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THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines Month Carolin Page FIVE Women's Acfivities and Sandhills Social Events MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE 692-6512 Iwim MISS SUSAN JO ROGERS, whose engagement to Wesley M. Garrison is announced by her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Dillard E. Southers of Pinehurst. Wesley, who is now stationed with the National Guard at Fort Knox, Ky., is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Garrison of Pinehurst. A December 24 wedding is planned. MRS. JONAS GREETING 65 AT PARTY HERE, TELLS PLEASURE AT NEW FRIENDSHIPS Displaying at once the dignity and out-going friendliness which are natural components of her Southern heritage, Mrs. Charles R. Jonas Tuesday chatted infor mally with each of the near 65 guests who came by to meet her at a reception in the Holly Inn ballroom. Towards the end of the party, the wife of the Eighth District Congressman expressed her ap preciation for the hospitality that the women in this area have shown her and her husband and said she was happy with the many new friends she has accu mulated over the state. Mrs. Jonas, a native of Clinton, left their beautiful old home in Lincolnton to accompany her husband on a tour through Moore County, where he made stops at different communities this week. Hostesses at the party here on Tuesday were Mrs. John L. McKenzie, Mrs. Peter Tufts, Mrs, William C. Sledge, Mrs. D. D. Gadd and Mrs. Mary P. Ferris cf Pinehurst, and Mrs. George H. Leonard, Jr. and Mrs. Charles Phillips of Southern Pines. Mrs. Jonas was honored Wed nesday at a morning coffee at the Carthage Hotel and at an after noon reception in Robbins at the home of Dr. Brady. TO REPORTERS VISITING MANEUVER ‘Special Warfare’ Techniques Shown Newsmen from several North Carolina counties spent a day in the Uwharrie National Forest last week witnessing guerrilla and counterinsurgency training con ducted by the U.S. Army Special Warfare School at Fort Bragg, in connection with the Cherokee Trail III maneuver that was re cently completed. The visiting journalists, repre senting newspapers, radio and television stations, arrived Camp Mackall in the morning td be briefed on the different aspects of special warfare before taking to the woods for actual training demonstrations. TTie Uwharrie National Forest covea:^ a wide area in Mont gomery, Richmond, Moore and other counties. The northwest part of Moore County was in cluded in the maneuver area. CoL George C. Morton, assistant commandant of the Special War fare School and deputy director for Cherokee Trail HI, gave the reporters an overall picture of the guerriUa-counterguerrilla ex ercise. Lt. Col. Robert A. Mat- Mrs, Speight Of West End Dies; Rites Held Sunday Mrs. Dalla Moore Speight, 80, died Friday in Moore Memorial Hospital, Pinehurst. Funeral services were con ducted Sunday at 3 p. m. at Beu lah Hill Baptist Church by the Rev. Max Gilmore. Burial fol lowed in West End cemetery. Surviving are her husband, Andrew Speight; three daugh ters, Mrs. Kenneth Blue of Jack- son Springs, Mrs. Darna Staley of West End, Mrs. J. O. Winberley of Aberdeen: a son, Carl Speight of Georgetown, S. C.; 10 grand children; three great grandchil dren; one sister, Mrs. Daisy Bal lard of Pinehurst: two brothers, N. A. Moore of Carthage and J. T. Moore of West End. thews, assistant chief controller in the field, gave more detailed information to the group. Before boarding an Army heli copter for the flight to the train ing area, the newsmen were fur ther briefed on the psychological aspects of special warfare. Lt. Col. Louis A. Waple, director of psychological operations at the Special Warfare School, conduct ed the talk. After lunch at the training exercise headquarters at Camp Mackall, the reporters visited elements of the 1st Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, which play the part of the conventional army during Cherokee Trail HI. The highlight of the day’s activities came when the group was invited to accompany a Pineland army convoy carrying ammunition and supplies. Along the route, the convoy was ambushed by a guer rilla band and the reporters saw at first hand the kind of combat action now taking place in Vietnam. Guerrillas attacking from a. wooded area along the road took the convoy completely by sur prise, swarming over it in a mat ter of minutes. But an alert radio operator of the 82nd Airborne Division’s convoy managed to call for help and a helicopter-bome reaction force quickly arrived to discharge reinforcements on the scene. These troops, assisted by an air strike from two T-28 Tro jan attack planes of the Special Air Warfare Center, sent the guerrillas headlong into retreat. Training during Cherokee Trail HI was based on lessons