FIRST IN NEWS, CIRCULATION & ADVERTISING THE A Paper Devoted to the Upbuilding THAOe SPAINC9 CAKSVlfiW A^Humy PiMKBUiPP 4^ PILOT CAROUNA ROOM MOORE COUNTY’S LEADING NEWS-WEEKLY ^ — : - — of the Sandhill TerritorV*^ North Carolina VOL. 16, NO. 19. Southern Pines and Aberdeen, North Carolina. Friday. April 3. 1936. \\ FIVE CENTS MANY CANDIDATES The Pilot introduces Rotogravure LAWRENCE SMITHS FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS IN FIELD “June” Harrington Announces Support of Miiis McCaskill for His Late Father’s Post \VM. JOSEPH IN FIELD Politics in the county is seething insofar as one office is concerned, Section With Next Week^s Issue Easter, Curb Marketing, Soil Conservation, Pictures Fea ture First Issue Easter’s the theme of women’s fea tures in our April all-roto-gidvure STATE FARMER SECTION which comes to you next week as a part of The Pilot. But with the flowers, Eas ter bonnets and the general holiday though there appear at the moment j trend of things, you’ll find plenty of to be few contests in sight for most | good common sense farm facts and of the jobs. Something will probably j figures. be done about this as the Democratic , ejjitorial privilege of getting I primary in June grows nearer, but an advance look at The Pilot’s "pic- the boys haven’t any too much time to come out with their announce- j tuie paper” convinces us that every ments and get to work on the elec- member of the farm family will just torate. I about revel in our April issue. “Curb The one exception just now is the i Marketing Has Become Big Business” office of the Register of Deeds, held | is the title of one profusely illustrat- at present by D. D. Shields Cameron ed feature. It tells how North Caro- of Southern Pines who was named to ~ fill the vacancy created a few months ago by the death of Will J. Harring ton, long incumbent and for years the Democratic party's leading vote lina farm women have increased their incomes and raised home living stand ards by a gigantic cooperative mar keting system. A summary of recent re.‘iearoh studies made by the South getter in the county. Mr. Cameron is Carolina experiment station for more a candidate to succeed himself. ; economic production of cotton is es- 1 Di pecially timely at this season of the In another column of to-days Pi- . u, . * .. T, • I „ year. Best varieties of vegetables for let “June” Harrington, son of the f . • t this section of the country are de late Will, announces he is not a can-; , J,, ^ „„ i scribed in another practical article, didate for his father s job but an ar dent supporter of the young woman ^ « you’ve been pondering over the who has served in the Register’s of- j new Soil Conservation and Domestic fice many years under both Mr. H ir- Allotment Act. you 11 be keenly in- rington and Mr. Cameron, Mis- xJess teiested in a clear-cut analysis of the McCaskill. Miss McCaskill is said to ' measure and what it will mean to * farmers in Moore county. Wins Recog'nition Painting by Ruth Doris Swett To Be Exhibited by Art Students’ League in N. Y. A painting by Ruth Doris Swett of Southern Pines, North Carolina, was chosen by a jury of prominent New York artists to be exhibited in the semi-annual members’ show of the Art Students’ League of New York. The exhibit will be open from March 25 to April 4 in the grand gallery of the Art Students’ League at 215 West 57th street in New York City. The semi-annual members’ shew is an important ex hibition at the Art Students’ Lea gue and is participated in by the League’s large membership from all parts of the world. ACQUIRE FORMER HERRING HOUSE ' Winter Residents l*urchase Res idence of Mrs. E. W. Paven- stedt on Morganton Road : AND ADDITIONAL ACREAGE rotogravure farm magazine. We think Kissimmee. Florida: have wide support for the place. But there is a Harrington in the field. The Pilot is this week in re ceipt cf the following communication; “Please announce my candidacy for the office of Register of Deeds of | they’re mighty interesting and at- Moore county, subject to the vote of tractive. Watch for them! the people in the approaching pri- - mary. Please state that my father’s ' For Willff name is Dan Tom Harrington, Route j „ \ a i 2, Carthage; also my father and the lOF nOSpitm Awa,ruCQ late W. J. Harrington, Register of The largest real estate deal con summated this season in Southern Pines was announced yesterday by E. C. Stevens, agent in the transaction. