Page EIGHT THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina THURSDAY, JULY 5. 1956 Cuban Good Will Tour Planned By Moore Boy Scouts Davis FamilyHolds m0 Reunion At Home On Carthage Rte. 3 Various scouts and their parents from Moore District met Monday night at Pinehurst Community Church to lay plans for a Cuban good will tour which is schedul ed to be held late this month and part of August, according to Frank Yandell, Scout executive. Bill Roth, Council representa tive, discussed plans lor the trip with the group. WilUam McKen zie, Scoutmaster of Troop 7, Pine hurst, will be one of 13 scout lead ers going. Others now scheduled lor the trip are a dozen members of troops in Pinehurst and Southern -Pines. Complete itinerary will be an nounced later this month. Three chartered busses will take some 88 Occoneechee Council scouts to Miami, where they will leave by boat for Havana, as guests of the Boy Scouts of Cuba. Convention Will Be Held Here By State Association Southern Pines Recreation Program The North Carolina Association] of Assistants and Deputy Clerks of Court will hold its annual workshop convention in Southern Pines August 2-4, it was an nounced today by officers of the association. Between 60 and 75 delegates from counties throughout the state are expected to attend the mjeeting. A committee from the Chamber of Commerce, which included president Mark King, J. T. Over- ton and Mrs. Bernice Harrington, has been in charge of preliminary arrangements, working closely with Mrs. Fred Beck, Deputy Clerk of Coirrt of Moore Coimty, and Miss Blanche Collins, assist ant Clerk of Court, who will be representatives from this county. Highlight of the meeting will be a banquet at the Southern Pines Country Club. Complete details have not been worked out yet. Descendants of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Davis, in response to an invitation from Miss Ethel Davis, met at the Davis home on Carthage Route 3 between Vass and Carthage, now occupied by Miss Davis and her brother, H. P. Davis, last Sunday for a family reunion. It was a special pleasure to the [relatives who attended to have their aimt, Mrs. John W. Kiker, 92, of Polkton present. Mrs. Kiker is a sister of the late Mr. Davis and the only one who remains of a large family of sisters and brothers. Her mind is alert and she greatly enjoyed talking to her nieces and nephews, their chil dren and grandchildren. A picnic table had been set up under a large tree in the yard, and at noon this was filled with choice foods in wide variety. The Rev. Fred Davis of Fair Bluff gave the invocation. The after noon was spent in conversation as relatives who get together very infrequently caught up on family happenings. Attending the reunion were; Mrs. John W. Kiker and daughter. Miss Viola Kiker, of Polkton; Mrs. Lee Newman and children, Stagg and Ann, Spokane, Wash.; Mrs. L. L. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Davis and daughter, Patricia, and Mr, and Mrs. Bobby Hodgins, all of Guilford; Billie Davis, Nor folk, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Jer- nigan, Beth Ann and Miriam Jemigan, Dudley; Miss Germaine Davis, Greensboro; the Rev. and Mrs. Fred Davis and children, David and Terry Jane, Fair Bluff. Also, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sew ard, Ann and Larry Seward, Lau rens, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Overman, Jimmy and Randy Da vis and Timmy Overman, Greensboro; Miss Davis and H. P. Davis of the home; and addi tional guests, the Rev. and Mrs. Jim Eskridge of the Vass Metho dist Church and Mrs. S. R. Smith of Vass. Quite a number of relatives were unable to attend. JUNE 15 - AUGUST 15 Sites: Town Park, Memorial Field, Southern Pines H. S. Gym, Aberdeen Lake Our recreation program this year will be centralized in the Town Park and the boys and girls will be separated this year into two groups. Group 1 will be composed of boys and girls from ages of 4-6 years, and Group 2 will be composed of boys and girls 