Page SIXTEEN
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1962
TOUR HIGHLIGHTS— Left,
master potter Ben Owen at work
at the Old Plank Road Pottery;
lower left, “The House in the
.Horseshoe,” and lower right, a
purebred Angus buU from the Bab
cock Farms breeder herd. All three
locations will be visited by the
group making a tour of upper
Moore County, sponsored by the
Sandhills Area Development As
sociation, next Wednesday.
Nurse Saves Children From Burning
Car Near Moore Memorial Hospital
<■ 'SC
Wildlife Club
Members Guests
In Lee County
The Moore County Wildlife
Club was the guest of the Lee
County club Monday night, for a
supper and program at the Lee
club’s lakeside lodge. About 15
members of the Moore club, of
which Ralph Mills is president,
were present, including several
ladies.
With the Moore group was Dr.
George T. Heinitsh, past club
president, and past president of
the North Carolina Wildlife Fede
ration, now on the board of
directors. He brought greetings
from the Federation and spoke on
the possible commandeering of
an area about Lake Mattamuskeat
for use as a bombing range by
the Air Force, and coastal dredg
ing off Currituck Sound which,
he said, would cause siltation of
some fine freshwater fishing
Mrs. Jane Caviness, nurse in
charge of the emergency ward at
Moore Memorial Hospital, took
care of an after-hours emergency
Saturday afternoon, and may
have saved the lives of four
young children.
Leaving late, at the close of her
day’s work, she saw parked near
the emergency entrance a car
which appeared to be on fire in
side. Through smoke and flames;
she saw the frightened faces of
several children.
She ran to the car, opened the
door and began pulling young
sters out—a job considerably com
plicated by the fact that they kept
climbing back in, stating firmly
that “Daddy said for us to stay
in the car.”
Finally she got them all out
and into the emergency ward,
where it was determined that they
were unhurt. In the meantime,
the interior of the car was fully
ablaze. Pinehurst firemen, sum
moned at once, pulled it away
from the hospital, but not before
it became charred inside.
The youngsters, whose names
NOTICE TO ALL CREDITORS OF DENTON REALTY
CORPORATION AND/OR DONALD S. DENOFF
Please submit immediately statement of your account with
either of the above debtors by mail to the office of thg,. Clerk
of the Superior Court, P.O. Box 635, Carthage, North Carolina.
This information is needed promptly in the event a Trustee
in an assignment for the benefit of the creditors or a Receiver
is appointed to marshall assets and pay creditors in accordance
with law.
WATCH OUR ADS
YOU'LL FIND IT!
areas. ^ ,
In the Lake Mattamuskeat and ages were not learned—ex
problem, Dr. Heinitsh said, he cept that all appeared to un-
SADA Ta Tour Upper Moore
(Continued from Page 1)
pastures, put in a few years ago.
with the help of the Moore Coun
ty farm office.
Returning through Glendon,
the caravan will pass by the
Standard Mineral Co. operation,
largest pyrophillite mine in the
world, on the way to Parkwood,
where at 4:05 p.m. it wiU pause
at the Wayne Feed Distributing
Co., a nerve center of the area’s
multi-million-dollar poultry in
dustry. With its capacity of 350
tons of broiler feeds per day, the
concern is feeding out some 8,000,-
000 broilers per year through four
dealers.
At 4:30 p.m., the group will
tour the Carolina Lace Plant at
Robbins, a unique operation in
this area. At 5:15 it will visit
the pottery area north of Robbins,
stopping briefly at Ben Owens'
Old Plank Road pottery on NC
705.
At Westmoore school at 6 p.m..
the Westmoore Home Demonstra
tion club will serve a dutch sup
per with broilers as the main
dish, the profits to go to the
county’s 4-H Development Fund
to build camps, provide scholar
ships and increase benefits in
several ways for the 4-H clubs.
After supper. President Cadieu
will conduct a short business ses
sion which will bring the mem
bers up-to-date on -what has been
transpiring under the committees
of the four SADA divisions—
agriculture, industry, community
development and travel & recrea
tion.
Because of the size of the ex
pected crowd and necessary tim
ing, the four-hour tour will have
to pass up many interesting points
which the chairmen had hoped to
include, and give a mere glimpse
of others, said Agent Allen this
week. However, on the tour work
ed out with cooperation of Moore
SADA Chairman Norris L. Hodg
kins, Jr., of Southern Pines, in
formation will be given concern
ing many of the attractions the
group will not be able to see or
to inspect closely. Thus the visi
tors will be briefed on the broiler
industry with its related business,
of which the Wayne feed plant is
only one; the diversity of industry
in the Robbins area, and the his
tory and importance of pottery
making now being carried on at
five places in the area.
Anyone interested is invited to
join the tour for all or any part
of the SADA event, the co-chair
men said.
Last year, a tour of the recrea
tional and industrial highl^hts of
lower Moore county was held un
der the leadership of Voit Gilmore
of Southern Pines, then travel &
recreation chairman, and a past
SADA president. This year, the
transition will be made from the
“sand country” — the famous
Sandhills—to the “clay country,”
quite different in aspect but just
as important in its way to the
economy of the county and area.
asked support of all members in
opposition—“We went to work
and fought it, and thought we
had it stymied, but it’s come up
again. The Air Fogce still says it
wants it, though it would ruin
some of the best goose and duck
hunting preserves in the coimtry,
with the landing and taking off
of those jet planes.”
A film on dog training was
shown during the program.
Clayton Cole, president, extend
ed a welcome to the Moore group,
and Mrs. Cornelia Vann made a
response, noting that this was the
second such an occasion in recent
years. She said the Moore club
is getting started on building a
lodge and hopes to return the
hospitality soon.
BRIDGE OPEN
Now open for travel to the Out
er Banks via U. S. 64 is the three-
mile-long Lindsay C. Warren
Bridge, replacing the Alligator
River ferries and cutting driving
time to the ®anks by about an
hour. The bridge w'ill be formally
dedicated May 10 and named for
the longtime U. S. Congressman
who later served as U. S. Con
troller General.
der six—were soon claimed by a
scared daddy. Ben Cockman, of
Bobbins, Rt. 1. He had been upr
stairs in the maternity wing vis
iting his wife and a fifth young
Cockman, born last Sunday.
It was not determned how the
fire got started in the car. The
quick-thinking nurse—^who also
was unhurt—is the wife of R. W.
Caviness of Carthage.
NEW WHITE BAGS
HAVE JUST ARRIVED
WE HAVE MANY
STYLES and COLORS
ALL WHITE
WHITE STRAW TRIMMED IN PATENT
TAPESTRY TRIMMED IN BONE LEATHER
LINEN BAGS SPORT BAGS
SPORT BAGS OF STRAW WITH MATCHING HATS
Welch
Gift
Shop
Southern. Pines
WE WIRE
ANYWHERE
SOUTHERN PINES FLORISTS, Inc.
570 S. W. Broad Si. Phone OX 2-3111
The Sandhills Knows*.. ..
4% PAID ON 12 MONTHS' SAVINGS
OUTSTANDING BOARD OF MANAGERS
PROGRESSIVE
The PLACE to BANK
. . . and SAVE
SOUTHERN
NATIONAL
BANK
Phone 695-7181
200 S. W. Broad Street
SOUTHERN PINES
CAPABLE AND ENTHUSIASTIC PERSONNEL
A FULL SERVICE BANK
MOORE COUNTY'S ONLY NATIONAL BANK
TOP FLIGHT CORRESPONDENT BANKING CONNEC'HONS
MEMBER F. D. I. C. — MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
If you haven't already, v/hy don't you talk with the folks at Southern National? ^