Page Two THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, NV>rth Carolina Friday, July 31, 1936. THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE riLOT, IiM'orporatod, Southern Pines, X. C, CARO-GRAPHICS -- by Mut '•u* fonts, Jr. XKLSON' C’. HVDE Editor FKAXt'ES FOLLEY Advertising Mannger DAN S. HAY Circulation ManuRer Subscription Itiites: One Year — $2.00 Six Months $100 Three Months -50 Entered at the Postoffice at South, ern Pines, X. C., as second.class mail j matter. THE REPl’BLlCANS I TAKE THE OFFENSIVE 1 The feature of the Presiden-I tial campaign to date appears to j be the sudden reversal of pos- j ition of the combatants. The Re- i publican party, almost over- i nig’ht, shook off its lethargy, its | attitude of “You can’t beat San*| ta Claus,” and leaped right in-' to the offensive. The unanimity of enthusiam for its candidate; the aggressiveness of its new campaign managtr, John Ham ilton ; the “walks” announced by a former Democratic Presiden tial candidate, former Democrat ic governors and other leaders, and the result of nation-wide polls account largely for the shift. Mr. Landon’s acceptance speech last week was favorably received by the public and the press. Shorn of the usual pol* itical piffle, it was a sound, con structive message in the opin ion of a large majority of the nation’s editors and commenta tors. As The Pilot has said before, it is going to be a fight. And “Jim” Farley to the contrary notwithstanding, the result is no foregone conclusion. Highlights of Mr. Landon’s ac ceptance speech: “The time has come to stop fumbling with recovery." “No people can make headway where great numbers are sup ported in idleness. There^^is no future on the relief rolls.” iPractical progressives have suffered the disheartening ex perience of seeing many liberal objectives discredited during the past three years of careless thinking, unworkable laws and incompetent administration.” “We must be freed from in cessant governmental intimida tion and hostility . . .from ex cessive expenditures and crip pling taxation.” “While spending billions of dollars of borrowed money may create a temporary appeai'ance of prosperity, we and our Child ren, as taxpayers, have yet to pay the bill. :^r every single dollar spent we will pay back two dollars.” “By its policies the Adminis tration has taken the American farmer out of the foreign mar kets and put the foreign farmer into the American market.” “Employes are to be free from interference from any source, which means . , . entire freedom from coercion or intimidation by the employer, by any fellow em ploye, or any other person.” “The Republican party does not believe that the people wish to abandon the American form of government. We propose to maintain the constitional balance of pow'er between the States and the Federal Government.” DO YOU KNOW Y0UR5TATE? Reveals Julian Bishop’s Trust Fund Income B IfAST ??TARHJP.S HAVf REPRE<fMTfP M Uft M AM6*?WP^MIMI$T£R<.£TC l>WlSON.ini9L3.JAME5 JLAWEIS tFmorHAVlN6 SSnAFQO(jANDAFlSU THAT rEUOl/TOflitfav fmOW)M6A5WU 246,27^0FT^Jf CU Hi NATIV£< Of JtMff cariDftS Of toi I DID YOU KNOW WIlllAM BiOlINT W40WA$ ONE OF N.C'S a/PRf5W7- ATIVE5 TO S16N THf CWV 5T(TUTiON. lATf R SfRVB AJAU5 SfNATOn fROn Jsnm^BF ^ • r-«o«»n> mras Aaoift IN 166^ HC WAt HOf! UXJTf BATF VIAU m TiK as •!or rvrov ? «uiTf ph>pu MU2OC0IUP arrrufR lUAPNOfivam I’robate Court Reports on Sums Paid Carthage I^andowner Who Plans “Walk” fection to professionals and to youth. “5. Walk at lot. ^ "6. Learn to think deliberately and usefully. Worry and hurry ! are the twin sisters of fate. ' They insure a short life and any- ' thing but a merry one.” Grains of Sand From State Press TOVKIST IXDVSTKY Before the "tourist season” ends reports the United Press, North he said Carolina resorts will pocket S50,- 000.000 in vacation dollars. This is ex- Majcr Alex P. Kelly of Carthage j dropped into the office this week to , have the address of his Pilot chang- 1 ed. The major has been stationed for j over two years at Cristobal in the Panama Canal Zone, is new going to the Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland. "I keep in touch with Moore coun ty affairs through The Pilot, and I don’t believe I miss much that’s go- H. \V. Dorn asked on Monday when cellant. But in North Carolina there is , temperature was over 100 if we no tourist season. Winter may close t going to retract our last week principal and interest of the bends some of the resorts in the mountains editorial about SL Uthern Pines as a [ shall be annually levied and collect- * and on the coast which are most fre- | summer resort. , ed. o * * t if I niipntpri hv North Carolinians But i answer is no. There have been Section 3. A statement of the