7-10 years of age. Older boys and girls will be handled separately. Robert Olmsted, Former Resident, Died Wednesday Mrs. Holland, 65, County Native, Dies; Rites Held ' PROGRAM Monday- 9:30-10 9:30-10 10:30-12 10:30-12 2:00- 3 2:00- 3; 3:30- 4 5:00- 7 ;30 Group 1 at Town Park. Supervised play period with group games and individual games. ;30—Group 2 at Town Park. Supervised play period with group games and individual games. ;00—Group 1 at Town Park. Story hour. ;00—Group 2 at Town Park. Tennis, croquet, badminton, etc. ;30 Group 1 at Town Park. Supervised play period with group games and individual games. :30—Group 2 at Town Park. Handicrafts, dramatics, group games. :30—Group 2. Skating party under supervision. ;00—Little Tar Heel League baseball at Memorial Field. (Boys 8-12) Tuesday- 9:30-12: at Town Park. Handicrafts, dramatics, group Judge Rowe Saw Ill-Fated Plane Before Takeoff 9:30-12: 10:00-12 2:00- 4 5:00- 7 7:15-10 00—Group 1 games. . j. -j ;00 Group 2 at Town Park. Supervised group and individual games. 00—Baseball, softbaU, and footbaU for boys and girls at Me morial Field. Ages 12-17. ;30—Supervised swimming parties at Aberdeen Lake. Omy boys and girls from ages 7-16 will be taken. The activi ty bus will meet thq boys and girls at the Town Park at 2:00 P. M. ;00 Pony League baseball at Memorial Field. (Boys 12-15). ;30 Adult softball league at Memorial Field for adults only. Wednesday—Same as Monday schedule. Thursday—Same as Tuesday schedule. Friday— , i i rr 9:30-10:30—Hiking and supervised group games for Group 1 at Town Park. , ' . 9:30-12:00—Group 2 will meet at the Town Park and will go to the High School gymnasium for basketball and volleyball. 2:00- 4:30—Supervised play periods for groups 1 and 2 at the Town Park. Parents bringing their children to the Town Park be sure and leave their children in the hands of Miss Kay Davis or Miss Joan Howarth or Mr. Me Leonard. One or all three will be on duty. Parents are asked to please bring their children on time and to pick them up on time. Olympic Funds Drive Carried Over 2 Weeks Hayes Designed House Featured Jury Selected For August Term Of Superior Court In National Mag Judge J. Vance Rowe, just back from a vacation trip to California, where he attended the annual Ki- wanis International convention, had an interesting story to tell— and it wasn’t about the conven tion. He saw a United Airlines plane standing alongside the American Airlines plane he was taking to Washington. Less than an hour later the United Airlines plane crashed with a TWA plane over the Grand Canyon, killing every- • one aboard. Judge Rowe S2dd he had never thought of taking either of the planes, since both were going to New York and he was going to Washington. All three planes were non-stop. While in California Judge Rowe visited his daughter and son-in- law and, for the first time, saw his grandson, now three years old. After riding in big and “terri bly” fast planes to California and back. Judge Rowe had a bit of a let-down when he reached Ral eigh. J. Vance, Jr., met him in a Piper Cub, hardly big enough for two . . . but enough to get him back to Southern Pines. The July issue of the magazine “House and Home” carries an ar ticle describing a residence in Greensboro which was recently completed by the firm of Thomas J. Hayes, Jr. The local architectural firm specializes in buildings of con temporary design and the Greensboro home, one of the firm’s most recent achievements, besides being featured in the na tionally-circulated magazine, is attracting wide-spread attention, according to news from Greens boro. Hayes is the architect who has been commissioned by the town to draw plans for the proposed new town haU. A proposed floor plan for the new structure, which will be lo cated on the present site of town hall, has been completed and will be submitted to Council at its next Ineeting. 