Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 14, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page Tw'O T H E^T LoY Published each Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated, Southern Pines, N. C. NELSON C. HVDE Editor JEAN C. EDSON News Kditor BuainrH Manacr' CHARLES MACAULEY DAN S. KA> Advertiiiiis CircuUtion Hflen K. Hutirr, Dtisir rtmrron Smith, H. L. Epp». Auociates Member Woodjard A880ci«te» Subscription Kates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.0C Three Months -50 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N. C., as second class mail matter. the PfLOT. Sniithorii IMnou and Abcrdean. North Carolina Friday, October 14, 1938. / Top Prices For Tobacco On Aberdeen Market EARLY DAYS OF KING’S DAUGHTERS Reminiscent of the early days of Southern Pines and of a so ciety once embracini? in its membership estimable women from many states, aJl active in forwarding the work of the King’s Daughters under the most apt title of the Lend a Hand Circle, was the gathering here of members of the North Carolina Branch of King’s Dau ghters for their 48th annual convention. Forty-seven years have pass ed and gone since that October day in 1891 when eight charter members under the active lead ership of Mrs. Lucius M. Young and Mrs. R. M. Couch organized the Lend a Hand Circle. An ex panding group that soon be came noted for public activities ALL THE INCOMES* OVER ^5000 IN TH1» COUNTRy, IF PUT -r06ETHER, NWOLP PAY TME CO^T OF SfeVERNMPKT FOR TMAN fOM months Vn 1MB CHINESE t«lE OF HAINAN. IN THe CHINA ^FA, V/OMEN weAR. EARRINQ^ /j iNCMes >N D/AMETe/9 MP THBy weAK Ai MANY, SO AT A r/ME I ONE A^'LLION piREa ANP indirect JO&i IN THE H0R5E ANP BUGSy BU5lrtE^> WE RERLACEP lY AN ESTIMATEP , 00.000 JOBf’ MAKING, CELLING AN(? ^■FeVICING AUTOMOBILE? 9^ \ Some Grades Sell as High as i $65 Per Hundred.—Total I Sales Ahead of 1937 I Tobacco prices on the Aberdeen j market reached new high peaks last REMINGTO.% TYPEWBITERS E.ATON’S SOCIAL STATIONERY CONGRESS PLAYING CARDS WMEN FPIGHTENEP, WE Rirrtl? \ f\‘>^iftKjHDmATlAHliC C0A9iAL \ WATF^) mn/,-1 rt ITSELF WITH AlR , ' - TO Tt'lr ^U9rACE ANF F10AT4 ON THE vt'AT^RUNriL PA.NofS i PA'iT TVfw /r r/r ' A//f, DBFIAIS*. A/s>J Off i/fJPfH I ■•-■-■If .f/ V-*'* ARE ' AN ' 6^MILLI0,SI - lIFk' l^.>U;■.A^CE ■ POllf'E<i IN EFFECT IN C -V/ j week with some grades selling up to j $65.00 per hundred. Numerous far- I mers are making averages of well I above $30.00 per hundred for their I entire sales. Sales on the Aberdeen market for the first four weeks of the 1938 sea son ending Monday were, according to official figures, 1,602,654 pounds as compared with 1,416,336 for the first four weeks of the 1937 season. Monday’s sales were the most sat isfactory of the season as all grades; H were in strong demand with the bet- || ter grades bringing the highest prices :| of the season. | Jj I Floors of both the warehouses are | jj being cleared every day now and | H farmers can be assured of a sale || every day by selling on the Aberdeen j market. For evidence of the fine, sales being made on the market daily,, read the Aberdeen tobacco market advertisement elsewhere in this is sue. R.C.A. R A D I O S Buy The Best H AYES’ SANDHILLS BOOK SHOF* Southern Pines North Carolina PARKER P E N S BANCROFT'S TENNIS RACKETS B. & P. BLANK BOOKS ART STL-EL FILING CAOINETS The Bowling SIXAINS €F$ANr NOONDAY FIRE DESTROYS HOUSE IN VV. SOUTHERN PINES Southern Pines AUeys ARE OPEN With the finest equipment including 3 Brunswick-Balke Alleys in the former Buttry store, East Broad Street. What most affects the life of man. Planned by Miss Catherine Pierson and many charitable deeds, the | ^^^akes some folks black and others Circle was incorporated in June, I ^an? Almost coincidental with the noon whistle with its echoes still dying in i BtlSUUUttHXUtKK:: the air, the siren sounded two long, loud blasts calling the Southern Pines Fire Department to the home of "Andy” Allen on West New Hamp- j shire avenue. The home w'as al- VISITORS WELCOME George Ormsby, Proprietor the coloring of lavender and white carried out with asters and cosmos doomed as the boys whirled 1894~ for the ourBOse of erect-1 What sometimes makes iis blue and relieved by the 48 flame-tipped can.' firehouse, but they man-1 ing a home building,' Operations «»me coloration cvoM ‘"'■-“Eh “"ly trails , <?tartpd in Seotember 1895 and makes us gay and glad, admiring comment all through the' ^ reached a hydiant some 400; two years later the Commisison-! But while hearts beat like muffled progress of the repast. ' ers of Southern Pines added another story to the building, leasing the rooms for five years and locating therein the public school. Actually the building was .so used until 1907-8. In October, 1900, the Circle opened the “People’s Library drums, W’e have to take it as it comes? The Weather. —A. S. N. feet from the fire just in time to' save the adjoining house. j With all the elders away little tion of “North Carolina Today” issued' Bobby Allen elected to play with , 1 by the State Department of Conser-1 matches. He escaped and the neigh-11 ^ {vation and Development, is on the managed to save some of the j A copy of the Fall and Winter edi- The fellows who lost out in the editorial desk, a colorful booklet pic-1 Perscmal effects and furniture from first primary look to us like the ^ turing the state from the mountains blazing four-room frame dwell- winners in the competition for Rep- to the sea. The Sandhills is well rep-l*''S^- -Andrew Allen is an old employe flnH* FrPP*Rpfldinp"Rnn"m’^in t^^ Congress from the 8th i resented with a page of the Jug-i°^ the Highland Pines Inn, Augusta jj: hall Miss Irene Couch now i through town potters, the old Prosperity post-1 May Allen is Mrs. J. Fred Stimson’sj|: Mrs’ Dale acted as librarian ! started in June 'office, tennis and a fairway at Sou- ™aid. ;* finri’no- thp wintpr nf 1Q01 9 Settled yet. 'them Pines, golf at Pinehurst, har-| Many local drivers were astonished uuring uie wixuei oi Pinehurst, a dragi^o find that New Hampshire avenue ®I|c SOUTHERN PINES ' ' NORTH CAROLINA COl NTRY DAY AND BOARDING SCHOOL for GIRLS and BOYS Suo<*e8sful preparation for leading Schools. W'hen the birth of sons to two ! hunt with the famous Boyd hounds '^eyond Saylor street was just a foot- members of the Kiwanis Club, Leon at Southern Pines, and a stirring pho- P^^h, impassable for cars. Seymour and Dr. Overcash, was an- ! tograph of five racers crowding a' nounced at this week’s meeting, Dr, j brush jump of the Steeplechase, MISSIONARY MEETING Cheatham said it was a good augury course, for the organization. ‘We need to see more over-cash,” he said. '* : J ■ —. ■ i hibit at the World’s Fair in New “Jim” Boyd’s new novel, “Bitter j York, was a guest in Southern Pines .West Broad street at 3:30 p. m. Creek,” is now running serially in ' lact week he told something of the October 19th. Mrs. Pelton extends the Saturday Evening Post. | scope of the great exposition to open ; on Flushing Bay next April. We think we’ve discovered a dog! ^otal cost of Fair and build- W'ith the death of many of the early members and remov- of others the Circle became inactive about 1920, and follow ing the organization of the Sou thern Pines Library Association in 1922, Mrs. Flnda Weed and Mrs, Clara Holcomb Johnson transferred to Charles Macauley for the new association 1,000 volumes of the old library. La ter they gave $1,200 of the funds of the Circle as a contri bution to the building fund of the new’ library’. ^ ^ v, ^ w > Mrs A S Rutr^lPS daughter ’ ° ® i $155,000,000. of Mrs Younjr is believed to be ! announcing his upwards of .50,000,000 people are ex. 01 Mrs. loung, is oeiievea lO rushed home. . —.t.j i.- ^ .. . I the last surviving member of the circle. The Hall, now the Spears Apartment, is located on the north side of Connecticut ave nue between Broad and Bennett streets. —C. M. ARE YOU READY IN' CASE OF FIRE? This is Fire Prevention Week, observed throughout the coun try. The need of an educational and protective observance is dictated by the fact that once a minute, on the average, there is a building afire somewhere in the United States; that a large Ji; Music (Pianoforte and Violyi) Art Handicrafts Dancing Tennis Riding The first meeting of the season jji; When Martin Jenter of New York,' ^ Missionary Society of the i who will design North Carolina’s ex- ^h^rch of Wide Fellowship will be KINDERG.4RTEN, SUB-PRLMARY, GRADES 1—VIII SE.VSON OPENS OCrrOBER 4TH held at the home of Mrs. P. P. Pel- Mr». Mllllcent Hayes, PrinelpaL a cordial invitaion to all women. It pays to advertise. pected to visit it. North Carolina’s exhibit will cost approximately $100,- | j 000, of which