'riday, March 22, 1929. THE PILOT, a Paper With Character, Vasa. Norik Carolina Page ThrM Vacationing in North Carolina Described in Attractive Booklet Fifty Thousand Copies to be Publiiifhed and Circulated by State Motor Club An attractive descriptive booklet, ‘Vacationing in North Carolina," (.mpiled from authentic data con- .erninjr North Carolina resorts, ho tels, sports and other information is prepared by the Carolina Mo tor club and will be issued about May '5. “Initial edition of the bookle t, which Y.ill be published annually, will be "0,000 copies,” according to Coleman W. Roberts, vice-president of the club. -Sole purpose of the booklet will be -.0 set for.h advantages of the state iiF a whole as a playground for the nation for both summer and- winder vacationists. “A vast number of the hun'dreds of ihousands of inquiries received each year by the Carolina Motor club and iis affiliations throughout the state tome by mail from all parts of the nation seekiwg information regard ing North Carolina. In the past it nas be«;n necessary to furnish inquir- rr? with pamphlets, leaflets and t>ooklets describing specific town.^, communities or projects. A booklet built on a statewide basis will elim- GASOLINE PRICES VARY FROM 10 to 29 CENTS The spring tourist season is about to open and motorists will find about 50 varieties of gasoline prices in existence as they travel over the country. Statistics compiled by the Amer ican Automobile Association show ed gasoline varies in price from 10 to 29 cents a gallon in different localities and the gas tax ranges from six cents in South Carolina to two cents in Wisconsin. Only two states, Illinois and New York, have no gas tax. It was estimated motorists would use more than 14,000,000,000 gallons of gasoline this year and pay a tax of more than $300,000,000 for the fuel. Th«re are now 22,000,000 pleas ure cars in the United States and 11,000,000 of them will be used for touring trips during the open season. It was estimated each car will carry four vacationists or pleasure seekers and one-third of the nation will take its recreation on wheels during 1929. New Flood Lights for Knollwood Airport Field Made Available for Night Use by Two 1000-Watt Lamps. inate us. of this miscellaneous lit ^ cAMERON TO CLEAN ature and w.ll prove of «ntoId value FARMERS to small communities and centers | "iliat have been unable to adequately i “Arrangements have been made j kittle by little until its dimensions are place their advantages before per- | with A. M. Cameron to clean cottoa ! adequate for our needs, ther^ will be Having been established as a rec ognized flying field to be placed in all the guide books and maps issued by the Federal Department of Com merce, the Knollwood Airport is now concerned with the matter of lighting for the benefit of night fliers. The markers pointing the way to the field have proven their value, but can not be seen in the darkness. For several days the Pinehurst Electric Shop has been installing the wiring. The pow erful lamp which illuminates the wind cone on the roof of the hangar has already been set up. Two 100-watt fllcod lights similar to the one that lights the theater building from the village green are to be fixed at the side of the building to give different angles of illumination on the run ways. Chance visitors to our port have not been frequent enough to warrant continuous use of the new lights every night. When notice is received beforehand, as often happens. Of an intended visit, or when a plane is heard circling over the community, they will be flashed on and left burn ing until a landing is safely made. They will also be invaluable to any who find it necessary to take off at night. Since the field is to be enlarged sons who have the mleans to travel. I seed for the farmers of the commun- “Varying quantities of the book- j ity on Friday, March 29,” says H. L. ]eT will be supplied the 1,031 motor j Seagrove, agriculture teacher, clubs comprising the American Au- Mr. Cameron recently insialk<l a no boundary lights as yet. The suc cess of the port this season proves that it is an asset, inde-ed a necessity to the Sandhills. With its inclusion will call here, and eventually the field will be as busy as a railroad station. Tomobile association, assuring a ci;‘- | cleaner for his own private use, but j the government maps, more fliers culation among persons really seek- has consented to clean seed on the ing recreation. Vacationing in North above date for the small sum of 10 Carolina will present a panorama of | cents per bushel. All farmers desiring I It is conveniently located for all :he points of interest and of historic i their seed cleaned should have them planes traveling either North or ;.nd scenic attraction throughout! at Mr. Cameron’s bam on or before j South since there is no other between North Carolina from an impartial, j the above dates. here and Florida, unbiased viewpoint. “Last year tourists to the number j ^ <f more than 5,750,000 visited thej:| south and southeast and spent the iiiaggering sum of more than $425,- 000,000, and this statewide booklet