Page Two THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen. North ('aroltna Friday, January 3. 1936. THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE PIIX)T, Incorporated, Southern Pine®, N. C. NELSON C. HYDE Editor FRANCES FOLLEY Advertising Manager DAN S. BAY Circulation Manager Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months .50 Entered at the Postoffice at South, ern Pines, N. C., £is second .class mail matter. IT’S GOING TO REQUIRE A LOT OF THOUGHT Chief event of the incoming new year will be, of course, the election of a President. This is going to be a matter requiring the deepest thought on the part of the American people, and if we are anything of a prognosti- cator, party lines will be torn asunder in the rendering of a decision at the polls. The question boils down to this: President Roosevelt, who will undoubtedly be a candidate for re-election, 'has been in command during the period in which a reasonable degree of prosperity has returned to the country. To him must go the lion’s share of the credit for lifting us out of the mire. But has this lifting process been done on a sound economic basis? In short, are we in so far over our heads to pro vide for Today that the price will be too great for Tomorrow'? Big Business, of course, an- . swers this affirmatively. And presents convincing arguments. The Chamber of Commerce of the United States sees the pres ent trade stimulation as but temporar\\ Agriculture is divid ed. Labor’s enthusiasm for the New Deal is not what it was. Even the man on relief is report ed as dissatisfied. The national debt is over thirty billions of dollars. The in debtedness of state and local taxing bodies is estimated to be at least eighteen billions more, making a total public debt of our American people — national, state and local — approximately j forty-eight billions of dollars. | This amount is equal to the esti-1 mated total annual income of all the people of the United States. These are just a few of the things w’hich the electorate must think about between now and November. Perhaps this debt is all rig*ht. Perhaps President Roosevelt and his advisers know | where we are going, and how we are going to get there. I There’s no gainsaying that hej has revived industrji and agricul-1 ture and taken care of the un employed to date. The question is, how long can we continue to increase our debt by twelve mil lion dollars per day, the estimat ed deficit for the last half of 1935, in order to revive things? j No one knows who will oppose; Mr. Roosevelt in November. No one know's vVhether the Republi- ■ can party has anyi fiscal policy, or program to continue the up-1 swing in business at any lesser price. No one knows much of j anything except that during this i new year we must elect a Pres-| ident, that never before have we faced an election owing so much mony; therefore never has there been a time when we needed to devote so much thought on an issue, with less knowledge and information to guide us. It’s a problem. Arms, fortified by the latest an-1 tidote to halitosis. He was equip-1 ped w’ith every weapon of the I trade and he tried them all: | charm, disarming frankness, log-1 ic, eloquence, paternal counsel, I hurt reproachfulness, arch dis-| belief. Whatever the assumed | role, underneath lurked the alii too familiar mule-like being who refused to believe that he could fail, that his sales-talk fell on deaf ears; that he had actually encountered one more mule-like than himself. So great was the lady’s rage at his persistent as saults upon her time, her pri vacy, so great the strain on her politeness, that her entire hou.se- hold was wont to cower in fright j w’hen the cry went up: “Here | comes the Fuller-Brush Man.”| Year after year as one after j the other of the Fuller cJan turn ed from her door with bitter-1 ness, with shockjed incredulity, or with plain terror, she vowed that if the Fuller Brush were the only brush in the world still she would have none of it .Yet now she 'has actually ordered a Ful ler Brush. Why? Because the other af ternoon a quiet-vtoiced g*entle- man came to the door. He rang' the bell. When the maid came I he did not ask if the lady was home, he simply gave her a cata logue. “This shows some of our best brushes,” he said. “Maybe your folks w’ould like to buy one. The prices are all marked and the address of our shop is there. jThey can just write any, time. Thank you,” he said, as