THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1961 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Caroli; CLASSIFIED ADS BLACKWELDER WELL COM PANY: Boring and drilling. In quire at Frank Talbert’s Shell Station between Aberdeen and Southern Pines, ask for Mr. Tal bert. Night phone Sanford spring 775-2421. jl3tf FOR RENT: Small house nicely furnished. Suitable for couple. Call Mrs. Daniels, 0X5-6541 or inquire 660 North Ridge Street. ol9tfc APARTMENT FOR RENT: First floor, furnished. 470 N. Ashe St., phone 0X2-8703. mlltf ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays at 8 p. m. Community House, Aberdeen, WI4-1469. J6tfc WAITRESSES: FULL OR PART- TIME. WEDGE INN. PHONE 0X2-6344. oSif FOR RENT: 2-room cottage. M. I. Hill, at bridge south end new U- S. 1 highway. o5tf HOUSE WORK — baby sitting wanted. Write Emma Lee Mal loy, Vass, N. C. n23p BABy SITTING WANTED: PHONE OX 2-7471. N23p FOR SALE: 1949 Chevrolet. Good mechanical condition. Re built engine. Approximately 4,- 000 miles. Also dual wheel util ity trailer. Call 0X5-3365. n23c ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: Monday nights 8 p. m. Guild Room, Episcopal Church. Phone 695-4965. mlltf FOR RENT: 4-room furnished cottage on North Ridge Street. Dr. L. M. Daniels, 0X2-6382. ol9tf YOUR OPPORTUNITY to earn year around. Full or part tim.e dealers needed. Above average earnings possible from start. Should have car or a form of transportation. No lay offs. Write P. O. Box 5071, Dept. S-3, Richmond, Virginia. n23p Basketball (Continued from page 1) NEED QUALIFIED WOMEN in terested in good earnings at once. Increased Christmas busi ness means more openings in Cameron-Carthage area. Write Avon Mgr. Jean Poison, Box 901, Asheboro, or call MA9- 8349. n223c FOR SALE: Girl’s bicycle, large. Good condition. White roller skate shoes, size 7'/a like new. Call CY4-4742 after 6. n23tf FOR SALE—Reasonable: Duo- Therm heater, 150-gal. tanlc and asbestos mat. 0X2-8823 or 630 N. May St. a23p WORK WANTED: House or baby sitting. Write Partbenia Shields, Va9s, N. C. n23p FOR RENT: 2-BEDROOM HOUSE. NEWLY DECORA TED. IMMEDIATE POSSES SION. INQUIRE 390 EAST IN DIANA AVENUE OR CALL 0X2-6533. n23if FOR RENT: "COMFORTABLY FURNISHED BEDROOMS WITH RUNNING WATER. CLOSE IN. VERY REASON ABLE. APPLY PERSONALLY 170 E. CONN. AVE. n23c WANTED: Well mannered hunter for 12-year old girl. Give price, description. E. A. Hubbard, Box 747, Sanford, N. C. n23p FOR RENT: Attractive small apartment, one block from Post Office. 125 South Ashe St.o5tf LOST—REWARD: Gold charm bracelet at playground or street to Park View Apts. Monday. .. Miss Minck,, phone 695-6522. n23p BAKE SALE Patch's Dept. Store SATURDAY Nov. 25 — 10 A.M. St. Anthony's Women's Club Weej Bass uns America’s Most Sought-After Shoe Carthage “Bulldogs” will see All- Tourney Steve Paschal return along with Penn Benner but will lose All-County and All-Tourney Jackie Phillips. Bobby Nelly and George Wirtz Have graduated. Coach Kirtman will have Jane Womack, Katherine Flinchum, Rosemary Kelly and Judy My- rick, who were all first string per formers last season, returning. He will lose All-County Key Patter son and Jane Claviness and Nancy Gardner. ELISE, ROBBINS: Jene Bowen, coach of the Robbins boys, loses only two players from last season. They are All-County Donnie Cameron and All-County Buddy Daurity. Returning will be veter ans Johnny Freeman, A1 Monroe and Billy Steed. The Robbins girls, coached by C. E. Hackney, who are defending Conference (Champions will miss the scoring of Rubie Williams who made the All-County and All-Tourney selections last spring. However Coach Hackney will have Delores Baxter who was also both All-County and Conference, returning alohg with Linda Ken nedy, Adele Brady and" Paulette Key. FARM LIFE: Coach Willard Blue will field a new team this season as a result of losing five players who graduated. Gone are scoring leaders Jerry Whitaker and Ray Garner. Jerry aBiley and Jody Hall are experienced boys returning. Coach Blue will have the strongest girls team at Farm Life in years as he will welcome his complete starting unit of last season returning. In fact, only one player will be missing from his entire squad of last season. Linda Blue and Lucille Whitaker