Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / March 22, 1929, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE PILOT, a Paper With Character, Vass, North Carolini. Friday, March 22, 1929. THE PILOT Published every Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated. Vass, North Carolina. NELSON C. HYDE, President. Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Address all communications to The Pilot, Inc., Vass, N. C. Advertising Rates on Application. hours work in a ten-hour day, and hauling forty cars with a ten-car locomotive, and the result was not hard for the doc tors to guess out. rections in such fine condition in a few years more that it will be one of the most attractive routes on the continenc. Already several miles from There are a few sucih men. i Aberdeen to Southern Pmes and John McQueen and Harrtson i Manly are in course of planting Stutts yoked together would make a pull at starting the world if it should by any peradven- ture slow 'down in its tracks some day, and a lot of folks j would bet that they would geti is started. Both of these men I XI. r> X X TT are not only business men. Their | Entered at the Postoffice at Vass, jj, almost anything that or already planted, and the work is continuing. Some individual land owners up and down the road are also taking a hand in the task on tJheir own lands, as the influence of the work done along the road as it traverses a considerable portion of Sandhills and McNeills township is having its effect. The truth is tlhat Moore county is moving along fairly well in the woflrk Mrs. An derson is sponsoring and The Pilot is able to report a satis factory condition of tihe job. CRAINS OF SAND N. C., as second-dass mail matter. THE VALUE OF UNITY At a recent meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of South-1 to see Stutts back again at his is of use to tJheir community! and to their neighbors is al-! and to their neighbors and their | neig*hborhood. And that is one! of the reasons why it is good Our own story of the peach season is rather brief, to witf"^ March—“Let’s spray*” Augrust—“Let’s pray.” We have discovered a way to sav: money, and pass it along to you. era Pines Dr McBr^er, the work, even though prudence will ■ president, alluded to the value 1 suggest ^at he take the . coast more than one mile of the seven of unity m the operation of cer-j more moderately, for too ivh*n driving from Pinehurst .o tain functions in the communi- j is risked where an overlc^d is, southern Pines on the double road, ties that comprise the Sandhills. | tackled too long and too often, discovery w^€*n we This note was brouglht out again in the suggestion last week by a a NORMAL railroad man who intimated that some day in the future pJans will have to be adopted for the tal, 89,749 were white boys and girls. After this year you are going co have to have two license plates for your car, one fore and one aft. This is the law in most states, and the Legislature has just enacted it at Raleigh. LEGISLATURE Much criticism has been heard found ourself half way between the ■ two towns with a bare pint of gaso- I line in the tank. broader service on tJie part /o'"" have a queer idea the Seaboard for the associated legislature which has been sit-,of our distances down here We re- communities that have for their since the first of the year, |“>ve a e er rom a nen m e« chief railroad denendpTicp the fa- but close scrutiny Will disclose, York state asking us to gee him some that the bodv has been normal *»ooms either in Pinehurst or Ashe- cilities at Southern Pmes. From all nnarters comP« thi*; comp I It is Tepresentiative of North Car-jThe Pilot s circulation is wide- note of mutual relations between j This is a peculiarly *anoma-1 doesn’t quite extend to S“»vS vu£rth« S'!<>“»«*?■ ltls.m.nelh.m»,tly««' 1- .