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Smith of Millbrook, New York, have pur- chas:d from Mrs. Edmund W. Paven- stedt of Washington their residence on Morganton Road, formerly the Donald Herring house, and in addi tion, some three-quarters of an acre of adjoining land from Dr. Ernest W. Bush. Ml-, and Mrs. Smith have been occupying the Pavenstedt house since March 1st. The Smiths have been winter resi dents of Southern Pines for a number of years, until this season occupying the house of Miss Birdilia Bair on Connecticut avenue. Mr. Smith is an authority on shooting, the author of s.veral books on the subject, and Mr.s. Smith one of the country's best known horse women. She was for , ! some time master of hounds of the Baltimore Orioles and Philadel- i Minbrcok Hunt. With Mrs. Landon phia N itionais Want Spring ^ k Thorne of New York, she owns the 1 tilining Farther North j Thorndale stables of Millbrook, whose ^ j horses winter at The Paddock, a num- C. OF C. 10 DISCUSS PLAN ber of them winning in hunting and ^ ~ : jumping classes at the Pinehurst Does Southern Pines again want to , ghow this week. Mrs. Smith is SOUTHERN PINES CONSIDERED FOR BASEBALL CAMP Nearly $1,500 Local Towns Have Raised Over SI,400 for Red Cross Flood Relief Paul H. Dana, treasurer of the Moore County Red Cross chapter, reports slightly over $1,400 receiv ed from Aberdeen, Pinebluff, Pine hurst and Southern Pines for the Flood Relief fund of the American Red Cross. Little Pinebluff alone turned in over $150. The goal is $1,500? which is expected to be I'ealized by the end of the week. Those who have not given who may still desire to may send their contributions either to Mr. Dana at Pinehurst or Nelson C. Hyde, Southern Pines. Next week yo'i'll see The Pilot set-; become a baseball training camp *,ing a record in the number of pic- : The following Associated Press ! a daughter of Oakleigh Thorne. Mr. and Mrs. Pavenstedt have not tures we’ll be bringing you in our | dispatch was received this week from to S.uthern Pines since Mr. Deeds, are first cousins. My grand father, Joe Harrington, named me af ter cousin W. J. because he always seemed to like him better than any of his other nephews, in other words, W. J. was his favorite. “I am merely going into detail be cause I wish it understood I am not W. J. Harrington. Jr., of the Horse shoe section of Moore county. The late Register of Deeds has a son with the same initials as mine, his name being William June Harrington, Jr. I have always signed my name W. J. Harrington. Jr. (Was told by cousin W. J. to do so to avoid our mail be coming mixed*.—Signed: W’illiam Jo seph Harrington.” Nor are Miss McCaskill and Me.ssrs. Cameron and William Joseph Har rington to be the only ones in the field, according to reports. Others are expected to announce next week, and the fat is on the fire. There hasn't been a good, hot political battle W. L. Jewell of Sanford Gets General Construction Job at Price of $46,700 Contracts for the new wing of the Moore County Hospital have been let by the Board of County Commission ers, subject to the approval of Dr. H. G. Beatty, State Administrator of the PWA, and of the legal depart-, ment, at a total of $66,909. | Those to whom contracts were, awarded are as follows: W. L. Jewell ; Baseball training camps in North and South Carolina will be considered for use next spring by the Baltimore Orioles, club offi cials ?aid tonight. Baltimore’s old-time Federal league entry worked at Southern Pines, N. C., and found conditions there satisfactory. It was recalled by John B. Ogden, general man ager of the present International league team. Sudden change for Florida cli mate to eastern points during mid-April when the league opens was cited as undesirable, espec ially for pitchers. The question of the desirability of inviting the Baltimore International I Pavenstedt entered the profession of I law in Washington. Mrs. Pavenstedt