Women's Activities
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and Sandhills Social
MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor
Events
TELEPHONE OX 2-6512
GIRL SCOUT NEWS
Mrs. John Creech is leader of
a new Brownie troop for girls in
the third grade of the East South
ern Pines School. Assistant lead
ers are Mrs. W. C. Phipps and
Mrs. Max Rush, and troop com
mittee members are Mrs. William
L. Scarborough, Mrs. William B.
Rogers, Jr. and Mrs. Leland
Daniels.
The new troop will meet on
Wednesday afternoons with
meeting place and starting date
to be announced next week.
Troop 104 will meet Tuesday at
Brownson Memorial Presbyterian
Church with Mrs. Ed Koshak and
Mrs. Harry Herendeen, leaders,
This will be the first year of In
termediate work for these girls.
A new Intermediate troop has
been organized at St. Anthony’s
School. Mrs. James Aldridge is
the leader, assisted by David
Drexel.
Troop 109, whose leader is Mrs.
William R. Bonsai, enjoyed a hay-
ride Friday night and will visit
the Midland Crafters Gallery this
(Thursday) afternoon.
Mrs . William T. Huntley, Jr. is
leader of Troop 82, and officers,
elected this week, are: Ellen
Bushby, president; Janet Phillips,
vice president: Bonnie Sontag,
secretary: Janice Campbell, treas
urer; Carolyn Niles, senior plan
ning board representative.
Troop 78, of which Mrs. Harry
Fullenwider is leader, visited a
beauty parlor this week as part:
of their work on the Good Groom
ing Badge.
Troop 66, with leader, Mrs:
James Ratliff, Jr., has been row
ing bandages for Moore Memori
al Hospital and v/ill go there
Monday night for more volun
teer work. They are also helping
out at the Southern Pines Libra
ry.
A NEW BREAST FORM*
FOR POST MASTECTOMY
Now a revolutionary aolutioa la
a delicate problem. The bate of
the form la a shaped mound tl
soft pliable plastic foam. Sealed
to this base Is a thin,
Cr62t6$ washable plastic shed
natural
removed and a self*
SCnSUtlOD.. sealing liquid injected
natural normal
fdinininp
ICUIIIIIIIi; sponds rapidly and
UppaUranCS allently to the slightest
motion—It's so natural
even you can forget The entire
form is enclosed in an easHy
laundered nylon cover for inser*
^tlon into the pocket of any bra
desired. Developed in concert
with leading surgeons. Ask
about TruLlfe today.
'patented
Camp Supports and
Appliances are
scientifically fitted here
by registered fitters.
CULBRETH'S
Southern Pines Pharmacy
Southern Pines
Tel. OX 5-5321
(At Railway Station)
ju 27tf
INS and OUTS
Here for the winter season, at
105 North May Street, are Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Thompson, who
got back last week after the
summer at Canandaigua, N. Y.
Mr. Thompson is presently on a
business trip to Madeira Beach,
Fla.
Mrs. George C. Moore returned
Friday to her Massachusetts
Avenue home after a visit in
Raleigh with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.. James
H. Cash and their son, Jim, who
celebrated his second birthday;
with a party Thursday. Weekend!
guests of Mrs. Moore’s were Mr.
and Mrs. L. H. Cherry, Jr., i en
route from their summer home in ■
Waynesville to their winter place ^
at Eau Gallie, Fla. I
Here over' last weekend with;
Col. and Mrs. Harold W. Uhrbrock \
on Little Road were their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Uhrbrock and their
small daughter. On Life Maga
zine’s photographic staff, Don
Uhrbrock has been transferred
from Atlanta, Ga. to Miami, Fla.,
where he has moved with his
family. He is presently on assign
ment at Bogata.
Dr. W. F. Hollister Saturday
attended the Quarterly meeting
of the board members of the
Children’s Home Society of North.
Carolina, Inc. held at the King
Cotton Hotel in Greensboro.
About 45 members from through
out the state attended.
Mr. and Mrs. David McCallum
spent last weekend in Lenoir and
Blowing. Rock. Their son, David,
Jr., was home from N. C. State
College Tuesday and visited his
parents overnight.
Mrs. Catherine M. Duyk has as
a house guest an old clasmate of
her high school days, Mrs. Regina
Panteleo, of Asbury Park, N. J.
A visitor here many times, Mrs.
Panteleo is a most enthusiastic
booster for Southern Pines.