■<- » '■ working for a common purpose.! progressive of the Union, but [ pj-pj-u-st Pinehurst, Southern Pines and' the most conser-; nnehurst. Aberdeen and the territory ad- I Norflh Carolina is a queer i jacent are in a way separate mixture of high speed and stand, Hotels m both Sou-hern P>nes and identities, but they are also fac- ^n^l in both respects is pro- Pinehurst are jammed. The H,ghland tors in a common work and a nounced. This is accounted for | P»«es Inn broke it s all time record | common development, and each' the fact that for a century j l^^t Saturday nighi when it took carj | The hunting season at Southern Dr. Symington’s report of heaKh conditions in Moore County for 1928 reveals that 15,594 children and grown-up wtre vaccinated during ihe year. Ha reports 555 cases of con tagious diseases quarantined, 2,000 examinations of school children, 52 tonsil and adenoid operations, 264 tieatments of pupils for dental de fects, 145 visits to jails and convict camps and 150 to the -couniy home and county tuberculosis hospital. Eleven thousand, eight hundred and forty-nina miles were covered during the vear on official busines. Peach blossoms and straw hats are out, and the girls are looking lovely in vheir summer frocks. Must be ’bout time to get our new spring is in a measure tied up with the others. The Kiwanis club has prior to the civil war content-, ^64 guests, ment prevailed in the establish- j Pines is over and horses have been I leaving almost every day during the public* i past week. More than two hundred: a-JCJCSAv. S ♦ I 1 SOUL SHATTERING REVELATIONS brought these villages closer to- order. Then came reconstruc- Total enrollment of the gether, but some of the leaders ’ which was negative more | schools of North Carolina for the , and fifty privately owned horses were of the'different villages are of' ^^27-2« was 100,691, according | unloaded at the Southern Pines the opinion that still more ac- ^ from^ the sky, j to “State School Facts.” Of this to - j freigh. platform during the season. tive joint effort will be whole-; So we have I some. In some things each of * ultra-progressive force striv-, | these centers is more prominent • hereditary con-, | than the others, but it is in this i serMative influences, and the; { prominence that each needs the | sovernmentel policies that pre-, ♦ cordial relation of the others, for the outcome of this, in no sense are they rivals, no wires, matter if some folks think they Progress, being live and ag- j are. Aberdeen is not Soutiheni ^r^ssiye, w’lns, but conservatism, ^ Pines, and Southern Pines is not eyes to the rear, holds Behind Your Front. Pinehurst, while Pinehurst is Progress is bold, and By James Oppenheim. neither Southern Pinp^ nor alarms conservatism, W^hich is Harper & Brothers, New York. 192x. Aberdeen, but the three supple-i to be safe. So at Raleigh $4.oo. ment each other, and each would ^ measure is adopted, then re-, be grievously smitten should one' then thrown in the (Reviewed by Ann Hyde Allen) of the others be lost. Each servesto be pulled out' The after dinner coffee finished, itself 'and serves the others at rebuilt on wholly new the guests draped themselves about the same time. Each profits by satisfying no one, but a the livinig room and silenced descend- conference with the others, for f’f'mpromise among all. And that Our hostess, endeavoring to en- many subiects are communitv about the result of the fcs- *^rtain, produced a volume entitled matters instead of individual to Broad propositions were “Behind Your Front. Psychoanalysis the one village This is illustrat- offered, but always while the ^-man.” and assured us ;h... ed in the activity now in prog- progressive stepped on the ga«i innermost being would stand re- ress in the planting of the Mid- the conservative stepped on the I was chosen for th? fir t land road and the road from Such driving is hard on- '»eriment and steeled myself for tao Aberdeen to Southern Pines. The ^^t it need not be dis- revelation. Aft.r answering sundry three towns are interested in the couraging, for every time we project, and from that commun-' move we get a little farther for- Are you really polygamous ity interest comes community ^ '^ard, and fortunately the gov- polyandrous ? and Do you hke to welfare. All are interested in ^ming machinery has no re- ‘‘■"P- the outlying development of the gear to signify anything, l!, lands convenient to all three. SO backward if that ;si ® The faster this spirit can be, “"^ol^tion and^e usually cultivated and broadened the ^ hold what we gain. *as i«iinfc ana .ub tunc more substantially will the foun-' North Carolina has no cause for :rde;ert"thts “ i: tn " t" dations be laid for the future of I *«couragement. The road sy.stem s cas f ato , the Sandhills, and it is a matter example. It came throug:i of satisfaction that the tendency i’•'’® course that beset? i ,„.Eni ...m a tunumst, ueivveeii to work together is daily becom- Gilda Gray and Greta Garbo which mg more pronounced. reached the wire ahead ot anything else in the union prob- STUTTS BACK ably. This year some forward ON THE JOB !