were the team’s high-scorers last ’ sea son and will be available for duty this year. high FALLS: C. E. Russell, coach of Highfalls Blue Eagles, will lose only one player from last season’s team as Jimmy Manness, Ed Shields, Arthur Greene and Larry Mashburn return from the 1960-61 starting five. Coach A. C. Appanaitis, whose girls team wn othe Regular Sea son Championship last season will have one of the strongest teams in the Conference as he has his entire Squad returning, including high-scoring Betsy Shields and All-County Carol and Gladys Wil son. PINEHURST: Coach Rodger Paschal has three of his first five players available for the coming season. They include James Bed- dingfield, Richard Oldham and Marshall Lewis. Butch Hardy will be an outstanding performer. Bob Gillis, the Pinehurst girls’ coach, has the top individual scorer of last season as All-Coun ty-All-Tourney Judy Cameron re turning for duty. If Coach Gillis can find replacement for Sue Mc Kenzie and Abby Kennedy, who have graduated, Pinehurst could be one of the better teams this season. SOUTHERN PINES: Coach Bil ly Megginson’s Blue Knights Re gular Season Champions of last season will lose six feet, seven inches All-County Glen Marcum but will have experienced materi al available in All - Tourney Harold Wiliford and Johnny Bris tow, Eddie McKenzie and Wally Wallace. Coach Megginson’s girls team will be improved as he will lose only one starter. Outstanding re turners include Clara Harper, Psggy Worth and Joan Grover. VASS - LAKEVIEW: Tommy Grey’s Vass-Lakeview “Blazers” suffered heavy losses due to grad uation of key personnel including All-Oounty Derry Thompson. Henry Callahan and Paul Cum mings are outstanding boys re turning. Coach Grey’s girls also lost star performer Jeanette Mullinix but will have high scoring Sara Von Metzger, Joan Causey and Joyce Jones available for this season. WEST END: Coach Charles Richardson’s West End team has lost its entire starting five by graduation. This includes All - County Wayne Carter and All - County Rodger Greene, six feet three inches. Tommy Lewis, six feet, one inch; Donnie Shaver and Billy Monroe head the list of boy’s returning. Richardson will field an im proved girls’ squad as he will lose only two players. Sophmores Frances Pursser and Geraldine Garner return along with Linda McNair and Charlotte Blake. WESTMOORE: Coach Elmer Seawell loses one player from his entire team of last season. He will have veterans Frankie Brew er, Kurby Burgess, Johnny Hus sey and Jerry Beane. Missing is his six feet two inches center, Donnie Hussey. , Coach Seaweli’s girls team will feature All-County Vera Shields, Nancy Brown and Judith Moore. Joyce AUred, Carolyn Dunlap and Betty Teague have graduated. Page THIRTEEN WATCH OUR ADS .... YOU'LL FIND IT! CHAIRMAN— J. Elvin Jackson of Carthage, who is employed at the Carolina Bank, Pinehurst, displays a card listing the counties of the 8th Congressional District. At the recent state conven tion of Young Democrats in Durham, he was elected YDC 8th District chairman. The counties listed are those com prising the “old district. Some are being lost and others add ed under the new re-district ing set-up that' will go into effect January 1. Jackson is also president of the Moore County Young Democrats. PLAN HELPS BUSINESS The Payroll Savings Plan re duces garnishments, lawsuits, and other difficulties involving employee credit. It develops good employee relations. Employees appreciate the convenient oppor tunity to buy U. S. Savings Bonds regularly and thus improve their financial ^health. These Bonds are indestructible investments, guar anteed by your Government against loss of any kind. SAVING AT 'TOP' Savings Bonds are the part of the saver’s take-home pay that grows as interest adds to their cash value. Saving this way, he doesn’t really miss the money. A person saves from the top of his income—not the bottom, when he uses the payroll savings plan to buy U. S. Savings bonds. The Veterans Administration provided a total of 54,643,000 days of patient treatment during Fiscal Year 1961, which ended June 30, 1961. INSTEAD... LErs COOK UP AN '60 Corvair 4-dr. radio, heater and Powerglide 58 Chevrolet 4-dr Sport Sedan V-8 Powerglide 57 Chevrolet 4-dr. V-8 