Pag’e Two THE PILOT Published every Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated. Aberdeen, North Carolina NELSON C. HYDE, General Manager BION H. BUTLER, Editor JAMES BOYD STRUTHERS BURT RALPH PAGE Contributing Editors Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months .— 5^ Address all coirtmunications to The Pilot, Inc., Aberdeen, N. C. Entered at the Postoffice at Aber deen, N. C., as second-class mail mat ter. THE PILOT, a Paper With Character^b^een^^ Carolina Friday May l, 193^ OVERLOOKING A GOOD BET May be it may require the im- genuity of a genius to discover •how to capitalize one of our best assets, but now that the winter season has »pretty well closed in the Sandhills we have at our finger tips the possibilty of de veloping a spring season if we have the ability to turn it to ad vantage. Out of this fever of planting and decorating our roads and landscapes and homes •and gardens has suddenly flash ed on the communities the fact that here in the North Carolina sand barrens has been created one of the finest floral establish ments in the world. Some places have more extended examples of individual gardens, but few sections have a more extended and detailed community garden than in that area of which Pine- hurst, Knollwood, Southern Pines and Aberdeen are the vil lage centers. This territory has not only awakened to the gains from intensive planting of ev erything, but the highways as well as the village streets and lawns have come into project, and along with all that the own ers of large acreage of ground are encouraging the native wild growth, the pines, dogwoods, brilliant maples, the heaths and the various flowers of the swamps, until we have realized that all of nature around us is earnestly trying to regain that primal beauty that we allowed to escape us when the lumberman centered upon his campaign of desolation. cient to justify the visit to Moore County. We have this valuable asset, but we have not yet realized its gre^ worth. We made a noise about the peach blossom a few* years ago many people came from nearby points. But our broad, general floral exhibits that lasts for weeks, is so much bigger and more extensive that it is sufficient to justify much more advertising, and an intro duction to the people every where. The .trains now should be filled with excursionists from the North coming to see the Sandhills flower show that cov ers miles of country, and the highways should be lined with cars hurrying this way to bring people to enjoy the unusual spec tacle. A whole commuinty clad in flowers, roads, hilltops, lawns, valleys, swamps, everything a riot of color, a forest of endless charm. We are overlooking one of the best assets we possess, where we where it already is, and be sold without the competition of the new crop. Another step would lead to the thought that in- instead of making the new crop it might be pulled as soon as along far enough to show the berries, and thus save the work of ripening and harvesting. Or, other plans for preventing the GRAINS OF' SAND One of the reasons given for fail ure of the legislators at Raleigh to agree on means of raising revenue to provide a six months school term from State funds is the unpopularity of one Josephus Daniels with the lawmakers. Josephus through his growth of the crop might be in- . ^ Observer has been fighting troduced to save the work en- and nail for a luxury tax. Of tailed. j no one wants a luxury tax, but then no one wants any tax, and it may be that a luxury tax will be found the most expedient, the least objectionable of all the plans evolved. And a luxury tax would have been passed long before this were it not for Josephus’ support, we ^re told. There is reason for Mr. Daniels’ unpopularity. No one likes a dictator in a democracy. This same proposition was carried far enough to intimate that some cotton could be burn ed to advantage. But ultimately some philosopher will propose to curtail the crop that has not yet been grown rather than to de stroy the one that has been made and then make another. However, it is not certain that such a scheme would be favor ably received. To refrain from making another crop is too pos itive to be popular. And prob ably the man who might be ask ed to burn the surplus cotton he m a long time is about the fellow who’d stinted and saved until he had a thousand dollars salted away. His uncle was well along in years and was going to leave him another thousand, and he figured with two thousand dollars and the aid of the mortgage company he could build his own home at last. Uncle died. Left him the thousand dollars, in stock in a bank, pie stock was duly transferred to him; then the bank failed. Stockholders were assessed 100 per cent of their holdings, in accordance with law, and our friend lost his inheritance and the thousand dollars he had saved. Beat that one. should make the most of