IP Page Two THE PILOT. Southern Pines and Aberdeen, Norlii Carolina Friday, July 9, 1937. THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated, Southern Pines, N. C. NELSON C. HYDE Editor Ben Bowden. Kiitharine L. Boyd, Helen K. Butler, Jean Edson, Charles Blacauiey, O. D. l*ark, Oaii S. Ray, Bessie Cameron Smith, Associates. Subscription Kate«; One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months 50 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mail matter. A HLMAMTARIAN PASSES The passing- of Dr. Jamie VV. Dickie removes from the Sand hills one of its builders. After service with the medical corps of the United State Navy dur ing the World War, and two years of intensive training in tu. bercular work at Asheville, Dr. Dickie came to Southern Pines 16 years ago and built up an in- stitution destined to become na tionally recognized for its work in the rehabilitation of tubercu lar patients. In addition to his contribution to the community in his medical work, Dr. Dickie has played a prominent part in its civic and social life. He was one of the charter members of the Kiwanis Club and served for one year as its president. He was a director of the Moore County Education al Foundation, an organization which through its loan fund has aided deserving youths of the county in carrying on their edu cation beyond high school grades. He has taken a keen and active interest in many enter prises looking toward the well being of Southern Pines. The many friends of the lov able doctor join a sorrowing widow and two fine youngsters in mourning his passing, THE CASE FOR TOM GIRDLER The Pilot is in receipt of an interesting communication in answer to an editorial on the subject of Tom Girdler and “Lit tle Steel” written by K. L. B. and published in this paper several weeks ago. We are pleased to give space to the views of the author; Deac Martin, of Cleve land, Ohio, who says: Recently a friend living in your community sent me a copy of “The Pilot,” containing an article by you (K. L. B.) on Republic Steel and the S. W. O. C. This article contained some statements which are raiher far-afield from the facts and I am taking the liberty of writing you in the hope that my letter will clear up some of the misunderstanding which seems to exist in your mind on the question. I am doing this because I believe so strongly in the cause Mr. Girdler has been leading, although I do not know him personally and have no connection with the company. To many of us this cause com cm close to being a crusade to save de mocracy in this country, which is being threatened by the John Lewis dictatorship. Your reference to the stretch-out as being the only way that occurred to Mr. Girdler for reducing costs is somewhat besi ^e the point. To my | certain knowledge the stretch-out j never has been and is not now used I in the steel industry. I understand | that that is a practice applying in a j number of other industries but not m I steel, and Mr. Girdler cannot be ac-1 cused of introducing it into Repub- [ lie. I You do not appear to agree with Mr. Girdler’s conviction that he should operate his business to make profit. I think whether or not one believes in the profit system is a question of whether or not one be lieves in the capitalistic system. With out profits, the capitalistic system would wither and collapse. The chief point on which you are misinformed is the picture you draw of Tom Girdler’s employees on one side demanding a signed contract and Tom Girdler on the other, refusing to grant such a request, with the re sult that men are striking because of that. The facts are that Tom Girdler’s employes have not asked for a signed contract. The C. I. O. has asked foi it. The C. I. O. claim to represent some of Girdler’s employees. They have never said how many or what portion of the total. To date they have declined to avail themselves of their privilege of requesting the Na tional Labor Relations Board to hold CARO-GRAPHICS — by Murray JomJR POYOU YOUR 0k JKHOW 5TAT£? HC. EUaED aEOflGE WAiHimirON AFTER HE HAD Pffn PREJIPEMr THREE YEAW MDVWKNOWrHAT m FIRff PAPBR MONEY I55UEDIN N.C\VA$ AUTHOR IZfD IN 1712 TO FINANCE A WAR AOAINnTWE INDIANA • yiixm TrtOJ.J. JARVIf SlKCffPEDZEB YAHCE BOW A) 60VERN0R OF Nr. AND AS U1 SENATOR #v IN 1990 YAPKIN CO. lED WE ffATt IH WE NUMBER OF Din‘IUERIE$. SHE HAP EIGHTEEN PKnUEBY WAtro AHP 7 COOFERATIVf WAHTT PIDYOUKNOHfrw EllZABETH BlACKNEll OF A5HEVIUE WAJ THE FIRfT WOMAN IH m UNITED STATff TO RKEIVE A MEDlCAl PIWOMA ? • TH6 EDITORS OF CARO-CRi^PHICS IMVITB YOU TO SEND IN INTCPESTINO FACTS (^OOUT Yooa COMttONlTV ♦ an election in plants, thus revealing that they feel certain they do not have the majority. Some light is thrown on this by the fact that out of the 53,000 wage earners in the company, 23,000 have continued to work all through the period of the strike and that the instant pickets .surrounding various plants m Ohio were disarmed and law enforcement began, practically all of the em ployees have gone back to work and the plants are resuming normal oper ations. It is unfair to Mr. Girdler to say that his employees distrust him or that he has become more and more separated from them. As a matter of fact, the fight that he has put up for the rights of a man to work at a job of his own choice, free from mo lestation and coercion from a labor organization, has endeared him to thousands