Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Sept. 3, 1937, edition 1 / Page 8
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V^e Bighf THE P1IX)T, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, September 3, 1937. A Good Place To Trade Is With An Old Established Store. 16 Years of Service Means Something To Us, and to You Summer is about over—we hope. ■Start your Fall purchasing now. , Black and brown school oxfords, I suede with leather trim $2.25 Women’s Dress Shoes, suede pat ent trim '$2.10—$2,45 Children’s School Shoes, oxfords and high tops $1.00 to $2,75 Men’s Dress Oxfords, all new styles $2.00, $3.00, $5.00 School Supplies lx>r the Children; Dresses, Shirts, Sweaters, Pants, Ptencils, Pens, Ink, Tablets, Note Books, Crayons. All the little Things They Need to Start Back to School. BUY THEM AT NelvinBros. “16 Years of Service” Aberdeen and Soutbem Plnea Report Shows Busy Year By Naternal Welfare Committee WANTS I HAVE THE BEST BUY in South- eiTi Pines. Ten room house, one block from No, 1 Highway. Tourist business established. See H. A. Lewis, Agent. FOR SALE: Seed Oats: Coker’s No. S3-47 Cold and Smut resistant, Rl.OO per bushel. George H. Maurice, Eagle Springs, N. C., R. F. D. No. 1. Work of Miss Margaret Mc Queen, Prenatal Nurse, Prais ed by State Officials That splendid work is being accom plished by the Moore County Mater- n£il Welfare Committee is evident from the report of its activiies which reached The Pilot this week. A total of 347 field nursing visits were made by Miss Margaret McQueen, prenatal nurse, during her first year’s work, ty clinics between last September and June. Two hundred and four in and 390 visits were made to maternl- dividuals attended these clinics. No deaths occurred from June of last year to April, three since April 1st. No deaths were reported from es- tompsia or puerperal septicamia, the two arch-killers of North Carolina mothers. Four cases of eclompsia were reported, all of which were sent to the hospital. Miss McQueen, in her reports, expresses the belief that two of the three deaths occurring might have been prevented had the patients reported earlier to the clinics for treatment. The third death was that of a prospective mother who was suffering from tuberculosis and not chargeable to obstetricail cause. Dr. Cowper, maternity and infan cy head of the State Department of Health, has highly commended Miss McQueen’s work in the county. The county committee feels that the peo ple of the county can assist Miss McQueen in her good work and pre vent further deaths by reporting to Miss McQueen every indigent mater nity case, or by bringing the patients to the clinics. The dates and place.s .'Of clinics are: West End, 1st Thursday in the month; Cameron, 2d Tuesday; Hemp, 3d Tuesday; Pinehurst, 4th Wednes day; Carthage, 4th Friday. Used Car Specials Offered this week by OSBORNE MOTOR COMPANY SOUTHERN PINES in connection with Chrysler Used Car Sale Week J»33 CHEVROLET COACH—In ex cellent condition. Good rubber all around. A bargain.at $225.00 1936 CHEVROLET TRUCK—Motor completely re-built. New rubber all around $350.00 1333 PLYMOUTH COACH—Body, up. holstery, paint and motor all in good condition. New rubber all ■round $225.00 J934 FORD COACH: Re-built motor. Good paint. First-class rubber all around. A good clean job tor only $350.00. BIG C.VSH PREMIUMS FOR COUNTY FAIR EXHIBITS Kiwanis Speaker A. B. CAMERON Kiwanis Hears Scope of County Welfare Work A. B. Cameron Lists Multitud inous Duties of Mrs. Gilliam Brown, Superintendent TOR SALE: Man or Boy’s Bicycle, 'ifirinch wheel, or will trade for a 24-inch wheel girl’s bicycle. Apply D Pinehurst Garage, Pinehurst, N. C. The premium list of this year’s Moore County Agricultural Fair is I being worked up and the largest cash I premiums ever offered are tc be i given this year. Mrs. M. C. Liske, oi Mt. Gilead is in charge of the adver tising in the book this year. It will be in the hands of every farmer in Moore county within a short while and will portray in detail everything to be expected and offered at this year’s fair. Special emphasis will be given booths put on by the schools of the county. Secretary Waddill believes that by getting the younger folks of the county