Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Nov. 18, 1938, edition 2 / Page 2
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Pagre Two THE PILOT. Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, November 18, 1938. An Inventory of Service ALL MODERN EQUIPMENT EXPERIENCED OPERATORS \ Machineless Zatos / , Permanents Jamal [ I Licensed FREDRIC MACHINE PERMANENTS Other Standard Permanents $4.00 to $10.00 PARKER-HERBEX INDIVIDUAL SCALP TREATMENT’S OGILVIE SISTERS SCIENTIFIC TREATMENTS Licensed Admiration Soapless Oil Clairol Accent individual Shampoos Pine-Bordered Fairway at Country Club Lather Oil Sastile SMART HAIR STYLES >FINGER WAVE LOTIONS Tonic Quick Drying ADMIRATION REVITALIZING FACE TREATMENTS V . Lou tee Norris Approved Eyebrow Dyeing BONNIE BELLE | I Cosmetics ' :i CONTOURE ) Nail Polish MANICURES—OIL Revelort ^ Peter Charles La Cross Countess D'Arian NOJ GLOSS HAIR RINSES ALL STANDARD SHAMPOO TINTS AND DYES Ag nes Dorotky s Beauty SKof) HELEN HARTGROVE, Manager Telephone 5131 Over Broad Street Pharmacy VET*’ CATHERINE PIERSON Interior Oettgner Souikern Pinea NTorik 0«rolinA Wert Broad Sireei Telepbone 5611 tm:: Homes For Sale F. H. A. Loans Available Homes for Rent Building Sites for Sale R. F. Potts BROKER Theatre Building SOUTHERN PINES Tel. 5055 ANTIQUES We buy, sell, or exchange OLD GLASS, CHINA, PRINTS, FURNiTURE, ETC. ALLIE McINTOSH Carolina Theatre Building or Comfort Comer at May St. Hotels Here Report Brisk Early Season Patronage Turner and Flynn to Agair Man age Highland Pines.—Pine Needles P<H>ular Southern Pines hotels, with but few expections, have opened for the win ter season and are reporting- brisk business and an unusueil demand for accommodations later on during the | winter. One exception is the attrac tive Highland Pines Inn on Weymouth Heights, which will open on Deeem-' ber 1st vvnder the management of Millard H. Turner and W. E. Flynn. The Inn was open during the summer this year, and closed recently for renovations. j The stately Pine Needles atop' Knollwood Heights opened two weeks' ago £ind has already entertained more ^ guests for this season of the year than ever before in its history. This ' hotel, with its grass-greened 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, clubhouse for teas, suppers and dances, is be coming increasingly popular under the management of Emmett E. Boone, who also successfully manages the Howell House at Westhampton Beach, L. I., in summer. Proprietor Frank Pottle, returning from a summer spent in Jefferson Highlands, N. H., opened the Holly wood hotel for its 25th year this week, and as usual has a good book ing for the season. This popular Southern Pines hotel, ever a tavoiite with a clientele which has patronized the house for many years, has kept up its reputation for comfort and service. Park View Busy Host Charles Sadler, who operated the Park View without dining room service during the summer, resumed the full hotel service in October, and has received an encouraging patron age during the past few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Reynolds, owing to an influx of guests, opened The Jef ferson earlier than usual. Mrs. Grearson, delayed in her re turn to Southern Pines, opened High land Liodge a week later than us ual, on October 1st, but has had many guests, several of whom are booked for the season. Mrs. Huske of the Colonial Inn, now in its tenth year, expects the usual numbers of patrons for her homelike Inn. Frank Welch, finishing the extensive alter, ations and additions under way all through late summer and early fall, has transfo . 