is designed to attract a greater share of this tremendous business to North Carolina. Local Boys and Girls Eligible to Compete for Worldwide Trip Local D. A. R. Sponsors Flag Contest of U. S. Association and Hearst Papers MANY VALUABLE PRIZES The local Alfred Moore Chapter of the D. A. R. is sponsoring the first annual Flag Contest held by the United States Flag Association in co operation with H#&rst newspapers. As an expression of his gratification over the fine response on all sides to public announce ment, of the Fla^ (. ontest of the United States Flag Association, which is sponsored by the Hearst newspapers. William Randolph J U Hearst has personally made a dona tion of $25,000 for the purpose of ex tending the Patriotic Pilgrimage men tioned in th‘3 announcvmeni, givin^j the scholarship awards in ad'dition i<) the awards already offered by the Hearst Newspapers, and increasing the number of boys and giris to bf? .‘•f nt around the world. The coiitest consists of the answei- ing of 75 questions p^crtaining to Our Flag, a shor*^ essay on “Old Glory’s (iieatest Glory,” that can be recited in five minutes. The c*ontestants will be marked on the (1) answers to the <juestions, (2) the essays, and (3) on the delivery of the essay. The local wirtners are then entered in the Regional Comest. The win ners of this contest are then entered in the National Contest. The two l>nys and girls ranking highest in the National Contest are given a trip aiouiid the world with escort and all t'xpenses paid. Prizes for lo<ral win ners, scholarships and ntiedals, prizes lor Regional winners, Patriotic Pil- Krimaige to Washington, Gettysburg, Philadelphia, Valley Foi^a, Niew York City, West Point, Boston, Lex ington, Saratoga and ma(ny other ])laces of historical interest. This contesc is o-pen to all boys and «irls who (1) live in the United States, (2) who have not graduated fj'oni a high school or the equivalent in a private or parochial school ann <3) ari.‘ between fourteen and eigh teen years of age on Flag Day, June M, 1929, that is, who were horn be tween .June 14, 1911 and June 14, J915, both dates inclusive. The pa pers must be in by noon Priday, April So don’t delay but ask Mrs. L. P- Tyson, Carthaige, N. C. or Mrf=5. James Swl^tt, Regent or Mrs. Ber nard Leavitt, Southern Pines, N. C. ff r the particulars. FUR COAT INSURANCE Can be obtained by people of integrity and good habits, covering against ALL RISKS except moths, ver min, wear and tear. In your home—thetft either by burglars or dishonest domestics, fire, lightning, windstorm or flood. At restaurants, theatres, hotels, clubs, thieves are watching for an opportunity. Your coat can disappear in a very few minutes. While traveling on trains, automobiles or busses, your coat is subject to all sorts of hazards, including derail ment, collision or wreck. Covered at all times whether it may be in Continental United States or Canada, tihe annual rate is $2.00 per hundred, subject to a minimum premium of $6.00. John Bloxham will gladly take your application. s. B. RICHAKDSOII, MC. Real Estate and Insurance Southern Pines Men should be made to take vaca tions—so they won’t get the idea that they’re indispensable. Rain vs SO-SO Acme Hear Ye! The decision: “It has been found, by the testimony of hundreds of farmers—men of character and ability, standing high in their community: That—Best results are obtain able when Fertilizer is made 50 percent mineral, to start the crop gTowing; and 50 percent organic, to offset the loss of fertilizer by rain, and to strengthen and con tinue the plant life. This organic nitrogen (ammonia) stays in the ground, dissolves slowly and makes the farmers’ chances of a good stand, and a good yield, much more certain and sure. Therefore: Old Reliable Acme Manufacturing Company, of Wil mington, North Carolina, contin ues to make now, and has for the past forty-six (46) years, only 50-50 quality goods. Ask the man who uses ACME. Ask your dealer or write. Acme Manufacturing Company s h Wllmingrton, N. G. Nrtiluer FULL ROWS vol. II. NO. 6 Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporation Cop)i*4iht 197^ Good Cotton is Wanted In the United State« the demand ii feTeatest for strict low middling, middlinjr, strict middling and good middling from 15/16 to one inch in length, says the 1927 Yearbook of Agxicu’ture. These four grades made up 85.05 per cent of the total consumption by American mills. All the lower grades together ac counted for only 13.28 per cent. The demand for rotton under ipch in lengtli was less than one- tenth of 1 per cr!it of the whole. In other words. 0(^0 D cotton it wanted—cotton up to a standard. And tiu* fanner who uses V-C fuu it to .-rll! y.C “III competition with modern industry, the farmer must awinii into step with the march of mod ern busineSvH methods.