Page Eight
THE PILOT. Southern Pines and Aberdeen. North Carolina
A
Friday, May 3, 1935.
Buy It From Melvin’s
We Are Prepared to
Supply Your Needs in
DRY GOODS
Mne Dress Prints, Play Ootli,
Printed Flaxon, Seersucker, Unen
and SILKS
NOTIONS
DresJten, Hats, Caps, Shirts, Pants,
0\erails and a variety of Small
Notions. Hosiery for all ages.
SHOES
For Men $1.50 to $3.00
For Women $1.00 to $3.73
For Children 85c to $2.35
Low Prices for Quaity
Merchandise
NELVIN BROTHERS
ABERDEEN, N. C.
THE
Carolina Theatres
Pinehurst-Southern Pines
PRESENT
..CHARLES BOYER - JOAN BENNEH
JOEL McCREA • HELEN VINSON
a WMrER WANGtR PBODUCTIQN i.i..,.
At Piiiehurst
Monday, May 6th,
3:00 and 8:15
At Pinehurst
Wednesday, May 8th,
3:00 and 8:15
Presenting
MARLENE PIETRICH
“THE DEVIL IS
A WOMAN”
Cfosii^ Night
At Pinehurst
Friday, May 10th,
3:00 and 8:15
CARDINAL
RKHUIEU
% TA IVffll N O
CEORCE
A It L I t f
yii
At Southern Pines
Mon., Tues., Wed.,
May 6, 7, 8, 8:15
Matinee Tue^ay at 3,00
WilllAM;
with
FRANCHOT TONE
« MAY ROBSON
Ted Hasly * N«t Pandlaton
Rob*tt Light
THEATRE
Southern Pines
Thu.-Fri.-Sat,
May 9, 10, 11—8:15
Matinee Saturday at 3:00
SOUTHERN PINES
Prdinent Speakers
For West End School
Church
Rev. J. Fred Stimson, Pastor.
10 00 a. m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a. m.—Sermon by pastor.
Sunday morning subject, "The
First Commandment,” by the pastor.
Sunday evening union service con
ducted by local Hi-Y Club.
The Church of Wide Fellowship
Rev. C. Rexford Raymond, D. D.,
Pastor.
10:00—Church School, classes for
all.
11:00 a. m.: Holy Communion and
reception of members. Dr. Raymond
preaches on “Church Fellowship.”
7:00 p. m.—Christian Endeavor.
8:00 p. m.—Union service at the
Baptist Church; Hi-Y meeting.
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., Midweek
service and prayer meeting.
State Commander of American
Legion One of Commence
ment Week Orators
PINEBLUFF
Emmanuel Episcopal Church
Rev. F. Craighill Brown, B. A., B. D.,
Rector.
Catholic Church I
Sunday Masses 8:00, 10:30. {
Daily Mass, 7:30.
All are cordially invited to attend
any of these services.
Christian Science
New Hampshire Ave., near Ashe St.
Services are held every Sunday at
11 o’clock. The subject of the lesson-
sermon on Sunday May 5, will be:
‘Everlasting Punishment.”
The public is cordially invited to
attend.
VESPER SERVICES
Each Sunday afternoon at 5:00
o’clock at the Civic Club for Pres
byterians. The Rev. E. L. Barber, pas
tor.
3Ianly Presbyterian j
Sunday School at ten a. m. Young I
Peoples meeting at seven p. m. i
Preaching second Sunday night at |
seven-thirty. Fourth Sunday morn-1
ing at eleven o’clock. |
I
PIXEHURST I
The Community Church
A. J. McKelway, Pastor |
; Service, Sunday, May 7: Church i
school, 9:45 a. m. |
Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. At'
this worship service the commence
ment sermon of the graduating clas,s
of the Pinehurst High Schoonl will be
delivered by the Rev. S. H. Fulton,
pastor of the Laurinburg Pi-esbyter-
ian church. The special music for |
the service will be by an excellently |
trained choir of High School students. i
Young people's service, 7:30 p m. ,
No evening church worship.
The Class of 1935 of West End
High School is singularily honored in
that it will have the privilege of hear,
ing two prominent North Carolinians
during their Commencement week
program. The Rev. D. E. E^arnhardt,
Presiding Elder of the Fayetteville
District, 1^. E. Church South, will
deliver the baccalaureate address in
the school auditorium at 11:00
o’clock this Sunday morning, and
Herbert E. Olive of Lexington, com
mander of the North Carolina De
partment of the American Legion,
will deliver the Commencement ad
dress Tuesday, May 7, at 8 o’clock in
the auditorium.