Six Ne'w Members
Initiated at VFW
Auxiliary Meeting
The VFW Auxiliary, John Boyd
Post 7318, initiated six new mem
bers, Mrs. Ruth Tyson, Carthage;
Mrs. Jewell Hall, Mrs. Mildred
Merrill, Mrs. Martha Klabbatz,
Mrs. Pauline Bethea and Mrs.
Beulah Monroe, all of Southern
Pines.
Present for the initiation cere
mony October 25 and to inspect
the auxiliary, was Mrs. L.* W.
Tagge of Hamlet, District IX
president. Mrs. Tagge commend
ed the organization on its work,
and discussed the projects sot up
by National. She and the new
members received corsages of
Buddie Poppies.
1 Funds from the successful ham |
supper sponsored November 1 by
the auxiliary, will go toward re
lief work.
Mrs. Louise Crain, president,
presided at the auxiliary’s regu
lar meeting November 8; present
for initiation was Mrs. Shield Mc
Callum.
j Mrs. Jenny Garty reported that
, she and Mrs. Barbara Balboni de-
jlivered trick or treat favors to
the children at McCain Sanatori
um on Halloween.
I On Sunday, President Louise
I Crain, Mrs. Amelia Crain, Mrs.
I Katie Lee, Miss Mary Scott New-
|ton and Miss Pauline Crain de
livered various materials to the
Durham Veterans Administration
Hospital for use in the physical
therapy department. The group
toured the department and were
shown equipment used in patient
rehabilitation.
After the meeting, members
held a birthday celebration to
commemorate the 13th anniver
sery of the founding of the aux
iliary. Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Garty and Mrs. Trudy
Stephenson.
MRS. HUGH HOWARD ANDERSON
PINEBLUFF METHODIST CHURCH RITES
UNITE MISS DAVID AND MR. ANDERSON
Midgets Get 56-0
Win Over 71st
People
in
• • #
1/
IwiAok
. tIVeepsake
b.tl A M O N O R I N fS S
YoO too will love the
beautiful styling and
perfect quality found in
every Keepsake Dia
mond Ring.
VISTA Ring $250.00
Also $100 to 2475
Wedding Ring $12.50
The Glitter Box
Main St. Aberdeen
Evangelist Billy Graham of
Montreat, and assistants Lee
Fisher of Asheville and Grady
Wilson of Charlotte, were over
night guests this week of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles A. Pitts at Manly.
Arriving for the weekend with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Hales in Pinehurst, is Miss
Virginia Hales, of' New York
Mrs. Marjorie Lousek of Gar
den City, Long Island, N. Y. is
the guest this week of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Claxton in Pinehurst.
Here with her sister and broth
er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Graham
Culbreth is Mrs. James Massen-
burg of Raleigh, who is recuper
ating frohi a fall at her home last,
week in which she fractured her
right leg. Home for the weekend
with the Culbreths was their
, son, Tom, a student at N, C. Stats
College.
J. W. “Mike” Page gets home
tomorrow for four days’ leave
with hife grandmother, Mrs. R. S.
Lovering and Mr. Lovering. Mike
is stationed with the U. S. Navy
in Norfolk, Va.
Local Educators
Attend Meeting
Three members of the South
ern Pines city board of education
and Supt. Luther A Adams at
tended a meeting of the North
Carolina State School Boards As
sociation in Chapel Hill yester
day, taking part'in an all-day
program that ended with a short
talk by Gov. Terry Sanford.
Board members attending were
Mrs. Walter Harper, Dr. C. C.
McLean and P. I. York. Members
unable to go to Chapel Hill wens
N. L. Hodgkins, Sr., chairman,
and J. E. Sandlin.
With other school board mem
bers and superintendents from
over the state, the local delega
tion heard a talk by Dr. Henry
Hill of Peabody College and a
symposium, “Charaet.sristics of a
Good School System.”
Group meetings in the after
noon featured the topic, “Achiev
ing Excellence in Education: The
Role of the School Board.”
East Southern Pines school’s
Midget football team, coached by
John Williams, registered a 56-0
victory over the Midgets of the
71st school near Fayetteville Sat
urday morning.
It was the local Midgets’ first
win of the season in play with
teams of a Midget league in and
around Fayetteville. The South
ern Pines boys had previously lost
games to two other teams in the
league.
