, ■ :-r^.. -.■n''^wi Many Drinks Daisy Ayers, white of near White Hill, is perhaps the first woman to be tried in a Moore county court on a charge of driv ing an automobile while intoxicat ed. She was given 30 days in jail, this to be suspended upon the pay ment of a fine of $50 and the costs, and she is not to drive a car again for 90 days. The Recorder recom mended to the commissioners that she be sent to the county home. $343,380 INt’REASE IN TAX LOAD PKOBABLK (Continued from page 1) Due from other funds 662,54 First Real Estate Mort gages 8,000.00 Capital Properties 800,712.06 heatre Total $863,202.11 Asks Better Salaries for Teachers of N. C. SANDHILLS PHOTO SHOP Aberdeen, N. C. Principal Zimmerman of Aber deen Schools Makes Plea Be- for Kiwanis Club Liabilities; Encumbrances ! Outstanding Vouchers on Closed Bank Matured Bonds and Inter est Outstanding Due Other Funds Bonded Indebtedness Surplus or Deficit: Operating Fund.s, deficit of Bond Funds Capital Funds ; 462.90 934.62 15,497.50 9,283.70 520,500.00 7,793.90 44^05.23 280.212.06 Carolina Theatre Southern Pines, N. C. PRESENTS Mon., Tue., Wed., Aug. 13, 14, 15 Matinee Tuesday At 3:00 :%GIRL FROMMIS^aUFt^ Thu.-FVi.-Sat., Aug. 16,17, 18 Matinee Saturday At 3:00 R. C. Zimmerman, principal of the Aberdeen schools, thinks it is entirely a matter for the taxpayers of Moore county to determine whether they can afford it or not, speaking of the pro posed bond issue for new buildings be fore Kiw'anis Club members on Wed nesday, but holds that new buildings or no new buildings, teachers of North Carolina should be paid more money. With the average salary over the state only $45.08, less than that paid a junior guard in a convict camp, how can we look for proper education for our children, no matter in how expensive buildings they are taught, Mr. Zimmerman asks. “Our children are worth better teachers than we can give them at such salaries,” he said, adding ‘‘as general conditions improve in other lines, we are go ing to lose those good instructors we have and get inferior ones.” Mr. Zimmerman cited figures to show that it would be economy in the state to run the schools for nine months, stating that records have re vealed that one in three pupils have to be retaught in eight months schools, whereas in the nine months schools the record is sufficiently bet- ter to offset this reteaching expen.~e. Paul Dana. Kiwanis Club treasur er, announced at the meeting the re ceipt of a check from Judge William A. Way in the amount of $40.75, mon ey taken in from sightseers at the Carolina Orchid Greenhouses last winter season for the Kiwanis relief fund. The club passed a resolution of thanks to Judge Way. Mr. Dana also announced that the fund for the support of a bed in the cfiildren’s ward of the Moore County Hospital had been raised and a check for $365 sent to the hospital for another year. This is an annual club activity, the raising of funds for this bed. Next week’s meeting of the club will be held in Carthage, with L. V. O’Callaghan of Southern Pines in charge of the program. Total $863,202.11 The following comments from the audited report of the accountants are of interest; $40,146 Defk-ienoy I “The tax yield for 1932 decreased I $12,865.31 due principally to a de- I creased valuation and a decrease in the tax rate.” “Expenditures were maintained sub- ! stantially within the budgets. How ever, deficits are reflected in some funds due to the decline in the tax yields.” “Sinking fund surplus is short of requirements in both the courthouse and highway bond funds. This condi tion however, is not such but what remedies cannot be effected without an undue burden before the matur ity of the term bonds.” “The combine? financial position of the county reflects a deficiency of $40,146.43, caused principally by the deficiency