Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Sept. 24, 1964, edition 1 / Page 5
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page FIVE m- # f Women's Activities and Sandhills Social Events MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF, Editor TELEPHONE 692-6512 FIREMEN’S AUXILIARY— Wives of volun teer members of the Pinehurst Fire Department have recently formed an auxiliary that will select officers, plan meetings and decide what to do to help out the men in their work with the Fire Department. New officers shown above, from left: Mrs. Peter Tufts, vice president; Mrs. Carson Dennis, president; Mrs. Leonard Whitesell, secretary-treasiirer. (Hemmer photo) Pat Starnes School To Start Adult Dance Classes A l2-week course in adult ball room dancing begins Tuesday at the Pat Starnes School of Dance, according to Mrs. Pat (Boyd) Starnes, instructor. Beginner and intermediate classes will be held at the South land Hotel for couples and’"will include the latest steps in fox trot, waltz, swing, rurnba, bossa nova and cha-cha. Mrs. Starnes attended a three-day workshop in Columbia, S. C. last summer, where she received instruction in the lastest dance technique from nationally known teachers. Interested persons are asked to caU Mrs. Starnes at 692-2302, for further information. Looking Ahead BROWNIE SCOUTS The first meeting of the Brown ie Girl Scout troop for third- graders will be on Tuesday, Sep tember 29, at 3:20 at Emmanuel Episcopal Church. Any interested third grade girl may attend. iNew Heir-Rivals MATTHEW MILLER Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Miller of Niagara announce the birth of their first child, a son, Matthew Kenneth. The infant, weighing seven pounds, three and one- quarter ounces, was born Septem ber 13 at St. Joseph’s Hospital. LAURA LYNN COX Mr. and Mrs. Winfred Allan Cox announce the birth of a daughter, Laura Lynn, at St. Jo seph’s Hospital on September 16. The baby weighed six pounds, 7 3|4 ounces. They have one oth er daughter,' Frankie Ann, 14 months. Miss Heit Tells [^roup Of Training For Peace Corps Miss Mary Margaret HeiL who has joined the Peace Corps find has left for her 21-month assign ment in Peru, was the speaker at the September 17 meeCing of the St. Anthony’s Women’s-Club. The speaker gave a most inter esting talk on her training for the Corps in San Diegp, Calif. This was the first meeting of the new season for the club. LEAGUE BOWLING SANDHILL BOWLERETTES Results Carolina Soap & Cqpdlg. 4, Southern National Bank 9..y Mill Outlet 2, Carolina Bank 2. Bamum Realty & Ins. 3, Un sponsored 1. The Billid-Fran 1^, Craig Drug Co. 2%. High Ind. Series, Phyllis Lut- trell 489; High Ind. Single, Glen da Martin 173. High Team Single, The Billie- Fran 571; High Team Lines, The Billie-Fran, 1674. Standings W L Carolina Soap 8 0 Mill Outlet 5 3 The Billie-Fran 4.5 3.5 Craig Drug Co. 4.5 3.5 Barnum Realty 4 4 Unsponsored . 3 5 Carolina Bank 2 6 Southern National Bank 1 7 Hollywood Hotel Bingo Winners listed The winners at the Saturday night bingo game for Hollywood guests were: Mrs. Sidney Cole, Mrs. J. D. Paul, Mrs. Rufus Sprague, Mrs. Elden Hartshorn, Mrs. Herman Krueger, Mrs. Lloyd R. Hunt, yol. SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT, MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING NEWS AND ADVERTISING WEEKLY. ( Gentry Completes Insurance Course William H. Gentry, Jr., execu tive vice president of Barnum Realty and Insurance Co., return ed Saturday from Hartford, Conn., where he completed the five-week Home Office Sales Course, sponsored by the Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. The concentrated study pro gram, covering all aspects cif Oomercial and personal insur ance, is designed for company personnel and independent agents. Forty-four students from 29 states took part in the recent 213th session of the course at tended by Mr. Gentry. Out-Of-Town Friends, Kin, At Dutton Rites Coming from Virginia to at tend the funeral services for Claude L. Dutton at the First Baptist Church on September 12 were Mrs. Roy Turnley of Post Oak; Mrs. Sadie Turnley and Mrs. Roy Burnett, of Richmond; -Mrs. Ruby Humphries of Childs- burg; and Mrs. Virgil Strickland of Snell. Also attending were Mr. and Mrs. Temple Turner of Rocky Mount. Mr. Dutton’s grandson, Roger Dutton, serving with the U. S. Navy in the Mediterranean, flew in from Naples, Italy, but air plane delays prevented his arriv ing, in time for the funeral. He is remaining