upon thousands of his em ployees, as indicated by letters and messages he has received from them anU the enthusiastic manner in which they have returned to work as soon as they were able to get thiough the C. I. O. picket lines. SOMETHING NEW IN RESORT ADVERTISING This summer enterprising cit izens of Maine are capitalizing the political isolation of their state, as temporarily fixed by the national election returns. Maine has not ceased to be an attractive summer resort be cause she happened to monopo lize a little comer of the 1937 electoral map along with Ver mont. So wide-awake habitants of the Pine Tree State are mak ing the most of its new distinc tion by expanding their adver tising acti\ities. For example, we are told that a camp owner in Maine’s Range- ley Lake region is making a first-rate bid for publicity. He is circulating something that is probably unique in the way of advertising folders. It is in the form of a passport, authorizing the holder to travel to the camp, and is labeled as valid during July, August and September. There is space for amendments and extensions, and a visa good for all the privileges and pleas ures of the camp. Other drives for Maine’s summer benefit are reported, but this will answer the purpose of a good specimen. The camp-owner is doubtless a never-say-tlie Republican. But he is obviously too hospitable to discriminate against unregencr- ate Democrats and even New Dealers in distributing his pass ports. NEW LAWS PRESENT BUDGET PROBLEMS If you meet up with one of the County Commissioners and he seems a bit more preoccupied than usual, or you note deeper furrows in his brow than you knew were there, you may attri bute it to budget-making time. Just about the hardest job the commissioners have is to give the people of the county all of the improvements they want and still keep the tax rate down to a figure that will be pleasing to them when they get ready to pay their taxes. This year, as Chairman Wil bur H. Currie now sees it, there will of necessity be an increase in the rate, which was 79 cents or the $100 valuation. The county’s part of the expenditure for the aged and the blind and the wel fare administrative cost will be around $19,000, according to the budget figures sent to Moore county, and this must be provid ed for in the budget. The schools, too, are clamor ing for funds, and the courts re quire considerable financial backing, but the Commissioners are determined to keep expenses as low as they feel is consistent with the best interests of the county. JVROBS DRAWN FOB AUGUST , $70,000 REDUCTIONS IN TERM OF CRIMINAL. COURT The jury list for the August term of Superior Court for the trial of criminal cases is as follows: L. M. Hartsell, D. A. McDonald, Jr., Qllie Hussey, J. J. Check, O. D. Phillips, K. E. Peele, L. J. Boyte, O. C. Ad- cox, F. L. Burns, Lacy Williams, R. B. Bailey, W. E. Phillips, Fred Han non, J. J. Dowdy, D. Mclnnis, J. R. Gainer, J, R. Key, E. C. Matheson, E. C. Calloway, D. T. Maples, D, E. Dennis, J. M. Tyson, G. H. Purvis, Ar thur Wicker, J. F. Smith, J. A. Dun lop, Carl F. Johnson, W. B. Way, Al bert Cameron, D. M. Smith, W. H. Chriscoe, G. M. McDermott, J. C. Blue, W’alter M. Wicker, Will J. Ca gle and E. O. Freeman. VALUATIONS ALLOWED During the two days last week when the Board of County Commis sioners sat as a Board of Equaliza tion and Review to make adjustments on the valuation of property in the various townships, reductions aggre gating approximately $70,000 were allowed and a much smaller amount was ordered listed correctly. Reductions were requested because of the removal of houses or timber from the lands, for double listing in a case or two, and for various other reasons, and ranged In size from $40 to $10,000. 226 TEACHERS ALLOTTED MOORE COUNTY SCHOOLS C.4RD OF TH.ANKS We wish to thank our friends for! their many deeds of kindness and ex- i pressions of sympathy during the ill- j ness and death of our brother, John i A. Wicker. —MRS. CHARLIE WILLIAMS —MRS. JOHN SCARBORO —MRS. FRANK MAPLES —MRS. WALTEJl MAPLES. The State School Commission this week announced its allotment of teachers for the various counties and the city units. Moore county, outside of Southern Pines and Plnehurst, is given 41 high school teachers and 126 elementary school teachers. Pine- hurst and Southern Pines come under the city unit heading, and their allot ments are: Pinehurst, seven high school and 19 elementary school teachers; Southern Pines, 11 high school and 22 elementary. ei^AiNS er sand With nearly everybody away or get ting ready to go, its kind of nice to see Mars and Jupiter back in the Southern skies. The two planets have joined the summer stars and will be with us until long after the fol.j« are back. The North Carolinian who stays in the state for the entire year has the equal of about anything else on earth offered him In the line of diversified vacation. He has hundreds of miles of coastal border, in fact one of the longest of the eastern seaboard, for bathing, boating or fishing—and with in easy reach. He has on the opposite side of the state a great mountain barrier with its high peaks exceeding anything else in eastern North Amer ica, opening up tremendous depths and a sweep of magnificent scenery. An ai'tlole In the July Woman’s Home Companion tells a story of the Appalachian trail, the “Longest Path In the World.” It Is