Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / April 17, 1931, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page Four N / THE PILOT, a Pappr With Character, Abpriee-i, North Carolina Friday, April I7, 10.3j H ♦♦ H S CARTHAGE n S PINEHURST LUMBER YARDS Pinehurst, N. C. ♦♦ ♦♦ <♦4 ♦♦ n Building is starting up again, and for the present it is encouraged by low prices of material. Lumber is a purchase at the prevtailing prices, and it is a good move for those having building to do to get their ma terial now. It is impossible that framing lumber can re main as low as it is, for the minute the building indus try starts, as it is bound to do to make up for the quiet day it has been passing the call for lumber will make a difference in the price. Now is the time to build. Framing lumber at a price that makes it worth while to secure it. The highest qualities of Long Leaf. The select qualities of Short Leaf, all sizes^, all kinds, and at prices to make it profitable to you to get busy. :: :: ♦♦ H ♦♦ S g I At the charming home of Mrs. H i Alonzo Blue on P»Ionday afternoon, ^ j Circle No. Two of the Presbyterian tt: Church held the regular monthly g I meeting and the first meeting of the ^ i new church year. There were 15 mem- ♦♦ ' , n I bers present. Plans were made for the new year. Mrs. Evelyn Blue was chosen treas urer for the circle and Misses Janie McLeod and Annie Clegg to lead the ♦♦ I Bible study for the coming year. I ♦♦ I Mrs. W. G. Brown was charming hostess to the Sanford Music Club at the home of her mother last Satur day afternoon. The program was pre pared by Mrs. Brown and was very 111- tertaining. Circle No. Three of the Carthage Methodist church met at the home of Mrs. Carl Gulledge Monday afternojn with nine members present. Plans H I were made for giving a silver tea on g I April 24 at the home of Mrs. J. H. Buffaloe. Mrs. G. C. Graves and Mrs. Cabell Penn were joint hostess to Circle No. 1 of the l^resbyterian Auxiliary Mon day afternoon at their home here. Sixteen members were present. Four little girls received copies of PINEHURST LUMMl YARDS Pinehurst, N. C. 3 the New Testament at the Presby- 3 n ♦♦ u n ♦♦ n ♦« n ♦♦ ♦♦ XX ti WEYMOUTH HEIGHTS SOUTHERN PINES Dogwoods in blossom on Weymouth and out the roads over the hilltop. Hollies, azaleas and other aristocrats of the forest cover the grounds farther down. Build ing development continues. The Paddock is already enlarging to make room for more people and for more horses. The Andrews home is becoming an illustration of the possibilities of a bit of the Weymouth slope in the hands of skilled landscape men. But Weymouth is a limited area. When the eastern slope is taken no more land will be made out that way. This is the time to select a home site on Weymouth. s. B. RICHARDSON Real Estate PATCH BUILDING Southern Pines. North Carolina tt tx H a ♦♦ n ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ tt tt terian Church on last Sunday for hav ing recited the Child’s Catechism. These children are members of Mrs. E. H. Morton’s Sunday Class. Mrs. John Beasley spent the week end in Monroe. Mrs. Lee Campbell and children have returned to Washington, D. C., after spending the holidays with Mrs. Campbell’s mother. Miss Katherine McCollum of Washington, D. C., is visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Phillips and chil dren are paying their annual visit to friends and relatives in Carthage and Moore county. Mr. Phillips is teaching in Kentucky. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Garrison were in Rock Hill, S. C., for the week-end. Walter Mclver of New York is vis iting his sister, Mrs. R. C. Wallace. Friends were delighted to see Miss Howel, who used to be teacher of the Saventh grade in Carthage. She was the guest of Miss Mary Currie. Friends of Mrs. Alice Harrington Thomas sympathize with her in the loss of her only son, P. D. Thomas of Charleston, W. Va. He had been ill for several weeks but was appar ently getting along all right when he was taken by a heart attack He died on Monday. Mrs. Thomas has many friends in Carthage and Moore county, having been reared here. She is a sis ter of Will Harrington and Mrs. Lewis, daughter of Mrs. Mary Jane ♦♦ I Harrington. s; MR. STIMSON STARTS Hi NEW SERIES OF SERMONS I UjjTp2H PAINT Ijnve Brothers Porch and Deck Paint is made in a wide range of pleasing colors from which you may choose. Come in and let us show them to you. tHUmtlfmce andsUufnUe Your porch win give a smiling greeting to your friends and it will prove a source of immense pleasure to you and your family if it is ’’fixed up’* a bit. The porch is really an outdoor sun parlor and its appearance should be con sidered as a matter of importance. Due to the abuse to which it is exposed —rain, snow, sleet, ice and the hot rays of the sun—scuffing shoes and oft-moved chairs, the porch floor needs the best kind of protection that can be secured. For this protection we offer LOWE Brothers PORCH AND DECK PAINT. It is very easy to put on—you will be pleased and surprised at the results you can obtain. Aberdeen Hardware Co. Aberdeen, N. C. ♦♦ H! Mr. Stimson, at the Southern Pines ♦♦ I _ ’ Baptist church, has entered on anoth er series of four evening sermons on Sundays. Last Sunday the topic was “The Debt That Jesus Paid in Full.” ♦♦ j Next Sunday he will pay his respect^ to the “Religious Dead Beat,” the man who takes no pai’t in squaring off what he owes in fairness to repaying* some of that debt by helping along in the cause. A week later the theme has some reference to the payments that should be due by the beneficiar ies, the closing subject being “Spir itual Currency, evidently a discourse that will throw some light on the character of medium which might be used in the adjustment of the obli gation that the great payment of the debt leaves with the original debtor. Mr. Stimson has been attracting an appreciative congregation with tnese topical discourses, which in his sim plicity of handling delivers his mes sage in a manner that makes his st >ry plain. CAMERON SENIORS TO GIVE PLAY NEXT FRIDAY The Senior Class of the Cameron High School will present “Miss Ad venture,” a farce comedy in three acts by Charles George, Friday even ing at 8:00 o’clock, April 24. Josephine Carter, a young and pretty “tomboy” known to her friends as “Jo,” is sent, against her will, to a smart girls’ finishing school. For a lark, Jo and several of the girls write love letters, Jo sending her’s to a nearby address in the hope that it might reach a destination. That night she steals the janitor’s clothes and, disguised as a boy, escapes from the college. Arriving at a farmhouse in the morning, she applies for a po sition as a farmhand. The farmer, a young, good looking chap, is suspi cious, but pretends to believe that Jo is a boy. The letter that Jo has writ ten arrives at the . farmhouse, the name and address being that of the young farmer. He notifies the col lege, also Jo’s mother, who arrives with the principal of the school to take her back to college. She rebels and decides to become a “farmerette” and to marry the farmer. The cast is as follows: Sue, a young i girls, Eula Flynn; Josephine Carter, phiH; ^ romance college girl Ida Whitaker; Betty, a j known as Jo, the tomboy, Jesfie Daniel Thomas; Mrs. John Ty]e Ca,’ voung college girl, Jessie Cooper; Thomas; Sarah Ann Haskins, house- ter, mother of Josephine, Ruby Good, Peggy, a young college girl, Thelma keeper for Albert Brown, Flora Bruner, Samson, janitor at Miss, lips; Rebecca Haskins, ^er dauft- There will be special music and a Prim’s school, Clovis McDonald; Miss : er, Montie Pearl Bullock; Albert complete comedy between acts, ^d- Prim, who conducts a school for Brown, a young farmer, Andrew Hem- mission lo and 25c. Brand No. 2 ML MBs mmL Tender, Tasty Cans STRING BEANS ^ } &.* X5c (Quaker Maid COCOA ‘1!" 10c EVAP. MILK C:; 4 SL 29e MEAL or GRITS 10 lbs. 25c GranAniotlier's CAKES La|F«r, Rairi» or Poimd lb. Cake BREAD FULL POUND 5c Wrapped Loaf PINK SALMON 10c CORN lOe ttokar Coffee lb. 29c Mello Wheat 2 pkgs. 25c RICE Fancy mf ^ Bine Rose LARD Finest Compound S Bucket 9 1 C California Yellow Cling PEACHES 3 49c A&P Fancy APPLE SAUCE IOC Iona Brand FLOUR 24^ 65c SUGAR Finest Granulated — ib. 5c LUX TOIIET SOAP 3 i cakes 19c CHIPSO — 3 pkgs. 23c PAIMOIIVE SOAP 3 cakes 19c IVORY SOAP 7 cakes 25c The Gifeat Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. JPresenting the NEW CHEVROLET SIX in tweive attractive models CONVERTIBLE CABRIOLET A eomfortable coape or a racy roadster. ^ Wide mmble seat. Radiator ^rrille. ... 615 CONVERTIBLE LANDAU PHAETON 650 A new, fnlly convertible touring car. ^ Windshield folds forward THE COACH An ideal car for the family. Roomyseats. y Fisher body. Driver’s seat adjn«;table. 545 SPORT ROADSTER A fast, smart, youthful open car. Wide ^ , mmble seat. Special upholstery. ... 495 STANDARD FIVE-WINDOW COUPE 545 An exceptional value in an attractive ^ new model. Spacious rear deck PHAETON Distinctive in style. Top fabric harmo- ^ nizes with body color. Top boot standard. 510 FIVE-PASSENGER COUPE A new and distinctive de luxe model. ^ Radiator grille and cowl lamps. ... 595 , SPECIAL SEDAN Exceptional beauty. Six de luxe wire wheels. Special fender wells 00\J STAIVDARD COUPE An excellent personal car for business or professional use. Large rear deck STANDARD SEDAN A fine car for general family use, smart- ^ ly styled. Wide, comfortable seats. .'. :*535 SPORT COUPE Every inch a smart automobfle. Roomy ^ rumble seat. Adjustable rear window. 575 635 STANDARD ROADSTER A quality car at a very low price* ^ Spacious rear deck. Top boot standard. 475 All prices f. o. b. Flinty Michigan. Special equipment extra Nowhere else in the low-price field is there such a wide selection of fine eoaeh- eraft as in the Chevrolet line—and Chev rolet alone in its class provides the many recognized advantages of Body by Fisher. This means not only attractive styling, handsome interiors and fine, modern appointments — hut also the safest, most durable body construction known — wood-and-stcel scientifically combined. And as for performance—remember that Chevrolet gives you a smooth, easy- running six-cylinder motor that develops fifty horsepower, yet operates tjcith less expense for gas, oil, tires and upkeep than any other car you can buy! When you get ready to buy a low-priced car, inspect the line of new Chevrolet Sixes now on display at your dealer's. Allred Chevrolet Co., Aberdeen, ,-N. C. Keith aiotor Co., Inc., Vass, N. C. t ALSO DEALERS IN CHEVROLET SIX-CYl.,NDER -„5. f. b.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 17, 1931, edition 1
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