Friday, June 5, 1&36.
THE PILOT. Southern Piites and Aberdeen. North*Carolina
Mrs. Swett Elected
Secretary of Library
Summer Schedule in Force.—
Vacation Membership For
School Children Popular
At a meeting of the trustees of the
Southern Pines Library held last
Thursday, Mrs. Janies B. Swett was
unanimously elected to fill the office
of «ecr£tary.
Beginning this week the summer
schedule of library hours will be in
force. These hours are: Monday, Wed_
nesday and Friday mornings from
9:00 to 12:00; Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00.
It is worthy of comment that this
year the full winter schedule has been
maintained until June 1, instead of
being discontinued on May 1 or May
15, as has previously been the cus
tom.
Vacation memberships for children
of school age are new available upon
payment of a fee of fifty cents. Dur
ing the past month a considerable
number of vacation members have
already been enrolled, and it is antic
ipated that during June many others
will take advantage of so fine an op
portunity.
An innovation this year—and one
that will prove very welcome to the
town’s summer residents—is the ap
preciation of funds for the purchase
of books during the summer months.
Such purchase, at a season when the
income of the library is necessarily
diminished, must of course be limit
ed, but it is proposed to add each
month a small number of books of
outstanding merit and of notably wide
demand. This month the additions will
be: “Sparkenbroke," by Charles Mor
gan, listed as the best-selling novel
throughout the country during May;
“Beyond Sing the Woods,” by Trygve
Gulbranssen, May selection of the Lit
erary Guild and already a best-seller
in six languages; “The Doctor," by
Mary oberts Rinehart.
CIVIC CLUB CLOSES AFTER
DANCE FOR S P. GR-ADITATES
The last affair to be given by the
Civic Club this season was last Fri
day night, a dancing party in honor
of the graduating class of Southern
Pines High School. There were six
teen young people present.
■ The parents and chaperones who
came in during the evening were Mr.
and Mrs. Maxwell Grey. Mrs. Walter
Spaeth, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chandler,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thompson, Mr. an€
Mrs. Wooley and Miss Campbell. Mr.
Simonds is proving himseuf a very
popular band-master.
The Week in Aberdeen
REAL EST.\TE TRANSFERS
J. Vance Rowe and J. Talbot John
son, commissioners, to Jesse Leigh
and Frank Armstrong, Trustees: prop
erty in Mineral Springs township
S. R. Hoyle to J. L. McGraw and
wife: property in Carthage township.
Lester W. Stutts and wife to Wiley
Powers and wife: propeity in Shef
fields township.
Ernest Stutts and wife to Wiley
Powers and wife: property in Shef
fields township.
Nick Rapatas to Claude L. Dutton
and wife; property in McNeill town
ship.
L. S. Cummings and wife to W. W.
Williams: property in Ritters town
ship.
Pinehurst, Inc., to Bennie Gaddyand
wife: property In Bensalem township.
Graham Sweeping
All North Carolina
Listen to
SANDY
GRAHAN
Friday Night, June 5th
10:30—11:00 o’clock P. M.
Statewide Radio Network
For Governor
Miss Mary Page attendefi the com
mencement exercises at the Greens
boro College for Women last week
as a graduate of the Class of 1886.
Mr. and Mrs. George Moger and
children cf Southern Pines were din
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs J. G.
Campbell last Sunday.
The Rev. and Mrs. E. L Barber and
children are visitiing relatives in Se
neca, S. C., and Carrollton, Ga.,
this week. Mr. Barber will assist in the
marriage of a former member of his
congregation while in Carrollton.
Leland McKeithen of Duke Uni
versity spent the past week-end at
home.
Mrs. Eunice Creel and daughter.
Miss Edythe, have returned from an
extended trip to South Boston, Va.
Mrs. E. B. Maynard and infant son
have returned home from the Moore
County Hospital.
iGlenn Caviness and Charlton Hunt
ley, students at the Presbyterian
College, Clinton, S. C., are home tor
the summer vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Talbot Johnson,
Miss Betsy Jean and Lawrence John
son and Frank McCluer motored to
Randolph-Macon College, Lynchburg,
Va., the first of the week to attend
the graduating exercises of which
Miss Miriam Johnson was a member.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Batchelor are
closing their sandwich shop this week
and with their family will enjoy a
vacation of two weeks in Blowing
Rock.
Miss Cornelia Shaw of Davidson is
arriving this week to visit her sis
ters, Mrs. Robert N. Page and Miss
Sarah Shaw, in consideration of 30
years faithful services as Librarian of
Davidson College, has been elected Li
brarian Emeritus, and given a year’s
vacation.
Miss Frances Jean Freeman has
completed her school year at Meie-
dith College, Raleigh, and is home
for the summer months.
Thomas B. Wilder attended the
commencement at Wake Forest Col
lege on Monday of this week. Mr. Wil
der, a graduate of this college, has
attended 57 commencements at Wake-
Foi'est consecutively.