in the sinking fund re quirements.” A further item which taxpayers of the county should taite into consid eration before passing judgment on the proposed increase of nearly one quarter of a million dollars in county indebtedness is this; There were some 2,500 names on the last list of property owners of the county ad vertised for non-payment of taxes, nearly 10 percent of the population of the county, around 50 percent of the number of taxpayers in the coun ty- SOUTHERN PINES Subscribe To THE PILOT Moore County's Leading Weekly $2.00 Per Year In Advance Mrs. Lila V. Wrenn. Nancy Wrenn and Sue Ann Milliken spent a few days in High Point last we*;k as the guests of Mrs. M. J. Wrenn. Miss Margaret Vistal of Moravian Falls is visiting her cousin. Miss Nancy Wrenn. Albert Adams left Thursday for New Hampshire to bring home Mrs. Adams and young son. Mrs. Lila V. Wrenn and daughter Nancy will leave the last of this week for a visit with friends in Lenoir. Mrs. C. W. Mitchell and daughter, Lyda Mae, Miss Elizabeth Hobbs and Ralph Hobbs of Windsor are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Sitterson this week. Robert Dorn is expected to return the latter part of this week after a trip to Chicago and the World’s Fair. D. A. Blue, Jr., Paul Blue and Ed ward Prizer will return in a few days from a visit to the World’s Fair. The Rev. Fred Stimson has return ed from a few days’ trip to Lenoir. Francis Robinson is spending a few days in Southern Pines. a— Lilting romance and uproarious comedy amid the gay American col ony in Paris comes to the Southern Pines Theatre Monday, Tuesday and W'edneaday, August 13, 14, 15, with a Tuesday matinee, in “Paris Inter lude.” based on the New York stage hit, “All Good Americans.’ Dealing with Paris at the time of the arrival of Lindbergh, the plot follows the fortunes of a group of new’spaper cor. espondents, a girl tfashion writer •'.nd other expatriates in the festive 'rcnch capital. One of the spectacular details ot the new picture is a great fashion show, with beautiful mannequins dis playing the latest finery in a replica of a famous Parisian salon. Another is the huge masquerade ball given by the artists in the Latin Quarter. The tamoius American bar and other haunts of tourists also figure in the engaging blend of comedy and ro mance. Madge Evans plays the her oine, as the American tourist who, jilted and stranded in Paris, wins her I way to fame as a fashion writer. Otto [ Kruger p!*rNING JULY 1. 1934, AND ENDING JUNE 30, 1935 FUND Column 1 Total Budsret Reqiirementa Column 2 Estimate of Revenue to Be Available other than Tax Levy SCHOOLS—Current Expense $ 5,260.00 $ 3,500.00 Capital Outlay 3,950.00 3,150.00 Debt Service 10,105.73 750.00 i COUNTY—General and Courts ... 44,777.00 14,075.00 Poor 9,622.00 1,536.00 Health 9,680.00 1,200.00 Court House Bonds .. 14,019.50 750.00 Funding Bonds 3,953.38 .300.00 Contingent 3,000.00 50.00 ROADS— Debt Service 30,269.28 2,600.00 TOTAL $134,636.89 $ 27,911.00 “County Fiscal Control Act”—Sec. 7, Ch. 146, P. L., 1927 Column 3 Column 4 Column 5 Column 6 Column 7 Column 8 (Col. 1. lens Col. 2) Tax Levy to Balance Budget Estimate of Uncollectible Taxes, Commi8> aions on Collectiond and Tax Payers* Discount (Col. 3, plu» Col 4) Total Amount of Tax Levy Estimate of Property Valuation EHtimate of Tax Rate on $100 Valuation Tax Rate of Lant Preceding (jtiry $ 1,760.00 $ 526.00 $ 2,286.00 1.5 2.5 800.00 225.00 1,025.00 .5 .0 9,355.73 2,794.27 12,150.00 jg 6.5 6.5 30,702.00 9,081.00 39,783.00 o 20. 20. 8,086.00 2,415.00 10,501.00 d o 5. 5. 8,480.00 2,530.00 11,010.00 w 09 o> 5.5 5. 13,269.50 3,963.50 17,233.00 04 V 8.5 8.5 3,653.38 1,091.27 4,744.65 .9 5 2.5 2.5 2,950.00 V 1,000.00 3,950.00 4) QJ 2. 2. 27,669.28 8,264.72 35,934.00 18. 18. $106,725.89 $ 31,890.76 $138,616.65 70. 70. *