I is the well known writer, Maude Par- i ker, and the former wife of the late j Richard Washburn Child, one time ; ambassador to Italy, j Mr. and Mrs. Smith plan to improve j both the house and grounds of their j new possession, consolidating the Bush acreage with the present prop- i erty through extensive landscaping and gaidening. They plan to stay late into the season. Local American Legion Post Buys Clubhouse To Remodel Former Stanley Storehouse on Maine Avenue, Southern Pines for Quarters League team here next Spring will be of Sanford, general construction, at | a cost of $46,700, Cl utchfield and Sul ; directors of the Chamber of Com- i More than 20 members of Sandhills merce next Tuesday. Southern Pines Post No. 134, American Legion at- in the past has been not only the ^ tended a meeting of the post in the winter training camp cf the old Bal-;Jr. O. U. A. M. hall on New Hanip- timore Federal league team, but the , shire avenue. Southern Pines, Mon- year before the Federal leaguers ■ day night fov the purpose of confirm- were here the Philadelphia National | ing the report cf the building com- league team trained here. That was mittee bringing to a successful con- livan, of Greensboro; heating, 339; plumbing, $7,045; Thompson Electric Company, Raleigh, $2,885. Trustees of the Duke Endowment, meeting yesterday in Charlotte, ap propriated $962,499.22 to 103 hospitals and 47 orphanages in the two Caro- 30 years ago. Yesterday morning’s pa- Moore County Hospital in Pine-1 hurst was allotted $6,010, which is ^i^jering a training camp farther elusion its efforts to obtain quarters for the post. With Commander John Hemmer in around here in some time but there’s one dollar per day per charity pa-1 ^orth than Florida “to prepare the i the chair the committee reported fav- tient for the past year. Of the nearly j ^g^m better to return to uncertain | orably on the purchase of the former one now in the making. Busy Week Here For Golfers and Horsemen Two Tournaments On and An nual Pinehurst Horse Show.— More Golf and Dog Show Next million dollar total. $522,475 went to hospitals in North Carolina and $62,- 662.92 to orphan homes in this state, the balance to hospitals and orphan ages in South Carolina. The appropriations brought to $10,- 586,387 the sum allotted to hospitals and orphan homes in the Carolinas by the Duke Endowment since its es- This has been one of the busiest tablishment in 1924. weeks of the season in Pinehurst and Southern Pines. Pinehurst has had its DR. GEORGE L.UTHER CADY annual North and South Amateur golf PREACHES HERE SUNDAY tournament on, with nearly 200 en tries, and its 19th annual Horse Show ran through Tuesday and Wednesday l)efore a large crowd. Southern Pines has its annual Women’s Mid-South Championship golf tournament on, with sixty playing on Wednesday and again today, Friday. Yesterday the matches were rained out. George T. Dunlap, Jr., of Pinehurst is favored to win the North and South, and Miss Deborah Verry of Wcrcester, Mass., is in the lead in the Mid-South. Horses from all parts' BOARD OF ELECTIONS FOR A distinguished visitor from New York City will preach next Sunday morning, April 5, at The Church of Wide Fellowship. He is the Rev. Dr. George Luther Cady,' national secre tary of the American Missionary As sociation. He is well known as an em inent preacher, and has held impor tant pastorates in Dubuque, la., and Boston, Mass. His sermon here will be appropriate to Palm Sunday. of the state and some from South Carolina and Virginia competed in the various events at the Horse SSow, with local stables faring well. The Women’s North and South golf is scheduled for next week in Pine hurst, as is the annual dog show, to {Please turn to page 5) COUNTY IS APPOINTED The Moore County Board of Elec tions, to supervise this year’s elec tions in the county, was named this W’eek at Raleigh, as follows: L. V. O’Callaghan, Southern Pines; John A. Fry and B. C. Wallace. Carthage. spring temperatures in the north.” j Stanley storehouse, a commodious two Improvement of the local baseball; story structure, 30 by 50 feet, locat- grounds, including fencing, would be j ed on a plot 100 by 150 feet, on the necessary if one cf the big profession- j south side of Maine avenue, between al league teams were to come here. | East Broad and Ashe streets. L. V. And the question of an entirely new | O’Callaghan, J. H. Stephenson, J. field might come up, for the pres- j Vance Rowe, L. L. Wooley and R. E. ent field is the property of the South- Denny were elected trustees for the ern Pines School and might not be ' property, and all members of the post available for the big fellows. ! as a committee of the whole to se cure funds necessary for altering the MENT.