Page Two
THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen. North Carolina
Friday, June 26. 1936.
THE PILOT
Published each Friday by
THE PILOT, Incorporated,
Southern Pines, X. C.
XKLSON C. HYDE
Editor
FRANCES FOLLEV
Advertising Manjiner
1>AX S. KAY
CircuUition MunaRer
CARO-GRA?HICS hy
Mu>niy
.A"’*'-. ,/'■•
Sui»wTi|»tion Kates:
One Y’ear
Six Months
Three Months —
$2.00 I
$1.00 I
.50 I
Entered at the Postoffice at South
ern Pines, X- C., as second .class mail
matter.
W(H MORE INTO TH£
T::£A>LWTMANTriP
ui
THE SOLDIER IS
AGAIN A TAK(;ET
Turning half a million dollars
loose in the county is sumi
enough to agitate those who j
have something to sell. The vet-j
eran will have otfered to him a ^
hundred places to put his bonus. |
With some it was probably dis- j
posed of before due. ith others i
it will go for various things. For
soma better fortified or nwrei^^.
conservative it will be P‘*^ce(Un , ^
ound investments as tney,
SCHOOL-
s
DO YOU KNOW
YOUR STATE ?
t
u-"/
!N lOOf THf ‘'V WIT? SCHOOIHOU5E
VVORT*< fi'C'iN \m ir WAJ $25,369
oKKPOfy
pIDYOUKMOWrHAT
NORIMCAROUNA IJ OHE(^
IHf Tfri .*?ICHErr 5TAT£5
<itT BACK
9
PUftmG the FlRfTi W ^ »'>■ TFRN
60V AYiOCK PARl/i/Nf.P 04(5» COrx-tUTFP
THf 5£NTfnCEf OF 26 PP.*'^r!£r.*>
"a
CHARIH r ■;'"‘V •"
TIACHJO. '
PIP W KNO\Vr.^AT
TMfryTAT£MU«T»A!N >674
VAfMUlPPI&VfWMUTZlF
IOAOIN6 RIF1E5. W'CH VS
iNClAflfOFTilEPlAJNfHAD
WOi’^v.S AWAY A< IU£1£0
9
I eral days with Miss Margaret Mc-
' Dermott.
I •
I Mr. and Mrs. Hinton and children
I of Wadesboro visited Mrs. J. R. Thom
as Sunday.
I Mr.'-'. H. E. Norman and son, James,
I of Mt. Airy .spent last week with Mrs.
J. W. Ko^crs,
Mr. and Mrs. N. N. McLoan of Vass
■iaitecl Mrs. J, D. McLean Sunday.
Mrs. O. C. Britton .spent last week
n Charlotte.
r\r:.s- ^Iiry Bo.ss Irvin spent*Friday
1 Sp.nford with Mrs. Georg? Earn
hardt.
:.T;s. ;\Tarlin McFadyen and ohild-
■cn of Manchester are vi.siting rela-
■ live.s here.
Mrs. Pearl Th mas is spending sev-
' i^ral days with Mrs. H. C. Cameron
in Olivia following an operation in
th’ Lae County Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cannon of High
Point were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Rogers.
Floyd Kith, Jr., of Raeford is VM-
iting hi.s grandmother, Mrs. J. R-
Thomas,
Rev. and Mrs. M. D. McNeill, Mrs.
J. I). McLean and Miss Margaret
McLean were dinner guests Tuesday
of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Teague in San
ford.
Miss Martha Britton spent the week
; end with friends in Durham.
Mri,. Marshall Beatty of Ivanhoe is
visiting Mrs. Georgia McFadyen.