The Commencement week program
was officially inaugurated last night
with the music recital of the senior
piano pupils of Mrs. Sam McDuffie.
Tonight at 8:00 in the High School
Auditorium the primary, grammar
grades and high school groups will
hold a declamation and recitation con
test. Medals will be awarded to the
boy and the girl winning first place
in each group.
On Monday, May 6 at 8:00 the Sen
ior Class will hold its Class Day ex
ercises. The theme of the program
is to be "Quo Vadis.” On Tuesday
night at 8:00 the official Commence
ment exercises will take place, with
Commander Olive addressing the
graduates. Miss Josie Mae Russell will
deliver the valedictory address and
David McLean the salutatory address.
Principal J. F. Sinclair will award
the diplomas.
W’ednesday night at 8:00 the W'est
End Players, under the direction of
Miss Alberta Monroe, will present the
Senior Play, a three act comic-mys-
tery "Oh, Kay,” by Adam Applebud.
In the cast of characters will be An
nette Currie, Marg^aret Hoots, J. J.
Hinson, John Thompson, Josie Mae
Russell, Hazel Hoots, Woodrow Law-
hon, Tilon Stubbs, Currie Monroe,
Eva Ritter and Raymond Freeman.
The Home Demonstration Club will
meet May 9 at 2:30 at the home of
Mrs. J. H. Suttenfield. A demonstra
tion on bread making will be given.
W. H. Rorke visited his son Ed
ward Saturday at Duke Universtiy.
On Sunday Mrs. W. H. Rorke and
Jess Brundage of New York City
and Edward Rorke returned to Pine-
bluff with Mr. Rorke.
Next Sunday morning C. O. New
ell will preach a baccalaureate ser
mon for the graduates of Pinebluff,
who are Helen Meade, Virginia But-
ner, Dorothy Williams, Frances Van
Huel, Hazel Adcox and Hoover Ad-
cox. There will be no service in the
Methodist Church in the evening.
Mesdame.s W. D. Shannon, O. A.
Galley and J. H. Suttenfield attend
ed the council meeting of Home Dem
onstration Clubs at Carthage Mon
day.
Mrs. W. T. Sloan and son Risley
of Clinton are guests at A. G. Wal
lace’s.
Mrs. E. M. Swan and daughter,
Lucy returned to their home in Sher
burne, N. Y., last Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Oliver, Mrs.
W. L. Stagg and Miss Nora Dobson
of Winston-Salem were guests at J.
H. Suttenfield’s Saturday.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Howie
April 10 a daughter, Katherine Eliz-
abetr.
Mrs. C. O .Newell entertained Wed
nesday night at her home at a sur-
pri.se party, honoring Mrs. Mary E.
Aiken on her 84th birthday. Thirty
guests were present, among them be
ing Mrs. Bryant Aiken and son of
Brooklyn, N. Y., who are house guests
of Mrs. Aiken.
GARDNER COUNSEL FOR
TELEPHONE INVESTIGATION
S. r. CLEE C I.l B TO SIXG
.\T THEATRE IX P1\F:IILRST
The Southern Pines High School
Glee Club will sing a 15-minute pro- i
gram immeoiately preceding the
showing of the picture, “Cardinal
Richelieu,” featuring George Arli?s,
in Pinehurst Friday evening. The
glee club will sing compositions of
Bach, Brahms, la Hale, Grieg. Praeto-
Former Governor O. Max Gardner
of North Carolina has been named
counsel for the investigation of the
telephone industry by the Federal
Communications Commission. His
■salary is to be $10,000 a year. It i?
understood the appointment was
made at the personal suggestion of
President Roosevelt. Mr. Gardner has
been representing the rayon industry
in W^ashington as legal adviser sinr-
his retirement from the governorship.
Butter, chickens, eggs and milk at
the Curb Market Saturday in South
ern Pines.
At Pinehurst
A sterling cast, a vivid, enthrall,
ing story and fine direction have
been assembled in Paramount’s “Pri
vate Worlds," the attraction at the
Pinehurst Theatre Monday, matinee
and night. May 6th. The glamorous
Claudette Colbert, winner of the Acad
emy Award for 1934, heads the cast
of “Private Worlds” in the character
of a woman who seeks refuge from
love in the memory of a dead sweet
heart. Opposite Miss Colbert is Char
les Boyer as her colleague, a man
who has b«en taught to hate women
by the willful misdeeds of his sister.