he walk ed away. Now that is something new*. Or is it the subtlest salesman- s'hip of all? For it got results. She sent for a brush. Ever since hearing of this in cident w'e 'have wondered if it was due to a sudden gleam of intelligence on the part of one individual Fuller-Brush Man, or whether it is an indication that the entire mess of salesmen have seen the light. Perhaps these men have encountered other mule-like housewives, other mil itant females whose eye grew cold and w’'hose hand rtfached for a rolling-pin at the sight of them. Perhaps it has finallyi oc curred to them that there was something wrong; CARO-GRAPHICS — by Murray Jones, jr. 00 YOU Know YOUR STATE? \W THU ^IWT rWMt'EHT OF IHf U .S'. TO Utt SCirmiflC HANP5HAKIM6 WPYOUKHOWrHAT ROVAIGOV MARriM,INI77^ HAP TO Hff 10 A BRITISH ti/AR5H(P IN MUHH0Ori HAR MR,rROH VMIIRt Hf IJ5UfD PROflAMAirOHS FROM TIMF TO T! MH ? CAPT. HAWORTH, GUIlfORf) JHW THf WNNIN6 COAL IH THf BA5KfTPAli 6AMF A6A1N5T CATAWBA AFTER THE HMAL 6UM» .C. HAS F£W£R V0ll)M£5 PtK PIRSOM IT5 lIBRARItS THAM AMY OTriER STATf DIO YOU KNOWthat MR. lONMlE CR£PlE,OFHYPf fO m BURIfP 5TANPINGi;P Hf 5UFFFRED FROM A5TMMA IN LIFE, ANP TH0U6T HE MI6HTREJT BFnFR 5TANPIM6 ? • THfe EOlTOftS or CARO'GllAPMICS INVITC fOU TO SEND IN INTCrtESTlHO PACTS AOOUT YOOft COnflUNITY • Who Owns Oldest Ch^rolet in Moore? If It’s Oldest in U. S. Company MilHonth 1935 Car is Yours Free Grains of Sand NIAGARA Snow, rain, go away. Little golfers want to play. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Stutts and son James of Granite Quarry spent the Christmas holidays with the Rev. bert of Beor Creek and Ida Mae Har- Deeds cf Moore county to the follow ing: Tom Farlow of Seagrove and bert of Bear Creek and Ida Mae Har- vell of Pisgah; Eklwin Cameron and Of course in a newspaper publish ed in a resort community you aren’t supposed to say anything about snow i and Mrs. C. L. Dutton ani fam- and such detriments. i j]y I J. P. Turnley spent Christmas day and Mrs J. A. Wood at The Hollies, Marjorie Hilliard, both of Vass; El- ^ bert Taylor of East Bend and Lela Miss Victoria and Virginia Pierce Reynolds of Vass; Marshall Corbett Beatty of Ivanhoe and Flora Mae Mc- Fadyen of Cameron; Hampton More of Spies and Essie Mae Hussey of Bjnnett. of Cameron spent the week-end with But when every community in the | •with friends at his farm home near United States, as far as we have been | cameron. able to determine, is in a like predic ament; when everybody know's all about it, your newspaper just can’t keep the secret any longer. Bill and Roy Turnley of Cameron spent a day or two of the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Dutton. Bob Dutton and Clarence Furger- srn, who have been with the C. C. C„ spent the holidays with their family here. Mrs. W. M. Parks of Dundarrock It's been great weather for the ccal spent Christmas with her parents, man, the furnace oil man and the Mr. and Mrs. R A. Smith. MIHS M.\RJORIE HIIXIARD BRIDE OF EDWIN C.-VMERON There’s no use of kidding When everyone’s skidding. oil fellow who owns the wrecker. And the youngsters with the sleds. On account of the snow there was no service at*the village church last Sunday morning. There was a beautiful Christmas A marriage of interest to friends of the contracting parties was sol emnized in Carthage on Saturday of last week when Miss Marjorie Hil liard became the bride of Edwin Cam eron. The bride is the attractive daught er of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hilliard of Vas3. They will reside in Vass. And a vacation for Don Currie and tree and a nice program by hte chil- A1 Grover. The weather didn’t keep people something! from the various New Year’s wrong not with their product but | parties. There were good crowds W’ith them Carolina, the Pine Needles Inn, Is it too much to hope that I ^lub. Southern Pines Country Club and The Chalfonte to welcome young '1936. -Edward F. Green. HERE COMES THE FULLER BRUSH MAN’ this single incident is a sign that there is going to‘ be a change in general sales’ tactics? What a: world this would be if this j feed the birds change that has overtaken the Pilot: Fuller-Brush Men could affect | ^ill you please ask your patrons to also the Magazine-Subscription feathered guests the boys, the Shelf-of-Books-Your The deep snow and its remain- Children-Need ladies, the dark on the ground for so kng a time gentlemen with linen, the Eng- ^re afraid will cause