May 22, 1925. (E PILOT. lET YOUR ESSING le With Our ^p-to-Dati> |m PRESSER iteam Presser in [eaning Depart- ^ best work, on lemen’s clothes. sr Shop VASS, N. C. ses Ism ired Him I Failed ‘umatism months I used jw of for real re- 1-Tone-O, >ottles of proud of talk all Id walk a 10 suffers NE-O teed LC. I, N. C- mtxtmntnm ds I VOLUnE NUMBER 27 Is a Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding of the Sandhill Territory of North Carolina Address all o^iiM^ntkms to the pilot PRINTOW X)IIPANV. VASS, N. C. FRIDAY. HAY 29. 192S SUBSqtffTION $2.00 SAN SPITTING MCE AGAIN This Time He Hits ’Em Harder Than Ever-^12,S00.00 Blow (S. B. Richardson) Yes, it is a fact that the Mayor and Board of Commissioners of Southern Pines have gone wild again. This time their extravagance has taken on the form of an American LaFrance fire engine at a cost of $12,500.00. I must confess that such a rumor picked up on the street without being ana lyzed would naturally shock the eonfi- dance of the most ardent admirer of the present administration, dampen the arder of the most progresive citizen and provoke just criticism from the majority of the taxpayers; there fore, I feel it my duty to offer the following explanation not only to justify our action, but that those of you who pay the bills may be in pos session of the details the entire tansaction. For two years your Board of Com missioners and myself have been striving in all our public improve ments to conform to the requirements of the Southeastern Underwriters Association in an effort to reduce the insurance rates in Southern Pines. At first there seemed to be insurmount able obstacles in our path and the prospects of our being able to meejt the conditions necessary to advance from a third class town to second clase seemed very remote. Our greatest obstacle was removed when the rapid growth of our City forced us to abandon the old water phmt and re place it with what the State Inspector has pronounced **the most modem and best equipped plant in the State.” This plant provides an abundant sup ply of water, adequate equipment for pumping and water mains suificicnUy large to deliver water to any hydn^ in town in such quantity as is required by the Underwriters^ Having finally accomplished this major project, there still remained .one barrier between lower insurance rates and the Underwriters which was an approved type of fire engine that would deliver 750 gallons per .minute from three lines of hose eonnect«d to one hydrant for five consecutive hours and one full time paid fireman to operate it. At a recent meeting the Com missioners appointed a committee, consisting of Mr. Mase and mysetf, to go to Atlanta and get a definite proposition from the Southeastern Underwriters Association; this com mittee was also clothed with authority to purchase an American LaFrance fire engine, provided such action would bring about a re-rating and place our city in second class. This duty has been performed, the fire engine will be delivered September 1 and the in surance rates will be ‘reduQeii. Now the question is how are we going to pay this $12,500.00. Had it not been (Continued on page 8) MGEBUUDDIGNEW ABERD^ GARAGE Pine Structure Hundred Pett Square-^y Embury H. A. Page, Jr., is at work on a big new garage building at .-^ierdeen, which will be one of the most iCjpn-. venient and striking things-of its kind in the South. 13ie location ji»t west of the Peach Growers* building, fronts on the highway, and allows a ‘base- *nent that will a little lower than the road, with a one-story structure above the highway level, and with ap proaches to both floors from the high way. Aymar Embury is architect for the new building, and.he is providiag for- a structure as interesting in its character as all the other new wo«k 6 has done in the vicinity. *It will be ^ fitting companion for the peach wilding, and an interesting addition to that section of* Aberdeen. The lower floor will have storage, repair shop and various uses, while the sales room, stock room and offices will be on the main floor. The size of the building, 107 feet on the square, will give ample room for the Ford business that Mr. Page carries on. But the chief interest that will attach io the new structure will come from