Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / May 28, 1964, edition 1 / Page 18
Part of The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page EIGHTEEN THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1964 The Pineburst Page MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF TELEPHONE 692-6512 HONEYMOON SPECIAL—TANDEM BIKE Year-Round Resort Hotel, Holly Inn, Offers Much For A Family Vacation Fully air-conditioned, the Holly Inn, year-round resort hotel, of fers much for a family vacation— play on one of Pkiehurst’s five famed golf courses in the morn ing, and relaxation by the pool in the afternoon. In addition to informal golf matches and put ting contests, Pinehurst offers the summer visitor horseback riding, skeet practice at the Gun Club, tennis at the Country Club, fish ing in nearby streams and ponds, bridge and gm rummy parties, picnics, tours to such interesting points as the Devil’s Tramping Ground, Jugtown pottery. Town Mtiiig’sPASr fitiimDiiM wm WALL PAINT No atirring, uo priming. Dip ia and start to painti Creamy-thick—won’t drip or •patter like ordinary paint. Dries in SO minutes to lovely flat finish. Clean up with soap and water! noose from 19 decorator colors- Exactly matching tkadet for woodwork in durable"Dueo" Satin Skeen Enamel. SHAW PAINT 8e WALLPAPER CO. Southern Pines Creek Indian Mound, the historic House-in-the-Horseshoe and par achute drops at nearby Fort Bragg. Holly Inn manager is Ar thur Long. Sandwiches and drinks are served by the pool or the guest may lunch at the popular Coun try Club soda grill. In addition to comfortable tele vision lounges and card room, bil liard and pool tables, ping-pong and skittles are available for eve ning enjoyment. 'The Dutch Room, unique octa gon-shaped cocktail lounge, pro vides music for evening dnacing, with special Saturday night par ties. Popular evening features are the Monday night get-acquainted community sing around the pool, with pool-side bar service avail able until 10.00 p. m.; Tuesday, game night, and Wednesday night card parties; Thursday’s infor mal buffet and Friday’s skittles tournament. Weekly winners ^e eligible for each month’s high- score prize—a free day’s accom modation for two on their next summer visit to the Holly. Satur day is Gala Night, with dancing to the music of Buster Doyle and his orchestra. The Holly linn cui sine is rivaled only by its excel lent service. Pinehurst’s winding streets, shaded by large flowering mag nolia trees, invite exploration of the beautiful village. A honey moon special is the “Bicycle Built For Two!” The summer season runs May 18-September 21. Sportswear, in cluding Bermuda shorts, is popu lar for sunlit hours, with bright summer cottons for ladies and coats and ties for gentlemen worn in the evening. Greensboro Man, High-Over-All Champ In Skeet Hunter Galloway pf Greens- jboro, in a shootoff Sunday at the Pinehurst Gun Club, became High-Over-All champion of the weekend Sandhills Skeet Cham pionships. He scored 293x300 in the shoot-off with Herb Johnson of Elkin. IN PINEHURST TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS PLEASE CALL OX 2-6101 Carters Laundry & Cleaners, Inc. 155 W. New York Ave. Soutkern Pinea YOUR VOTE IS PRECIOUS GET ‘‘MOORE” FOR IT VOTE FOR DAN MOORE FOR GOVERNOR SATURDAY, MAY 30th Paid For By Friends of the Candidate m28c With your diploma in hand chart your course for the future. CAROUNA PHARMACY Pinehurst. N. C. Veteran shooter Jack King, also of Greensboro, tied at 100 straight for the All-Gauge championship with Dr. Archie Coffee of Char lotte, won the title when Coffee missed one bird in the shoot-off to score 99 x 100. King also won a first in the 28 gauge champion ship, with 49x50. High Novice was Clint Kimil of WinstonSaiem, 92x100. His son Clint, Jr., became junior cham pion with an 84x100 score. Scoring 94x100 to take the Ladies Championship title was Mrs. Betty Bates of Fayetteville. In a three-man shoot-off with John Rowe of Fort Bragg and Vern Mull of Camp LeJeune, Capt. Billy Jackson copped the 410 championship with a 47x50 HERE and AWAY The Arthur J. Laceys leave . attend Sunday for a stay in Buffalo, N. Y., sailing then from New York City June 11 for a North Cape cruise. They plan to hinr a car to motor through Europe and will then go back to England for a stay, returning to the states in ^ieptember. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Schmelzer expect to leave this weekend for Vernon, N. Y., where they will spend, the summer. They will be accompanied by their son, Jimmy, who graduates tonight, Thursday, from the Pinehurst High School. He plans to attend Pembroke Col lege next year. After the winter months here, Mrs. John E. Dixon leaves this week for her summer home in Blue Hill Falls, Maine. Going north this weekend are Mrs. William Fleming and her son, Pat, who will join Mr. Flem ing in Philadelphia, where he drives during the summer har ness racing season at the Liberty- ville track. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel O. Delany, who spent last week at Garden City, expect to leave for Wash ington, D. C., where they will the graduation Midgets Play Tennis Finals On Saturday After two shoot-offs with a Greensboro team, a five-man team of Camp Lejeune Marines won both the 20 and 12 gauge events, 470x500. The two-man team composed of Herb Johnson and Marion Er win, the latter from Durham, cap tured the 20 and 12 gauge events with a final 198x200 score. Final matches, both singles and doubles, will be played Sat urday in the Midget Handicap Tennis Tournament, which has been in progress this month un der direction ,of Pro Joe Roddey on the courts at the Pinehurst Country Club. The matches begin at 10 a. m. and interested gaUeryites are in vited to attend. Team Match On Friday, a well-coached Southern Pines tennis team, di rected by Ken Propst, handed the Pinehurst team its second defeat of the current season, only one of the locals winning his match to make the final score 8-1. TEEING OFF * WITH deNISSOFF 40-Year Try A veteran caddy, who says he has been trying for 40 years to win the annual caddy tournament here, last Monday realized his ambition,. Robert Robinson, known as “Hardrock” by his col leagues and his customers, turned in a gross 76 to defeat last year’s titleholder, Fletcher Gaines, who took the runner-up prize with a gross 78. About 100 local caddies took part in the all-day event, played every spring over one of the courses at the Pinehurst Country Club. “Hardrock,” who has caddied for many of the top players here during his years at the club, was the favorite caddy of the late Pinehurst resident and course ar chitect, Donald J. Ross, who was a golf professional before he came here from his native Scotland. Pinehurst Popularity Appearing in the May issue of the N. C. Travel Bulletin, pub lished by the Travel Information Division of the Department of Conservation and Development, JANICE FIELDS, incoming president of the Pinehurst chapter. Future Homemakers of America, has been chosen the local chapter delegate to attend the National FHA Con vention in Chicago. She will leave Raleigh July 13, re turning home July 17. Janice is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Fields, Jr. The Pinehurst FHA chapter help ed raise the money to send a delegate to the meeting with various projects, including a successful fruitcake sale at Christmastime, and a bake sale later in the year. is what looks like a pick-up from one of the spring Cracker Bar rels, seasonal publication of the Pinehurst Press Bureau. Headed “For ‘Golf State, USA,’ ” the plug for Pinehurst, and the Pine Crest Inn, states: Popularity of Pinehurst with golfing groups who return year after year is well known, and well illustrated by “The Cotton Pickers” who come year after year to the Pineerest and play 36 holes a day. Who’s who of this group of 8 executives: John Ford, vice-president of Chrysler Corp.; Bruce Bryant, CBS vice president in charge of national advertising; Dave Nyran, TV vice president of Dancer-Fitzgerald - Sample; Copeland Robinson, advertising manager of Liggett & Myers; Wil liam Nollman, sales representa tive for Life Magazine; Robert Dingwall of Charles Hoyt Co.; Richard Ayers, president of Chase Bag Corp.; and advertising exec utive S. W. MacMurray of Green wich, Conn. We’re always glad to pass along a plug, both for Pkiehurst, and