Joan Bennett, Joel McCrea and Helen
Vinson are in the supporting cast.
"Private Worlds” was adapted from
the best-selling novel by Phyllis Bnt-
tome.
As the production cycle more and
more stimulates an interest in the
cla-s.sic. the production of Victor
Hugo’s “Les Miserables,” the attrac
tion at Pinehurst Wednesday, May
8, matinee and night, deals wtih on?
Ci the greatest human interest dra
mas of all time. In this adaptation of
Victor Hugo’s monumental work, the
pages of the book as they trace the
life of Jean Valjoan are graphically
re-created with all the drama, ro
mance, tragedy, historical signifi
cance, humanness and thrill. Fred
eric March is at his best as the hero.
Jean Valjean, the fre.sh honest coun-
try youth who stole a loaf of breal
because he was starving. As the
fanatical detective, Javert, who
hounds him from pillar to post, Char
les Laughton offers an entirely new
and gfreat characterization, and Sir
Cedric Hardwicke, the distinguished
English stage and screen star, is
brilliant as the beneficent Bishop
Bienvenu. The love story is provided
by Cosett, Valjcan’s ward, played by
Rochelle Hudson, and Marius, a young
revolutionary, played by John Beal.
“Les Mi.serables” is now running at
the Rivoli in New York City, and
New York critiirt, ’v'ent "all the way”
in coining phrases and applying ad
jectives to the production.
Spain, and the early part of the pic
ture is given over to a panorama of a
M«rdi Gras Carnival, and a lavish
fiesta of beautiful clothes, fascina
tions no woman can resist. MIse Diet-
rich in “The Devil is a Woman," will
prove a revelation to her fans, fas
cinating, vivid, a Dietrich ever-to-be-
remembered. Supporting Miss Diet-
rich are Lionel Atwill, Cesar Romero,
Edward Everett Horton, Alison Skip-
worth and Don Alvarado.
“The Devil Is a Woman,” the at
traction at Pinehurst Friday, May
10th, matinee and night, stars Mar
lene Dietrich, and, as one of Von
Sternberg’s screen-paintings, is much
above the ordinary. The locale is
At Southern Pines
Venturing into the domains of de
batable subject matter as he did
with “The House of Rothschild,”
Darryl P. Zanuck again essays the
biographical drama with another pro
vocative world personality in the
production “Cardinal Richelieu,” play,
ing a return engagement at the
Southern Pines Theatre Monday, Tues.
day, Wednesday, May 6, 7, 8, with a
Tuesday matinee. Painting Cardinal
Richelieu with sympathetic strokes,
setting him amidst the intrigues of
the decadent court of Louis XIII and
colorfully revealing the dramatic con
flicts that beset kind and prelate
alike, a fine balance of appeal is
achieved to please the large body of
faithful adherents to the church as
well as others. Aside from its his
torical Importance, the production
pictures Richelieu as a human being.
George Arliss’ Richelieu is polished,
suave £^nd subtle and gives that
grand Thespian full sway for his ex.
ceptional talent. Edward Arnold,
another topnotcher, as King Louis
contributes a finely shaded, robust
perfo;TTiance.
"Reckless,” starring W’illiam Pow
ell, Jean Harlow and Franchot Tone
is playing a return engagement at
Southern Pines Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, May 9, 10, 11, with a Sat-
urday matinee. Starting: aa a three-
cornered courtship with Sports Pro-
u'.oter Powell battling Millionaire
Playboy Tone for Miss Harlow’s
favor, the dialogue sparkles and the
action speeds along until Mi.ss Har
low and Tone are married. This is a
topically based, sophisticated, melo
dramatic romance mixed with com
edy. Running its course, it at various
periods touches upon practically every
knowTi theatrical and entertainment
element including vivid spectacles.
Three musical numbers are introduc.
ed, the most popular being “Reckless,”
j by Oscar Hammerstein and Jei’ome
1 Kern.
Pilot Advertising Pays.
The V'llhige Chapel
Rev. T. A. Cheatham, D. D., Minister
Sunday Services:
Holy Communion, 9 a. m.
