Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Sept. 16, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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
Patfe Two THE PILOT, Aberdeen and Southern Pines, North Carolina Friday, September 16, 1932. THE PILOT Published every Friday by THE PILOT, Incorporated. Aberdeen and Southern Pines, N. C. NELSON C. HYDE. Managing Editor BION H. BUTLER, Editor JAMES BOYD STKUTHERS IJURT RALPH PAGE Contributing Editors formation would make clear what the government is under taking to do, and in the only manner possible. The money loaned to big business is perhaps as well illustrated in the sum placed in the hands of the Penn sylvania Railroad recently. Noth ing is given to the railroad com pany, but a sum of money is loaned, and to be repaid with in terest. To give money to the small man in that way would be impractical, for the government Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 vvould not recover its gift. That Three Months f>0 is one of the impossible things Addr„s .11 communication, to The 1 complained of Another l*ase Pilot. Inc., Aberdeen. N. C. .‘"./he case I ot the loan to the railroad the Entai-ed at the Postoffice at Aber-: purpose is to build some cars. deen, N. C., as second-class mail mat-1 The entire sum allotted to the ter. I company for this purpose will be -jp;n'd out for hire of hands, pur- ANI) WH\T DOES jchase of material, which means plicate the many sales taxes zation of a league, and those re- and five small spirits whose names with a camouflage that leads us sponsible for carrying out the no one knows. Hans Christian Ander- to Ihink some one else than our-!project so successfully. The eight son might have concocted such a rec- selves pays the taxes. Mr. Smith thirks we \yill have/to come out into the open, lay an unscared genuine direct sales tax and get money to pay our high operat ing government costs, or else re duce taxes and run government more economically. As economy teams, repi'esentini'- Aberdeen, ipe. Cameron, Carthage, Pinehurst, j “The Donkey of God” is the guide Southern Pines, Thomastown, j book of ones heart's desii-e, for its Vass-Lakeview and West End, j distills the essence, the heart and feel- went through the season with- >ng of a place thru imaginatively out squabbling, something rare I dramatizing its spirit, in a newly organized amateur i Louis Untermeyer, the distinguished ball league. And to top off the i and critic and famous antholo- in government has not t)een | schedule, two teams fought off i gist may, if he is not very careful, looked on as possible by many ! a tie for t'he championship in a I find his already sufficiently impres- people the outlook is thought by i three-game series which kept|sive reputation eclipsed by his new Mr. Smith to be a real sales tax j the excitement at fever pitch with no fringes or appendages, j to the bitter end. I We congratulate the Sandhill THE NEW BASEBALL American Legion, LEAGUE j which set the lea^'ue in motion, jthe league officials who kept it Baseball did a lot for the j on a high plane, and the players Sandhills this summer. When who maintained their equili- SEABOARD’S AUGUST RECORD A total of 98.8 per cent of the 2,- 568 passenger trains operated by th® Seaboard Air Line Railway during the month of August arrived at their destinations on time, H. E. Pleasants, Division Passenger Agent, announces. one as a teller of tall tales to small listeners. FREEMAN & SLOAN Undertaking — Embalming Ambulance Service Day Phone 7 Night Phone 22-J ABERDEEN IT ALL SIGNIFY? i the hire of the hands that make _ • , • , .lit, and in the end the whole Two main highwajs crossing , each other. One car coming down the road titty miles an contributes to their construction. Another cutting across, not so company gets none of'the fast, driver said to be half sous- money. It gets the cars. The ed. Perfect contact. One cai j money goes to those who build rtrtiinrV»4- + ri csQilrvl* ‘ .-i i t ,i times are bad and the hours dragjbrium throughout the tensity of folks need diver^^ion, and the' a close race. The public owes Moore County League games them all a vote of appreciation furnished it, with a full measure!for the entertainment they fur- of excitement throughout the i nished through the dull summer season. ! months. May the league spring Thanks are due the origina-i back into life next summer, with tors of the plan for the organi-i equal vigor and success. Court House News caught where the sailor says amidships, where the dressmak er says waist line. Caught as ac curately as a surveyor could lo cate the equator. W'reck delight fully perfect. Also complete. The other car magnificent solar plexus blow'. Engine split to them, and those who do the work are the small men the crit ics hold up as the victims be cause the money is loaned to the railroad company instead of be ing given out in driblets to the small man. The money loaned to the railroads will be paid out GRAINS OF' SAND This is the week Papa has been dig- .