Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Jan. 26, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE PILOT, Southern Pines ahA Abwdeen, North CaroteA Friday January 26, 1934, THE PILOT ' Published every Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated. Aberdeen and Southern Pines, N, C. uable as an investment, as is the but since they returned home it case where the house is his own. I is found that all the states need Never in the world was there | another big book of new laws, NELSON C. HYDE, Managing Editor BION H. BUTLER, Editor JAMES BOYD STRUTHERS BURT Contributing Editors Subscription Rates: a better time for folks to get closer acquainted with the Build ing and Loan associations, for both the question of a perma nent home owned by the occu pant and the decision of what shall be the field of the small investor are perplexing the w’hole nation. The man or wo man with a little extra money, so the thing has to be done all over again. We are hogs for laws benefit to this section as well as the whole state, than a little en-1 ergetic encouragement of Stru- thers Burt, Frank Buchan and Dr, McBrayer in their effort to | GRAINS OF' SAND in this country, and the discour- ] make North Carolina highways aging thing is that after near ly a century and a half of state and national existence, and con stant making of new laws in all that time we have not yet start ed on the great job of lawmak ing, for it seems to be essential One Year $2.00 Six Months - $1.00j ggpeciaiiy the young folks who 'now to make more new laws each Three MoHths 50 j trying to learn how to save ] ] I and invest, has the best prospect Address all communications to The j world with the associa- PiLOT, Inc., Southern Pines, N. C. the most delightful in the United States. WHAT TO DO WITH MONEY? People who have some money, much or little, are still looking about for safe investment of it, and with much more scrutiny of everything than for a long time. During December' courts of the State convicted 131 persons fr>r op erating motor vehicles while under the influence of liquor. North Carolina voted dry in No vember | year than was the case in pre vious years , , , 11 books of new laws that | bonds, which have tions, while those who are look-1 will come from each state .and^^een the main outlet for invest- Entered at the Postoffice at South-1 ^ I Congress at the sessions funds, and which have af- v. .U .V,. that are immediately ahead will fo^ded the opportunity for the much help, probably be bigger ^wks of'building up of the great indus-j laws than the boo^s^ j ^ i tries that characterize this coun-1 The, fellow who predicted ern Pines, N. C., as second-class mail matter. that is their owti have the same chance now and more than ever a stimulus to save and Make McGoober says it keeps hfm so busy running out to see the air planes flying over his house that he does not get time for much else, and he believes if these things were stopped from going by here so much people would get more time to do things and may be that would lessen the call on the government for so thinks E. H. Garrison, Jr., county farm agent.* , His prediction was made in response' I to the question, “will the government ■ undertake to get the growers “par-- Ity’ prices for their 1934 crop?” j “With trees dying out by the thousands,” Mr. Garrison replied, “the natural law of supply and de mand will operate to give the grow ers better prices. Those fortunate few who make anything like a crop are on the way to earn some real money.” acquire in this way. Aberdeen session by session pijed up new hard v^^inter has to pack a lot of roug^ pies that attractiv^ old cottage , Southern Pines and Pmehurst | laws m the past, and when thejg^jj^g question. The grave weather in the next five weeks or i the Fow-nes home on Midland Rc are all showing excellent results J coming sessions have been com-1 threats of government competi- take the The magazine Vogue recently “wrote up" the pottery business ot Mr^ Augustine Healy and Mrs. Edgar a long Ewing, whose shop, “Marjean,” occu- near Road. WHAT OF THE DOGWOOD FESTIVAL? What is being done about the Dogwood Festival which has been widely advertised to be held in Southern Pines in April? I through the loan associations j They are ’worth close study by every individual in their com- [munities, and the secretaries of I the associations will gladly give I anv information desired. count as a prophet. The fire at the McDaniels residence MANY ON HONOR ROLL OF ABERDEKN SCHOOLS TIME TO PLAN FOR GARDENS The main thing the whole hu Some months ago a committee struggling for is the The Honor Roll of Aberdeen Schools for the third and fourth months is as follows: First Grade—Richard Batchelor was appointed by the Chamber supplies for a living. First comes bur laws is that we never make^ „ j st lji;^jtlgg them. of Commerce to formulate plans for this event, an event which eatables, for unless we eat we, the kind that heem to suit. W^e, jggygs of bonds on all sorts of send for the funeral man. The [ file the men who make ^h^jland property hav’e given the As far as The Pilot knows, the committee has done little