^THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 1955
THE PILOT—Sonihern Pines. North Carolina
Rain Hampers Local Tennis Matches; j Plans Made For
Play Will Continue Saturday, Sunday
Men’s tennis matches held Sun-'
.day afternoon on the to-wn courts
were interrupted by rain shortly
after they began, with aU four
^; courts in play, and a good turnout
' of players waiting to take part.
Rain cut off the women’s con
test Saturday afternoon also, but
not until lour singles matches had
been reeled off. Two doubles
matches were interrupted by
weather, both with tied scores.
One ended alter tbe first set with
score tied at 7 to 7 for Kim Mac-
Kim and Pat Van Camp playing
against Cathy Gilmore and Sarah
^ Garrison. In the other, Martha
Underwood and Danny Devins,
T.mifln Bullock and Margaret
Hobbs, had each copped a set, for
a 6-4, 4-6 tie.
The matches will continue this
weekend and next, with the wom
en playing Saturday afternoon,
men Sunday, and everyone invit
ed to participate. Teams are
headed by Martha Underwood
and Margaret Hobbs for the wom-
'4'' en, Wayne Harrison and Charles
Phillips for the men. Play starts
about 1:30 p.m.
' Women’s singles played Satur
F.H.A. Fall Rally
Here October 11
day were as follows; Lillian Bul
lock beat Martha Underwood, 6-4,
6-0; Danny Devins beat Margaret
Hobbs, 6-2, 6-2; Eloise Whitesell
beat Kim MacKie, 6-1, 6-4; Pat, — -
Van Camp beat Sarah Garrison, 'plans for the year s work.
6-2, 2-6, 6-3.
The executive council of the
i Future Homemakers of America
'pf Moore County met in the ^ar-
I 'thage High School Homemaking
department Monday to make
Raleigh. Music Group
Memberships Available
The Raleigh Civic Music Asso
ciation will present seven concerts
by soloists, symphonic, and choral
organizations on its 1955-56 con
cert series, and will also include
a performance by the famous Bal
let Theatre, according to Charles
Stephenson, Jr., president of the
association. A number of persons
in this area are members of the
Association.
Anyone wanting to hear the se
ries of programs may join Civic
Music. Memberships are open to
all, but are available only until
the membership deadline, Satur
day, October 1. No single tickets
will be sold for the concerts, and
admission to the programs will be
by membership card only.
I Plans were made for the fall
I'rally to he held in the Southern
Pines School October 11. T^is is
to be a recreational rally -with all
chapters in the county present.
Tire Moore County F. H. A.
I will have an officer’s workshop
in Robbins October 17. Officers
from the local chapters will at
tend this workshop and their
duties wiU be discussed.
A booth at the Moore County
Fair is being planned with the
theme. “The Pure Food and Drug
Act”. Each chapter in the county
will contribute to the booth.
, Carthage F. H. A. served re
freshments to the group. Chap
ters represented were; Robbins,
Carthage, Cameron, Vass-Lake-
view. Farm Life, Pinehurst,
Southern Pines, West End, and
Aberdeen. Chapter advisors also
attended.
CAP Cadets From
Sandhills Visit
Greensboro Gronp
The Southern Pines-Pinehurst
squadron of Civil Air Patrol
Cadets went to a meeting of the
Greensboro squadron on Tuesday
night. The Boys boarded a big Air
Force Bus at the Railroad Sation
in Southern Pines and in front
,of the post office in Pinehurst.
With one stop to eat, they ar
rived at Greensboro in time to
observe the Greensboro imit in
their drill practice and then ac
companied the boys from Greens
boro to their formal meeting quar
ters and were on hand to observe
the manner in which this squad
ron of cadets held their meetings.
They were met and escorted to
the meeting place by Lt. Col. Lit
tleton Upshur, Group 2 CAP
,Commander. As they left the bus,
they were greeted by Col. Up-
Cadlts’ executive officer, Charles
F. Baker of Southern Pines, ac
companied them on the trip, in
,the absence of the commander and
iwas in charge of 'the group.