John Edward Pleasants, a student
of the Dental College in Atlanta, Ga.,
is home for the summer vacations.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Page of
Statesville were guests of Mrs. Rob-
•-rt N. Page last Monday.
Mrs. Reid A. Page has returned
from Charlotte where she spent sev-
'■ral days visiting her mother.
Mrs. Wimberly Bowman has re-
tuined from Charlotte where she
spent some time visiting friends.
Mrs. Banks McNary of Goldsboro
and Mrs. J. C. Adams of Linden dre
guests of Mrs. E. J. Macon.
Mrs. Stewart Weaver is attending
commencement exercises of the South
Carolina University at Columbia. S.
C., where her brother, Raymond O’-
Cain is a member of the graduating
class.
Mrs. David Coffey of Pinehurst and
small daughter are visiting Mrs. Ros
ser Jones. *
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Cochran have
returned from a visit with relatives
in the state of Alabama.
Mrs. H. T. Morgan and small daugh
ters, Jean and Joan, are visiting rel
atives in Kannapolis.
Mrs. .Fred Flinchum of Sanford is
the guest of Mrs. Knox Matthews.
Miss Elizabeth Griffin of Biscoe Is
the guest of his cousin, Chris Page
Shamburger.
Miss Katharine Johnson has com
pleted her school year at Wingate
Junior College and is home for the
summer.
Miss Thelma McFarland, a govern
ment employe of Raleigh, Is spending
her vacation visiting her parents.
Jerry McKeithen has completed his
school year at the Citadel, Charles
ton, S. C., and Is home for the sum
mer vacation.
Jack Smith, jr., celebrated his
fourth birthday on last Thursday by
entertaining his Sunday School class
on the Presbyterian Church lawn.
Mrs. Stewart Weaver was hostess
d the Home and Garden Club and a
number of additional guests last Wed-
lesday night at her home on the Rae-
:ord Road. The roll call was answered
to by many helpful garden sugges
tions, and a flower show was plan
ned tc- take place some time soon,
ed and revived the flower gardens..
A paper cn “Plants Poisonous to the
Touch” was given by Mrs. C. E.
Pleasants, jr., followed by a paper on
the “Whys and Wherefores of Mulch
ing,” by Mrs. G. D. Martin. The pro
gram closed w’ith a recitation by
Miss Gaynelle Gwyn.
Mt s. E. L. Pleasants wm hostess to
the Walter Hines Page Book Club last
Thursday afternoon at the Commun
ity House, with the topic of,study
centering around the state of West
Virginia. Mrs. R. N. Page gave a
paper on the state and Mrs. E. T.
McKeithen a paper on “The Best
Known Authors of West Virginia.”
Miss Rebecca Doub rendered a piano
selection during the musical hour.
The Rev. and Mrs. Leon M. Hall en
tertained the firemen and a number
cf guests at a chicken supper at their
home on Tuesday night of last week
in appreciation of the prompt service
rendered when a recent fire of their
chicken.house threatened the Metho
dist parsonage.
Mrs. Frances Pleasants was host-
est to her bridge club last Friday
night at the home of her sister. Miss
•fdr"* Maurer, with the livingroo'r
arranged for three tables. Mrs. Ros
ser Jones received the guest prize and
Mrs. Robert Gwyn the club prize. The
guests present other than members
were Mrs. Jones, Mrs. A. K. Penning
ton, Mrs. G. D. Martin, Mrs. S. L.
Windham and Mrs. M. B. Pleasants.
Mts. Frank Shamburger gave a de
lightful swimming party followed by
an enjoyable picnic supper at the
Aberdeen Lake last Tuesday evening
honoring her little niece. Miss Eliza
beth Griffin, who is visiting in her
home.
Tommy Avery was host to a num
ber of young friends on Tuesday af
ternoon, the occasion being his fifth
birthday.
Vacation Bible School
Opens Monday Morning
All Children Between 4 and 15
Eligible to Attend Classes
in Pinehurst
Why Gulf makes a new
Gas for June
The 1936 session of the Vacation Bi
ble Schcol of the Pinehurst Commun
ity Church w'ill open Monday morn-
' ing June 8 at 8:00 o’clock. The school
will run from June 8 to June 19 with
sessions from 8 to 9 a. m. each morn
ing except Saturday. It will be divid
ed into four sections according to age
groups: Beginners, 4 and 5 years old;
Primary group, 6, 7, and 8 years old;
Juniors, 9, 10, and 11 years old; In
termediates, 12, 15 years old.
Ptof. W. P. Morton will be the prin
cipal of the school, assisted by Miss
Lavora Sally, Beginners; Mrs. Ellis
Fields, Primaries; Miss Dorothy Ehr-
hardt, Juniors; Mrs. A. J. McKelway,
Intermediates. Assisting these lead
ers will be a staff of 12 to 15 helpers.
The two weeks schcol, which In the
past has numbered one hundred stu
dents and over, is for the purpose of
giving consecutive and thorough
courses in the Bible and related sub
jects. In addition to these courses are
carefully supervised periods in hand
work and recreation.
