Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Nov. 5, 1964, edition 1 / Page 21
Part of The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1964 THE PILOT—Southern Pines. North Carolina © 1 'U:, The Pinehurst Page MARY EVELYN de NISSOFF TELEPHONE 692-6512 Proceeds From Rummage Sale Go To Local Church The Community House, next door to the Fire Station, will be open on Wednesday and Thurs day of next week when the com mittee will be at work, pricing items for the Community Church rummage sale, to be held Friday and Saturday, November 13 and 14. Persons having articles of clothing, household furnishings, shoes, etc. to donate, may leave them there on the two days be fore the sale begins. If pickups are desired, call Mrs. Isham C. Sledge, 294-3902, or Mrs. True P. Cheney, 295-5191. The sale is sponsored each year [ by the Women of the Community Church and proceeds are used for church work not covered in the yearly budget. In conjunction with the rum mage sale, there will be a sale of pies, cakes, cookies and other de licious edibles. Sit PcrSi;. NEW TOURNAMENT CHAMPION— Maurice R. Smith, 70, of Lake Wales, Fla., 3rd from left, produced a 72-hole low gross 311 to become first champion of the Three-Score-and-Ten Club at Pinehurst Saturday. Allen R. Rankin of Columbus, Ohio, the 1954 Western Seniors title-holder, took the over-all low net prize with 269. Other members of the champion’s foursome. shown above, from left: R. B. Scribner of Rye, N. Y., treasurer and organizer of the club, initi ated here, which plans fall tournaments in Pinehurst and a similar event each spring in California; C. N. Scatter of Ancaster, Ont., vice president; Mr. Smith, and Gen. A. V. Arnold of Southern Pines. (Hemmer photo) Southern Pines Golfers, Tin Whistles Winners Scoring 30-31-61 to head the field of 50 entrants in Saturday’s Tin Whistles Club tournament, a stroke play, better ball of pair event, were Southern Pines golf ers Judge John D. McConnell and John C. Ostrom. Runners-up 34-38-62, were Kingstone Reed and Dr. J. C. T. Sihler. Kenneth F. Ferris and Dr. Francis L. Owens took third prize with 31-32-63. Pass The Buck ? Or will the buck pass you? Not if you see us for your Hunting Equipment First. Your chance to get those antlers will be much better with the proper hunting equipment and we can furnish that! Come in and see. Tate’s Hardware & Electric Co. TEEING OFF * WITH deNISSOFF N. E. Broad Street Southern Pines, N. C. Apparently we have a geist in the office. This ghostie, acting further to heckle us in the already hectic atmos phere of the newsroom during pre-election week, made off with our “Teeing Off’’ column. Perhaps the playful pixie ob jected in some way to our refer ence to expected Halloween hi- jinks (poltergeists are notably touchy spirits, we’ve heard.) Any way, no copy was to be found anywhere of the two pages we know we wrote last Friday; no type was set, nobody remember ed a thing about it. The whole column just disap peared. What appeared under the Teeing Off head in last week’s issue was a short addition we whacked out Tuesday, to be tacked on to the column we sup posed was already standing in type. A brief reconstruction of main body of the column might still be in order here, since it polter-1 annual Tufts Memorial Golf gleeful Tournament for mixed four somes, in its 10th renewal No vember 27 at the country club. Also scheduled for the 27th— the yearly Harvest Square Dance in the Carolina Hotel Ballroom. And on November 29, the an nual Thanksgiving Gymkhana and Pet Show is scheduled in the riding ring at the Carolina. (Courtesv N. Photo Dept.) Now Glamorous Summer Job At Fair Is Over, Judy Owens Heads For West Page NINETEEN Midget World Tennis Series Ends At PCC The Midget World Series end ed October 24, according to ten nis pro Joe Roddey at the Pine hurst Country Club, with the Na tionals trouncing the Americans 4-2. The losing team hosted an in formal party for the winners Sat urday morning at the tennis house adjacent to the courts the club. Midgets, who meet each Satur day at 10 a. m. for a clinic con ducted by Pro Roddey, began their annual fall tournament this past weekend. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS St. Andrews Staffer To Address PTA Here Tuesday Mrs. Louis Ebersole of St. An drews College will be the guest speaker at the November 10 I meeting of the Pinehurst Parent- the Teacher Association. The PTA meeting, scheduled ^ as usual, on the second Tuesday liad to do with upcoming events j of the month, follows on the in November—and the Pinehurst i heels of National Children’s Book calendar is chockful of these. | Week, which began November 1, First listed is the annual John land the program will be in line D. Chapmans Memorial Mixed with that theme. ROUIARD , jOHMOn'§ 0\ FISH FRYr 195 Tasty Boneless Filets ■ Crisp Golden Brown French Fried Potatoes ■ Cole Slaw*TartareSauce"Rol!3and Butter ’ \ WEDNESDAY NIGHTS 4 ALL YOU CAN EAT Foursomes; in play today, Thurs day, by Silver Foils and Tin Whisitles Club members, the tournament was initiated as a memorial to the parents of noted amateur golfer Richard D. (Dick) Chapman, who were Pinehurst residents for many years. Both the late Mr. and Mrs. Chapman were fine golfers, he was, in fact, an enthusiastic com petitor in amateur events over the country, and was a holder of the National Seniors Champion ship. In addition to their home in Pinehurst, the Chapmans at one time owned a place at the golf paradise of the Pacific, Pebble Beach, Calif. Beginning tomorrow, Friday, is the weekend official “opener” at the revamped and revitalized Pinehurst Gun Club — the first annual Annie Oakley Handicap Trap Shooting Championship for Women—which has attracted a good field and is of historic in terest here as the ace sharpshoot er, Annie Oakley, taught at the old Gun Club in the early part of the century. A Harvest Skeet Championship is set at the Gun Club November 21-22. The World Seniors Four-Ball Championship for Men will be sponsored here November 9-14, by the Southern Seniors Golf As sociation, founded in Pinehurst over 30 years ago. The President’s and the Vice President’s Teams will tangle November 17 in the annual match for Silver Foils Club members. Tin Whistles Club “specials” coming up this month—a mixed event at stroke play for better ball of pair on the 19th, and on the 21st, the 14th annual Howard Kenworthy trophy, individual stroke play tournament honoring the memory of a longtime Pine hurst winter resident whose ori ginal home was Youngstown, Ohio. An added incentive to try for a hole-in-one is the turkey to be given away November 25 to the man and women coming closest to the pin in the Pinehurst Country Club’s Thanksgiving Turkey Shoot. Honoring members of Pine- hurst’s founding family is the The speaker, who is in the Ed ucation Department at St. An drews, will discuss the proper kind of books and publications adults should select for their homes and for the children. Dr. J. C. Grier, Jr. heads the program committee for the year. Parents are urged to attend Tuesday’s meeting beginning at 8 pm in the School Auditorium, and to look over the display of new books which will be on ex hibition, either in the Elemen tary School library, or in the Multi-Use Room. Six Local FHA Girls Attend District Rally Saturday proved to be an in teresting day for the Future Homemakers of America from Pinehurst. Their B4visor, Miss Jerry Jones, took 20 girls to the District HI Rally at Seventy- First High School. The girls are grateful to Ho- bert Williams for driving them, and to Bobby Burwell Sharon McDonald and Debbie Prince for taking part in the Hootenanny. Elaine Bryant from Pinehurst ran for state parliamentarian and the FHA members are proud that she was first alternate. by Donie Edson, reporter Husband-Wife Dance Team At Carolina For Second Season Nino and Helen, husband and wife dance team who have been at Wentworth-by the-Sea, Ports mouth, N. H., during the past summer, are back for their sec ond season at the Carolina Hotel. The couple, who appear Tues day and Saturday evenings in the Carolina’s Pine Room, give private or group lessons, by ar rangement, and can be contact ed