jquented by Xortn Carolinians. ±Jut i i debt of the Town has been filed with I more and more North Carolina makes; practically every cierk and is open to public in- I an appeal to all the year-round vis- j summer resort in the country as we gpection. I itors from beyond the borders of the , had heie Monday, and with moie hu state. Golf at Pinehurst and duck shooting in Currituck are well-known Julian T. Bishop, New York broker, who has announced that he will move to Canada if President Roosevelt is re-elected, receives an annual Income from a trust fund provided by his grandfather, W’illiam D. Bishop, pres ident of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railrrad, a staunch'Demo crat. who left an estate of $2,165,934, officers of Probate Court in Bridge port, Conn., disclosed last week. The grandson, according to the Probate Court records, received $11,- j 451 in February, 1936; $10,047 in } 1934 $11,460 in 1933 and $11,166 in j 1931. His grandfather’s estate in- i eluded $407,000 in cash, $772,000 in { stocks, $018,000 in bonds, $176,000 in i notes, $86.5oO in real estate, $60,000 j in insuiance and $43,800 in miscella- j neous items. | Jvilian Bishop recently advertised , that if President K'osevelt were re- ’ elected he would sell his quail farm ' near Carthage and move to Canada. He says he wanted to work for the ! Democrats when Mr. Roosevelt cam- ‘ paigned against Herbert Hoover, but ; “when I found I had to go to Farley i and Cummings I quit what little I was doing." He doesn’t consider the present Adminisf rati, n Democratic i at all, but "red as fire.” It was once ■ published that he lost $188,100 in | BE IT ORDAINED BY THE stock market operations during the BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF' fj.ur years beginning January, 1929. i THE TOWN OF SOUTHERN PINES, | NORTH CAROLINA, AS FOLLOWS; Section i. Bonds of the Town be issued to the aggregate principal amount of EIGHTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS ($18,000.00) for the pur pose of the construction of streets. Section 2. LEGAL NOTICES AX OKDIX.AXCE AITHORIZIXG THE ISSVAXCE OF EU.HTEEX THOrs.AXn LM)LLAKS ($18,- 00(M)0) STREET LMPKOVEMEXT B O X D S OF THE TOWX OF i SOI THEKX FIXES. X O K T H CAKOIJXA. BYXl'M DESCEXDAXTS TO H.WE REUNION AT L.\KEVIE\^ Descendants of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Bynum will hold a A tax sufficient to pay i reunion at Lakeview on Wednesday, August 5th. Seven of the daughters of these early settlers survive. They are Mrs. Jane Keith of Cameron Mrs. Sue Cameron of Vass, Mrs. Minnie Patterson of Philadelphia, Miss., Mrs. Lydia McDonald of Hamlet, Mrs. Kate Shaw of Southern Pines, i Mrs. Ida Patterson of Winston-Salem Section 4. This Ordinance shall take effect thirty days after its first publication unless in the meantime a The investigation into the tragic j for its submission to the; and Mrs Florence Thomas of Corne- ^ voters is filed under the Municipal ^ lius. A large number of the grand- cieath of a New York University co- ^ pjjiance Act, and in such event it children and great-grandchildren are ed at Asheville has a certain similar- ^ g^all take effect when approved by expected to be present. ity to the death in Pinehurst of Elva ' the voters of the Town at an election; Statler Davidson. In both, the inves- j as provided in the said Act. tigator announced he had “an ace in The foregoing Ordinance was pass- must be commenced within thirty the hole," would have the solution days after its first publication. ready at a certain time. The time j^jy jg3g the Asheville tragedy than they were the morning the unfortunate girl’s body was found. was first published on the 31st day , H. F. BURNS, Clerk, Southern Pines, North Carolina, came, and nothing happened. They' Any action or proceeding ques- j3i_a7 are apparently no nearer a solution of tioning the validity of said Ordinance ! must be commenced within thirty days after its first publication. H. F. BURNS, Clerk, .Southern Pines, North Carolina. J31-A7. attractions outside the too brief sum- hier season. And more and more other j resorts should extend their seasons in ; order that the state and the visitors ’ may profit on the resource of the I glorious North Carolina autumns the ; mild North Carolina winters, and the I gentle and delightful North Carolina I springs. i The tourist industry as some other ! sections have discovered is one which takes nothing out of a region but which instead leads to its increasing beauty. A study in Canada pointed out that the paper industry meant the export of forests and the min- I eral industry the emptying of mines, I but tourists, bringing almost as many dollars as either of these industries, j I left Canada with all it contained be- j fore they arrived. To a lesser degree ' this is also true of North Carolina. | I In agriculture and industry to too i I large an extent money has been made ! by mining the soil or by mining hu- | i man beings. Undoubtedly advance has ’ I been made against such destructive ' j farming and such exploiting industry. | I But the net advantage of the tourist j industry remains. People pay for see- i ing and seeing consumes nothing. ; Blessed with the greatest moun- : I tains in the East with a cnflstlflnd , ^ i i ^hall be annually levied and collect I idins. in lue r.asi;, wun a coastiana . „ew proofreader. In our I which does not suffer by comparison ^ g^^^y last week the pres.