Newspapers / The pilot. / Nov. 16, 1928, edition 1 / Page 5
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Friday, November 16, 1928. News of the Week In Southern Pines Many Social Events as Winter Season Gets Under Way in Sandhills. The Thursday Bridge Club last week jiiet with Mrs. W. C. Mudgrett and i^pent a delightful afternoon. The usual pleasurable game of bridge was indulged in, after which ice cream and cake were served . The highest score was handed in by Mrs. John Powell The annual Bazaar which is to be held some time in the early part of December was discussed Last Friday night the Boy Scouts of our town had a Father and Son hike to Lemon Springs. Jack Coursey spent last week end with his parents, returning to Raleigh on Tuesday morning. Mrs. John Lewis and Mrs. Etta Lynch attended the Ruby Annivers ary of the Baptist Missionary So ciety at Aberdeen Tuesday. The pro gram was in charge of Mrs. Lewis. _TOE PILOT, a Paper With Character, Vaaa. Noith r«mKnA, Page Fiv« wth special emphasis on the adult. Ray has been appointed to take thejl^vrl f/l 'VICTOR AND VANQUISHED ^e last speaker was Atty. W. D. Roll Call at Lakeview. ^ ^ ^ I PLEDGE SERVICE TO STATE. Matthews, who took for his subject,! Mrs. Alfred H. Williams*and Miss HlStOriCal oOClCty “The Clash of the Ages.” Two selec-' Katherine E. Williams and Miss Kath- tions by the high school chorus, with erine E. Williams, of Utica, N. Y., Miss Reed as accompanist, were great-1 motored down last week and will ly enjoyed. A business session with i spend several weeks in their cottagje. election of officers followed. ^ Miss Helene Doughtery has return- — I 3d to Lakeview after spending the EUREKA. I summer in the North, and has re- I The following telegrams passed be- Author, President of Associa** | tween conqueror and conquered after tion, to Preside at 28th |the excitement of the recent Guber- Annual Session. natorial race in North Carolina: (Hon. O. Max Gardner, James Boyd, of Southern Pines, j author of Drums and Marching ■ jj^ addition to my congratulation^, sumed her duties in the office of John|^^» ^nd president of the State Lit-, j wish for your administration as A Woman’s Club for the Eureka McQueen. . _ jerary and Historical Association, will, ^11 the benefits that may community has recently been organ- . Community Club held a special!^ among the shakers at the 28th ^ pQggijjiy secured to the State. lotte Erson. Barnum and Page report the reni»i Blue as presi- meeting on Wednesday eve- . ® ^ me rental t . .. nin<y at. fVio Vtrkmo nf "My ow%a xt the Wrenn cottage on Ashe i to Mr. and Mrs. James Neville. and the second higrhest by Miss Char- „f the Wrenn'coUaero^AshP ^lue, vice president, N. ® ®**^®*‘'and M.^. R. S. Boger, recertary and The “Night Club was entertained iQf Seal Harbor Maine will arxUr ' ™ ic«ni lo maKe nats. . j- * i ^ n • u uemei last Friday by Mr. and Mrs. Frank jhere Saturday to occunv’the Whit«b i^he Moore County Home demonstra- Clayton, Synodical evan- ^"""e*»tely following the address, Shaniburgier, of Aberdeen. After a house ^'«‘aker,t„ gelist of the Presbyterian church, there will be a reception to the mem- delightful game of the ever popular] Mrs. Alfred Lynch of Lewiston bridge, delicious refreshments were.Pa., will reside in the Ames cottaee'”"® John Stubbin and wife" reVidentJ*’’®®™''®''- “"d *>est' brought to a close a busy work, so far, is to learn to make hats. *eek at the church, for Rev. G. T. annual session of the association tOj p SEA WELL, be held next Thursday and Friday at^ijon. H. F. Seawell, the Sir Walter Hotel in Raleigh. Mr. Carthage, N .C. Boyd will deliver the presidential ad-' Thanks for your gracious telegram. dress on Thursday night. IMy hope is that we may all work to- ® gether for the building of a finer O. MAX GARDNER. held a revival meeting. And on May street this our served, consisting of a salad course and ice cream and cake. The men’s prizes were won by Everest Perkin-1 crease the ranks of Students "at son and Chariest Everest, and the' school. women’s by Mrs. Frank Goodwill. R., Mrs! Emma F. Cottle of Kenne E. Hart and Mrs. Ashe received the bunkport, Maine, arrived on Tuesday guest prizes. ij,nd has rooms again at the Elline- The Night Club will meet at Good- ton. will’s home next Saturday evening. ! faithful and patient worker with this ^ night found the little church more season. Mrs. |.. 8:>ving D^ht* of*^^*he*^Lakeview Ly^nch has two children who will in-,to";*;')* Nursery has been very busy fulfilling in the school auditorium. The title o fthe play is “June.