Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / April 26, 1935, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Friday, April 26, 1935. THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Page llirM She Ark SoiUltern ^inrs, N. C. Mrs. Millicent A. Hayes, Principal \ COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Cinderg:artea through the 8th MUSIC-ART—LANGUAGES Tutoring Arranged for Older Groups Limited AccommodatioiM for Boardart By M. R. Dunnagan, The Pilot’s Raleigh Correspondent The State Senate, whch had had j ulate more than 40 bills needing at- A Will be in hii office orer tlM Poat Office, Sanford, N. C., eTeiy Wednesday, frprn 10:00 a. in. to 8:00 p. m. Don’t fail to se* him If your eyca are weak. R. A. WARREN For Fine Repairs Watches—-Clocks—Jewelry West Broad Street Southern Pines the Important Revenue bill lor ex actly four weeks Tuesday, on that day at an afternoon session placed It on its third reading, although It was some $2,500,000 short of the amount needed to balance with the Appropriation bill, already passed by the House £ind to be considered this week by the Senate. The Revenue Bill which passed its first reading Friday and second read- i ing Saturday with only a few audi- j ble votes in opposition, has replac ed in it several items which the Sen ate earlier had eliminated and which raised the revenue estimates some $2,- 000,000. Only five items are exempt ; from the three per cent sales tax, I meal, flour, lard, fatback and sugar, ! as it is now written. Also, Bibles, • hymnals and Sunday School litera ture were exempted. Time To Apply For Crop and Feed Loans Applications Should Be Made To Moore County Loan Com mittee at Courthouse DEMONSTRATION CLl B ENJOYS OUTING, FISH FRY COMMENCEMENT AT VA8S LAKEVIEW SCHOOL MAY SO tention. When the big bills are out of the way, however, they make short work of the others. Sixteen public j bills and resolutions and 87 measures ' were ratified last week, bringing the total ratified for the session to 745 bills and 42 resolutons, of the 1733 bills introduced. The counties voting for repeal are Alleghany, Beaufort, Craven, Curn. tuck, Durham, Edgecombe, Halifax, Martin New Hanover Onslow i^asquo- tank, Pitt and Wilson, 13. Others, to establish stores, would have to vote local option. The Senate restored the sales tax I on hotel room rentals, exempting NcLean Furniture Co. COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS CASH OR CREDIT SOUTHERN PINES FUNERAL HOME Embalming—Ambulance Service Tel. 7401 Southern Pines L. T. CLARK DRS. NEAL & GRIFFITH Veterinarians I Office at Race Track, Pinehurst. Also at Swinnerton Staliles, Southern Fines, daily E. V. PERKINSON General Contractor Storage fiMtliem Pines, N. C. Tel. 5038 A. L.. ADAIVIS PAINTSl — DBCOEA.TOB PAPER HAHGBR WALL PAPBIIS Phone C9Si J. N. POWELL Funeral Directing Embalming Ambulance Service Day and Night Phone 6161 East Broad St., Southern Pines Servlc« Since 1895 regular roomers in hotels. The maxi mum sales tax on any one article was increased from $10 to $15 and the in come tax exemption of 15 per cent The House passed the bill provid ing $500,000 for upkeep of streets m towns and cities designated as parts of the State highway system, and sent it to the Senate. It changed its mind and voted to bring it back, but too late. The Senate had already passed it, and it has been ratified. The automobile license tax rate was still further reduced by the House to on amounts given to charity and the' 40 cents per 100 pound.s. The Senate like was reduced to 10 per cent., had passed it at 45 cent.s, a reduction Chain filling station taxes were res- from the present 55 cents. The Sen- j tored. Thus the Senate had gone up f^te may concur in the 40-cent rate. I the hill and down again, also. The joint session of Senate and I I House adopted wtihout change or The House indicated Friday that j comment the report of the commit- ! it would not be likely to accept the tee naming 35 trustees of the Univer- I bill as it comes back from the Sen ate, probably Wednesday, in which ! case a conference committee would , have to be named to iron out the dif- ! ferences. It is considered likely that I all of the basic food items now ex- ! empt will be put back in the bill as I the House had passed it. Or, it may 1 be that the Hill liquor control bill may be used as a stop-gap to till in between the expected revenue and I appropriation differences. A "round I robin” of 50 House members is re- j ported to have signed up to vote tor I the liquor control bill it the Senate passes it, and that is about halt of the ' 120 members present at any session along now. If the House should adopt the Sen ate measure, or if the conterence committee should iron out the dit- ferences in a couple of days, then it seems likely that the legislature can ' adjourn within a week. This is not , expected. Amendments to the Hill bill may be offered to let t;\oi.'e coun- ' ties which voted for repeal in 1933 : establish liquor stores at once, along I with some of the resort sections, not- I ably Asheville, Waynesville, Pine- ; hurst and Southern Pines. ■ Both Houses ana Senate have worked hard the past werk, the House seeking to clear up ita heavy calen dar, and succeeding fairly well, even j though it has the habit of bringing j back bills already killed and passing I them, or killing those already passed, i The Senate, on the Revenue bill, has i allowed its public calendar to accum- HigKland 1-odge A Quiet Home-Like Family Hotel Pleasantly Located on Vermont Avenue Near the Pines SEASON OCTOBER 1ST TO JUNE 1ST Nicely furnished comfortable apartments for rent MRS. W. N. GREARSON Telephone 6933 Southorn Pines, N. C. tmiuuumssmmsttnttn CHAS. J. SADLER, Mcr. Park View Hotel FINE LOCATION GOOD ROOMS OPEN ALL YE.\R RATES MODERATE SEASON 1935-1936 FOR SALE or RENT My House E. Mass. Ave., Six Bed Rooms, Four Baths, Oil Burner and Electric Refrigerator. Furnished and Opened for Inspection Pick Your Home for Next Season George C. Moore sity of N. C., ten to fill iinexpired ■ terms. However, Senator Kivers Johnson offered a resolution recom mending that one trustee be named ' from each county, with an addition-' al trustee for each 40,000 population. • or major fraction. It was adopted as p. recommendation, but the body re- fused to undo what it had Just done and mal^e it apply this year. As adopted, it has no actual force, i merely recommending. I The House changed its mind on two | measures. It rescinded its action of a few days before memoralizing Congress to remove the processing tax on cotton, by adopting a repealer bill, and sent it to the Senate. It also revived a bill killed, to allow debtors of defunct banks to offset debts with deposits, passed it and sent it to the Senate. Field Supervisor Carl C. Culbreth of the Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Office at Sanford states that applications for emergency crop loans and feed loans are now being received by the Moore County Loan Commit tee, with offices located in the Court house at Carthage. In accordance with the Act of Con- gre.ss authorizing the loans, and reg ulations issued by Governor W. 1. Myers of the Farm Credit Adminis tration, loans will be made only to farmers who are unable to obtain elsewhere seed, fertilizers, supplies, feed or the necessary credit to pur chase such items. Loans will not be made to applicants who can obtain credit in the amount needed from any other source, including the pro duction credit association. Any farmer who has the necessary security should apply to the produc tion credit association first. If the as- Eociation is unable to make him a loan in the amount needed the far mer will receive a statement to that effect and will be considered eligible to apply for a loan from the emer gency fund. The regulations provide that the largest loan to one farmer this year is $500 and the minimum $10, but no loan may be made in an amount greater than is actually needed to cover the cash cost of purcha.sing seed, fertilizers, supplies, feed, etc. Loans will be made for the purpose of growing and harvesting crops, for summer following, for purchasing feed for livestock; but not for the purpose of purchasing livestock or machinery, or for the payment of debts or taxes. Loans will be made only to appli cants who are cooperating with the Production Control Program of the Agricultural Adjustment Administra tion. A.«i in the past, the security for an emergency crop or feed loan will con sist of a first lien on the crop by getting the landowner to waive his claim in favor of the crop lien; but the landowner is in no way obligated for repayment of his tenant’s loan. Checks in payment of approved The Springfield Home Demonstra tion Club sponsored a community rec- I recreational meeting recently that I was greatly enjoyed by all who | I were so fortunate as to be present. ' Club members, almost 100 percent! strong, and their families journeyed : ' to Lakeview where the men engaged ^ in fishing while the women cooked | a hundred pounds of fish which they 1 were wdse enough to bring along with 1 them, then all gathered around and partook of the feast. M. J. McLean, representing the men, expressed thanks to the club women for tue delightful occasion, and Mrs. Ben Gulledge, club president, i made a talk which was enjoyed by all. ' Some 75 persons enjoyed the outing. loans will be issued by the Regional Emergency Crop and Feed Loan Of- i I fice at Memphis, Tenn.; and not by i i the field supervisor or the loan com- | i mittee. | The Vass-Lakeview School Com mencement will begin on Friday even ing, May 3, at which time the annual recitation-declamation contest will be held. On Sunday evening, the