--nt one . I with any in America, with a central ' This from the United Press this week: The identity of the Governor of North Carolina, who observed to the Governor of South Carolina that a > long time was elapsing between drinks, has become the subject of in tensive research by the writers’ pro ject of the Works Progress Adminis tration in North Carolina, it was learned today. The writers also will try to find out when the remark was uttered, to which Governor of South Carolina and what he did about it. An appeal has been made tx3 all those who have authentic source material on the sub ject to give their accounts AX ORDINAXCE AL’THORIZIXG THE ISSl ANCE OF T \V O THOUS.\XD IK>LLu\KS ($2,- (►00.00) WATER SUPPLY SYS- \X OKDIXAXC’E AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF SEVEN THOUSAXD ($7,000.00) SEWER SYSTEM BOXDS OF THE TOWN OF SOUTHERX FIXES, XORTH C.\ROLlNA. BF. IT ORDATNKD BY THE' RnApr> ow roMMTcscTOMFHS ov TEM BOXDS OF THE TOWN OF T'vr' TnwM OF PsnUTHFRN PTNFS. SOUTHERX FIXES, N O K T H ' NORTH CAROLINA, AS FOLLOWS: i CAROLINA. I l. Bonds of the Town be is-sued to the aeeregate principal I BE IT ORDAINED BY THE g^vF-N THOUSAND! BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF j^oLLARS ($7.000.00> for the mir- THE TOWN OF SOUTHERN PINES, constructing a Sewer Sys- NORTH CAROLINA, AS FOLLOWS: . Section 1. Bonds of the Town be Section 2. A tax sufficient to pay issued to the aggregate principal the nrincinal and interest of the bonds amount of TWO THOUSAND DOL-1 shall be annually levied and collect- LARS ($2,000.00) for the purchase ed, of constructing a Water Supply Sys- Secti-n3. A statement of the debt ''f the Town has been filed with the Sectiori 2. A tax sufficient to pay pi^^k and is open to public inspec- ; The talk around the office is that. tion. "feed cars.” Naughty naughty. 1 section which the Tufts at Pinehurst : have shown needs only development j in intelligence, North Carolina, sit uated so near the great centers of population, has every advantage | Sandhills at present. At* least fifty which should make it a State uneX' ' ers is filed under the Municipal Fi nance Act. and in such event it shall take effect when approved by the A RECIPE FOR HEALTH It is essential to think about health the year ’round. But it’s more essential during the heat of the summer months. A recipe for health is one of the by-products of the sessions of the American Osteopathic Association held last week in New York City. Here it is, as presented by Dr. Russell C. Mc- Caughan, the association’s ex ecutive secretary: “1. Sleep eight hours every night—we can’t all be Edisons or Napoleons. “2. Drink four or five pints of liquid a day- » “3. Eat slowdy, deliberately, a wide variety of foods—a little less than you actually w’ant. If time does not permit a leisurely meal, better not eat at all. Leave the problem of calories and vita- mitis to your physican. “4. Never allow ypurself to become too good at competitive sports and games: Leave per- celled in its appeal to tourists. But I beauty like charity must begin at j home. Tourists will come to this State 1 when its citizens are themselves so impressed with its possibilities that they are willing to preserve them and improve them. If the preservation and ! improvement comes first, the tourists i will come afterwards, j —Raleigh News & Observer HE H.