Friday, October d, IdSl. _THE PILOT, a Paper Witfe Cnai^cter. Aberdeen^ North Carolina F^aragrapHs Page Fiv# Rally Day was observed in all de partments of the Community Church Sunday School on last Sunday morn ing with attractive programs and some increase in attendance, the lat ter reaching two hundred and twenty- four. Supt. W. P. Morton and his wide-awalce co-workers keep the at- attendance at a high mark the year ’round—so the feature ,of the day was the feeling that there was still impossessed territory which chal lenged every worker and offered Mrs. Marion Phillips and daughter, Mary Evelyn, are spending the week at Sedgefield Inn. Mrs. Laura \J. Beam is with her daughter, Mrs. E. B. Keith for an in definite stay; Mrs. Beam came the latter part of the week from New berry, S. C., where she had been vis iting her daughter, Mrs. Summer. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Thompson re turned Sunday from a week’s stay at Manteo, ,on Roanoke Islan3. Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Brown of Mont- fields for Christian social service [ clair, N. J., arrived in Pinehurst this week and are in their home “Whis pering Pines.” Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Stoller and lit tle daughter, Elizabeth of New Phil adelphia, Ohio, are the house guests of their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Senders at the Willow-Oaks Cot tage. Mr. and Mrs. Percy W. Thompson are back after spending the summer in the n,orth. Among the Pinehurst people at tending the Country Fair ^opening at Hemp on Tuesday were Dr. and Mrs. Frank T. Pinkerton and Dr. Clement Munroe. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tufts and son, Peter returned this week from during the trying winter months. The assembly of the school in the Broth erhood r,9om was particularly inspir ing. Special songs by the small chil dren brought the exercises to a close. The people of the community had a real treat this week in the classes which were conducted in the Com munity Church each evening from Monday through Friday by Claude T. Carr, Director of Religious Education in the Synod jof North Carolina. Mr. Car held similar classes here last year at which time the course of lec tures was based on “The Teacher,” and credits were awarded all who completed the course. “The Growth of Christian Personality,” a study of the pupil, was the text book used this | Lenox, Mass., where they spent the week. A very large class has taken ' past three months. advantage of this presentation <of child psychology by one unsurpassed in his line. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Stutts return ed Saturday from a ten-day motor trip to New York with stops along the Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Jellison and children, Marjorie and Buddy have returned after spending tTie summer in Bethlehem, N. H. Mrs. A. McN. Blue of Carthage was the guests of her sister, Mrs. E. way, including a visit with relatives In | b. Keith ,on Tuesday of this week. Fianklin, Va. ^ Mrs. Ethel Journey had as her and Mrs. Guy Pigford Journey nad as guests from Friday until Monday, her sister-in-law, Mrs. Cora Journey Green of Dallas, Texas. Mrs. Green had been in New York for some time and w'as en route to Columbus, Miss., Ritter spent Sunday with Miss Eliz-j abeth McDonald at N. C. C. W. Dr. ana ivirs. Lruy i^igford were week-end guests of friends in Wil- | mington. , Mr. and Mrs. Carey McD.onald, Miss Catherine Cole and Miss Ethel i Narrow Escape Eleven Thousand Volts of Electricity Loosed When Carolina Main ^ine is Cut Eleven thousand volts of elec tricity played around loose on the road between Aberdeen and Pine hurst near the Aberdeen Sand Company pits Sunday afternoon late when a boom of the big drag line equipment of the company fell across the main line of the Caro lina Power & Light Company, snapping it in two. Fortunately, although a large number of men were at work moving the drag line across the-highway, no one was in jured. Aberdeen and Pinehurst were thrown into darkness with their current shut off from the big plant north of Pinehurst, and Southern Pines was in semi dark ness, getting what light it could from its auxiliary plant until the main line had been repaired. The snapping of the line caused a burst of flame to shoot up from the highway and play about the drag line-equipment until the cur rent was grounded. Ralph Chand ler, manager of the Carolina Pow er & Light Company, states it was almost miraculous that no one was injured. Carolina Motor Club To Give Office Here Will Establish Branch Head quarters in Aberdeen To Serve Touring Public A. Kennedy of Mechanics Hill, who tive talc being used as a filler in oper^ed a gun factory near Hemp ; both the soap powder and the talcum on the old plank road which ran from powder. Stokes and Surry counties to Fayette- | “‘Outside” products on display is a ville. One *of the original board from furniture booth by the Carter Fum- this old road is also 200 shown. A pair iture Qo., of Sanford, whose radio 20 Boys Enroll as Boy Scout Nucleus Scoutmaster Backer Starts Work of Reorganizing Southern Pines Troop The Carolina Motor Club will open a permanent office in Aberdeen on or about December 12th, according to word received this week by Murdoch M. Johnson, president of the Aber deen Chamber of Commerce. This office will be for the purpose of serving road information, distri buting license plates and otherwise continuing the services rendered by | this organization to car owners throughout the Carolinas. The let ter received by Mr. Johnson from C. W. Roberts, president of the motor club, says: “This office should be very valuable to all patrons of Southern Pines and Pinehurst, and we will put posters out in both of those commun ities so as to attract them to our of fice in Aberdeen when they desire any kind of accurate travel information or Motor Club protection and services. “Our superintendent of branches, Mr. Huggins, will get in touch with you regarding the establishment of our office in Aberdeen some time in the 'near future,” the letter concludes. of spectacles 200 years old, a pow- brought in the World Series baseball der horn used during the War of 1812, i game. The Carthage Motor Co. is I a hat worn during the Civil War, a showing a spick and span, late model I 130-year old violin and a flax wheel j Ford. { bearing the date of 1816 are merely i The entertainment features of the I a few of the ,other relics on display. I fair are being taken care of by I W. N. Kidd of McConnell is pres- Gloth’s Greater Shows, with a ' good ent with a quantity of native ores collection of riding devices, midway collected in the vicinity, which he ^is shows and concessions. Free acts and confident contains gold, silver and a daily balloon ascension add the fin- copper in commercial quantities. Edwin A. West, the genial princi pal of Elise Academy, of Hemp is on hand extol the undoubted virtues of individualized instruction as prac ticed in this school. In very marked contract with the, exhibition of hand-wover linsey-wool-! excellence sey, is the display of the Pinehurst | ishing touches which make each day complete. This is Hemp^s first exhibition showing the resources and advantages of the community and Hemp “*has done herself pr,oud.” Those sponsor ing the fair are to be congratulated OLD DAYS DEPICTED BY HEMP FAIR EXHIBITS Silk Mills, whofee large manufacturing' PARENT-TEACHERS TO MEET plant is one of the main-stays ,of, IN ABERDEEN NEXT TUESDAY- Hemp. Their showing of multi-color-! ed thread and rayon weaves in beau- | There will be a meeting of the tiful designs is a most pleasing one. i Parent-Teachers Association at the An additional Moore coiftity prod uce ,on display is two brands of pa tented soap powder and a talcum pow der being manufactured at the talc High School Building in Aberdeen on next Wednesday afternoon, October 14th, at 3:30 o’clock, at which time matters of importance will be discuss- mines near Hemp by the Vandeur Co., | ed, and it is hoped that each and every of New York city and Hemp, the n^- i member will attend. (Continued from Page 1) After spending the summer in Mer edith, N. H-, Mrs. Albert Tufts and children have returned to join Mr. Tufts, %vho came down a few weeks earlier. Mrs. Charles W. Picquet and Mrs. W. L. Dunlop accompanied Mr. Pic quet and Mr. Dunlop to Charlotte‘on Tuesday, where the latter were mem bers of the Kiwanis quartette broad casting from Charlotte that evening. Mrs. Frank T. Eat,on arrived in Pinehurst this week after spending the summer in the north and has op ened her house, “Easton Log Cabin,” for the winter. Fay Fitzgerald returned this week from Bethlehem, N. H., where he spent the summer. returning to Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lyman have returned after spending the summer at Roaring Gap. On Friday evening at the Scout Hut, Troop No. 3 of Southern Pines held its first meeting with Scoutmaster Max Backer, following the plan to re organize. About twenty boys express ed their desire to build up the troop i and it is believed that there will be On Saturday evening a j,olly party | enough boys join in the next week or of young people enjoyed a marsh- mellow roast at Leavitt’s club house. Among the guests were the Misses Dorothy Jump, Minnie Laura Turn bull, Mary Alva Cloud, Idell and Es telle McKenzie, Clara Fascue, Cath erine Cole, Myrtrice Wicker, Roder ick Innes, Bob Lewis, Dwight Scot- ten, Bill