some of the lish Bounders selling Scotch ^o perish, a few crumbs thrown tweed from Canada, the Old- top of the snow will doubtless ?Iook-Rug racketeers, in fact the i save the life of ^any a bird, salesmen and boosters of every sort, not forgetting our own lo cal brand. For among the tour ists who come to the Sandhills, though many may be the sheep like dodos some of our local real tors would have us think, there will be others more contraryi of di.sposition. On these the usual slogans act like a red flag to a bull. “Boost, don’t knock,” they hear, and these folks begin to think. “Why do they need to boost so much,” they ponder. “Are folks knocking? Mut be something to knock about.” And when “Let’s put over Southern Pines” resounds from the house tops they< decide they’re from Missouri where the mules come from. Nobody is going to put anything over on them. And they move on to the next town where they 'hope they are going to be let alone. do next, the results would be the most spectacular combina tion of catastrophies ever wit nessed. Mixing heat and cold to gether you could also get some fierce combinations that would be something of a puzzle to put back, once the lid blew off. The Weather Man’s task is a big one. The world is made up of a curious lot of people and it takes a curious assortment of weather to satisfy all of them. The mild, warm days of late Fall were gratifying to many. A delight ful change to just as many oth ers when the thermometer fell down cellar. Small folks scan ned the clouds with hope, faith in all signs that pointed to snow, while others watcher for a clear ing sky. The family from Maine dren at the church on Wednesday night, and apples and oranges for every one present. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Toler and lit tle Faye of Raleigh spent the holidays with relatives in Niagara. Mr. and Mrs. John Michael, who have'spent the past year or so in Connecticut, have moved here and leased theold Colonial cottage for the season. Mrs. D. S. Ray and daughter Miss i Elizabeth have returned to their home after spending some weeks visiting relatives in Chapel Hill and other places. Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Taylor and lit- | tie son of Winstcn-Salem spent the holidays with relatives in Niagara. Elbert and Wiley Garner of Aber deen and Pinehurst w'ere dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Berney Gamer on Christmas day. Mrs. G. F. Coburn of Woonsocket, R. I., is a recent arrival and plans to spend the winter months with Mrs. | G. S. Smith. Mrs. George Smith, who arrived I some weeks ago from her summer home in East Hebron, N. H., is oc cupying her cozy winter home here for the season. Bill Folas, fen cases and Key car riers in fine leathers at Hayes. Chevrolet’s one millionth car ol 1935 production is to be presented to the owner of the oldest Chevrolet li censed and in regular use in the United States, and Mid-South Motors, Inc.. of Aberdeen has been asked to discover whether the oldest Chevro let is in this territory. The one millionth Chevrolet built assembly line at Flint, Michigan on December 12, just eight days after Chevrolet produced its eleven mil lionth car since the beginning of the company, Presentatisn of the millionth car of the year—a 1936 Standard coach —will be made to the owner whose Chevrolet is discovered before mid night on January 15, 1936, to be the oldest model licensed and in regular service. It is specified that, to win, the old- timer Chevrolet must have been reg ularly licensed for operation during the current year, possessing its own 1935 license tags issued before De cember 1. It must, also, have been li censed as a passenger car, and be equipped with a complete passenger car body. It must bear the original engine and chassis numbers, legible and unaltered. To enter a Chevrolet for considera tion, the owner need only drive It to any Chevrolet dealer’s salesroom and submit it for examination, receiving a blank on which he will report the engine and chassis numbers of the car to the Chevrolet Motor Company at Detroit, where the company’s rec ords will determine which is the very oldest in service. A well-cared-for home forest serves also as a windbreak for buildings, a shelter for livestock, a means of protecting valuable lands from ero sion, a source of profitable employ ment for men and teams during other wise spare or idle time, a place of recreation and an improvement