'DANIEL. WEBSTER STRAIGHT BOURBON • WHISKEY PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS Friends Here Learn Of Recent Passing Of Mrs. A. R. Wolf Seventy-five names were drawn for jury duty for the August term of Superior Court at the meeting of the Board of Commissioners Monday. From the list a grand jury and a petit jury will be chosen. Judge Walter Crissman wiU preside at the August term, sched uled to begin August 6. Following is a complete list of the jury list: McNeill Township—Billy Wil liams, Ivey Jackson, Harold Jack- son, Mrs. Pauline Crossland, Mrs. C. C. McDonald, James F. Wil liams, N. L. Monroe, J. A. Fergu son, J. I. Saunders, W. H. Mat thews, Q. E. Williams, C. W. Wil liams, and Billy E. Holder. Also, J. K. Watson, John New ton, Russell Jordan, James E. Hudson, S. A. Benson, W. H. Lee, William F. Smith, Roger Marion, Reid Kelly, W. Jack Morgan, Thomas S. Craven, Edith Titus, Roy Horton, Mrs. Elizabeth San ford, S. J. Ferguson, George M. McDermott, M. H. Gardener, and Charlie Caldwell. Sandhill Township — H. R. White, M. G. McRae, Burgess Smith, William R. Taylor, Lloyd T. Peters, Howard D. Morgan, H. Milton Russell, James A. Cook, James H. Carpenter, Walter Friends here have received news of the death in Altoona, Pa., on June 14 of Mrs. A. R. Wolfe, 95, for many years a winter resi dent of Southern Pines. She and her daughters. Miss Marguerite Wolfe and Mrs. Ralph Welch, left their home here in May to spend the summer in Pennsylvania. The family attends St. Anthony’s Cath olic Church while here. In addi tion to the daughters, one son, Richard Wolf, of Sunbury, Pa., survives. Funeral services for Robert Arch Olmsted, 79, retired attor ney who died Wednesday after noon at Pinebluff Sanitarium, will be held Saturday at Couders- port. Pa. A former resident of Southern Pines, Mr. Olmsted was bom at Coudersport June 21, 1877, son of Arthur George and EUen Ross Olmsted. He studied law in the o^ice of his father, an attorney Who was a judge and served also as speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Mr. Olmsted first came to the Sandhills with his family as a Pinehurst winter visitor in 1910 In 1924, after four years of resi dence at Philadelphia, he made his permanent home at Southern Pines, building the house now owned by W. P. Saunders on Massachusetts Avenue extension. He and his family lived in South ern Pines from 1924 until they moved to Sanford in 1936. He lived at Sanford until about two years ago when he became a patient at the Pinehurst Conval escent Home and later at Pine- bluff Sanitarium. His death Wed nesday followed a stroke suffered at the sanitarium on Monday. While Mr. Olmsted retired from the active practice of law many years ago, he maintained until about 1948 lumbering and mining interests in Tennessee. He had served as an official of both the Altamont Land Co. and the Sewanee Fuel and Iron Co., both located in that state. Survivors include his wife, Kathryn Fizell Olmsted, of Pine- bluff; a son, Arthur, of Denver, Colo.; a daughter, Mrs. Glen Rounds of Pinebluff; five grand children and six great-grandchil dren. A son, Warren F. Olmsted of Sanford, an attorney, died in 1950. . Graveside services will be held at Eulalia Cemetery in Coud ersport Saturday morning at 10 o’clock, conducted by the Rev. John Moore, Episcopal minister of Coudersport. Mrs. Ruth McKay Holland, 65, died in the Moore County Hospi tal Monday night. Funeral ,services were held at the Cameron Presbyterian Church Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock, conducted by the Rev. James B. Cooper and the Rev. Mr. Trivetter. Interment followed in the Cam eron cemetery. Mrs. Holland was bom in Moore County, daughter of the late Neill and Mattie McKay. Surviving are her husband. For est P. Holland of the home; one daughter, Mrs. W. F. Williamson of Raleigh; one grandchild; one brother, Neil E. McKay of Hart ford, Conn.; three sisters, Mrs. Carlos McLeod of Olivia, Mrs. John D. McLeod of Aberdeen and Mrs. Jim McDonald of Cameron. Jiist over half the county quota of $1,000 for the 1956 Olympic Fund has been reached. Garland McPherson, chairman, announc ed