it and | has already on hand might file profit immensely. THE LESSON OF PENDER’S HOUSE In going to the country to build his house L. E. Pender has interpreted the future. This is a territory of room, and attrac tive home sites in the vicinity of the villages. Mr. Pender has approximately a hundred acres of ground a couple of miles from Pinehurst, and not quite so far from Southern Pines. He wants the charm of the space about him. He does not like the circumscribed dimensions of the village lot, and the phonograph or the radio of the next neigh bor, and the dialog that floats in from the house just beyond the line fence. Why should he? Why should anybody limit his boundary to 50x100 feet, and compel himself all of his life to back out of the garage and turn in the street? Five or ten or twenty acres outside of town costs but little more than half an acre in town, and gives so much more free dom and space for indjividual action. It gives infinitely more opportunity to make a house an objection. Actually burning his own cotton is 'one thing, and not the same as burning anoth er fellow’s surplus. And there is the impossibility in the story. If coffee or cotton or any other thing is destroyed to les sen the supply on hand some body has to lose the amount de stroyed. It is like paying taxes in that we are all willing to make the other fellow the goat, but never ourselves. The alter native is to face the situation, and if there is a surpilus so great that buyers will not take it and pay for it we have to sell it for what they will pay, and suf fer the loss ourselves. Always it is to be remembered the buyer has the last word. He can buy or raise, and he can refuse if the price is not satisfactory. Quantity makes the price, and the seMer can make the price only by improving quality or lessening the quantity. And high price always increases quantity, as low price lessens it in due season. SPEAKING OF THE WEATHER Chief Beasley of Southern Pines took a little of his own medicine last week. The officer of the law drove his car to Salisbury to appear against the so-called “Boll Wee'vil” gang, and The story is, of course, that Jo sephus wants to be the next Gov ernor is playing to the people, let j parked in front of the Courthouse. the corporation chips fall where they | When he came out he found a tag jYiay. * j dangling from the steering wheel. He jhad violated parking regulations. What Josephus fails to take into ! consideration in his apparent theory ; “The Aberdeen Hotel has changed of life is the important element of ; hands. Get a story about it,” we told pleasure. He would tax our motion pictures, one of the few joys we have in the sticks; he would tax our coca colas until the “pause that re freshes” loses its refreshment; he would tax our smokes to the point of breakinig the Camel’s back. And of course anything containing more than a fraction of one percent of alcohol one of our reporters the other day. “That isn’t news. Boss,” he said. “It changes hands every week.” They’re having a great squabble in Southern Pines over their new Recorder’s Court. It’s only a few weeks old. Why don’t they give it a try and see how it works before is entirely out of the question. We condemning it? The voters will decide are given a bit to wonderment as to the question next Tuesday, what Brother Daniels would leave us by way of amusement. We write editorials all the time. can’t Daylight saving went into effect in the north last Sunday. They are going to save something up there, if The saddest story we have heard it’s only daylight. The bridle path has found the beauty of the low trail around the swamp edges and having led folks in that quarter tliey ore recognizing the many interesting plants growing there in profus ion. In the older days the roads climbed to the hill tops to be on dry ground. Now they j^re droppinor to the valley to be a- j have. On the mong the luxuriant flower and shrubbery shows. The swamps down on that level keep the roadside planted. This supple ments the planting going on a- long the road? higher on the ride'Gs. and helps to make the entire Sandhills an extended dream of floral perfection. Few places in the whole Unit ed States have such a spectacle to present to an appreciating audience. But for some reason v/e have not counted the spring flower show in our assets and charms to be included in inform ation distributed to folks who might be interested in knowing about the charm of the Sand hills. May is the month folks ought to be coming this way for their short outings. If they knew the delights of a week or two or three weeks on the golf courses here at this season, and on the roads, and on the bridle paths and on the footpaths, and how excellent the roads are that lead to Moore county, and the good roads that gridiron the county, it is reasonable to sus pect that hotels and sports and the community life could be