or nothing in the way of plans for has listed the festival among j i^g disposes of more than j is time for a change. Each new seasonal attractions in its ad- j j^^e table. It helps to man who gets to the State cap- vertising material, the Chamber j p^y ^j^g other things. ’ ital has some new ideas about 'In‘the older days each family I new laws, and many are offered maintained a garden, and it was ; that ap never accepted to be hard to bring famine to the i made into laws. We are never house that had a food supply in | short of material for new laws, the lot back of the house. Gar- i but as all proposed new law.s are dens have fallen into what: opposed by a certain proportion Cleveland called inocuous de-! of the members much trash and suetude because they take work. | I'efuse is thrown aside before We have cultivated a view' of ^ the new laws are made and that work that is not favorable to' waste, exertion in that line. We are And when we get all the laws of Commerce committee falls down on its job of making it an outstanding affair. Only by thoughtful planning and sincere effort can the festival be suc cessfully launched and carried through, and The Pilot hopes to hear of action in the near fu ture. BUILDING AND LOAN OUTLOOK The Aberdeen Building and teaching the children that they must not work until they are pleted and all their new laws are | many things and the bur-' imade we will get ready for the i qJj enterprise byi } next set'sion to make some more orf-itrpi'TitDPTit’ Hv in- a u o *. j Inew laws. We can look t y lo +v,«iic,Q«rJ ^ taxes 3110 Dy coaes ana the first of any account in Southern !a thousand years and see the ii„,itations of various sorts, are Pi„es in seven months. I constant necessity of new laws, conducive to confidence in constituted ; industrial establishments as in-| Bilge Kpozer suggests to The Pilot that it takes more time and more j vestment outlets. ,that we ought to try a fire along some Betsy Jean Bobbitt, Bill Ellis, Ruben j Farm mortgages which once of the new fire lanes to see if they , Green, Sarah McLeod, Gene Morgan, SU ice e \ eai e oie. j were regarded as dependable are win do any good before we spend too Mable Norton. Myrtle Alice Sham- An interesting thing about i ^igo doubtful class. The much money making too many of I burger and Mary Elease Smith. Second Grade- Mary Katherine Ball. Betty Barber, Anna Capps, Charles Cummings, Ruth Lawhon, Hazel Melvin, Margaret McNeill, Elizabeth Page and Clifton Wilson. Third Grade- Tom Blackburn, Alexandra McLeod, Robert Monroe Max Wicker, Lawrence Wicker, Ada Marie Combs, Rebecca Deaton, Ethel Gene Howie and Runell Marshall. Fourth Grade -Olivia Benton, Bet ty Lou Deaton. Carina Greene, Mary Spencer Harrington, Kelsie Norris, Mary Page, Catherine Rowe, Ann Warner, Harriet W'eaver and Jessie Windham. Fifth Grade—William Hendren, Lawrence Johnson. Richard Page, Ray Stutts, Belk Troutman, Patricia Berge, Emma June Melvin, Frances Hearn, Louise Leach Martin. Char lotte Miller, Hartha MacLeod and Kathryn Page. Sixth Grade. Helen Batchelor, Jeanne Batchelor, Mary Margaret Burney, Evelyn McMasters, Kath leen Rhyne. Hope Weaver, Henry Ad der, Courtney Huntley, Robert Page and Bill Smith. j Seventh Grade—Clayton Brassing- : ton, Jean Folley, John D. McLeod,, Catherine Charles. Bettie Cliff, Bet- . « , . . . iam.1 uny^ 1.11c 1 One thing about the spring mail or- should Income an annua fea u j things can be considered i laws one session and engage a I j.g^j ggtate bond or loan a black der catalogues is that they have be- of the Spiingtime season ere. ^hen the table is cared for. | f®t of lawmakers, practical-j gyg^ which will for a long time g:un to make pictures of women with The farm is the principal ly ah\ays picking the ^'^cuiits jj^gjjj^g investors to scan very real faces instead of with black source of food supplies. But the ; from sources that have had no critically anything of that sort spotches for a mouth and two black ,, i Ti. n 1 ^ ♦ garden is a great auxiliary. The ^ experience in the work, and we, offered as an investment. Pub-, smears for eyebrows, it really looks ’ J 01 ® j family that maintains a good ifji’e them when they getljjj, utility stocks and bonds are; as if better times are in sight. if, after the Seaboard Air Line | garden has settled a big item of ^ through. A theory e.xists that | condemned by the government Railway has coopeiated to t e | living. In ,fact a | ^fter a man has been in the leg- threats of competition on the After reading in the Congressional , featurrng the even,, good garden in a community , is^ature once or twice he has broadest scale). Railroads aare Record some of the debates over i ik- and the town of Southern Pines ; ^.