interested in this feature of the fair it will lay a foundation for better fairs in the future. The entertainment and amusement features of the fair have been con tracted for and Moore county resi dents are promised the very best in acts and amusements ever staged in this part of the state. The Pilot will carry full details of the fair’s program in later editions and anyone seeking any information regarding any part of the fair are asked to communicate with either Secretary Paul Waddill or Herbert F. Seawell, Jr.. presirent of the Fair Association, Carthage. A GOOD INVESTMENT: There is a ? family furnished house for sale cheap, located on May street (U 3,. Highway Number 1) Southern Pineff., You can buy this place un der mortgage terms, whereby the rent received from one apartment fays the interest and taxes, etc. You live free in the other apart ment. See R. F. Potts, agent, Phonj 5881, Southern Pines. ySESH HONEY—Comb or Strained. Mrs. J. W. Frank, Niagara, tf. TEACHERS WANTED—Enroll im mediately, Positions open in the western states. Elementary, ad vanced grades, history, commer- nal. Spanish, Latin, English, So da! science, mathematics, others, 'finclose stamped envelope. Pro fessional Placement Bureau, 502 Boyd Park Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. —S3 SUILDING SITE: For Sale $325. Comer May St. and Maine Ave., Southern Pines. Frontage 100 ft ■1 Maine avenue, numerous pine trees. Permits house to be southern «Kposure. R. F. Potts, owner. JSTENOGRAPHER - BOOKKEEPER mnts position, preferably in Sou- Dhern Pines. Knows short-hand, Ikook-keeping and typing. Phone 0402 or write Box 1094, Southern Ptaea. ROBERT PECK U’EDS IN BINGH.\MTON, NEW YORK (Continued from page one) Pethick of Southern Pines and a bro. ther of the bride, Neil McLean. Eighty guests attended the recep tion. Among those at the wedding were Mrs. Hodgkins, Mrs. Victor Sweezy, Miss Mary Grace Pethick and Rich ard Pethick, all of Southern Pines. After a motor trip Mr. and Mrs. Peck will reside in Durham, this state, where Mr. Peck is a member of the faculty of Duke University. PATROLMAN DEES JOINS PINEHURST POLICE FORCE Former County Superintendent of Schools A. B. Cameron outlined to members of the Sandhills Kiwanfs Club on Wednesday the multitudi nous duties involved in handling the welfare work in Moore county, and paid a high tribute to Mrs. Gilliam Brown of Carthage, the county’s wel fare superintendent. He went in:3 the history of the development of this work in the county from the time Mrs. H. F. Seawell started her volun teer efforts for the needy, up through the stages when the superintendent of schools was responsible, then the first concentrated effort of an offi cial nature under Miss Lucile Eifort of West End, and finally the inaug uration of a full time welfare head two years ago when Mrs. Brown was appointed. Mr. Cameron enumerated some of the duties Mrs. Brown has to per form: keeping children in school; vis iting the schools, the prison camp and the county home; prc'viding cloth ing for indigent children ihat they may go to school; seeing that they have textbooks; investigating the moral condition of communities; ar ranging for entrance into training schools and asylums of those who must be sent away; visitation of sick people on relief; care of crippled children; providing medicine for in digents; investigating the needs of ex-soldiers and their families; the dis pensation of food and clothing to needy families; seeking jobs for youths; keeping an eye on paroled prisoners; the burial of the dead in poor families. These were but a few, Mr. Cam eron said, of the jobs which keep Mrs. Brown and her staff of the Welfare office busy. On top of these now have come additional duties involved around the Social Security Act, old age pensions, aid for the blind and dependent children. Mrs. Brown herself was to have been the speaker at Wednesday’s Ki wanis meeting, held in Mrs. Huntley's Coffee Shop In Aberdeen, but stress of her duties, coupled with the sad death of her nephew. Patrolman George Penn, forced her to cancel her engagement, Mr. Cameron, of the wel fare staff, speaking in her stead. MISS “PAT” LUMPKIN IS BRIDE OF HAROLD P. WEAVER SOUSE TO RSa^T: Unfurnished on ConnectieHt avenue, 2 blocks to stores. Furnace heat, 2 bed rooms, <28.00. See R. F. Potts, agent, Car- ilina Theatre. Phone 5881. A. F. Dees, who has been night pa trolman at Aberdeen for several years, has accepted a position on the Pinehurst police force and will be succeeded in Aberdeen by Patrolman Sides of the State Prison force at Raleigh. City Commissioner E. C. Stevens of Southern Pines, who with Mrs. Stevens spent the summer at Nan tucket, Mass., is expected to return here next week. Pencils, Erasers, Crayons, Note Book Covers and fillers, everything for School at Hayes.’ DR. L. R. SHELTON CHIBOPODIST Foot Spedallst will be at Agnes Dorothy’s Beauty Shop, Sunday, September 5th, 9:S(^;00 Miss Virginia Dabney Lumpkin, of Richmond, Va., former member of the faculty of Southern Pines School, and Harold Pendleton Weaver, son of Mrs. Ada K. Weaver of Aberdeen, were married on Wednesday, August 18th in the famous Little Church Around the Corner in New York City, according to announcements re ceived here this week. Mrs. Weaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dab ney Lumpkin of Richmond, taught in the local school for several terms and was a popular member of the young er social set here who knew her ad "Pat” Lumpkin. She formerly lived in Danville, Va. Mr. Weaver is a graduate of Aber deen High School and attended the University of North Carolina. He is now employed In Chapel Hill where the young couple will make their residence. Richard Tufts, president of Pine hurst, Inc., played in tho natfbrial amateur golf tournament in Portland, Oregon last week. He is expected to return to Pinehurst shortly. Gay Loretta Young, more captivat ing than ever, with handsome, dash ing Don Ameche, who thrills millions as the hit star of radio’s biggest Sun day night air-show, go romancin,? tempestuously in turbulent Spain m the 20th Century-Fox fast moving comedy drama of romance, intrigue and mad adventure, “Love Under Fire,” the attraction at the Southern Pines Theatre Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, September 6, 7. 8, at 8:20 p. m. Borrah Minevitch and his gang, harmonica wizards who scored a tre mendous success in “One In A Mil lion,” are featured with Fiances Drake, Walter Catlett, John Carra- dine. Sig Rumann and Harold Hube; in the supporting cast. Bewildering things happen to a Scotland Yard officer who is ordered to arrest a girl with whom he flirts. The situation becomes more absorb ing when a revolution breaks about them. The story hits a fast pace when, with the aid of adventure, mus ic and plenty of comedy, it develops into a game of hide and seek to find who has looted the valuable jewels. I The film’s rich comedy is expert- i ly handled by Borrah Minevitch and | his harmonica band, while Waltei' Catlett and E. E. Clive deliver char- i I acterizations patrons will talk about, j Kipling’s colorful characters live j glamorously, adventurously and cour ageously on adventure’s last frontiei' in the picturization of his famed “Wee Willie Winkle,” the attraction for Thursday. Friday and Saturday September 9, 10, 11, with a Saturday matinee, with Shirley Temple and Vic tor McLaglen in the starring roles. From the heart of mighty India, where all the world is wild and strange, where the British raj enda at Khyber Pass, in the land of the Bengal Lancers, comes this glorious adventure of the Scottish Highland ers in action and of the little girl who won the right to wear their plaid. The most spectacular production in which Shirley Temple has yet appear ed, “Wee Willie Winkle” gives Victor McLafelen a powerful role of a fear less, fighting fool and provides splen did opportunity to C. Aubrey Smith, fighting fool and provides splendd opporitunty to C. Aubrey Smith, June Lang, Michael Whalen, Cesar Romf ro, Constance Collier and young Douglas Scott. Not only can this be hailed as dim inutive Miss Temple’s best picture, but it establishes beyond a doubt that Shirley is far from relinquishing her stranglehold on the claim to being mo tion pictures’ best bet. G-MEN ON TRAIL OF PAYNE, W.VNTED FOR PENN MURDER (Continued from page one) Miss Lola Hedges, 16, and Sam Wolfe, 19, both of Swannanoa, were about to enter their car at an Ahse- ville recreation park when they were confronted