con tinuing their activity for six weeks yet. You can always talk about the that fits the ground, and that | weather and the fashions and can surround itself with the the people, and nobody holds you sort of trees and shrubbery that to task for what you say because make a landscape rather than a hedge to shut out the next fellow’s back yard. Ground is abundant and so much is said by everybody else that no one pays attention to what you say. One day a chap coming down street during a cheap—so far. But it will not brisk rain said to a man he met. alw’ays be so. Not always can the man seeking a home location ‘Nice day.” The other assented, ‘Yeh, not bad.” The philosopher salutation on NEW RECORDER’S COURT long enough for us to decide whether ! I or not the Court was necessary. But Editor, The Pilot: anther bill was drawn up and present- Several people have suggested that ed to our Legislator and passed, through the columns of your paper amending the charter of Southern I state my reasons for being opposed Pines, making our next election not to the Recorder’s Court Bill as pass- one year hence but two years in the ed by the Legislature now in session, .future. Some have intimated that my oppo- , I believe that a judicial office sition was based on political purposes. ! should be an elective office. I have Let me assure you in the beginning no fight against our present Recorder; that I have no such reasons, and on the other hand I have the highest I have no political aspirations what- admiration for him, but I think it is ever, but, as a citizen and tax payer, my right and privilege to vote for a I feel that I have the right and priv- man for a position of this kind rather ilege to oppose any particular , than have him appointed, measure which I feel will not be for We have a County Recorder who is the best interest of our town and paid around $2,000 per year to try community. I do not believe in the every case that should come before a criticisms of a measure without of- i Recorder. We also have a salaried To Breed Quail In Historic Horseshoe Section of County Julian Bishop of New York and W. R. Heree of Detroit Be hind Game Farm Horseshoe section of Moore county near Carthage, scene of many Revo lutionary skirmishes between the Tories and the Patriots, and birth place of Governor Williams, one of the early North Carolina chief exe cutives is to he the scene of the es tablishment of a commercial game farm by John Willcox, clerk of the Moore county superior court, Julian Bishop, of New York, and W. R Pierce, of Detroit, Mich. The project starts off with the blessings and en couragement of Governor Q. Gardner, Col. J. W. Harrelson, chief of the Bureau of Conservation and Development, and Charles England State game warden. The farm will be in charge of Mr. Pierce, for twenty years a breeder of commercial game, and native quail will be bred for purpose of stocking state and private game preserves. Wild turkeys will be later tackled. Mr. Pierce has already moved to the Horseshoe Camp, and with the assist ance of Ed Fry, Carthage hunter and guide and custodian of the camp, is getting everything in readiness to start the venture, which, it is believed will mean much to that section. Quail sell for $8 to $10 a pair. As Mr. Pierce says that he is confident that he can raise 2,500 pair a year i without any assistance, the tremen dous possibilities of commercial game breeding are readily grasped. “And by taking on a few hands,” Mr. Pierce said, “I believe I can raise all of the quail that we can profitably market. The Horseshoe .section ii ideal for game breeding purposes, and I am delighted over our prospects.” Messrs. Wilcox, Bishop and Pierce called on Governor Gardner, Col. Har relson and Warden England last week and were given every assur ance of state cooperation in their venture. They were told they could count on the State Department of Conservation and Development to take about all the birds they could hope to raise the first year or two and Mr. England said there was a market right now for twenty thousand na tive quail. To begin, with, Mr. Pierce plans to set eggs, which he will procure from other breeders, under bantam hens, and will thus have a sizeable bunch of birds, if all goes well, by the lat ter part of the summer, or early fall. SCORES MOURN DEATH OF BENJAMIN D. CAVINESS have the pick of a small tract j tried the same ^ ^ t i. n n 4. r, 1 • that will give him the topog- another pedestrian, with the re- ® I shall County Prosecuting Attorney who is raphy and the neighborhood ! loiner, “For ducks and fish and | my objections fust and my sug- paid a salary to prosecute every case and the roads and the trees and ^ that kind of cattle.” He tried it!