learned in Vietnam. Air commandos from the Sipecial Air Warfare Center, Hurlburt Field, Fla., support the Cherokee Trail exercises with aircraft and weather teams. The Cherokee Trail exercises are con ducted for the officer students, both U.S. military and foreign allied officers, at the Special War fare School. Prospective Brides Are Honored At Tea Mrs. Robert M. McMiUan and Mrs. Claude E. Reams were co hostesses at a tea Wednesday from 4-5 p.m. at the former’s home. Heather Gates, on Ridge- view Road. The party was given to honor Miss Angelyn Stokes and Miss Gail Miller. Miss Stokes will be married August 22 to John Mc Millan and Miss Miller will be come the bride of George Reams in the fall. In the receiving line with the hostesses and the honorees was Mrs. Broughton Stokes of Greensboro, Angelyn’s mother. The house was decorated char mingly throughout with arrange ments of mixed summer flowers. Served along with the punch were petit fours, mints, nuts and party sandwiches. Mrs. Sanford Sees Samarcand Manor On Sandhills Visit Mrs. Terry Sanford, the State’s First Lady, paid a second visit in the Sandhills besides the one to Camp Easter in the Pines last Sunday. Following her appearance as guest of honor at the opening ex ercises of the camp for handicap ped children, Mrs. Sanford drove out to Samarcand, on the west ern outskirts of the county, to in spect Samarcand Manor, the State’s Industrial School for Girls which is situated there. This was the First Lady’s ini tial visit to this rehabilitation school, the only such project for girls in North Carolina and, although the time was short she made a general tour of the grounds and several of the build ings, including the chapel. High lights of the visit was the warm reception accorded Mrs. Sanford in the school auditorium, with the entire student body of 300 girls present. On the platform with the First Lady was Blaine Madison, com missioner of training and correc tional institutions under whose charge the school operates, who made the principal address, also Mayor N. L. Hodgkins, Jr., and Voit Gilmore, Democratic candi date for the state senate, who had accompanied Mrs. Sanford on the visit. Present in the audience were Mrs. Madison, Miss Betsy Sanford and Miss Gerry Gilmore, also the Democratic candidate for the State house of representa tives, Clyde Auman, and Mrs. Auman, of West End, and Mr. and Mrs A. L. Burney of Southern Pines. Mr. Bruney is a member of the Moore County Board of Public Welfare. Mr. Auman is on the State Board of Correction and Training and Mr. Burney is a for mer member of this board. Mrs. Caroline Blue of Eagle Springs, president of the Young Demo crats of Moore County, was also with the group. Following brief remarks by Mrs. Sanford and the other guests and a gracious welcome by Miss Reva Mitchell, superin tendent of the school, refresh ments were served in the newly- opened dining-hall and recrea tion building, after which the euests took their departure, with the guest of honor “the proud possessor” as she said, of a gift from the school; two hand-wov en, embroidered linen towels the work, from start to finish, of the Samarcand students. PRO PEGGY KIRK BELL BREAKS SUMMER GOLF CIRCUIT WITH VISIT TO FATHER MR. AND MRS. MILTON B. GILLIS COUPLE MARRIED IN MOUNT OLIVE ARE MAKING THEIR HOME IN CHAPEL HILL The State of North Carolina has more than 300,000 living WW H veterans residing within its borders. Ritchie Posts Perfect Record. On Dean's List James L. Ritchie, IV, of South ern Pines, is one of 42 students at Presbyterian College, Clinton, S. C., named to the Dean's List for the second semester of the 1963-64 session, according to Registrar Roslyn Martin. Ritchie qualified for the PC Dean’s List with an average of 4.00—a perfect, all “A” mark— one of only six students to post such an average. A rising sopho more at Presbyterian, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ritchie, III of Bristow Court. Rotary News 'The Rotary Club of Southern Pines meets each Friday at 12:15 p. m., for limch and program, at the Southern Pines Coimtry Club. Visiting Rotarians are in vited. The speaker for this week’s meeting will be a member of the staff of the U. S. Army Special Forces, Fort Bragg, whose topic will be “The Role of the Special Forces With Our Allies.” Opera tions of these forces in South Vietnam will be the main theme, The Shady Grove church be tween Newton Grove and Fayetteville was the setting for the ceremony which united Miss Judith Lee Dudley of Fuquay Springs and Milton Bruce Gillis of Mount Olive in marriage June 14. The Rev. E. C. Taylor and the Rev. Walter Reynolds officiat ed. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dudley of Fuquay Springs, the brid'e was given in marriage by her father. Mr. Gillis is the grandson of Mrs. R. M. Gillis and the late Mr. Gillis of Manly, and the late Mr. and Mrs. J. Bruce Cameron, also of Manly. His mother is the for mer Mary Elizabeth Cameron. Her gown of pure silk organza over taffeta, was designed with a scalloped neckline and an alencon lace bodice. Her head- piece was a veil attached to a miniature crown of borealis and seed pearls. She carried a prayer book topped with an orchid. Attendants were Miss Kaye Howard, maicJ of honor, Mrs. De lano Whittington, cousin of the bride, matron of honor, and bridesmaids. Miss Barbara Gillis of Mount Olive, sister of the bridegroom. Miss Phillis Black man of Greensboro, Miss Tanya Dudley, and Miss Kathryn Willi ford of Fuquay Springs. David B. Gillis acted as best man for his son. David B. Gillis, Jr., brother of the bridegroom, Graham Cooke of Rockingham Marvin Alridge of Albemarle, L. W. Cannady, Jr., of Selma, Sherwood Baggett of Roseboro and Freeman Hinson were ushers. The bride, a graduate of Mount Olive Junior college and Camp bell college, will be enployed as a stenographer at the University of North Carolina. Mr. Gillis attended Mount Olive Junior college and East Carolina college and is continuing his edu cation at the University of North Carolina. The couple will live in Chapel Hill. MR. MILNER MR. HARRIS In WINN-DIXIE POSTS— Changes in executive personnel in the Raleigh Division of Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc., were an- noimced this week by R. C. Rigden, vice president of the com pany, whose super market in the Town and Country Shopping Center here is a unit of big food store chain. John Milner has been promoted to expansion and development manager of the Raleigh Division, in charge of the firm’s expansion program in the two Carolines and Virginia. W. Marcel Harris, who goes to Raleigh from the Montgomery Division of Winn-Dixie, is suc ceeding Mr. Milner as retail operations superintendent. Both men will have offices at the Raleigh Winn-Dixie headquarters. PONY LEAGUE Pinehurst Defeats Local Team By STEVE HASSENFELT The Southern Pines Pony Lea gue baseball team was defeated twice last week by Pinehurst. In the first game Pinehurst rallied for four runs in the second inn ing and two in the sixth. South ern Pines got four runs in the top of the seventh on four hits for their only tally. The final score was 6-4 and Bryant was the winning pitcher, while Mike Warlick suffered the defeat for Southern Pines. In the second, of a two game series Southern Pines was defeat ed again 7-5 Pinehurst scored three unearned runs in the fifth inning and rallied for two in the top of the seventh on four base hits. Southern Pines got their runs in the bottom of the seventh. Southern Pines meets Carth age this week in games on Tues day at Southern Pines and Thursday at Carthage. Lutheran Church in America. Player Hils AB Ave. Lutherans To Attend Events At Kure Beach Several members of the Lu theran Church Men of Our Sav iour Lutheran Church will ac company the church’s pastor, the Rev. Jack Deal, to a retreat and a quarterly meeting of the East ern District of the men’s group, at Kure Memorial Lutheran Church, Kure Beach, Saturday and Sunday. Following the retreat, the quarterly meeting will be held at 3:30 p. m. Sunday. The Lutheran Church Men is an official organization of the Deal Warlick Arnold Bushby Buchan Little Hassenfelt Strickland McDonald Brooks Atkins Chatfield Shore 6 13 3 2 7 10 4 6 2 6 1 0 0 18 26 8 9 28 30 17 25 11 25 10 15 4 .333 .500 .374 .223 .286 .333 .236 .240 .181 .240 .100 .000 .0001 Mrs. Peggy Kirk Bell, co-own er and manager with her hus- “^and. Warren, of the Pine Needles Lodges and Country Club, left Tuesday for Findlay, Ohio, for two weeks’ vacation with her father, Robert Kirk. Her hree children, Bonnie, Peggy Ann and Kirk, accompanied their mother, and Warren expects to join his family there later. In addition to her duties as ho telier, homemaker and mother, (the Bells own a home on Grove Boad where they live with their family), Peggy Kirk is a teach ing and touring golf professional, who earned the LPGA’s “Teach er of the Year” award in 1961. The fortnight in mid-west marks a break in fSe summer '’olf circuit for her—she has just returned from competing in three tournaments—in Baltimore, Wor cester and New York. Fair—With Mishaps Warren joined his wife and the three children in New York, where they spent three days at the World’s Fair. Carolyn Niles, who accom panied them to be with the chil dren, hobbled through the ex hibits on crutches, because of a sprained ankle, and on the hot test day of the year there, the Bells were among the record 200,- 000 who attended. The heat proved too much for young Kirk, who fainted while watching the “Wonder World” show. Fortunately, the nurse on attendance at the first aid station there was Miss Judy Owens, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Francis