Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Sept. 13, 1929, edition 1 / Page 4
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 Four THE PILOT, a Papei With Character, A&erdeen, North Carolina Friday, September 13, 1929 THE PILOT Published every Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated. Aberdeen, North Carolina than he paid for it, for a house | built in the building and loan as-' sociation shelters his family i while he is paying on^ the in- j Early arrivals for the winter col- stallment plan, saves him a rent; they wish they had stayed bill in the same period, stiniu- i Sandhills this summer. “It NELSONC. HYDE, General Manager been any hotter here TT TiTTrrTi7o homc arouiicl nis own root, ana +han it was up north,” they state. As BION H. BUTLER, Editor 'delivers to him when his install- of fact, government weather JAMES BOYD STRUTHERS BURT j ments are paid, a valuable prop- | j-ecQj-ds of late show it has been some RALPH PAGE erty that is his to keep, and GRAINS OF' SAND Contributing Editors ten degrees hotter in New York than which is more liable to grow into ^j^*g section much of the time. more money than it is to have j lost its value and be junked, as is the case with many another Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months j installment plan purchase. Three Months 50, g^jne years ago the Kiwanis Address all communications to The I club induced some young chaps Pilot, Inc., Aberdeen, N. C. ito start building and loan sav- Summer isn’t the busiest season of the year for local real estate men. We met Sam Richardson on the streets of Southern Pines the other ly needs are some new panes of glass i g in the High School building and a Jl little sprucing up of the grounds out g in front. Why not have the boys do H I ♦♦ some work on the grounds after ' g school some day, Mr. Wright? Good tt muscle building exercise for the foot ball squad! day and he said, “Just been down to ingL'sora7ofThe yo^.ng™f;il7ws|the to despatch my day’s have grown to be older fellows and names could be cited of that building association fund grow ing into such a sum as to af ford material aid in going through college and laying the Really,’^ we interjected. “Yep,” said Sam. “Mailed both let ters.” Got Charlie Picquet sized up now.” “The Mentor” tells how Admiral Le 8 Motte Piquet, commanding the French ' g fleet a hundred and fifty years ago, i g gave the American flag its first salute, j g John Paul Jones on the old Ranger, I g put into Quiberon Bay on the coast ^ H of Brittany to turn over some mer- } H chant vessels for protection by the g f’rench Admiral. He asked the admir- I g ♦« al for a salute to the American flag, . g and the Frenchman consented. The g Ranger is said to be the first vessel I Advertising Rates on Application. Entered at the Postoffice at Aber deen, N. C., as second-class mail mat- terv iuiu iiiaLcxicj.1 CHV.1 gjwiiig, I If you want your office or store to; ^ xu ON THE BIG WATSON substantial foundation for a I look busy just let the word geti^*^ carry the American f^g on the DEVELOPMENT I successful life. Building associa- | around that you’re in the market for j A factor that is pouring outitions have dotted this whole | an automobile. You’ll have callers money into the Sandhills trade Sandhill country with homes | aplenty, channels these days is the big de-' ihat shelter excellent young j ——- cure a salute of nine guns from the French or any other nation, and Ad miral Piquet was the first foreign naval officer to salute the American :: n velopment at the Watson place households that are through that Haven’t heard much about Aber-jflag on the water. These Piquets, or between Pinehurst and Southern groun e ^ ideen’s proposed new community house Picquets, or however they spell their Pines where Gannett, Seelye and ® greatest civic 1 names, seem to be early in the game, Fleming, of Harrisburg under|buildmg and loan expe^^^^^^ immediate and less cost-'no ma ter what it is. the management of H. W. Reut-1 they have not only gained a PINEHURST LAKEVIEW n Mrs. Lloyd Gardner and Mrs. R. A. Holland spent the week-end in ersham, who is making things j home but also a habit of thrift jingle