«ay,s Arthur Brisbane. The University ging aown in his pocket for school of Southern California discovers that books. And the diggin’ comes kinda subscribers to newspapers buy from hard this year, eh, boys? twelve to twenty-one per cent more merchandise from local stores than Well, we’ve got to educate ’em.l non-.«ubscribcrs. According to the un- Marriage License Issued A marriage License has been issued from the office of the Register of Deeds of Moore county to Dr. C. A. McManus and Mrs. J. Irene Campbell, both of Hemp. They’re the best investment in sight iver.'^ity’s investigation, business would i property in Greenwood township. Mrs. M. M. Furr to L. .A. Furr, property in Greenwood township. turns later on. fragments, transmission recalls; cars will be plac- mince pie or hash. Drivers casu-; operation w’hen built to . alties, possibly^ funerals by move inoney, and men will; right now^ and the more we learn twenty-five per cent smaller with time this is printed. Apparently , employed in operating the !'eni, the better the prospects for re-|f*^t newspaper advertising, every trick was taken. And what a magnificent movie picture es-1 caped because the camera man did not know in advance. At the crossing of two main highways, remember. W’hisky, indifferent recklessness in driv- Real Estate Transfers The following transfers of real es tate have been recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds oC Moore county; Mrs. M. M. Furr to John W. Furr: property in Greenwood township. Mrs. ;\I. M. Furr to Mary L. E. I Furr; property in Greenwood town ship. rs. M. M. Furr to Carrie Jane Med- lin, property in Greenwood township. Mrs. M. M. Furr to Joe M. Furr, ^^^tnsBsinsnsL Will be in his office over the Post Office, Sanford, N. C., every Wednesday, fr,om 10:00 a. m. to 3:00 p. m. Don’t fail to see him if your eyes are weak. The that earnings from are built will the pay I Mrs, AI. M. Furr to Rosa Furr Gar-1 Charlie Picquet in a heart-to-heart i ""'•> P^P^'-ty i" C.reenWood tou-nship. j wages and also afford money to | Aberdeen and Southern Pines have talk with a friend the other day re- repay the government for the | new schoolmasters this year. They ’11 marked: “Folks say Fm a darn poor. Greenwood township. | Mrs. M. M. Fuir to Bertha Furrl Agnes Derothy’s Btsuty Shoppe All Branches of Beauty Work Also Carry a Full Line of GALVE PREPARATIONS Over Broad Street Pharmacy Phone 5131 Southern Pines, N. C. ! j Dr. J. I. Neal > 1 Veterinarian ] at Swinnerton’s in Southern Pines on Monday—at Pinehurst j Dairy on Thursday. be watched with interest. From all we business man, which is probably true, | have been able to see and hear to 1 I probably always will be. But f ^property in Greenwood town- date. both towns have chosen well. ' would rather make a stagger and miss than to scare out without a Blank-;LG have been coming out of start. the moth balls this week after quite a \acation. Old Sol’s been a little more friendly. , ‘I still entertain hopes of a theater Here are some for Jesse loan, and is a strictly bu.sines^ proposition. r. 4. u T)i 4. r The small men are employed, mg. But what of it ' Plenty ^ ■ grs and .shops to build more. ■> ^ ^ Plenty of people, ami more born f ^ sttaulated., ever.v day. Enough to kill half government is nothing out, amilhona.vearandnotgoshort are im-l of population it we feel that way.: ^11 over the country. And | JL n''? “ “ to carry the matter a little far- ± ^ ^ ther the railroad i.s getting in,, .. Cltement. Cars enough to smashPage’s taxpayers’leagi , V. * up a million if we so elect, for; f^ 1 between 191S and 1929 the national ."‘I aRO. the market for cars is slow now. I \ ell, who ^he PJ'bilc; vania, like many other big in road IS a public road, and we' is not paying to its ® anything at all at = ii™T the present time. The little man. T ? “7"'^ the worker, is getting the whole hi 5 S ? v'l'"- v" income. And funnier .vet, the him. A man s whiskv is his own, i v u- u iu' i and no railroad president can! P'”" - LAST BARGAIN FARES OF THE SEASON ship. September 30, October 1 Mrs. M. M. Furr to James T. Furr, 1 ABERDEEN TO New York $ 9.50 property in Greenwood township. Mr.