Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / July 3, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two THE riLOT, Suuthern Pines and Aberdeen. North Carolina Friday, July 3, 1936. THE PILOT Published each Friday by THE PILOT, Inc orporated, Southern Phies, X. C. NELSON C. HYDE Editor FU.\NCES FOLLEY Advertising Manag-er DAN S. RAY’ Circulation Manager CARO-GRAPHICS -- by Murray Jones, Jr. SubNoription Rate!, : One Year $2.00 Six Months . $1.00 Three Months .50 Entered at the Post office at South. em Pines N. C., as second.class mail matter. PO YOU KNOW YOUR S1XIEJ FOR TFE STATE I LEGISLATURE i A close election appears in | sight tomorrow in the only | Moore county contest in the j run-off primary. W. R. Clegg, of ! Carthage, who represented the county in the last Sta.te Legisla ture, but who ran second to J- Hawley Poole of West End. in the June primary, is making a second bid to go back to Raleigh. The Pilot was well pleased with the result of the first pri mary in this contest for the Democratic nomination. Hawley Poole is one of the successful younger men of the community- He ably managed one of the Sandhills largest peach or chards, the Manice Orchard; he has made a success of his own farming enterprises; he has shown marked ability in civic af fairs, a keen interest in all things looking toward the bet terment of his community and his county. This is his first ven ture in politics, and as the type of man more of whom we should have in governmental affairs it seemed to The Pilot the elector ate was to be congratulated on its choice a month ago. In an advertising card Mr. Clegg says: “Don’t Experiment. MC.WOUtPh’T RAUFVWICOfffimmOII Trtt FIRJT10 AMtHPMBrro WERf NDYDUKNOVTriATi GOVRICHARPmRARP.nZB mm HI5 FAUURF Ajf 60V OFTH£0)IONYON2 OF Hif CHIEF om\as ANPTH£5TATFTRJAJURfR ? C0H6Rf»MAH lOMGER TrtAN ANNONE Fii: fMm nc,coNHNUAaY oiwfrp Alp; ANP aRANiy W THf Ji ATB Wf VAlUf Of /t lORP/ mmBlOR'f f\:: 01 w; \rmhsip 24 nMff in ai vtA.\ r mm mo\frrn IHNORTrfA«FWMCO,flC, ATWfTIMfOFWFNATWRHER 51AVF INJURRECnONIN WJI, AN ACCIPENTAL PiriF W5- CHARC'E f?55!'FfP IMAWNK n • TH6 EDITORS OF C(^R0'eRl^PMIC5 IMVlTP YOU TO 5EN0 IN ((JTf -SCPri C- -1 . ■ PINEHURST GRAINS OF* SAND Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Vail are guests Portland, Oregon, offers a bounty road wide enough to give you all the this week of Mr. and Mrs. Halbert of a hundred dollars for careless driv- room you need and has little traffic. J. Blue at their cottage at Virginia ers. If we would declare an open sea- The road opens up territory that will Beach- son on reckless drivers we might be a revelation to many. Continuing Mrs. Richard S. Tufts and children make highway conditions safer for out Connet ticut avenue the road turns left Thursday for Roaring Gap, where sane drivers. left on the approach of the govern- they have opened their cottage for ment pioperty and continues out by the summer. A scientist now says life may be old Long Street church and into Reily Mr. &nd ^^rs Allen Taft and Peter restored by an electric current. A per- street of Fort Bragg. Some of the gmjiey left Tuesday morning for their son shocked back to life might not pioneer roads that figured in our jjj Canada for the remainder of care to die again. Returning with ^ early history are crossed or encount- summer, sparks flying would make you dub- ered as the Yadkin, Morganton, Cole- ious as to where you were in the in- man and Preachers road, designated terim. now by markers. Deer are frequent- I ly seen in small groups, watching A great crop of seeds are now com- , with curiosity, the cars as they pass. joined in a picnic dinner on the lawn of A. B. Sally’s home by the Sally family, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. O’Brien, Mr, and Mrs. Thomas H. Craig and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Conant. Billy Viall, James Wicker and the Taylor boys, John and Jack, left Monday fdr c;amp Spears near Char- I lotte where they will spend two weeks. i Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Sally, Miss Lai- , v.'ra Sally and . B., Jr. ,spent Fri- Jiiy in High Point and were guests of Mrs. Paul Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Black left ' Thursday for a motor trip of several weeks through the north, going es pecially for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Jellison