^®^ the shrubs that he would like to again on old Doc Strawbridge, acreage in the who had a thinker of his own country he can designate the | and Doc looked at him with that kind of house he wants, for with ! i^laring stare of his and said, much ground to put it on he can choose the type of house that v/ill harmonize with differ ent locations and then take the location that suits. Mr. Pender has begun a .job that is making not only a home but a home that is artistic and that takes advantage of all the things nature and human intel- licrence have afforded the man who wants to get a roof over his in the County that should go before I believe I have the distinction of ^ Recorder. This Court in Carthage, being the first person to go before ^ told, nevei takes more than our Board of Town Commissioners days per week to try all the opposing the fee system for our offi- coming under its You’re a dum liar or a dum'cers. At that time I told our Mayor Jurisdiction, and most of the time, I fool.” I and Commissioners that I believed f told, they dispose of their work Some sage has counted the | we were paying our policemen a sal- one day. rainy days and says we have >ry large enough and that they should Court here in Southern Pines had rain every consecutive Sat-| not, in my opinion, get an extra fee prove to be self-sustaining, it urday for eleven weeks. This is for making an arrest or summoning a $1,200 per not in that class of information witness, and that their activities, in ^ correctly inform- that Horace Greely catalogued . my opinion, should be confined to the salaries are $75.00 per month as “important if true.” Where- city limits of Southern Pines unless | Recorder and $30.00 per month for fore a majority of people will a crime was committed inside the i ^ portion of that agree that the winter just pass- icity limits and it was necessary for j as I stated before, should go ed has been one of the m -^st ' them to go outside of the city lim- i County Court fund. And we head. He has set an examp>le I a^^^able recalled in this sec-j its to apprehend the criminal. Beyond a peradventure no six weeks of the year is more de- ligihtful in the Sandhills than those just in sight. Winter is a time when folks come this way partly to escape the rigors of the disaerreeable weather of the North. But May is a time when this country has so much that is pleasant to offer that it v/ould be worth leaving anything in May or June in the North eo en joy what is offered here now. Everything that is attractive in winter here is attarctive now. All the sports can be enjoyed In addition the marvelous May and June weather are worth a few weeks in floral paradise, the flower show alone being suffi- that deserves to be followed, an exampile of a harmonious loca tion for a house, and a house that belongs where he puts it. That is a thing that should be studied more than it is, making the house and the location fit, and both fit all the surround ings. This house is worth much study in this respect. It fits the location, the neighborhood, the place under the hilll away from the road, the field in front, the pines across the valley, and it supplements the more preten tious buildings in the villages and emphasizes that it is a coun try place of modest ambition, but one that embellishes its community by its simpllicity and excellent taste in everything that accords with its simplicity. A CURIOUS PHILOSOPHY An odd suggestion comes from some wise man who proposes that with the excess amount of coffee in Brazil it would be wise to burn a large quantity of it to reduce the am^ulnt an hand. Maybe it did not occur to him that it would be as simple to lay away until harvest the sur plus now on hand, and then in stead of burning what is laid away burn in the field what comes to be harvested, which would permit the present sur plus to come Qn the market, tion. Yet if we will all study the weather records we will discov er that comparing one year with another there is but little dif ference in the main. A few more cold days, a few more warm days, the heat and cold differ ently distributed, more of one in January, more of the other in February, but about the same Some time later the Mayor and Commissioners appointed a Mayor pro tem which, to my mind, was a good arrangement, but I am told they questioned the legality of such a procedure, and decided to have a Recorder’s Court instead. Our Sena- must understand that if our County Recorder’s Court is not self-sustaining it must be paid for by the taxpayers of Moore county, of which we are a part. Therefore I would suggest, if we must have a Recorder’s Court in Southern Pines, that we have an Act of Legislature, if necessary, to have ^ , our present County Recorder hold tor, . M. Johnson of Aberdeen, told court one day per week in Southern me that the first bill sent him by pines, bringing with him our County totals within a few degrees j called for a Record- Prosecuting Attorney. There are sev- when the end of winter comes ree mi es eyon ,eral county wide advantages to this as when the end