^. M. M. Furr to W. L. Furr, Southern Pines that will contain P'-°P^>-‘y Greenwood township facts rue; m an auditorium, gymnasium, stage for conventions and local enterprises, wiiieb. seems to me justified when we compare what the community is now wealth increased from $192,.'500,000,000 to $3(51,873,000,000—an increase of 88 per cent. National income increased from $34,400,000,000 to $85,200,000—an in crease of 147 per cent. During the same period total gov ernmental expenditures, Federal,' State and local, grew from $2,919,- And that is what encourages me to carry on even in the face of the un favorable balance of the summer. “That Mr. Picquet is not bluffing when he says he is losing money by keepings his theater open is shown by his balance sheet. Possibly he does not care to have the figures publish ed. but the total admission fees Philadelphia 8.50 Atlantic City 8.50 Pittsburgh 10.50 lialtimore 6.00 Washington 5.0Q MRS. OLIVE, MISSIONARY IN a.. , , „ . CHINA. HONOR GUEST HERE Ji^^^cts Sold for all Trains Sep- J. R. Page and wife to Alice Page Shamburger, property in Sandhills township. The ladies of the Baptist W. M. U tember 30th — October 1st— at home to their friends'of‘the iBaltimore Tick- ^ * Cli 11 IJx U CCiJl _ _ _ _ _ 4.,^ i OLrtLtr aiKl iULcii. feIv:\V IlOiII ’ call him to the carpet because ; I'ooo.ooo to $13,048,000,000-an increase the last three months did not equal ne cirinKs in nis own car. As tor : • i • i.- -n i v the highway patrol, who js "'M* i» a plan in which Republl- ^ ’ can and Democrat alike had a afraid of them. They can’t be ^ a -t. \ \ are pulled thi evidLe will not^f?*"‘",^7 Republicans all be conclusive. You can show that i ?,! J’'''®';''®; the other fellow was to blame, .“dit unavoidable of 347 per cent. Governmental indebtedness in- nothing of the operating costs. It creased from $4,20.5,000,000 to $30,- on a theater of 194,000,000—an increase of 615 per Presbyterian and Methodist Mission ary societies at the Community House on Tuesday afternoon in honor of Mrs. L. Bunn Olive, returned mission ary from China, Avho has lived at Southern Pines during the summer months and who is leaving this week the cost of the films exhibited, to say home at Mars Hill. Mrs. Lewis, ' president, was in charge of the op ening exercises. Prayer was made by Mrs. J. R. Page. Mrs. C. L. Jackson or that it was an accident. And who saw it, any way? Of course, if SMITH PREDICTS you have the'^''^^-ES TAX cent. In 1913 governmental expenditures represented 8.5 per cent of the na tional income and in 1929 represent ed 15.3 per cent. Bad as this may seem it by no means tells the worst. Since 1929 taxes have steadily risen while in- the high character that Mr. Picquet operates, but the well known truth is that no other kind would get any where in Southern Pines or Pine hurst, and as Charlie says, “There you are.” But he is a hopeful ganesa, and it’s hard to tell what hope will do if you have enough of it. introduced Mrs. Olive, who made a most interesting talk on her twelve years work in China. ets Limited Returning to leave destination prior to Midnight October 3rd; Other Points Octo ber 4th. Reduced Round Trip Pullman Fares Stopovers Allowed and Bag'/age Checked P’or Information See Agent H. E. PLEASANTS, D. P. A. 505 Odd Fellows BIdg., Raleigh Pilot advertising sells merchandise.; MR. LlNt BAaWAV It rumored that Frank Sham-1 right of way you are not going] in the Sunday papers a long ■ comes have sharply declined. It is re- to let some conceited hog take I article by A1 Smith, candidate j liably estimated that this year gov- burger furnished the paint used on j it awaj" from you. And if you! for president four years ago, I"'11 absorb not le.ss than 30 that new school bus which operates can beat the other fellow' to the'predicts a national sales tax. per cent of the national income. on the Plnebluff run. I crossing why in thunder wait | Mr. Smith right clearly show's j foi him to go bj . And if you can how he reaches his conclusions.: Announcement is made that the North Carolina no longer holds the get by heal se driver ^ in The Pilot has trequently revert-'Sherwin-Williams Paint Company will (luestionable honor of having the tront why not cut around quick- ed to the idea of a sales tax, in-'enter at once upon a million dollar highest birth rate of any state. .\c- ly before the iellow coming the viting more or less criticism by' advertising campaign and will also cording to figures recently issued by other way blocks your road?i the .suggestion, but inasmuch as! expend several million dollars in raw the Federal Census Bureau, New Mex- Let the othei tellovv hold back | opinion does not create laW's the ^ materials. There is one concern that ico now has more bii ths per thous- in the curve, for he is a slob of critics have not suffered much ' evidently thinks the comer has been and of population than any state in a driver, and you can’t fool away by the expression of the opinion, turned. the Union, North Carolina CAKEHY SPECIAL GRANDMOTHER’S BREAD 2ai-Otmc9 % Pnllman LOaves R£D RIPE] TOMATOES 4 25c all day to crawl through that bunch of toads. Step on her. That’s w’hat gas is for. It has just the one drawback, and you don’t happen to notice that. When the neighbors look What the faithful will do with j Mr. Smith’s proposition is yet toj be seen. | However it is not hard to see} why the governor argues as hej doe.s. It is well enough known! It appears that newspaper ishers have some value, in hard times IS now : second but Alabama is only a frac- pub- I tion lower and South Carolina not far behind. BAKING POWDER 19c you o\er after the choir sings taxes are piling up, and that i as they pile up they are discour- u f1 4. 