// /' VOLUME THE PILOT NUMBER 26 Is a Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding of the Sandhill Territory of North Carolina Address all communications to THE PILOT PR1NTIN(. COMPANY. VASS. N. C FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1927 FORMER MOORE PASTOR HONORED He Served Seventeen Years As Pastor of Carthage First Presbyterian Church. Rev. John K. Roberts, of Green ville, S. C., attended, this week, the King College commencement at Bris tol, Tenn., where the honorary de gree of Doctor of Divinity was con ferred upon him Tuesday. This honor comes to him for serv ices *to the church at large, and for jhis scholarship in the department of Religious Education. We claim Mr. Roberts as a Moore county boy and rejoice in this honor which comes to him, because Carth- age-Union churches were his first pastorate which he served over nine teen years; and for his kinship with more than one Scotish clan by his marriage to the oldest daughter of Hon. A. D McDonald. King College celebrated its 60th anniversary this week, and her sons from far and near were there to take part in laying the corner stone of the new administration building. King College, though a small col lege, is large in its influence through the number of eminent ministers and leaders it has given to the Presby terian church. Among her celebrat ed sons that were present, Rev. James I. Vance, D. D., pastor First Presbyterian Church, Nashville, Ten nessee, delivered the alumni address; and Rev. J. Sproil Lyons, D. D., pas- WARNS WORLD WAR VETERANS War-Time Insurance Must Converted Not Later Than July 2. Be (Please turn to page 2) KOLNSEVELLE MAKING START AT IMPROVEMENT T; velle at the Archory Club has made a start at the im- jrovlnient of the pp^operfcy facing the Midlands Road. He has bought a hundred dollars’ worth of the various trees that enter into the construction of bows and planted them on the Archery property. These include lo cust, Circassien Walnut, Yew, and Other trees and will be followed by ethers until he has everything grow ing that enters into the construction of bows and arrows. The archery plant is coming to be one oi the sho*-» places of the region, and the variety (f trvies will add to the attraction. HAYES FERNINST THE ROAD SIGNS Would Have All Banished But Direction and Distance Signs. EARLY DAYS IN MOORE COUNTY An Old-Settler Tells the Story of the Sandhills By HON. ROBERT N. PAGE. My work in life has been somewhat versatile; I have tried to do any number of things, but the writing of history is a new venture, undertaken at the request of some of my younger friends, who have shown some interest in the stories told now and then, by me, of the Sandhills of another day. And, really in pppreciation of the men and women who have wrought here, it is essential that what they had to start with, be told. I am going try to paint the picture and sketch in as the tale unfolds, not only stages of develop ment, but personalities, some of whom have made a larger contribution than others, but the memory of every one of them worth keeping green, for what they did, or what they were. My story must begin with the date when for the first time I saw this section now known as the SANDHILLS. In January, 1880, my father and I came on a tour of in spection of the long leaf pine timber. For the greater part of his life he had been engaged in the manufacture of lumber, having started in the eighteen forties by cutting and hewing, by axe, the long leaf pine along the lower stretches of the Cape Fear River, and rafting the hewn timbers to market at Wilmington; then back to his native county, Wake, where he was a pioneer in the business of sawing trees into lumber by the use of the steam mill. I Upon the exhaustion of the timber"]^ {supply in that section, he had start- i OPlVfFIVT OlV led various enterprises, though none ' f v/1 ITlL'll 1 Vfil of them seemed to win him from his i first love. The Seaboard Air Line, then the Raleigh and Augusta Air Line, for the units forming the Sea board had not then been consolidated, had just been completed to Hamlet. After an all day journey on the only train then can-ying passengers, we stopped at Hoffman, in Richmond I County, for the reason that a bn,lh- j er of my father, Lewis Page, had -just gone there a few months before I with a small steam mill. The next i day was spent on horse back inspect- I ing various tracts of timber east of Hoffman, bringing us at night fall to a point about midway between where now svand the villages of Southern Pines and Aberdeen. The last piece of timber inspected was the 640 acres, now Montevideo Park, an, in two words: economize, work. I went out the other day after some berry pickers. Driving up to a group of negro shanties I saw a man drive i:p in a coupe with a bill book in his hip pocket. What business my mind ' asked would he have at such a place 'on Monday morning. I soon found j out, or at least guessed, for I heard j some one knocking on a high grade I piano in that house that was hardly I big enough to hold a piano. The roof I was all but falling in and the house Iwas hardly fit for kindling wood ! though affording some kind of ^-lelter I for its inhabitants The next door I there was a somewhat better house I with iwo cars. Many of these houses I have talking machines, radios and jmany other things bought on time. : They are simply weighted down for ! months ahead with installment debts j that are sapping their earnings away. I Every week nearly I get inquiries I from commercial agencies wanting to know ihe standing of folks in the community who want to buy such things, I make it a habit to reply they are poor people and not able to go in debt any more. As a result the inquiries have fallen off. They other, with a bridle path betw^een the two roads, and with the home-mak ers on either side vieing with each other in making their holdings the most interesting the soil and climate here permits. He has some lots on the Southern Pines side of the creek, and there in the woods he has al ready been doing some planting. And it is so all along the route. (Contiinued on page 2) There are 12 important parasites of chickens in this country. There are 40 or 50 parasites of cattle. And there are 50 to 60 found in horses. an known to kill a deer with her bow since the days of Queen Elizabeth; was the winner . of the ladies’ third place at the National Tournament last year, holder of the ladies’ champ ionship in the South; and holder of the world record practice score for women in the American round. All the equipment that Mrs. Rounsevelle has been using is made within the bounds of the State. The craftsmanship of the skilled bowyers and fletchers of The Archers Com pany at Pinehurst is already well known throughout the archery world. (Contiinued on page 2) CHILDREN’S DAY AT YATES-THAGARDS SUNDAY There will be a children's day serv ice at Yates-Thagards Church Sun day, June 12, 1927. In addition to children’s exercises, Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Gibbons, of Lakeview, will tell of their recent trip to the Holy Land. In the afternoon Rev. J. E. Ayscue will preach. Dinner on the ground. Everyone come. Bring a well filled basket.