Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 24, 1963, edition 1 / Page 10
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Page TEN THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina To Our Patrons— who have so overwhelmingly accepted our new menu, we would like to express our gratitude. The comments in regard to the new decor have been most welcome. To our friends who have not visited the “Golden Door Dining Room” lately, we offer this portion of our new dinner menu. Gourmet Features Calves Liver, Sauted in Butter 2.65 With Bacon Strips Cutlets of Veal, Breaded and Sauted.... 2.65 With Tomato and Pepper Sauce Tender Cubes of Beef with Burgundy Sauce 2.50 With Tender Cooked Vegetables Fricassee of Chicken in Patty Shell.... 2.50 Served in Casserole Baked in Jacket or French Fried Potatoes Green Garden Vegetable or Tossed Green Salad with Choice of Trio of Dressings Above Served with Choice of Appetizer, Dessert and Beverage The Golden Door Dining Room of Howard Johnson's Between Aberdeen & Southern Pines U.S. 1-15-501-211 Stop wishing - start running!; Thrifty FJiSiDAIRE ! Frost-Proof refrigerator! HE Tl!rf • No frost, no defrosting ever—not even in the freezer! • 100-lb. zero zone freezer. • Twin vegetable Hydra* tors, and more. Just Model FPDS-14T-1 13.81 cu. ft. 4 colors or white $349.95 »■' easy lenr.s Budget-priced 2-speed Sturdy m FRIGIDAIRE GIANT 12-LB. TUB! washer! • 2 speeds, 2 cycles, muItN fabric washing. • 3-Ring Agitator gets clothes clean inside and out. • Fresh running v/alnr rinses! Just $239.95 Model WCDA-63 e:.:, Best Buy FRIGIDAIRE Pull ’N Glean oven range! • Famous Pull 'N Clean oven pulls out for stand* up cleaning! • Automatic cooking with Cook-Master. • Instant heat with Speed- Heat unit. Just $249.95 Model RD-39-63 4 colors or white ea^. Burney Hardware Co. Aberdeen, N. C. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1963 Carthage News And Personals The Rev. and Mrs. W. S. Gold en are spending some time with their daughter in Philadelphia because of the illness of their son-in-law, George Wallace. Colin G. Spencer Sr. was able to come home from Moore Me morial Hospital, where he has been a patient for some time. The Rev. and Mrs. Leon Lar kin of Lake Junaluska were the guests of their niece. Miss Gladys Watson, on Monday night. Miss Gladys Watson spent Fri day night in Salisbury visiting her friend, Mrs. Clifford Puler. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. MacLeod, Mrs. Elizabeth Barrett and Mrs. Currie Horne visited Mr. and Mrs. Holt McNeill at their home in Dobson on Monday and found Mr. McNeill confined to his bed. Mr. and Mrs. Young H. Allen and daughters of Lumberton spent this weekend with her par ents, Solicitor and Mrs. M. G. Boyette. Mrs. Fred Underwood and Mrs. Davis Bruton of Chadbourne have returned home after attend ing the funeral of their sister, Mrs. A. F. Boyte, on Sunday. Friends are glad to know Mrs. Shirley McArthur Bozic is im proving in Moore Memorial Hos pital from her injuries sustained in a car accident. Mrs. Mary Ruth Harrington McLeod is still a patient in Moore Memorial Hospital but plans to get home very soon. Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sab- iston, Jr., are spending this week in Raleigh, where they are at tending the meeting of the N. C. State Bar Association. They will be joined by their children, the Rev. and Mrs. W. D. Sabiston III of Duke University, and Miss Kinsey Sabiston of St. Mary’s Junior College, for a weekend stay at The Sir Walter Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Earl McDonald, Mrs. W. G. Brown, Solicitor and Mrs. M. G. Boyette and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Lambert attended the golden wedding anniversary With The Armed Forces Marine Private First Class Johnny R. Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Howard of Route 2, Cameron, is serving with the Fourth Marine Regi ment, First Marine Division and is participating in joint training maneuvers, titled operation “Dull Knife,” with Pacific Fleet Am phibious Forces. The maneuvers are taking place in the Hawaiian Islands and will include amphibious assaults on the island of Molohai. Army PFC Richard L. Mont gomery, 23, whose wife, Mary, lives at 155 W. Connecticut Ave., has completed eight weeks of training as an information spe cialist at The Information School, Fort Slocum, N. Y. During the course, Montgomery received instruction in journal ism, public speaking, national and world affairs and radio and television techniques. He entered the Army in July, 1962, and completed basic train ing at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Montgomery, a member of Al pha Psi Omega and Mu Sigma Tau fraternities, was graduated from Minot (N. D.) High School in 1957 and from North Dakota State Teachers College in Minot in 1962. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har old M. Montgomery, live in Minot. Burdice Wofford, seaman ap prentice, USN, son of Toy L. Wofford of Carthage, is serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Shangri La, operating out of Mayport, Fla. Shangri La. is currently deploy ed in the Mediterranean for seven months of training exercises. Army Specialist Four Cicero E. Sullivan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E. Sullivan, Route 2, Car thage, participated in Exercise LEFT HOOK, a five-day 1st Armored Division maneuver which ended late in September, at Fort Hood, Tex. During the exercise, a mock war was devised which included both offensive and defensive problems, a simulated nuclear at tack, river crossings and offen sive guerrilla operations. Specialist Sullivan a radio-tele type operator in Headquarters Troop, 1st Squadron in the divi sion’s 1st Cavalry, entered the Army in December, 1961, and completed basic training at Fort Gordon, Ga. The 25-year-old soldier is a graduate of Carthage High School. His wife, Juanita, lives in Kil leen, Tex. Marine Private Samuel C. Hartsell, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Hartsell of Route 1, West End, completed recruit training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Par ris Island, S. C. The training included drill, bayonet training, physical condi tioning parades and ceremonies and other military subjects. Three weeks were spent on the rifle range firing tlie M-14 rifle and other basic infantry weapons. The recruits, reported to Camp Lejeune, for combat infantry training. Dennis R. Foster, machinery repairman third class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie F. Foster of Vass, is serving aboard the at tack aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk operating out of San Diego, Calif. He recently participated Hunting and fishing are big business in the nation and in North Carolina. Yet, the land- owner who controls virtually all the small game hunting territory and much of the fishing water, has realized little benefit from his resources. in exercise “Black Bear” in the Eastern Pacific, The exercise was a major fleet strike and anti-air warfeure prac tice which centered around the Kitty Hawk. It was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of fleet units under realistic conditions. party for Mr. and Mrs. Talbot Johnson in Aberdeen Simday. Mr. and Mrs. John Hoska and baby son, of Alexandria, Va., are visiting her grandmother, Mrs. M. G. Dalrymple. Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Cole is a patient in Moore Memorial Hos pital. Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sabis ton, Mrs. M. J. McPhail and Mrs. Curtis Muse attended the funeral of Mrs. W. J. Adams in Greens boro on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Seawell and Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Ingold attended the football game in Ra leigh Saturday. Yellowstone KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY •KENTUCKY SINAieMT Bourbon whisice^ _ OWTtLUO 4 •OTTUO 8S PROOF • DISTILLED «. BOTTLED BY YELLOWSTONE DISTILLERY CO. LOUISVILLE-OWENSBORO, KY. BUILDING ? • BUYING ? Current Dividend Rate LOW INTEREST — CONVENIENT TERMS NO DISCOUNT FEES Southern Pines Savings & Loan Assn 205 S. E. Broad Street Tel. 695-6222 1 i ii J 4 WILL CHILDHOOD BE THE ONLY FREEDOM THEY WILL KNOW? Personal freedom can slip away a little at a time, as quietly as children grow. It can be destroyed by forces from within our borders. Subtle forces—like the steady expansion of the federal government in business, and the effect it has upon our daily lives. Already our federal government owns many thousand businesses, from bakeries to saw mills. In the field of electricity alone the out put of federally owned plants has risen from less than 1% of the industry’s total in 1935 to more than 15% today. And advocates of gpv- ernment-in-business press constancy for more. They advocate a dangerous course. When any government owns business, it can control both goods and jobs. It adds economic powers to its vast political powers. When it does that, it can tell you where to work, where to live, even what to do or say. Then freedom has slipped quietly away. II More government-in-business could rob jur children of the self-reliance they have just begun to learn. And it could rob them of the freedom which they still enjoy. ( CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY) An investor-owned, tax-paying, public utility company
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Oct. 24, 1963, edition 1
10
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