in Bethlehem, N. H. I ihey will also visit friends in Bos ton, New York and Washington, D. C. I Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Sledge entertain ed at a buffet supper and bridge Fri- ^ day night for Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Mc Leod, Frank McMannis, George East- 1 man, Garrett J. DeFoy'of Boston, Mr. I and Mrs. Thomas L. Black, Mr. and ; Mrs. E. G. Fitzgerald, Miss Belle I Fitzgerald ,Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzz- i gerald and Mr. and Mrs. John F. Tay- I lor. Prizes in bridge were won by Mrs. I J. F. Taylor and Mrs. E. G. Fitzger- I aid, Frank McManus and E. G. Fitz gerald. I Mr. and Mrs. John F. Taylor enter- I tained for dinner Monday night at I their home here. The last course was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. I L. .Duiilop, and an evening of bridge i followed. Prizes in bridge went to Mrs. Elwin McLeod and Mrs. John Fitzgerald, Garrett Defay and T. L. Black. Miss Elsie Thomas and Miss Helen Ruth Cole entertained Friday night for the Misses Louise and Margaret Lawrence of Hamlet. ' The Pinehurst fire department en- j tertained at a fried chicken supper ' Saturday night at the fire house. More than fifty people enjoyed this informal affair. The young people of the Commun ity Church iiad a picnic and swim ming party at Juniper Lake Tuesday afternoon, supervised by Miss Carter who is in charge of the young peo ples’ activities for the summer months. I The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Com munity Church will hold the July meeting in the Ladies’ parlor at the ^ church next Tuesday night, July 7th I at 8:00 o’clock. j Mrs. Nell Roundtree left recently ’ for Lake Placid, New York for th* I summer. Mrs. Alvin Leavitt is passing th® week in Raleigh. Mother—heed the urgent ad vice of doctors end hospitals; do as they do; give your baby a daily body-rub w»th the anti- septic oil that chases away germs, and keeps the skin SAFE. That mear.s Mennen Antiseptic Oil. It’s used by nearly all maternity hospitals. It gets down into skin-folds—and pre vents infection, chafing, chap ping and roughness. Get a bot tle today. At any druggist. MENNEN Antiseptic OIL ing up not to mention a prolific crop of weeds and grass seed. Gardeners | planted early in the middle of April befcre the dry weather came along, , then after the drought was establish ed, and then again following the rains. The result is about three different We ilo not feel that it will be in | sowings and in some cases not always the nature of an experiment to ' the same seed. The mixture is amus- nend Mr. Poole to the Legisla-}ing and affords a variety to choose ture. Based upon past records, | from. ... • ^ we beJiev’e that he would prove' * ' i more representative of the good ! The berry season for the Sandhills ' From the late Jim Johnson’s thre- noUy of Long Strce.. "Here lie some thirty dead un- knov^-n, Who wore and gloried in the Gray, Even they’ve fergot what’s past and gone, Feel no resentment in this day. For Khaki. Blue and Gray clad men. Are co.mracies all, for aye, again.” Our neighbors in khaki, absorbed went to CharLtte Monday, taking Jesse Cole, Donald Currie, Jr., Peter Dupont, Preston Shaw and the Taylor boys to the Boy Scout camp, near there, i E. L. Scofield went to New York this week and plans to sail at an early date for the summer in Europe, j Mr. and Mrs. Halbert J. Blue and sons, Richard and William, have gone to Virginia Beach where they have a Cwttage for the summer. , Dr. M. W. Marr left this week for 'an extended vacation in the north. The Rev. and Mrs. T. A. Cheatham motored to Holyoke, Mass., where Di'. Cheatham officiated at the marriage of Miss Lillian Ross to Richard Pip- pitt on June 26th. Before returning. folks of Moore countv in the leg-j is a prolonged and lengthy one. Th ^ ^ islative halls at Raleigh than his jStrawberry arrives in the early spring. | the two colors. The army protects Cheatham will spend adversary I Dewberries and Young berries make j sanctuary and its silent hamlet. ^ _ • ! their appearance and now the wild I —~ I blackberries are ripening in quantity j W'hen the newspaper was more with the big blue huckleberry of the | youthful than it is now, it had three swamp a companiori. For about two i distinct divisions, the events, opinions. THE LURE ^ OF THE CHURCH A general complaint is