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FRIDAY. JUNE 11. 1954
THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina
Three Southern
Pines Students
Get Duke Degrees
Three students from Southern
Pines were awarded degrees at
Duke University’s 102nd com
mencement Monday morning.
The local students, all of whom
received A. B. degrees, are:
John Austin Beasley, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Beasley, 565 Indi
ana Ave., who was a member of
the Glee Club during his stay at
Duke.
Rosemary Maud Dundas,
daughter of Mrs. John Dundas
610 Valley Road, and the late Vice
Admiral Dundas, who was presi
dent of Kappa Kappa Gamma sor
ority. '
Reginald S. Hamel, son of Mrj
and Mrs. R. A. Hamel, 370 Leake
St.
About 1,050 undergraduate and
graduate students received de
grees. The baccalaureate sermon
was delivered m Duke Chapel
Sunday morning by the Rev. Dr.
James W. Henley of Nashville,
Tenn. Dr. Robert G. Gustavson,
president and executive director
of Resources for the Future,
Washington, D. C., spoke at the
graduation exercises.
Gov. William B. Umstead also
addressed the Class of 1954.
Edwin C. Bliss Is
Clark U. Graduate
Edwin C. Bliss, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Anthony H. Bliss who live
on No. 1 highway north of South
ern Pines, received a bachelor of
arts degre at the 64th annual com
mencement of Clark Universitj),
Worcester, Mass., Sunday.
A graduate of Taunton, Mass,,
High School, he majored in econ
omics at Clark Uiiiversity, com
pleting his requirements last sum
mer. He was active in crew, cho
rus, fencing, music club, Clark
Christian association, rowing
club, psychology, club, dramatics,
international relations club, hu-
manites club, was a member of
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and
Spanish club president. His broth
er, F. Allen Bliss, received a
bachelor of arts degree from Clark
in 1952.
ENGRAVED Informals.
reasonable. The Pilot.
Prices
Drug Specials
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OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK
CRAIG’S WALGREEN STORE
SYCAMORE ST. ABERDEEN, N. C.
CROP CONDITIONS
Due to warm weather the cot
ton crop has made remarkable re
covery and some fields that were
thought lost are making a come-
'back. There has been consirerable
replanting of cotton especially in
the northeast part of the State
and of course many fields will not
have as good a stand of cotton as
would be desirable With favorable
weather in the next several weeks
cotton should continue to improve
because examination of roots show
that the re is a good new root
system developing.
PAGE SEVEk
FOR
Land Surveying
CONTACT
Clarence H. Blue
Matthews Bldg. So. Pines
Bourbon
Whiskey
’'old
stac«,
PINT
i$3.65 415 Of.
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FRANKFORT. KENTUCKY
h
HOWARD L. MATTHEWS overheads a telephone line in Ger
many, where he was recently promoted to corporal. Assistant
wire section chief in Battery D of the 1st Infantry Division's 5th
Field Artillery Battalion. Corporal Matthews entered the Army in
January, 1953, and arrived overseas last June. His wife, Mar
garet, and parents. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Matthews, live on Route
3, Carthage. (U.S. Army Photo)
Five Local Young
People Graduate
At Chapel Hill
Five Southern Pines young peo
ple received degrees Monday
night at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, according
to information from the univer
sity.
With the degrees they received,
they are:
William Luin Baker, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. L. Baker, A. B. in
Education.
Jane T. Carey, daughter of Cal
vert Carey of Greenwich, Conn.,
and granddaughter of Mrs. J. H.
Towne of Southern Pines; A. B.
in Sociology.
Janet CornweU, daughter of
Mrs. S. D.Fobes, A. B. in Educa
tion.
John Emmett French, son of
Mrs. Emmett French, A. B. in
Economics.
Channing Nelson Page, Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Page, B. S.
in Business Administration.
Arthur Roosevelt Rowe, son of
Judge and Mrs. J. Vance Rowe
of Aberdeen, was among the grad
uates, receiving an A. B. degree,
having already begun his studies
in the University Law School.
Judge Rowe has law offices in
Southern Pines.
Dr. Andrew J. Warrep, director
of the Rockefeller Foundations
Division of Medicine and Public
Health, gave the principal address
at the commencement exercises.
TOPDRESSING
Since the cotton crop is two to
three weeks late, farmers that are
planning on topdressing with ni
trogen and potash should do se
at once in order to get cotton off
to an early start and avoid the
possibility of Boll Weevil and Boll
Worm trouble that often develops
in late maturing of cotton.
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VETERINARIANS
Southern Pines, N. C.
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11
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SOUTHERN PINES, N. C.
86 PROOK THE STAfiG DIST. CO., FRANKFORT. KT.