I>
Page FOURTEEN
IHE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1960
Women’s Activities
an^d Sandhills Social Events
BESSIE CAMERON SMITH, Editor TELEPHONE 2-0312
Sandhills B&PW
Club Heairs Talk by
Bishop Melcher
The Sandhills Business and Pro
fessional Women’s Club met
Thursday night at the Southern
Pines Methodist Church where
dinner was served by the Metho- *
dist women. I
Bishop Louis C. Melcher of |
Pinehurst spoke to the group on
“International Relations.’’ Fifteen
members were present and one
guest, Mrs. Maria H. Pegram.
Looking Ahead
JR. WOMAN’S CLUB
The Junior Woman’s Club of
Southern Pines will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the Church of
Wide Fellowship. Attorney Hoke
Pollock will be guest speaker.
PRESBYTERIAN
CIRCLE MEETINGS
Three Circles of Brownson Me
morial Presbyterian Women of the
Church will meet next Tuesday,
the 9th, as follows;
No. 8, with Mrs. Lament Brown,
465 East Indiana Avenue, at 10
a.m.
No. 9, with Mrs. Neill E. Mc
Kay, East Indiana Avenue, at 11
a.m. Luncheon will be served af
ter the regular meeting.
No. 10, with Mrsi Melvin John
son, 360 Manly Avenue, at 10 a.m.
ALFRED MOORE CHAPTER
The Alfred Moore Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revo
lution, will meet at the home of
Miss Meade Seawell in Carthage
at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, February
13. Co-hostesses with Miss Sea-
well will be Mrs. W. G. Brown,
Mrs. M. J. McPhail, Mrs. J. L.
McGraw and Mrs Jamie C. Loy.
EAS’TERN STAR
Magnolia Chapter 26, Order of
the Eastern Star, will entertain
Past Matrons and Past Patrons
at the regular meeting at 8 p. m.
Friday, February 5.
CIVIC CLUB
The Civic Club will hold its
regular monthly meeting next
Monday, February 8, at 3 p. m.
There will be a reception for new
members, with tea. Guests are
welcome.
CANCELED
The family night supper sched
uled at Manly Presbyterian
Church for Friday night, Febru
ary 5, at which a missionary to
Korea, the Rev. Ernest W. Pettis,
was to have been the speaker, has
been canceled because of so much
illness in the community.
RAINBOW GIRLS
INSTALLATION
A public installation of officers
of Sandhills Assembly No. 40, Or
der of Rainbow for Girls, will be
held in the Masonic Hall at 7:30
p. m. Saturday, February 6. All
friends of the girls are invited to
attend.
POSTPONED
The American Legion Auxil
iary’s Valentine food sale has
been postponed indefinitely.
The regular meeting of the
Unit has also been postponed un
til February 20 because of sick
ness.
BAPTIST CIRCLES
Circle 3 of the First Baptist
Church will meet at 8 p.m. Tues
day with Mrs. Ned Bushby,' 750
South Bennett Street. Mrs. Doris
Wilson wiU be co-hostess.
' Circle 5 will meet at 10 a.m.
Tuesday with Mrs. Allan Mc
Laughlin, 610 South May Street.
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Travel Service
Pinehurst, N. C.
Phone CY 4-4122
After School Party
Marks 10 th Birthday
Of Janet Mooney
Last Thursday, on her tenth
birthday, Jandy Mooney, daugh
ter of the Rev. and Mrs. R. C.
Mooney, Jr., was honored with an
after school birthday party at her
home at 435 North Ashe Street.
For the occasion her mother
had baked and decorated in pink
and white a lovely “My Fair
Lady’’ cake. A doll and a minia
ture antique chair graced the top
of the cake. Leading from the top
of the cake to the edge of the
large cake plate were steps done
in pale yellow. The ten candles
served as stair railings. Pink
roses gave the effect Of a rose
garden. The drinks, ice cream and
favors also carried out the pink
and white motif.
