'i t \ Page SIX In addition to courses being taught at the Department of Public Health Nursing of the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, exten sion courses are offercid for the benefit of students living in all parts of North Carolina. i The word “garden” means an enclosed space and gardening is distinguished from agriculture by being carried on within an ; enclosure of some kind, instead of open fields, according to the American Association of Nurs- I erymen. Eastman Dillon, Union Securities & Co. Members New York Stock Exchange 105 East Pennsylvania Avenue Southern Pines, N. C. Telephone: Southern Pines 2-3731 and 2-3781 Complete Investment and Brokerage Facilities Direct Wire to our Main Office in New York A. E. RHINEHART Resident Manager Consultations by appointment on Saturdays Beautify your home as you heat it! WITH Genuine DUO^ERM FURNITURE STYLED OIL HOME HEATER 1 Capacity Console f Luxurious mahogany finish. New Exclusive Automatic Power-Air Blower gives even forced warm-air heating, saves 1 out of 4 fuel dollars—(optional). Exclusive Duo-Therm Dual Chamber Burner gi^s more beat from every drop of oil. 4 Big heat radiating doors. Waist-high heat control dial. Automatic Draft Minder. Waste Stopper. Humidifier. Add thermostat and tend fire from your easy chair. $10.00 Down Delivers from . % BURNEY HARDWARE CO. ABERDEEN. N. C- ECHO SPRING KENTUCKY BOURBON 45 PINT $3.85 4/5 Of. ; H PSOOF • ECHO SPRING DISTIllING COMPANY, lOUiSVIllE, KENTUCKY THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 8. 1956 PINEHURST NEWS By MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF Parent-Teacher Meet The November meeting of the Pinehurst Parent-Teacher As sociation will be held next Tues day at 8 p. m. in the school audi torium. The business session will be followed by a play celebrating National Education Week, enti tled “Beach for Freedom,” which is to be presented by high school student members. Rehearsal Party Wallace O’Neal entertained 35 friends from Chapel Hill, Greens boro and Durham Friday evening at the Holly Inn at a rehearsal, party for a former University of North Carolina Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity brother, Hartwell Conklin of Durham, whose mar riage to Miss Sue Fryer of Hills-1 boro took place Saturday at the Pinehxirst Community Church. The bride was formerly a room mate of Miss Carolyn Nelson’s at UNC. Birth Announcement Mr. and Mrs. Leonard White- sell announce the birth of a daughter, their first child, Mon day at the Moore County Hospi tal. Brief Mention Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Quig ley are due in today from New York City to occupy their cot tage, Column Lodge, for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hotchkiss were weekend guests of his mother, Mrs. H. P. Hotchkiss, at Pine Villa. Lt. Clyde Garner, who return ed two weeks ago from duty as a jet pilot in Korea and has been on leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Garner, Tuesday reported for duty at the Myrtle Beach AFB. Here for their annual fall visit at Maple Cottage are Robert E. Rich, Charles Rittling, William McGennis and Robert Conley, all of Buffalo, N. Y., who arrived Wednesday for 10 days of golf. Judge and Mrs. W. A. Leland McKeithen are spending the weekend with Judge and Mrs. C. W. Hall in Durham where they will be spectators at the Duke- Navy football game. Mrs. Marie E. Clow and her nephew, Elwin Clow, and his wife are back from Luddington, Mich., for the season. Among local fans who attend ed the Duke-Georgia Tech foot ball game at Durham Saturday were Peter Tufts and L. D. Jones and Donald Miller his son, Don nie, and Clyde Gigee. Lt. Colin McKenzie, Jr., left last weekend for Fort Benning, Ga., after a visit of several days with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Colin McKenzie. Mr. and Mrs. Roderick M. Innes spent last weekend in Ra leigh where Mr. Innes, a mem ber of the Executive Committee of the North Carolina Bankers ! Association, was in attendance at a two-day meeting of the Associ- , ation. Add CSolor to Your Fall Garden With CHRYSANTHEMUMS Plants Now Ready. Several Types and Colors. Roy KeRy Landscape Seryice Pineh'urst 3005. Midland Road — So. Pines 2-4815 Ponzer