Friday March 30, 1934. THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Page Three R. A. WARREN For Fine Repair$» ^Vatches—Clocks—Jewelry West Broad Street Southern Pines :APITAL NOW OPEN ®ht Ark Southern llinrs, N. €. Mrs. Millicent A, Hayes, Principal A COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Kindergarten through the 8th year MUSIC—ART—LANGUAGES Tutoring Arranged for Older Groups Limited Accommodations for Boarders iJy M, R. Dunnagan, The Pilot’s Raleigh CorreKpondent I Miss Margaret Sanger, well known ! for her activities in behalf of birth I control and chairman of the nation- I al committee for federal legislation I for birth control, will be one of the I principal speakers at the annual con vention of the N. C. Conference of I Social Service to be i held jin the Raleigh Memorial Auditorium April 29-30 and May 1. Dean Juston Mil- ler, of the Duke Law School, presi- I dent, will preside. Miss Gertrude Weil, j Goldsboro, is secretary. “The North Carolina Child ot To- ^^^gnSSSEHSSSL Will be in his office ov«r the Post Office, Sanford, N. C,, every Wednesday, ft^m 10:00 a. m. to 3:00 p. m. Don’t fail to see him if your eyes are weak. More than half a million bushels of oysters and shells had been plant ed in the waters of eight North Car olina counties by the CWA through I the week ending February 21 under the Department of Conservation and I Development, Director R. Bruce Eth- i ridge reports. I The report of L. W'. Neison, sup- ' ervisor, shows that 5S8,119 busnels had been planted, 315 men were em. ' ployed and $46,536.35 spent on pay- ! roll.s, the average cost per bushel , planted being 8.6 cents. List Your Property If: Give In Your Poll PINEBLUFF W. Duncan Matthews ATTORNEY AT LAW SOUTHERN PINES morrow” is the theme of the con vention. A union religious service Sunday night will open the conven tion. Group meetings will be held Monday morning and the full con-; ^ Foushee and daughter ference will meet at luncheon, with Durham are spending the afternoon and evening sessions and week with Mrs. Foushee s parents, j one Tuesday morning. The Associa- ^^*"- ^ Lampley. tion of County Welfare Superintend- Chamberlain and ents will have as its theme: "Treat- Ronald and niece Miss Wright, of ment of Juvenile Offenders” and As- guests of M. sistant Attorney General A. A. K. Parker and family over the week- Seawell will speak on “Spirit of the Lgv,r-> Mrs. L. L. Von Tacky, who has been caring for her aunt, Mrs. Edith Notice Is Hereby Given to Make Returns on All Property Before the List Taker During the Month of April I other organizations or groups , meeting are community check ofti- ^ cials. Family Welfare societies, min- I isters, Red Cross workers, church , , . o . ... , _ garet Gibson spent last Saturday in committee, public health nurses, Trav- " noberts, returned to her home in Ti- tu.sville. Pa., Tuesday morning. Misses Pauline Butner and Mar- Public Stenographer Carolina Theatre Building Telephone 5881 Southern Pines Veterinary Hospital DR.J. I. NEAL Pinehurst Race Track E. V. PERKINSON General Contractor Southern Pines, N. C. Tel. 5033 Sanford Mrs. Ehram Pickier gave a sur prise birthday party at her home hon oring her niece, Given Pickier, who celebiated her tenth birthday. Eight een little playmates enjoyed various games and delicious refreshments. Mrs. Benjamin F. Butner, former ly of Pinehurst, is spending several v^’eeks as a guest of Miss Anne F. Popham. Mpster Virgil Lte Carpenter under- ■ od $3,166,860.31, or $34,546.97 more ^ operation at the Moore I than the $3,132,313.34 collected in the flers Aid workers and the Society for the Abolition of Capital Punishment. Feleral income taxes in North Car olina due and paid around March 15 have exceeded the payments made during the same period a year ago and there was an increase in the | numbers of income taxpayers. Collec tor Charles H. Robertson reports. Collections for March 1 to 20 reach- Failure