\L TELEPATHIST AT MID-FINES CLUB SUNDAY Dr. Franz Polgar, mental telepath ist who entertained and baffled a large crowd at The Carolina in Pine- in Pinehurst Tuesday afternoon at a gathering sponsored by Charles Reutter, Jr., will demonstrate his powers of thought transition at the Mid-Pines Club at 8:30 o’clock on Sunday night. Dr. Polgar attended the luncheon meeting of the Kiwanis Club of Aberdeen in the Aberdeen Community House Wednesday and astounded the members by his dem onstrations. building for Legion purposes. Among the members of the post all handicrafts are represented, and much of the labor of rehabilitating the foimer storehouse will be contributed by these members. The building, pur chased from the Stanley estate, is well timbered and framed, and when refinished will not only make a com- mcdious home but one that will be a credit to Sandhills Post. CHILDREN TO PL.\V Piano pupils of Mrs. Claude Hafer will give a recital tonight, Friday, at the home of Mrs. George C. Moore on Massachusetts avenue, to which j is invited to this community service friends cf the children are invited. | Palm Sunday night. DU. CHEATH.AM CO»tMUNITY HOUR PRE.ACHER SUND.\Y The Rev. Dr. T. A. Cheatham of Pinehurst will preach at the Commun ity Hour service at The Church of Wide Fellovi'ship at 7:45 p. m. Sun day, April 5. There '">'1 be special mu.sic by the choi> and Mrs. Charles W. Picquet will sing a sclo. Everyone STATE T.4X YIELD FOUR MILLIONS OVER YEAR AGO Revenues Show Ten Percent Gain for PMrst Three-(iuarters of Fiscal Year SALES TAX RESPONSIBLE Revenues of the State of North Car olina for the first three quarters of the current fiscal year were $4,189,- 136 or 10.25 per cent greater than re ceipts for the same period in 1934-35, the Slate Department of Revenue re ported this week. General fund revenues for the nine- months period increased 17.72 per cent from $20,290,153.48 last year to $23,885,563.95 this year. Motor vehi cle taxes and fees increased 2.88 per cent from $20,589,328.72 to $21,183,- 054.60 despite lower-priced license tags. Collections from all sources were $45,068,618.55. as compared with $40,- 879,482.20 up to March 31 a year ago. Over half of the increase of $3,- 595.410.47 in general fund revenues was attributed to a rise of $1,854,176 in sales tax returns. The sales lax has been applied to all foodstuffs •Since the beginning of the fiscal year and to all meals since June 1, 1935. The amount cf sales tax far collected is only $25,000 short of the yield of $7,657,000 for the full 12 months of the last fiscal year. Com missioner of Revenue A. J. Maxwell yesterday was confident that the .sales levy, with exemptions removed from foodstuffs. wi uld yield the $10,- 000.000 which its advocates predicted. Even if the returns for the last quar ter of the year do not exceed the yield for the last three months of 1934-35, the estimate of $10,000,000 will be reached. Next to the sales tax, income, li cense and beer taxes showed the most notable increases in yields tor the first three quarters. Income taxes, falling due March 15, increased from $6,494,015.71 last year to $7,036,- 269.92 this year, a gain of over a half million dollars. The total for the fiscal year should reach the predicted, $7,700,000 easily, said Commissioner Maxwell. All sources of revenue for the Mo tor Vehicle Division, except automo bile license taxes, showed increases for the three quarters, though the gains were much smaller than those by toe general fund levies. An incrtase of $1,140,000 in gaso line tax receipts was offset to some extent by a drop in automobile li cense taxes from $6,566,592.33 to $5,- 927,499.96, leaving a net gain of only $593,725.88 in motor vehicle revenues. Gasoline taxes soared from $13,1'20.