Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Dec. 7, 1934, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page Eight THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Friday, December 7, 1934. MRS, HAFER’S PUPILS GIVE PLJ-IVSING PIANO RE( ITAL Mrs. Claude Hafer’s piano class jrave a recital Tuesday afternoon at Dr. Prizer’s home. The rooms were filled with friends of the pupils who thoroughly enjoyed the melodious and pleasing selections. The child ren .showed the usual careful train ing Mrs. Hafor’s pupils always do. Jane Grant Mann’s work was the most outstanding and all showed im- pro%'ement in tone and finish since their last recital. Those on the program were Hazel Kelly. Loui.se Blue. Gladys Snipes, Dorothy Dorn, Catherine Prize", Ed ward Prizer, Anna Walker, Mary O’Callaghan, Jane Grant Mann, Joe O'Callaghan of Southern Pines, and Anna Capps, Betty B-arber, Catherine Page and Helen Capps of Aberdeen. Mrs. Reid Page, the guest of the afternoon, sang three very lovely solos that were heartily applauded. Mrs. Hafer played a selection from Schubert that the children were es pecially interested in, and a brilliant Chopin waltz they had requested. The next recital will be held in Aberdeen in a few weeks. Call Mass Meeting to Make Townsend Plan County Wide] Hope to Have Old Age Revolving Pension Clubs in All Lo- cp.l Communities Miss Martha Emley and Mrs. Sharpe of Wrightstown, N. J., have opened their home on Ridge Street for the season. THE Carolina Theatres Pinehurst-Southern Pines PRESENT COLUMBIA PICTURE Ad cut or mat ONL-6A—1 col. x 14 j. At Pinehurst Mon., Dec. 10th, 3:00 and 8:15 SYLVIA SIDNEY and GENE RAYMOND, in ‘BEHOLD MY WIFE’ At Pinehurst Wed., Dec. 12th, 3:00 and 8:15 LORETTA YOUNG" JOHN BOLES At Pinehurst Fri., Dec. 14th, 3:00 and 8:15 EDDIE In SAMUEL r.CLO-.iVH':, c. At Southern Pines Mon., Tue., Wed., Dec. 10, 11, 12—8:15 Matinee Tuesday at 3:00 Limited number of Reserved Seats on sale at the Broad Street Pharmacy. a ThePdinted VEIL Southern Pines Thu.-Fri.-Sat., Dec. 13, 14, 15—8:15 Matinee Saturday at 3:00 There being so much interest man- I ifest in the Townsend plan of Old Age Revolving Pension.s and the new I club at Southern Pines from differ ent parts of the county, the local of ficers have decided to call a mass meeting to be held at the Court House at Carthage this Saturday, Decem- , ber 8th, at 2 o’clock p. m. Everyone in the county will be given an oppor tunity to become familiar with this plan, and if they desire to do so, ' organize a Townsend Old Age Re- ! volving Pension Club in the various ' communities over the county in or- ! der to facilitate the signing of pctij tions to be presented to the next ] Congress, which convenes early in I January. It is hoped to have representatives from every community of the coun ty present at this meeting who are interested in this movement, and that numerous clubs will be organ ized immediately in order that the people of the county may have an opportunity to sign petitions at the earliest possible moment. Theie is no membership fee charg ed for joining these clubs and the only cost will be for petition blanks, about five cents each, and for such circulars interested ones may wish to purchase for the further advance ment of the cause of the Townsend Plan which will not exceed $2.00 for each club. The Southern Pines club is anxious to assi.st in any way it fan in help ing others to organize in their com- ! munities. i The Carthage meeting will be an open one and young people and bufe- 1 iness people as well as those that are at this time eligible for a pension under the Townsend Plan are invited to be present, and if there are any that are opposed to the plan they are urged to be present and present their side of the issue. Officers of the ' Southern Pines group are J. M. Wind- ’ ham, pre.sident; J. F. Cole, vice presi- 1 dent and