out on the territory where saving that puts them a long he has about a hundred men at 1 way forward on the road toward work, and more apparently ar-l^ financial future that is encour- Mrs. A. P. Thompson entertained j Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Gibbon returned riving. Already he has a bigi^S^i^S* Nearly everybody should , Wednesday at luncheon and bridge i from Maine last Thursday accompan-* g clearing at the site of the dam, some stock in the local; honoring her mother, Mrs. Cornelia ied by Mrs. Inez Twambley of Saco, g which will back the water up | building and loan associations as . Black of Carthage, whose birthday it! who is to be their house-guest for H three-quarters of a mile on the i a home maker or an investor, j was. Those present were Mesdames | two or three weeks, two streams that unite just !f01*/00m abounds for both. Justjj. K. Roberts, Frank Blue, Ed Muse, above the dam site, and above ^ little money down, and your;D. B. Denning, J. B. Williamson, Sam his operation Charlie Williams is! money begins to grow or your j Miller, F. S. Cole, O. D. Wallace, P. R;ck;“MountTrsUinrMrI'crrdner» pushing his crew in the job of | house can grow, and it is profit |K. Kennedy, Comeha Black, honoree, | mother Mrs J W Powell clearing the groves, opening'all the way. ,all of Carthage and Mrs. Ralph Cald-1 ^ Woodward and sons. further roads, and mother ways: well and Mrs. Roy Harrington of getting m shape for the inter-, MURDOCH M’LEOD’S | Aberdeen. Canivess a H esting pMject that Mr. Watson | ^^W CHURCH j Mrs. J. S. Dunlop entertained at little visit one day during the past « has on hand Mr. Reutersham ^ Pinehurst is to have a new week. iS shows signs that he knows jlOW ur t^ away ‘ May be it is|!" : Mrs. Oldham and Miss Mary Old- | to move, for the clearing already j exactly correct to call it sis-1 bam, mother and sister of Mrs. Cav- H opened is so big that Progress r ^Ot exactl^^^^^^ ter, Mrs. J. I. O’Brien. The guests Jness, are guests in the Caviness home B can go forward at the dam site puroocn MCi^eoa s “urcn, vei j j i a and all along the streams The , M^Lod has ^rs. J. F. Tay- Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Aiken of I timber is to go to saw mills, and couise. muraocn mcjueoa na. Washington, D. C., with At “THE PADDOCK” The new clubhouse in Southern Pines is equipped with one of our RELIABLE RANGES and PYROFAX GAS A million dollars worth of new buildings are under way in the Sandhills. Most of them will use Pyrofax. FOR SALE BY SOUTHERN PINES WAREHOUSES Southern Pines. North Carolina be used for as many purposes as it is fit. That means further em ployment and further interest- , , , ^ ing transformation of the neigh- work of a fine n^’ Murdoch McLeod encouraged his congregation un- ^^uale. iviiss Washington, D. C., with their two til under his lead it has grown wmner of top score prize lovely little daughters, Ursula and to where it is readv to under- presented a guest prize. Ernestine, .spent a day in Lakeview H borhood. Without a Mrs. F. L. Dupont was hostess at recently, calling on their old friends structureV'and’one that will be ’ afternoon. Mrs. W. L. Mrs. J. A. Brown of Chadbourne, doubt this is the representative of the work that Tuesday , , , . , hiB^crp;7thino-recent^^^^ he is doing, and of Pinehurst n™lop ";as awarded high score prize, and daughter Mrs. Proctor of White- Sn thi\ seft[on It involves the a community. For while Pine- Mrs. J. S. Dunlop, second and Mrs. ville, ran down from Cameron, where fmmpdiatp conver-^ion of some hurst is a winter resort, and C^>'«rlie Fields consolation. they are visiting to call on Mrs. Wil- 600 acres of land into what is *^av be suspected of more or Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Hudson spent liam Warner one day during the past Sent?to be"omrone of t^^^ less frivolity, it is pleasing to lasj week-end at Graystone In., Roar- week. CONSTRUCTION PATER Full Line of Colors in Stock at THE PILOT OFFICE also CARDBOARD IN FULL SHEETS It n H ♦♦ S tt ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ most picturesque estates in the be able to say that it is a com- central part of North Carolina, munity of high moral charac- Mr. Watson has not disclosed ter, and of sound religious con- his plans to the newspaper men, victions. and possible he has not fully de- Already the place has in the cided yet what they shall em- Pinehurst Chapel one of the fin- brace. But the method of begin- est ecclesiastical structures in ning is sufficient evidence that the rural towns of the state, and when the visitors to the winter it is in the hands of the Rev. T. . xi, • 4.