its design. The istre^ front will be typi cal of Embury’s ardiitecture, whieh means that it will be picturesque as a building, and that it wiil display the contents of the l^ilding in the most interesting and attractive form. A frontage of 107 feet will give ample room to .show the Fords, Lincolns and the tractors, an4 ^11 the appliances that pertain to ^ business. Mice and operating rooms will be in the rear of the big show room, and the whole arrangement of the building from top to bottom will be on the plan of Ford efficiency and Embury’s ar tistic effect. It is not often that two influences like Henry Ford and Aymar Embury tie in together, but that is what is starting off there at the Page BuUding at Aberd^n. The building will be ready for use by^^. end of the summer. ' A calf furnished funds for water to be put in the kitchen, scrap cotton gave the floor covering, an old bannis ter held up ^e sink |ind a discarded incubator was made into a tea wagon when one woman wanted to enter the kitchen improvement contest in Samp son County. DEAIHOFHR. JAHESGIEEN Was Natiye of Yemoiijt—iMYea Wife -and Four SoM ^ S ) On Suiidf^'^!ii6mng at o’clock. May 24, the soul of one of our long known citizens, Mr. James Green, passed from this world to the great beyond. He'has suffefed with heart trouble since February and gradually grew weaker as the winter changed into spring and the spring into sum mer. All that could be done ,hy physicians, riiirsed, friends and rela tives was done^but God Imw best and so our town was" saddened as His will was done. *^Let not your hearts be troubled, for 1 am with you, even unto death.’’ Mr. Green was a native of Vermont from ;:^ere ,;he mpved to the ^outh several years- ago. Here he was married to Miss Burgess of Lilling- ton, who has been to him a loving and faithful wife, all thro’ life and unto death. They with their two' small sons have lived in Niagara for several years, where thc^ have a host of friends to mourn ihe loss of the dead and have heart felt sympathy for •his*' survivors. , ^ Interment was made at Southern Pines Hiursday. Mr. Green is sur vived by a wife and two eons, Alton and Charles of this place. Two sons Bert i^nd. James of Vermont, a brother, Mr. Pete Green of Souths Pines, and a sister, Mrs. I. F. .Chandler also of Southern Pines. The entire family has otir deepest sympathy. i i* Jesus,Qh.how, sw^t,- Prom which one never waits to weep. Securely shall my ashes lie, ^ Waiting the_summons from on high” MEM0BlAI.%SJ)EyjCE8 The ^huidhiU PoBt of The Am«r|(^n Legion will ,hold Memorial -aervkes *t Soath- ern Pines, Saturday morn ing at 10:00 o’clock. Hon. R. N. Page wUl make a talk aifter which the citizens will go to the different burying phces and decorate the ^myoe of Me dead 4wMiers. n»e Juyne agent of fiamptKMi-Cowtr states that $11,ON90 of new money came into the county as a result of the recent toflot shipments of ‘ poultry. ' THEOLDS(MH GRAVEYARD An Historic Spot Seven Miles West of County Seat Seven ijailes due west from Carthage on a high plateau from which can be fieen the town is situated an old ceme tery, known as “The Old Scotch Graveyard,” which possesses peculiar interest. Here, in this quiet wooded spot where majestic oaks and graceful pines lift their heads high above the surrounding forest standing mighty sentinels to guard the silent forms beneath their branches, rest and moul der the mortal remains of many of the early settlers ot this and the sur rounding section of country. Here and there the tombs lie, some marked with rude stones but many unmarked and forgotten, of our fore- fa^ers and ancestors, some of whom have slept there, perhaps for an hundred and. fifty years and possibly longer, for before Moore county was cut off from Cumberland, in 1784, this had been the burial ground of the country for miles and miles around. We find here the following (verbatim et literatim) inscriptions, chiseled in rude form, a few on marble, man on native brownstone and a few*on rocks in their native shapes while one was chisled upon a slab of heart pine, which retains the lettering in a far more legible state than many of ^e stones of later date: Neill McLeod di’d Aug. 25, 1845; agied 85 years. Sacred memorial of Allan McLean was bom Sept. 25, 1776; died the 2d of May, 1889. Christian McLean bom Jan. 1,1780; died Jaly 3, 1851. Saeied to the memory of Mai^ret McXioan vm Wm Ang. t, 1802; died Fetoy. 