to List Will Subject You to Double Taxation * same period last year, and 3,359 more j returns were filed up to March 16 than in the same period last year, he said. Income tax collections in the State for the fiscal year starting July 1, 1933, and up to March 20, County Hospital last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Winship and Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Gel.ser attended j the golf tournament at Augfiista, Ga., j last week. I Cadwallader Benedict, a student in | Princeton University, will come to , Pinebluff Friday to spend a week’s Everett, Zane and Musej Certified Public Accountants j Sanford, N. C. Greensboro, N. C. | J. C. Muse, C. P. A., Resident Partner' reached $10,901,729.40, or $1,952,-, |{)3_gter vacation with his mother, 694.91 more than the $8,949,034.49 j^jrs. M. C. Benedict at Cedarcote. paid in the same period of the pre- ‘ special Easter sei-vices will be ob- ceding fiscal year, Mr. Robertson re-, served next Sunday at the Methodist ported. NAIDA Tax Supervisor JENKINS of Moore County church with christening of infants i : J. N. POWELL, INC. Undertaking: Embalming: Ambulance Service Pinehurst and reception of members in ' the morning and a pageant entitled, "I Go a Fishing” in the evening. Mrs. T. D. Olmstead ot Hartford, Conn., and Mrs. R. W. Wardell of New York City are visiting their parents, the Rev. and Mrs. C. L. Major Graham K. Hobbs, Wilmin- ton, has been appointed commission- I er of the World War Veterans Loan I fund, to succeed John Hall Man- j ning, resigned to become assistant j district attorney for the eastern Fed- I eral district. He won over a field ot Jackson I about 15 applicants, in which Tracy The Pinebluff Library has put on 1 Moore, Greensboro, member of the jts spring attire with a coat ; 1933 General Assembly, was consid- of paint applied to its shelves, chairs I ered a leader. The commission con-' and floors. The following list of new East Broad St., Southern Pines' s*sts of five state officials with sec- books has been put on the shelves I retary of State Stacy Wade as chair- and the public is invited to use them: man. The post administers the home oil for the Lamps of China, Discov. building fund for veterans and pays ering North Carolina, Anthony Ad- $3,500 a year. verse, Life Begins at Forty. Back tTumbers, Beggars All, Great Meadow, T »e Ix AwQ o Fourteen hundred tickets to the Duel of the Queens. Beyond Khyber | XijUlllRJl?! 1 cl* i Jackson Day dinner to be held at Pass, Captain Blood Returns, Bon-| , f All V /I ' Memorial Auditorium March fire, Testament of Youth, South j Dealers in Lumber of All Kinds, j have been sent to the counties I Moon Under, As the Earth Turns, | Millworlk, Shee^ock, Rocklath, | many of them are calling for'Mutiny on the Bounty, Men Against i CeloteX, Upson Board, Shingles,! additional tickets, Mrs. May Evans, the Sea, Natural Gardens of North ^ } head of the Young Democrats of the Carolina, House of Exile, The Span- i State, announces. Attendance is ex- ish Marriage, Britian’s Master Spy, j pected to be 1500 or more. Epic of America, The Hash Knife j A full afternoon and evening is Outfit, Murder Day by Day, Enter- j planned. The executive committee ■ taining the Islanders, One More Riv- j meets in the afternoon, a rally will er. Work of Art and Angel in the be held from 6 to 7 o’clock in the House. j evening, the dinner proper from 71 W. K. Carpenter has purchased to 10 and dancing from 10 to 12 from Mr. Pitsche the house that he , o’clock. arid Mrs. Carpenter are now occupy- i Senator Bennett Champ Clark, ot ^ ing. | Missouri, son of the former Speak- i er of the House of Representatives, i SEVER.-VL VACANCIES IN THE will be the principal speaker. Others IGNITED ST.