of winter comes; that’s about the way weather runs. The records say the tem perature for the four months of this year was just about the av erage, and the rainfall about an inch short monthly for the four months. But being that near an s jurisdiction three miles beyond g^al county wide advantages to this our city limits. He refused, he tells ! i gee it. me, to pass this bill, and another bill j Right’ here let me say that in my was sent him making the city limits j opinion, Howard Burns, City Clerk, is of Southern Pines the limit for the j g very valuable man for the Town of Recorder s jurisdiction of Southern ^ Southern Pines—so valuable, I think Pines. He had this bill passed, not ’ knowing there was a State law giv- said town. One of my objections is, that the people living within that district out- average it is seen to be a right i® pleasant winter, which our win- ^0“^ jurisdiction for five ters, taking them from fall to corporate limits of spring, usually prove to be. It was a nice winter, and a magni ficent spring. May be it has rained a little too much, but we limits will never have are a little short of normal rain fall. Maybe ic has been a little wet to plant com, but the i concurrent with the purisdic- ground is a little dry for the i County Recorder, but as springs and the streams. May- ' any voice in the personnel of our tion is concurrent with the jurisdic- be a lot of things, but some other fellow sees too much where some of us see too lit tle. Yet it is a delightful spring. Tt has been a fine winter, and taking all the years and all the way through, and we have the average weather, which is of a satisfying type. I understand it, they have no voice where they will be tried, it being left to the officers making the arrest and the magistrate within- this limit. Another reason that I object to this bill is that it provides for an election in May to decide whether or not we will have such a Court, aiTd that de cision stands until our next election. It seems to me that if we are taking this Court on trial, one year would be that his whole time should be given to town matters. And I do not think he should hold a Recorder’s Court clerks position hatting to do with cases originating out of Southern Pines, making it necessary for a tax payer, who wants to see him an bus iness, to have to be compelled to wait until Court adjourns to transact bus iness with him. For our local judicial government I would suggest that if the Mayor does not want to try the cases, that he and his Board of Commissioners have the Governor or the Legislature either appoint a magistrate, that they will nanJfe, to try all eases coming un der a mayor’s jurisdiction. Our city government then would have our lo cal situation well in hand. Trusting that I have made my posi tion clear in the matter I am, Yours very truly, —P. FRANK BUCHAN. On Tuesday at 12 o’cock, April 21, 1931 the soul of a Confederate vet eran and prominent citizen, Benjamin D. Caviness passed away from this world into the great beyond at his home in Moore County near White Hill. He was only sick for a short time and all was done for him that medical aid and loved ones counld do. Mr. Caviness served in the Civil War- and had he lived until next August he would have been 88 years old. He was a farmer and made his way by the sweat of his brow and kept active un til the last sickness. Few possess the many good qualities that did Mr. Caviness. As a neighbor and friend he was unexcelled and was never too busy or ,two tired to render aid to one in need. His death will be mourn ed by all who knew him. This was at tested by the vast throng of friends that surrounded his last resting place and the many costly floral offerings that were placed on the mound by ten der hands. Funeral services were held from Center M. E. Church Wednesday at 3 p. m. by his pastor, the Rev. J. H. Buffalo. He was a member and stew ard of that church and a man of the old faith and school The choir led by J. M. Tyson, of Vass, softly rendered, “Safe In the Arms of Jesus,” “Sweet Bye and Bye” and “Shall We Gather at The River.” The Rev. Mr. Buffalo, then spoke highly -and touching of the life of Mr. Caviness. The body was laid to rest by the side of his wife and children who preceded him to the grave. The surviving children are Mrs. Maie Gil more, Lakeview, W. B. Caviness, Leesburg, Va., A. B. Caviness, Ashe- boro, J. E. Caviness, Lakeview and W. D. Caviness, Aberdeen. Flower bearers were granddaught ers of the deceased. Active pallbearers were Milton Cox, W. M. Wicker, Jasper Childress, C. N. Fields, E. B. Harrington and W H. Jackson. Honorary pallbearers were J H. Sal mon, Turner Smith, J. D. Smith. Tom Cameron, D. T. Harrington, A. McLeod, J. L .Rice, C. E. Pleas ants, Aberdeen, M B. Pleasants, Aberdeen, W. J. Harrington, Car thage, W. J. Wadsworth, Carthag-> Dock Layne, Sanford, and Jack Muse of Carthage.