today. . McPherson said the drive would be held aiiSther two weeks and urged anyone interested in the Olympics, scheduled for Aus tralia this year, to forward their checks to him in Southern Pines. To date, he said, $519 has been subscribed from 47 people^ KEEP THIS AD! Over 20,000 Arthritic and Rheumatic Sufferers have tak en this Medicine since it has been on the market. It is inex pensive, can be taken in the home. For Free information, give name and address to P. O. Box 826, Hot Springs, Arkansas j2128j5c NOTICE This is to notify all persons that Arnold Garner, who was associated with Napoli Supper Club during the past two weeks, is no longer in our employ or otherwise as sociated with us. NAPOLI SUPPER CLUB. July 5, 1956 By R. Scognamillo. THE LINEN CORNER CLOSED JULY 13 TO JULY 27 Wright, Isaac McNeill, Thomas E. Durham, Edward Hunsucker, and Ross E. Heafner. Mineral Springs—^Vernon San ders, James Morgan, Otis E. Puck ett, E. C. Daughtry, Charlie Goines, Arvie D. Porter, Wilbur Calcutt, William W. Davidson, Charles A. Scarborough, and D. W. Currie. Greenwood — Robert Preston, Maxton McKinney,. Luther Mc Neill, A. W. Key, B. J. Stanley, Wilford A. Holt, and Carlton Jones. Ritter—John Henry McLowhan, Edgar P. Brady, James Ed Lucas, John A. Price, WiHiam A. Up church, W. H. Brown, and Carson Phillips. Bensalem—^M. C. Reynolds and Carl Williams. Sheffield—Carol Comer, Jack Craig and M. T. Craven. Airmen And. CP&L Tied For Top Spot In Adult Softball No action this week in the Adult Softball League as players took off for the July 4 hoUday. Results last week show Caro lina Power and Light defeated the Officers at the Air-Ground School 14-5. The win put CP&L into a first place tie with the Air men, both with 4-0 records. In the other game the Catholic Laymen, who hadn’t managed a win all season, edged out the Church of Wide Fellowship 11-10 to move into a three-way tie for second place. The Laymen, along with Church of Wide Fellowship and the Southern Pines Lions Club, has a 1-2 record. Other season records show the Tankers with 0-3 and Officers, 1-3. Next games are scheduled for Tuesday "of next week, when the Officers meet the Lions and the Church of Wide Fellowship faces Carolina Power and Light. Prices OF USEDCMtS J? JSS»NWV-'^-- JULY -up- Unbelievably Low Priees ENTIRE STOCK MUST GO ! We Mean Business! SOUTHERN PINES MOTOR CO. South West Broad St. Phone 2-5311 86 PROOF Bottled By J. K DOUGHERTY’S SONS, Inc. OistUler* Philadetpliia, SUMMARY OF UNIFORM ANNUAL BUDGET ESTIMATE of Moore County, North Carolina FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING JULY 1, 1956, AND ENDING JUNE 30, 1957 Published in Compliance with Requirements of the “County Fiscal Control Act” Sec. 7, Ch. 146, P.L., 1927 Column 1 Colunm 2 Column 3 FUND Total Budget Requirements Estimate of Revenue td be Available other than Tax Levy (Col. 1, less Col. 2) Tax Levy to Balance Budget Colunm 4 Estimate of Uncollectible Taxes, Commis sions on Collections and Tax Payers’ Discovmt Column 5 Colunm 6 Column 7 Column 8 (Col. 3, plus Ck)l. 4) Total Amount of Tax Levy Estimate of Property Valuation Estimate of Tax Rate On $100 Valuation Tax Rate of Last Pyeceding Levy County—General and Courts $249,625 $172,600 $ 77,025 $ 8,558 $ 85,583 $43,000,000 .20 .20 Health - - - 39,800 16,580 23,220 2,580 25,800 .06 .06 Welfare - 94,691 37,000 57,691 6,410 64,101 .15 Poor — 10,500 6,630 3,870 430 4,300 .01 Debt Service -- 6,316 6,316 000 000 000 .00 .00 Total Other than Schools : 400,932 239,126 161,806 17,978 179,784 .42 .42 Schools—Current Expense - 208,534 Capital Outlay 531,000 154,292 264,000 54,242 6,027 60,269 .11 267,000 29,667 296,667 Debt Service 46,414 7,675 38,739 4,304 43,043 .10 Total Schools 785,948 425,967 359,981 39,998 399,979 .93 .93 TOTAL $1,186,880 $665,093 $521,787 $57,976 $579,763 1.35 1.35
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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July 5, 1956, edition 1
10
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