0
^THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page FIVE
Women's Activities
and Sandhills Social Events
MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE OX 2-6512
Winners of Men’s
And Women’s Matches
In Pinehurst Tennis
Result to date in the men’s and
women’s division matches of the
fall tennis tournament, being con
ducted by Professional Joe Rod-
dey at the Pinehurst Country
Club courts, are: Women—first
round: Mrs. D. D. Gadd df, Mrs.
John E. Barry, Jr., 10-5; Mrs. R.
M. Pearse df. Ann Roddey, 6-4,
6-2; second round: Mrs. J. h!
Devins df. Mrs. J. E. Harrington,
Jr, 6-1, 6-1.
Men, second round: R. M.
Pearse, Sr. df. Tony Martin 6-2,
Gary Cameron df. Frank White,
Jr. 6-3, 6-3.
New Heir-Rivals
Mid-Pines Guests
Are Winners at
Bridge Club Event
Guests from the Mid-Pines
Club joined in Tuesday night’s
monthly master point toimnament
of the Sandhills Duplicate Bridge
Club, with two teams taking
home prizes.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Burton Prouty
of Brockton, Mass, were top win
ners; second were Mrs. Jean Ed-
son and Mrs. Roy Grinnell; third,
Mrs. N. A. Seidensticker and
Frank W,. Baker, both of Ohio;
and fourth, Mrs. James Besley
and Mrs. C. D. May
LYNN ALEXANDER DANIELS
Mr. and Mrs. Leland M. Dan
iels, Jr. announce the birth of a
second daughter, Lynn Alexan
der, weighing seven pounds, one
and a half ounces, born Novem
ber 6 at Moore Memorial Hospi
tal. Lynn’s sister, Karen is eight
years- old.
DILENE RENEE SHORT
A daughter, Dilene Renee, was
born November 13 to BMl|c Dil
lon Short and Mrs. Short, the
former Pat Parks of Orlando,
Fla. Born at the Naval Base,
Brunswick, Ga., the baby has a
sister, Belinda Irene, four, and a
brother, Troy Dewitt, three. Mr.
Short is a brother of Mrs. Billy
McNeill, Jr. of Southern Pines.
SHEETING NEEDED
White sheeting material, us
ed by Jr. Woman's Club mem
bers to make cancer dressings,
is urgently needed. Persons
wishing to contribute used
sheets for this very necessary
public service project of the
Club, are asked to call Mrs.
WUliam R. Bonsai, HI at OX-
5-3663.
Grease Fire al Club
Causes Heavy Smoke
Local volunteer firemen were
called to the 5 O’clock Club on
S. W. Broad St. at 10:15 p. m.
Tuesday, after grease on the
cooking stove in the kitchen
caught on fire filling the build
ing with smoke.
Chief Frank Kaylor said there
was little damage and that the
blaze, which was confined to the
stove area, was under control
when the firemen arrived. The
fire department’s exhaust fan
was used to pull smoke from the
building.
Carthage Player
Wins All in Par '
Seekers Tournament
VARIETY SALE
T^e annual rummage sale
sponsored by St. Martha's
Guild of Emmanuel Episcopal
Church, Southern Pines, began
today (Thursday), to run
through Saturday, at the
former Patch Departmeni
Store location on N. W. Broad
St., Southern Pines.
Proceeds of the sale will go
to various church projects. A
wide variety of appliances,
household items, clothing, nov
elties and other goods are on
sale.
Sale time each day is from
8:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.
Vass Woman Wins
$2,000 Scholarship
For Her Daughter
Mrs. Roland Ferguson of Vass
received word this week that she
had won a $2,000 scholarship for
her daughter, Carol Parker, who
is in the 8th grade in the Cameron
School, Mrs. Ferguson won the
Ralston-Purina contest by writ
ing on the importance of teach
ing as a career.
Mrs. Ferguson and Carol are to
go to Raleigh on November 30 to
receive the award.
Earlier in the year, Mrs. Fer
guson went to New York to ap
pear on a musical TV program,
where she also won several hun
dred dollars.
BIRTHS
AT ST. JOSEPHS
Looking Ahead
LEARN MORE CLASS
The Learn More Bible Class
will meet Monday evening at 8
o’clock at the Pinehurst Nursing
Home.
BROWNSON MEMORIAL
Mrs. William Bodine will be in
charge of the program on Stew
ardship at Monday’s general
meeting of the Women of the
Church of Brownson Memorial,
to be held in the sanctuary at 8
p.m. Taking part will be: Mrs.
John Creech, Mrs. Francis Rainey,
Miss Ethel Blue Britt, Mrs. Mack
Stewart and Mrs. Dan McNeill.
