MOORE COUNTY'S LEADING NEWS-WEEKLY ■L A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding VOL. 14, NO. 2. ^ >*j;:AHTHAX3e ^ EAcue SPHINCS JACKSOH aPRIN09 MUTHBRN Pinss PILOT _ - FIRST IN NEWS, CIRCULATION & ADVERTISING a - 4f " J-v of the Sandhill Territory ot I'Vty X ‘^irolina A: Southern Pines and Aberd^n, arolina, Friday, December 8, 1933. FIVE CENTS BUSINESS STRAWS AND TRAVEL TREND FAVOR THE SOUTH Northern Stores Report Heavy Buying from Southern States, Says James Tufts FOREIGN TRAVEL OFF James Tufts, who has recently re turned from a trip north, brings a rather optimistic opinion of the out look. One thing that struck him is the increase of buying orders at the northern stores that furnish supplies in quantities for ihe south, especially those sections of the south that han dle much winter traffic of northern visitors. This increase is so marked that the northern supply houses re gard it as a definite indication of the way the straws point, and a corrobor ation of other signs that look favor able for southern traffic. * Another thing that Mr. Tufts en countered was a shifting of tourist travel from the ocean to the land. Disturbed financial relations with the foreign countries has made it easier Death Claims Mrs. A. Camerjn as She Strolls With Granddaughter End Comes Suddenly to Beloved Member of Pioneer Vass Fam ily—16 Grandchildren Survive The entire Vass section was shock ed and saddened Sunday afternoon when it became known that Mrs. A. Cameron, for more than half a cen tury a beloved figure in the com munity, had passed aw?y suddenly at her home. For several years Mrs. Cameron had suffered from heart trouble, occasionally having severe attacks of angina pectoris, but for the past few weeks she had been feel ing better than usual, and on Sunday afternoon was walking around the home grounds accompanied by a young granddaughter when the end camc suddenly. The funeral service was held at 3:00 o’clock Sunday afternoon in the Vass Methodist Church, conducted by the pastor, the Rev. W. C. Ball, assisted by the Rev. C. A. Lawrence of the Vass Presbyterian Church. A mixed quartet composed of Miss Elizabeth Wood, Mrs. R. G. Rosser, .1. M. Ty son and A. M. Calhoun sang “Rock *'f Ages,” “Looking This Way,” and “Abide With Me,” with Miss Martha Then, a sequence, when a thing starts in one direction the folks are inclin ed to follow the move. Hence a sort for tourists to travel in this coun try than to go abroad and he says as’Accompanist'Seven'grand- bookmg concerns note the tendency , to stay in the United tates this win- ter rather than get tangled up in the j Matthews and Henry Borst, Jr., maze of foreign currency exchange. | j^^Lean, serv ed as pall bearers and the many lovely floral designs were carried by , I girls of the community choir and oth- of See-America spirit appears to be | Interment was in in evidence this winter. Tourist and | (jrove cemetery beside the railroad agencies say there is more | ^ travel moving southward now than in j several years and less going outside ; ^ impossible to estimate what of the country. Foreign travel is j Cameron’s long residence in Vas.. ! has meant to the people of .he com munity. In the seventies sha and her husband cas.t their lot in what was to become the town of V'as.^ and through all the years she has exerted an influence for good. Both she and Mr. Cameron united with the Metho dist chuich and were ever loyal to it. Their home was always open to Proclamation Governor Calls On All Citizens to Listen In on Radio Program Tuesday Complying with the Governor’s Proclamation of December 2nd, 1933, wherein he calls upon “(1) all public officers to assemble in formally on Tuesklaiy, December 12, from 1:30 to 2:30 o'clock in the city halls and county court houses of their respective towns and counties, (2) all groups of citizens and (3) all high school and college students to assemble in their respective meeting places, and contact with a statewide radio program over which state and lo cal leaders will present for con sideration a governmental pro;.jram of immediate practical importance to the people of North Carolina,” the Town of Aberdeen has ai-rang- ed to have a radio installed in the City Hall and the Town of South ern Pines, one in the City Admin istration building, according to Town Clerks Evelyn H. Pleas ants of Aberdeen and Howard F. Burns of Southern Pines. All others are urged to listen in at places where there are radios. The railroads are influencing travel ■with low rates, which seems to stir up a new interest in going somewhere in the cars. D. G. Stutz of Southern Pines says the indications are that the Saturday excursion to Jackson- villje, Florida, down ar^l back for $1.75, will see the trains filled to the last seat. Folks are beginning to get ministers who came this way and L i perhaps no home in the conterence was more highly regarded by the ministers than was theirs. To those in LEGION POST TO ASK CWA FUNDS FOR CLUB HOUSE Sites and Building Material Of fered Veterans but 'Money Needed for Labor of depression and are encouraged to ^ look on the bright side again. Best in Two Years At Pinehurst the arrivals are ahead of last year by this