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Friday, June 28, 1935. SOUTHERN PINES Baptist Church Rev. J. Fred Stimson, Pastor. 10:00 a. m.—Sunday School. (Classes for those above 16 years of age only). 11:00 a. m.—Sermon by the pastor. Subject: “God Calls Man to Reason with Him.” 7:00—Young People’s service. The Church of Wide FellowHblp Rev. C. Rexford Raymond, D. D., Pastor. 10:00—Church School. Primary and Beginners’ Depart ments discontinued during epidemic of infantile paralysis. 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship; Dr, Raymond preaches on "The Reli gion of the Spirit.” 7:00 p. m. -Vesper service with re ports from the Elon College Confer ence. Service in the church garden. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.—Choir Re hearsal. Thursday, 3:30 p. m.—A Silver Tea at The Beverly, auspices of the Missionary Society. Emmanuel Episcopal Church Rev. F. Craighill Brown, B. A., B. D., Rector. Sunday Services—The first Sunday in the month. Church School 9:30 a. m.; Holy Communion and sermon, 11:00 a. m. Other Sundays, Holy Communion, a. m.; Morning Prayer and sermon, 11 a. m. Saint’s Days Service, Holy Com munion, 10:00 a. m. Catholic Church Sunday Masses 8:00, 10:30. Daily Mass, 7:30. Our Senior U. S. Senator NOTES ON CAPlfALHOlABLiS “ T41E SON Of A MlNlStER, AMD EQlToR OF A REUdOUf PAPER FOR YEAR$,144E SEMAfTOR IS R*TEO AiOME OF 0EMOCRACV*5 9ESTORATORS;^ES SUH.' «E'5 SmCtRE.tARHESf AK’COM\/lHCIH&,' fORCEFUlLVHE ElfPOUNDEDTHE AOMlHl^lRiniOM'j MONEIARV policy,ILOQOENTLV ARGUED 1HE WORLD COURT SUBJECT AND EFFECTIVELY ftAHOLED IHE TARLtV IN- SlEStlGATlOrt TRoToSAL iHE COHSTtToTloM WE CAN ALWAYS COUHTOH BAILtY iEMATtff J.W. Bailey fOR HE IV V/HEH we NEED IT •(HE ■'Park tto park SCENIC f ROM THe eiuE - «lD6EtO'niE&REAr 5M0KEY «OUHTAI^J HATlOfjALpAKti HAD MIS STROH& Suppoar iwO0,0 MORTH CAAOIIMA MoRTH CAROLlMA CAH CREDIT fctH.eAILEY FOR MOREHEAO ClTY'5 ^i^^S0,000 PcWT-ffRWIlHAL AHB HARBoR IMPROVEMEMT PROJECT ^ T^E PILOT^ Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina Page Fiv« Christian Science New Hampshire Ave., near Ashe St. Services are held every Sunday at 11:00 o’clock. Subject of the lesson- sermon, Sunday, June 30th. "Chris tian Science.” Vesper Services Each Sunday afternoon at 5:00 o’clock at the Civic Club for Pres byterians. The Rev. E. L. Barber, pas tor. Who^s Who Among the Debaters Discussed by Walter Lippmann Miuily 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. PINEHLKST ^ The Community Church A. J. McKelway, Pastor Church School—9:45 a. m. Morning Worship—11:00 a. m. ABERDEEN Bethesda Presbyterian Church Rev. E. L. Barber, Pastor. Services each Sunday morning at 11:15; Services ench Sunday evening at 7:30. Prayer meeting services Wed nesday evening at 7:30. Page Memorial M. E. Rev. L. M. Hall First Sunday—Preaching 7:30 p. m. 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 9:45 a. m. 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. SOX OF MRS. DAVID SLOAN WEDS IN GREENWICH, CONN. A despatch from Greenwich, Conn., states that Miss Kathryn Virginia Randolph, daughter of Mrs. Genevieve Drummond Randolph of Berlin, Ger many and the late Dr. O. B. Ran dolph, was married there on Sunday to James David Sloan, son of Mrs. David U. Sloan of Southern Pines. The ceremo.iy took place in the Con gregational church in the presence of the immediate families. Mrs. Dav id Sloan has been a frequent winter resident here, her northern home be ing in Millbrook, N. Y. Her son has visited here occasionally. PROF. SMITH WITH STATE SYMPHONY ORCHESTR.\ Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Stanley Smith, who spent the past three weeks with Mrs. Smith’s parents in Hagers town, Md., have gone to Asheville for the summer where Mr. Smith has ac cepted a position with the N. C. State Symphony Orchrestra. Mr. and Mrs. Smith were in Southern Pines Mon day and Tuesday of this week. The Pilot is read by some 10,000 persons each week. Regular advertis ing would drive your message home to these prospects. Pilot Advertising Pays. By WALTER LIFP.MANN In view of the fact that the Su preme Court said in the N. R. A. decision that it could not draw in ad vance the precise line between Feder al and state power, it is not aston ishing that comment about the de cision is very confusing. It has, in fact, produced some of the strongest paradoxes imaginable. Thus the President, who has spok en as eloquently as any one on the dangers of centralized power, found himself out on the end of a limb, hav ing given the country the impre.ssion that he would like to override the states. The Republican party which descends from Washington and Ham ilton through Lincoln to Theodore Roosevelt began to talk as if it would like to return to the articles of Confederation which preceded the Constitution. Mr. Hoover, who de scribed the attempt of the Federal government to stop a man from drinking a glass of beer as a noble experiment: Mr. Hoover, who from October, 1929, to March, 1933, ex tended the Federal power over banks, insurance companies, railroads, farms and factories beyond anything ever known in time of peace, suddenly emerged as an apostle of the purest Jeffersonian doctrine. Mr. Borah de livered an eloquent speech in praise of the Constitution and then inserted % an amendment into the utility bill which was properly denounced as un