A benefit dessert card party
will be held tomorrow, Friday, at
the Civic Club, beginning at 1:30
p. m. For reservations, contact
Mrs. Avery W. Evans, 0X5-4962.
DOGWOOD GROVE
Dogwood Grove No. 253 of the
Supreme Forest Woodpien Circle
will meet in the Woodmen hall
at 6:30 Saturday, for refreshments
and social hour prior to the in
spection meeting starting prompt
ly at 7:30. Mrs. Georgia Shepard
of Jacksonville, state manager,
will be present to grade the cir
cle on its performance. •
^ It was a case of “winner take
all” last Wednesday when Mrs.
|F. H. Underwood of Carthage won
the Par Seekers Odd and Even
tournament, and the low gross,
low net and low putts
Mrs. B. C Avery took top hon
ors in yesterday’s Blind Holes
try Club. Runner-up was Mrs. C.
tourney played by the Par Seek
ers at the Southern Pines Coun
try Club Runner-up was Mrs. C.
E. Millspaugh and Mrs. Richard
Davis won the low gross and low
net. Tied for low putts were Mrs.
T. C. Worth, Jr. and Mrs. Carlos
Fry. ^
SILVER FOILS
The weekly Silver Foils Club
tournament, a Selected 12 Holes,
Best 6 each 9 event, scheduled
for play Tuesday at the Pinehurst
Country Club was rained out and
is being played today. Because
results will be in too late to
beat the Pilot’s noon deadline,
they will be carried next week.
Many Attend PTA,
Visit Classrooms
Of Their Children
by
A NEW BREAST FORT
FOR POST MASTECTOHr
Now • revolufloiMry mMIm
• tfbllcat* proMwii. Tb* b«bb «#
fonn Is a shaped atoaad af
soft pRable plastic foaaL SaaM
to this base la a tMa.
CreaiBS mthable plastic she*
aetiirel ifom which air ta
• •-»-
SaOSSliOO.. sealing IhiuW injected
■afni^ to match the noraial
imuillllin spends rapidly and
SPP6dr30C6 sH^otly to the slighteet
modon—It's so natural
even you can forget The enOra
form is enclosed In an easey
laundered nylon cover for inser
tion into the pocket of any bra
desired. Developed In concert
with leading surgeons. Ask
about TruUfe today.
*patent»S
Camp Supports and
Appliancies are
scientifically fitted here
by registered fitters.
CULBRETH'S
Southern Pines Pharmacy
Southern Pines
Tel. OX 5-5321
(At Railway Station)
Parents of students in all 12
grades of the East Southern Pines
schools visited their children's
classrooms Monday night and
heard teachers describe and ex
plain the programs of instruction
used.
The school tour was made in
lieu of a formal program, at the
monthly meeting of the East
Southern Pines Panent-Teacher
Association.
The classroonji visits followed
a business session in which a
1961-’62 budget was adopted, list
ing current and estimated expen
ditures of $434 against an income
of $146.75 from memberships and
an estimated $400 from the year’s
main fund-raising project, a va
riety show scheduled for Febru
ary.
The Association proposes to
provide the school’s science de
partment with a bioscope ($200),
will contribute $100 (more if in
come warrants) to the band, $50
to the student safety patrol and
$25 each to the language program
and the glee club.
The Association has 589 mem
bers, each of whom has paid 50
cents in dues.
Following the room visits, re
freshments were served in the
cafeteria. Two high school stu
dents, Faye Reid and Cathy Sand-
strom, opened the meeting. Miss
Reid sang, accompanied by Miss
Sandstrom, and then spoke the
opening prayer.
Mrs. Albert Grove, president,
reported on her attendance at a
district PTA conference in Mon
roe, at which Supt. Luther A.
Adams was one of the panel
speakers.
Largest attendance of any
meeting in several years, except
student entertainment programs,
was praised by Supt. Adams.
October 23— A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Billie Rogers Brumfield of
Carthage.
October 26— A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Gibson of Aber
deen.
October 29— A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Everett Gibson of
Southern Pines.
October 30— A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. John Francis Cornell of
Southern Pines.
October 31— A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Fletcher Gillespie of
Pinebluff.
November 1— A son to Mr. and
Mrs. William Clarence of South
ern Pines.
November 3— A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Joe F. Furr of Vass.
November 5— A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McLaughlin
of Pinehurst.
November 7— A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Thomas France of
McCain.
November 8— A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Alexander McNeill of South
ern Pines; a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Phillips of Southern
Pines.
November 10— A daughter tp
Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Hall of Rob
bins.