here for a visit with Mrs. Grace Dutton, his grandmother, at her home on S. Bennett St. An obituary appears elsewhere in today’s Pilot. Admiral Browne Dies In Virginia; Rites Set Monday Funeral services for Rear Adm. (Ret.) George H. Browne, who died suddenly Wednesday at Charlottesville, Va., will be held held Monday in Arlington Na tional Cemetery, at 10 a.m. with full military honors. His wife, who survives him, is the former Jane McMullen of Pinehurst. He is also survived by a son and a grandson. Ad‘m. Browne attended the United States Naval Acad emy at Annapolis, Md., where he received his commission. During most of his career in the Navy, he was in the Submarine Corps. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society, he was enrolled at the University of Vir ginia to which he had gone for graduate work after his retire ment from active duty with the Navy. LARGE MOORE DELEGATION GOING Carolyn Blue Is Candidate For High YDC Post At Convention In Raleigh The Moore County YDC will send a large delegation to Ra leigh this weekend in support of Carolyn Blue of Eagle Springs for national YDC committee- woman. J. Elvin Jackson, senior party chairman in Moore, is among the many planning to at tend. Mrs. Blue, second-term presi dent of the Moore County Young Democrats club has oposition from Sue Stephenson of Raleigh. 'The election of officers will cli max the state YDC convention at the Sir Walter Hotel Saturday morning. Room 631 at the hotel will be the Moore County head quarters. Wednesday, the announcement was made that the large Meck lenburg club had given its en dorsement to Mrs. Blue. The Lee County club had previously en dorsed her and of course her own Moore County club gave its 100 per cent endorsement and sup port. Assurance of support has come from a number of clubs, Mrs. Blue said this week, but because of other contests absolute en dorsements have been few. Both young women have been visiting Blue Attending National Meeting H. Clifton Blue of Aberdeen left Tuesday night for Atlantic City, N. J., where the National Legislative Council is in progress all this week at the Hotel Shel burne. Mrs. Blue is attending sessions of the council as representative of the North Carolina Legislative Council, of which he is a member as Speaker of the House of Rep resentatives. Rep. Blue plans to leave At lantic City Friday afternoon and will stop over at Raleigh to at tend the State YDC convention. Seniors, Parents Invited To Meet Seniors and their parents are invited to meet together on Mon day at 8 p.m. in Room HI (Old student lounge) of the East South ern Pines High School to discuss guidance services available to the students, said Mrs. Jane Mc- Phaul, guidance counselor. These services include: voca tional programs, educational op portunities, military services and scholarships. A representative of the Sand hills Community College will meet with the group to tell plans for the college as to curriculum offered and to discuss transfer of college credits. Also present will be a repre sentative of the Lee County In dustrial Education Center at San ford. Any interested persons are in vited to be present. HOTEL (Continued frcrn Page 1) ably, the manager noted. There is another range on the side. The Dantr.v, salad room and bake shop are consolidated. Plac ed under a garde manager, cold cuts, salads and buffet foods can be kept cold and transferred in stantly from there to the trays by the waitresses. Up to 300 salads can be kept cold here at one time, ready for quick service. To keep hot foods hot are new infra-red lights on the serving table, which blink on automatical ly after the food has been there for a short period so it will have no chance to cool off. A new, 17-foot Champion dish washer has been installed of a conveyer type that moves glasses and silverware and dishes along continuously. The kitchen is not air condition ed but is kept cool and free of cooking odors by air-blowers. Other major redecorating and remodeling is evident in the front lobby, which is now entered by one wide front door, replacing the two doors and enhancing the beauty of the front entrance to the hotel. In this lobby also, new chairs of warm black rattan, with color ful cushions, have replaced the former furnishings. The dining room has been re papered throughout. Each summer, about 20 rooms are renovated and necessary re decorating is done, beginning with the top floor and working down, and this has also been carried out this