19, 1848. The sacred memory of Norman Mc Leod and died July the 8, A. D. 1886 ag*d 72 years. Saored to the memory of Mary Mc Leod died Oct. 27th 1859 aged 85 years. Ann McLeod died March 26, 1842. E. McLeod. M. T. Mol^d. R. M. McLeod. D. McLeod. Mrs. Jannette McDonald and died 24 Sept. 1834. Kenneth Murchison born Oct. 10, A. D. 174^, jlied April 12th 1817 in the 72nd year of his age. Ann McMillan died 1^ March' 1810. Neill^atheson died 10th Feby 4.8J.1. Sacred to memry of Norman Malhe- son who died August 18, 1846 in the 78 year of his age. Here lies Nancy McC&skill de’c Feby 29th, 1825 ag ftbout 0^. Sacred to the memry of Angus Mc- C^dll who died June the id, 1853 age 47 years 6 mos & 27 days. In memry of Elizabeth relict of An gus McCasHill-born Apl 23. 1813 died (Continued on page 8) goes on beneath the quiet earth be neath their feet. ^ Six of the men are known to be dead and their bodies were%rought out a^ 8 o’clock last night. Superintendent Howard Butler who rushed into t^ THE VffiMS OFfOT LHPR Howard Butler who rushed into tl^ef^ 'W . ■"" shaft immediately lifter the first ei- jfloiry WaHerpm Said That It plosion saw them caught there te- Was Foun^ittion CoO* ip neath the tangled mass of slate add timber. A second explosion shook the mine and the young superintendent was scarcely able to fight his way back before a third and final detonation closed the throat of the shaft and hid the men from his sight. Forty-four men, six of whose bodies have been recovwed, have been defi nitely aecomited for as having been in the mine at the time of the ex plosion. The number may run beyond this even as high as seventy-one. No accurate check is now possible. Ac cording to the distribution of lamps, there were seventy-one men entombed. According to the payroll check there were forty-four. The fact that some miners report when they come off duty instead of when they gelt''on, leads officials to believe that the larger number may be more nearly accurate. Dead and Entom^d The six men whose Ij^ies were brought to the surface tonight and sent to a Sanford undertaldng estabr lishment were: White, A. L. Holland, W. E. 3yerly, Hollis Richardson and Zeff Rim^. Colored, Will Ir^ and Jim Williams. (Continued ga page five) CAROUNA SBOW° JOOSEREm Sp^ial Attraction to pe Pre- smiei this Friday i^d Saturday' HJNE EXPLOSION ATCOALGim ; I JoMn i^. lauhseiier of Vass One of the Men Entombi^— Many Others ‘ Sanford, May 28.—Two score or possibly three score or more men were trapped e^ht hundred -feet under ground in t^ Carolina Goal Mine lune miles from here yeaterdiby when three successive e^^ilp^ions pf gas pecked ^le shaft, bibcking all escape and n(me among the mdnii^ experts who are,di recting the rescue work holdy out the faintest hope that any of them will be* removed alive. Twelve hundred feet from the mouth of the slanting shaft into the mine ja handful of relief men work feverish ly with a mountain of crambled slate and timber* Beyond the wall of debris a fire rages, and the thousands' who wait silently about the mouth of the shaft can ^ly wonder-wfeat else The Caic^in^; Theatres will re^>pen for the special attraction “Are Pirentsl People?” adapted from the Saturday\ Evening P^ Story' by Alice Duer Miller and featuring Betty Bronson,' (of Peter Pan fame) Adolphe Menjou,' Florence Vidor and Larwttdnce Gray. This is the first piftfe^^^ directed by Malcolm St. Claire, w1io’'‘‘'ife5ade “Thfe’ Lighthouse By The Sea” and sevei^'* of Buster Keaton’s Comedies. Betty Bronson, who skj^ocketed to fame in the title role of Barrie’s im mortal classic, “Peter Pan;” play^ the role of the Daughter^ while Adolphe Menjou, the cleverest actor' on the screen' today, is the Father and Florence Vidor, who has no superior as a'leadi^'^jla.dyris the Mother. “Are Parents People?” has to do with the trials of a young girl, whose parents are suffering from a. case of incompatibility. They are constantly quarrelling about trifles and finally, s^pjirate. How Betty finally brin^ about a reconciliation hy giving them a “mutual -worry”—making them .be lieve that she is infatuated with a long haired movie “shiek”—puts this picture a hop, skjp and,a jump ah^ad‘ of anything of its }cind. , . 