either personally at the Pine Room, or by telephone at the Carolina, 294-2911. The World’s Fair has struck its tents at Flushing Meadows and Judy Owens, Pinehurst-ite who has been working there all sum mer, is going west Friday to a new job. The daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Francis L. Owens of Pinehurst, Judy graduated from Catholic University as a nurse in 1962. When the Fair opened, she was working for the fabulous “Wond er World,” at the First Aid Sta tion. When this show closed, Judy moved to the Boat Marina’s In formation and First Aid Station where she waited out the Fair’s duration, meanwhile seeing just about all there was to see of the Fair. In New York, she stayed with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Rudel at their Fifth Avenue apgrtment. The Rudels are frequent visitors here with his mother, Mrs. C. M. Rudel, at her home west of the Carolina Hotel. With the Rudels, Judy late in the summer spent a week aboard the “Tabor Boy,” crusing with a group of educators and winding up at the International Yacht Races in Newport, R. I. The “Tabor Boy,” built in Bel gium, and used by the Nazis as a training ship in World War II, was bought by an American after the war and donated to Tabor Academy, boys preparatory school in Marion, Mass. On Friday, Judy and a friend from New York City plan to drive west with Aspen, Colo., as their eventual destination. There, Judy will go to work at the Aspen Hospital. Her interest in Aspen, aside from the job, is the skiing for which the resort is noted in the winter. In the summer, the tiny town at 14,000 foot eleva tion—(“Good heavens, you’ll have to take a supply of oxygen,” Judy’s mother told her)—spills over with musicians and music lovers there for the yearly Festi val and to attend the Institute of Music. Judy fell in love with the pop ular winter sport last season when she accompanied Mary i Frances Howe of Pinehurst on a “skiiing weekend,” at a nearby mountain resort. The two older girls in the Owens family seem blessed with wandering feet. Linda, who graduates in De cember from Penn State College, with a degree in education, has applied for a job with the Peace Corps. At present, the other four Owenses, Jennifer, Audrey, Pat and Kathy, are students at the Pinehurst School. EXPERT WATCH REPAIRS Beautiful BRIDAL SETS GIFT ITEMS WATCHES CLOCKS Oldham’s Local Resident Shoots 2nd Ace Year-round Pinehurst resident A. Parker Hall, Jr. made a hole-in-one, the second in his golfing career, on October 26 at the Pinehurst Country Club. At testing his perfect five-iron shot from the seventh tee of the Num ber Three Course were John W. Lindsay, William C. Harris and Dr. Michael T. Fhshko. ,His first ace, -said Hall, was at the Country Club of New Canaan Connecticut), 10 years* ago. N-S Defending Champ Wins Putting Prize The Julia Ball Memorial Tro phy given in last Wednesday’s putting contest for competitors in the North-South Senior Wom en’s Invitational, was won by the tournament’s defending champion. Miss Ada MacKenzie of Richmond Hill, Ont. Miss MacKenzie was the 1959 winner of the contest, inaugura ted in 1958 to honor the memory of the late Julia Ball of Bala- Cynwyd, Pa., a longtime Pine hurst winter visitor and Silver Foils Club member. Woman's Exchange Meet Set At Mid Pines Club The first general meeting and tea for members of the Sandhills Woman’s Exchange will be held Monday, November 9, at 3 p.m. at the Mid Pines Club. Mrs. Arthur C. Davenport of Southern Pines is this year’s president. Hostesses for the tea are Mrs. George Patteson, Mrs. Harry Pethick, Mrs. Robert Fisher and Mrs. Robert S. Heyl. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS VIRGINIA DAVIS LANDIS, Inc. BOUTIQUE Village Court Bldg. New Fashion News! VOGUE says the little naked wools at luncheon and cocktail time— pastel colors, "thin as a breeze," to wear under fur jackets and coats NEW COZY NEGLIGEES short and long NEW COLLECTION of BED JACKETS
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 5, 1964, edition 1
21
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75