L. Owens of Pinehimst, so she soon had the youngster feeling much better and quite at home. Despite these mishaps, Peggy Bell was very enthusiastic about the Fair and plans to return in August to see more of the ex hibits. AT TARBORO JULY 24 Little League All-Stars In Playoffs By JIMMY BALDWIN The Southern Pines Little League All Stars will play the Robersonville - Tarboro winner Friday, July 24, at Tarboro. The team will probably leave Southern Pines on Thursday morning July 23, in order to at tend the Robersonville - Tarboro games and work out on the Tar boro field later that day. The team will play Friday afternoon and Saturday, if they win Friday. The local team lost to Green ville 6-4 last year but defeated Warsaw in a consolation game. The winner of these area play offs will advance to district play the following week at an unde termined location. The All Star team is managed by Joel Stutts with Jack Barron as assistant manager. The team roster is; Scott Newton, Lynn Clippard, Cris Davis, Clyde Man- gum, Joe Parker, Larry Solomon, Fred Hollister, Robin Smith, Phillip Wicker, Alan Smith, Jer ry Simpson, Tommie 'Thompson, Brad Rush and Bobby Chatfield. Southern National Bank To Share In Deposits Of Town A plan to allow the Southern National Bank to share with the Citizens Bank and Trust Com pany in the care of the Town funds was approved by the Town Council at their meeting Tuesday with Mayor Norris L. Hodgkins, Jr., executive vice president of the Citizens Bank, abstaining from the vote—though express ing himself as favoring the move—the council accepted the request of Southen National to be considered in this capacity and instructed Town Manager F. F. Rainey to allot to the newer bank the handling of the court expense account. This is an account, said Mr. Rainey, kept separate from all others and for that reason this move will not present any book keeping difficulties. In expressing his agreement with the plan. Mayor Hodgkins spoke of the long service the Citizens Bank had rendered and expressed gratitude for the loyal ty shown to the older institution which has handled town funds since 1905. Harrington, All N. C. Delegates For Goldwater James E. Harrington, Jr., of Pinehurst who went to this week’s Republican National Con vention at San Francisco as an uncommitted delegate, joined Wednesday in a unanimous 26- vote approval of Sen. Barry Gold- water as the party’s Presidential candidate, by the North Carolina delegation. Harrington had announced early in the week that he would vote for Goldwater on the first ballot, believing him to be the favored candidate in his district. Harrington is 8th District Re publican chairman and a former Moore County GOP chairman. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS $150,000 Asked In Suit Arising i From Collision Suit for $150,000 has been filed in Moore superior court by William Arhe Maness, adminis trator of the estate of Tillet Leo Maness, against Tracy Lendon Reynolds and Wiley Robert Rey nolds. Judgment is asked in the al leged wrongful death of Tillet Leo Maness, 26, in an auto-truck accident of April 27 on a rural paved road, one and one-half . miles north of Robbins. Plaintiff states that a truck driven by W&ey Robert Rey nolds, \yho is in the poultry and hauling business with Tracy Lendon Reynolds on Robbins^, Route 1, crashed head-on into the car driven by Maness when the truck tried to pass another car and a slow-moving motor grader. Because of the highway work being done on the shoulders, with the motor grader working in the right-hand lane going north, and oncoming traffic obscured be cause o fa curve, caution signs had been erected to the south, the complaint affirms. Conditions were wet and rainy, it states. 'The truck, with a load of ap proximately 38,000 pounds on its trailer, hit the southbound car with such force it knocked the auto 86 feet backwards, and then went 113 feet itself before the defendant could bring it to a stop, the complaint alleges. Machine Shop Math Course Will Begin The Lee County Industrial Ed ucation Center will start a 60- hour course in machine shop math Monday, July 20, at 7 p. m. Classes will meet each Monday and Wednesday night from 7-10 P. m. Total cost of the course will be $3 payable July 20, Hoyt Hack ney, Jr., will be the instructcHr. 'This course will be of much help to a machine operator or a person who plans to work in the machine industry, said an an nouncement from the Center. July Sale Spring & Summer Merchandise EVERY DRESS EVERY BERMUDA EVERY BLOUSE EVERY SKIRT EVERY SUIT Remaining Summer Hais now $3.00 each McLean Style Shop South Street Aberdeen
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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July 16, 1964, edition 1
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