Children’s Service, 10:00 a. m.
Church service, 11 a. m.
Public cordially invited.
ABERDEEN
Bethesda Presbyterian Churcb
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.
! Page Memorial M. EL
j Rev. L. M. Hall
i First Sunday—Preaching 7:30 p. m.
j Second Sunday—Preaching 11 a. m.
Third Sunday—Preaching 7:30 p. m.
Fourth Sunday—Preaching 11 a.
m. and 7:30 p. m.
Sunday School every Sunday at
Pinebluff Methodist Church
Rev. Clyde O. Newell, B. A., B. D.,
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.
Cakes and pastries for sale at the
Curb Market in Southern Pines.
LEGAL NOTICES
POWEll.
DICK SUGG’S keys in a leather fold
were lost for two weeks. Then it
dawned upon him to put an adver
tisement in The Pilot. T'ae day fol
lowing publication the keys were
returned to him. F*ilot Classified
Advertising Pays.
H
FOR SALE — Furnished Cot
tage—2 screened porches, fine wa
ter on back porch. Good garage.
1-2 acre of land—young fruit trees,
grape vines and shrubs. One mile
south of Pinebluff, comer Raleigh
Avenue and Highway No. 1. Low
price if sold at once. A. L. Allen,
Box 2, Pinebluff, N. C.
LOST; Small brown purse with sil
ver watch inside. Return to Frank
Wilson’, JOmer Bennett fSti. and
Corm. Ave. Reward.
YOUNG COLORED MAN, first class
butler, can drive car and do garden
work. Desires place to take care of
for summer, or will go north. Apply
Tainer Hill, Care Struthers Burt.
Telephone 6261, MIO
Are You Building?
Are You Repairing?
Are You Painting?
GO TO HEADQUARTERS FOR BUILDER’S HARDWARE AND
SUPPLIES
II
And for
NORTH CAROLINA,
MOORE COUNTY.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
J. Blaine Ritter
vs
Mabel Ritter
The Defendant above named will
take notice that an action entitled
as above has been commenced by the
j Plaintiff in the Superior Court of
Moore County, North Carolina to ob
tain an absolute divorce upon the
grounds of seperation and the De-
fendent will further take notice that
if she fails to answer or demur with
in the time required by law to the
complaint filed in the Office of the
Clerk of Moore County, then the
Plaintiff will apply to the court for
the relief demanded.
This the 27th day of April, 1935.
JOHN WILLCOX,
Clerk of the Superior Court.
Robert E. Denny,
Attorney for Plaintiff. May 3-24'
SPECIAL RATES on Long Distance
Trips by Bus. Washington, D. C.,
$4.95; New York, $9.85; Boston,
Mass, $12.50; St. Petersburg,
$8.75; Miami, $9.95. 10 per cent off
round trip. Other rates and infor
mation at Postal Telegraph Com
pany, Southern Pines and Pine
hurst. MIO.
EXCHANGE WHAT YOU DON’T
WANT FOR WHAT YOU DO
WANT—REAL BARGAINS THIS
WEEK. Wardrobe Trunk, Cedar
Chest, Walnut Dining Table, Mar
ble Top Table, Morris Chair, Chif
fonier, Dresser, Bedsteads, Springs,
Mattresses, Kitchen Cabinet, Sew
ing Machine, Vacuum Cleaner, Car
pet Sweeper, Porch Chairs, Swings,
Shades, Breakfast Set, Rugs, Hat
Box, Andirons, Safe, Medicine Cab
inet, Stoxea and Ranges (both new
and used for wood or coal), Oil
Stoves, Ice Box, Clothes Wringer,
Mop Wringer, Organ, Victrola, Ban
jo. Would like steamer trunk in ex
change for anything.
THE TRADE STOHE
Pennsylvania Avenue
Southern Pines.
S. & W. PAINTS and VARNISHES
Build of the Best and You Build Permanently.
Paint with the Best and Re-Painting Day
is a Long- Way Off.
/
WE CARRY THE YEAR ’ROUND
FERTILIZER and FERTILIZER MATERIALS
for ALL CROPS
ARMOUR
Nitrate Agencies
DIXIE and OBER’S
And SEEDS for EVERY PURPOSE
Headquarters for
BUILDER, FARMER, ORCHARDIST, HOME OWNER
Pinehurst Warehouses, Inc.
Pinehurst, N. C.