^’ The Parent-Teacher Association contracts to beautify many of the, new lots both at Knollwood and Pine- hurst. Mrs. R. E. Hart was hostess to her bridge club this week at a lovely party. After the customary rounds of Markham, of Cambridge, Mass., who »“ditorium | ^ the guests Mrs. W. C. Mudgett was high. Mrs. Carl Thompson received the guest of honor prize. Personals. S. E. Slaymaker arrived in town I Albert Ruggles and William Fisher, last week and will spend the winter | students of State College, spent the each' ^^d guests of the association and the Folk-Lore and Art Societies, which will hold their annual meetings joint ly with the association. On Friday morning, there will be a program of four brief historical pa pers, followed by a business meeting of the association. The folowing pa- wi a>^ its monthly business meet- pej.g read: “Charles L. Coon,” mg on ri ay night, November 23rd. gxATE TOBACCO SALES president f the association, by ey ave e promise of a talk on SHOW BIG INCREASE.!^ W. Connor, Chapel Hill; “Biblio- j graphy of North Carolina History and Producers’sales of tobacco on North 1 1928,” by Lois V. Carolina markets up until November j Raleigh; “Hinton Rowan Helper,” by William Polk, Warren- ton; and “The Presidential Election of 1824 in North Carolina,” by A. R. Newsome, Raleigh. At the closing session of the asso ciation on Friday night in the Hugh Morson Auditorium, Professor Van Tyne will deliver the historical ad dress on “Diplomats in the American Revolution.” For a quarter of a cen tury, Professor Van Tyne has been an KIWANIS CLUB TO ELECT OFFICERS WEDNESDAY NIGHT The Rev. Edward A. Tuck assisted meeting by the Rev. George H. Hannon again last County’s Red Cross Sunday in the special meting at the ^ .. , up u«..i i^uven.uer Bethlehem church in Carthage. George , ® uxiliary of Eureka show an increase of more than fif- The Kiwanis Club of Aberdeen will hold its annual meeting and election of officers at Pinehurst next Wednes- dya evening, at which time the retir ing president, Paul Dana, of Pine hurst, and the other retiring officers will make their final reports for the yearns activities. CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION Eugene Clark, small son of I : ^^iculture shows. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Clark, of Leake f the j gales during the month of October street, celebrated his third brthdayi ^ present with a well pre-; topped those of October, 1927, by Monday afternoon. Twenty of his J^sson, promptly at 2 p. m. ^bout nine million pounds, but the small friends attended the party | giving unsparingly of leverage price received was $2.36 per ^ven him. ^ ^ hundred lower than that received in ' 'October last year Mrs. V. F. Fisher, of Carthage Rt. To date there have been 56,753,430 here in his beautiful new home in , week end in town with their parents. ^; «Pent Sunday with her mother, tobacco sold this Weymouth. This home is on the site of the old one hut, except for the charming English garden, is entirely The Eastern Star Sewing Circle] the Old Bright Belt; 178,998,172 in met Monday night at the home of i, *7' ^ the New Bright Belt, and in the South Miss Esther McDanield. Refresh-i . and grand- Carolina Belt 43,549,614. year in different from it and does credit to j ments of cake and coffee were served. both its builder, C. L. Austin and its architect, Alfred eYomans, for it is daughter, Margaret Kelly, spent the Mrs. B. W. Leavitt is in Rex Hos pital in Raleigh to undergo an opera- one of the most attractive homes up!tion. on the hill. j J. Fred Stimpson is attending the , . p. , ^ v Mrs. L. Cheeny left Monday for a | Baptist State Convention at High / short trip to New York. Pont this week. week end in Lumberton with Mrs. j STATE’S PER CAPITA DEBT Blue’s daughter, Mrs. R. B. Britt. HIGHEST IN THF roiTNTRY Mrs. Joe W. Blue has recently re- «*^HEST IN THE COUNTRY. turned from a week's visit to her down with Mrs. E. Tracy earlier this fall. Mrs. Florence Tracy will live North Carolina has the biggest per Several from the Eureka Sunday ’Tf*' indebtedness in the Tivr.xT.ni , United States, each citizen owmg - School attended the McNeill Township' ““Tr ““T.’ “.'