\S NO KICK COMIXG So far as Julian Bishop is concern ed, if Mr. Roosevelt is re-elected, he proposes to take a walk entirely out of this country. He’s going to Canada, he says, in that event. In the article in the New York Times in which appeared Mr. Bishop’s statement of purpose, we read: “Stopping at the Yale. Club yester day on one of his perodic visits to this city, Mr. Bishop emphasized his complete disinterest in politics, add ing that he had voted only once in his life.” Such being the case, what business is it of his who may be elected Pres ident of the United States? A man who has no more interest in political and civic duties than he indicates could be spared to Canada or Thibet or the Sahara desert. —Charlotte Observer. Section 4. This ordinance shall A effect thirty days after its first , - - , . , . * , v,„„ y, , -.5 publication. unle,ss in the meantime a let Mayflowers pass for Elbertas debt of the Town has been filed ^ petition for its submis.sion to the vot- and “iced cars” went through as ^ Clerk and is open to public in spection. Section 4. This Ordinance shall take effect thirty days after its first Aberdeen is the metropolis of the publication, unless in the meantime ’■'f'ters of the Town at an election as a petition for its submission to the P*''^'''ded in the said Act. voters is filed under the Municipal foreer^ine Ordinance was pass- F'inance Act, and in such event it 15th day of Julv, 1936. and shall take effect when approved by first published on the 31st day the voters of the Town at an elec- i Julv, 1936. tion as provided in the said Act. ■ action or p»'Oceeding question- I was trucks were parked about town over the week-end, awaiting the big rush of peaches to market on Monday. On Saturday night there was barely room to pass on the sidewalks, so i The foregoing Ordinance was validity of said Ordinance many people were in town What passed on the 15th day of July, 1936. ^ commenced within thirty with the big peach crop and bright' ®'‘d was first published on the 31st days after its first publication. day of July, 1936. j h, F. BURNS, Clerk, Any acticn or proceeding question- I Southern Pines, North Carolina, ing the validity of said Ordinance ‘ J31-A7. YOU CAN BUY FROM US A REAL TIRE 46 for IS A WEEK ON little at EASY TERMS World’* greatest low price tire SPEEDWAY prospects for tobacco, looking up. business is W’e have sworn out a warrant for one "Buck'' Tarlton. For breach of peace. If you’ve been having as much trouble getting to sleep these hot nights as we have, you’ll understand. W’e had just arrived at that highly satisfactory and essential state of complete coma last Tuesday night about 11:30 when we were awakened by the loud ringing of the telephone. We pictured some dire disaster, a telegram' full of bad news, the Asso ciated Press wanting us to dash to Hemp on some big story, or some thing like that. We took down the receiver. “Where is tomorrow’s Kiwanis meeting,” asked the voice of Buck. It was just one hour later that we succeeded in regaining a sopori fic state, an hour spent in tossing in a delirium of murderous threats could we but get our hands on the Tarleton. We swore out the w’arrant the next morning ‘M APPRECIATE GOOD DIGESTION!" SAYS MLLE. LUCY GILLETTE Daring Circus Aerialist "Camels stimulate my digestion,” she says. Camels help the flow of digestive fluids —increase al kalinity. They set you right! BOWLING CHAMP. Johnny Murphy (above) says: *'*For Diges tion’s Sake—Smoke Camels’ works out swell in tny case.” CilMCLS COSTLIER TOBACCOS —a big, husky, handsome Goodyear 1936 Blue Rib bon Prize Value! Look what you get: THE GOODYEAR MARGIN OF SAFETY—Center Trac tion for quick-stopping (let us show you!) THICK, TOUGH, LONG- MILEAGE TREAO — Lowest cost service per mile (proved by our customers' records!) BLOWOUT PROTECTED IN EVERY PLY—by patented SUPERTWIST Cord—extra springy, more enduring (ask us to demonstrate!) Remember — ours is the place to get your money’s worth and then some — in tires and service! Page Motor Co. Southern Pines, N- C. YOURTNAME HERE POMPEIAN COMPANV, BleemlicM, N.'j7N Enctoitd (ind 10c lor which pUtia itnd m* 7 Ponip«i<n Fict Cr*«ms and Powdcn. N«m« ■ Addtttt. City • •• Brings you^ J ^IPOMPEIAK ^CREAMS AND [face POWDERS bn TRIAL... Juit lilt In the coupon above, enclose II in an envelope with 10c and you'll k«vc the new Pompeian 4-Feature Face Powdcn at well at the famoui Pompeian Misiase, Tiiiue and Cleantlng Creams in the next mall. Fill out and mail the coupon now, before it's too late. This liberal offer is for a short time only. Regular sizes at your drug countcr 55c and 65c DO FALSE TEETH ROCK, SLIDE OR SLIP? FASTEETH, a new, greatly im proved powder to be sprinkled on upper or lower plates, holds falsa teeth Arm and comfortable. Can not slide, slip, rock or pop-out. Noa gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel ing. Makes breath sweet and pleas ant. Get FASTEETH today at any good drug store. EXPECTANT MOTHERS When your baby comes you will ^need Mennen Aiitiseptic Oil for him; so get it now and start using it on yourself. Rub it into the skin of your abdomen or ^wherever the skin is tight or dry from swelling. Notice how tautness, dryness disap pear. Then after baby arrives, give him a daily body rub with Mennen Oil. It’s antiaeptic— ^ will protect him against germs. See your druggist—today, - MENNEN Antiseptic OIL

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