THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 22. 1956 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina Last Rites Conducted In Raleigh Today For Rev. Francis Osborne Page SEVENTEEN The Rev. Francis Moore Os borne, 77, who retired in 1940 after 35 years of distinguished service in the Episcopal ministry, died Friday at Moore County Hospital after a short illness. He served for 15 years at Char lotte, 12 years at the Theological Seminary of the University of the South at Sewanee, Tenn., years at Pitts- t then for eight burgh, Pa. -t Funeral services were held at Christ Episcopal Church, in Ra leigh, Wednesday at 3 p.m., con ducted by the Right Rev. Austin Pardue.yBishop of Pittsburgh; the Rev. R. N. Rollitt, of Pittsburgh; the Rev. Martip Caldwell, of Em manuel Episcopal Church, South ern Pines; the Rev. James Mc Dowell Dick, of the Church of the Good Shepherd, and the Rev. I Stephen Walke, rector of Christ Church. ! • i .*i j ^ Burial followed in Oakwood Cemetery, Raleigh. He was born January 29, 1879, at Fletcher, in Buncombe Coun ty, son of the Rev. Edwin A., and Frances Moore Osborne. His fa ther, a former Presbyterian eld er who became one of the most famous converts and divines of the Episcopal Church in North} Carolina, was later Archdeacon of the Convocation of Charlotte, burgh. and founder of the Thompson Or- Following his retirement 16 pl^ge there. ^ ago, he and his wife pur- Francis Osborne graduated m , 1899 at the University of North j ^ home. Boxwood Carolina, where he was captain | Court, at Pinehurst, where they of the football team, a medal- have since lived. He remained winning track star, editor of the busy and useful serving as sup- Yackety Yack, a member of Del- ply rector for many churches REV. FRANCIS OSBORNE theology at the Theological Sem inary. In 1932 he accepted the Calvary Church, Pitts- Vote On Peanut Crop Quotas To Be Held Dec. 11 The Referendum on marketing quotas for the 1957-58-59 peanut crops will be^held December 11, according to Sam DilUng, vice- chaurman of the Moore County Agricultural Stabilization And Conservation Committee. If at least two-thirds of the farmers voting in the referendum favor quotas, they will be in ef fect for the 1957, 1958, and 1959 peanut crops. If quotas are not approved by the necessary two- thirds of the farmers voting, quotas will not be in effect for the 1957 crop and another refer endum will be held in 1957 on quotas for the following three peanut crops. If two-thirds of the voters vote in favor, price support on pea nuts will be set at the highest level permitted by law and the existing supply situation. If the vote in the Referendum is unfav orable, price support on peanuts will drop to fifty percent of par^ ity. THlATKtS CAROLINA Announce Opening !i Of Piano Sales Dealership Here The firm is the only company stored, he says, or if it was put in this area specializing in piano into an infested bin, insect dam- sales. CHECK GRAIN, Now is the time to check all grain in storage, warns H. Eldon Scott, Extension entomologist at Continuing through this Thursday, Friday and Satur- — -- CO..;., „ for the ■n.ank.giving "SaShlTri wMcf wmT! — Women—M men seldom see known as Paddock-Gibbs Piano them—provide the hilarity as Sales, well as the dramatic fireworks of “The Opposite Sex,” one of M- G-M’s biggest productions of the year. A stand-out group of Holly- age should now be apparent. Treatment now will reduce the most likely protect the grain un infestation to a low point and til early spring, he adds. PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS The residence of Gibbs, at 350 Crestview Road, will serve as temporary headquarters for the firm. Ciurently on display are two spinet and console models. wood headliners holds the center of the stage in this malicious, merry and musical expose of the foibles and frolics of the female of the species, headed by June Allyson, Joan Collins, Delores Gray, Ann Sheridan and Ann i i.