- ^ playgrounds of Moore County A. Cheatham, a clergyman ^ arrive this fall and winter they whose standing and acquaint- msi e i will see enough to interest them ance is wider than local. In sum- in the transformation scene now mer he serves one of the big , , starting. Mjr. Watson has put churches of Pittsburgh. In win- ^ ’ an emphasis on the movement ter he is in Pinehurst. Also in that h3s taken in the develop- Pinehurst the Catholics have a ment of rural homes and estates, church, under the care and by selecting his location in Rev. Francis Dillon, which is a the heart of the triangle that en- force in the neighborhood, and ;;;;7 McNeiir‘of L^keTiew. closes Pmehurst, Southern Pines an architectural addition to any and Aberdeen he places his im- place even of larger size. Mr. provement under the eye of the McLeod’s church will be a hand- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vinton are ex- Miss Ethel Grey has returned from , pected to return to their cottage here Boston where she spent the summer. I the latter part of this week from Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Hotchkiss, who ; their summer place in New York summered at New Haven, Conn., have state, returned to Pinehurst for the win ter. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Kennedy have returned from Paradise Point, where ♦♦ Lakeview this w^eek. Dune and Dan McCrimmon return ed last week from their trip to Texas, reporting a zuost interesting jour ney through the south country and back. elatives in i P. L. Gardner has returned from a i I business trip to Augusta, Ga. Donald Quale is the guest of his un- j K. N. Carroll and family, now res- Mr. and Mrs. Henry j idcnts of Cheraw, S. C., came up for Graves, of Lakeview. a week-end visit to their grandpar- Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Sledge have re- ^ ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Gardner, of the ^ short stay at Gray-j Mrs. C. M. Winfrey and children are stone Inn, Roaring Gap. They were | at home after a month’s visit to rel- accompanied on the trip by Miss | atives in Georgia. I Miss Flora McKinnon accompanied Mrs. F. L. Manning has returned Miss Johnsie Eastwood home from from Norwich, Vt., where she spent ^ Red Springs Saturday for a week-end The steady progress on KnoDwood Heights Dr. H. O. Deaton of Ft. Worth, Texas ,called on Mr. and Mrs. John McQueen one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Milton McCrossin of Palmyra, N. Y., stopped over for a night with Misses Catherine and Hon- oria Brooks en route from Washing- view, while his mother and father I ton, D. C., to Asheville on their were away. | honeymoon trip. tt FREE GRASS SEED 11 . 1. -ijj* iTi. 1 the summer. Mrs. Manning opened visit, whole region and in sight of , some addition to the temples, as restaurant in the Market Square everybody who may be interest- well as the home of a sound re- u,i.,. Mnndav ed in the neighborhood. He has ligious influence. .. : “" r. and m7s Raymond Johnson given this community a value as Pinehurst, both the corpora- ,pe„t the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. 3 recreation and winter play tion and the inhabitants, in- wesley Beavers of Durham, Ray- ground that can not be over- du(jjng visitors and temporary mond, Jr., was the guest of his grand- looked, and in that way Mr. \?V at- residents as well as permanent mother, Mrs. David Coffey of Lake- son IS a valuable asset, as well people, has taken enthusiastic as in other ways, for he is an interest in all the church devel- e.xcellent neighbor and associate, opment that has been carried out the kind that makes this a de- fv,p„p wpll-tn-do folk"? fmm the sirable place to create a perma- j^.