Rev. J. Fred Stimson of Southern Pines Bap. tist Church will deliver the baccsu laureate sermon; Class day exercises will be held on Monday evening. The Rev. Carey Adams, president of Pres byterian Junior College in Ma:\-)n, will give the address at 10 o’clock Tuesday morning, following which di plomas and awards of honor will be presented. On Tuesday evening the high school play will be given. ‘‘When a Feller Needs a Friend” is the title and the characters are working hard under the direction of Miss Eunice Setzer, determined to give a perform ance in keeping with the high stand ard set by former high school classes. All evening programs are schedul ed to begin at eight o’clock. The Hollywood Hotel Corner Federal Highway No. 1 and New York Avenue Rooms are Large, Verandas Sunny. Rates Moderate. Call, write or wire J. L. Pottle & Son, SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA Highland F^ines Inn arid Cottages (WEYMOUTH HEIGHTS) SOUTHERN PINES SEASON DECEMBER TO MAY Highland Pines Inn with its Splendid Dining Room Service and its Cheerful Homelike Atmosphere Caters to the Requirements of those Occupying Winter Homes in the Pine Tree Section. The Hotel is Situated on Weymouth Heights (Massachusetts Avenue) Amid De lightful Surroundings. Good Parking Space is Available for Motorists. All Features of First Class Hotels are Included at Highland Pines Inn. Best of Everything. II M. H. TURNER, H Managing Director VV. E. FLYNN, Resident Manager Passed and ratified were bills pro-1 viding for a tablet honoring the late ' Frank Page, for a decade State highway chairman, in the Capitol or in a new highway building, if erect, ed. and providing distinctive automo- ble license plates for officers of the N. C. National Guard. The House also : passed and sent to the Senate a bill I permitting the manufacture 6f slot! machines in the State, primarily for! the benefit of one vending machine | manufacturer in the State. Twenty, j three counties were exempted in the House. Moore was not exempted. The House refused to have anything to do with the Day bill to reapportion House of Representatives members in accordance with the 1930 census, as required by the Constitution, as the 1933 and 1931 bodies had done. It killed the minority report by a vote of 55 to 32, largely east-west In the division. It also killed the Stone bill, on motion of its introducer, to abol ish the office of Commissioner or Banks, tumng over the work to the Utilities Commissioner. The House passed the bill to increase terms ot office of registers of deeds to four years, with about one-third of the counties exempted. It went to the Senate. The Vsiiivcrsal Qar DR. MoKAY HONORED BY FRIENDS IN BUIES CREEK Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Cameron ot Vass attended a banquet given on Friday evening at the Campbell Col lege dining room in Buie’s Creek in honor of Mrs. Cameron’s lather. Dr. J. F. McKay, in recognition of his completion of 50 years’ faithful ser vice to his community as a physician. Around 150 friends of Dr. McKay were in c'ttendance. Dr. McKay’s father and grandfather were doctors and now he has a son who is practis ing medicine, so the favors, small black medicine cases containing can dy “pills,” bore the names of the “four generations of doctors.” Tuck ed within each medicine case was a prescription blank upon which the menu was written. Leslie Campbell, president of Campbell College, sponsored the cel- ebration. Gifts presented to Ur. Me- Kay were a silver headed cane given by friends in town, a Bible presented by members of the Presbyterian church, and a many-tiered birthday cake given by the ladies of Buie’s Creek. • / w OxE name comes quickly to mind when you think, of “The Universal Car.” The description is distinctively Ford. No other car is used by so many millions of men and women in every part of the world. Everywhere it is the symbol of faithful service. . . .That has always been a Ford funda mental. Something new is constantly being added in the way of extra value. Each year the Ford has widened its appeal by increasing its usefulness to motorists. . . .Today’s Ford V-8 is more than ever “The Universal Car” because it encircles the needs of more people than any other Ford ever built. It reaches out and up into new fields because it has everything you need in a modern automobile. . . . The Ford V-8 combines fine-car performance, comfort, safety and beauty with low first cost and low cost of operation and up-keep. There is no other car like it. FORD V-8 $495 up, f. o. b. Detroit. Standard accessory group including bumpers and spare tire extra. Small down payment Easy terms through Universal Credit Company. All body types have Safety Glass throughout at no extra ctwt
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 26, 1935, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75