**—U. S. Department of the Interior. V-C Back Up the Scientists tivt rybody < au eat just so much and put on so many clothes—and he can't eat or wear any more, no matter how rich he is. But on other things his pocketbook is the only lintit. The job is to learn how farm prod ucts can be used in making theae “Scientific farming has paid well all along, but it is not the scientific farmer who is complaining. He hasn’t the time. He is busy making money**—H. II. Hkimann. Puts Money in the Leal Yield and quality must balance if the tobacco grower is to make full profit from his crop. All author itiea agree on this. V-C Fertilizois are recognized as a vital factor in other things too. They hold big op portunities. Cotton seed used to be a big nuisance around gins, for in stance. Now it is worth real mon ey, thanks to the scientists. Scien tific research must stay on its job of hunting for new values in old farm products. There ought to be a good use—besides just eating it or wear ing it—for EVERY crop a farmer can grow. Let’s back up the scien tists with encouragement and money —and they'll dig up hidden markets all around us. V-C “La&or required for producing a pound of tchacco ranges from about teven-ieniht of an hour {ii minutes) for Virginia bright to about three- t$nth» of an howr (18 minutee) for Kentucky dark." — Ybabbook op Aamioxn/ruu. good yields of quality leaf. Made ospecially for a purpose—made carefully, thoroughly, honestly— they contain the usual ingredients plus one more that is not a chemical . . . V-C’s good name. Successful growers prefer V-C Fertilisers, becausj they know this fourth ingredient is there. They ham learned that it puts the money in the leaf. V-C ‘'There is- not an acre of land in the whole United States that doesn’t need at least one of the three principal ele ments of a complete fertUixer."—H. D. Wilson, Lmitiam CommiiHon- er of Agriculture. VX3 Why if the boll weerll always called **he*'? It's th« h«n that doM th« damage. • V-C Learn to Fertilize Right ^“The use of commercial fertilisers :s rather generally practiced, par ticularly in the eastern humid sec tions of the Cotton Belt. Unfor tunately in many cases apparently too little is used, or it is us^ with out enough skill to secure the best results."—Yearbook of Agriculture. V-C have used V-0, and although the boll weevil hit our county hard I made ov«r a bale to the acre."— W. Long, Taiboro, N. O. One Ton Against Fifteen Less than 27 pounds of plan* are in a ton of average livestock manure—27 pounds in 2,000. “Arc the other 1973 pounds ‘filler'?'’ asks the National Fertilizer .Association It then points out that a ton of 5-8-7 commercial fertilizer contains 20 units or 400 pounds of plant f^M)d —as nmch as you’d find in 15 tons of nmnure. V-C From leaf to p.'\ckage the wmu- fact are of cigareUes requires about nine days, says a government report. Bvt it took five yearn before that to make all the tobacco mixed in them. V-C '^Artificial Cotton” Now Between three and four million pounds of “artificial cotton” are now being grown in England, according to a report from London. The fiber is described as growing on a plant seven feet high that was discovered in British Guiana. I -v-c- One way to catch step with the procession and stay up with the leaders is to subscribe to a good farm journal—and read it! v-c One on the Indians! 1 The Indians had their pipes— made of clay or stone and none cost ing as much as an acre of good loamy land. But they were PIPES right on, and they drew good smoke. Not only that, but the Indians rolled their own cigarettes. Moreover, the Indians had their stogy cigars. Home-made, all of theae. But they were the originals of all that we have. There's nothing new . . . Fertiliser? The Indians had that too, of a sort—fish, right out of the creek, buried beside the plant. But it wasn’t V-C. Ho-hum! . . . FULL ROWS? Ah, there you’ve got it on the redskin! v-c “V-C Fertilizers have given us quality crops and greater yields. 'This year with boll weevil infesta tion the worst ever known around here, we averaged nearly a bale to the acre.”—Coate Mercantile Co., Coftts, N. 0. ■VIRCINIA-CABOLINA CBIMICAL OOBrORATlOK* Millions More People RIDE ON GOOD, XIRES A recent inquiry among car-own ers, conducted nation-wide, re veals that Goodyear Tires are now preferred 2 to 1 over the next most popular make—and from 3 to 1 up to 30 to 1 over other brands! The old opinion that “all the leading- tires are about alike” is rap idly submerging under the ever-growing proof of Goodyear su periority. The day is past when clever advertising might sway the multitude on tires. Car owners are too well posted—they have learned too much fiom experience to be baited by mere claims. Nor will tire- buyers, who watch their dollars, be swung away from the best tires by clever “dealer talk” in the face of incontrovertible facts which over-tower all the words in the dictionary. The loyalty to Goodyear Tires on the part of car owners is a mat ter of cold dollars and cents. Most people buy those products which give them the most for their money. ! Experience proves that Goodyear Tires offer the greatest value— by a wide and substantial margin. Therefore!—Goodyears far out sell any other make. Keith Motor Co. Chevrolet Sales and Service Gas, Oil, Accessories :: •• > t; Highway 50 Vass, N. C. a li

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