Miss Alice Holmes, secre tary. An enthusiastic meeting of the Townsend Old Age Pensions Club, was held at the Civic Club in South ern Pines on Monday evening. After an interesting talk on the sidelights of the plan by Miss Alice M. Holmes, a clear and concise analysis of the Townsend Plan was read by aiiss Elizabeth Schwarberg- bringing out its meaning in a most convincing way. -\fter an interesting discussion with satisfactory answers to many ques tion, many added theii- names to the petition. Several people volunteered to circulate petitions throughout Southern Pines and vicinity for more signatures. MISS EI.SIK CH.XNDLEU TO WED UICH.VUn F. TAKLTON Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chandler an nounce the engagement of their daughter. Elsie, to Richard F. Tarlton of Aberdeen. The wed^ding will take place this month. I Civic Club Sponsors I Lecture on Cancer I Dr. A. McNeil Blair to Make I Talk at Clubhouse on De- I cember 14 To review briefly the Civic Club’s activities for the month of Novemmer, on November 16 a Get-Together meet ing was held at which eighty people were served with a turkey dinner, followed by an interesting program furnished by the Third Grade pupils from the public school under the di rection of their teacher. Miss Gog- gans. A play, “Elsie in Bookland,” delighted the audience. The Federation of Women’s Clubs are striving, through educational talks, to assist in combating that out standing menace to both men and women in the prime of life, cancer. I At the Civic Club on Friday after- ' noon, an address will be given on the subject of Cancer—It’s Prevention and Cure,” by a physician who is a mem ber of the State and National Com- , mittee for the Study and Prevention I of Cancer. He has been practising medicine in North Carolina since 1903 and is a member of the North Carolina Medical Association, the Tri-State Medical Association, the Southern Medical Association, the American Medical Association, the American College of Physical Thera py and the American College of Phy sicians. At present he is the presi dent of the Moore County Medical Association, Dr. A. McNeil Blair. All are invited to attend this lecture, free to everyone. Following the talk tea will be served by the ladies of the Health and Welfare Committee of the Civic Club, at no cost to those ' attending. ' On Friday, December 28 a Mus ical Matinee will be given at the club house under the direction of the Mus ic Committee. Further details in another week’s paper. SOUTHERN PINES I Buptl»<t ('hureh I Rev. J. Fred Stimsein, Pastor. | 11:00 a. m.—Preaching by the pas- | tor. I Sunday, 7:30 p. m.—Union service. I Preaching by Rev. C. Rexford Ray mond, pastor of the Church of Wide Fellowship. 6:30 Sunday night Senior and In termediate B. y. P. U. 6:45 Thursday ' night — Prayer meeting. The t’hurc'h of Wide Fellowship Rev. C. Rexford Raymond, D. D., Pastor. Church School, 10:iu a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Ur. Ray mond preaches on “Apostolic Coun sel.” Wednesday, 6:00 p. m.. Fellowship night; supper, followed by address by Dr. Raymond. Kiiinianuel Episcopal Church Rev. F. Craighill Brown, B. A., B .D., Rector. Sunday Services—The first Sun day in the month. Church School 9:30 a. m.; Holy Communion and sermon, 11:00 a. m. This Sunday at 7:30 p. m. Union Service, Preaching by the Rev. J. Fred Stimson. Other Sundays, Holy Communion 8:00 a. m.; Church School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning Prayer and sermon, 11 a. m. Saint’s Days Services, Holy Com munion. 10:00 a. m. His Pupils Here 0 * Christian Science New Hampshire Ave., near Ashe St., Services are held every Sunday at 11 o’clock. The public is cordially in vited to attend. The subject of the lesson sermon of Sunday, December 9, “God the Only Cause and Creator.” IVIanly Presbyterian Sunday School at ten a. m. Young Peoples meeting at seven p. m. Preaching second Sunday night at seven.thirty. Fourth Sunday morn ing at eleven o’clock. WEST END Remington Rand Noiseless Type- writers at Hayes'. The Best Christmas Caid Line in The State at Hayes.’ Harry Russell, Jr. of Wagram and Harry Russel, Sr., of Cape Charles, Va., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Von Canon at t'.eir home,” “Recluse” for the Thanksgiving hol iday. Mr. and Mrs. Von Canon en tertained Saturday evening at Love- joy's for a party of eight in honor fo their house guests. Dr. and Mrs. Carl Sox entertained at dinner and bridge Tuesday even ing. Covers were laid for eight. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Von Canon had as their dinner guests Sunday even ing. Dr, and Mrs. Carl Sox and Mr, and Mrs. David Wilson. The Wonderful New Parker Pen at I Hayes.' PINEHURST The Community Church A. J. McKelway, Pastor Sunday—Church School--9:45. Morning Worship—11:00. Sermon by the pastor. Cheap Bible.” Young People’s Service, 7:30 p. m. THE WANT^AM HAV^ING JUST BOUGHT the furn ishings in a sixteen room house I have more goods and better bar gains than ever before. There are Morris chairs, rockers, straight chairs, good beds, bureaus, tables, rugs, curtains and many other use ful articles. Come and make an of-' fer f ',r anything you need.' ' i H. a‘. lewis. Trader j FOR SALE -Six-room house, laundry, garage, furnace heat. Must be seen to be appreciated. Offered at bar- j gain. Terris. See any real estate agent or Thomas Galbraith, owner. FOR SALE- 1932 Ford V-8 Sport Coupe, splendid condition, mileage 12,350. $300.00 cash. Box 834, Southern Pines, N. C. GLOVE lost—On Sunday, Dec. 2, at Post Office or Church of Wide Fel lowship, a left-hand, dark-gray, sue<|e glove with dark stitching on back. Finder will be rewarded by giving it to Mr. Grover at Post Office. PIANO FOR RENT: Apply to Ethel S. Jones, Box 492, Southern Pines, N. C. tf. Make that long distance trip by bus. I The rates are much cheaper. Wash-' ington, D. C., $4.95; New York, . $9.85; Boston, $12.50; Miami and i St. Petersburg, $9.95. Tickets and . information at Postal Telegraph Co., Southern Pines, N. C. 1)7 | J. L. SWEARINGEN, sheet metal j worker, and tin smith. Roofing and ' furnace work at moderate prices.! Manor Hotel building. Southern I Pines, N. C. j FEA :ERWEIGHT arch Supports,! made from an impression of each I foot. No metal. Hand-made. R. i Leatham, maker, 39 No. May St., I Southern Pines. tf. The Village C'hap»‘l Rev. T. A. Cheatham, D. D., Minister Sunday Services: Holy Communion, 9 a. m. Children’s Sei’vice, 10:00 a. m. Church service, 11 a. m. ABERDEEN Bethosda Presbyterian Church Rev. E. L. Barber, Pastor. Services each Sunday morning at 11:15; Services each Sunday evening at 7:30. Prayer meeting services Wed nesday evening at 7:30. j PaRO Meniorhil M. E. Rev. L. M. Hall F'irst Sunday- Preaching 7:30 p. m. ; Second Sunday- Preaching 11 a. m. ! Third Sunday—Preaching 7:30 p. m. ' Fourth Sunday—Preaching 11 a. j m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at I 10:00 o’clock. I Pineliluff Methodist Chur<'h ' Rev. Clyde O. Newell, B. A., B. D., Minister. Topic of C. O. Neweil’s sermon, “Children of Light.” 9:45 a. m Church School. '‘11:00 a. m. Preaching Service. 6:30 p. m.—Epworth League, Jun ior. 7:30—Epworth League, Young People. Sm > .