♦ ♦ > I ' 0 ! # • 9 Page SIX THE PILOT—Southern Fines, North Carolina THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1961 PINEHURST NEWS By MARY EVELYN deNISSOFF Baptised Thomas Moore Swoope, 11, and his sister, Pamela Helen, two years old, were baptised during the morning worship service Sun day at the Community Church by the pastor, the Rev. R. L. Prince. They are the children of Charles W. Swoope, who has transferred his membership to the church from Overbrook Presbyte rian Church in Philadelphia,^ and Mrs. Swoope who transferred from Manly Presbyterian Church. Godparents for the two children are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miner. PTA Meeting A North Carolina Education As sociation film “Parents Ask Questions About the School,” will be shown following the Oc tober meeting of the Pinehurst Parent-Teacher association Tues day at 8 p. m. at the school audi torium. Committee appointments will be given at that time and several commitees will report. Purchase Home Here Mr. arid Mrs. Joseph W. Duf- fie Id have purchased the home belonging to Mr. and Mrs. George Carney, who moved last year to Lantana, Fla. where Mr. Carney teaches golf in the winter. Mr. Duffield is a student at the Uni versity of North Carolina’s School of Medicine; his wife is a 1960 Duke graduate. The transac tion was. arranged by< the Col. George P. Hawes Agency. Brief Meaitiom ■ Miss Judy, Owens returned to the Catholic University Of Amer ica in Washington, D. C. last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Parson are back at their place. The Clearing, after a summer iri Brooklin, Me. Gen. and Mrs. Stuart Cutler got here this week from Union Springs, N. Y. where they spent the summer. ; Here for the season at their Midland Road home are Mr. and Mrs. John Read Burr, who sum mered at Skytop, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Darst, Jr. returned early in the week to New York City after an extended stay at their home here. Arriving home last Thursday from a week in New York City were Mrs. Stephen Perry and Mrs. James W. Tufts. James Aldridge sails Sunday aboard the Mauretania for Ire land and will go from there to Freshfield, Liverpool, England, for a six weeks’ visit with his mother. Mrs. Aldridge and then- children ene remaining here with her mother, Mrs. Harry Hogg in Barberry Cdttage. Retiuming Sunday to her home in Yardley, Pa. after a week with Mr. and Mrs. S. Donald Sherrerd was their daughter, Mrs. Philip White and her daughter, Lisa. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Strickland got here Saturday from Detroit, Mich, and are in their Liriden Road home for the season. Back from the summer at New town, Conn, is Mrs. Charles O. Liddell. Eric Nelson returned home Tuesday after a business trip to New York City and a Sunday visit with his daughter and son- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Ludwig in New Haven, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nelson were also guests of the Ludwigs and expect to return here today to pick up their son, Eric, who has been vis iting his grandparents, on their way home to Hollywood, Fla. Mrs. Hargrave Vail and Mrs. Washington Innes-Taylor left Monday for Fredericksburg, Va. where they will spend a fortnight before returning here. Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Cooke are back from Watch Hill, R. I. for the winter at their Linden Road cottagri. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garnier are back at their Midland Road home alter the summer in Ken- nebunkport. Me. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Lovering were his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David T. Dana of Lenox, Mass., who are spending the week at the Lovering place at Pawley’s Island, S. C. Mrs. Rimer Brooks, together with her son John Trow, who has been staying here at the home of her mother, Mrs. Charles F. Jones, plans to move to Winston-Salem next week where she will be joined by her husband. Mr. Brooks is now at IBM school in New York and has been transfer red from Massachus-etts to Win ston-Salem. Miss Mickey Rettew has enter ed the freshman class of Virginia Intermont College at Bristol, Va. A guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rettew is Mrs. Martin A. Breg- man of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, who arrived last week to visit her brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. B. U. Richardson got home Friday after visits with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul V. Peck and daughter in Odessa, Texas, and with another daughter