Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Aug. 23, 1935, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page J'our THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North CArotinA. Friday, August 23, 1935. CHBME5 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. The Week in Aberdeen The Church of Wide Fellowship Rev. C. Rexford Raymond, D. D., Pastor. 10:00—Church School. 11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship. Guy Usher of the School of Religion, Vanderbilt University, to preach. 7:00 p. m.—Young People's Vesper Service in Church Garden. Everybody Miss Alice Squires is making a sat. isfactory recovery from a recent ap. pendicitis operation at the Moore County Hospital. invited. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.—Choir Re- j Shaefer in Jersey City, N. J. hearsal. Mrs. John Herring attended the wedding of a friend at Rutherfordton on last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Creel visited Mr. Creel’s uncle, Mr. Masemore in W’adesboro on last Sunday. Miss Bessie Gunter and her niece. Miss Maud Gunter, who is her guest, attended the home coming at Gum Springs Church near Moncure last Sunday. Mrs. R. G. Farrell, accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Noe of Pittsboro, * ^ . . .. Miss Margaret Pleasants entertam. w'ill visit their brother, Walter ■‘"6 . , , ^ ^ ed for her guest, Miss Emma Orr of Lloyd in Franklin, Va., this week- ' / ’ I Charlotte at her home on last Fri end. I . i ,, , :dav afternoon, at three tables o* Miss Myrtle Jordan is spending her \ ^ , bridge. After an enjoyable game, Mrs. W. A. Blue entertained a number of friends and their out-of. town guests Saturday night from seven until nine o’clock at a water melon slicing on the lawn of her home. About forty guests enjoyed her hos pitality. i vacation with her sister, Mrs. John Christian Science New Hampshire Ave., near Ashe St. Services are held every Sunday at 11:00 o’clock. Subject of the lesson, sermon Sunday, August 25, "Mind.” Vesper Servlet Each Sunday afternoon at 5:00 o’clock at the Civic Club for Pres* byterians. The Rev. E. L. Barber, pas tor. Emmanuel Episcopal Cliurch 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, 8.00 a. m.; Church School, 9:30 a. m.; Morning Prayer and sermon, 11 a. m. Saint’s Days Service, Holy Com munion, 10:00 a. m. Miss Orr was presented with a prize as honoree, and Miss Ruth McFar. land received the high score prize. Knoxville, Tenn., Mrs. Walter Chil- dry of Sanford, Fla., Mrs. Henry Hur. ley of Merchantville, Pa. Mark Davis, who is a member of the C. M. T. C., at Fort Bragg, spent last Sunday with his parents. Mark had the distinction of leading! Honoring her sister Mrs. He^y his class there last week. Merchantville, Pa., Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Thomas, hockey entertained at bridge spent several days in Mount Gilead last Friday evening at her home. last week iMrs. Hurley was presented the guest Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blue, Mr. and|p"«' ^rs. M. B. Pleasants win- Mrs. Jack Taylor and Sidney Taylor i"®*- ^^e high score prize, and Mrs. joined the party from Aberdeen at Bowman winner of sec- Pawley’s' Island, S. C. last week- Prize. Those present besides cluh i members were Mrs. Henry Hurley cf I Merchantville, Pa.; Mrs. Bill Hunt ley of Greensboro: Mrs. W’alter Chil- McBrlde-Tllley Miss Annabebi Tilley of Chapel Hill and Ralph Walton McBride of Aber. deen were married Tuesday evening, August 6, at the Presbyterian par. sonage in Elizabethtown. The Rev. A. L. Poole officiated. Mrs. McBride is the daughter of C. C. Tilley of Chapel Hill and at tended school in Hillsboro and Ox ford. Mrs. McBride is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. V. McBride of Aber. deen. For the past few months he has been in the mercantile business in High Point. Following a wedding trip to Wrightsville and Carolina Bteaches the young couple will make their home on the Raleigh Road near Chap el Hill. ROGERS’ DE.\TH FELT KEENLY IN THIS SECTION (Continued from page 1) Mr, McNeill's article follows in part: “From the polo field at Fort Bragg he had driven casually to Pinehurst, arriving just in time for the begin- of about eight feet square left for him. He faced part of the audience and the rest of it sat behind him. For 10 minutes he floundered. All of his thrusts went flat. He was a complete flop. He grinned foolishly and the words quit flowing. Then he strode off the stage, dumped me out of my chair, seized the lapel of my coat in one hand and the chair in the other. He dragged us on to the stage and stood there grinning at the 150 people who had invaded his rostrum. With a gesture he began to crowd them to one side of the stage, and then he solemnly placed the chair at one side and thrust me into it. He hooked a thumb toward the aston ished tenants of the stage crowded together and said ‘You keep an eye on them back there and I'll handle these out here.’ And then for two hours he kidded the life out of Leo nard Tufts’ respectful rich. "Afterward there was midnight supper at Henry Page, Jr.’s, and he met a lot of those he had shifted around on the stage. It was at that supper that he took the second drink of his life—and I imagine the last— and made the answer to Struthers Burt that became celebrated. The summer before he had been in Russia there is to be said about a thing. People laughed uproariously and he looked at them wonderingly. He was never conscious of his own instlnc. tive tunnyness." It is a poor business man whose plans for making money are not a few hundred per cent ahead of his bank balance. WAMTE D end. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Maynard spent last Sunday in Durham. Mr. and Mrs. W'. W. Norris and Sanford. Fla.; and a number, He had washed his hands Kelsey, of Greensboro, spent aj°^ Aberdeen guests. ninf of his performance. He walked mere curiosity had swal- 'ci. to the stage pretty much as he ^ tablespoon of vodka. He had was when he reluctantly turned away Carolina corn, and from the polo stables 40 miles away, hospitality were Catholic Church Sunday Mass, 9:00 a. m. Daily Mass, 8:00 a. m. Manly Presbyterian Sunday School at ten a. lu. Young Peoples meeting at seven p. m. Preaching second Sunday night at seven-thirty. Fourth Sunday morn ing at eleven o’clock. ABERDEEN Bethesda Presbj-terian 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. Pape 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 9:45 a. m. at PInebluff Methodist Church Rev. Clyde O. New'ell, 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. DR. AD.AMS TO PRE.ACH AT PINEHURST CHURCH SUNDAY Dr. P. Cary Adams, president of the Junior College at Maxton, will occupy the pulpit at the Pinehurst Community Church this Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. Dr. Adams is a delightful speafter, and his visit to Pinehurst will be ap preciated, especially among the young people who knew him at con ference this year. It is hoped that the people of Pinehurst and com- munity will attend the service Sun day. Last Sunday the members express ed a desire to have Sunday School at 9:45 and the morning worship at 11:00 o’clock. The pupils of the low er departments will not assemble un til further announcement. in some obscure restaurant where he ate few days in Aberdeen last week vis-1 sandwiches and reminded me that iting friends I Honoring her daughter, Mrs. Sam I wasn’t to forget his chewing gum. Mrs. Grace Brasington and daught.iS'^^^"®^®" of Oxford, Mrs. E. L. He walked on to the stage and I ers, Misses Katharine and Marion, of entertained at bridge last | waited in the wings. Baltimore are guests of Mr. and Mrs. | evening at her home on Be-1 The house was packed. It was a Ithesda Road. Mrs. Mack Wallace was .sort of lake of white shirt fronts. It : high score winner and Miss Alma: was the height of Pinehurst’s sea- i SCHOOL BUS ROUTES BEING >L\I*PED BY H. LEE THOMAS County Superintendent H. Lee Thomas and Mr. Crissman, sent out by the State School Commission, are making a survey of the school bus routes in Moore county with a view to reducing the cost of trans portation. The most direct routes ^possible will be mapped out and every effort will be made to get drivers for each route as near the starting point as possible to eliminate and back-driving. Mr. Crissman will ar range for securing drivers while in the county. B.\BY BONDS SELL Sales of "baby bonds” are said to be around $1,000,000 a day. The Treasury has netted about $120,000.- 000 through such sales. Japan seems to want to make everybody else worship the Emper or; that’s what we consider real nerve. David Knight, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Folley and family attended the funeral of Mrs.:^^*®® DuMeer won second prize. The son. Folley’s mother Mrs E C Phil- given a prize. Out-i "The more prominent tourists had lips at Marion,’S. C., last Sunday. I ^ Mrs. Folley spent last week there,' Oxford, Miss Alice King of the stage. There was just a space returning home on Sunday. Miis Lanie Ruth Gunter is in Durham visiting her grandmother. Melvin Thomas of Fayetteville vis ited his sister, Miss Sarah Thomas last Sunday. Miss Mildred Osborne of Lilesville, a former member of the Aberdeen school faculty, is the guest of Mrs. G. A. Charles this week. W. H. McNeill and family and Mrs. Alex Brewer are spending this week at Carolina Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shamburger returned Sunday night from a va cation spent in the Shenandoah Val ley, the Endless Caverns, Williams burg and other places in Virginia. T. M. Sharpe and John T. Har rington attended the funeral services held foi Mr. Sharpe’s brother. Wil liam J. Sharpe, at Burlington on last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Haney Harris spent the week-end at Myrtle Beach. S. C. Miss Eva Ruth Vandergrift and Beatrice Vandergrift of Salemburg are guests of Misses Sarah Blue and Mae Marks. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bryant are spending ten days in the mountains of western North Carolina. While they are gone Mrs. B. D. Wilson of Chapel Hill is hostess at The Lan- tant. Miss Alice King of Knoxville, Tenn., is visiting Miss Janette Leach. Bradford McLean of Burlington is spending his vacation with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. McLean. Mrs. E. M. Medlin, who has been visiting her sister in Washington, D. C., returned home last week. Miss Elizabeth Hope Weaver, who has been visiting relatives in Louis ville, Ky., returned home last week. Mr. and Mrs. George Martin, Misses Alice King, Janette Leach. Belle Heilig, Lois McLeod and C. L. Guion and Ralph Caldwell, Sr., were on a house party at Henry Page’s house boat on the coast last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Page returned Sunday night from a trip to the mountains, bringing home with them their grandson, Rudy Page, who haa ' been attending a boy’s camp at Heu. dersonville. Mrs. R. G. Farrell has had as her recent guests. Misses Virginia Coun- I cil and Margaret Jewell of Raleigh, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. McKeithen have returned from a week’s vaca tion in the western part of the state. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McLean and Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Weaver are sr'ending thig week at "Seaside” near the coast! Miss Emma Orr, who has been a guest of Miss Margaret Pleasants, returned to her home in Charlotte Monday. Mrs. J. Ernest Thomas, who has been the guest of her mother for some time, returned to her home in Clover, S. C., last week, accompanied by Mrs. Lizzie Thomas. Mrs. H. E. Bowman and Mrs. Jones Macon visited friends in Fay etteville Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Ella Juat spent last Sunday in Candor visiting her sister, Mrs. Katie B. Shear. On her return home she was accompanied by her little (niece, Miss Katie Lee Shear. wmaanWIIIUIIillUIIIMIIIIWIIIIHIIIIII urged upon him, he said if I'd pour him one tablespoon of our corn, he’d try to swallow it. The party waa gay. Struthers Bui who asks sol emn questions soph icatedly, said, ‘Mr. Rogers, how uo yoj think North Carolina would vote if prohibition was put to that test. With no reflec tion, but a glance around the room, he said, “Oh, they'll Vote dry—if they are able to stagger to the polls election day.” Into 16 words he had packed all ARCH SUPPORTS, made from an impression of each foot. No metal. Hand-made. R. Leatham, maker, Southern Pines, Phone 7972. WANTED—Your old furniture. We give the best trading price. Get new furniture easily. We also buy your old furniture for the highest possible price. McLean Furniture Co., Southern Pines. WANTED—Someone to take over a practically new upright piano in this locality and finish payment on small balance now owing. Prompt action essential. Write Credit Mana. ger, Box 1124, High Point, N. C. Aug. 16—Sep. 6. WANTED — Good second hand steamer trunk. Box 654, South ern Pines. FOR SALE: Almost new house with cottage in the rear and garage. Two lots. One can be used as a garden. Both houses have cl.’ctric- ity, city water, and indoor toilets. New house, five rooms. Cottage three. Nice shrubbery, fine loca- tion and a bargain. Can give a pic- ture of property. Mrs. Alary Eld- ridge, Pinebluff, N. C. A30. J/uL ^jcuwlbuu^ ChuL TEXTILE CENTERS la one county iJone in the CaroUnas there are 104 cotton mills. The states are dotted with large plants. Only in the Carolinas may one follow every process of manufacture from the growing of the staple to the twning out of a finished garment ready to wear. Nearly 1,500,000 bales of cotton are annually produced fai the Carolinas while the mills consume about twic« tlMit amount. The finest grade of sea island cotton in the worid Is produced in South Carolina. Combined s|^ndl«s and looms in the Carolinas fnr exceed any other state. In recent years numerous rajron plants have located in the Carolinas, along wriA' Ueacheries, worsted mills, de-ifan plants and othttP establishments otillsfaig cotton. Value of the output of CaroHna miHs nus into hundreds of milHons of dollars each year. i That’s the Purpose of The Carolinas, Inc.*—TELL THE WORLD Ih CAROLINAS TIm CaroOna*, Inc. dom M, Ciuu'lott*, N. C. Without obBgatioi^ plesif • {CaroIliiM, lae, tjr BwOedii. INC. Th« newspapers of North Mid South Carolina have donated d>« space for thb a|id a »eriee of adTertisenients ^kidi wiM appaar for dia purpose of bringing facta about uio CaroUoa* before tbeir peopk, Uial they may be better informed at to tbe resonrce^ history and industrial inportanee of the Carolinas, nad that they may know h«w they can aeeist in the broad aoT«maat to advertise la worU the adv«ntaffe« e( tfib favored eeefloai ztttttmwtnni
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Aug. 23, 1935, edition 1
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