The local boys will journey to
Fayetteville again this Saturday
for a 10 a. m. contest with a Mid
get team at the Honeycutt recre
ation field there.
Final game of the season will
be played here Saturday, Novem
ber 18. Details will be announced.
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
Following an emergency ap
pendectomy at Moore Memorial
Hospital Friday, Rodney Pleas
ants returned Wednesday to the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jam^s Pleasants, where he is get
ting along fine. Rodpey |s a junior
in the East Southern Pines High
School. ' '.
Miss Camilla Cashion David, of
Pinebluff, Sunday became the
bride of Hugh Howard Anderson
of Winston-Salem.
Officiating at the double ring
ceremony at 4 o’clock in the
Pinebluff Methodist Church were
the Rev. Julian W. Scott, pastor,
and the Rev. R. D. Spear, Jr.,
pastor of the First Baptist Church
of Aberdeen.
Miss Carolyn Petty, of East
Carolina College, served as or
ganist and Miss Mary Lou 'Trout
man, of High Point College, was
the soloist.
• Palms, ferns and lighted tapers
formed a background for the
baskets of white mums and white
glads arranged at the altar.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Douglas David was given
in marriage by her father.
Her gown of satin and appliqu-
ed Chantilly lace, designed with
a chapel train, was made by her
mother. A pearl tiara held her
finger tip illusion veill, and she
carried a bouquet of stephanotis,
ivy and yellow roses, centered
with an orchid.
The bridgegroom, whose parents
are Mr. hnd Mrs. George D. An
derson of Aberdeen, chose as his
best man John Sanders of Wins
ton-Salem. Ushers were his broth
er, Dr. George Anderson, Jr.,
Southern Pines; Roy Bishop and
Jim Taylor, Raleigh; and the
bride’s brother, Chris David.
Mrs. George D. Anderson, Jr.
was matron of honor, and Miss
Diana David of Greensboro was
her sister’s maid of honor.
Attendants were: Misses Patsy
Taylor, Aberdeen; Arlene Pickier,
Wilmington; Polly Leach, Raleigh;
Mrs. Bill Childs, Southern Pines;
and junior bridesmaids, Jennifer
David, and Robbie Jo Buffkin.
Flower girl was Beth Buffkin of
Rinebluff.
The attendants wore dresses of
regal blue and matching pillbox
hats with flirtation veils and
carried nosegays of bronze • and
Southern Pines
School News
By DICKEY HOSKINS
PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS
This Friday night is the last
night of gridiron action for South
ern Pines in the 1961 season. If
the Blue Knights take the game
with Carthage this week, they
will take the Moore County
Championship. In the last few
wqeks the Blue Knights have
been playing real football. They
want to end their season this
year with three wins, one tie, and
six losses. The season has been
rough but the Blue Knights have
shown the spectators well-fought
games wherever they have play
ed.
For many of the ball club, Fri
day night will be the end of a
long and enjoyable high school
career in football. When the last
whistle is blown Friday night
such boys as Wally Wallace and
Harold Williford, seniors and
team captains, will feel a lump
in their throats as they walk off
the field apd then leave the field
house, hearing the cheers of the
boys for the last time. Both Har
old and Wally have fought well
for their school and both have
left something, for all football
players in tiie future to follow.
The annual pictures were tak
en this week of most of the clubs.
Tuesday morning was a day of
madness for Mr. Cox, photogra
phers everywhere, editors every
where, and all everywhere but
where they were needed.
The layout of the annual is fin
ished but that is hardly the end
of the job. More pictures have to
be taken and then again a few
more on top of that. It’s a wonder
that the photographer didn’t go
out of his mind.
I hope the whole town will
come out for the last football
game. It has never happened yet,
but it would be fun to have every
bleacher full and people stand
ing everywhere. The price is
cheap for excellent football and
remember that the money goes
back to the school which couldn’t
be a worthier organization.
At the end of the 1961 harvest
ing season, North Caroling had an
estimated 400 mechanical cotton
harvesters, about twice as many
as a year earlier.
FOR RESULTS USE THE PI-
LOTS CLASSIFIED COLUMN
gold mumsj interspersed with
dried wheat, and showered with
golden ribbons.
The flower girl wore a dress
of white organza with a regal
blue sash and a white pillbox
hat, styled like the senior at
tendants. She carried a white
basket with gold mums and yel
low rose petals.