and son- in-law, Maj. and Mrs. James R. Wicker and their two children in Shreveport, La. Miss Rosemary Woolston re turned Monday from Boothbay Harbor,Me. and is again at the J. A. Ruggles cottage for the win ter. Mrs,. Bernice iThbmpson and small son, Charles, were week end guests of her father John L. McKenzie and Mrs. McKenzie. Also here for the weekend were Mrs. McKenzie’s sister, Mrs. W. C. Horne and her husband from Whiteville; an aunt, Mrs. George Davis of Chadbourn; another sis ter, Mrs. Havries Land and daughter, Nancy of Hamlet; and the Hornes’ soil Maurice from Fort Benning, Ga. and their daughter, Nancy Carolyn, a stur dent at Campbell College. ' Sailing tomorrow aboard the Statendam for a tour of Eu rope are Mr. and Mrs. John S. Zelie, who do not expect to re turn to the States until May. Mrs. H, iP. Hotchkiss and daughters, Ann and Carole, are home following visits in Virginia Beach and Williamsburg. Back with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L. Paget Rigby is Mrs. M. H. Jurney, who has been visiting in New England for the past three months. John Bertrand, son of Mrs. Charles F. Jones, recently enter ed the Asheville School for his first year. John, who formerly at tended the Pinehurst School, has been in school at Durham. VASSNEWS Pinebluff Group Sets Meeting For Wednesday, Oct. 11 There will be a meeting Of the Pinebluff Improvement Associa tion, Inc. Wednesday, October 11 at 8 p. m., at the Pinebluff town hall. Members of the association and all who are interested in civ ic progress are cordially invited to attend, said Miss Pauline Sproul, secretary and treasurer of the organization. 'The agenda calls for a short business meeting during which the chairman, Leon I. Wylie, Jr., will ask for reports from commit tee chairrtien. The major items for consideration will be the re port of the By-Laws Committee presented by J. Douglas David, and the Parks, Parkways and Public Buildings Committee, pre sented by Mrs. William Wood. Members will vote on the two programs to be presented. By MBS. CHARLES CAMERON Joint Shower Mrs. Dana Thomas Frye, recent bride of September 16, and Miss Jo Ann Brewer, bride-elect of October 14, shared bridal honors at a shower Monday night, Sep- tefnber 25, given by the ladies of the WSCS of the Vass Methodist Church. Decorations of pink and white and a large wedding bell joined the honorees’ tables, un der which centerpieces of pink umbrellas were held by bouquets of mixed flowers. Floral decora tions of pink and lavender were prevalent throughout the hall. Mrs. David Moe and Mrs. A. G. Edwards, ir. directed a series of contests with prizes won by con testants Mrs. S. R. Smith, Mrs. Paul Gilmore, and Mrs. Charles Cameron, and Mrs. C. L. Tyson, who presented their gifts to the honorees. From the refreshment table covered with a white cloth and centered with an arrange ment of mixed flowers in the bridal colors, punch, cake squares and nuts were served by Mrs. H. M. Klingenschmidt, Miss Bessie Cameron, Mrs. Howard Callahan, and Mrs. James Hudson. Some 34 guests including the bridal mothers, Mrs. Cortis Thomas and Mrs. Edgar Brewer, Mrs. Lilliam Causey, grandmoth er of Miss Brewer, Mrs. L. B. Frye, mother-in-law, of, Mrs. Frye, and Mrs. Paul Gilmore, aunt of John W. Hipp, (USN), to whom Miss Brewer is engaged, shower ed the honorees with gifts _ to which the hostess added pink carnation corsages. Presbyterian Men Meet The Presbyterian Men of the Church met Wednesday night, September 28, at the church with C. G. Crockett presiding. The Rev. David Moe was guest speak er. Refreshments were served by Mrs. R. A. Edwards, Mrs. Hugh McLean and Mrs. Roger Marion of Circle 1. Woman's Club to Meet The Vass Woman’s Club will meet Friday, October 13, at 7:30 p. m, tSvith Mrs. W. E. Gladstone at her home in Southern Pines. A. G. Edwards, Jr., chairman of the American Home Department, will be in charge of the program. Mrs. Sadie Maurer, Vass-Lakeview home economics teacher, will be guest speaker. New Arrival > Mr. and Mrs. Glenn McMillan announce the birth of their first child, October 1, at Moore Mem orial Hospital. They have named their son, who weighed in at eight pounds, 12 y2 ounces, Darryl Glenn. Mrs. McMillan is the for mer . Joanne McRae. Personals A number of' friends of the community attended the funeral of Mrs. T. B. Green in the Rober- dele Methodist Church near Rockingham Sunday afternoon with burial in the Johnson Grove Cemetery here. Mrs. Green is the former Martha Key, daughter of Mrs. Isaac Key and the late Mr. Key, of this community. Our deepest sympathy is extended to the families