THURSDAY. OCTOBER 11, 1S56 THE PILOT—Soulhern Pines, North Carolina WITH THE Armed Forces William Everett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Track K. Everett of Route 2, Raeford, graduated from the U. S. Naval Pre-Flight School at Pensacola, Fla., September 21. He is a graduate of the U. S. Naval Academy, and is now a commissioned ensign. He has been assigned to the Whiting Field Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Milton, Fla., for pri mary flight training. PILOT ADVERTISING PAYS Page SEVEII Fingerling Bluegills Slocked In 51 Moore Farm Ponds By Federal Agencies There were 81,500 fingerling bluegills, better known as bream, stocked in 51 farm ponds in Moore County last week, according to W. K. Keller, conservationist. The fish were made available to farm ers through a cooperative agree ment between the Upper Cape Fear Soil Conservation District and the Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of Interior. Each of the pond owners re ceived the fish free of charge by m WE BUY AND SELL Good Used Cars See Us Now ! PAGE MOTOR COMPANY Ph. 2-5841 Southern Pines *■) b" FUEL AND going to the McKinney fish hatch ery some four miles south of Hoff man. The same pond owners will be furnished bass for their ponds next spring, about May, or possi bly early June. Fish are stocked at the rate of 1,000 blue gflls and 100 bass per surface acre of fertilized water. Unfertilized waters are stocked at a lesser rate. A. Blossom, hatchery superin tendent, believes there will be sufficient fish available to stock all ponds which have been con structed in Moore County this year. The Soil Conservation Ser vice has been notified by the Fish and Wildlife Service that the fol lowing requests for fish have been approved and it is almost certain that the fish will be available this Rites Held Sunday Mrs. Irene Given, Mrs. Irene Heinz Given, 85, of Manchester, Vt., only daughter of the late H. J. Heinz, founder of the food products firm bearing his name, died last Friday in New York. Mrs. Given, a native of Sharps- burg. Pa., lived in New York un til about 20 years ago when she and her husband moved to Ver mont. She was a board member of the Moore County Hospital and Village Chapel in Pinehurst, where she spent her winters. She also was a member of the board of the Congregational Church in Manchester. Surviving are her husband, John L. Given, a daughter, Mrs. Sarah Larson of Lake Forest, Ill., and a son, John L. Given, Jr.. North Carolina’s forest land is 62.1% of the State’s total land area, compared with 59.7 % in forest for the Southern Region and 34 % for the United States, according to the recent Timber Resource Review of the U. S. Forest Service. DELICIOUS FOOD at DIXIE INN Phone 2032^-VASS. N C. MONDAYS Thru SATURDAYS. GROUPS INVITED ■ Weekly Rooms $10 Single, $15 Double and up Retired People Weekly. Rooms and Meals $17.50 up SOUTHERN PINES WAREHOUSES, Inc. Carlton Thomas, I Aberdeen Veteran, KEROSENE OUR METERS Are Approved By The State PAGE &|!SHAMBIIRG£R Phone Windsor 4-2414 ABERDEEN ^-iNew York City. Funeral services E. Smith Pinehurst; Sandy Black, were held Monday in Manches (two ponds) West End; Frank Cox, |er. West End; Tom Flinchum, Car thage; Raymond Freeman, Biscoe; Arthur Garner and Herbert Host, Eagle Springs; Marvin Garner, Robbins; R. H. Kendall, Candor; Dave McCallum, Carthage; and I. L. Blackman. Southern Pines. i t-v . ' In 1955, SCS technicians, Keller | DlCS lu Durham and Kelly, assisted Moore County farmers and landowners to con-1 Carlton L. Thomas, 46, died struct 86 ponds. As of October 8 last Thursday afternoon at the there have been 51 ponds con- Veteran’s Hospital in Durham, structed in 1956 with SCS techni- Funeral services were held at cal assistance, varying in size Pleasant Hill Methodist Church from 0.3 acre to 16 acres. Many near Jackson Springs Sunday at of these ponds have been con- 3 p. m., conducted by the Rev. structed for irrigation or livestock Ray Gosnell. Burial was in the WRtGr sriQ h&vG TGCGivGcl finsucis'l j church CGiriGtGiry’. assistance from the ACP program. | He was born near Jackson Springs, the son of Donaldson and Dovin Luck Thomas, and was a textile worker. Surviving are his wife, the former Inez Keller of Ruther- fordton; three daughters, Betty, a student nurse at Lumberton, Brenda and Linda of the home, two sons, Carlton L., USAF, Cal ifornia, and Donald, of the home; one sister, Mrs. Ruth McCaskill, Red Springs; and three brothers Rotary Halloween Party To Be Held At Memorial Field SUBSCRIBE TO THE PILOT MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING NEWS WEEKLY. The annual Rotary Club Hal loween party will be held at Memorial rield this year, mem-U^ g Seaerove Edaar A Red plaLtag LSi^itTe?