'It is a clever story l^t containsr ^ough k^hs to raise ypur spirits tpt the highest >pit^* has pathos^ «np«^h ^ ,mate ypur he^ throb, and romance .enough to ,^11 you with the joy of li^ng. -r , m WUX DI6S AT SOUTHERN PINES Mr.'WM Allan died at his home in’ Southern Pines, Monday moming. aftiar ^ illness covering three or fouri years. ’ . Bfr. ^len, or-“Bili' as ^ was inti mately known, was a general favorite in the town with young people and- people of all ages. He came to South ern Pines in its early days and lived with his motfier Mrs. Bartron, who* owned and operated Tara Nook, a popular boarding house, whose partcms came y^r after year. Mr. Allen leaves a sister, Mrs. King, |4M»hood. also of Southern Pines. The funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon and interment took place in Mount Hope cemetc^. ' federate Srfdier .rfi "j* '* “Leam to Wvf your liquor,” advises Philander D. Boston, writing in the Washington 'Mslt. He hastens to ex plain that 'il^^ mUy be done without violation the 'Volstead Law, for he refer^Htd “pot liquor,” or water in which v^%etables have been boiled— once a^ staple of Southern food, but now,'^ lie charges, too often poured downsink. Col. Henry Watterson, he tells us, claimed that “pot liquor** made the Confederate soldier the best individual fighter and the finest type of hardy manhood the world has ever seen. He insisted that, without “pot l^uor,” tile Southern Confedera^jy would have fallen within six months, instead of holding out against over whelming odds for four long yeairs. Mr. Poston continues: “ Tot liquor’is just plain vogetabje essence, or the,:water. in which vegeta bles are boiled, which nearly everyo^ pours down the sink. It’s that st\urdy stuff, dear to the haaft and sj^omach of the real negro thi^t twer ^f strength and endura^i^ who wins o^ admiration when we w^teh the play '^ his brawn and bone m rhe happy ecution of his hard physical ‘Pot liquor’ is quite foi»]gn to the frail and educated 'colored ^ntlems^^,* but just mention it to a real stur^, downright i^egro, and watc^ him smile. “Evolutif^ works from tlw ^rroi^d upwai^ 13^ eai^ is compo^ pf certain minerals, , as ircm, li^, soda, ph^phorous^ iodin, et^. same minerals are found 'in '^aw^tqr; in the vegetable and aninu^l kingdoms, ^d in phjsniical man. Kafcin,, r^ponding to eternal cosacue cansfis the vegetsUes to eat, digoity assimilate and deposit in the cells pf the^plant these minerals from, the SfOil. After being so treated, they are ’^- •vanced to > the next higher plane oi ^ij^e —vegeteble kingdom, -Now they refined and made ready fox anot^ upward move and similar process jn the animal and human body. . “Vegetation receives from still other source another power—trem^- dous in its strength and eternal in ^ vitality. That power is splar en^gy. It comes to the earth in the form 4>f sun-rays, and vegetation, e^o^sed to the~e constant rays, absorbs th^ vi^al power and locks it up tight in i^e vegetable cells along with the als from the earth. There, in t% le|if, which ^is thf? cheimcal ^abpratp^y of |lhe plant. In the p0d, in the fnixt, ,^d in the grain, are blended and bpi^d together the Almighty powers of ^sjp and of earth. “But,^ right here, pian st^pis m ^d spoils it ajl. IJe destroys or thrf^^ away practically all .value in the vege tables he cooks and eats. In ^e long boiling, the vegetable cells tin broken open and the minerfiL wealth (Co)atini^d on page 8) mmimm nSTAUfASRffi Vass, Union an d La^view Hold InstaHatim ' ^erviees- '' An .impressive installation service was' held at ^the^ Vass >Presbyteran ^huMh last Sunday' morning when J[tev. D. McD. Monroe was instalted «s pastor by a commwion of Fayattevflle Presbytery compesed o^ Minlstm ^ A. McLeod, of Galatia, and Charles Rowan, of Rowland, and Elder A. B. Cameron, of Caiihage. A large con> gregation; w^ present; ^Or^it was an ' occasion of more than ordinary inter est, in that each minister taking part was a native of this section and" had fldany relatives or friends m the neifi^ The usual order of service was ob served' with «Rev. BicLeod prasiding. Special music was beautifully rendar- (Continued on imge 8)