Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Sept. 25, 1931, edition 1 / Page 7
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1,1, „iu} lilj||i^9pippp!imp^pv ,u. I. ii!,iiiim«ijpj, ...I... ,11 Priday, September 25, 1931. THE PILOT, a Paper With Character, Aberdeen, North Caroliiia Pa ere Seve« Pinehurst A. B. SALLY CONTRACTOR Estimates furnished on request Phone 4291 ABERDEEN BUILDING AND LOAN ASSO. New Series Opens September BE THRIFTY—JOIN PICKLER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS PINEBLUFF, N. C. >uthern iPines, E. V. PERKINSON General Contractor Telephone 5033 North Carolina HIGHLAND HARDWARE HOUSE SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Everything in Hardware state distributors for Petro and Nokol Oil Burners. H. H. H. H. H. H. L, V. O’CALLAGHAN ~ Plumbing and Heating Contractor SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Electrol and Williams Oil-O-Matic Oil Burners Frigidaire Mastoker C. J. SIMONS Electrical Contractor SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. General Electric Wiring System C. L. AUSTIN GENERAL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER License No. 783 SOUTHERN PINES, N. C. Phone 5935 COLIN G. SPENCER Building Stone and Lumber CARTHAGE, N. C. SANFORD SASH AND BLIND COMPANY ' Sash, Doors, and General Millwork Phone 28 Sanford, N. C. SOUTHERN PINES WAREHOUSES, INC. EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER Telephone 7131 Truck Delivery M. H. FOLLEY LUMBER YARDS Lath, Plaster, Millwork, Builders’ Supplies ABERDEEN, N. C. SOUTHERN PINES BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION SERIES ALWAYS OPEN HELPS YOU SAVE § 8 u Weymouth Heights Southern Pines, N. C. Southern Pines is a progressive village, with progres sive public officials. Its Board of Town Commissioners, Chamber of Commerce, Civic Club and Park commission, are all aggressive in their ambitious park project, which not only includes the villrge ar^a, but reaches out into the surrounding neighborhood. Weymouth Heights is the extension of the park project, several hundred acres of home lawns and roads and drives being planted and landscaped by skilled en gineers, and tied in with the general parking scheme that starts with the village main streets and continues out toward that great natural forest w*hich shelters the big military reservation of Fort Bragg. The fort is pushing forward in its scheme of development, and day by day fortifies its flank of improvement on the east side of Weymoutb. Fort Bragg is one of the greatest assets of the Southern Pines section. Its vast range of many thous and acres is the extended picture that lies out to the east of Weymouth, a panorama for the front windows of every Weymouth home on the east slope of .Weymouth Ridge. For a home location on Weymouth consult s. B. RICHARDSON Real Estate Southern Pines. North Carolina Sandhills Building and Real Estate Activities Good Time to Build If Money Is Handy Prices of Building Materials Are Down to Tempting Point “It’s a pretty good time to build now, if a man has money,” said El sie Keith, of the Pinehurst Lumber Yards. “Prices are down to where they ought to be tempting. Lumber that sold for $27, for instance, can be had now for $16, and other things are in proportion. Brick is down to where a man can almost name his own pi ice for taking them away, and workmen can be hired for ordinary jobs of building and repairing at a price that ought to stimulate fixing up atid repairing homes all over the country.” The new school house for the col ored folks at Pinehurst is an illustra tion of the cheaper building that is possible. The Tayloitown building was a revelation to contractors, but those who seem to be familiar with conditions as they exist at the pres ent say the contractors who secured the job will have a sufficient margin over what they will probably have to pay to do a satisfactory piece of work. The farmer who has a little building that needs to be done, the village home-owner, or the man who has a big job in sight, will find this an oppoitune time to tackle his prop osition, if, as Mr. Keith modifies his statement, he has the money. Lakeview Property Reverts to Barber LHJ nous* Pattern 321 ADD TWO ROOMS TO THE HOUSE Estate and Lessees Compromise Differences.—Mrs. Wilson Granted Divorce A term of Superior Court for the trial of civil cases opened in Car thage Monday with Judge T. B. Fin ley, presiding. No cases of outstand ing public interest are on the docket for the week. A case in which the plaintiffs were Edward J. Barber and Oakley Wood, executors of the James Barber Estate, and the defendants, Henry L. Graves and W. W. Miller, was compromised. This case was in connection with the Lakeview property. The terms of the compromise are that the defendants be removed from and the plaintiffs be put in possession of this property, the idefenda'nts having paid 'the rental and damages agreed upon and the costs. U. L. Spence was attorney for the A NICE little apartment for two is great stuff; but a nice little home for two is greater stuff. Hop in the auto or go out to the end of the car line, and find a small lot surrounded with fresh air. Take your sav ings, get a plan of a house-for-two, and go to a financial agency where you will get co operation, valuable advice and a square deal. Try your building and loan or your banker. Get the dope on real estate values, future sales possibilities, commissions to pay, and everything. Owning a home is the best recommenda tion any married man can have. And espe cially is this so if the home is a small one. House No. 321 was designed for apart- ment-ites. It is an apartment under its own roof. It is a complete small unit, including space for the automobile. The kitchen is extra long to include a dining space in one end. The one bedroom is large, and is separated from the other rooms by a small hall. Off the rear end of the living room is a terrace over looking the garden. Future expansion is suggested by the architect. The plans show how two bedrooms and a dining room can be realized if later additions are desired. The house is planned on simole lines and ornamentation has been eliminated. Cost of construction will be min imum, and even the usual cellar can be left out. Heating can be accomplished in a