called a "Master trail, six feet wide, 2,050 miles long, from Mt. Katahdin, Maine, to Mt Oglethorpe, Georgia, the longest m.arked path in the worlo, the great est single recreational project ever attempted and carried through chief ly with amateur labor.” The trail leads through the Unaka and Mount Pisgah national forests and dow'n into the Great Smokies. A few Sandhillers have traveled over parts of the moun tain country on foot. Some day there will be more as the path be comes better known. It will be a fine outlet for the ones who always feel more secure on foot than on wheels and can have their soaring altitudes without the feeling of a dropping ele vator. It might be worthwhile to look over some of North Carolina before going too far away in search of sun burn and blistered heels. A small girl not long ago was about to set forth on a long jouraey that would take her clear across the continent. It was quite an event in the family and one that aroused In terest in every member of the house hold, af.d that of course Included the faithful ebony cook whose interest be gan in the young girl when she was much more a youngster than now. So out of the family funds she cachea a dollar and handed it to the young missy with the stern admonition she wanted to be bearin’ fum ’er and she was to write dat out. Her white charge could provide a heap of bearin’ with all that money. Now a hundred postal cards are a heap of cards, whether you are young or old, especially if you are seeing new worlds for the first time. So an Ingenious youngster used telegraph wires and the situation at home waa satisfactory. The German nurse and the English tutor and the French governess all have their value, but none of them can take the place of the old fashion ed negroes whose kindly but unyield ing authority has been Instrumental in fashioning the character of many a white child of the South. When Becky Neal gets back, more than her white folks will be glad to see her. for many an offensive bullet. The squirrels take the food put out for the birds, Is one complaint. One resident suggests then that more food be put out for the birds and let them share with the squirrels, rather than elimi nate one to save the other. One of the interesting things about the State Capitol are the number of tame squirrels that live on the grounds. Hugh oaks harbor the little animals. Numerous benches are scat tered about under the oaks. There Is £ilways an Interesting audience oc cupying these benches whether It be a visitor from out of town who has dropped down to enjoy the restful at mosphere, or the people whose homes are In the town. The tame squirrels that come up for nuts or to look the srtanger over make the park about the Capitol one of the pleasant fea tures in the fine old city square. The squirrels In our own village are an entertaining bit of wild life. Guns should be discouraged by all w’ho are Inclined to destroy them. M.VRRIAGE I.ICENSES Marriage licenses have been Issued from the office of the Register of Deeds of Moore county to the follow ing: Claude Wallace and Anna Mae Maness, both of Carthage Route 1; Bennie Maness of Carthage Route 1 and Maida Williams, Hemp; Herman McNeill and Jessie Mashburn, both of Glendon. F'or Sale Clneeip #5 Room, (partly furnished) Tobin Cottage on U. S. Highway No. 1. Price $1,800—part on mortgage. 9 In good repair. 92 ft. frontage. Includes 2 car garage. # Second floor apartment rents for $12.00. This $12.00 monthly in come will pay your mortgage charges. Thus you get your own rent occupancy about free of charge. C. p. PCTTX Telephone 5881 SOLE AGENT Theatre Building Southern Pinett ATLANTIC ALL EXPENSE CITY WEEK-END TOURS Go Friday or Saturday morning—arrive Atlantic City same afternoon. Leave Atlantic City Monday or Tuesday—morning or evening. Tours—for two full days at Atlantic City—$34.45 for travel in air-conditioned, de luxe reclining seat coaches; $50.70 in air-conditioned Pullmans. Cost of tours includes all neces- sarj' expeosep from the tim® you leave home until your return. You travel in safety—free from liigh- way hazards and dangers. Get de scriptive leaflet and details frooi your local Seaboard agent. WORIDIS LOWEST PRICE FOR SUCH SIZE AN. POWER!" Unfortunately the friendly little squirrel that creeps shyly to the doors of gome of our homes arrives a.i linwelcome visitor, and is the '^rget Ask about ths new low>cost Hudson-C. I. T. Time Payment Plan—terms to suit your income. No. 1 GARS off the Low and Moderate Price Fields Hudson and Terraplanc . . . lowest priced cars in the v>orld for such size, power andi features. LOWEST PRICED CARS IN THE WORLD with fill! 55 inches of front seat comfort for three. LOWEST PRICED CARS IN THE WORLD to ^kive you so much power ... or to combine such performance with outstanding economy, officially certified. LOWEST PRICED CARS IN THE WORLD with the new way to drive, without a gear shift lever ... or with two braking systems operating from the same brake pedal ... or with patented Duo-Flo Oiling Sys-» tem and oil-cushioned clutch. For record value, look at a Hudson or Terraplane now . . . while new car prices are ^till low and your old car will bring you so much more. PAGE MOTOR COMPANY SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. HYDRAULIC HILL-HOLD (An optional oxtra on all modolt) Kmps your car from rolling back wards wlion ttoppod on iip-graiio*.