Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / May 30, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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pBge Two THE PILOT, Southern Pines, North Carolina Fiklay. May 30, IWl- THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE lMLt)T, Incorporated, Southern Pines, N. C. .lAMKS BOYD, l*iibli>ther NEI>iON C. HYDE, Editor DAN S. KAY, Manatftr CHARI.ES MACAl'LEV, AdvcrtisinR Helen K. Hiitler, Virginia Creel, Bessie Cameron Smith, Charles CuUinvford, AM»ociateA. SubHcriptlon Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months 50 Entered at the Postoffice at South ern Pines, N, C., as second class mail matter. MERITED RECOGNITION THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE I A MANUf^CrufleK NOW TURNS ourHowmtK Turr WIU MURL 37- POOHD sum* *MIIB ANDJiU/Ur, ANOiOt tnem oABt mis/ s 'ALm^lHUN symciENT w« 60.000 coF^ee f>0XXM./tTDKS 1$ NEEPCP IN * MOPERN Bo rrnsr RAcvrrs, LKB) IN IMf 6*Rl.y OF tDJNiS, WERB WITH SPIMSS ^TKftMEPfiCfiOSS 1SK $ NOW SELLING were Misses Betsy Tillman, Hassle Sherrill, Jane Allen, Louise Riddick, Ruth Lilly, Edna Gentry, Harriet Shillinglaw, Lillian Moore and Messrs. .\I. P. Wilson, E. B. Tilley, Shelby Horton, Jr., and William Campbell. Dr. J. A. Ruggles has returned 'rom attending a conference of doc- .ors in Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Tate and fam ily have gone to their home >n Blow ing Rock for the Summer. Miss Cora J. Hopkins left Monday ..loining for Emporia, Va. On Monday morning, June 2d, Mra. Herb rt Erhnrdt, Jr., will open a nursery and kindcrgart n school in | hp Sunny corner cottagc. i Al.so on Monday the ann\ial Sum-! .ner church .school of the F-'inchuret | Community Church will open for a' periiKl of two weeks All childien in the community between the ages of four and l.'S are given a cordial invita- i tion to attend. The seventh grade exercises were held Tuesday morning in the form of a play entitled "On the Threshold," with the cast and their teacher Miss Ruth Lilly receiving much praise for .1 splendid performance. Supt. Harbi- son presented certificates to 47 stu- OMt tflUK EKH-;s IIEKE WNOI NCK srn.MKK HOI KS Four Southern Pines Grocery stores have announced their Summer hours, effective June 1st, ’as follows: Open daily at 8:00 a. m.; close daily except Wednesdays and Saturdays at 6:00 p. m. On Wednesjdays the closing hour will be 1:00 p. m., and on Sat urdays 9:30 p. m. Signing the agree- mtnt are the A. & P. Store, Dom’s, Modern Mnrket and Penders. dents, the largest class in tne history of the school. MCOMK Of f/O.OOO , , AUD emKeL'i/ me TAxee. wow.p rav all costs of eovFRKWtMT FokONii'*aa/T 2 MOUTHS This editorial might bear the old familiar title, “Home Town Boy Makes Good.” It would be particularly appropriate in that the subject was actually only a boy when he started the climb up the ladder. At 13 Ralph Chandler went to work for the Seaboard. After 15 years of railroading he began the career in the light and power in dustry which has brought him' repeated recognition for his en- ] ergy, ability and judgment, a ca-; reer crowned last week with i another reward at the hands of his employer for the jiast 17 years, the Carolina Power &. l^ight Company. Mr. (’handler was selected to manage a newly |. created central division of tho' company, enlarging his field of activity and control to include the Southern Pines, Sanford,' ^ Troy, Asheboro, Wadesboro,; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. B. Ward and Rockingham, Hamlet and Max-^Miss Mary Ward have gone to their' ton districts. Summer homo in Hartville, Ohio. This is a large assignment.! Mrs. Leslie i<Jilliland was called to Rut the powers that be in the C. the bedside of her mother, Mrs. B. A. P. & L. have selected wisely, for, Byrd in Broadway Saturday. Mrs. The Pilot knows of no assign-' passed away on l uesday. ment yet given Ralph Chandler Mrs. Orville M. Moore ard daught-; that'has not been efficiently and er, Miss Audrey Moore, have gone to effectively carried out. Southern New York to bid goodbye to Lieut., Pines congratulates one of itsiBirdwell Moore who has sailed for I the first to graduate into a full state own. i Porta Rica. Lieut. Moore has been in | of national emergency in many a The Pilot also takes this CO- tiaining at Fort Deveiis, Mass., and ^ year. Not the brightest launching of a casion to welcome to Southern' is a son of Lieut. Col. Or\’ille M. , career. Pines Mr. M’Elderry, who comes Moore, stationed at Fort Bragg and here from Hamlet as superin-1 Moore, of the chaifonte. tendent of the central division,! Mrs. John Lamb of Chapel Hill is and Mr. DuBose, transferred j v-isiting her son, T. R. Cole and fam- from Spruce Pine, who has been' iiy. named manager of the local of-' fice. Pinehurst Paragraphs Grains of Sand The folks familiar with the okl .say ing, "How far is up?" now want to know how near is "short of war?" This week's High School Senior is NO TIME FOR WASTE Moore county cast its vote for Clyde Hoey for National Committee man from North Carolina in last Fri day’s battle’between the former Gov- •iir. and Mrs. Robert Bariett and | gynor and “Dick’’ Reynolds. Its repre- son Bobby are visiting Mr. and Mrs. | ..sfntative was Attorney TV. D. Sabis- Jiiliam in Harrellsviile. Mr. and Mrs. Arch M. Cuirie an- i nounce the marriage of their daught- ton of Carthage. Hoey won. That Congressman from New’ York In one of his recent columns,! Edgar j^ho’s been fighting the Administra David Lawrence pointed out a ' great and often overlooked i ^ danger in the government’s present .spending program. ‘Drastic ta.xation—the most severe America has ever exper ienced—is planned,” he