-steps have been taken, although maybe only enough to indicate text graciously informed me that by turning to ihe “page number of that type” I might find a contrast between would “help my sub-function for me.” On page 84 I accordingly found that while Gilda Gray was “Cabare'i. vs. tragic d-spth,” Greta Garbo was “The Silent Women, still waters that run Hanison Stutts, head of the thp ric^'ht mntp Rut xrooi’i.’ Pinehurst Warehonsps and a * 4^ 1 ^ , deep”: moreover Giilda G. was “Jazz! ; yvarenouses, ana a^from now that route will still be the tears in things” while Greti leading factor in nearly every markpd ;inH wp will or» tnmgs, wmie ureta cood thino- that i<i o-oino- nn in a larthei | q, -y^as “The enigmatic Mona Lisa goon tning tnat is going on in and possibly hit a clip on one of | smile the soul-imaee tvne” As vou the Sandhills, has returned to them Taking-it all in nil Ipo- . , as you his desk after several month.s | j^iature has done right weU^^^^^ "fi® ?! conditions that prevail, anrli I„ chapter one of this remarkable (an also Feel.) In Chapter three are disclosed: “Startling Contrasts. With swift strokes no.able men and women are put in contrasting pairs and their inner rature laid bare. Beginning with Wilson vs. Mecken and ending with Gilda Gray vs. Gi -ta Garbo.” In case a reader may not recognize the notables he is referred to the Who’s Who in the back, where he will find illuminating sketches of each in dividual, such as: “Dempsey, Jack, yes, you guessed it. Edison, Thomas, a promising lad ind2ed. Wills, Helen, plays a feeling with in- tuKion game of tennis. Mencken, H. L., Ha Ha.” ; Farther on is the chapter, “Are I Women Men?” For the sake of the gentlemen we hope that the answer may be negative, for, “The thinking function,” Mr. Oppenheim tells us, “appears so rarely in a woman tha'l I cannot after much research find an ex ample of a well known woman whose main function was sensa tion and whose sub-function thinking.” Mr. Oppenheim now promises U5 how'ever confused we may feel, “It will all come clear in the end when you actually see how the heads and faces of the types differ. In all twelve different kinds.” For, as everyone knows, “In the making of humanity there were per haps only 'twelve different moulds,” for noses you understand. Therefore by merely looking in the mirror and ascertain whether he has a lily of the valley, rolled, or bulb and bar nose, the reader may find his type and, by referring to Chapter nine, the vocation bes’i^ suited to him! We may only conclude that Mr. Op- V ' oooK, tne reaaer may nna wnetner ne a viffor and annparanpp tViat ^ ^®t of credit. We are; is an introvert or an extrovert. He lows thp a^^^^nranpA h the right COUrse al-,may next disicover whether his lead- ieldy for 3^"" period of\c- ^ ■ tivitv in the roTnmnnitv Fpw I feeing or thinking. As the author i penheim is a marvel. How else can m^n hivp PxritpH Thinkine-i h. have contrived to get published, i^ thp 1a\t ^ ntT ™E never pair together, nor do Sensa- [ by a leading American firm, a book q? ++ f • r entire highway tion and Intiution.” (I add -.his only rison btutts, for m addition to ^ Hpinripw ThinVpv i«w being one of the leading busi-’ John H. Anderson, case some deluded Thinker laboi ness men of the SandhiUs, and I Chapel Hill, state director of the , «"der the m.sapprehens.on that he|c.ous English? one of the leaders of most things I United Daughters of the Con- worth while, he is also endow-'^^ites The Pilot ask-1 ^^^ogram is mapped OUT v/hose ridiculous pseudo scientific theory is only equalled by its atro- FOR NEW BIBLE CLASS ed with a friendly cordiality that 1that attention be called tu makes of him one of the most under way by the i human fellows in North Caro-1 for the planting and im- Frank Buchan’s Bible class, which lina. One of his