November 13— A son to Mr.
and Mrs. James CEu-son Jones, Jr.
of Pinehurst.
GRAHAM IN 'TROUBLE— World-renowned evangelist Billy
Graham, who calls North Carolina home, made a good recovery
out of a sand trap, approaching the 11th green of the champion
ship No. 2 course at Pinehurst, during a recent day of golfing
relaxatitjn in the Sandhills. In the background are other mem
bers of the foursome in which Graham played. Left to right
Grady Wilson of Charlotte; Charles A. Pitts, Canadian business
man who does much lay evangelistic work and has a home at
Manly, near Southern Pines; and Lee Fisher of Asheville
Wilson and Fisher are associates of Graham. (Hemmer photo)
BUT COLLECTION TUESDAY WAS 'SUCCESSFUL'
County Lags in Blood Donations,
May Lose Program For Hospitals
Moore County has met only 78 iH A. Peck, Dr. Charles Phillips
pr cent of Its quota in blood col- Dr. R. J, Dougherty, Ralph
lections for the Red Cross center Chandler, Jr., Tom Ruggles, Dun-
AT MOORE MEMORIAL
Births at Moore Memorial Hos
pital, Pinehurst:
Nov. 6—Daughter, Mr,, and Mrs.
Leland M. Daniels, Jr., Southern
Pines; son, Mr. and Mrs. William
Nicholson, Red Springs; daughter,
Mr. , and Mrs. Everette Prevatte,
Carthage..
Nov. 7—Son, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Coley, Carthage.
Nov. 8—Son, Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Howard Ritter, Robbins;
daughter, Mr., and Mrs. Frank
Robertson, Lumber Bridge;
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
M. Thompson, Carthage; son, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Andrew Love,
Raeford.
Nov. 9—Son, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
B. Reynolds, Raeford; son, Mr.
and Mrs. Jackie F. Bryson, Cam
eron.
Nov. 10—Son, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Allen Cook, Carthage;
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mc
Daniel, Robbins.
Nov. 11—^Daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Gwyn, West End;
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James D.
Welch, Bear Creek.
Nov. 12—Son, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Maness, Carthage.
CONDITION BETTER
The condition of Joe Monte-
santi, Sr., who has been a patient
at St. Joseph of the Pines Hospi
tal for several days, was report
ed much improved this morning.
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
Dan Lewis, who entered Moore
Memorial Hospital last Thursday
for treatment, returned to his
Murdochsville home on Tuesday.
Many fathers attended in re
sponse to a “Pop’s Night” resigna
tion given the meeting in an
nouncements.
at Charlotte, in the three years
the program has been in opera
tion, Glenn Brozier of Fayette
ville, Red Cross representative,
told a gathering of Red Cross vol
unteer and civic leaders in the
Parish Hall of Emmanuel Episco
pal Church, Wednesday night of
last week.
The field representative, along
with John Buchholz of Southern
Pines,, chairman of the county’s
blood program, told the group
that unless this record improves,
the county will be forced to with
draw from the program which
now supplies its two hospitals
with blood of all types, on condi
tion that citizens of the county
replace this blood during the sev
eral visits of a bloodmobile from
the Charlotte center to communi
ties of the county during each
year.
'Successful'
A collection of 109 pints,
against a quota of 125, at Pine
hurst Tuesday—of which donors
from the personnel of Moore
Memorial Hospital contributed
large proportion—gave hope that
the tide had turned and that poor
response to appeals for blood is
improving.
Mrs. Audrey K. Kennedy, ex
ecutive secretary of the Moore
County Red Cross chapter, called
the Tuesday collection successful
and expressed her appreciation
to the donors of the area. Mrs.
Kennedy was at last week’s
meeting.
With a total quota of 4,375
pints in the three years of the
blood program, Moore County has
collected 3,105, through October
10, Mr. Brozier said.
Bill Cade of the blood center at
Charlotte, which sends out the
bloodmobiles, processes the col
lections and supplies the hospi
tals, explained the mechanics of
the collection program.
Mr. Buchholz compared failure
of the collection program with a
note coming due at a bank and
said that “the foreclosing time is
near,” unless the record of blood
giving improves. Without the
program, he pointed out, hospi
tals will have to expand their
facilities and staffs.
“We cannot continue as we
have in the past,” he said.
Suggestions made by the offi
cials and others present to im
prove the situation included:
more hard work and personal
contact in recruiting donors,
maintaining the interest of don
ors over a period of years, “con
tacts” with industrial firms guar
anteeing blood for all employees
and their families on condition
that a certain number of pints
be donated by workers each year,
changing “quota” figures to be
proportionate to population of
communities visited, a telephone
committee to reach people who
have pledged to give blood, and
more attention of recruiting of
Negro and rural donors.