time as well as ahead of the year before. A general pick-up in business is noticed every where. Visitors coming from the north say things are easing up, and with hopeful spirits on all hands. Money is reported as floating about more freely here in the neighborhood. The stores talk with more encourage ment. H. M. Kirk, a farmer from the Roseland section, remarked to The Pilot that tobacco has brought good prices, that cotton has been doing right well, that grain has been satis factory, and that the farmer is feel ing in much better mood than for sometime past. Others from the sur rounding country have similar en couraging evidence to offer. The air of gloom seems to be lifting, and the general sentiment is that the world is about to start on its customary rolling ahead instead of going to the dogs. , every walk of life she was hospitable and kind and those in need were nev er turned away without their first having been ministered unto. Mrs. Cameron was a loving mother and grandmother and it was her joy to have all of her chil<3ren settled near her in the village. She derived her greatest pleasure from serving those she loved. After failing health prevented her from leading her us ual active life, she bpent much time engaged in crocheting and last Christ mas presented each of her seven (Please turn to page 8) Concert by High School Chorus December 15 R. M. Caldwell, Jr. and Miss Taylor Married Well Known Aberdeen Young Man and Member of School Faculty Quietly Wed Miss Effie Taylor of Louisburg, member of the faculty of the Aber deen schools for the past two years, and Ralph M. Caldwell, Jr., member of a prominent Aberdeen family, were quietly married at the Presbyterian Manse in Aberdeen on Wednesday evening of last week by the Rev. Ernest L. Barber, pastor of Bethes^ da Presbyterian Church. Only immed iate relatives were present. Mr. Caldwell is a son of Ralph M. Caldwell, Aberdefln automobile deaU er, and the late Mrs. Kate McKeithen Caldwell. He was graduated from State College at Raleigh two years ago and is associated in bu«inesa with the B "\n Drug Company in Aber deen. Miss Taylor has been teacher (f the fifth grade for the last two years and during her residence in Aberdeen has made friends of one and all. Fine Program Arranged by Fred erick Stanley Smith for Glee Club Benefit Of interest to all music lovers in the Sandhills is the concert to be giv en by the chorus of fifty voices of the Southern Pines High School on Friday evening, December 15 at 8 o’clock in the Southern Pines School auditorium. The program, under the direction of Frederick Stanley Smith, has betn in course of preparation sev eral months and will consist of male, female and mixed choruses, octets, and quartets, and piano solos. The pi- pils of the second, third and fourth grades will also present several num bers. In addition to the above the newly organized Women’s Octette will sing Grieg’s “Jesus, Friend of Sinners,” Clokey’s “Night Song,” and several English Folk-songs. The personnel of the octette is as follows: 1st sopranos, Mrs. Kennedy, Misses Richardson and Abel; 2nd sopranos. Misses Wade and Buchan; altos. Misses Lp.ne, Anderson and Adams. There will be an admission charge ^f 25 cents for adults, 15 for chil dren. Reserved seats are 50c, The proceeds will be used to purchase new music for the high school chorus and ^lee club. The public is urged to at tend. At the last meeting of Sandhii' Post No. 134, American Legion, on Thanksgiving evening much enthus iasm was aroused over the prospect of a club houhe in the near future. In the early days of the post a building fund was established through minstrel shows and other entertainments. A part of that fund still remains in tact although the lean years have drawn to some extent upon it for ab solutely necessary expenses. The pos sibility of securing labor through the Civil Works Administration was dis cussed, also the question of a site. Before the evening was over two sites had been offered, one as a gift to the post and the other at a nomi nal sum; logs in sufficient quantity for a sizable hut had been offered by John Hemmer of Pinehurst, and a res olution to apply at once to the CWA ' for funds to carry on the work had been adopted. A committee composed of John Hemmer, Lloyd Wooley and John Stevenson was appointed to look into the matter of sites and to ap ply for funds for labor, this commit tee to report at the next regular meet ing or a special meeting if necessary to call one. I All Legionnaires and ex-service men are urged to attend the next regular meeting of the post in order that the views of all may be obtained. Toys, Dolls Needed MRS. WHITAKER SERIOUSLY HURT IN AUTO ACCIDENT Prominent Resident of Southern Pines Suffers Broken Collar bone and Ribs in Lenoir HIT CROSSING STREET Haven’t you some old toys or dolls you are through with? j Dozens and dozens of children in I and about Southern Pines are going to be without them on Christmas Day, and it won’t be the fault of the lo cal Fire Department. The boys make an annual practice of picking up toys and dolls and making them as good as new at the fire house during their spare hours. Not many have been sent in to them