Games were enjoyed by the
guests, who were: Vicky Woodell,
Fonda Fortner, Marsha Johnson,
Player McPhaul, Ann Sullivan,
Laura Adams, Lynn Carter and
Ellen Romero.
Jandy was the recipient of ap
preciated gi^ts from those attend
ing the party.
Baptist Women
Have Programs on
Sabbath Observance
Four Circles of the First Baptist
Church met this week, all study
ing the same program, “Observ
ing the Sabbath.” Each program
was follovred by a social hour.
Circle 1 met Tuesday at 8 p.m.
with Mrs. Bill Thomasson, who
conducted the program with the
nine members present participat
ing.
Mrs. Henry Jordon was hostess
to Circle 2 Tuesday night, and
her mother-in-law, Mrs. C. W.
Jordon, of Siler City, was a guest,
bringing the attendance to nine.
Mrs. Paul Boroughs was program
leader.
Eleven members attended the
meeting of Circle 4, held Wednes
day afternoon at the home of Mrs.
George Bowden, who led the pro
gram.
Mrs. Don Grant was enrolled as
a new member and Mrs. Cliff
Barnes was a visitor when Circle
6 met ’Tuesday morning with Mrs.
Maynard Mangum. The total at
tendance was 12. Mrs. W. E. Kiv-
ette conducted the program.
INS AND OUTS
Capt. Donald Smith of Manly
had influenza last week and was
admitted to Womack Army Hos
pital at Fort Bragg Friday night,
where he has been critically ill
with pneumonia. His condition
was slightly improved at the
latest report.
Mrs. D. Wade Stevick had a
happy weekend with her children
and grandchildren at home with
her. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Stevick
and daughter, Susan, wdre down
from Richmond, where Dr. Ste
vick is now director of medical
services at McGuire VA Hospital;
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ray and
son, Andy, came from Fayette
ville, and the other daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Lowish and sons Michael and
Matthew, were here from Greens
boro.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Andrews,
Southern Pines winter residents,
returned last week from a de
lightful vacation, ^ith all of their
traveling done by plane. They
went first to Oregon, where they
spent 10 days visiting relatives
and friends, then to Hawaii for a
month in the 50th State. Return
ing, they stopped in Californnia
for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight W. Winkel-
man, II, and children, Billy and
Wendy Lee, arrived Monday from
Skaneateles, N. Y., to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight W. Winkelman.
Leaving the children with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Win
kelman will depart Sunday for
Aspen, Colorado, and Squaw Val
ley, Calif., to attend the winter
Olympics, after which they will
spend a week in Scottsdale, Ariz.,
visiting his brother Peter, a stu
dent at Arizona State University.
They will drive back by the
southern route.
'Mrs. George M. Thompson
came home Wednesday from St.
Joseph’s Hospital, where she was
a flu patient for eight days.
Miss Harriett Walton and John
Ray returned to the University at
Chapel Hill after being here for
a week with John’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan S. Ray.
Donald D. Kennedy of Valley
Road underwent a spinal opera
tion at Duke Hospital in Durham
last week. He is getting along
well and it is hoped that he can
come home next week.
FOR RESULTS USB THB FL
LOTS CLASSmSD COLUlOf.
NEWS FLASH!
The Moore Memorial Hos
pital Auxiliary’s Valentine
Barbecue and Dance commit
tee requests that reservations
be made in advance for tables
of 10 or more; reservations
are not necessary for smaller
parties as tables will be set up
for them. Bob Smith’s orches
tra from Fayetteville will
play, and all ages are invited
to attend. Tickets are now on
sale. The big event takes
place February 13 at the Na
tional Guard Armory, South
ern Pines.
■ 7“^
Plans for St.
Anthony’s Charity
Ball Progressing
Committees are busy whipping
everything in shape for the an
nual St. Anthony’s Charity Ball,
to be held February 20 in the Na
tional Guard Armory here from
9 to 1 o’clock.