Others attending the session
were: the Rev. Martin Caldwell,
Red Cross Chapter chairman; Dr.
can McGoogan, administrator of
Moore Memorial Hospital; Col.
George H. Garde, Major Paul S.
Ward, and Clyde Auman and
Paul VonCanon, pf West End.
Pinehurst Theft
From Home Being
Investigated
Police and the Moore County
sheriff’s department are investi
gating the theft of silverware and
other items to an estimated value
of $1,500, stolen from the home
of Mrs. N. K. Toerg.3 on Linden
Road, Pinehurst, some time in
October.
Chief J. T. Shepherd said
servant came down from Long
Island to open Mrs. Toerge’s home
in advance of her arrival for the
winter season bringing a bag of
silverware which was placed in
the home. Some time later it was
found to be missing, along with
other items.
The list includes plates, plat
ters, butter plates, crested julep
cups, vegetable dishes, candle
sticks, ash trays, a water pitcher,
etc., in silver, also several tro
phies—two Paul Revere silver
bowls engraved “Club Champion
ship, Rumson, N. J.,” and a water
goblet given as a trophy in the
Pinehurst Horse Show, bearing
the name “Sharon Dixon.”
Also listed are silver-edged
glass coasters, aluminum* tumb
lers, pewter candlesticks, bone-
handled steak knives, wood salad
bowls, china platter with Eng
lish hunting scene, and others.
INS AND OUTS
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Selden of
Sarasota, Fla., are spending this
week with Mrs. A. Mangum Webb
at her Indiana Avenue home.
Joining Mrs. Webb and her guests
Tuesday were her sister, Mrs. W.
Lester Brooks of Charlotte, and
Mrs. Van MacNair of Davidson.
Mrs,. Ernest Morell has return
ed to her home on Midland Road
from Moore Memorial Hospital
where she has been a patient for
10 days.
Mrs. C. B. Gale spent last
weekend in Statesyille where she
attended a reunion of students
who had attended the Mulberry
Street School.
Spending this week with her
sister, Mrs. Allan T. Preyer and
Mr. Preyer on Bethesda Road is
Mrs. W. B. Blades of New Bern.
Lt. and Mrs. John Ray and in
fant daughter Paige, of Myrtle
Beach AFB, spent Saturday of
last week with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan S. Ray.
C. E. “Pat” Lee entered Moore
Memorial Hospital Monday for
observation and treatment. Mrs.
C.' E. Lee, Jr. returned to the
home of her mother, Mrs. Alice
Caples, Tuesday after a week’s
stay in Moore Memorial Hospital.
INS AND OUTS
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Von
Tacky returned Monday to Tena-
fly, N. . after a week’s stay with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clar
ence L. Von Tacky in Knollwood.
Jaan and Charles Richardson
of Chapel Hill were weekend vis
itors with their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde G. Council.
Mr. and Mrs. Vittorio Cfesci-
manno are back at,their home on
580 East Indiana Avenue after
spending the summer at Thorn-
brook Hall, their place in Nor
wich, N. Y., where they returned
in mid-June from a sojourn in
Palermo, Sicily. Visiting them is
Signora Wehrli of South Ply
mouth, N. Y.
Dr. Emilly Tufts last Friday
and Saturday attended the meet
ing of the North Carolina Pedia-
,tric Society at the Sedgefield Inn,
Greensboro. She returned Sunday
after a visit to Asheville.
McAllister & hobbs
"Fine Foods"
Featuring a very limited quantity of "Betty
Creek Truly Water Grown Corn Meal and
Whole Wheat Flour.
The Shaw House
Tea Room
Corner S. W. Broad Street and Morgantop Road
NOW OPEN
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
10:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
LUNCH
TEA
SPECIAL PARTIES
Tel. 695-7385
Owned And Operated By
MOORE COUNTY HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
Takejfjefemily out for
HAMEL’S
Restaurant
Southern Pines, N. C.
Treat The Family
To A Delicious
Thanksgiving Dinner
Prepared in the j
grand old-time style
The Traditional
ROAST TURKEY
with all the trimmings
with choice of Vegetables, Salads
Plus Home Baked Pies
HAMEL’S RESTAURANT
Southern Pines, N. C.
‘Then he
kissed
me!”
We can’t all enjoy youthful romance, but with'
today’s modern medicines, vitamins and wonder
drugs, we can enjoy more vigorous, healthful
living.
Main Street
Aberdeen, N. C.