constitutional. Mr. Lowden, after an admirable speech on the dangers of centralization, sponsored a declara tion in regard to agriculture which, if it means anything, means that the agricultural problem is to be handled by the central government. As one of those who do not feel they have the final and complete an swer to the question, I have been try ing in my mind to define the issue. I have not got very far. As a mere beginning I have been trying to class ify the various points of view which seem to be represented in the debate. Th§ result is crude and probably not very important, but here it is. 1. Those who believe that when the Supreme Court interprets the Constitution, it has no choice a.s to how it will interpret it. They would hold, for example, that the clau.se in the Constitution dealing with com merce is just as clearly controlling over the opinion of the Court as, let us say, the provision that the term of the President shall be four years. 2. Those who believe that in in- terpreting some sections of the Con stitution, particularly that dealing with commerce, the Court has dis cretion and adapts the Constitution in the light not merely of pre(jedent but of its views of public policy. 3. Those who hold that the Feder al government has no power not ex pressly granted to it. 4. Those who hold that it has large reserve and implied powers. These are the four main general attitudes as to how the Constitution should be interpreted. They have ex isted since the earliest days. 5. Those who believe that the so cial system is so national in character that it must be .subject to uniform laws. There are progressives and there are conservatives who hold this view. At the moment the progres sives desire national labor legi.sla- tion becau.se they believe that other wise a state with high labor stand ards will meet destructive competi tion from states with low labor stan dards. There is also a very strong conser vative demand for national laws on many matters. For example, many bankers would like to see a uniform banking system in place of the forty- eight state laws and one Federal law under which banking is now conduct ed. Like the progressives interested in labor legislation, they argue that some states are lax and this makes for unwhole.some competition. Though the electric power companies are for the moment in favor of “states rights,” the railroads would prob ably regard it as a disaster it jate- making were turned over to the forty- eight states. All those who thmk along these lines, be they progressives or conser vatives, are particularly impresed with the idea that a uniform law is better for their purposes than forty- eight separate laws. 6. They are opposed by those who are convinced that unless govern ment is kept decentralized it will be come tyrannical, bureaucratic, and in efficient. This .school believes that the country is too large, that its re gional interests are too varied, to make much uniformity desirable. They believe also that many vigor ous local governments are the best training schools for politics, that the states are laboratories in which social experiments can safely be made, that the advantages of uniformity are greatly exaggerated, that progress made slowly by local consent is surer than progress imposed from Wash ington. These two points of view do not rest on rigid and absolute principles. There is no sane nationalist who ' wants to abolish the states. There , is no sane home ruler who does not ' recognize that some more centraliza- ' tion is necessary and inevitable. Nevertheless, the opposition is real. ] The nationalists are prejudiced in favor of centralization, the home rul ers are prejudiced against it. On a j concrete question, therefore, the na- j tionalists have to make a strong case in order to convince the home rulers. and price-fixing. They are moving to ward a state capitalism which would eventually be indistinguishable from .state socialism. Their program would require a radical change in the Con- ! stitution. 9. Those who believe that laissez- faire and state socialism are both dangerous and impracticable. They believe that during the depression it has been demonstrated all over the world that by means of a coherent monetary, budgetary and tariff pol icy, the economic .system can be kept in a working balance without resort to the regimentation of private enter prise. They believe that without such a policy private capitalism will break down and that the regimentation and the socialism which supplant it will then break down too. Their view is exemplified by the policy of coun tries like Great Britain, Sweden, Aus tralia, Belgium. It is part of the pol icy of the New Deal, unhappily con fused and neutralized by the policy of j regimentation. Personally, it seems to , me the most promising. It requires no change in the Constitution. The neces sary powers have existed in the Con stitution from the very beginning. There are two other points of view which, though not inherently impor tant, are important politically. 10. There are those who believe that centralization is proper if the centralized power is in Republican hands. 