num ber of satisfactory ways without putting the heater in a basement. The living room cl course has a nice open fireplace, and the out side chimney is the house’s main architec tural feature. The front entrance has a satis- fjdng individuality. Complete building plans and specifications are available for this house for $1.00. In cluded with the plans is a cardboard cut-out model of the house, architecturally drawn to scale. The model can be colored, and it will visualize for you exactly what the completed house will look like. Address your requests for plans and model to the editor of this paper, LHJ House Pattern Number 321. In I liji I -H > C AH. AGE ^^DININQ KlTCHtNjyj [CF] wO LlVING’T^OOM T6nniS Tourncv To Thanksgiving turkey shoot at the • grow. If necessary, sprinkle the ^ jy ‘ field trials with the lawn each afternoon just before sun- ijp611 fepOrtS A rO^frS-Itl dogs, the Christmas goose shoot, the' down. ^ races and events at the track, etc. On j It is important that the seed be Pinehurst Activities to Follow ^ December 19 the New Holly Inn will | kept moist until they germinate and Closely Opening of the Car- open, followed by the Pine Needles on i to water the young grass frequently. olina Oct. 26. With the Kiwanis convention at January 23, other hotels in the in terim. plaintiffs and W. Duncan Matthevfs beginning October 21 the SIMPLE SUGGESTIONS FOR °EmiIy yVilson was granted an and the MAKING A WINTER LAWN absolute divorce from N. F. Wilson,, spring of 1932 |unofficially > opens, and Louise Chandler won in her suit' the official opening taking place Oc- I" Practically every section of the for divorce from Harrell Chandler. A great part of Tuesday and Wed nesday were taken up with a case in which George Hilliard of Vass was suing the Standard Oil Company for damages arising from a leakage in a gasoline tank near his well which rendered the water unfit for use. The case was finally thrown out. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS South it is possible to maintain beau tiful green lawns throughout the win- I ter and the preparation of the win- arriving wmter. The Kiwanians will' , . . , 1 ^ ter lawn is simple. tober 26 when the Carolina is ready to receive the regular business of the If your soil is of the heavily packed clay type, and raking in the seed is impracticable, or where watering can not conveniently be done every day, cover the seed with a thin coating of soil; about 1-8 inch will be sufficient. You will find the simple method de scribed here an inexpensive way to make a beautiful winter lawn. have things pretty much for them- The following transfers of real es tate have been recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Moore county. I). A. McLauchlin and wife to Fan nie E. Handon: property near Nia gara. R. L. Ring and wife to W. T. Ring and wife: land in McNeill township. A. D. McLauchlin and wife to Thomas Ring: property in McNeill township. John Thomas McKeithen and wife to T. A. Ring: property in McNeill township. In the early fall, mow the grass on HIGHLAND LODGE OPENS selves during their stay, and by the er„^„ent lawn closely and re !'i iriCkH rnoir* \71G1t time they have concluded their visit and their work and their play the regular register will open. A good delegation of members is scheduled With the beginning of Autumn comes the announcement of the open ing of Highlan<l Lodge, Southern Pines, for the season of 1931-32. This is Mrs. Grearson’s fourteenth year of attractions appeal to^ the men who | lightly, and soak down ownership and management and the thoroughly. The seed and soil must be kept moist until the grass starts to move the clippings. Apply a complete plant food evenly on the surface, us ing four pounds (two quarts) per ^ 100 square feet. Then sow winter for the gathering, as the Pinehurst, ^^^e constitute the Kiwanis organization. After their delegates and friends have returned to their homes the Monday following their departure will witness the beginning of the fall sports. The 8th Midsouth Tennis Tournament is on the cards for the week, supplemented by archery, a tar get tourney at the traps, women’s putting contest and the rifle range on different days of the week. Polo will begin at the week-end. Following along throughout the season the usual program of swiftly succeeding events will follow, the Sandhill Polo Club with its twice-a-week games, the house has steadily risen in patron age and popularity. Directors I. C. Sledge Walker Taylor, Jr. O. H. Stutts H. D. Vail R. S. Tufts Walker Taylor A. P. Thompson J. F. Taylor RESIDENCE BOILER INSURANCE Provides at reasonable cost indemnity for injury to persons and damage to property resulting from explo sion, also, for replacement of cracked or fractured sec tions when no explosion occurs. Cast iron boilers fre quently crack when not in use. The periodic inspections by competent Boiler Engi neers, another service extended with this form of in surance, assures more economic operation and longer life of boilers. Unnecessary delay in making repairs is also eliminated. Rates quoted on request. n ♦♦ ♦♦ : ♦♦ ♦♦ 1 it ♦5 ' ** ; ♦♦ ♦♦ I ♦♦ i a ♦♦ i n I* ^ zz *• II .. ^ 1 tt tx ♦♦ I tl PINEHURST LUMBER YARDS Pinehurst, N. C. Fall Time has come, and V/inter is in Sight. To protect against the cold nothing gives as good values as CELOTEX--The Great Insulator Celotex holds the heat, and does not conduct the cold in from the outside. Celotex cuts down your heating bills, and it pro tects you in summer against the outside 'heat. Another shipment of Celotex is on the road, for this material has been moving out at a seasonal gait, one job taking several hundred dollps’ worth, both for insulating purposes and for plastering uses. Celotex has growTi faster in popular favor than almost any other new product that has come out in recent years, and one of the points in its popularity is the ease with which it is applied. Any man handy w*ith a saw and hammer can fix his attic, or line an ordinary room. It is useful in the country as well as in the town. MID-SOUTH INSURANCE AGENCY 11 PINEHURST LUMBER YARDS tt •« L. L. Gardner, Manager Pinehurst, N. C. tmi T I 1 a ** i 11 it Pinehurst, N. C.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1931, edition 1
7
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