^at°the^regu- G. of Low- lar luncheon meeting Friday. The Pilot had last week re ported the scene as Town Park. Joe Scott, who is chairman of the Rotary planning committee, told the club of progress made to date and said the party, which annually attracts hundreds of children, will have many ] features this year. ' Busses, he said, would be sta tioned at the Post Office and would make continuous trips back and forth to Memorial Field, giving anyone a ride who desires one. The club voted to donate $25 as a gift to the group in West Southern Pines planning a simi lar Halloween party. I Other items at the meeting saw Bob Leland inducted as a mem ber by the Rev. W. C. Timmons. Danny Sheffield was a guest. RE-ROOFING? Wtluve You’ll feel safer If you can say. • • nvpiP!! ■tK'i’f.Vi' Johns-Manville Asphalt Shingles are made to the highest standard of quality. Thejr’re avail able in a wide range of colors and blends. Whether for a new house or new farm build ing or for re-roofing your present home or farm buildings these colorful shingles give you long years of protection and safety against fire^ | weather and wear. Easy to apply, Johns-Manville Asphalt Shin- ' gles bring color and beauty to your home. Eco- i nomical in cost, they provide long life and en-: hance the value of your buildings. Let us show you styles and colors HEADQUARTERS FOR JOHNS-MANVILLE B UIL DI N G M AT E R i A L S EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS CAN BE ARRANGED Southern Pines Warehouses, Inc. Phone 2-7131 "Everything For The Builder" OUR 32nd YEAR Southern Pines, N. C. This is vdiere Tomorrow starts! I Commercial slaughter of live stock in North Carolina during July amounted to 22,789,000 pounds liveweight, say specialists with the North Carolina Crop Re porting Service. This was 12.7 per cent above the 20,219,000 pounds slaughtered during the same pe riod last year. Calves showed a | decline in the number slaugh tered. Wilson, North Carolina, is the] world’s largest bright leaf tobac co market center, with 19 auc tion warehouses. CiOlden ^fedding PINT 45 O FIFTH KENTUCKY WHISKEY A blend- 86 PROOF • 30% STRAIGHT WHISKEY 70% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS JOSEPH S. FINCH & CO. ALADDIN, PA. & FRESNO, CALIF. New Fairlane 500 Club Sedan After today, American cars will never he the same again. For the Big New Kind of Ford is a brilliant new automotive package—the one fine car in the low-price Held! We've unwrapped the 1957 Fords! They’re the best Fords of our lives. The power is new—with Silver Anniversary V-8’s to fit every horse power need. The style is new—a revolutionary, sharp, brilliant, clear-cut design that will stand out in traffic. The comfort is new—a rock-solid velvet-road ride. The braking is positive — silky smooth when your toe says "whoa.” The steering is light and firm. This is a great automobile, from the large honest dial faces on the in strument panel to the effortless loaf ing way it cruises. The new Ford begins with the “InnerFord.” Its new elegance comes from within, from the way its auto motive muscles are put together. All the changes are toward more rugged endurance, toward increased power. toward smoother operation. These are the bases for its “Mark of Tomor row’’ elegance. This is the one fine car in the low-price field. There are actually 19 different new kinds of Ford—and no matter which one you choose, it’s yours at low Ford prices! How does it look,? It’s only four teen hands high—as tall as a child’s pony. You can stand beside it and lean your elbows on its roof. And it’s over seventeen feet long ... 21 inches wider than it is high! This big new Ford looks like the fun on a travel poster. It’s the kind of car that looks sunshiny in the rain. It looks as fresh as morning. It looks like tomorrow—like the first thing out of Detroit that sym bolizes the new Age of Movement. See it at your Ford Dealer’s. Give it your own Action Test. But you’d better leave a deposit ... for you won’t want to bring it back. The Big- New Kind of Ford. Comes In 19 Mod^s New Fairlane Club Sedan New Custom 300 Fordor Sedan In all models you have your choice ol engines, either the great Mileage Maker Six or one of the new Silver Anniversary Ford V-8’s.* You’ll have no trouble choosing Ford — but you’ll have trouble choosing whicii Fordl Six or V-8, the going is greatl *A special 270-hp Thunderbird 312 Super, V-8 engine available at extra cost. Also, extra-high perjormance Thunderbird 312 Super V-8 delivering up to 28} hp. See the new Ttindi r^FordJhr ^57 ^ at your Ford Dealers today!... 57 Ford SEE YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER , JTaclcsoin IVlotoz's, Inc. U. S. Highway No. 1 N. C. Dealers License No. 1909 SOUTHERN PINES, N. C.

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