Mrs. Lee Smithson is in charge
of tickets, with the following as
sisting with sales in their towns;
Mrs. J. Watson Smith, Pinehurst;
Mrs. Marvin Wicker, Aberdeen;
Neill Dupree, Carthage; Peter
Tola, Sanford; Mrs. Mary Sharpe,
Mrs. Gertrude Simpson and Mrs.
Frank Martin, Southern Pines.
Mrs. Voit Gilmore is honorary
chairman of the dance and Mrs.
Raymond Dougherty is general
chairman.
Ed Turbeville and his orchestra
will play and a star vocalist will
be featured.
Mrs. Norman Back is chairman
of the decorations committee.
Plans call for a large fish net, fill
ed with colorful balloons, to be
hung overhead, the balloons to be
released during the evening.
David Drexel is to assist with this.
A Mardi Gras theme is to be car
ried out.
Mrs. Mock Speaks to
Hospital Auxiliary
A.t 'Tuesday Meeting
Mrs. John G. Mock pf Southern
Pines and Pittsburgh, Pa., nurses
aide instructor at Moore Memor
ial Hospital where a class of six
girls from Samarcand Manor is
being trained, spoke to the Moore
Memorial Hospital Auxiliary at
its regular meeting held Wednes
day morning at the nurses’s home.
Mrs. Mock formerly served as
director of nursing education at
Atlantic General Hospital, Atlan
tic City^ N. J., and spoke from the
store of knowledge which she has
gained in this and other allied
services. She spoke highly of the
class with which she is now work
ing.
Mrs. Mock’s talk followed a rou
tine business session presided
over by Mrs. J. Paget Rigby,
Auxiliary president.
Executive Board
Meets at Home of
Mrs. Dougherty
The executive board of St. An
thony’s Women’s Club held a
planning session at the home of
Mrs. Raymond Dougherty, presi
dent, last Saturday.
Those attending were Mrs. Lee
Smithson, Mrs. Hollis Thompson,
Mrs. Norman Black, Mrs. Marvin
Wicker, and Mrs. Mary Sharpe.
They discussed coming events, al
so the recent successful chicken
supper.
Mrs. Dougherty served coffee
and gingerbread.
Does Observe
Founder’s Day
Drove 42, BPO Does, meeting
Tuesday night at the Southern
Pines Country Club, observed
Founder’s Day and paid special
recognition to charter members of
the Drove.
Refreshments were seiwed by
Mrs. Ralph Wallace, Mrs. Morris
Arnold, Mrs. Tony Boreilli, Mrs.
J. D. Arey and Mrs. Arthur
Thomas.
INS and OUTS
Mrs. Harold A. Collins attend
ed a luncheon in Lumberton last
week, given in honor of her
daughter-in-law, Mrs. James Mc
Leod Collins, by Mrs. Henry Hu-
taff and Mrs. James E. Johnson.
There were around 25 guests.
Mr. and Mrs.- Howard Brough
ton returned home Tuesday night
after being away for a week fol
lowing the death of his father,
Harry T. Broughton of Hertford,
who passed away in a Raleigh
hospital on Tuesday of last week.
Mrs. Broadus Smith of Orlando,
Fla., arrived Sunday to be with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Y.
Poe, Sr., for a few days as both
are on the “flu list,” Mrs. Poe
also having pneumonia. Both are
improving.
Dog’wood Grove
Plans Valentine
Party for Juniors
At the regular meeting of Dog
wood Grove No. 253 of the Su
preme Forest Woodmen Circle
Tuesday evening, plans were
ma(Je to entertain the junior
members and their friends with
a Valentine/ party in the Wood
men hall on Friday, February 12,
from 7 till 9 p. m. Party arrange
ments will be handled by Mrs.
Alvin Adcox, chairman, assisted
by Mrs. D. E. Bailey, Mrs. Ted
Yearby and Mis Louise Crain.