ENJOY THAT FEELING OF WELL-BEING
GEORGE REIS, Gold-
Cup winner. "I smoke
Camels,” he says, "enjoy
that feeling of well-being.”
r Mvire Yoy to s^xo >n
TTfji'trfw.' fAC-.y .aDOOT Y'JOft C0M«0««TY ♦ ,
a.s
trees al- some of the leading Republican
newsp::p rs. And if a Republican
H. K- B. can't make sense out of his own
platform surely it is too much
to ask of a Democrat. As for the
suppoied authois of the docu
ment. are tney actually at var
iance with eacii other? Borah
I’lNEBLUFF
Mrs. Warren H. Stewart of Em
poria, Kan., is .spending the week
with Mr, and Mrs. J. H. Suttenfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kinlaw’ spent
the week-;nd with Mrs. Kinlaw's
mother, Mrs. E. B. Mocdy of St.
can find- Probably to every vet- | — ——
eran will come the opportunity | . |
of dividing with the sharper who r ‘
will try to sell or let him in on ; AT A KING
^ome-get-rich-quick scheme. To j column in
every person who has a Charlotte Observer of June and Hoover certainly are—but
lars in a savings account j 19 comments with more wit b.tween Iionver. Hearst and the
countless agencies who are ready | wisdom on Democratic re- "si-iecia! interests” surely not
to divide or take all the spoils, Republican Con- much difference exists. Each
A line of airy patter made up ot illustrate what he would glorify the rugged indivi-
illigitimate salesmanship will muddled Democratic dual at the expense of the less
scoop in many a gullible victim^ thought he cites a list of “extra- rugged; tach while professing a
Agreements so skillfully w'ord- contrad’ctions” eman- laissez fair economy practice or
ed that later need to be untang- Deal spokesmen encourage.'^ the opposite. What-
ledbvia lawyer show an unhappy concerning the Republican plat-. ever the difference in motive
balance.There isn’t such a that it wp 1 there is little difference in their
as easy money-Investments that. or the action.s or in the enthusiasm Fayetteviii« this week where Mr.
double over night are verv otten p^al—liberal—reactionary ' with which thty are backing the ^ enterprise,
deceptive schemes. ^ —written by Borah—by Hoover party whose political tenets have, Morton, Mrs. Norman
David Woody of St. Pauls is visiting
his .sister, Mrs. Marvin Kinlaw. |
Clyde Simpson. Jr., of Mt. Gilead' ‘
is spending several days this week i ^
with Miss Ella Backus.
Gen. H.nry Butner spent the week
end with his brother, M. F. Butner.
en. Butner is on his vacation before
taking command in the Canal Zone.
I
. i ■ ■ ■
“CAMELS HELP my di
gestion, cheer me up,” says
Miss Travis Lander, cashier.
hivaccm!
The county has its share of the “special interest
spongers who are eager to use ■ u ‘ t
The only trained
5”—by always had their .sympathy. It
I mav be that they have all had
Morton and children, Betty and Mil
dred, Mrs. Mary Ivey and son, Pete
your money me There is no doubt that these a hand m fram^ing the platform j^^rwood spent the week-end with I
IS that which K„si. icontradictions are extraordinary ijt would not be Mrs. Lawton Foushee and Miss Juliai
banker or other "in -^ioubt at all. But how could Jhat too many cooks have spoiled ,
ness firms. The soldier is ^ . v, '! a., P. Morton, Miss Margaret Par-1
a target an o ^ 1 document under discussion? In, Tne exaniples Mr. Kent has ^ j \iuHon of Norwood!
' ' the main, the contradictions in i given oj what he calls muddled j .spent Sunday at the Lampley resi-
aitrtimrfr " I the Platform are glaring, and Democratic thinking, looks sur^dence,
OUR timber ! they are not, the ambi-1 pnsingly like muddlec\ Mr
CROP
Miss Alberta Fletcher is spending
forest land
are
, guous language and the neut.ral* iK^ent s thinking. Howe\er, it is ^eek in West End -with Mrs. Fred
* izing phrases are evidence of the not to be \yondered at, when you (Conroe.
