Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Oct. 5, 1934, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page Eight THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Carolina Theatre Southern Pines, N. C. Pinehurst Paragraphs 1‘KESENTS Adolph Zukn p;ei IlfPiTRA W ■'M (pLIERT IHIAM. <OKON Mon., Tue., Wed., Oct. 8, 9, 10 Matinee Tuesday k "^%|||i(HI \ ^ \ I I MONTGOMERY I " T^e-OutZr. j WHnaSUlUM fDWMDAKHOlD Thu.-Fri.-Sat., ! Oct. 11, 12, 13 i Matinee Saturday Mrs. C. B. Hudson entertained at bridge and tea Tuesday afternoon at her liome, guests being Mrs. W. L. Dunlop, Mrs. Charles W. Picquet and Mrs. I. C. Sledge. I Miss Catherine Cole, bride-elect, I shared honors with Mrs. Harold Cal- ; loway at a delightful bridge party and I miscellaneous shower Thursday night when Mrs. True P. Cheney and Mrs. ! VV. L. Dunlop entertained at the i Cheney home. Guests included Miss 1 Cole, Mrs. Calloway, Mrs. Wesley K. j V^iall, Mrs. F. L. Dupont, Mrs. Eric I Nelson, Mrs. J. S. Dunlop, Mrs. Ber tha Freeman, Mrs. Frank McCaskill, ! Miss Sarah Cobb, Miss Lillian Moore, ' Mrs. Herman Campbell, Mrs. Tom 1 Cole, Mrs. A. P. Thompson, Mrs. ] Gordon Cameron, Mrs. Hulon Cole, Mrs. Roy Kelly and Mrs. Clarence Thomas. “Home Mission Harvests" was the topic of an inspiring program present ed at the regular monthly meeting of I the Woman's Auxiliary of the Com- ! munity Church held Tuesday night in I .he church parlor. Mrs. True P. j Cheney was program leader. Musical I numbers included a duet by Mrs. A. ; J. McKelway and Mrs. Raymond ' Johnson and a piano solo by Mrs. I Claude Fry. The business meeting was I l>resided over by Mrs. R. E. Wicker, vice-president of the auxiliary. Two new members were enrolled. plans of Rome to dominate the world. Very craftily anjl with a cunning un known to the screen In the past he has woven in the story of the clowii- Cecil DeMille’s great production, Caesar and Marc Antony “Cleopatra,” will grace the screen through Cleopatra, of the Southern Pines Theatre Mon- j Plenty of entertainment, with com- day to Wednesday, October 8, 9, i romance, is promised In 10, with a matinee Tuesday after-1 “Hide Out.” the attraction for Thurs- noon. This is a typical DeMille pro- ! ^^ay, Friday and Saturday, October duction, lavishly gorgeous in every j ''’ith a Saturday matinee, respect and with every one connect- , The premise is novel and is full of ed deserving high honors for his or human interest as well as good cem- her particular job. ' edy. One of the Sandhills favorites, Claudette Colbert is cast as Cleo- Robert Montgomery, is starred as the patra, with W’illiam Warren as Julius regenerated gangster, with Maureen Caesar and the famous English O’Sullivan, so lately seen in "The Bar- screen star, Henry Wilcoxen as Marc retts of W’impole Street,” as the girl. Antony. | As the detective nemesis, Edwin Ar- Friday, October 5 1934. SEKVICE HOURS CHANGED AT WIDE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH The Church of Wide Fellow.ship an nounces a change in the hour of ser vice and a marked change in the or der of service for next Sunday morn ing. The Sunday School will meet at 10:10 a. m. and its closing service will be merged into the opening ser vice of worship in the church. Church worship will be at 11 a. m., instead of 10:30 as formerly and will be gin wtih a processional hymn in which the Sunday School, led by the church choir, will march into the church. During the early part of the church service there will be a brief address to the children who will then be given the opportunity to retire. A half-hour story telling period in the Primary room will be given for the children who w'ish to attend. Chil dren too young to go home alone will illness in a Richmond hospital where j to the screen the beauty and glory will prove good entertainment for the ' thus be cared for until the close of she recently underwent a major op- j of ancient Egypt and the selfish . entire family. 