■“r" The double road between Southern Mrs. A. S. Ruggles left Tuesday for 1 of Vo„o ! accordin gto statistics for the Pines and Pinehurst is about to State of North Carolina, Department of State. To All to Whom These Presents May Come—Greeting: Whereas, It appears to my satisfac tion, by duly authenticated record of the proceedings for the voluntary dis solution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, de posited in my office, that the Graham- Poole Motor Co., Inc., a corporation of this State, whose principal oiffiee is situated in the City of Vass, County intensive student of the American I Noi*th Carolina J u- u 1 L 1 (W. B. Graham being the agent there- Revolution, and his books have an in- j and in charge thereof, upon whom temational reputation as standard au-| process may be served), has com- thorities of the Revolutionary period. 1 plied with the requirement sof Chap- Beaides being a thorough scholar of ^ Consoli^t^ Statutes, enti^d , ^ u I. 1 • Corporations,^ drelimmary to tShe wide reputation, he has a pleasing i33„j„g j^is Certificate of Dissolu- address as a public speaker. I tion: ! Now Therefore, I, J. A. Hartness, Secretary of State of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 10th day of November, 1928, file in my office a duly executed and attested consent in writing to the dissolution HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT HERE TO OIL NEW DOUBLE ROAD. VassiT^'r"'. ''I'Vr * iitco oil.* x.iiciiuiot IS i,u re- corporation, executed by all _, ginning of the present year compil- ceive its coat of oil. The road ganj?" stockholders thereof, which said ^^rs. Florence Everest Tracy, sister i?ns« o. icxi/ Aiicauiiv i.vii i o j r« i ^ . „ . • J 4.U- 1 « . . f a leiv uc ay lui j gunday School conference at of Charles Everest, arrived this week Raleigh, where she will spend several , ^ a 1 • • 1 11 L ‘SSt ounday and report a good pro- , i xt i ^ ^ , and joins her small son who came days with her sons, Albert and Ed- [ ^g|j carried out and helnful National Industrial Con- of the State Highway department ar- consent and the record of the pro ward. 4.„ „ii* o., 1 ...1-1 ference Board. rived with the necessary parapher- ^^®dings aforesaid are now on file in The District Convention of the to all Sunday School workers. in the Tracy home on Weymouth Christian Endeavor Societies was held Road while Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Tracy are away on their winter trip. Their trip is to be quite an extended one. They will first go to Florida and then to Cuba, where they will take the steamer for the voyage to California throug^h the Panama Canal. After a visit with fiends in Holly wood, they will sail for thier final ^ goal, Honolulu. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Wolf and family have returned from their home in Altoona, Pa., for another winter sea son here. Miss Birdilia Blair and Miss Ferris have returned for the winter after a pleasant summer spent at Honey- wood, a charming country estate on the Susquehanna, near Sunbury, Pa. Mrs. James Boyd, with her sons, Jamie and Dan and her small daugh ter Nancy, arrived home Tuesday af ter spending the summer at Milbrook, New York. Mrs. Elvin N. Edward, wife of the District Attorney of Nassau County, N. Y., and Mrs. Ashdown visited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lyons this week. M.rs. V. R. Wiley entertained the Farrish Guild at her home on Massa chusetts avenue Tuesday afternoon. at the Church of Wide Fellowship Oregon has the next largest per nalia on Wednesday and pitched camp ^ ™^i„*¥e^3ul"ny*wCrof!l have hire- Mrs. W. McC. Blue and Miss Mary «irn'7 ^ i • j u • j j h ‘ *** Acsmiiuuy tthcicvx, x nave: hcitt- McLeod represented Eureka in ‘he Delaware is The [l^w. '-oad was ^ing dragged^ all Health and Welfare meeting at Pine- last week in preparation for its final I seal at Raleigh, this 10th day of No- er for Dr. Blair. MANY ATTEND SUNDAY SCHOOL MEETING AT VASS A large crowd was present Sunday afternoon for the township Sunday School meeting which was held in the Vass Presbyterian church. W. B. Gra ham, township vice president, pre sided, and a very interesting program was given. Miss Blanche Monroe, of West End, spoke for a few minutes on Cradle Roll work. Garland Pierce, of Southern Pines, discussed the va rious branches of young people’s work, and Prof. A. B. Cameron talked there is a neat little sum left over. To say the community is “well pleas-' ed” is expressing it lightly, for had not we watched with abated breath i for fear “hard times” might make hard sailing for our boarding depart- j ment! Much credit, in this good re-1 port, is due Mrs. Lannie Bailey, kitch- i en manager. Yes, the Eureka com munity are well pleased with the dormitory management of Mrs. Bailey I and Mr. Kiser. LAKEVIEW niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitm WHY THEY ACT THAT WAY? by George a GOODNitss rA£! 