the State has appro- j Culled from J. V. Snipes’ Niagara pHated $75,000. Coleman Roberts, I news: I who’s supervising the State’s adver- j "Who said Army airplanes flying' tising, raised $25,000 more. North all over us in groups | We hope they Carolina will not have a building of ^ don’t make a mistake and drop a | its own, but will have 4,500 square' bomb on top of us while we are feet of space (rental, $15,000) in aj asleep or awake-” ^ Georgian Colonial atyle building —— 1 housing other exhibits. | Warren Olmsted, former Southern ^ North Carolina, he said, w’ould not. Pines resident, has been elected chair- stress its products, but show the pop- '■^r: j man of the Sanford chapter, Amer ican Red Cross. sibilities of the state, the natural re sources, the variety of scenery of fered travelers in mountain, lake, piedmont, Sandhills and seashore, the possibilities for industrial growth, etc. Members and guests of the King’s Daughters enjoying the dinner serv- proportion of the peril and dam- ed by members of the Reliance Club age is due to human careless- in the parlors of the Church of Wide j “This ought to be a year ’round ness or neglect; and that in l Fellowship last week were charmed,; state for tourist*,” he said. “Now manv instances a sudden out-1 and voiced their pleasure for the there’s a gap between the time peo- break of fire in a household , novel and colorful decorative scheme, j pie leave the mountains in summer finds the occupant or occupants j i and come to the winter resorts, and perplexed and distraught, and pjow many of the grown-up read-1 versa. These gaps are the best unable to take the measures es-1 gj-g of these lines are confident i the year. We want to fill of their ability to act prompt- j make the people see they ly, wisely and effectively in the | here all the time.” event of a sudden blaze on their | own premises ? Do you know ! a tiskit, a taskit, they’ve found her sential in the emergency. It is obvious that if the pub lic at large was more familiar with the means of checking ac cidental fire in its incipiency, a great property loss in the aggre gate would be averted, and, what is of more vital importance, the danger of human life and the extent of human suffering would be substantially diminish ed. Here and in many other American communities prelim inary instructions and warnings for Fire Prevention Week have been put out in advance and widely circulated through the press and radio during the edu cational campaign. Property owners and, in particular, house holders should study and note for future guidance the advice disseminated by men qualified by experience to give it. Among older people counsel of another kind is necessary. yoi/// NEW BEAJTY.. NEW LUXURY . .THAT NO OTHER LOW- PRICED CAR MAY BOAST .. as well as a host of engineering features exclusive to Chevrolet your fire Fire Department tel ephone number? Are you famil iar with the use of fire extin guishers ; of smothering the burning clothing of a nearby victim; of remembering that smoke is thinnest near the floor, and that the best way to seek safety is by crouching or crawl ing; of closing as many doors as possible to keep the fire from spreading—of these and many other methods of finding protec tion until the firemen have ar rived. All this information should be sought and duly set down in writing during Fire Prevention Week. A proper compliance with the admonitions of the fire- righting experts will go far to ward reducing the evil of acci dental fire. yellow basket—or was it a brief case? Anyway, Miss Elizabeth Frye, parole supervisor, of Raleigh, is again in possission of the Moore county pa role records which were removed from her automobile while she was in the county recently. They were found by a resident of Cameron. DR- FAIRLEY ASSISTING AT VASS REVIVAL SERVICES Dr, Watson Fairley of Raeford ia assisting the Rev. C- I. Calcote in a series of revival services in the Vass Presbyterian Church thia week, with afternoon services at 3:30 o'clock and evening services at 7:30. The meetings will run through Sun- j day evening. Dr. Fairley is one of the strongest preachers in the Presbytery and is bringing Interesting messages. lEW 1939 CHEVROIE ON DISPLAY AT ALL CHEVROLET DEALERS 0CI22 A
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 14, 1938, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75