G,ouger, Melvin and Frank McCaskill, Robt. Cagle and Floyd Medlin. Mr. and Mrs. Verner Z. Reed have returned from their summer spent at Newport, R. I. Dr. Henry Lewis Smith to Preach at Bethesda Home-Coming Oct. 18 President-Emeritus of Davidson and .Judge Shaw of Greens boro on the Program Dr Henry Lewis Smith, president- emeritus of Davidson College and Washington and Lee University, will be the m.orning preacher at the home coming celebration at Old Bethesda Church on Sunday, October 18th, the Rev. E. L. Barber announced this week. The afternoon preacher will be Judge Thomas J. Shaw of Greensbor,o, a ion of the old church and a broth er of Mrs. Robert N. Page of Aber deen. His brother, Dr. Angus Shaw of Charlotte, preached at last year’s home coming. An all-day program is being ar ranged f,or the big home coming at Moore county’s historic edifice on the heights overlooking Aberdeen. As is the custom, dinner, picnic fashion, ill be served on the grounds, and the public is cordially invited to attend and bring baskets of fo,od. Bethesda’s home coming is one of events of the year looked forward by residents of this section to horn the old church has meant s»o uf'h, not only to themselves but to :-'ir forebears. No church has play-1 a greater part in the life of the ommunity than this century-old so- ly, and it is dear to the hearts of Hundreds of families in Mojore and ad jacent counties. A more complete pro gram of arrangements for the day V'ill appear in next week’s issue of ' - e Pilot. 439 Killed August’s 58 Brings Year’s To tal N. C. Auto Death List Ahead of Year Ago Sixty-six persons, 24 of them pedestrians and 42 occupants, were killed in automobile accidents in North Carolina in August, bring ing the year’s total to 439, as com pared with 58 killed in August, 1930, and 429, or 10 less, for the same period last year. Seven of those killed were children playing in the streets. Nine of the drivers in 63 fatal acc^ents were children playing in the' streets. In addition to the 66 killed last month, 507 . were injured in the 349 accidents, 63 of which were fatal, records of the Motor Vehicle Bureau show. HACE HORSES ARRIVE FOR SEASON AT PINEHURST Rev. Wade Thompson Promoted by Church Pinebluff Pastor Elected District Superintendent of Methodist Episcopal Church The Rev. Wade H. Thompson, who has been pastor of the Pinebluff M. E. Church for the past two years, has been promoted to the office ,of Dis trict Superintendent of the Methodist two to bring the troop up to full roster. There is fine material registered which will provide leadership for the individual patrols, but it will take time to coordinate and develop the troop into what it was when it was the champion troop of Walter Hines Page Council in 1929, and 1930. The present task is to place each scout in his merited rank so as to be gin from some tangible starting point and build up from there. The troop was pleased at its first meeting to welcome Dr. Prizer as a visitor. The grown folks are always welcome at the scout meetings, says Mr. Backer, j Repairs have been made to the I Scout Hut under the leadership of a i committee composed of George Moore, i Ralph Chandler and Frank Buchan. A I number of scouts on Saturday morn- i ing went diligently at the atsk of j ing went dilligently at the task of I one looked sharp enough the chairman j of the above committee could be seen I busily saw’ing dead limbs from the) ! trees in front of the hut. I The meeting this week will be held j on Thursday evening at 7:30 in place I of Friday ,the regular night, to allow Scoutmaster Backer, who holds a state office in the American Legion, to attend the official welcome at Charlotte to National Commander Henry L. Stevens. line being responsible for a revival of the potter’s art in this section. Mr. ^ and Mrs. Busbee are untiring in their i H efforts to explain a bit of local his-1 ♦♦ t,ory attached to each particular item I jf on display. | || Among the more interesting of | ♦♦ these antiques are several old cards, | U spinning wheels and reels and a home- i H made hand loom more than 100 years old, on which the old time, hand-wov en cloth kn,own as linsey-woolsey is being made daily for the edification of the spectators. The original Eng lish linsey-woolsey was composed of a linen warp with a wool filling, hence ! II the name, but the Mo,ore county prod- 11| uct is made with a cotton warp and a : II wool filling, both grown in the vi- j || cinity. The entire process from raw! S material to finish cloth is demonstrat ed by elderly women of the commun ity who are thoroughly experienced in this almost forgotten art. Num bers of dresses, voluminous petti coats (antiques in themselves) and suits of men’s clothing, all made pf this