' opportunist, vaccillating ten
' of its framers, and their anxi
bids for an;# and every supp
The Platform can be interpr^
! a dozen different ways and is
tripts'nemetuallv. The °revenue I ing so interpreted. In fact, , , u u
Sh thfs forest wealth should : find the same contradictions, 1 upon it .and unhappily it ^
nrodJcfannuallv for the State,.Mr. Kent need have looked nojclearly also too much for him. shannon Tuesday,
may even ""val that now produc 1 fisher than the editorials of K. L. B.
Tte twenty million 1
of producing for- , of its framers, and their anxious | muddled affair as the Republ
wood-usin; Sullen dfftoenTway. and" s be-'Mr. K.nt It wa. too much for
our present \voou us K In fact, to the New Dealers who commented
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Lampley are vis
iting Mr. Lampiey’s bi-other in States
boro, Ga.
Ella Mae Johnson of Sanford is vis
iting Anne Warner this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Van Dyke of
Cherryville were guests of Mrs. W. D.
ed by thre manufacturers of
cotton and tobacco.” So saj»? the
Agricultural Review from Ral
eigh.
Some farmers reckon on pay
ing for their taxes and upkeep
of their property from the an- ^ doctor’s office in Aberdeen,
and there sat the doctor, a preacher
GRAINS OF" SAND
EUREKA
In our wanderings last Saturday of thirty-six years ago, so the Free
afternoon, we finally got around to Press chronicles for June 2, 1900.
Mrs. Sallie Ray has returned home
after a visit with her daughter Mrs.
H:bson Tucker of West End.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowen and child
ren and Mrs. Vernan Huffman and
baby Carol of Dallas visited relatives
the
nual harvest of hardwood ^^ow- t^^ere sat the doctor, a preacher, We have Be Kind to Animal Week, ^
th. Nature did a lot for North ^^rtertaker and an insurance man,, National Cheese Week, Restaurant
Carolina in supplying her with a newspaperman Week. Old Home Week. Mother-sDay. : Beveraee of Star st>ent
bountiful lot of valuable and im-1^ ^ ^ the goif Father’s Day and Children's Day. Sun- 7 ® , ^
portant forest trees- The great |day, June 28 is to be Safety Sunday, Junior Blue.
variety and quantity afford a ' ! and a staggering list of other things Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Blue visited Mrs.
source of income for the future ^rvmp to a that lead on and on. Soon we will have McKenzie at Doubs Chapel
Twell as today, when handled The “ J ^ to consult the c..e.Car to see « Church s„hd.y a.ternoon,
right. ^ J. thrberries is the day we give the dog an extra: Mr. and Mrs, John McCaskill and
When fires have not done se- have limited the season. Pat on the head or proceed up the children of Durham and Misses Myrtle
rioua damage to the | ™
growth is rapid. That IS see and a relative of the dewberry than usual. There is nothing hke
doned^ In not dethrone the .staWlshed dewberry "'em.
not a good shipper, but
occupied by — -- .
evacuated Acres of ^ Md as 1
Sr:" has -rd to „nd a Hva, ,or the
Sprung up, in fields and oyer berry,
wild land. Previously cut for tim- '
ber In fifteen years the pme has standing on the
contributed something of a cov- „
eastern ridge of
The Utilities Commissioner tells us
Young we have ’.eft 67 street cars now op-
<rating in Nofth Carolina. Only four
cities have street car service, with
no more than 57 miles of track in use.
er crop.
overlooking the Southern Pines and Pinehurst once
forTsts’of’Fort Bragg the long brown , boasted of six miles of track and care
McCaskill and Velma Carpenter, who
are attending Summer School at
Chapel Hill, spent Sunday in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. McCaskill,
Mr. and Mrs. Carey McLeod an
nounce the birth of a daugther Sat
urday June 20th, 1936.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe W. Blue and
Mr. and Mrs. Emery Hardy visited
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Blue Sunday af
ternoon.