of the deceased. Willie Hilliard is a patient at Moore Memorial Hospital. Mrs. D. H. McGill and Mrs. A. G. Edwards Sr. visited Miss Ag nes Smith, who remains a patient at Moore Memorial Hospital, Sat urday afternoon. Eddie Schwemfurth who re cently completed his boot train ing at the Great Lakes Naval Sta tion, Ill. and has been on leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Scl^weinfurth, will leave Friday for his new station in London, Conn. Butch Griffin of Western Caro lina Teachers College spent fro^ Friday, until Sunday here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Griffin and family. Miss Irene Cameron of the Overhills community, who is vis iting her sister, Mrs. Daniel Boggs, was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. McFayden in Lakeview. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Futrell and family of Denton were week end visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Roby Futrell and family. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Danley and children, Jackie and Kathy spent from Friday until Sunday at Holdens Beach and Little Riv er, S. C. Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Fincher of Asheboro visited Mrs. Daniel Boggs and family Sunday after noon. PARKER OIL CO. "Serving Moore County 18 Years" ^ssa PRINTER METER TICKETS ALWAYS DEPENDABI^ Authorized Dealer -Fuel Oil “Kerosene -Gasoline ABERDEEN WI 4-1315 VASS 245-7725 MORE INCOME Increased receipts from the sale of tobacco, poultry, and eggs were primarily responsible for the over-all increase of more than’ $100 million in income from N. C. farm marketings in 1960 as com pared with 1959. Since farm pro duction expenses in 1960 were not much different from those of 1959, the net income realized in 1960 was $101 million or 20 per cent above the 1959 net of $495 million. Finance Your 1962 Car With A Bank Loan At 5% And Save Compare the payments on the chart at the right to see how much you can save by us ing a Citizens Bank loan to finance that new car. You can purchase your car insur ance from your own insurance agent or from us. We will finance the premium if desired. Life insurance is available at small additional cost. Before you buy that new car . .. check with us. NEW CAR CHART Amount 18 MOS. 24 MOS. 30 MOS. 38 MOS. to be Financed Monthly Payment Monthly Payment Monthly Payment Monthly Payment $1000 $ 59.72 $ 45.83 $ 37.50 $ 31.94 1200 71.66 \ 55.00 45.00 38.33 1500 89.58 68.75 56.25 47.91 1800 107.50 82.50 67.50 57.50 20(» 119.44 91.66 75.00 63.88 2200 131.38 100.83 82.50 70.27 2500 149.36 114.58 93.75 79.30 The Citizens Bank & Trust Co. SOUTHERN PINES Busiiness Directory 7e/Affte 7^ 9^ /inea. _>inHHlV QUEEN fill " Regular Season 11 A. M. — 11 P. M. DaUy US 1 between So. Pines & Aberdeen ^%av€i SenvUe Phone CY 4-4122 Pinehurst. N. C. AIR 8t STEAMER TICKETS CRUISES ^ TOURS AMBULANCE SERVICE POWELL FUNERAL HOME Phone OX 2-6161 Southern Pines, N. C. COLLINS DEPT. STORE Official Boy & Ct,ib Scout Equipment Ph. WI 4-1213 Aberdeen, N. C. Southern Pines Pharmacy N. W. Broad Ph. OX 5-5321 Prescription Specialists Southern Pines Warehouses Quality Building Supplies Our 33rd Year Phone OX 2-71T1 CLARENDON FARMS DAIRY, Inc. Distributors Long Meadow Milk OX 5-5602 THE PILOT. Inc. SOCIAL STATIONERY : GIFT PRINTING WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS All Types of Business Forms Prompt Service — Reasonable Prices Phone 2-7271 Southern Pines, N. C. FIELDS PLUMBING & HEATING Plumbing - Heating - Air CondUioning Ph. CY 4-5952 Pinehurst, N. C. ANY PART FOR ANY CAR BROWN AUTO SUPPLY RCA - MOTOROLA TV B. F. Goodrich Tires, Batteries OX 2-2561—Southern Pines THE PILOT. Inc. SOCIAL STATIONERY : GIFT PRINTING WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AU Types of Business Forms Prompt Service — Reasonable Prices Phone 2-7271 Southern Pines, N. C. .Bigelow Carpeting HALLUM FURNITURE CO. Aberdeen - Rockingham SAVE at • r McLEAN'S STYLE SHOP ^ If It's Fashion News — It's Herel Aberdeen, N. C. Windsor 4-1181—103 South St. CLARK & BRADSHAW Auto Service N. W. Broad St. Ph. OX 2-7171 "II '■ tGCG" McAllister & hobbs Food Market - Fine Foods N. E. Broad St. Ph, OX 5-7671 Goldsmith Construction Co. Forestry Service Phone OX 5-7391 ^ Southern Pines, N. C. TATES HDW. 8i ELEC, CO. N. W. Broad St. — Mill wgmiwii euwiiw MILL OUTLET STORE Dress Materials and Accessories Draperies and Upholstery. 650 S. W. Broad St. SOUTHERN PINES COUNTRY CLUB Open Year Round Sou. Pines Recapping Co. Ph. OX 5-6273 S. W. Broad St. Ext. Southern Pines, N. C. •

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