troubles has! Jefferson has been meeting in the basement of been that he lends a hand here j. highway, the state road the Baptist church for the last three ing something %r'SsT at' li^y way of i r. Sfr/rr i£'t ' i “ loaded hi«? K ^ ' Carolina boundary. The Daugh^-i^^^" names on the roll, loaded his shoulders beyond the^ers of tihe Confeiracy are trv-|At that session a program commii- ing to have this entire road! appointed consisting of Bion tlmTand'prrrvinr Confederacy are trv-|^^ session a program commii- hai^ hppn hiicJ f!5v u to have this entire road I ^®»^sisting of Bion a day much" of the hours, planted and in all possible ways }«• Butler, chairman, the Reverend J. ed a lifr^nph^J tu *- undertaking to do with church, S. B. Richardson and Frank DubL wplf^ro ‘" ^11 the roads in the neighbor- Goodwill. They submitted to the pres hood. Mrs. Anderson urge! land i««nt, Mr. Buchan, a plan for th, Sfa?rs’'of^W«^pnr^t'r ^hel owners along the route“to help study of the Bible from an undenom- other interests which C ““t the work as it is be- i^^ational viewpoint, the purpose of manded his attllvt nn 1 11"^ Sandhills sec- ‘he volume, the characters that are has been doinir twfHitv the road presented, the basic influence that it doing twenty-four 1 from Moore county in both di- stands for, with the proposition that (flexibility be given the program co allow the study to be coriducted by capable men whenever such may be available at home or from outside points. For Sunday, March 24, Mr. Stim- son will dir-cCt attention to the book of Genesis, and it is expected that each succeeding meeting will have a program provided especially for the date. Some conspicuous names have b?en mentioned in connection with this work, which appears to be meet ing with favor. Everybody is invited. Ten o’clock, sharp. If the dramatic critics paid money oUl of their own pockets to- see shows, and if literary critics dipped into their tobacco money for books, the public would get the lowdown on a lot of stuff. Wepouth Heights Southern Pines, N. C. It It is becoming the fashion now for buyers of prospective country homes to go on across the Weymouth Ridge, and into tIhe undeveloped re gion. Two new buyers picked up places to suit them last week, and others are on the track this week. It all means one thing. More country homes beyond Weymouth Will Stimulate more homes on Weymouth Heights. Steadily more Weymouth locations piass into the hands of those who Will create those homes. To be among the number to get in on time, see s. B. RICHARDSON, Inc. ARCADE BUILDING Southern Pines, N. C. NOW^ for all time Stop Moth Damage m Plans quibble with the moth I ^ attio • storage closet like this will provide your HJilV©n household w'ith maximum protection. FREE Thousands of families have made their homes more valuable in this manner W’-' wiU seiui you ih'^ plans and spociriciilioiis / (l^mvn by a l?:ulin'^ firm of architects; your /M^ lumber d?:sler ran furnish the Super- (xnkir Closet Lining and other ma- ierials; any good carpenter can build * quickly. The moth’s natural enemy Brown’s Supercedar Closet Lining, admittedly the best, is nuKiO of genuine “Ten nessee” aromatic red cedar. Though pleas ant to you, the aroma from this wonderful wood is the moth’s natural enemy. Costs no more ihan ORDINARY Closet Lining i m The m o t li worm is stifled, suffocat- ed-and dies. -therefore you may as well have the genuine, sealed at the niiU in douiilc- fae«, fibre board, mctal- bound boxes. Contents kept In perfect condition. RCEDAR You do not have to build a new home to hav« Siipercedar closets. Line the closets of your prci- ent home, rij?ht over the plaster^xl walls. Stop nuith dairfagc once and for all. X and builders appreciate Architect fact that Supercedar is made from th# Tlnfl^A* h®«rt of the log and thorcugjily air- uiiaer seasoned. Thus it is guarantee 90 ptr cent or move red face with 100 per cent oil content. I , Ull cuilicrilr* i* niade v/iUi longue-and-groove sides and •nds; carpenters prefer it. '•to' The Pinehurst Lumber Yards Pinehurst, N. C.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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March 22, 1929, edition 1
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