3d The Beverly into a completely modem hotel with every convenience for his patronage. Mr. and Mrs. Hildebrand of Pine Cone Lodge, up on the hill, have had their usual number of early guests as have Mr. and Mrs, A. S. Rug- gles of The Woodworth. J. Elmer Harrington wUl open the Southland at the usual time, a few days before Christmas, and the Mid-Ptnes Club will open December 26th. The Southern Pines railroad depot is the highest point on the Seaboard A.vr Line Railway between Washing ton and Miami. New Streamliner Seaboard Orders Complete Seven-Car Stainless Steel All Chair-Car Train The purchase of a new seven- car streamlined, stainless steel, all chair-car train with dining car by the Seaboard from the Budd Manufacturing Company was an- nounciKl this week by L. R. Powell, Jr., Receiver. The new Seaboard streamliner will be powered by a 2,000 horsepow’er Diesel electric engine ordered from the Electric- Motive Corporation. This train will operate out of New York on the Florida run probably in early February, Mr. Powell said. Three Arts Group To Have Its Own Theatre Dne Play Now in Rehearsal.— Prof. Koch, U. N. C., to Read “Christmas Carol” Celebrating the start of their sec ond year in the Sandhills, the lliree Arts Group, a county-wide organiza tion of the younger set of the area, has acquired a theatre and work shop in the old Community Chapel, direct, ly opposite the Holly Inn in Pine, hurst, and are making plans to ex. pand their scope over and above their last year’s activities of present ing one-act plays and the sponsorship of art exhibits, to Include the pres entation of full-length plays, an oper- etta and the sponsorship of lectures and recitals. Work is now in progress cleaning out the newly acquired site, which will seat some 300 persons, and plans are being made to present Professor Frederick H. Koch, director of the Carolina Playmakers at Chapel Hill, in his reading of Dicken’s "Christmas Carol" some time early in December. The first presentation of the mem bers of the group will be J. B. Priest- ly’s “Labumam Grove,” a three-act comedy that ran for a year in London with Edmund Gwenn and Melville Cooper in the leads and that later had an ex.tended run on Broadway, in the season of 1934-35. The play is now in rehearsal and will open about December 15. Another activity now under consid eration is an art exhibit to be held, probably at the Civic Club In South, em Pines, during Christmas week. Officers of the Three Arts Group are; Jack Lee, drama director: Cliff Blue, business manager; Betty Lee, graphic arts director; Carl Thomp son, publicity director; Lucille Pal mer, corresponding secretary; Elean or Kelley .recording secretary and Dick Suggs, treasurer. Southern Pines is the home of a large number of prominent authors and writers. FOR Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner Quality Baked Goods Bread, Rolls, Cake and Pastry FRESH EVERY DAY Dainty Desserts Danish Pastry, Coffee Cake, Cinnamon Buns, Cookies, Cream Puffs, Chocolate Eclairs, Lady Fingers, Doughnuts, Almond Macaroons. Sunshine Cake. MRS. A. R. CHISWELL East Broad Street Telephone 6852 Southern Pines Sanitation Sweet, clean, odorless clothes cost so little. Above all else clothes are your most intimate possession. They should be protected by every means of sanitation, and this we guarantee. FACTS WHICH WARRANT YOUR CONSIDERATION OUR STERILIZING SANITARY METHODS Now jnclude the sole use of Proctor & Gamble’s “Amber-flake” soap, the finest laundry soap on the market. “LAUNDERED CLOTHES GUARD HEALTH” SOUTHERN PINES LAUNDRY CO., Inc. Telephone 6101 w. New York Ave; Mrs. Helen Winters SPIX3IAUZES IN THfi CARE OF THE SKIN Let her advise you how to safeguard your face from that weather-beaten appearance. CORRECTIVE FACIALS BACK MASSAGE By Appointment Telephone 5381 22 South Ashe Street Southern Pines PILOT ADVERTISfiVG PAYS HIGHLAND PINES INN Season December to May (WEYMOUTH HEIGHTS) SOUTHERN PINE5 M. H. TURNER W. 15. FLTNN Highland Pines Inn with its Splendid Dining Room Service and its Cheerful Homelike Atmosphere Caters to the Requirements of those Occupying Winter Homes in the Pine Tree Section. The Hotel is Situated on Weymouth Heights (Massachusetts Avenue) Amid Delightful Surroundings, Good Parking Space Is Available for Motorists All Features of First Clatts Hotels are included at Highland Pines Inn. Best of Everything.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1938, edition 2
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