year. On the managerial staff at the Carolina, in addition to Mr. De- lany, are Gerald' F. Hurley, reser vation manager; Kyle Fleming, assistant manager and Clifford Smith, sales manager. The hotel will open formally for its 65th season October 15. clubs and other meetings about the State, seeking support. The Moore County club in for mer years has produced a state YDC president, H. Clifton Blue, arid a national committeeman, Voit Gilmore. Both are support ing Carolyn in her race now, and both are expected to attend all or part of the convention. Events Listed Registration will begin in the lobby of the Sir Walter at 11 a.m. Friday and continue through the day. A ladies’ luncheon and fashion show will be followed by a 3 pm keynote address by Dan K. Moore gubernatorial nominee. There will be a banquet at 7 p. m. Friday in the Southern and Carolina Rooms of Raleigh’s Memorial Auditorium. Elections will be at 9 am Sat urday. A 5 pm reception that day will honor county YDC presi dents. The main convention ban quet will be at 7, followed by a dance from 10 till 1. A legislative breakfast Sunday morning will conclude the con vention. First Large Coin Show In Area Set For October 17-18 The Sandhills Coin Club, draw ing membership from a half doz en counties but having its head quarters and holding its meet ings in Southern Pines is plan ning its First Annual Coin Show to be held at the National Guard Armory here, Saturday and Sun day, October 17 and 18. This will also be the first large coin show to be held in this section of the State. W. T. Huntley, general chair man of the show, said 41 tables have been taken by dealers, up to the full capacity of the Arm ory, and the dealers and amateur exhibitors will put on outstand ing displays. Dealers are listed from over North Carolina and also from Towson, Md.; Martinsville, Charlottesville and Richmond, Va.,, and Spartanburg, Green ville, Bennettsville and Greer, S. C. Final plans for the show were discussed at the club’s monthly meeting at the municipal court room 'Thursday night, with C. A. McLaughlin of Southern Pines, president, presiding. Doors of the armory will be open for the show from 10 am to 10 pm Saturday, 12 noon to 6 pm Sunday. Guards will be provided by the club for the entire period of the show, since value of the property to be displayed there will run into thousands of dollars. Door prizes will be awarded on both days. Invitation to display their coins has been extended to two out standing amateurs. Bill Floyd and Mac Owens of Salisbury, whose large and amazing collec tion is reported one of the coun try’s most interesting. General admission will be free and hundreds of collectors and dealers from over this and neighboring states are expected, along with many others who want to enjoy the show, with its fascinating displays and educa tional aspects. This is the first big project of the Sandhills Coin Club, which was organized in March, 1963, and is affiliated with State, re gional and national coin club as sociations. Chairman for the show, in ad dition to Huntley, are June Bay- liff of Aberdeen, chairman of the bourse tables, also reservations; Mark Liddell, Southern Pines, door prizes; Larry Snider and Winston Burroughs, Southern Pines, registration; C. A. Mc Laughlin, cards and posters, as sisted b.y Huntley, in charge of direction signs, and Mrs. June Bayliff, of host cards; Bill Sea- well, Raeford, social events and exhibits. The chairmen have set up their committees from the membership of some 65 persons. Officers in addition to Mc Laughlin, are V. P. (Sonny) Guion, Aberdeen, vice-president; Mrs. Irene Mullinix, Vass, secre tary-treasurer, and directors W. T. Huntley, Southern Pines; Price Morris, Laurinburg; Jim Pheagin, St. Pauls; Fred Riley, Ashley Heights, and W. S. Tay lor, Aberdeen. A series of slides from the American Numismatic Associa tion, on “Coins of Special Signifi cance,” was shown at this week’s meeting, with Earl Seawell at the projector. An auction sale was held, with Huntley as auctioneer and six nickels bid in for $99 as top sale item. The members showed and examined coins, sold and swapped until a late hour. INJUNCTION (Continued from Page 1) made Soap and Candle Co. are listed in the incorporation papers as Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. McSwain, with a Southern Pines post office address, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. McSwain of Raleigh. The Carolina Company has several manufacturing