Letters from many of the mem
bers in the Woodmen Circle home
in Sherman, Texas, were read,
expressing gratitude for the gifts
sent them at Christmas, also notes
of thanks from several local
members who have been ill in
the hospital.
Miss Pauline Crain surprised
the group when she^ announced
that her project “coffee urn” had
been accomplished. The much
needed um was brought in and
displayed.
Miss Mary Scott Newton in
vited the auditing committee
composed of Mrs. Bailey, Mrs.
John Goldsmith and Mrs. William
Reiner to meet with her at her
home on Friday night.
The members voted to make a
contribution of $5 to the March of
Dimes.
Party sandwiches, candies,
cookies and peanuts with root
beer were served by Mrs. Bessie
Swearingen and Miss Newton.
Mrs. Bryan Poe's
Mother Passes
News of the death of Mrs.
Bryan Poe’s mother, Mrs. Jacob
Wade of Morehead City, was re
ceived last night. Mr. and Mrs.
Poe, who live at 570 South Ridge
Street, left immediately for her
home.
Frances Butler's
Country Kitchen
Theft of Photo Albums at Pinehurst
Brings Stiff Sentences from Judge
Judge Frank M. Armstrong
handed stiff sentences Wednes
day in Moore County Superior
Court to a man and a woman
who pleaded guilty to larceny of
two valuable photograph albums
from the Pinehurst Country Club.
The pair mingled uninvited
with banquet guests at the club
last Thursday night, and on their
way out picked up the albums,
valued at between $200 and $300
apiece.
Gladys Jett Isom, 31, a sad
eyed, slennder and rather pretty
woman, and John Henry Ingram,
alias Fred Ingram, of Moncure
said they were cousins, and had
gotten together at an apartment
the woman had taken at Pine
hurst just for a friendly gather
ing. They said they went to the
Long before the early settlers
arrived in this country, the Indi
ans had learned how to grind na
tive corn into meal. But history
does not record whether it was an
Indian squaw or a colonial dame
who first had the clever idea of
converting corn meal mush into
spoon bread by baking it with
the addition of eggs and fat.
Spoon bread is usually attribu
ted to the South, probably be
cause Southerners, with their
predilection for hot breads, make
so much of it. But New England
ers have always been noted for
their very excellent version of
spoon bread, and in one of the
earliest editions of a noted cook
book is included a recipe for the
bread you “eat with a spoon.”
Spoon breads do differ, how
ever, in one very important re
spect. If a white corn meal is
used, you get an entirely differ
ent product than with yellow
meal. Made with the white meal,
a spoon bread will taste the same
as one ^one with the yellow, but
it will have a crusty top and soft
center. With yellow meal, the
bread has an even, mealy tex
ture very much like com bread or
johnnycake, although, of course,
it is much more moist. Southern
ers prefer to use the white meal.
Northerners the yellow.
The milk used in spoon bread
differs, too; sometimes sweet is
indicated, sometimes sour or but
termilk. 'The following recipe,
which closely follows the earliest
examples, utilizes sweet milk.
SPOON BREAD: 4 cups milk,
tbsp. salt, 1 cup corn meal, Vz
cup melted butter and 4 eggs.
Place milk and salt in saucepan
and heat gently over low heat.
Slowly stir in corn meal. When
milk begins to be absorbed by
corn meal, add butter and mix
thoroughly. Let it cool. Then add
well-beaten eggs and beat • with
rotary beater unntil well com
bined. Turn into a buttered bak
ing dish or casserole add bake in
a moderate oven (375) about 45
minutes or until knife inserted
in the center comes out clean.
Serve from dish in which bread
baked. Eight servings.
