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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1962
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page ELEVEN
Another
Colonial
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a Over 100 Career Guides which will help yc
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LITTLE LEAGUERS HAVE LAST SWIM.
What was probably their last swim of the sum
mer was enjoyed by these boys and others of
the Cardinals team, Southern Pines Little Lea
gue champions, who were guests at the sponsor
ing Pine Needles Country Club for a cookout
and poolfest Monday evening of last week.
Wan-en and Peggy Kirk Bell, Pine Needles
proprietors, gave the youngsters a fine evening
of entertainment at the new club pool and
recreation center. Other adults assisting at the
party included Joel Stubbs, Cardinals coach,
and Mrs. Doris Brennen Weir, of Rhode Island,
former Alpmpic world champion swimming star,
who was visiting the Bells.
In the photo, from left, are Jonathan Lyerly,
Alien Lyerly, Carl Sarvis, Tommy Shore, David
Allen, Robin Smith, Dan Deal, Eddie Allen and
Jerry Simpson, with Warren Bell glimpsed in
background.
33 Moore Ponds Stocked With Catfish;
escue-TonacCo ScitatioS
’Farmers
By WILLARD E. KELLER
Moore County Conservationist
Thirty-three Moore county
ponds wero stocked with white or
channel catfish recently. These
fish should be ready for “harvest”
about the end of November. Most
of these ponds had previously
been stocked with bass and
bream. Pond owners who have
constructed ponds last fall and
this year will be notified within
the next few weeks about the
bluegill and redear bream.
B. W. Owen, Seagrove, Rt. 2,
has completed a soil and water
conservation plan for his farm.
The main feature of this plan is
the use of fescue in rotation with
5 New Teachers
Complete WSP
Faculty list
Five new teachers were among
the faculty members greeting
their pupils at West Southern
Pines schools last week.
Two had been employed just
the week before as the result of
some last-minute changes, en
abling Principal H. A. Wilson to
complete his faculty list in time.
The five new members:
Charles A. Haywood, an honor
graduate of St. Augustine College
at Durham, is teaching science,
in which he has a B. S. degree.
Mrs. M. F. Haywood, an honor
graduate of North Carolina Col
lege at Durham teaches home
economics, in which she has the
B. S. degree.
Edward C. Rodgers, who won
his B. S. in music at Morgan State
College, Baltimore, Md., is teach
ing a s-ection of the eighth
grade and assisting with the
music program.
Mrs. Bernice James, a graduate
of A. & T. College at Greensboro,
has been substituting in the
Greensboro city schools while
raising her family. She is teaching
a section of the seventh gracfe.
Miss Betty Counts, a 1961 grad
uate of Winston-Salem Teachers
College, who taught last year in
Washington, D. C., has a
third grade section. Both Mrs.
James and Miss Counts have B. S.
degrees in elementary education.
tobacco. Jason Freeman has a
small area of tobacco in land that
was in fescue last year. He has a
fine sod of fescue which he may
plow under this fall for next
year’s tobacco. However, two
years of fescue have given better
results. J. W. Childress, Carth
age Star Rt., likes, his fescue-to
bacco rotation.
On the edge of Lee County is
the farm of Dr. Lawrence Cam
eron, with fescue on deep sand,
which is unusual in that fescue
will not normally survive dry
summers in sand land.
Farmers using this rotation
have reported increased yields of
100 to 500 pounds per acre and of
superior quality.
Fescue increases yields and
quality by lowering numbers of
nematodes, adding humus and
making the following crop more
drought-resistant. The roots go
deep to break up plow pans. To
bacco following fescue will ripen
more uniformly up the stalk, giv
ing more time between pullings.
Sylvia Cooper
Meredith
Baptist Retreat
Miss Sylvia Cooper of Aber
deen, president of the Baptist
Student Union of Meredith Col
lege, presided over sessions of a
pre-school retreat held this week,
Sunday through Wednesday, at
Camp New Hope in Chapel Hill.
Following the retreat, sponsor
ed by the school’s BSU executive
council, the students moved into
the college dormitories at Ra
leigh to be on hand for the open
ing of college Friday, and assist
new students with their orienta
tion schedule.
Plans for the year were formu
lated during the retreat sessions,
at which faculty members and
religious leaders of the school as
sisted the council, also Raleigh
and Chapel Hill pastors.
An “unidentified vitamin” from
fish meal improves growth in
chickens. It has had a part in the
fast growth of the fish meal in
dustry.
Come/to Luumj^
High in the COOl
Blue Ridge Mountains I
Relax in the nistic
loveliness of an Alpine
Village with all the
comforts of gracious living.
Refreshing weather doubles
the fun of golfing, riding,
swimming, tennis and other
resort activities.
For reservations or information, write:
Rites Held Sunday
For Isham Wallace,
Route 1, Robbins
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at Flint Hill Baptist
Church for Isham Wallace, 80, of
Routs 1, Robbins, who died Stm-
day at St. Joseph of the Pines
Hospital after an illness of sev
eral weeks.
The Revs. Amos Garner, Ben
nie Maness and Max Gilmore
officiated. Burial was in the Wal
lace family cemetery.
Surviving are: four daughters,
Mrs. Minnie Morgan of Pinehurst,
Mrs. Hattie Rouse of Robbins,
Mrs. Roy Dean of Eagle Springs
and Mrs. K. C. Maness of Route 1,
Robbins; two sons, Clyde of
Route 2, Bennett, and Claude of
Route 1, Robbins; four half sis
ters, Mrs. Nettie Sanders and Mrs.
Cora Britt of Robbins, Mrs. Beu
lah McNeill of Route 1, Robbins,
and Mrs. Swannie Maness of Siler
Citv: three half brothers. Stead
Wallace of Biscoe, Millard Wal
lace of Route 1, Robbins, and Jim
Wallace of Route 1, Carthage; 39
grandchildren and 66 great-grand
children.
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