Powerglide 53 Chevrolet 4-dr. Straight Drive Very Clean, Runs Good '52 Ford 4-dr, $1595 $1495 $750 $495 $250 '60 Chevrolet Pickup Vz Ton $1395 Wicks Chevrolet Co. 207 N. Poplar St. Ajserdeen, N. C. Junior High Midgets Win Last Game 32-18; Show Presented at Half-Time Ask Your Miss If She Wants Weejuns! It s the MUST shoe for college, high school and junior high and nothing would please your young Miss more than a pair of Weejuns for Christmas! Nation-wide demand is so great they're difficult to come by . . . but we happen to have a representative stock, received this week. They won't be here next week ... so don't delay. Give Her this thrill! $11.95. STROUD HUBBARD’S Quality Shoes Since 1910 SANFORD. N. C. OLDE BOURBON by J. W. DANT STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 6 YEARS OLD $230 $365 Southern Pines Junior High School’s midget football team reg istered a 32-18 victory at Mem orial Field Saturday afternoon, defeating the Crusaders, a midget team from Fayetteville. The vis iting team is one of the stronger teams in an eight-team midget league operating in Fayetteville. Coach John Williams praised the local boys—all seventh and eighth graders—for their fine de fensive playing. “The kids were up for this game and put on a good show,” he said. “They deserve a lot of credit.” The Saturday contest ended the team’s five-game schedule this year. The coach said the boys had done a good job all through the season. “Homecoming” festivities at half-time enlivened the program, with junior high girls escorting football players, majorettes per forming and Daphne Pottle as a ‘Blue Knight”—symbol of South ern Pinbs athletic teams—^riding one of Mrs. Verdie Caddell’s horses. A “victory dance” was held at th.e school Saturday night by Junior High students. LAY A-WAY NOW! Shop in November Relax in December Rounds Takes Part In Book Fair at Cleveland, Ohio \ Glen Rounds of Southern Pines was one of the artists and writers featured last week at the Cleve land Book Fair, Cleveland, Ohio, where he spoke and gave draw ing demonstrations before a series of audiences that totalled about 2,000 school children, in the audi torium of the Cleveland Public Library. The local artist and writer also took part in radio and television appearances and interviews. About 30 authors and illustrators of bpoks for children and young people participated. Over 2,000 new books were displayed and viewed by children and others at the Book Fair which was spon sored by The Cleveland Press, the national Children’s Book Council and public libraries. Mr. Rounds, author of more than a score of published books, most of them illustrated by him self and largely in the juvenile field, returned to Southern Pines Saturday, after three days in Cleveland. The visit was his second ap pearance at the annual Cleveland Book Fair. He has appeared for nine years at a similar event held in Washington, D. C. ti riOOF • 0«NT DISmiEir to., UWiENCEIOIS, IID. ^ WATCH OUR ADS . . YOU'LL FIND IT! STOP paying high insurance costs . . . A Year Buysj Z>44. ALL THIS in Southern Pines Only $12,000 On Your Home $ 4,800 On Your Contents $ 4,800 Theft Coverage $ 2,400 Extra Expense $25,000 Liability Coverage $ 500 Medical Coverage $ 250 Property Damage $ 50 Glass Coverage $ 600 Shrubbery Plus Additional Coverage Want to know More? Call now Phone CY 4-2752 Richard L. James Kennedy 8c Co„ Inc. (Beside Carolina Bank) Pinehurst — Phone CY 4-2752 KENNETH C. KENNEDY RICHARD L. JAMES OTHER NEW TOYS Full Size Keys ® Electric Organ $37.50 5 1 Belk's 'Big Boy' Wagon $8.99 1^ Other Wagons as low as $1.99 ■' ^ ^gf Fire Chief Pedal Car $12.99 ^ With Spotlight, Bell, Ladders. pull toy Ride-'Em Fire Truck. $22.99 Remote Conlrol Aulo . Toil-Wiggling i T-i. n- Electric Horse Race i *<> 3 ® ® Game $6.99 Plenty Of Action to TchSi^a^*^ii'*sq*SgSieI Electric Football Game $6.99 Suzie Seal Pull Toy arou^! Brightly enameled Complete With Carsi and Accessories "Arfs-arfs" proudly as she S'js 8.™* siaiion $4.99 SEE OUR BIG DISPLAY rr OF 88 TOYS! baby-safe colors. Action — OOC '*^*'a* 1-3's want! Also Famous Playskool Toys For Tots! CPEN TIL 8:30 FRIDAYS Williams - Belk At Cur Back Entrance SANFORD • NORTH CAROUNA

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view