Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / March 30, 1934, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page Eight THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, March 30, X934. CARTHAGE Miss Mary Robert Shields was a charming hostess Wednesday even, ing at a card party and miscella- Beoiis shower in honor of Mrs. W. D. Buffaloe of Gibson, a bride of a few pionths. Miss Knimie Hearn Horton enter tained the members of her bridge clug and several adilitional guests gaturday at a bridge luncheon at her home in Albemarle. Cameron and Community TYPEWRITER REPAIRING {i;(H)d Used Rlachines For SALE PRICES REASONABLE R. N. HAYES at Sandhills Shop SIMONS ELECTRIC SHOP Expert Radio Repairing and Klectrical Work at reasonable prices. PHILCO RIectrio, Battery, and Automobile Radios. Tel, 7151 So. Tines, N. C. Carolina Theatres Southern Pines-Pinehurst Presenf Presenting (GEORGE A RUSS in “The House of Rothschild” At Pinehurst IMonday, Apr. 2nd, 3:00 and 8:20 With Roberf Young At Pinehurst Wednesday, Apr. 4th, 3:00 and 8:20 At Southern Pines Thu., Fri., Sat., Apr. 5, 6, 7 Matinee Saturday at 3:00 Presenting W. C. Fields, Joan Marsh and Adrienne Ames in “You’re Telling: Me” At Pinehurst Friday, Apr. 6tJi, 3:00 and 8:20 Presenting (Jharlie Ruggles, Mary Boland and I^annv Ross in “Melody in Spring’ At Southern Pines Mon., Tue., Wed., Apr. 2, 3, 4 Matinee Tuesday at 3:00 Miss Thurla Cole, charmingly en- j I tertained her chib, The Merry Makers, I : at her home on Thursday evening. Two tables of bridge and one of: t hearts were in play. High score in; 1 bridge was held by Mrs. J. D. McLean | ! and top score in hearts by Mrs. Jew- j ‘ ell Hemphill, each receiving dainty ' gifts. The hostess, assisted by Mrs. i I Hemphill served a salad course, the • plates being decorated with color- ' ful Kasterjeggs. Special guests were Mrs. J. L. Me- i Graw of Carthage, Mesdames Mai- I ! lory and William Harbor and Mrs. ^ ; Loula Muse. Miss Margaret McLean was genu- : i inely surprised on Saturday, her birth- i day, when members of the Y. P. C., with their adult advisor, Mrs. H. D. i Tally, gathered at her home and an. : nounced a party. Sprightly games, 1 clever contests, etc. featured the, : evening's entertainment, the honoree 1 declaring it was the most delightful. evening she ever spent. I The Girls’ Auxiliary of the Baptist Church met with Mrs. R. F. Lowry 1 Tue.sday evening. A .splendid prog ram on Home and Foreign Missions was presented by the following young girls. Misses Elizabeth and Margarery Thomas. Mary and Rachael Smith, Grace and Ernestine Snipes, Marie Parker and Helen Cooper. A fruit I salad was served, plates were decor- j ated with Easter favors. ' Mis.s Virginia Cameron and Mrs. Loula Muse were elected delegates to F’ayetteville Presbyterian which meets Tue.sday, April 3rd, with the_ Carthage Church and Wednesday, April 4th, with the Hemp Church. Mrs. J. E. Snow, who has been quite ill with pneumonia, is much better. With deep regret the many Camer on friends of Mrs. Frank Hare learn ed that she was ill and would be car ried to a hospital this week for treat- i ment. Miss Susie Gaddy of Route 2, mem ber of the Junior class underwent an operation for appendicitis at Moore County Hospital last Saturday. Her . condition is quite favorable, j J. L. McGraw of Carthage visited J. E. Snow Friday evening. Robert Wooten of State College, Raleigh and William Parker of Wasli- ington. D. C., spent the week-end with home folks. C. C. Jones of Route 1. was guest of Prof. and Mrs. R. F. Lowry Sun- j day evening. Among the nominees for CJueen of the Dogwood Festival which will be held in Southern Pines, Cameron was I ,§-lad to note the name of one of our I prettiest and most attractive young ladies. Miss Helen Parker. Prof. R. F. Lowry attended the teachers' meeting in Raleigh on Fri day, j Prof. Hentz, who teaches in Con- ' necticui, spent Thursday night with his sister. Miss Mary Hentz, first grade teacher here, and Friday after- 1 noon they left for their home near j Spartanburg, S. C„ to spend the ' week-end with their parents, i The Rev. Mr. Wooten, presiding elder of the Rockingham district, oc cupied the pulpit of the M. E. j Church Sunday morning, preaching a j very able sermon, after which he held the regular Quarterly Conference. I Elder and Mrs. Wooten and Carl * Stutts of Carthage were dinner ' guests of Mrs. Georgie Matthews , Sunday. . Ed Muse of Carthage attended the I Quarterly Conference Sunday. ^ Mrs. Flint