this year and they are fearful lest their friends, the needy little ones, will be disappointed on Christmas Day. Jnst telephone 7201 and some fire man will call for whatever you have that will make children happy. Or if vou want to give money, that will be fine too. The fire laddies will use it to buy toys and dolls. Do it now. Christmas is coming. Mrs. Charles R. Whitiiker of South ern Pines, president of the North Carolina Tuberculosis Association, was seriously injured when struck by an automobile in Lenoir late Wednes day afternoon, and is in the Lenoir Hospital. Mrs. Whitaker suffered a fractur ed collarbone and three broken ribs. While walking across a street in the business section of Lenoir in com pany with another woman she failed to see a car which darted out from behind another, and was knocked down. Her friends and others rushed to her aid and a passing automobile was pressed into service to carry the injured woman to the hospital, where she is reported as resting comfyrta- bly as could be expected under the circumstances. Mrs. Whitaker is making her home in Lenoir at present, though her per manent home is in Southern Pines where she and Mr. Whitaker have re sided for many years. She has long been active in the tuberculosis asso ciation, in the Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution and in other organi zations of State-wide importance, in many of which she has held important offices Word of the accident came to her daughter, Mrs. E. V. Perkin- son, here yesterday morning. State Symphony To Play Before Governor Orchestra, with John Powell, Pianist, as Guest ArtSst, Gives Concert Tomorrow Southern Pines Asks $S2,000 for New High School Building, Improving Present Structure and Addition to Colored School Swamped Seaboard Sells Out 11 Cars for Jacksonville Excursion Saturday A special train composed of 11 passenger cars will be attached at Southern Pines to regular train No. 107 tomorrow, 'Saturday night. This was necessary in order to ac commodate the crowd of excursion ists taking advantage of the spec ial rates to Jacksonville over this week-end, according to the report of local Seaboard Air Line of ficials today. The round trip rate of $1.75 swamped the Seaboard, but a few more accommodations are available. Board of County Commissioners Expected To Act Monday on Loan From Governmwit MANY FAVOR PROGRAM TRAGEDIES MAR OPENING HERE OF J. M. Rhinehardt Killed on Cur rie Farm; Negro Wounded in Southern Pines A concert in honor of the Governor of North Carolina will be given by the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra tomorrow, Saturday evening, at the Raleigh Memoral Auditorium. A re ception will follow the concert and dance selections will be played from half past ten until midnight by a twenty-piece orchestra. The concert will be presented by the North Car olina Symphony Society and the net proceeds will be given to the Asso- cited Charities cf Raleigh. A feature of especial inlc-iest i»i the Raleigh concert will be the fact that John Powell, will play the piano part of his own composition, “Rhap?odie Negre.” Mr. Powell stands in the first rank of the world’s pianists as is also among the foremost of modern com posers. His “Rhapsodie Negre” is not, as one might imagine, a pot-pouri of negro melodies, but is, rather, a symphonic poem depicting the his tory of the American negro from the time he was dropped from his na tive African haunts up to the pres ent time. “Rhapsodie Negre” has been played over fifty times, presentations having been given by most of the world’s finest orchestras in all paits jf the civilized globe. 7orum to Present Major Totten Here Illustrated Lecture on Maya Ar chitecture Will Be Fir^ of Weekly Programs The Forum of the Arts, which will rresent a series of weekly programs of an interesting and educational na ture throughout the winter t^ason in Pinehurst, announced this week the first of its Thursday evening events. Major George Oakley Totten, lization and author of “Maya Archi- an eminent authority on Maya civi- tecture,” will give a talk illustrated Architecture. with colored slides, on Maya Art and Major Totten is one of the world’s leading architects. He designed the Egyptian Pavilion, one of the most beautiful buildings at the Chicago Century of Progress Exposition, and his group of Embassy buildings and magnificent private homes have con tributed to the splendor of the na- One killed, one wounded, is the summary of the local hunting season to date, with the shooting just getting under way. Both casualties appear in- j excusable. The fatality occurred between Car- j Ihage and ,West End; the near trag-| edy within half a mile of The Ark | School in Southern Pines. J. M. Rhinehardt, fi7-year-old white , man who resided between Carthage and West End, was fatally shot in' the back at close range on Thanks- j giving Day. The killing is said to: have resulted from his approaching j four men, who were heard shooting cn a farm belonging to Mrs. Kennie Currie and managed by Rhinehardt, and asking “What in the world are you doing here?” The four men are supposed to have been drinking. A coroner’s jury found that Rhine hardt came to his death by