Except that they must be from four
to fifteen years old there is no re
striction as to those eligible to attend
and this notice of the school is also a
cordial invitation to parents within
reach of the Community Church of
Pinehurst to avail themselves, for
their children, of this period of reli
gious education and training. '
NIAGARA
MISS LILLIAN (JRAC’E ROSS
TO WED ON .Il’NE 2«TH
Mi.ss Lillian Grace Ross, daughter
of Donald J. Ross of Pinehurst, is to
b^ the bride cf Richard Pippitt of
Port Jervis, New York at the home
of the bridegroom’s aunt, Mrs. J. L.
Wyckoff in Holyoke, Mass., on June
26th.
Miss Ross is a graduate of Emma
Willard Preparatory School at Troy,
N. Y., of Mt. Holycko College and o^
the Catherine Gibbs Secretarial
School In Providence, R. I. Mr. Pip
pitt is a graduate of Hamilton Col
lege at Clinton. N. Y., and is now in
his last year in the Harvard Medical
School. He is a son of Harry Pippitt,
prominent resident of Port Jervis. The
! ceremony is to be performed by the
Rev. Dr. T. A. Cheatham, rector of
the Village Chapel, Pinehurst, the
bi'ide being the first person christen-
en by Dr. Cheatham in Pinehurst.
Donald Ross is leaving here tomorrow
night for Boston to remain until after
the wedding.
C. L. Dutton has bought a business
in Southern Pines and will move his
store there.
Johnnie T. Hendren of Savannah,
j Ga., is spending a few days with his
I uncle, J. W. Fiank, who has been
j critically ill for some weeks.
Mrs. G. W. Slappey of Columbus,
[_Ga., arrived the past week to spend a
! few days with Mrs. J. W. Frank.
I Mr. and Mrs. George McDermott and
; family and party from Cameron were
: pleasant callers in town Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs L. D. Williams and
; family leave this week for Bethlehem,
I N. H., where they usually spend the
summers.
JUNl—MONTH or BRIDES
and the month when summer
officially starts. Gulf is on the
job with a new summer gas—-
because unless your gasoline
is ‘IKept in Step with the Cat*
endar” it can’t give you the
best mileage . . . part of it
blows out of your exhaust un-
humed, uasted. Every gallon
of That Good Gulf you buy in
June is specially refined for
summer driving—so that all of
It goes to work, none of it goes to
waste. Try a tankfuH
JIM
.1, ARCH STERNE, FORMERLY
OF .ABERDEEN, DIES SUDDENLY
J. Arch Steine, former proprietor ;
of the Aberdeen Hotel, died In Con
way, S. C., last Friday after an illness
of only four days. He was a victim of
pneumonia. Mr. Sterne has, fcr .some
time, been manager of the Camden
Hotel at Camden, S. C., where he and
Mrs. Sterne made their home. They
were in Aberdeen for several years
and enjoyed a wide circle of friends
there. *■ • • •. *' 1
Surviving in addition to Mrs.
Sterne are t.vo daughters, Mrs. Jack
Nettles of Rock Hill, S. C., and Mrs.
Sam Evans of Charlotte. Mr. Sterne
I was laid to rest in Bluefields, Vir
ginia, his former heme.
Pilot Advertising Pays.
rOR OlG^SflON'S SAKE _SMQKE CaMEI.S
TENNIS STAR. Miss Jane
Sharp(Wo«'),says:"Smoking
Camels helps tny digestion—
makes my food taste better.”
KELLY PETILLO(</&o>'(^),SpcedKing,
says: "Camels stimulate my diges
tion.” Camels cncourage the flow of
digestive fluids...increase alkalinity.
To the Voters of
Moore County
I wish to express to the voters of Moore County my sinccro ap
preciation for the loyal support and cooperation they have here
tofore given me in the discharge of my duties as Prosecuting At
torney for Moore County. I am deeply grateful for the honor the
voters of Moore County have given me in permitting me to serve
them during the past few years in the responsible and trusted po
sition as Prosecuting Attorney of our County Court.
I have endeavored at all times to live and conduct myself in
such a way as to reflect credit upon the office which the people of
Moore County have honored me with, and I have undertaken to
discharge the duties of the office in an efficient, fair and impar
tial manner- I think every perse n charged with crime is entitled to
not only have, but should feel that they have had a fair and im
partial trial, regardless of race or station in life, and whether or
not they were able to be represented by counsel-
«
I am sure the good people cf Moore County in every walk of
life are familiar with my record as Prosecuting Attorney, and I sin
cerely hope that I may be honored with their vote and personal in
fluence in my behalf at the polls on June 6th. •
If it happens that there are those who do not know me, I will
appreciate it very much if before voting, you will inquire of your
neighbors and friends of my recDrd, and I am willing that you
may be governed by what they say.
I wish it were possible for ni9 to write and call upon every vot
er personally, but I wijl be unable to do so, and I sincerely hope
that no one will hold this against me.
With sentiments of appreciation, I am
Yours sincerely,
M- G. BOYETTE
COSTLIER TOBACCOS