^Vth, down for the winter, are nent or - temporary home. among the foremost of the work- RTTVTTvr niv THF ' staunch backers of mSTALLMENT PLAN :S ZS/ZS‘: Last week the Hon. Robert N. tors, but are conspicuous in the Page, who knows something, assemblies and helpful in their about financing, had an article ’ contacts. The new church will fn The Pilot on the subject of be promptly built, and it will be H the Building and Loan Associa- substantially sustained. The hold S tion as a means of saving money, it has on its people in its pres and of building up the commun- i ent limited housing conveni- ity in which it is established. | ences tells what it will do when The association at the same ' it has more room to manifest its time, under the head of “Install-; energy and its impression on its jH ment Buying,’' published an ad-1 community. |g vertisement telling of the work | H it has been doing in recent, 1 § months. ! OPENS KINDERGARTEN |H The argument is wholly in fav- IH or of installment buying, and i Mrs. M. Burkhead from Warrenton, ! g the reason why it is so logical, Va., who came to Aberdeen about two I g is because it is an installment: weeks ago and has rooms at Mrs. A. ; II plan that enables the buyer to | A. McKeithen’s has established a i H save on the installment plan at' Kindergarten class, and at the pres-1H the same time that he is buying j ent has seven pupils, and the promise ‘ g on the installment plan. He does I of almost as many more. The pupils : g not awake to find out in the I enrolling at present are Gloria Gray g course of a few months or years | Medlin, Marie Kennedy, Lyle Reid g that he has been paying all the ^ Starling, Mary Spencer Harrington, time for something that he has I Hardin Gunter, Jr., Bobbie Cook, Rus- been consuming as fast or faster sell Batchelor. ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ i ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦<# ♦♦ I ♦♦ ! ♦♦ i ♦♦ ♦♦ The next four weeks is the proper time to sow Italian Rye Grass, the best winter lawn for this section. To encourage the planting of more lawns in Aberdeen, and thereby the beau tifying- of the town, we shall be glad to supply grass seed without charge to any resident of Aberdeen sowing a winter lawn for the first time. For those who desire to buy seed, the ABERDEEN HARDWARE COMPANY will carry an ample stock and supply them at actual cost, 10c per pound. n PAGE TRUST COMPANY “Plain, plodding people we often shall find Leave hasty and confident people behind. You find that in McGuffy’s Second Reader. Knollwood Heights goes plodding along, building new houses from the first of January to the last of De cember, and that’s a gait you can’t beat. Halbert Blue’s house is now in shape that an in spection of it shows what a mansion it is. Fine location, fine design, well built, roomy and with the modern util ities. It will go forward rapidly now to completion, and w^hen the landscape men get through with it a little la ter it will be one more of those ideal spots that make Knollwood Heights the fascinating place that it is be coming. At the Tufts, Newcomb, Johnson house the foun dation w’alls are rising and giving a comprehensive idea of what that building is to be. Another creditable Knollwood Heights addition, and it seems that every new one gives more and more promise to this ideal com munity. Mrs. Hogg’s handsome building continues to devel op, and to work out its interesting features there among the pine knobs. The truth is that all of the building on Knollwood has surpassed any expectations held when the first plans were contemplated. Knollw^ood Heights has outclassed itself from the start. Incidentally the Pinehurst Warehouses are putting in the furniture for the No. 3 Olmstead house. Enough has been done there to indicate that this will be a mighty attractive home for its occupants. But that is the Knollwood way. KnoUwood, Incorporated Pinehurst, N. C. Building Sites may be procured in this favored neigh borhood by consultation with any accredited Real Estate Agent in Pinehurst or Southern Pines, N. C. n n
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1929, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75