1 the services in the church. oration. Mr. and Mrs. Mills lived here ■■■ for a number of years, going to Rich- ' mond two years ago. j Jerry Healy of Doublcday, Doran & Co., New York, spent the past; week-end here with friends. \fter spending the summer in Mer edith, N. H., Mi.ss Mary McLong ar rived the first of the week and will be with Mrs. A. S. Coburn until the opening of the Carolina Hotel. Miss May Chapman has returned from her home in Cleveland, Ohio and urday, coming from Meredith, N. H., where they spent the summer. Billy V’iall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley R. Viall spent two days in the Moore County Hospital this week undergoing treatment for a broken arm. Coburn’s Beauty Parlor has been moved from the Market Square build ing where it was located for many years to a sunny corner in the Thea tre building. Mrs. O. H. Stutts and young son, returned Sunday from Franklin, Va., where they spent the summer with her mother, Mrs. Lawrence. Dr, and Mrs, Loui,^ J. Pegram mov- Mr. DeMille spent $1,000,000 on this ; nold provides a line that gives the ed this week into the house on Mid- picturc and has more than SI ,000,- story a big wallop, while as the far- land Road formerly occupied by Mr, ! 000 worth of entertainment, superb mer father and mother, Whitford beauty, lavish settings and stirring Kane and Elizabeth Patterson are also • » and Mrs. Clarence Thomas. Pinehurst friends of Mrs. J. A. | encounters to show for it. W'ith a I delightful. Mickey Rooney is Mills regret to learn of her serious j fine sense of balance, DeMille brings ideal as a little brother. “Hide Out One Cent m word each insertion. Minimam charKe, 25 cents. All Want Ado must be paid for before inaertion. H. C. McLeod, the handy man, is at the Trade Store readj' to repair your furniture, H. A. Lewis is there from ten to twelve ready to trade for anything. Have a one ton ele vator for sale cheap. Will buy or .sell if you do not care to trade. Come and see us. H. A. LEW^IS, TRADER. I MADE TO ORDER and we stock ' Bird Baths, Sun Dials and Lawn Benches. D. L, Mauney, Jack,son' Springs, Route 2, near Maness Or- i ohard. S21012 i The Rev. A. J, McKelway, pastor is busy in her plans for the opening I of the Community chufch has an- ' of The Cottage School on the 16th, nounced that quarterly communion | Mr. and Mrs. Alex Innes have re- , services will be hold in that church turned from their seasonal stay at j at 11:00 o’clock next Sunday morn-' Roaring Gap. I ing, to which everyone is invited. j The Rev. A. J. McKelway and Miss Virginia Hensley, who is a Alex Stewart spent Tuesday and student at Meredith College, Raleigh, Wednesday in Rowland, attending a j .«pent the week-end at home with her meeting of Fayetteville Presbytery, | ' mother, Mrs, D, W.' Hensley. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gilliland and Mr. and Mrs. James McNab have family, and their niece. Miss Fronie ' I returned for the winter season after Taylor spent the week-end with Mrs. j passing the summer at Harbor Btjach, Gilliland’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. I Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. McNab, Mrs. A. Byrd at their home in Broadway, ! j True P. Cheney and her young L, L. Tait returned from Blow- 1 daughters. Dorothy and Sally Chen- ing Rock Saturday and joined his i ' ey left Friday for a motor trip to family in Dundee Cottage for the V'i ialia, Georgia, where they w'ill vis- winter months. i it Mrs. Cheney’s parents, Dr. and John Biggers, who has been visit- ^ Mrs. John M. Meadows. ing friends in Pinehurst left Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tufts and for Tarboro where he will teach this their family arrived in Pinehurst Sat- year. NEW F"AL.L. SHOES Just Arrived! \ A Foot of Comfort Means Miles of Happiness This Special Steel Arch Support Shoe Means Comfort The STYLITE Two-Eyelet Tie is very smart at .