in the appearance of the farm. Pilot Advertising Pays. This is the time to make New Year’s resolutions, yet we heard of one that was made and kept for the last three years but fin ally broken the other day. It was a queer enough resoliition, too, an«l the reason for making it and for breaking it may be a not unprofitable tale. It seems that a certain lady was greatly bothered by a plague of traveling salemsen. Mobs of them w^re forever descending upon her with their wares and camping out on her doorstep. Of these the most persistent was the Fuller-Brush Man. Great were the battles between them, for this lady happened to be one of those people, the bane of ev ery salesman, who naturally des pise to be urged to do anything. Year after year she withstood the attacks of the Fuller-Brush Man. He came trained in the Complete Salesman’s Manual of threw back their s'ho'ulders and When you come down to it, if j enjoyed the decline in tempera- brushes are good—or magazines ■ ture while their neighbor from or toothpastes or towns—plenty the warm climate of China of people will want them, but shivered, the sale of a lot of perfectly Recently fine, let us say, brushes can be hurt by the manner in which Ihey are offered to the public. OUR ASSORTMENT OF WEATHER The Engineer who is in charge of the weather department must have a tremendous task on His hands. Occasionally jou hear a man say he would like to regu late the weather and then it wouldn’t be so hot or so cold or so wet or dry or whatever was wrong with that particular day’s allotment. If a layman should attempt to take over the weather depart ment and try his hand at our ex tensive system of winds, he would probably produce world wide destruction the first move. The winds move the clouds along, the water carriers, and un less he had some idea of what to before the snow covered the ground, the jonquils were up about eight inches and the forsyt'hia had opened a few of her buds. The first signs of Spring. But the calendar says w'e are just entering Winter and mentions nothing about Spring. Winter in the Sandhills isn’t a very serious affair. The sun has reached its greatest de clination and swings back on its journej' with the long oblique rays gradually growing shorter. So if we didn’t like yesterday and are doubtful of tomorrow we can rest assured it hit some one exactly right. With all the horde of human beings and their many wants and desires, the Creator will, in his weather for tomor row and the next day, not only please someone, but go on con ducting the bureau with safety, a mighty) important factor. —H. K. B. NEW SERIES OF TALKS IN C.ATHOLIC CHURCH HERE We Have Resolved To Give You Bigger Bargains During 1936 Here’s a few of the Bargains you’ll find at Penders. And it’s only the beginni- nmg. Shop here dur ing for bigger bargains. Since the installation of the queb' tion box in St. Anthony’s Catholic Church, Southern Pines, has proven so popular to non-Catholics it has been decided to devote the next ten Sunday evenings to the explanation of some chief points of Catholic doc trine. The following ten topici, will be difcus.sed on succeeding Sunday even ings—1—“The Bible Is Not the Only Guide to the Teaching of Christ;" 2— “How Many Churches Did Christ Es tablish ?”;3—“Sin and Redemption;” 4—"The Seven Sacraments Institut ed by Christ;”5—“The Six Command ments of God;” 6—“The Six Com mandments of the Church;” 7—“What Are Sacramentals;” 8—“Prayer Use ful in Daily Life;” 9—“Life After Death;” 10—“Devotion to the Bless ed V’rgin and the Saints.” Afterwards the sermon questions asked the previous Sunday evening will be discussed and answered. The services will close with benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament, All are invited to attend these next ten Sunday evening services, which begin on Sunday, January 5th at 7:30. MARRIAGE LICENSES Norway MACKEREL 317c D. P. Quick OATMEAL 2 15c Miracle Tiny PEAS Dried Navy BEANS 3 lbs. 10c m Triangle Free Running SALT 3 10c Old Virginia PRESERVES 17c 1-Ib. Size Marriage licenses have been issued from the office of the Register of Deeds of Moor county to th follow ing: Tm Farlow of Seagrove and Rona Brewer of Spies; Roland Lam- D. P. Blend COFFEE 21c lb. Dano Pride ROLLS 5C Dozen. Libby’s Crushed PINEAPPLE No. 2 Can IJt Colonial Red Sour Pitted CHERRIES 2 Cans 23c Chocolate Pecan CAKES .b. 17c Southern Manor ASPARAGUS'S 15c Southern Manor Whole No. 2 cans BEETS 2 25c