for the Pine Crest whose owner- managers, Bob and Betty Barrett, do such a fine, and apparently ef fortless job of providing good service, a relaxed atmosphere and an out-of-this-world cuisine for the full house which they main tain almost constantly throughout the season. NIMETEEN SIXTY-FOUR re in recent years, medical search has provided effective methods for treating many types of stroke and restoring patients to self-sufficiency, according to the North Carolina Heart Associa tion. Congratulations and best of luck to , eocli of yoiii Jones Dept. Store Carthage, N. C. of their daughter, Deena, from National Cathedral School on Tuesday. Deena will attend Pine Manor Junior College in Wellesley, Mass., next year. The three will then go on to York Harbor, Maine, where Mr. Delany is man ager of Pinehurst, Inc.’s summer hotel, the Marshall House. Leaving this weekend for New York City are Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dunne. They have been here for the spring season in the home of he rmother, Mrs. F. R. Razook. The Dunnes will go later to Lake Placid, N. Y., to, be as sociated with the Razook shop in the Lake Placid Club. Mrs. Richard S. Lovering re turned this weekend from her cottage at Pawley’s Island, S. C., where she spent the past 10 days. Visiting her was her daughter-in- law, Mrs. F. C. Page, Jr., of Charlotte. Mr. Page joined his wife and mother on the week ends. Mr. and Mrs. Frank White and son, Frank, Jr., who are spending two weeks at the latter's cottage at Long Beach, returned today for commencement exercises at the Pinehurst School where the Whites’ granddaughter, Sandra Wicker, is being graduated. San dra and her parents, the Melvin Wickers, expect to join the rest of the family next week at the beach. Robert Morse, who has been on the office staff at the Carolina Hotel for many years, is a patient at Moore Memorial Hospital where he underwent major sur gery Monday Here until June 6 with Mr. and Mrs. Kingstone Reed at Bracca cottage are their son and daugh ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Reed, and their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moore, all from Kitchener, Ont. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Kuhn have as house guests for several days, Mr. and Mrs. Earl G. Christian of Larchmont, N. Y., whose home on Midland Road next door to the Kuhns’ cottage is almost com pleted. Weekend guests of John O. Hobson were his son and daugh ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hobson of Raleigh. Mrs. Harold Northeutt of Mor- ganton gets here tomorrow, Fri^ day, to join Mrs. Hugh Carter on a trip to Washington, D. C., where both will attend their 40th Re union at the National Cathedral School. Graduation exercises at the School will take place Tues day. Mrs. Carter is representative of her Class of 1924. Mrs. John Edmunds and chil dren, Susan and Johnny, left to day, Thursday, for Monticello, N. Y., where they joined Mr. Ed munds, who is training and drives harness horses at the Monticello Raceway. CONGRATULATIONS You have worked and studied for this day. We hope that success will always be yours. JONES SKATING RINK Highway 15-501 Phone 692-2750 Southern Pines, N. C. In addition to some six million home loans for veterans, the Vet erans Administration has guaran teed or insured 72,000 farm loans and more than 238,000 business loans. YOU’VE DONE IT . . . WE WISH YOU GREAT SUCCESS. Remember Your Graduate With A Gift From . . . O. B. FLINCHUM CO. Ila Caddell CARTHAGE. N. C. FREE GIFT WRAPPING Joe Caddell CRAIG DRUG CO YOUR WALGREEN STORE SYCAMORE STREET ABERDEEN YOUR CHECK LIST FOR Vacation Time or Any Time can be filled here at money saving prices. We have the largest selection of hot and cold foam chests ever, all at reduced prices. 17 Qt. CHEST Reduced to $1.59 Ice CHEST Special $1.98 "Little Brown KEG” SUPER CHEST - Regular |9.95 Reduced to $7.77 27 Qt, CHEST $2.49 value $1.89 Ice Preserver BUCKET 49c Picnic JUC $1.98 50-FT. CARDEN HOSE - $2.98 Value VERY SPECIAL $U9 WE GIVE S&H GREEN STAMPS tv
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 28, 1964, edition 1
18
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75