\t Pinehurst Moviedom hails a new, vibrant,, glamorous screen star, concert ar tist and radio singer, and star of the film sen.'sation, “One Night of Love," playing a return engagem.ent by pop ular request at Pinehurst. Monday, December 10th. matinee and night. Her triumphant song literally trans- ■ports one inlo a fau-yland world of music, beauty and thrilling emotion. Her glorious alluring charm, her ti- brant personality radiates a magne- i.isni iiuni the screen that is capti vating and seauctive. America has taken her to its heart as an opera star—it w'ill welcome here with lav ish praise as the new screen sensa tion! “One Night of Love" is not Miss Moore’s first screen venture. She formerly appeared w'ith Lawrence Tibbett in the cineniativation of "Ntvv Moon” and again as “Jenny Lind” in “A Lady's Morals." But "One Kight of Love” is the first production to give full sway to her rich beauty, her golden-toned voice and her dramatic ability. The attraction at Pinehurst Wed nesday, December I2th, matinee and night, is an adaptation of Sir Gilbert Parker’s well known nove;, “Behold My Wife,” which was so successfully produced some years ago in silent pictures and now co-features Sylvia Sidney and Gene Raymond. In a deft mixture of pathos and comedy, Syl via Sidney is hei'e revealed as an In dian girl who marries a white man who takes her home for the purpose of embarrassing his family. A not able cast will be seen in support, in cluding H. B. Warner, Lauia xiope Crews, Kenneth Thomson, Eric Blore and others. One of the most human, compell ing and dramatic screen narratives in years, Je.sse L. Lasky’s “The White Parade,” is Che atiiaction at Pinehurst Friday, December 17th, matinee and night, and is recom mended as superlative entertainment. It is a story with a soul! It is a grip ping and a poignant drama, and the manner of its pre.sentation is a dis tinct contribution to screen history. Loretta Young offers a ma.sterly per formance as the young .student nurse who is the heroine. The film follows her schooling from the day of her en rollment, until just graduated, she has to make her choice between the man she loves, John Boles, and the service whose true meaning has be come e;very day more clear to her. John Boles contributes a splendid characterization as the rich young suitor who, baffled by the elusive se cret of the^e girl nurses, seeks to persuade her that her life lies with him. •\t Southern IMnes “Kid Millions," Eddie Cantor’s fifth annual screen musical extrav aganza for Samuel Goldwyn, brings the pop-eyed comedian to the screen of the Southern Pines Theatre Mon day, Tuesday, Wednesday, Deo. 10, 11, 12 with a Tuesday matinee, as Wrought Iron Display at Carolina Today Wcrk of Pupils of Descendant and Namesake of Daniel Boone Exhibited An exhibit of wrought iron made by students of Lees-McRae College, Banner Elk, under the direction of Daniel Boone, mountain blacksmith, will be made at the Carolina Hotel today, Friday and Saturday during the meeting of the university and college business officers. The students at the mountain school where Boone is instructor in wrought iron, are working with furd of the North Car olina Emergency Relief Administra tion. The director of the educational division of the N. C. E. R. A., C. E. McIntosh, will give a talk at the meeting of college officials. The public is cordially invited to see this display of wrought iron, which is both an example of mountain handicraft and of the sort of work done by students working for an ed ucation with FERA funds. Their in structor, Daniel Boone, is fifth in line of descent from the famous pio neer and is a native of the North ; Carolina mountains who learned the blacksmith's art from his father and I grandfather. He worked for Anthony Lord, of Asheville, and other well- I known architects before going to ‘Lees-McRae College at Banner Elk. ! After this week-end the display of ; wrought iron will be moved from the Carolina to the Electric Shop at Pine hurst. Included in the exhibit are lighting fixtures of wrought iron, with shades of mountain mica, like those Boone has made for the Tennessee Valley Authority in its model town of Norris, Tennessee. TH.