Miss Lillie Blue spent Sunday with
green of the distant | that operated daily between the neigh-
Older fields the earlier settler, stretches m th. ^- Extinction threatens Mrs. Ida Mae Hardy of Carthage
once had under cultivation now the street car. So if you want to grab
are mature forest trees, with oc- is > P j
one for your lawn to go along with
casional faint ridges indicating dovro
time to make the selection.
- , ^ rinwr. into the new re- the iron deer or make into a tea room
the path of the Pjj>’J2h. Second theater has about or put away in the archives with the
growth pine is a different tree -r^^
than the ori^nal long leaf that i the same
made up the fomer forests that ^
were [Sm-i rangue on a deep pie. They may pro-
ftnre fact^’
clf sTk,’ TooS forZeT’ greens iLps the old ones are better for movie
for Christmas dccoration, are all j fans and the managemen .
products of the farm. Harvested |
Ferman McCaskill
Mrs. John Primm and daugther
Louise and Windoro Hardy, visited
friends in Jonesboro Sunday after
noon.
Mrs. J. M. King, Mrs. Walter Scott
! and son Joseph and Mr. and Mrs.
I Ram Saunders of Asheboro, visitod
"I can hardly wait for The Pilot
to get here,” writes Mrs. J. R. Mo*
Queen, who recently removed fromj^;;- ^mgs son Oifford King Sunday
the Sandhills to the mountains of ' ^ temoon.
dependable sources of revenue
for the landowner.
The pine is a magnificent tree.
Along with being a. thing of val
ue it is a delight to grow, al
ways attractive at any age, from
a plumy seedling to a venerable
monarch. Any vacant land is en
hanced by the planting of these
trees, or encouraging the growth
welcome it.
North Carolina, to a Southern Pines
relative. And The Pilot is just as
r -7. -- ^ Kamishari Island of Hokkaido was' pleased to visit these good Moore
in inteUlgent hands where the , - „,tnse last week, county fn»'*.ds. Mrs. McQueen and her
?rp?ot'ic?rt^« “
crop bids fair to be one of the skip around over the earth to observe
crop uiuss I ^ ^ eclipse it would seem as if
Fate just gives the globe a twirl and
then blindfolded puts down a pencil
mark. In 1900 Southern Pines was tUa
elected spot. Several promtaent ob
servatory parties from Cambridge,
Minnesota and other points were here
to view the phenomena. Instruments
were set up on Tilghman bill. Many
visitors flocked into the little village
CAMERON
DR. R.\YMOND SPEAKS AT
KIWANIS MEETING
Dr. C. Rexford Raymond made an
excellent address to the Kiwanis Club
Wednesday at its meeting in the
Methodist Sunday School rooms at
Aberdeen. His subject was “Techno
cracy In Its Relation To Social Secur
ity."
Misses Mary Lacy Mclver and Miss
Rachel McIntosh of Sanford are visit
ing Miss Flora Phillips.
Misses Ruth and Jessie McFadyen
of Fayetteville were Sunday guests
of Mrs. Georgia McFadyen.
Miss Jean Ferguson of Chicago, 111.,
is spending several weeks with Mr.
and Mrs. H, P. McPherson.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl York and child
ren of Raleigh spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. W. M. Wooten.
Miss June Hemphill is spending sev-
PENDERS
Check These Quality
Food Values
Southern Manor Fruit
CocktaS 2
Not
cans
Armour’s Assorted Meat
Spreads 3
No 1-4
cans
Lang’s Dill or Sour
Pickles 2
All 5c Bottled
Beverages 6
for
(Plus Bottle Deposits)
Heilman’s or Best Foods
25'
25
25
25
Nayonnaise
and Relish
8 oz I Cc 16 oz QCc
Jar Jar “v
Alaska Pink
Salmon
tall
can
Libby’s Brand
Plain Olives 1“ 30
Assorted Flavors
Pa^T-Jell S? 4'^!®
Southern Manor.
^licious 1-4 Ib
Iced pkg
Tea
IS
Our Pride
Bread
20 oz 0<
loaf V
a p. Blend
CoSee
1. 23'