THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 1S5G THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Page FIFTEEN DRIVE CAREFULLY — SAVE A LIFE ! Have Your Summer Clothes Cleaned and Stored for the Winter at Valet MRS. D. C. JENSEN Where Cleaning and Prices Are Better! News and Personals from Vass Bessie Cameron Smith, Representative — Telephone Vass 2I7) Girl Scouts Entertain Girl Scout Troop 5, led by Mrs. Howard Gschwind with Mrs. P. B. Irby as assistant, entertained their families ^t a covered dish supper at the Vass community house Friday evening, followed by a program' of folk dancing and Pid you know this fact about,.. *c »v North Carolina is the 23rd State in number of airports with 114. It ranks 20th in number of airplanes and 20th in number of licensed pilots. North Carolina also has one first place in aviation that can never be taken away from it—the first flight by man in an airplane—Wilbur Wright at Kitty Hawk, N. C., in 1903. Further dramatic progress in aviation, both commercial and private, is in the immediate future for North Carolina. Many thousands of visitors walk up Kill Devil Hill annually to visit the Wright Memorial, where not the least of its attfactions are the surrounding countryside and its law abiding people who favor "legal control" of the sale of malt beverages in the best interest of wholesome conditions and their hospitable community. North Carolina Division UNITED STATES BREWERS FOUNDATION, INC. THE B E V E R A G JE O F M O D E'R AT I O N court of awards^ Around 40 at tended. Supper was served buffet style from a long table covered with a white cloth and decorated with a floral arrangement in shades of yellow and orange, flanked by yellow Ccmdles in crystal holders. The girls sang the invocation. The program opened with a ballet number by Jeanette Mul- linix, attractively costumed, with music by Mrs. Irby. The other dances represented work the girls had done to earn the Folk Dance badge. They were intro duced by Mrs. Gschwind, with brief explanations. Dances given were: Children’s Polka (German), Bow, Bow, Be linda (American), Donkey Dance (Mexican), Bleking (Swedish), Dance of Greeting (Danish), Sev en Steps (German), Chimes of Dunkirk, a Belgian folk dance related to the ring of church bells, and Carousel (Swedish). The last named represented a merry-go-round, with two cir cles, the inner, composed of large girls, representing the horses and the' outer, made up of smaller girls, as the riders. A lively mo tion folk song by the 18 scouts present was the closing number of the program. Badges did not arrive in time to be presented, but Mrs. Gsch wind read the list of awards and asked the girls to stand as their names were called. Girls earning awards are as follows: den flower, farmer, folk dancer. Susan Irby, drawing and paint ing, garden flower, child care, folk dancer. Jeanette MuUinix, outdoor cook, dancer, folk dancer. Doreen Keith, folk dancer. Ann Edwards, folk dancer. Bonnie Hicks, folk dancer. Dana Thomas, storyteller, folk dancer, athlete. Joanne Brewer, cook, athlete, folk dancer. Guests were asked to join the scouts in forming the friendship circle and singing God Bless America, as a closing number. To Lead Service The Rev. James Eskridge, Methodist pastor, plans to go to Mississippi at Thanksgiving