^,gre some of its product can ^ been there long enough and it hot water because of all man-|ker it leads the ordinary fellow to sus- ner of hard knots tied in their , pect that the moonshine booze is not ears. j half as bad as the more pretentious This question was put up to a , stuff they sell under the law. big New York banker visiting in j Sandhills the other day, and his | one of the latest recruits to the made we find that many of them are not what we want so answer as to what a man with Southern Pines colony of writers Mrs. some money could buy with some Wallace Irwin, who writes under the safet.V and return was, name of Laetitia McDonald, has a new “Pick carefully a piece of land and buy it at the right price.” That answ'er has been given by different persons whose opinion has been asked, yet always with the caution to pick the property and do not pay too much for it. The drawbacks that present Loan Association is about to open I eighteen years old. We are not ja process of repeal is neces.sary | themselves are that land must a new series of stock and loans. ’ encouraging that interest in the i each year. It is a great industry j necessarily be a long-time in- and in connection with the new garden on the part of either ;law jnaking is. vestment, it may not be depend- series will sponsor an essa.v con- young or old that would help to test for the Aberdeen ' High ^ keep the wolf from the door, so School, in which prizes aggre- what we should get out of the gating $25.00 will be given away garden we have set aside for for the five best essays written what we can buy from the green by pupils, on the value of Build- grocery. ing and Loan associations. The Every household should have “ |ed on for annual income, and it IMPROVING ! faces a steady drain in taxes. THE SURROUNDINGS. ^ut for a long pull, for reason- Struthers Burt, Dr. McBrayer®®^®pted, and Frank Buchan stand out ra- a final profit the opmion ther prominently in the state' / convention at Greensboro where novel out, published by Farrar & Rinehart. It is titled “Silver Platter” and Hayes’ Bookshop lias copies. an investment. first prize will be $10.00, the sec- jts garden, and every commun-; Probably the days of high ond $5.00 and then four prizes of *ty should have a public .spirit; yj|]„y.g ‘..oads was under disrus- *n real estate speculation $2.50 each. that would encourage making in j the;^?!® ^ Pos- j about the bottom of the'price This contest is under the di- protitable and backing iustifies , sibly we may have another wave level. Inquiries are noted here rection of the Keesler Memorial f^tistying yields that some ot' enthusiasm that has been I®/ hi?h-hitting, but that is not and there for such property, Committee which is carrying on gardens around Southern section is not a r ® investment the bank-1 which is one of the best indica- nng a contest throughout the schools of the state wherein high schools in counties having build ing and loan as.sociations may compete. County winners go to a state contest, the final win ners receiving prizes up to as high as $125. Two purposes are in mind in these contests, the one to encourage the students in presenting a live subject in forceful manner and the other is to stimulate building and loan a.s.sociation extension. This section of Moore county has three associations in Aber- Pines can show, and which prove the possibilities of a garden and reached in this .section is not a] new or spontaneous climax. It The University of North Carolina Glee Club is giving a concert in San ford tonight at 7:30 in the High School Auditorium. Many from the Sandhills plan to hear this reputedly excellent group of singers. tie Hannon, Mae Marks, Margaret Root rot and other diseases will McLeod, Mildred Page, Marshal reduce peach production seventy-five Page, Odell Shaner and Roberta per cent within the next five years, Zimmerman. Eighth Grade- - Louise Crain. Ninth Grade- None. , Tenth Grade — Marcella Folley Frances Jean Freeman and Gladys Fulk. Eleventh Grade—None. BOY UHO SHOT WILSON. B.VLLPI.u\YER. GETS 90 DAY» future, not of high priced stuff, but here and there of what will be regarded as bargain offer ings, which now seem to be er referred to. His idea was I tions as to the near future of thP v«l„P Tt ; the result of long and strenu-1 for what looks | this neighborhood. Nothing in the \alue. It i.s absuid that the'^,,^ fI like a rea.sonable price on a de vast amounts’of garden stuff the used in this section are so lar- ^ ^ '‘"f fl. gely freighted in from Points ^^g g^o^j^: many directions, and it is gi as remote as the I acific coast, ^j^g ‘ as the opinion of many keen Florida, Louisiana and else- .“ ' , i servers that we are'to see a ' ■ ' nf diked thi., part ot tne immediate where where people have to work to make their products and to see it pays freight and merchant’s profits besides, be fore it can get to the table here. sirable piece of ground. That sentiment seems to be felt in given ob- see a marl since the improvement of the land along the roads has been Clarence King, colored boy of Vass, spires more confidence and stim- charged with shooting Dav- ulus than for lands to get into the hands of people who can hold and use them, for there is id Wilson, popular ball player ot Moore county, was given 90 days on the roads by Judge Sink in Superior the real basis of business and Tuesday. The shooting was sup- industrial prosperity, and confi- accidental. dence in that quarter awakens confidence in all directions. it Pays to .