- 159 for the three quarters last year to $14,261,733.41 this year. C.\RD PARTY TONIGHT FOR BENEFIT OF FLOOD VICTI»LS Plans for the card party to be giv en this evening. Friday, at the Southern Pines Country Club to raise additional funds for Flood Relief work have been completed and a ca pacity crowd is looked for. Mrs. P. Everest is still receiving table res ervations. however. The charge is one dollar per person, which includes re freshments and prizes, and there will also be a door prize. Other games than bridg# may be played. fip »:VAL PLANS AMATEUR HOUR AND GLEE CLUBS Seven Clubs to Give Open Air Concert in Afternoon; Sand hills Talent on P. M. Program OLD SLAVE DAY A FEATURE Thursday. April 16th, the opening day of the Southern Pines Spring Blossom Festival, will be featured by two events new to this annual cele bration and offering promise of a distinct treat for resident and visi- tots. The program, which covers both afternoon and evening, was announc ed yesterday by the committee in charge, A. B. Yeomans, Prof. Fred erick Stanley Smith, P. Frank Buch an and Dr. George G. Herr. Seven glee clubs from here and neighboring communities, including Aberdeen, Carthage and other near by towns, will present a mammoth open air concert in the Municipal Park in the afternoon, starting at 3:30 o’clock. Besides each club sing ing individually, all the clubs will rcmbine in several numbers. After this program the members of the clubs will be entertained at tea at the Civic Club. The largest Amateur Hour prog ram ever staged in the Sandhills is scheduled for Thursday night in the High School Auditorium, with all the talent in the section invited to enter the trials from which 15 numbers are to be selected for the* event. The trials, or auditions, are to be held Monday evening, April 13th at the schoolhouse. Those selected to appear Thursday night will compete before %vhat is expected to be a packed house for cash prizes, with several prominent local residents acting as judges. Old Slave Day One feature of the Spring Blossom Festival that will be kept this year is “Old Slave Day,” not only on ac count of the public demand for its retention, but for the former slaves themselves. These old people look forward all year to the time when they can all be together and can meet the public who take so much interest in talking with them; al.so many of them have friends and relatives in this part of the county, who come to see them that day. The committee expects that be tween a hundred and a hundred and twenty-five former slaves will be present on ‘‘Old Slave Day,” which is scheduled to be held on Thursday, April 16th, next. They will be brought here from all parts of Moore ccimty by people who volunteer for the service, but the committej will have to pay out about a dollar each for those present to properly feed and take care of them while they are here, and in addition there will be the cost of prizes and a small sum of mcney given to each one. The committee would appreciate aid from persons interested in these old people and in maintaining this day, and contributions made to Frank Buchan, postmaster and chairman of the committee, at The Pilot office, or to any director of the Chamber of Commerce, will be used for this pur pose. Fire Damagres Former S. B. Richardson Home Mr. Richardson Loses Furniture Not Yet Removed from Late Residence on Bennett Street Fire gutted the former S. B. Rich ardson residence located on the cor ner of Bennett street and Maine ave nue in Southern Pines at an early hour Sunday morning. Untenanted for several weeks, a light observed in one of the upstairs rooms and reported to Officer Newton at 11:00 o’clock Sat urday night by George Munroe sent the officer to the house where he ob served nothing suspicious. At 3:00 o’clock Sunday moming Joe Buckley, residing on the opposite corner, aroused bj' the crackle of fire, awoke to see flames shooting out of the cellar entrance and enveloping’ the rear of the house. A telephoned alarm brought out the fire company ‘Please tufn to page 4)