\NKS(iIVIN« 0BSERVF:D BY ( HRISTI.VN SCIENCE CHURCH It is customary on Thanksgiving Day for Christian Science Churches and societies throughout the United State to hold a service appropriate to the occasion, at which time a Le3son- Sermon especially prepared at the headquarters of the Church in Bos ton is read. In accordance with this custom, the Christian Science Society in Southern Pines held its service on Thursday last. The service included the reading of the Thanksgiving Proclamation written by the President of the Unit ed States, the singing by the congre gation of several hymns and a solo, “In Speechless Prayer and Rever ence.” The Golden Text of the Lesson- ' Sermon on Thanksgiving was as .follows: “Thanks be Unto God for His ' Unspeakable Gift.” i a boy Cinderella of the Brooklyn I waterfront who become the heir to a fortune in buried treasure in the land of the Pyramids. Ann Sothern, Ethel Merman, Block and Sully, George Murphy and this season’s crop of Goldwyn Girls piance along the Nile with Eddie in this fast-paced, fun-packed tunefuls tale of adven ture in the harem of the Sheik and the tombs of his fathers. “Mandy,” the Irving Berlin hit which Eddie Cantor originally introduced in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1919, is revived in one of the elaborate song and girl numbers staged aboard the liner en- route to Egypt. The elaborate “ice cream fantasy” a pcor boy's dream come true in which Eddie, the mil lionaire, opens a free ice cream fac tory for boys and girls, is filmed en tirely in Technicolor. At Southern Pines Thursday, Fri day and Saturday, December 13, 14. 15, with a Saturday matinee, Gret.'s Garbo, in “The Painted Veil” w'ill play a return engagement by popu lar request. “The Painted Veil’ ’is by the famous author, Somerset Maugham, who’s current picture “Of Human Bondage” is a success. The cast supporting Miss Garbo is of more than ordinary class. The men who made her life a vivid drama of romance, are Herbert Marshall and Geoi-ge Brent, and others in the sup porting cast are Warner Oland and Jean Hersholt. FOR RENT: Front room, steam bear ed, newly furnished, centrally lo cated, nice porch. 6 East Vermont ! Avenue or Bdx 1405, Southern ' Pines. I BOARDERS WANTEJD— Huntington Lodge. Terms reasonable. Steam Heat. 73 S. E. Broad St., Southern Pines. LOST—Fox terrier, male, one black eye, brown spot on left side. An swers to name of Mickey. Please potify E. H. Lorenson or The Pilot. ANTIQUES FOR SALE by private party. Glassware, China, Furniture, etc. —Address 691, Southern Pines, N. C. FOR RENT—Large, sunny room, heated, all conveniences, price mod erate. Telephone 5625, Southern Pines. FOR RENT—Centrally located sun ny, second floor apartment. Kitch en-dining room, pantry, living room, bed room, bath, three clos ets, laundry in basement. Plea.sant porch. Al.so single rooms. Lillian A. Roberts, 15 East Penn Ave. WANTED—Reliable white man wants work with northern family. Good driver, can do most anything about the place. Address box 152, Hemp, N. C. D14. LOST SETTER DOG—Name on col lar, H. L. Hendricks, Moss’s Sta bles, Southern Pines. LOST—Black hound with tan legs and white feet. Split in each ear. Answers to name Rock. $10.00 re ward. Vander Robson, Southern Pines, N. C. LOST: Gold chain bracelet. Monday night between the theatre and Broad Street. Please return to Pi lot office, Southern Pines. I l|altbag SuggeBttnns I Hosiery—Service, Semi-Chiffon, Chiffon, Sheer 69c to $2.25 ^ Gloves—Pigskin, Pigette, Kidtex, Fabric $1.00 to $5.75 Scarfs—Imported and Domestic, Handmade 69c to $5.00 Handmade Lingerie—Glovesilk and Bemberg $1.00 up Lounging Pajamas and Robes $5.00 to $23.50 Slips—Gowns—Pajamas Parker Games—Dolls—Infants Gifts Luggage—Leather Gifts—Pullman Slippers Moire or Kid Children’s Quilted Silk Robes ^3.25 Children’s Wool Challis Coolie Coats - $1.95 Children’s Pongee Coolie Coats $1.25 C. T. PATCH DEPARTMENT STORE M Southern Pines, North Carolina
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Dec. 7, 1934, edition 1
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