^5.00 The AIR-TRED Oxford moulds itself to your foot. Special Steel Arch Support $6.00 COMMON SENSE OXFORDS, widths to EE, all sizes $4.00 Nurses’ Oxfords . $5.50 Very Special! BiT)wn and black kid 3 eyelet tie-Patent and kid one strap shoe.'* and black. All size.s in C width, Kid pumps in brown Choice SL.98 North Carolina’s Debt Situation C. T. PATCH DEPARTMENT STORE Southern Pines, North Carolina FOR sale: or RENT—Eight room In his talk before the Kiwanis houst*. Suitable for two apartments. Club last week Herbert F. Seawell, Two baths. Hot air furnace, elec-1 Jr., of Carthage brought out some trie lights. Central location. J. M. E. care The Pilot, Southern Pines. FOR sale or RENT Five room cottage. Modem improvements. W’rite J. M. E., care The Pilot, Southern Pines. FOR RENT; One, Two, and Three room furnLshed apartments in the Beverly, Corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and Bennett St. Steam heat, Eft.*<ctric lights. Hot water, use of | ,» telephone and privilege of large sunny Lounge included. Within a i, block of business section. Rent by the month or season. J. B. Gifford Proprietor. S2805 AIREDALE PUPS, 4 months old, de- t wormed and healthy. W'ill make J splendid guards and companions. Males $7.50; females 55.00. Box 693, Sanford, N. C. 0-5. important facts and figures about North Carolina finances. Among them we quote the following; North Carolina and its sub-divis ions owe 889 million dollars in addi tion to what we will have to pay on the national debt. In 1920 the State debt was 7 mil lion dollars: today it is over 180 mil lion dollars and is greater than that of any state in the Union except ! New York and on a basis of valua tion exceeds that of New York. This debt is 4 1-2 times the average of all other states in the Union. From 1921 to 1928 we borrowed money in this state at the rate of 50 million dollars per year. Ninety per cent of our State debt has been incurred since 1918 and «ur third of tlie entire annual income of the nation Ls spent just for the lu.\- ury of being governed. This is an impossible economic condition. Whether a man ever .sees a tax bill or not he pays the tax just the same, either in increased cost of w'hat he buys. decrea.sed wages, increased rent of cessation of employment.” :VIKS. I). K. .'VI<I\T-:il, BKOAinVAV .\V\.\Y IN OULUSBOKU SPARTAN LAYING MASH contains Oatmeal, Buttermilk and Cod Liv- «r Oil which means more eggs for iMs cost. —Pinehurst Warehouses 'sell it. Mrs. Duncan R. Mtrfver of Broad way passed away in Goldsboro Sat urday after an illness of several months. Funeral services were held in Broadway Sunday and were conduct ed by the Rev. John S. CooJc. Mrs. Mclver was 64 years of age.. She was the daughtisr of the late Darius Thomas and Rasanna Dalrym- tax bill has multiplied itself four -^irvived by her! huAand, Prof. D. R. Mclver and two j sons. Thomas Mclver of Bi-oadway and Frank Jttclver of Reidsville, two times in ten years. Interest alone on the public debt is over 53 million dollars per year,. 144 .J J 11 J • . isistfTS, Mrs. F. E. Barnes of Gtoldsbonj, thousand dollars a day, six thousand I , , , nr>H V i'rrria T'V'^*v»qci dollars an hour, one hundred dollars a minute. If a special treasury or depository WANTED—Party interested in old j been built and one thousand dol- rare book proposition. Address! l®*'s deposited in it each and every Care of Pilot. FOUND: A terrier puppy. W^ R. Hay. Wood, Timberland, N. C. «OE McGKAW WILL BE STAliTER AT FAIR RACES day from the day that the Good Mas ter walking by the Sea of Gallilee called Simon Peter to take up his and Mrs. Eazzie Thomas oC Broad way. .JOHN WIIX>COX ON CATi'LE FEED ,%D\ ISO«Y CQiiJOU’TTEE Joe MsGraw of Goshen, N. Y., the "human record book” of harness horse racing, has been secured to act as official