Another recipe, which makes a
little smaller amount, I tried re
cently and had good luck with it
like this: 3-4 cup corn meal, 1
tsp. salt, 1 tbsp. sugar, 2 tbsp.
butter, 1 cup water, 2 cups sweet
milk, 3 eggs, well beaten. Com
bine meal, water, salt, sugar and
1 cup of milk in saucepan. Cook
over low heat, stirring constant
ly, until thickened. Remove from
heat add butter and cool. Then
add eggs and remaining milk and
blend well. Turn into hot, weU-
greased Vk qt. baking dish. Bake
in moderate oven about 45 min
utes. Serve piping hot with plen
ty of butter. ,
Serve it witn little broiled sau
sages, or country ham for supper
some evening. It's a fine dish for
a cold, winter night!
Moore Democrats
Invited to Attend
Rally at Sanford
The Lee county Young Demo
crats club has issued a special in
vitation to Southern Pines and
Moore county Democrats to at
tend a mammoth Central Caro
lina Democratic rally at Sanford
Wednesday, February 10.
Speakers will be men who have
been discussed as possible candi
dates for Governor. Definitely
scheduled to appear on the pro
gram, to begin with a barbecue
at 7 o’clock at the Lions Fair
grounds, are Terry Sanford of
Fayetteville, Dr. I. Beverly Lake
of Raleigh and Wake Forest, and
Arthur Kirkman of High Point.
State Treasurer Edwin Gill has
said he will try to attend.
Tickets for the event, to which
Democrats of nine counties are
invited, are $1.50, and may be
bought in Moore county from the
Moore YQC president.
James Nolan, Lee YDC presi
dent, pointed out the event is the
biggest North Carolina political
rally scheduled thus far in the
I960 political season, and added:
“We need the lively spirit of
Moore County Democrats to as
sure the rally’s success.”
Country Club for a beer and
picked seve^ral items, including
the albums—they “didn’t know
why.” On the way back into town
the woman tossed the albums
from the car.
The albums were the property
of John Hemmer, Pinehurst
photographer, and contained col
lections of photographs of Pine
hurst made through the years for
special display purposes.
On information furnished by
a club attendant, Pinehurst po-.
lice traced the car and arrested
the pair, also another man, J. B.
Ingram, Jr., 29, of Pinehurst,
brother of John Henry, who had
stayed outside the club in the
car.
The albums, picked up in dif
ferent parts of Pinehurst, were
not recovered by police until sev
eral days later.
The sentence: 12 months in
Women’s Division of Central Pris
on, suspended for three'years on
payment of costs and on condition
she get a job and “not maintain
a Tiome or apartment in Moore
county where men congregate in
unreasonable numbers at any
time of the day or night.”
For John Herry Ingram: eight
months on the roads. After sen
tence was passed his young wife
collapsed, sobbing, in his arms.
J. B. Ingram, Jr., pleading not
guilty of aiding and abetting, was
acquitted by a jury.
PTA Will Honor
Past Presidents
At Monday Meet
Members of the East Southern
Pines Parent-Teachef Association
will have a Foundej-’s Day pro
gram at the regular monthly
meeting of the organization in
Weaver Auditorium at 8 p. m.,
Monday, February 8.
Mrs. Albert F. Grove, member
ship chairman, who will have
charge of the program, said that
founders of the National PTA
would be recognized and that
tribute will be paid to past pres
idents of the local association.
The past presidents are: Dr. Rob
ert M. McMillan, James D.
Hobbs, Dr. Charles A. S. Phillips,
Mrs. Isaac Woodell and Charles
S. Patch, Jr. Mr. Patch, president
for the 1958-59 school year was
reelected for 1959-’60.
The public is invited.
Following thg program, re
freshments will be served in the
school cafeteria. Mrs. Donald
Denoff, refreshments chairman,
and third' grade room mothers
will be in charge.
Si. Anthony's PTA to
Have Program Feb. 11
The fifth and sixth grades will
present a program at the Febru
ary meeting of St. Anthony’s
School Parent-Teacher Associa
tion, to be held Thursday, Febru
ary 11, in the school auditorium.
The public is invited.
SPECIALS
Hats $1.00 up
Dresses $3.00 up
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