11. There are those who believe it is proper if the power is in Democrat ic hands. In 1932, for ekample, Mr. Roosevelt ^ was .shocked by Mr. Hoover’s im mense deficit expenditures. In 1935 Mr. Hoover is shocked by Mr. Roose velt’s immense deficit expenditures. In actual life these eleven points of i view may be found in many different I combinations. That is what makes ' the current debate so confusing. (Copyright, 1935, for The Pilot) MOTHER AND CHILI) BITTEN BY D()(J AT (JLENDON Pinehurst Paragraphs j Dr. Symington has procured anti rabies treatments for a Mrs. Phillips and her daughter of Glendon, who were bitten by a dog on Friday. Mrs. Phillips is said to have been bitten while attempting to keep the dog away from her children. Two others from the upper part of the county are said to have been attacked by a dog, but it has not been learned whether the dog was afflicated with with r.abies. Mrs. Clarence Warrick has return ed to her home in Olivia after visit ing Mrs. A. P. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dunlop have returned from Virginia Beach where they spent the past week-end. Mi.ss Mary Jane McLong left Mon day morning foi- her home in New Hampshire where^she will spend the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hennessee and daughters, the Misses Olive and Carol Hennessee, left by motor on Monday for Bridgeport, Conn., V’here they will visit relatives for several weeks. W. E. Hardison, Jr., has gone to Chattanooga. Tenn.. for a vacation of two weeks with his parents. W. P. Morton ,Jr., left on Tuesday for Camp Mishemoka where he will spend a month. W. E. Lowe of Elon College was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Campbell last Thursday and Fri day. Mr. and Mrs. Worth E. Brown of Jack.son Springs announce the birth of a .son on Tuesday at the Moore Coimty Hospital. Miss Doris Tripp left Sunday to spend her vacation with her family in Plymouth. Mi.ss Evelyn Gillam and Miss Ella Best were guests Tuesday and Wed nesday of last week of Mrs. Martin Wicker. They were en route to Can ada for a sight-seeing trip of two weeks. Mrs. William Huntley and baby son of Greensboro and Mrs. A. P. Turn- meyre of Mo\int Aii'y were guests of Mrs. Raymond Johnson Tuesday. Mrs. R. A. Johnson and Mrs. Henry Crews of South Boston, V'a., are guests in the home of Mr, and Mrs. Raymond Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Nelson and chil dren left Tuesday for Little Comp ton, R. I., where they will spend the summer. Mrs, J. N. Powell has returned from Durham where she spent the past six weeks a,s ♦he guest of Mr. and Mrs. E, K. Rund. Miss Betsy Ogle.sby left Saturday for Roanoke, Va., where she will join her sister for a trip to Detroit. Mrs. A. B. Sally and Miss Lavora Sally spent Tuesday in Greensboro. On Wednesday evening Mrs. I. C. Sledge and Mrs. J. F. Taylor were hostes.ses for bridge at the home of Mrs. Taylor in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Elwin McLeod, George Eastman and Garrett Defay, all of Boston. They are making their annual visit to Pine hurst. Eight tables were placed in the living room and porch, and prizes were given Mrs. McLeod, Mr. W. L. Dunlop, Mrs. F], B Keith, Raymond Johnson and Tom Cole. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Elli*. I Fields celebrated their 20th wedding I anniversary with a luncheon for rel- : atives and neighboi s. They received many gifts of china. Those present ^ were Mr. and Mr. C, B, Fields and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Fields, Mis. Robinson, Alfred Glasspool, Mr. and Mrs, T. H, Craig. Mr. and Mrs. Frank DuPont, Mr. and Mrs. Colin McKenzie, W, P. Morton and family and Mr, and Mrs. E. C. Cunningham. ! Mrs. W, L. Dunlop and Mrs. Ray mond Johnson were hostesses to the ; Summer Bridge Club on P’riday even ing at the Commimity House, A vote of thanks wa.s given the committee that secured window and door screens for the clubhouse. After a spirited game of bridge, which was played at nine tables, prizes were awarded Miss Camille Alexander, Mr. Joe i Wood, Miss Miriam Laid, Jack Mul- cahy, George Eastman and Joe Wood. ; We Print PACKET HEADS 11 LETTER HEADS INVITATIONS STATEMENTS BILL HEADS ENVELOPE Si RECEIPTS DODGERS FOLDERS BLANKS CARDS TAGS Pilot Print Shop Southern Pines, N. C. It is useful then to note certain conflicting beliefs about the kind of government we ought to have. The conflict has existed at all times in American history. We may note next three conflict ing social philosophies. 7. There are those who do not be lieve that government, national or state, .should regulate business more than it is now regulated. They are only accidentally believers in states’ rights. If the states exercised their rights they would be just as earnestly opposed. They are really believers in laissez-faire. 8. Those who believe that much more regulation of the economy is necessary and desirable. Temporarily they are nationalists, but if Congress were conservative, they would turn to the states. The essential thing in their view is the idea that in order to reg ulate the economy government must move in the direction of wage-fixing Orchard Supplies Everything for the Peach Grower Right Quality and Right Prices BASKETS BUSHELS - HALVES - HAMPERS Caps and Liners - Cushions Available at Our ABERDEEN OFFICE Telephone Aberdeen 153 June Campbell^ Ngr. Pinehurst Warehouses, Inc. Pinehurst, N. C.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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June 28, 1935, edition 1
5
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