\dv’ertlse in The Pilot. under way is so plain that those All that w^realizl wrdrnoVi'’^’ the - ■ Special Introductory Offer | all realize the wisdom of mak- ' no argument regarding the ing a garden for everv home. We of the work. One of the , do not realize that we nave no features of what has been deen, Pinehurst {»nd Southern : ^^Qi.g ,,„g^ ^ filling- nm- t«hio« that it perpetuates it-|!i Pines, and they all show in their \^th%hinls f^^^^^^^ trees planted go on|^ Ia.st Imports that they are not eounty than we have of sending only thriving, but that they arei^^, South AmenVa fnr « inuH handsome roadside embellish- affording help .to a Jarge num-! for fhe fit?place. That^l and are in themselves one i ber of mdustrious and thritty;<-io not have more and hetfpr of the most powerful arguments: families in acquiring their ownU.XV?!" hs to their value. It all of the Look what 39c will buy Saturday and Sunday J , ,. gardens for every home and r , %‘t, If’’™'-'- “ Wt of .shiftless in. fordmg a safe place for the. ^ excusable ■savmgs of small investors with either on the part of the indiv- idual or a reasonable return of interest for the money invested. It is us- usually considered that the man who rents a house pays about a third of his income for rent. roads leading to Moore county I could be made as attractive as Moore county roads are becom- j ing, a .journey through North Carolina would be worth the j § time and cost if for no more than . J to travel such interesting scen- Jg the community. It would not be a bad idea if every man who applies for work on the public funds jobs should be re- D J. i-u* J J. ' 11 I cjuired to put in certain time on i ‘ * « But this does not include mov-l^ garden as a qualification that . three men who are mtn- | mg costs tiom time to time, re-, jj, helping himself as well as tioned by the papers a.s repre- | newal of furniture and fixtures being helped by public taxation '•‘^^^ting Moore county in their |H And right now plans should be, ^‘^tivities are not letting the ^ made for gardens on a bigger sleep. But they can, scale than ever, for bellies will! better work and more: be .iust as hungry this year of proportion to the help : grace as ever in the past backing they get from the; • . i community and also from the I OUR HYSTERIA whole state, for the movement' OP" NEW LAWS I’eached a momentum as 1 a state movement and is no , We are beginning now to talk longer local. In their work they Chocolate Covered PEPPERMENTS Fine Pepperment Creams in rich, Salisbury Chocolate. (The whole world loves Appropriate for ,. :e;tao Salisbury’s Peppermints.) Appropriate for every oc casion. Pound 60c. every time he moves, wear and tear on his furniture every time it is carted about, and all the other costs of adjusting furni ture and equipment to the new surroundings. The man who pays his rent to himself is the winner of that amount of mon ey, and also the possessor of the savings that come from not having to move and renew his furniture and equipment from time to time. The many other ad vantages of living in a house you own are well know'n. It is a to make some more new laws, home, while a rented house is a ■ Congress is in .session making the state in their enthusiasm. Milk Chocolate Covered PEANUT BRITLE Tiny, hand picked Peanuts, toasted to a turn, in table butter . . . then dipped in Salisbury’s Milk Chocolate. Gee! They taste so good to eat, and, really, each Pea nut seems enthusiastic and proud to graduate into Salisbury’s Peanut Brittle. Pound 60c. about members of a new legis-' are an aggravated type of ag- lature to make some more new |gressive energy and enthusiasm,; laws. In all the*48 states of theja thing that is essential in all i Lnion legislatures will be chos-* public works of g'eneral welfare, i KREAMETS Such Creams! You will love them. They just melt away. The blend of this delicious Cream is amazingly fasci nating to the taste, with Salisbury’s Fine Coating. Simply irrestible. Give the family this itreat. Pound 60c. CUT CARAMELS Buttery Chocolate with se lected Georgia Pecans. What more need be said to one who is fond of really good Caramels ? Twelve ounces 60c. Milk Chocolate Covered NUTS Whole nut meats, in deli cious Salisbury Milk Choc olate. No creams. Nothing else. This is the choice of many esthirsiastic candy lovers. This package contributes, in a large measure, toward the popularity of Salis bury’s Home Candies. COCONUT FONDAY The finest, shredded, white Coconut, from the far away Philippines, caught in its prison of Salisbury’s rich chocolate, makes a combination, many think, excelling all Pound 60c. other pieces. Everybody Likes Good Candy. Take advantage of this opportunity. temporary location, in which the occupant has only a brief in terest and no incentive to im prove it or to make it more val- more laws. After the legislatures adjourned at their last sessions they had finished up all the law making that seemed necessary, rt;::r::t:io“:::: thrower s pharmacy go. But they do thrive under i encouragement. Probably noth-iL ing will be of more substantial A Reliable Drug Store
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Jan. 26, 1934, edition 1
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