Loving attended the j funeral of her i;ncle, Tom Cross of I Sanford Tuesday. Mrs. Gib.son and Mrs. Fletcher ot wa¥t EJ> Rockingham were guests aight of Mrs. Janie Muse. Mrs. Gibson and Mrs. Fletcher of Saturday j At IHnehurst With everything that any audience Rockingham were g^uests Saturday j want in a picture, "The House night of Mrs. Janie Muse. Emergency Crop Loan Office in Carthage Maximum Amount Obtainable by One Individual is $250, the Minimum $25 of Rothschild” is one of the grand est pieces of entertainment to reach the screen in years. It deals with historical facts^—the pmbitions, in trigues, jealousies and hatreds of men and nations behind the world- moving events—or in its more inti mate phase, wherein the Rothschild family is symbolic, when it portrays the glory of a race which emerged from the tragedies of eternal perse- another hit. Like his earlier auccess, “Bottoms Up” is a delightful ro mance with songs woven logically into the story, “Pat" Paterson, love ly English comedienne, makes her pine forest, with pines of all sizes from the old timers that escaped the sawmill man to the little seedlings just rising above the ground. The streams on two sides and the rivers American film debut in this picture, j and ridges with some table land give Thfe other members of the cost are John Boles, Spencer Tracy, Herbert Munidin, Sid Silvers, Harry Green the finest chance in the world to landscape engineer to plan an m- teresting project, so that for the Thelma Todd, Robert Emmett O’Con-1 next few years Mr. White's home will nor Dell Henderson. Susanne Kaaren, be one of the interesting studies ot and Douglas Wood. The film satirizes i the Sandhills. With Knollwood, the the bluff of Hollywood. Bl’RRELL WHITE BUYS 150 At'RK- TKACT ON KNOLLWOOD HEIGHTS Barber estate and the fine places ex panding all around in that quarter the Knollwood rogion is jcxtreme- ly attractive this spring. The Pilot has just received word that an emergency crop loan office has been opened at the Court House ‘t is close to the last word in in Carthage and farmers desiring «i»cere, understanding and convinc- (ContiniH’d from page 1) lake of considerable capacity from which more water may be pumped to BIRD CLUB NEWS Again the value of publicity was loans should apply between the hours | production. For George Arliss , the orchard if desired, and also to proven by the largest attendance of of 8:00 a. m, and 5:30 p. m. followers. "The House of Rothschild '| afford a bit of relief picture to the i t^e year, on Tuesday last. Unfortu- According to the regulations under ' &'’ing to be an unalloyed joy, for | cove in which it is situated, and for, lately the birds have been too busy, which the crop loans are to be made I the lovers of adeptly-cab'c pictures j. various pm poses that an ingenious, geem. to even read our news this vear any farmer who secures i cast is going to be something to, ruralist can expect of a body of clear,, items, so the number of species seen a loan must obtain a statement from ‘ ^^e youthful early fam-. fresh running water on the place. Respite an ideal morning. It the county production council, where 'Rothschild to the tremendous- ^ program of improvement that | is safe to say the gathering of mem- one exists, that he does not intend large number of small character occxipy the most of the summer'bers and visitors (always welcome) to increase his acreage or production j played in the closing days jf. and is already under way- on the steps of the New England in violation of the Agricultural Ad-jpicture depicts; and to the t.o followed later by other'Schemes House after the hunt in the woods justment Administration program. lovers of lavish costuming the last j supplementary to what amply repaid all who came. Friends In counties where a county produc-1 inexpressibly pleasure. i clone this season. Mr, W'hite has are urged to go, either individually tion council has not been set up, be-] After The House of Rothschild j recovered his health that he is or by twos and three, on any pleas- fore any application for a loan will booked, Mr. Picquet was noti- ^ ^i^ig ^ow to arrange to live here ant morning and roam quietly over be considered, the farmer who is ap-, would be road-showed at niost of the year, and his purpose is wooded ground, making notes of what plying will have to give satisfactory; i)rices and would be with- to find in this section his chief oc-, they see and hear. Those with more evidence that he i.s cooperating with