old time material, according to the styles of another day, are on dis play. Many hand-woven coverlets and aged patchwork quilts, attractively arranged, serve as a background for the various ,other articles being ex hibited. Other items among the antiques include a display of old crockery, en tered by Mrs. J. A. Price, matron of the Quaker Children’s Home of Mc- Tlonnell, together \‘^ith a four-poster corded bed and a ladder-back chair. War Days Recalled An,other interesting relic of former times is a muzzle-loading rifle man ufactured prior to the Civil War by H ti Central Carolina Telephone Company Carthage—Pinehurst—Southern Pines annjunces kn offering of the Common Stock of its par ent company, the Associated Telephone Utilities Com pany, to its Subscribers and the public in general. This stock will be sold for cash or on a deferred payment plan, at any office of the company, at the market price, which is the previous day’s closing price on the Chicago Stock Exchange. Dividends are paid in common stock at the annual rate of 8 per cent of the number of shares owned on the 15th days of January, April, July and October. Financial information regarding company may be had on application at the office of the CENTRAL CAROLINA TELEPHONE COMPANY SOUTHERN PINES MINOR CIVIL CASES TO BE TRIED BY HUMBER (Continued from page one) tween the Bruce Ritter place and Lea- mon post office. It was ordered that the town of Hemp be allowed $25 per month for October, November and December as part payment for a special officer and deputy sheriff for the* town of Hemp, upon said officer’s taking the oath of office and posting an approved bond. Allowances for support were made as follows: C. H. Strickland $10 for support of three children of Dossie Mayo who is now serving a jail sentence; W. M. Mayo $10 for support of three chil- SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK Fine Percales, yard wide, attractive patterns, reg. 25c, special 19c Hollywood Prints, soft fine quality, regular 25c to 45c, special 25c Fast Color Silk Drapery Material, regular 89c, special 59c One special pattern in Colonial Cretonne,, (close out) 15c Colonial Drapery Cretonne, reg. 50c, special '35c Solid color and checked Outing Flannel, yard 10c Good quality Prints, yard wide, yard 10c One Special Lot Remnants, 1-2 PRICE Hoover Aprons and Uniforms, white or colors, special, 89c each. a At $10.9S Episcopal Church. Mr. Thomp son is a very able man and the peo-1 Qf Dossie Mayo who is now serv- ple of Pinebluff are glad to hear jail sentence; Mrs. Charles A. his pr.omotion and feel sure he will | Timberland $10; Bruce 18 i i ♦♦ ♦♦ A number of race horses have ar rived at the Pinehurst track for the Winter training and racing season, a arload belonging to Stacy Smith hav ing been unloaded this week. They •une down from the track at Lexing- on, Kentucky. Vivian Slocock has returned tt> P inehurst for the season, after spend ing the summer in Ireland. Racing, ^nd polo activities at the race are al- ready getting under way. be successful in his new work. Al though Pinebluff citizens hate to lose him and his family, they wish them happiness in their new- home and wel come the Rev. C. O. Newell, and fam ily, of Bessemer City who will take Mr. Thompson’s place. 300 INSURANCE MEN AT MEETING IN PINEHURST The North Carolina representatives of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company met at Pinehurst yesterday with some 300 representatives in at tendance. H Brady, Ritters township, $5 per month; Bose McNeill $4 per month; William J. Stuart, Spies, route 1, ^4 per month; and Mary Strickland near Cameron, $5 per month. An allowance of $5 to C. W. Brown, Sheffields township, was discontinued, On motion it was ordered that M. Schwartzman, Aberdeen, be allowed an expense bill of $18.00, Joe Daven- port, Asheboro, to Carthage jail. Mrs. i 5 Ida J. Blue of Vass route 1 was al- || lowed $27.98 for damage done by , H dogs to her turkeys, as per recommen-11| dations of appraisers appointed by the :l Board. ^ We are showing a special group of Ladies ’ Coats, all wool, good lining and interlined, fur trimmed or plain. Ladies’ and Misses' Dresses in silk or wool crepe, smart styles. ‘ Three-piece Knitted Suits. Two-piece Jersey Suits, smart combina tions. Taffeta or Satin Evening Dresses. At $6.95 Group of Children’s and Misses’ .Coats, fur trimmed or plain ... At $5.95 Misses' Dresses, sizes to 20, wool crepe or flat crepe, one or two piece styles, excellent values. n n ♦♦ n tt i &SLtVLrdiSL-y WE WILL HAVE SPECIAL DOLLAR DAY ITEMS IN EACH DEPARTMENT. THESE WILL BE SPECIAL FOR SATUR DAY ONLY. H n C. T. PATCH DEPARTMENT STORE Southern Pines, North Carolina r

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