wrote, i “And yet not a word is heard i about cutting out wasteful ex penditures. “If the American people sub mit to a tax program such as is being rightly proposed to finance defense and still permit spend- ing-as-usual on projects that can be omitted or else postponed, it will mean that the day of reck oning will bring an economic de pression in the United States far more perilous than that of 1929- 33... “Scarcely a week passes that there isn’t some impetus given to projects which are being plan ned on a big scale whitn ..ave relatively little to do with de- fen.se, but which are being drag ged into the picture with defense as an excuse . . . Only an alert and aroused public opinion can do something about it—and maybe the nation'will have to organize its own economy campaign and make it an issue in the congres sional elections of 1942.” Mr. Lawrence doesn’t just criticize — he points to definite places where major cuts in gov ernment spending are both possi ble and desirable. There is, for instance, the proposal that $450,- 000,000 be spent on farm subsidy payments—a boost of $238,000,- 000 over last year. There is the fact that some $1,000,000,000 a j’ear is still being spent for re lief, even though employment is at the highest level in our his tory and in many sections there is a serious labor shortage. There is the fact that strong forces are behind measures to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on the St. Lawrence and other socialized power projects, despite the undeniable evidence which shows that the existing private utility industry is 100 per cent ready and able to meet all present and prospective pow- Rev. A. J. McKelway officiated. Mr. Dunn has a position at the Pinehurst ' Garage. Mr. and Mrs. Dunn are at j Home in Southern Pines. Dr. Thaddeus A. Cheatham is visit ing Mrs. Cheatham's brother, F. H. . aulkner in Helena, A''k. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Williams have returned from Florida where -hey spent several months. Mr. and Mrs. True P. Cheney and daughters, Dorothy and Sally have gone to Skytop, Pa., for the Sum mer. Mrs. Karl John.son had the misfor lune of falling Sunday night at hei .lome and breaking her hip. Hugh W. Carter and daughter Betsy returned Tuesday from visit- ng Mrs. H. M. Adams in Somerville, N, J. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Palmer have gone to Chautauqua, N. Y., and Bar Harbor, M!aine. The WJoman’s Auxiliary of the Community Church, with Mrs. Thom son's war policy, "Ham" Fish, will be a neighbor of ours through the month of July. He’s been ordered to active "special” duty with the Army at Fort Bragg for one month. How would you like to have had an office on the 60th floor of New York’s Wcolworth Building last week ? The elevator operators were out on strike. Deaths from automobile accidents in Moore county are averaging two a month for 1941. Drive carefully. | Remember that day years ago when we had some rain in the Sandhills? food sale Saturday (tomorrow) in the vacant store next to Wailace’s Five and Ten Cent Store. The Rev. A. J. McKelway returned Thursday from Montreat where he was a delegate to the General Assem. bly of the Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Emerson Humphreys has re turned to her home after being a pa is L Black as chairman, will hold a j tient in the Moore County Hospital. ' ' Richard and Johnnie Ray of South er needs—and to develop and | spent the week-end with build new facilities with private Callie Battley. money, not with tax money. The i>onaid Stewart Chamber of Commerce of the ^’'ayetteviiie spent Sunday with United States has just passed Sledge, resolutions asking that at least I Meredith of $2,000,000,000 be .saved annually by curtailing non-defense spend ing, and devoting this money to defense needs, holding down debt or tax requirements by that amount. Mr. Lawrence goes to the heart of the matter when he says that only the American people an do anything about this situ- ition. They are willing to spend inv amount necessary for de fense. Are they willing to make unprecedented tax and debt sac rifices merely to pay for political luxuries, for experiments in state socialism, for a bigger and jigger bureaucracy, or for any •activity which is not absolutely unavoidable? Government waste it this time is a certain guaran tee of an unprecedented econom- c and social collapse at some fu ture time. Herndon, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Keith, Mr. and Mrs. Wade Stevick and Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dunlop are on a fishing trip at Snead's Ferry. Mis. David Coffey was hostess to the Friday Afternoon Bridge Club last Friday. The club is meeting today with Mrs. Thomas L. Black. Mrs. J. R. Page, Mw. June Page and Several of the teachers gave n beautifully appointed tea at the Page homie in Aberdeen Saturday after noon in honor of Miss Frances Elr- hardt, bride-elect. Mr. and Mrs. E!d Swaringen, Mas ter Charles, Mrs. Colin McKenzie, Miss Margaret McKenzie and Colin Jr., are spending the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Raeford Hutchinson in Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Sledge entertain ed a group of teachers with a supper party at their home Saturday even ing. Those enjoying this occasion Greatest "r* BeAimfi/L ote/AfermpeL All-Tim* Lew Pric* MODIL »-10 $131.75 InstaUe** j £LECTR/C Looking for something easier, farter, COOLER in cook ing this summer? 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The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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May 30, 1941, edition 1
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