Cadets making the trip w«;e
Cadet Capt. Donald Walter, Cadet
'Sgt. James Prim, Cadets David
Prim, Matthew Toia, Larry\ Mc
Donald and Norwood McDonald,
of Southern Pines; and Cadets Jo^
PAGE "A*
BUILDING LAWNS
In most of North Carolina the
fall months are the best time of
the year to build permanent
lawns because the young grasses
get a chance to become’well m-
tablished before next summer’s
heat and dry weather. If you are
interested in building a new lawn
this fall you should write to u»e
IL C. Agricultural Extension
they were greeted by Col. Up-,of Southern Pines; and Cadete^|N.^
shur, Capt. Bunting, head of alUDewis, Davis Frye and Richard,,S , Lawns”.
cadets in the state, and Cadet Kehoe of Pinehurst. ^_on_Caro
of the Gerensboro
in
Capt. Thomas
squadron.
Driver of the bus was Sgt. Cecil
Van Hoy of the USAF Air-
I Ground Operations School. The
THE
Be wanner in every room
SAVE to L on FUEL!
FOR YOUR
OLD HEATER
on the Early Purchase of this Quaker Heater equipped
with automatic forced Air Fon.
#
f4utMtatie FORCED
AIR FAN
^ Mokes your new Quaker on auto
matic forced air heating system.
• Turns itseif on and off automatic-
oily.
• Grcuiates ONE-THIRD more warm
air them ordinary heater blower or
fan.
• ♦ I.-*:
{ .j-
$040
The Quality Shop
Poplar St.
ABERDEEN
4/5 QT.
CONTINUES TO BRING YOU
The Finest in Men’s aothing
with
New Great Lines
6 YEARS OLD
Griffon Suits - Sport Coats
Trousers
Stephen L Stetson Hats
Wing Shirts
■'0.„ ■ ' r'
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY, SIX YEARS OLD, 86 PROOF.
OLD .QUAKER DISTILLING COMPANY. LAWRENCEBURG. INDIANA
ALL THIS —AND
Credit if you need it, too!
'"Hf.
J:
* J * t
0
THE AMAZING
NEW
ilH
tu on d^jgsjCASt CA«M Wrirris wamahtusi
Inspect These Outstanding Buys In Onr Used Car Lot!
f
"COMMANDER"
MODEL 4410M OIL HEATER
You'll save from 25% to 3314%
on fuel with a "Commander."
Make any comparison you wish ...
you'll find this great new heater
is an outstanding leader in value,
Styling and operating economy.
Outstanding “Commander” features include • patented Automatic
"Air-Feed” to burner that eliminates draft problems . . . turns
smoke and soot into heat • New Giant Fumace-'Type 4-way
"Heat-Extractor” . . 156% more heat radiating surface than
ordinary heaters . . . reduces chimney heat loss up to 48% »
Giant 2-gallon Humidifier requires filling less often . . . life-time
porcelain finish • waist-high finger-tip cbntrol • all-steel con
struction heats up to 5-1/3 times faster than cast iron • plus 14
other outstanding features including Automatic Safety Valve,
Instant Heat Side Doors, etc.
TRADE HOW - SAVE!
1954 Chevrolet Bel-Air, 4-dr.„ Powerglide
r adio & heater
1954 Chevrolet 210, 4-dr. sedan
1953 Chevrolet Bel-Air 4-dr., Powerglide
radio and heater
1953 Chevrolet Bel-Air 4-dr., radio & heater
1953 Chevrolet 210, 4-dr. sedan, r. & h.
1952 Chevrolet 4-dr. sedan, Powerglide r&h
1954 Ford Customline 2-door
1951 Chevrolet 2-door, radio 8e heater
1951 Kaiser 2-door
1949 Olds 88 Sedan ^
1949 Chevrolet 2-door Sedan
f
-TRUCKS-
hi.1
Liberal trade-in allowance
for your old heater.
1954 Chevrolet Vz-ton Pickup
1953 Chevrolet V^-ton Pickup
1952 Chevrolet Vz-ton Pickup
1954 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery
1950 Chevrolet 2-ton Truck
A-
■ f
Easy
Terms
Hallum Furniture Co.
Aberdeen
Rockingham
1955 Chevrolet lV2-*ton with hydraiilic steel flat dump
PINEHURST GARAGE, Inc.
0 K Used Car Lot
PINEHURST
Phone 4951
CARTHAGE
Phone 5721