Attends Meet Of Textile- Electrical Men John Ponzer'of Southern Pines, district industrial engineer of the Carolina Power and Light Com pany, was one of some 350 dele gates from North and South Caro lina and Virginia attending a con ference on electrical equipment for the textile industry last Thurs day and Friday. The conference, held at North Carolina State College in Raleigh, was sponsored jointly by the Tex tile SubTCommittee and the North Carolina section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, and the School of Textiles and De partment of Electrical Engineer ing of the college. The conference was designed primarily for engineers and oper ating men from the Carolinas-Vir- ginia area who are in the textile industry. Other allied industries were also represented. The general theme of the meet ing was “how to increase efficien- sy in production and the applica tion of automation.” Ponzer, who is an officer of AIEE, presided at an afternoon session of the conference. Mrs. R. L. Hart, Former Resident, Dies In Reidsville Mrs. R. L. Hart died at her home in Reidsville last Friday following an extended illness. Formerly of Southern Pines, Mrs. Hart was the wife of the late Robert Lee Hart. Mr. Hart was at one time proprietor of the Broad Street Pharmacy here. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. D. H. Huffines^ Jr., of Reids ville; one brother. Burton W. Wray of Reidsville; three sisters, Mrs. Henry B. Clark of Reidsville, Mrs. C. S. Nissen and Mrs. Frank H. Abbott of Esparto, California. Funeral services were held at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Reidsville with the Rev. Richard Lee officiating. Burial followed in Mt. Hope Cemetery in Southern Pines. Students majoring in public health nursing in the Depart ment of Public Health Nursing of the University of North Car olina iSchool of Public Health may receive the following de grees: bachelor of science in pub lic health nursing, master of public health and master of science in public health. Calvert RESERVE |j iPi / m m WM if IS ' a U V/. 4? CALVERT DISTILLERS COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY-BLENDED WHISKEY. 86.8 PROOF. 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Who says dream cars never come true? namite G>ming! Americas first production dream cor will influence the shape of cars for years to come The old Detroit rule was to introduce new features gradually, to make little changes each year. Sometimes a new grille, an engine improvement, or new colors and trim. We broke that rule. In fact, we broke all the rules. This is dynamite! For you are not the only one who has dreamed of a totally modern car, a car that has everything you find at automobile shows, in illustrations, and in custom- built experimental cars. Detroit has had that dream, too. And that’s why the 1957 Mercury is the car that has honestly excited the most car-jaded, the most sophisticated of Detroit’s automotive experts. When you see the new 1957 Mercury, you’ll see America’s first full-production dream car—a car that will influence the shape of cars for years to come. You’ll see a dream car you can own and drive—a car that has far more than startling years-ahead beauty. THE BIG M for ’57 boasts dream-car features never before found outside a designer’s dreambook: a Key board Control that makes ordinary push-button driving old-fashioned; an exclusive Floating Ride with a revolutionary new cushioning action you have to feel to believe. There are Mercury "firsts” everywhere you look. A Power-Booster Engine Fan in the Montclair series that saves horsepower other cars waste. And many more Mercury exclusives. You’ll see THE BIG M—the new Mercury for 1957 —soon. You’ll see it. You’ll drive it. The first dream car that can be yours. The dynamite is on its way from Detroit to your dealer’s—now! STRAIGHT OUT OF TOMORROW THE BIG M for'57 with DREAM-CAR DESIGN See it at your MERCURY dealer's on November I2th Don’t miss the big television hit, “THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW,” Sunday evening, 8:00 to 9:00, Station WFMY-TV, Channel 2 U. S. Highway 1 JACKSON MOTORS. INC N. C. Dealers License No. 1909 Phone 2-5822

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view