drawn from release in all popular ciipation in creating about his com- experience will, at the next meeting, the production control program of priced motion picture theatres until niunity an atmosphere that will help be glad to try and translate such the Agricultural Adjustment Admin-1 Pall, but the producers PCf- to bring out the pleasures of life this notes into identification although community can afford. auccess is by no means guaranteed. next Fall, but istration. I him to keep his original dates The maximum amount of an emer-! provided he would charge an admis- gency r op loan that may be obtain ed by any one individual is $250, the minimum is $25. Applications for loans in any amount from $25 to $150 may be ac cepted by the emergency crop loan office provided the farmer does not have sufficient security to obtain a loan el.sewhere. While the property etaoin .Sion price of $1.65, which would be a^^^es in clearing the bulk of it is in the regular road-show price. He suc- Pilot Advertising Pays. cceUed in compromising with them to the extent of pricing part of the main floor at $1.65 and a part at $1.10. The schedule of prices will be as fol lows: Boxes $2.00 plus tax 20c, $2.20. A part of the orchestra, $1.50 plus tax, 15c, $1.65- -remainder of the A farmer applying for $150 or m^re lower floor, $1.00 plus 10c tax. $1.10, must first make application to the |'’<^l*^ony, first three rows 75c, re production Credit Association for a rnainder at 50c. Matinee prices will be loan from it. Rejection of this appli-1 $110; lower floor, 75c, bal- cation by the Production Credit As-■ children, 30c. sociation will be considered sufficient' ^he portrays in one breath and evidence that othei- credit is not avail-' defies all creation in the next and p.ble and the applicant may then make loves men according to her own code. . application to the Emergency Crop ^he lying, stealing, loving, hating ^ impetuous and spontaneous girl of ^ the mountains, Katharine Hepburn i comes to the screen -of the Pinehurst Theatre Wednesday, April 4th, mat- ineeinee and night, in "Spitfire,” a picturization of the Broadway stage Loan office. I>I'KE ENDOWMENT .VLLOTS !?'.279 TO MOORE HOSPIT.AL {Co)iti>nied from /xigc 1) that 11 additional hospitals will be 1 “Trigger," and those who! j issisted later this year, which would ^ ^ave seen the picture declare that j I bring the number of such institutions : ^ offers the scintillating star her j up to 109, and make the total appro- ^ost impres.sive role to date, not ex- ■ priation, on the basis of $1 per pa- j cepting hei Eva Lovelace of "Mom- i ticnt, per day, S810.000. | CUory” or her Jo March of “Lit' Last year, a statement by the trus-' fjg vVomen.” It is a story of a moun- I ! tees .said, patients who received free, tain girl who becomes frantically re- * , treatment numbered iipproxiniately 'ligious from reading the texts of some j j o7,000, or an average of 523 per hos-, cards she has scolen from a Sunday | |pital. For each of the.se, the endow-1 gchool. and who undertakes mirac^ ; : ment will pay about $14. Since 1924, | healing powers through her j I the statement added, the number of ^ primitive faith in God. Hated by the j . fiee patients has doubled while the lYiany who believe her witch, and lov- | ^ percentage in participating institu- gj ijut a few of the beneficiaries ! tions has increased to 60 per cent, ^ler miracles, she becomes an out- 1 , from 30 per cent, j cast. The story is said to be uni- Othei institutions of local interest qj,g jri many ways, not the least of j were allotted the following sums; , is the fact that the spectator Duke Hospital, Durham, $55,475; unable to guess the outcome un-j Hamlet Hospital, Hamlfct, $10,621; the climax is reached. Ralph Bell-j I Highsmith Hospital, Fayetteville, amy and Robert Young are Miss Hep- j ,$13,140; Lee County HospiUl, San-^ burn's leading men, ford, $2,740; Pittman Hospital, Fay-, ^he attraction at the Pinehurst i etteville, $8,352; Watts Hospital, Theatre, Friday, April 6th, matinee Durham, $21,692. night, is none other than the | Business Manager Edwin McKeith- ; adaptation of the well known stage ! I en of the local hospital said yester- j piay, "You're Telling Me” in which j day that the Duke allotment repre- vv. C. Fields, that superb comedian j sented $i OO to a patient day for gets real chance to strut his stuff and j charity patients, but that as the pa- takes full advantage by delivering I TO THE TAX P.AYERS OF SANDHILLS I TOWNSHIP: I NOTICE I will meet the tax payers of Sand hills Township at the following places and dates for the purpose of listing their taxes for the year 1934: SOUTHERN PINES—at Standard Oil Filling Station, April 20th, 1934, station near overhead bridge, (one day only.) RADFORD’S STORE-(one day only)— April 24th, 1934. PINEBLUFF—Firemen’s Hall, April 17th, 1934—(one day only). ADDOR—at Postoffice—April 13th, 1934. (one day only). ABERDEEN—The remaining days of April will be in Aberdeen at the Aberdeen Hotel, except Sunday. J. T. Harrington Tax Lister Presenting RETURN ENGAGEMENT of “Bottoms Up” tient-day cost was nearly $5.00 a day the institution must look to other contributions for a continuance of its care of those unable to pay. The annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Moore County Hos pital will be held at the hospital next Tuesday evening, April 3rd, at 7:00 p. m. The directors will meet for din- all kinds, sizes, and shapes of laughs. { As a nut inventor, Topper, in dem, onatration of his puncture proof tire, he deflates the balloons on the wrong car, and humiliated, leaves town, at tempts suicide, meets Princess Les- carboura, who later okays him with the home town high-hats, maneuvers the engagement of his daughter, helps On« C*nt a word cach inurtion. Minimum charirc, ti ccnU. All Want Ada muat ba paid far bcfarc inicrtien. VRCH SUPPORTS without any metal. Made from impression taken of each foot. R. Leatham, maker, Wor- then Court between 71 and 78 S. Ashe street, Southern Fines, tf. j nei, the meeting immediately follow. | him get a million for his invention j and exalts him to the post of drlv- I opening goll MISS MARGARET .\RNOLD ] course j WEDS ELLSWORTH GILES. JR. j At Southern Pines i Another spectacular pre-release at- In the Church of St. James The traction, but at the regular prices. POSITION WANTED—Young wom an, college graduate with teaching and business experience, desire.'; summer employment as private sec retary, tutor, governess or com panion. References furnished. Ap ply Box 1263, Southern Pines. a6 Less in Scarsdale, N. Y., last Sat- urday two former residents of South- |em Pines were united in matrimony I by the Rev. Harry Price. The bride I was Miss Margaret Cain Arnold, for- i mer member of the faculty of the I Southern Pines Schools, and the I groom was Ellsworth Giles, Jr., who vith his father published the Mid- has been arranged for the Southern Pines Theatre Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, April 2, 3, 4, with a Tuesday matinee, in "Melody In •Spring." An unusually pleasing com edy with music, featuring the radio star, Lanny Ross, and surrounded with such notable stars as Charlie Ruggles, Mary Boland, Ann Sothem, FOR SALE—Male and female Bea gle dogs, 70 South Ashe Street. FOR A HOME while you are away from home, go to Maple Lodge. Reasonable rates. Free garages. Apply 424 South Bennett Street, Southern Fines. tf. fOR SALE—La SaiJe Sedan, run only 8,000 miles, like new. Bargain. Apply G. T. Dunlap, Pinehurst, N. C. I oouth Daily one winter in Southern j George Meeker, and the three Gale j i^ines a few years ago and who resid-1 sisters. "Melody in Spring” is a real I 3d here for several years. Miss Ar-1 family attraction, especially appro- I nold and Mr. Giles met while here. ; priate to Easter week. It is a mus- Miss Arnold is nt present teach-1 ical, motivated by light, lilting com- I ing at Friends Central School in edy. Overbrook, Pa. She is a graduate of j "Bottoms Up," described as a ro- I Tufts College. Mr. Giles, who was a! mantle comedy with music, will play member of the Class of 1928 at Prin- ‘ a return engagement at the Southern [ , ceton, is with the Insurance Company | Pines theatre, Thursday, Friday and . of North America in Philadelphia.' Saturday, April 5, 6, 7, with a Satur, I Following a short wedding trip Mr. * day matinee. Buddy DeSylva, the pro- and Mrs. Giles will be at home at | ducer who wbls also responsible for j 1408 Berkley Road, Haverford, Pa. j “Sunny Side Up” is credited with , TAXPAYERS of Moore County You will save money by paying your 1933 taxes during March v'^hile the penalty is only 1 per cent. The first of April the penalty will advance to 11-2 per cent and it will increase 1-2 per cent with each suc ceeding month. “A penny saved is a penny earned.” PAY NOW W. T, HimiEY MOORE COUNTY TAX COLLECTO*
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 30, 1934, edition 1
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