plants and office locations in Southern Pines. The Handmade Soap and Candle Co. has a plant and sales room at Skyline. The complaint alleges that the defendant corporation. Hand made Soap and Candle Company, is manufacturing and selling soap and candles “under a tradename and trademarks and in packages, wrappers and containers which imitate and' so nearly resemble” those of the plaintiff company “as to falsely represent that the defendant’s soap and candles come from the same source” as those packaged in the distinctive appearance of the plaintiff’s prO' ducts. The complaint alleges that the Handmade Soap and Candle Company “deliberately and ma liciously” uses packaging and con tainers and confusingly similar trademarks “with an intent to deceive the trade and public into mistaking and confusing tlie soap and candles of the defendant for and with those of the plaintiff. . for the purpose of unlawfully ap propriating and trading upon the goodwill and reputation of the plaintiff. . .” The complaint also charges that the defendant “has passed off or attempted to pass off its goods as being goods of the plaintiff; that it has sought to divert busi ness from the plaintiff; and that it has appropriated “trade se crets, formulae, mixtures, ma chinery, forms and molds” and has unlawfully obtained custom er lists, sources of materials sup ply and other information be longing to the plaintiff and has wrongfully appropriated this in formation, to its own use. The complaint is signed by two Greensboro attorneys, Clifton T. Hunt, Jr., and Theodore H. Brooks. W. Harry Fullenwider is local attorney for the plaintiff company. Great Books Club To Start Season Oct. 12 First session of the Fall season for the Great Books Club will be held at the Southern Pines Li brary, Monday, October 12, at 8 p.m. David A. Drexel, discussion leader, said that “The Brothers Karamasov” by Dostoyevsky will be the book for consideration. All interested persons are invited and are urged to read the book before attending, so that they can join in the discussion. The club plans to meet the second and fourth Monday nights of each month. W. A. Simpson Succumbs At 81 William A. Simpson, 81, of 260 Hill Road, died Wednesday afternoon at the Pinehurst Nurs ing Home. Funeral services will be held at St. Paul Apostle Church, Troy, N. Yj., Monday morning. Interment will follow in St. Peter’s Cemetery. Surviving are five sisters, Mrs. Edward J. Purcell, Troy, N. Y.; Mrs. Catherine Guy, Menands, N. Y., Mrs. Michael Meany, Schenectady, N. Y., Miss Clara Simpson and Miss Edna Simpson of St. Petersburg, Fla.; and two brothers, Lesly Simpson of Troy, N. Y., and Kenneth Simpson of St. Petersburg, Fla. Glaucoma Clinic To Be Conducted Here October 15 An eye clinic for the detection of glaucoma—a leading cause of blindness among adults in the United States—will be conduct ed at the National Guard armory on Morganton Road here, Thurs day, October 15, it was announced this week. The hours will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p..m. Dewey L. Ritter, Jr., of South ern Pines, chairman of the Zone 5 Lions Clubs which are sponsor ing the clinic, said that a local physician and two others from Duke Hospital, Durham, will be on hand to perform eye exami nations for which no charge will be made. The recently formed Lions Zone 5 includes clubs in Southern Pines, Aberdeen, Pinehurst, Pine- bluff and West End. The clinic is one in a series sponsored by Lions Clubs over the state, in coopera tion with the N. C. Association for the Blind. More than 15,500 persons have been examined in 13 of these clinics, of whom 564 have been referred for fiuther tests. All persons over 35 years of age are urged to visit the free clinic, Mr. Ritter said. Aid to the blind and sight con servation form a major project of Lions clubs throughout the state. FROM ONEIDA SILVERSMITHS ■ Something for everybody! in our glittering array of silver gift items- All pieces are supremely beautiful, useful and in expensive. Made of finest silverplate. Shop early. A Shrimp-Dessert Dish $4.95 B Candle Snuffer $2.50 C Fluted Bon Bon D> $4.95 D Fluted Compote $5.95 E 2-Ute Candelabra $9.95 Expansion Trivet $9.95 G Twin Jam Set $9.95 CCS plus F«d. T&X dlitter ^ox Main Street Aberdeen PILOT ADtrERTISING PAYS Always OlocN 1 \ kITCRKST“ And a" fouu SoPPby OF “DESiee. Voo / bc»CE_ HAMLET, N. C.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1964, edition 1
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