- i. i. , Miller, with Leslie Nielson and Jeff Richards as the men around featuring laminated mahogany soundboards. The firm has been awarded a franchise in this area for Story and Clark pianos. Gibbs, a member of the South- Pruning - Cabling - Bracing - Feeding Cavity Work a Specialty WRITE OR CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES SOUTHEASTERN TREE SERVICE LLOYD HALL Phone Aberdeen Windsor 4-7335—or Phone 8712 - Burgaw. N. C. - Box 564 JAMES A. SMITH. Mgr. 30 Years Experience m24lf ta Kappa Epsilon fraternity and Gimghouls secret society. He won his B. D. degree at the Theological Seminary of the Uni versity of the South at Sewanee, Tenn., and studied one year at the General Theological Semin ary, New York. He was married in 1905 to Miss Mary Winder Bryan of Raleigh. His first parish was in Char lotte, where he built and served both Holy Comforter and St. throughout the State. He was related to Adlai Stev enson through their common an cestor, Alexander Osborne, who Robbins Merchants Staging Christmas Promotion Events Members of the Robbins Mer chants Association have started their Christmas promotion, ac cording to Johnny Myers, presi dent. With all members participa ting, the association will carry on lap inte^ve month-long cam paign, beginriing next Thursday, November 29, with a giant Christmas parade through Rob whom the rumpus revolves. Others in the cast include Charlotte Greenwood, jMJoorehead, Joan Blondell and Sam Levene ^ith “guest stars” Harry James,'Art Mooney, Dick Shawn and Jim Backus. A right merry Thanksgiving Holiday en tertainment is assured you. director of music at the Church of Wide Fellowship, and Pad- dock, who is a member of the . 182nd Airborne Division band at 1 Bragg, and organist at the Church of Wide Fellowship, will devote part time to the business. Paddock was formerly con nected with a piano dealership at his home in Bridgeport, Conn. came from New Jersey to settle bins streets. The parade, which m Iredell County in 1748. His begins at 3 p. m., will in great-grandfather Adlai Osborne was on the first bo^lrd of trustees of the University of North Ceuro- lina. p. m., will feature floats, bands from several high schools in the surrounding area and other exhibits. On December 8 a drawing for $50 will be held at the Norfolk A frequent contributor to the Lettep to the Editor” column of Southern Depot in Robbins at 4 ... Pilot, the Rev. Osborne join-Ip. m. Similar drawings will also Martins churches, conttnumg as ed with Mrs. Osborne in August^be held on December 15 and 22, rector of Holy Comforter after in writing a definitive piece i with a grand drawing scheduled enough for a about Gen. J. H. Winder, who was December 24 when the winner I in charge of the Confederate will be presented $500. both grew large full-time rector. In 1906, he organized the first prison camp at Ansonville during Boy Scout troop in Charlotte, and the Civil War. Gen. Winder was in North Carolina. Mrs. Osborne’s great grandfather. In 1920 he returned to the Surviving are his .wife, Mary, University of the South as chap- and one son, Francis Bryan Os- lain, also occupying the chair of | borne of Charlotte. MOTOROLA nP^EdSlQf^ poktAble tv 95 from Model 14P3. 3 models—5 colors to choose from OaUXE MOTOROLA CRUISER PORTABLE TV WITH FEATHERWEIGHT CABINET IN TWO-TONE COLORS You’d be proud to take it any where! Features the same ex- pensive tuner used in $300 LOW (insoles for 26% more power- DOWN fill reception. 90° aluminized tube. Choose from three beautiful two-tone colors. uuMt/f eer the be^. IN TOWN TODAY, Prices incL Fed. Tax and 1-year warranty on picture tube. Open Wednesday Afternoon and 8 pjn. on Friday and Saturday Nights REPAIR SERVICE ON ALL MAKES OF TV SETS PICK-UP AND DELIVERY HOUSE CALLS Allred Television Sales & Service Hy. 1 South—Phone 2-6862 SOUTHERN PINES "Service After the Sale" [ It is necessary, Myers said, for shoppers to hold on to their tick ets. Highlighting the early part of the promotion will be a dance at the community center in Robbins December 8 at 8:30 when a Holi day Jubilee Queen will be chos en. All candidates are from Elise High School. First Rounds Of SPCC Golf Tourney Are Now Underway First round matches in the an nual club championship golf tournament at Southern Pines Country Club have produced no favorite to date, although Joe Carter, runner-up last year, won his match over the weekend, it was reported today by Andy Page, assistant pro at the club. Jack Carter is defending cham pion. He has not played any matches as yet, but is scheduled for this weekend. The tournament is being play ed mostly on weekends by the some 55-60 golfers in the club, with a week allowed to play each match. The matches should be comple ted by December 8. Coming Sunday through Wed nesday, November 25-28, with three Sunday Shows at 3-7-9 is the screen version of Marion Hargraves’ (of “See Here Private Hargrave” fame) delightful story, “The Girl He Left Behind,” star ring Natalie Wood and Tab Hunter, with Jesse Royce Landis, Jim Backus and Murray Hamil ton in support. This is a handsome and slickly paced comedy drama abou^ the Army’s basic training program, which will be especially appeal ing to the teen age audience, and their parents, since the film is dabbed with generous touches