starter of the $1,600 speed program at the State Fair on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday next week. For many years an official at a majority of America’s foremost rac ing meets, the New York man is said to be able to cite state, national and world records from memory. He is Cattle feed advisory committees composed of the relief administrator, cross and follow Him, it would still i farm agent and one outstanding lack 159 million dollars of being | ^^.rmer liave been named in the var- enough money to pay the public debt counties to set the prices an of this State. ^o be brought for the relief cat- W’e have been operating the State | W'illcox is the out-standing government at about one million dol- 1 who haa been named to serve lars more per month than the tax payers have been ^le to pay in for that purpose. We have been funding our deficits and calling our budgets balanced. The annual tax biil of the State is over 102 million dollars and is great er than the entire annual income of all the corporations in this state, domestic and foreign. Every man, woman and child in considered one of the three leading i North Carolina, white, black, yellow authorities in the United States on ■ and red owe over $183.00 each, the history o€ the sport. Every family of five owe $916 tax debt. Out of 67 industries that moved South last year, only four came to North Carolina As far as climate and locality are concerned we should have had at least 50 per cent of them, maybe more. President Roosevelt speaking in Pittsburgh in 1932 .said this: ‘‘This nation earns forty-five billion dol lars per year. Fifteen billion dollars of this amount is spent for govern- ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED The engag'ement is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Hulon Cole of Pine- fiurst of their daughter, Katherine JClizabeth, to John Thomas Biggers «f Matthews. The wedding will take ^ace in November. with Miss Head and Mr. Garrison in Moore county, and they met on Tues- ; day to decide on prices to be paid for hay and grain feeds bought by the relief administration- All purchases and prices must be approved by this committee. C.\RLO.^D OF C.VNNED BEEF FOR RELIEF RECEIVED HERE If yoH want to remt that apartment quickly list it in The Pilot "Want Ads.” A carload of canned beef arrived in Aberdeen last week for distribution in Robeson, Scotland, Richmond, Montgomery and Moore counties. Moore’s allotment is 3,840 cans, each can containing one and one-half pounds. MISS JEAN SMITH, PINEHI RST W EDS JOHN ADCOX, FINEBLl FF Miss Jean Smith and John Adcox were married Monday, September 10 . at Spartanburg, S. C. They are mak ing their home in Pinebluff. Mrs. Ad- GRANDMOTHER’S SLICED POLLMAN « lOc ROUND ROLLS dozen Sc JEWEL, SWIFT’S 8-lb CARTON 80c m 25c PREMIUM FLAKES,.16c NECTAR TEA, 2 25c I CALO DOG FOOD,c*ans 25c 75th I0N.4, 95c $1.85 75th ANNIVERSARY FLOUR ANNIVERSARY SALE Plain or Self-Rising SUNNYFIELD ^e99At$1.95 SALE BABY FOOD OATS S-Sm. PKGS. 4«/z oz. CAN GERBER’S SUNNYFIELD 25c 4 CAKES CAMAY SOAP, D1?A\[C! QUAKER, 28-oz. DLiililO, MAID, CAN 19c 10c Imported Swiss CHeese, lb. 79c SALAD DRESSING „ua„ p., 10c Pt. 15c SANDWICH SPREAD RAJAH '2 pint jar Qt.25c 10c PINEAPPLE D^LMONTK^ 10c N„,2 17c ASPARAGUS TIPS No. 1 DELMONTE Round 2 Cans 25c Banana^!, 4 lbs , 25c Oranges, doz 40c Hose F*ears, doz 30c Celery, 2 for 15c York Apples, 3 lbs 10c Cranberries, lb 25c Boned and Rolled Roast, lb 29c l*ot Roast, lb. .T,....19c Lej;-of-Lamb, Ib 29c f..anib Shoulders, lb. 19c Select Oysters, Va. Best, 66c Standard Oysters, qt 55c cox is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. mental purposes This means that one L. E. Smith of Pinehurst. j Tihe Gi^eat “Save witH Safety” ATLANTIC & PACIFIC
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1934, edition 1
8
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