Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 8, 1964, edition 1 / Page 9
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e t 9 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Page NINE SURVEY BEING MADE IN COUNTY How Do Tobacco Varieties Compare? By F. D. ALLEN Couoty Extension Chaiiman A Tobacco Variety Perform ance survey is being conducted in Moore County to determine how various varieties compared in yield and value during 1964 on tobacco farms. As many farmers as possible are being contacted so that the information gathered will repre sent a sizable portion of the to bacco grown in the county. Grow ers are being asked what total pounds and value he received from each variety he grew in 1964. Cards are being sent to a rep resentative group of growers in the county and the growers who receive cards are urged to fill out the card accurately and return it to the County Extension Chair man’s office. Everyone who re ceives a card should send it in regardless of whether his yield is low, medium or high. This is es sential if the summary of the variety data is to represent the actual performance of a given variety in the county and state. This information is also being accumulated by other counties, and a summary of the county, belt and State results will be available for growers to see as soon as it has been summarized. Furniture 8e Boat Upholstery Free Estimates Pickup & Delivery Service Custom Upholstery Center US 1-A South Southern Pines (Next to Almond’s Tire Service) REGISTRATION IN SCHOOLS ‘Health Careers’ Meeting For Young People Of Area Slated November 7 Health Careers For North Car olina District III will hold their Second Annual Health Careers Congress on Saturday, November 7, at the Ovens Auditorium in Charlotte, Nowth Carolina. Dis trict III includes Moore and 13 other counties. This Congress is for high school students who are interest ed in a health career, to encour age them in preparing themselves to help solve the critical person nel shortage which exists in the medical and allied professions. Participation will be on a lim ited basis—4 students and 1 adult from each of the 137 high schools in District HI. Local participation will be announced later. The morning program will fea ture a keynote speaker, the Mer cy Hospital School of Nursing Glee Club and a presentation of several classifications in the health field necessary to the re covery of a patient. Luncheon will be served in the Coliseum, adjacent to the Auditorium. Pro fessional Associations and Volun teer Agencies will have educa tional exhibits on the Mezzanine of the Auditorium. Interpreters will be on hand to answer detail ed questions. After lunch, there will be tours to five facilities in Charlotte— throi/gh WASHDAY WITH A FLAMELESS ELECTRIC DRYER ’"^“055 away your clothes pins. Forget about carry ing heavy loads of wet clothes to the line. Dry anytime . . . day or night. Have more time for your family. A flameless electric dryer can help you do all these things and more. An electric appliance dealer will be glad to help you make your selection. CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY Alt investor-owned, taxpaying, public utility company Charlotte Memorial Hospital, Charlotte Rehabilitation Hospital, Mercy Hospital, Presbyterian Hospital and the Wesley Nursing Center. Guidance Counselors of the high schools have been sent regis tration sheets for the Congress and Pre-registration will close on October 16. The Congress will inform some 600 young people of the opportu nities for rewarding service of fered by health careers, to help them plan such careers and to be of assistance to counselors and advisors of these young people in their work in this area. Last year some 8:50 adults and students from 13 counties at tended the first Health Careers Congress held by District HI on October 26, 1963, at the Ovens Auditorium. Health Careers For North Car olina is a program of the North Carolina Hospital Education and Research Foundation, Inc., which is supported by more than 120 hospitals, 28 hospital auxiliaries, the North Carolina Medical So ciety and League for Nursing and several corporations and founda tions. Miss LoRayne Dinguess, Coor dinator for District HI is located, in The Duke Endowment at 1500 North Carolina Natilonal Bank Building, Charlotte. CARD OF THANKS We wish to acknowledge with grateful thanks the kindness shown our husband and father, Samuel Turner Fields, during his illness and upon his death, by his many friends and relatives, and by the nurses and doctors at Moore Memorial Hospital. Mrs. S. T. Fields and Family PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ROBERT W. HOWARD 244 N. W. 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The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Oct. 8, 1964, edition 1
9
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