of polite young romance, humor and most vivid description of the rigors of basic tradning to come along in quite a while. The story provides a very pleasant opportunity for the good looking young couple to strut their paces, for Jesse Royce Lan dis to properly exasperate as Hunter’s over-protective mother and for Jim Backus to display his usual brand of good humor. There’s also a fine portrayal by Murray Hamilton of a Southern sergeant with an insinuating drawl and non-celluloid manner, the real standout of the film'. turned out by Miss Day and her husband-producer Martin Mel- cher under their Arwin Produc tions banner, and as such, is an auspicious beginning. It is one of those tense, exciting, edge-of-the-seat pictures that never lets on an audience’s at tention from the opening scene to the thrill-packed climax. Starting Thursday night, De cember 29, is the gripping and suspenseful drama “Julie” star ring Doris Day, Louis Jordan and Barry Sullivan. It is the first film Local Insurance Man Qualifies For Top Honor Club J. D. Hobbs, district supervisor here of the Occidental Life In surance Company of Raleigh, has qualified for Occidental’s top honor club composed of leading company representatives and managers. Membership in the Laurence Lee Club, named after Occiden tal’s Chairman of the Board, is open to all company field men whe meet qualifications as to the quality and amount of business produced. Hobbs is expected to attend the Club’s annual sales conference to be held next year at Salt Lake City, Utah. In addition to being a member of the Lee Club, Hobbs is also a member of the Company’s ex clusive “Millionaires Club”, Oc cidental’s highest production honor. Wolmanized^ PRESSURE-TREATED LUMBER STOPS ROT AND TERMITES Sandhill Builders Supply Corporation Service-Qualily-Dependability Tel. Windsor 4-2516 Pinehurst Rd. if Aberdeen, N. C. Top lure for hikers all over the country is the 2,050 mile Appal achian Trail, which extends from Mount Katahdin in Maine to Mount. Oglethorpe in Georgia. ABERDEEN THEATRE wroE Screen "Pictures As They Should Be Seen" SUNRISE THEATRE SOUTHERN PINES Ph. 2-4013 Continuous Shows Daily Thursday ,& Friday. Nov. 22-23 Dan Dailey and Sheree North —in— "The Best Things In Life Are Free' Cartoon and Short Sat., Nov. 24 — Double Feature Robert Wagner in "Desert Sands" Charles Starrett in "Blazing 6 Shooters" Plus Cartoon Sunday & Mond^. Nov. 25-26 Rhonda Fleming and MacDonedd Carey —^in— "ODONGO" — Cartoon Tuesday, Nor. 27—Only Jock Mahoney & Martha Hyer —in— 'Showdown at Abilene' Cartoon and Comedy Wed,, Nov. 28—^Do^ble Feature John Derek in "The Outcast" Jack Palance in "KISS OF FIRE" Plus Cartoon Thursday & Friday. Nov. 22-23 Night 7:15 & 9:15 "HIGH SOCIETY" Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly Frank Sinatra Saturday—Matinee 3:00 Night 7:00 & 9:00 'THE YOUNG GUNS' Russ Tamblyn, Perry Lopez Color Cartoon — Serial Monday & Tuesday, Nov. 26-27 Night 7:15 St 9:15 "Somebody Up There Likes Me" Paul Newman. Pier Angeli The life story of Rocky Graziano Wed.. Nov. 28 Night 7:15 St 9:15 "RIO GRANDE" John Wayne, Ben Johnson Next Thursday |t Friday '^Away All Boats" The Battle Cry of the Pacific STARVIEW Drive-In Theatre Between So. Pines-Aberdeen INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERjS Friday-Sciturday, Nov.23-24 "The Stranger Wore A Gun" (Technicolor) Randolph Scott Sunday, Monday, Nov, 25-26 "Interrupted Melody" (Technicolor) Glenn Ford - Eleanor Partner Tuesday-Wednes.. Nov. 27-28 (Technicolor) "JUBAL" Ernest Borgnine, Glenn Ford Thursday, November 29 "Trouble With Harry" (Technicolor) Edmimd Gwenn Friday-Salur„ Nov. 30-Dec. 1 'Four Guns To The Border" (T^hnicolor) D. Calhoun TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 PJd. Children under 12 in cars Free • ELECTRIC. SHAVERS Up To Tracie- In ALL STANDARD MAKES Craig Drug ABERDEEN CACCLINA June Allyson, Joan Collins, Dolores Gray, Ann Sheridan, Ann Miller, Leslie Nielson—in "THE OPPOSITE SEX" (Cinema-Scope-Met roColor) Thursday-Saturday 8:15 p.m. Mat. Saturday at 3:00 The Big Happy Look at the m TAB HUNTER (in 'Battle' dress again!) NATALie WOOD (a 'Rebel' with a cause!) Look Peacetime Army! (■aeBaai Ihe Gfrl He Left Behind" ,...e(/r wr too far behindi MuiNTco B, WARNEhR Bros. fr € J with JESSiE ROrCE IANOI?-JIM.eACKUS HENR» MUEsVj?' SUNDAY-WEDNESDAY. Nov. 25-28 3 Shows Sunday at 3 - 7 - 9 Mat. Wednesday at 3:00 Week Nights at 8:15 Doris Day, Louise Jourdan, Frank Lovejoy—in "JULIE" Starting Thursday Night. November 29th 8:15 ECHO SPRING KENTUCKY BOURBON 45 PINT $3.85 4/5 01. I» PJflflf . ECao SPUING SISTIllING COMPANY. lOOISVIllE, KENTUCKY