FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1954
THE Pn.OT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
Page ELEVEN
V
^9
Dr. Manchester, Authority On Brazil,
To Address Pinehurst Forum Thursday
Duke Historian
Has Served With
Embassy At Rio
Sales Cards Must
Be Turned In To
Dr. Alan K. Manchester, Duke
University historian and one of
the nation’s leading scholars in
Brazilian affairs, will deliver a
lecture at Pinehurst February 11
under the auspices of the Pine
hurst Forum, Inc.
He wiU speak on “A Problem in
Communication.”
Dr. Manchestter, who served as
cultural affairs officer at the U.
S. Enibassy in Rio de Janeiro dur
ing 1951-52, is a specialist in
Latin-American affairs and par
ticularly in the field of the Port
uguese Empire and the history of
Brazil. At Duke, he is professor
of history and dean of undergrad
uate studies.
Dr. Manchester has lived in
Brazil for a total of six years. He
is the author of numerous books
and scholarly papers on Brazilian
history, international relations,
politics and literature.
A member of the Duke faculty
since 1929, Dr. Manchester holds
degrees from Vanderbilt, Colum
bia and Duke Universities. He is
a native of Camden, N. J. He
taught at the University of Okla
homa, several colleges in South
America, Trinity Park School in
Durham and Wallace University
School, Nashville, Tenn., before
joining the Duke faculty.
There will be the usual Coun
try Club buffet supper at 7 p. m.
before the lecture. Reservations
should be made in advance.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT
MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING
NEWS WEEKLY.
Receive Allotment
Notices of tobacco acreage al
lotments were to be mailed out
this week by the Moore County
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Committee Office.
Joe A. Caddell, ASC chairman,
stressed the fact that these notices
are going only to those farmers
who have returned their 1953 to
bacco sales cards to the ASC of
fice in Carthage.
Allotment notices for farms
whose owners have not returned
their sales cards will be held up
until the cards are received.
Under the present regulations,
an allotment on a farm for which
the sales card is not returned to
the county office within 15 days
from the date sales are completed
is subject to reduction.
Ernest G. Wall
Rites Wednesday
Ernest G. Wall, 69, of Ashley
Heights, died Sunday afternoon in
Moore County Hospital. Funeral
services were held Wednesday at
2:30 p. m. at the home in Ashley
Heights. Burial was in the Ashley
Heights Cemetery
Surviving are five sisters, Mrs.
J. T. Robertson and Mrs. J. H.
Moody of Ashley Heights, Mrs. W.
C. Snyder of Pinnacle, Mrs. Al
fred Bell of Atlanta, Ga, and
Miss Joye Wall of the home.
PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS
Money To Spend
Should Determine
Type Home Built
In planning a Jiome, a family
should plan on the amount of
money one has to spend, although
most people plan houses they
want without consideration of the
cost, said R. M. Ritchie, Jr., agri
cultural engineering specialist, at
the Housing Workshop held in
Carthage last week. Some families
spend as much remodeling as the
cost of a new home. Mr. Ritchie
showed a well planned home and
a remodeled one, explaining the
points of good construction and
arrangement of each plan. He ex
plained with charts the size and
locations of bathrooms, walls and
floor coverings, also heating and
insulation.
Miss Pauline E. Gordon, house
furnishing specialist of the Ex
tension Service, stated that cost
will never determine the comfort
and convenience of a home. Some
of the most expensive homes are
“women killers,” said Miss Gor
don. One should list the things
that have to be kept and done
before the house is built. Once it
is built, it sits there. Clothes clos
ets should be built for what we
want to keep in them, she said.
Miss Gordon had models to
show storage for bedrooms as well
as slides. Kitchen storage was
shown by slides also.
Scrubbing is the worst thing
that can be done to a floor said
Miss Gordon. She discussed the
two types of floor finishes; Sur
face and penetrating. Types of
flooring were shown, with finish
es, and Miss Gordon gave the
methods of cleaning the different
A large number Of persons who
were interested in building and
remodeling attended the work
shop.
Funeral Held For
Verdie D. Dickens
Verdie D. Dickens, 60, of Cam
eron, Route 2, died at Lee County
Hospital about 1 o’clock Saturday
afternoon. He was born in Chat
ham County, son of the late
Murph Dickens and Emma Poe.
Funeral services were held at
Swann Station Baptist Church at
2 o’clock Sunday, conducted by
the Rev. C. E. Ruffin and the
Rev. L. M. Dixon. Burial was in
Cameron Grove Cemetery.
Mr. Dickens is survived by his
wife, the former Lena Spivey; two
sons, Elon and Hampton of Cam
eron, Route 2; two brothers, Lour-
via of Norfolk, Va., and Newt of
Mount Gilead; two sisters, Mrs. H.
B. Duke and Mrs. Ed Stephens of
Raleigh
Mlarzac’s
YOUR REMNANT SHOP
Jonesboro Heights — Sanford, N. C.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN PIECE GOODS
SHOP IN SANFORD DAYS — FEBRUARY 4, 5 and 6
NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE
AVONDALE CHAMBRAYS
“Perma Pressed”
Alcoholism Booklet
Stirs Much Interest
The publication of a booklet On
the problems of alcoholism by
the North Carolina Alcoholic Re
habilitation Program has stirred
up an unusual amount of interest
throughout the United States. The
booklet consists of a number of
lectures given by nationally
known authorities, and is titled,
“Alcoholism—A Personal and
Community Problem.”
Director of the State Alcoholic
Rehabilitation Program, S. K.
Proctor, said that numerous re
quests for the booklet have come
from every state in the Union and
from several foreign countries.
Interested individuals may
have a copy free on request to
the North Carolina Alcoholics Re:
habilitation Program, P. O Box
9118, Raleigh.
79c yd.
PRINTED TAFFETAS
Beautiful patterns, 45” wide
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WE HAVE THESE LEADING BRANDS OF FERTILIZER,
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iovO-
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BUILDING
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^ Most Complete Line of Paints in the Sandhills
Johns-Manville Rock Wool Batts, Asbestos Roof
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AMMUNITION
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FENCING
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Phone 3412
The Big Supply House of the Sandhills'
Pinehurst, N. C.