by a man who forced them, at the point of a gun, to drive him to Thomasville. The highwayman was hungry, they said, and he apparently had not eat en for some time. They stopped for a sandwich, they added, and the high wayman became ill. At Thomasville, Payne freed the couple and, after warning them not to notify police within three hours, gave them $20 in one-dollar bills. Miss Hedges, who identified Payne from pictures, said that he had told them he had over $600 in his possession. Last Saturday night V. C. Blount, a Lexington cotton mill worker, was driving toward his Thomasville home when a car drew alongside and three men, armed with either sub-machine guns or sawed-off shot guns, com- mandered his car, placed a hood over his face and drove him to the out skirts of Siler City where they rob bed him of $20, set him free, burned his car and drove away. In the meantime, police in Darl ington, S. C., announce the arrest of Dan Cox, wanted in Asheville for questioning in connection with Penn’s murder. Cox is alleged to have been the purchaser of a sawed-off shoe gun found In a cab abandoned in Asheville shortly after the slaying. At the same time, Mrs. Cox and her brother-in-law, Clec Clark, were ar rested, in Fayetteville. Mrs. Cox was questioned briefly there and taken out of town, presumably to Asheville. Clark was left in jail in Fayetteville. He is a filling station attendant there, with iii “sccIIsT’t reputation as a quiet, hard working young man. REDUCTIONS In All Departments TAKE ADVANTAGE of the SALE Fall Goods Arriving ■ Now Showing Fall Coats New Marquisette Curtains C. T. PATCH DEPARTMENT STORE SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. McCullough, winter residents of Pinehurst, spent several days here during the past week. HERE TO INSPECT STABLES Frederick H. Burke of New York and Will J. Stratton of Princeton, N. J., were here on Wednesday to inspect work on the new Stony Brook stables on Youngs Road. They plan to ship their horses down from Princeton early in October. Carolina Theatre—Southern Pines PRESENTS ROMANCING TEMPESTUOUSLY'^*; ‘ IN TURBULENT SPAIN I! ^ LOREHA DON fVOUNG-AMECHE^ Borrali MINEVITCH FRANCES DRAKE WALTER CATLETT JOHN CARRADINE SIO RUMANN • HAROLD HUIM Mon., Tue., Wed., Sept. 6, 7, 8—8:20 P. M. (NO MATINEE) A PICTURE WORTHY A OF THE AUTHOR WHOSE HEROIC PEN CAPTURED THE SPELL OF INDIAI PPS' J WlNKIi VKTOR McUGLEN C.AIIIEY SMITII*JliNE LANS mtnil WIUEN > CESAI lOMElO I Clllflltl tIUItl • IIIIUS Sim 74!A; Thu., Fri., and Sat., Sept. 9,10,11—8:20 P. M. ' MATINEE SATURDAY AT 8:00 CHURCH NOTES The announcement in last week’s PI- lot that services would be held at 10:00 o’clock on Sunday mornings during September in the Community Church at Pinehurst, instead of at 11:00, was in error. There will be the usual 11:00 o’clock worship services during the month, with Sunday School at 9:45. The Rev, Mr. Mc- Kelway, pastor, has returned from Montreat. The subject of the lesson-sermon at the Christian Science Church on Sun day morning, at 11:00 o’clock, will be “Man.” The Christian Science Church is located on New Hampshire avenue noar Ashe street, and the pub lic is cord.'ally invited to attend. During t'le Rev. J. Fred Stim- son’s vt^ation atbsence, the Rev. Frank Moore of Wake Forest col* lege will fill the pulpit at the Bap tist Church in Southern Pines. Mr. Moore will preach the sermon at th6 regrular service <hi Sunday morning at 11:00 o’clock. ‘PEACHES" LOSE CLOSE GAME TO DUNN-ERWIN AT NIGHT (Continued from page one/ Gardner retired and Pierce took up the pitching assignment for Dunn- E3rwin. Edgar Parker was the first man to face him and he struck out to retire the side and kill the PeacUes’ rally. Dunn-Erwin made four hits from the combined deliveries of Thomad and Auman, and the Peaches touch ed Gardner and Pierce for three sin gles. Both teams erred twice in the field and there were five wild pitches chalked up against the four pitch ers. The box score; Peaches 100 020 0—3 3 2 Dunn-Erwin 310 000 0—4 4 2 Note book covers, Ring Books and Brief Cases from 10 cents to 18.95 at Hayes.’ • TRY A PILOT WANT AD •
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Sept. 3, 1937, edition 1
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