7" WELV.,- tAV CUOTl-\ES HAi/e AOJ- MIGHT SO » IvMGKT AJS WBL.U rit'iVSUTHEK n K 3 tt SneS COMIKJG CVER i ; A.MD WOJLD W06ABCV \P \ tAV Goes v GRAjsUsiV WOmV /XAsRE TKO' A. S'^'V-V- A 6>VT a-D /S-'EUU ' fOQ ON\e TKtMG - KCW VOOJ'iG I > >CO /'■Wt KttP* ^ vojo'-'ti; O0>«X> V DO IT? / I \ \a/aSv\ TO v" Tv\C- FAMILY LAUNDRY, INC. SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA Wednesday afternoon and evening. A j Tuesday of this week ‘ Average net debt for all state gov- top dressing ,and it begins to look j vember, A. D., 1928. buffet supper was served at the! Miss Mary A. Black spent last weekif the days of dust are over. S«rettr^™*Sta1 ^urch for the guests. A I »nd with relatives in Lumberton. ■ Nebrltka—have no state debt'* SUESCRIBS TO THE PILOT—$2.00 ^ovlG, 23, 30, Dec. 7. ber of delegates attende dthe meet- j p principal of Farm Life! state debt. j w. Duncan Matthews, Atty. ings from the different parts of the ^ g^hool, has a well established record district, which includes seven coun- ■ ^ g^ood instructor in the class room j ^ 1 and as a strict executive ovre all' Miss Lillian Roberts, of Pennsyl- g|-a(jgs ^ow he displays wisdom in i vania avenue, and a carload of friends purchasing groceries. After two I went to see the House in the Horse- j^^nths as purchasing agent for the shoe last Tuesday. , boarding department he is able to Miss Mallet, of Freeport, Maine, j grocery bills paid, as has accepted a position at stonegraph- j overhead expenses, and Wrinserlessl Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vinton left on (Tuesday for Mt. Dora, Fla., where they will spend the winter. I Mr. and Mrs. Wade H. Coffey and I their son David, left on Wednesday ifor Greelyville, S. C. Mr. Coffey is j in charge of a hunting club owned by I Mr. Nash of Nash Motors and Mr. i Allen of the Allen Hosiery Co. ] Mr. and Mrs. Edward Burr, of Darien, N. Y., arrived on Wednesday to spend the winter in their cottage. Mrs. Nicholas Gibbon has returned from Maine, where she has been spending several weeks with her aunt. Miss Johnsye Eastwood has accept- , ed a position in the Clow Gift Shop at Pinehurst. ' Thursday night was a night of much merriment and music, for it was the j night of the fiddlers’ contest. Fiddlers ’ § gathered from all around at the Pa- :i villion of the Lakeview Inn to try •• their skill. And such fiddlin’. Just.;: like the tales our grand fathers told ^ Us about. The prize winners will be; || announced lated. After the contest ! everyone joined into a real old time , square dance. ! The Misses Alice McQueen and .Ethel Reide, of Winston-Salem, were j guests of Mrs. John McQueen on Mon day. ! Claude Johnson and family have re- 1 turned to Aberdeen, their former I home, after a year in Lakeview. } Mr. and Mrs. 0 .H. Carpenter have j returned and are now living in Shingle Sides. Holt Gardner has left for Florida where he will spend some time. Mrs. Dan Ray attended the meeting of the Health and Welfare Associa tion at Pinehurst on Tuesday. Mrs. EASY engineers have found a better—faster— easier—safer method than wringing. The old- fashioned wringer is obsolete. It is gone from the latest EASY Washer. The new EASY Damp-Dryer takes a big batch of clothes and damp-dries them ready for the line in less than 2 minutes. And mark this ... does it while the big tub washes. Two operations at once! Does it more gently than the most deli cate hands can. No broken buttons. No dis torted woolens nor cracked silks. You should know about the latest—the moder^ way of washing at once. Name the day and we will show you in your home how the EASY Washer saves work and clothes. Phone us today. 10 things you will like best about the EASY Damp-Dryer: Safe—no exposed moving parts. 2, Operation simple and automatic. 3^ Empties automatically. Eliminates lifting heavy pails of water. 4^ No strain on fabrics-'does not crack silk or rayoa garments. Leaves blankets and wool* * ens flufiy and unstretched. 5^ Breaks no buttoot not * metal fasteners. Takes out more water than wringing does. Leaves clothet evenly damp and £iree from deep, hard creases. Makes ironing easier. Damp-dries whole batch * of clothes readv for the line in lets chi minutes. lan two AIm built with 4-cycle gssoUne motor for homes withoHt electricity. SAFER FASTER EASIER GENTLER t 5Y WASHER Plftone for FUFF Dctn.oit8tratioa iaras-, & Bushby, Inc. Electrical Contractors, Radio, Frigidaire. Daniels Building. Southern Pines. BIHlHUHHltmtHtHtlHHHtmW!
Nov. 16, 1928, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75