A graduate of Aberd,een High
School, Mrs. Anderson' attended
Carolina Business College in
Charlotte and has been employed
as a secretary at Moore Memorial
Hospital, Pinehurst.
Mr. Anderson, a graduate of
Aberdeen High School, also
graduated from State College in
Raleigh and Gaston Technical In
stitute of Gastonia. He is employ
ed with dhe R. J. Reynolds To
bacco Company in 'Winston-Salem
where the couple will live after
a trip to the mountainst.
Reception
The reception followed at the'
home of Mr. and Mrs. O. C.
Adcox, aunt and uncle of the
bride.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. McHam of
Sanford greeted guests and in
troduced them to the receiving
line. Guests were directed into
the dining room by Mrs. Paul
Troutman. A hand crocheted ban
quet cloth, made by the bride’s
mother, covered the table. 'WJiite
mums in a crystal container were
flanked by lighted tapers in cry
stal holders.
Mrs. Craig Pickier of Wilming
ton and Mrs. Jack Taylor poured
punch and guests served them
selves cake, nuts and mints.
Others assisting in serving were
Mrs. Ehrman Pickier, Mrs. Dan
Mangum, Mrs. Billy Carpenter,
Misses Nancy Troutman, Jessie
Mae Garrison and Misses Iris and
Susan Pickier of Wilmington.
Miss Frankie Swain presided
at the bride’s register.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Adcox said
the good-byes.
Cake Cutting •
Following the rehearsal Satur
day evening, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. George
Anderson entertained members of
the wedding party at the Ander
son homCi
The refreshment table, placed
before the picture window over
looking the terrace, was overlaid
with a white embroidered linen
cloth. The cloth, handmade in
Japan, had been brought to Mrs.
Taylor by her sister.
The center floral arrangement
in pink and white was accented
by pink candles in silver holders.
After the bridal couple cut the
three-tiered wedding cake, Mrs.
Jack Taylor served cake and Mrs.
Douglas David poyred punch.'
About 50 guests attended.
Commissioners
Make Request for
More Patrolmen
1961 Tax Levy Runs
Over $1 Million,
Board is Informed
The county commissioners, in
their regular monthly session at
Carthage Monday, approved a let
ter to be sent to Colonel Lambert,
State Highway Patrol comman
der, asking that two additiona;
patrolmen be assigned to Moore
County.
The county, formerly with six
troopers, now has four on active
duty: E. G. Shomaker, H. A.
Hight, R. R. Samuels and Tom
my Clark. Patrolman J. Frank
Swaim recently was suspended
for unrevealed reasons and is due
for a Patrol hearing November 14.
All the commissioners were
present for Monday’s meeting.
Chairman L. R. Reynolds and
John M. Currie, Tom Monroe, J.
M. Pleasants and W. Taylor.
The commissioners discussed
possible purchase of a new rural
fire tfuck with Henry Williams of
Robbins, chairman of the coun
ty’s rural fire department com
mittee, hearing Mr. Williams’s
recommendation that the board
put in an order for a truck and
get delivery next spring, but pay
for it out of the 1962-63 budget
to go into effect next July 1. The
question of whether or not this
could be done legally is to go to
County Attorney M. G. Boyette
before a decision on the plan is
made. The truck would be sta
tioned at 'Vass, according to plans
worked out at last month’s meet
ing when a delegation from the
Vass and Little River Township
area appeared to ask for a truck.
The board also authorized Wil
liams to proceed with getting lia
bility-and collision insurance for
ail four rural fire trucks now
operating in the county.
A resolution adopted by the
board exempts from state Sun
day “blue laws” that prohibit
sale of certain merchandise on
Sunday, the Whispering Pines de
velopment and the Midland
Crafters shop on Midland Road
between Southern Pines and
Pinehurst, Towns and counties
may exempt areas in their juris
dictions.
Mrs. Estelle Wicker, county
accountant, said that the 1961
tax levy, based on a county real
and personal property valuation
of $52,098,822, amounts to $1,009,-
231.64, About $533,000 of this
amount has already been collect
ed, she said.
In the morning, the board
heard reports from Fleet Allen,
agricultural agent; Miss Flora
McDonald, home 'economics
agent; and Mrs. W. B. Cole, wel
fare director.
KEEP UP WITH LATE
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Open Wednesdays Until
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PROOF
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LAWRENCEBURG, KENTUCKY
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110 N. W. Broad
Southern Pines