a gun shot inflicted by Amos Jones and Emery Burns. It was ordered that they be held without bond for grand jury action and that Guilford Sey mour and W. H. Fry be placed under $50 bond as material witnesses. Fry was tried in Recorder’s Court on Monday as an accessory after the murder. Evidence was heard, but judgment was not passed as Judge Humber wished to have more lime in which to study the evidence. While driving a mule across Cream er & Turner peach orchard near The Ark School last Friday afternoon An drew McNeill, colored, who resides in that neighborhood, was struck in the head by a bullet from a .22 calibre rifle. The bullet just missed penetrat ing the brain, lodging in the base of the skull near the nape of the neck. As he fell from the seat of the wagon McNeill saw three small boys with guns running as fast of their legs would carry them from the scene of the accident. Though too young to be loose in the country with firearms or to possess hunting licenses, tjie boys had been shooting in the vicinity during the afternoon and were believ ed to have been on their v/ay home when they caught sight of McNeill and his white mule. .Whether they took a pot shot at him “just for fun,” as would see; is not known, but they could not help but have seen him as he was in the open and mule and wagon stood out against the sky lire. The police are on the trail of the youngsters, one of whom is believed to be known. McNeill, who is employed at The Paddock, was rushed to the office of Dr. W. C. Mudgett for treatment, and the bullet removed after .several days when his condition would per mit. He will recover. (Please turn to Page 4) No action was taken by the Board of County Commissioners in the mat ter of a federal loan for financing an extensive school building program in the county when it met in regular session on Monday. The matter was discussed from every conceivable an gle, but action was deferred until next Monday. The commissioners feel that they should “make haste slowly” in a question of such great importance to every citizen of the county and they are trying to weigh carefully the ad vantages and the disadvantages be fore committing themselves. Meanwhile, more requests or “de mands” are coming in to the County Board of Education for participation in the fruits of any loan made from the government. The Southern Pines School District asked last week for $52,000 for three school projects here. After consideration the county school board eliminated one project, voted to reduce the others 60 percent. This program, according to members of the local school board, would serve no purpose. The Southern Pines projects are: New High School building adja cent to present building, needed to provide adequate classroom and study room facilities—$30,000 to $35,000. Modernizing present building—15,- 000. Addition to Colored School building, where 650 are now housed in structure intended for 450 pupils—$10,000 to $12,000. Nothing for the Colored The County Board of Education eliminated the colored school addi tion from consideration on the grounds that it as not making any provision for colored schools. It cut the other requisition 60 percent. [ Directors of the Southern Pines j Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday I voiced disapproval of the discrimina- I tion against schools for colored peo ple in the county, much overcrowded and in need of improvements and ad ditions. Colored people are on the verge of registering complaints which might easily upset the whole school building program in the county, they held. Delegations from High Falls, Spies, Hemp, Spencerville, West End, Eu reka, Bensalem, Carthage and Vass appeared before the Board of County Commissioners last week in favor of the county’s borrowing from the gov ernment for the proposed school build ing program. Some 250 persons wait ed on the commissioners, as against about 25 from Pinehurst and South ern Pines, who had voiced disapprov al the day before. But the disapprov al was more in the nature of com plaint against the proposal to equal ize the school debt service over tiie county, rather than against the pro posed loan, and now it is understood the debt service proposition is to be laid aside for a year or two. . H. Lee Thomas, county superintend ent, feurs that the county will be too late to get any loan, even if favorable action is taken by the commissioners next Monday, so many allotments hav ing been made from this fund already. However, should the commissioners aprove the loan, he said, the Board of Education will take immediate ac tion in trying to obtain the money. The paving of U. S. Highway No. 1 from Aberdeen to Drowning Creek is expected to be completed by the end E. C. STEVENS ELECTED MEN’S CLUB PRESIDENT The annual election of officers of the Men’s Club was held in the clab- house Monday evening, E. C. Stevens being elected president, W. J. Newton, vice-president and E. W. Merrill, sec- retary-treasurer. TO HOLD CONFERENCE The Rfev, J. C. Wooten, presiding elder of the Methodist Conference, will hold Jjia firtit quarterly confer- of next week, the contractor on this ence at the Memorial Chareir job states. Sunday morning. eSH