\TES MARINE <’ORF>^ will be former Governor O. Max Gardner, Senator J. W. Bailey, Gov ernor Ehringhaus, and others. The occasion, as formerly, is to be a notable gathering of Democrats of the State, young and old, men and souin ijaroiina, i- ionaa anu r.asK:*ii j women. PINEHURST, N. C. PIANO TUNING E. S. VanAlstyne Tuning — PIANO — Voicing Residence Phone 6063 P. O. Box 1615—Southern Pines A. L.. ADAMS PAINTER — DECORATOR PAPER HANGE» WALL PAPERS Phone 6922 MONTESANTI Featuring North Carsliaa HomespmM' TAILORING, DRY CLEANING Tel. K41 Printing we can do it and do it right If So/omon were alive today .., ts a near mm saf/ Does the regular old fashioned lo cal lizard bite, and if so, is that bite poisonous to the human system ? are two questions that are bother ing Industrial Commissioner J. Dew ey Dorsett in a Workmen’s Compen sation case. A woman employed In a textile mill discovered a lizard on the toe of her shoie and shook her foot to dislarge it. The lizard ran up her leg to a point just above the knee where she slapped it. She claim ed the lizard bit her and a- black spot developed. It was finally cut out and the place bandaged. Small blis- Savannah, Ga., Mar. 26- Between 35 and 50 youths will be accepted for enlistment in the United States Ma rine Corps from Virginia, North and South Carolina, Florida and Eastern Georgia during April according to an announcement by Lieut. Col. A, B. Drum, commanding Marine Corps Re cruiting District with offi''.es in the Post Office Building, Savannah, Ga. Young men who have an education not le.ss than that provided by a public high school diploma and who have attained their 18th birthday are accepted for general service. Boys between the ages of 17 and 18 are accepted with an eighth grade edu cation to learn the drum and trumpet. Men accepted are trap.sferred to Parris Island, S. C., for a few weeks preliminary training before being ad- signed to some ship or Marine Bar- "So you want to know what motor car to buy.^ Weil, this is my be.st advice: ''First, be sure it is a General Motors car. General Motors, remember, is the foremost automotive organization in the world—with the greatest experience and the finest jacilities for building superior automobiles. "Second, be sure it is an eight-cylinder car. The trend today is unquestionably toward the Eight because of its greater smoothness and finer performance. "Third, be sure it is a Straight Eight. The Straight Eight engine, you know, has been developed to a state of highest perfection for use in cars of the more popular type. "Fourth, he sure it is not too expensive. Nowadays you can get good cars for com paratively little money. "Fifth, be sure it has a Fisher body, for in no other can you get the quality for which ^>odies by Fisher nave long been famous. "Sixth, and most important of all, be sure it is a car you can be proud of. No car is a bargain unless you can be happy with it. "Now, if you have studied cars, you will know that there is only one car on the mar ket that meets my description—the Pontiac Straight Eight! "Pontiac is practically no more expensive to buy and no more expensive to operate than cars in the very lowest-price field. "Pontiac lifts you out of the mass group and into the class group at almost no addi tional cost. "Yes, Pontiac is the car I think the average American family should buyP' ★ ★ ★ Why not come in and see the new Pontiac Straight Eight—get behind the wheel and put it through its paces? LIST PRICE AT PONTIAC. MICHIGAN 695 With k<tmpers, tpart tire, meui Ur* ctftr, tire loth and sprmg covtrf. lb* Hit price istJ2.00 mddditiomaL ters began to develop around the, racks for duty. bandage. Insurance adjusters claim Young men who desire service in the woman used carbolic aoid or j the Marine Corps will receive appli- cigarettes to burn the blisters. Com- cation blanks upt.ri rekuest. missioner Dorsett wss not satisfied so he ordered the Aroman sent Duke Hospital for observation. to Use The Pilot “Want Ada” to sell the little odd« and ende. PONTIAC THE ECONOMY STRAIGHT EIGHT IVIartin Motor Oomipanv

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view