1 aging industry, which is losing on t he look natural, for no-, jtg income by reason of lessening body looks natural when he has, jjygjj^ggg^ ]Qg^- income pays to be patched up after the ^o taxes. To meet the usual re patched up after the crash. However that is one stage of the game that ycu do not realize, so what is the dif ference ? Therefore, “Let her go, Gal lagher!” eview LUX Flakes 2|ikgs.19c r? 3 cks. 19c New York. BIG BUSINESS AND LITTLE MEN It is unfortunate that politi cal policies are biased enoug'h to lay much stress on delusion and deception on the hope of suc cess in elections and by such pol icy to hamper the progress of the country and the understand ing of the people. The subject!make discussion of the subject comes up through reading some j unnecessary. The tariff tax is of the criticism of the govern-1 another, and so general in its ment’s ^ction in permitting the effects that it raises the price quix'ements of government ex- j THE DONKEY OF GOD. pciiises taxes must be gathered,! and if not from the former sour-1 Untermeyer. ces then from somethinv else, i Harcourt Brace & Co., and Governor Smith sees no place to turn but to a national sales tax. Thinking men have seen this shadow hanging over the country for a long time, and it has been adopted in so many places that already it is estab lished. The gasoline tax is the most outstanding example of a salea tax, although the tobacco tax is one familiar enough in a state like North Carolina to Federal Relief commission to put funds at the disposal of the rail roads and other big business in stitutions and not in the hands of small individuals. The delud of the things niade at home as well as those imported. In fact every tax laid on any industry i.4 a sales tax, for it is only throuvh the sale of products that iiig statement is common that i any money can be obtained with big business is given freely of'which to pay taxes. Federal money while the small! The only trouble is that with man is denied. lour frig*ht over the idea of a A little study and honest in- sales tax we obscure and com- Reviewed by Ann Hyde Allen Louis Untermeyer’s enchanting book of Italian legends has apparently achieved the ideal form of which au thors dream. The format, color, and particularly the fascinating line draw-1 whispered by progress northward through Pompeii, Paestum and the Hill towns of Assisi and Sienna, through Florence and Venice to Rome. But aside from the always vivid and dramatically living Italian background this is the only sequence. The legends range from a mystery, murder story of the Medicci to a mystic tale of an imaginative temple boy; from a madly glamorous mediaeval horse race to the story miniature Sicilian SUPER SUDS 2 pkgs. 15c WHITE HOI7SS EVAPORATED CaiiMF or Ivory SOAP Cakea 19c or Sweet Mixed PICKLES qtjar 19c ings of James MacDonald both en hance and accentuate the essense of these poetic tales. The book we are told is for “ages 12, up” but it is my guess that the ‘ups’ will get even more pleasure from it than the ‘downs.’ The only serious question raised is whether greater pleasure from it than the ‘downs.’ The only serious question raised is whether greater pleasure would be derived from reading these varied stories of Italy after having seen their settings or from visiting the places with the glamor of these romances upon them. There is a geopraphical sequer.ie to the stories which start at Naples and donkey whose ancestor had thrice car ried Christ upon his back. A sample taste—which will set readers of all ages dreaming—is the secret recipe for torrone, the famous Italian candy, of which honey is the base. . seven kind^ of tropicol nuts from seven corners of the world, and the whites of eggs from the whitest pigeons, and the satin hearts of moon- seeds, and cinnamon powder that has been sifted thru silk, and drops of | dew from white rose leaves, and thej clear sap of silver gum trees, and ai crumbling of young spices, and the | milk of the century plant that bios- i soms only once in a hundred years,! MILK 4 Tall Cm ^ 9c 2SMAliIi CANS OO N.B.C. Crackers 6 25c Oreo Sandwich lb. 25c SraX¥FIELD PANCAKE FLOUR 3 pkgs. 25o WALDORF 4 rolls 19c BROOM Clean AiriiANiiKi & lpA\ciirtic
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 16, 1932, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75