heard that the church has lost it‘^ hold on the people. To a certain ex tent this is true, while on the | Opening the new Sumerall road other hand the church has a re- j through the camp shortens the dis- markable hold on the people, tance between Southern Pines and months our supply is plentiful and table and pantry shelves benefit. That fact w'as demonstrated last week at historic old Long Street. The North Carolina society of Colonial Dames unveiled a bould-! er commemorating the founding . of Long Street church in 1756, | last Wednesday. To that little ceremony were drawn people from over the state. Not very many from any place, a few from Moore county, Raleigh, Fayetteville. It is an interesting dirt The Week in Carthage several weeks on the Cape. HolIan.d Shaw, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Shaw and who is with the U. S. S. Wyoming sailed last week from Norfolk. Va., for a three month’s cruise. Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Footman, for- itorial page. If our Grains o an residents of Pinehurst were re cent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Campbell. Miss Mamie Leak hats gone to Ker- nersville tO' visit relatives for the re mainder of the summer. ! Dr. and Mrs. L. J. Pegram had as guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Jones of New York , City- Mrs. Nelia Black of Carthage, Miss Adelaide Bateman and Mi.'^'s Elizabeth and wares cn sale or advertisements. The section for opinions was the ed- had come up then for classification wonder where they would have put us. Back under the Devonian Sands perhaps to stay? and Mrs. G. C. Miss Catherine Blue left Saturday week-end with Mr for Camp North Falmouth on Cape Graves. Cod to spend two months. She will Mrs. J. K. Roberts and children, teach music and archery. iiiss Anne McCree and Daniel ar«> Taylor of Lynchburg, Virginia were Mrs. Joe Pinkston has returned to spending the summer in Point Pleas- guests for the day Sunday of Mr. and her home in Mooresville. She was ac- ant, \\. Va., and Richmond, \a. Fayetteville, Lumberton, punn | companied by Mrs, Alonzo Blue, Mrs. | Miss Ida Caddell of Asheburo spent Bill Buffalo and Miss Catherine Blue ^ the week-end here, who spent the day with her. Mrs. J. V. D. Baker of Pennsylvania Mrs. W. T. Monroe and Mrs. J. W'. is visiting her mother, Mrs. John Sym^ and elsewhere. The old church drew them back. When they made the journey they knew they would encounteir nothing. Evalyn ington. else along the road, no two-fold purpose in the trip. The church was the sole attraction- Standing : in government territory, an un inhabited country, isolated rang er stations ?»re its only neigh bors. Which ever direction the pilgrim hailed from, the road led through a wilderness only, no I Blue Tuesday. Mr. Mrs, Thomas L. Black. Peggy Ewing left Monday for Roar ing Gap where she will enter camp for two months. Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Fitzgerald spent the vveek-end at Wrightsville Beach. Going with them to Miss Frances Cox’s camp at Jacksonville, were Eva Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bartlett of War- and Mrs. J. L. McGraw and ■ saw spent Sunday with Mrs. O. D family have returned frcm Sullivan’s ' Wallace. Mrs. S. B. Bartlett accom- Fitzgerald. Delores Johnson, and panied them home. ^ Nancy Sledge, \X-ho are there for the W'. G. Morton of Los Angeles. Cal., ‘ week, is visiting his uncle. E. H. Morton. 1 Other children going to Miss Cox’s Mrs. O. F. Sims of Winter Garden, camp were Helen Fields, Bobby Viall Va., and Mrs. Ralph Leach of Aber- and Bevins Cameron. Ellis Fields mo- Island. Mrs. Curtis Waite of Welsh, W. Va.. visited Miss Catherine Shields Sunday Mrs. E. G. Long of Roxboro havp returned home Monday after visiting relatives to visit, no old neigh- Margaret Penn, bors to drop in on. Young people and old folks came, men and w^o- m'en iprominent in outside af fairs, who'^e ancestor.«! had wor shipped at Long Street. Man probably never construct ed anytihing tfhat he put anj" more dignity into than some of our early c'hurches. Long Street stands grave and impressive. The building is painted white with green shutters. Steps lead up to the high porch. White col umns support its Toof. No stain ed windows, no mosaics, no tap estries express'ing the theme of religion. Yet the lioly old edifice stark in its jsevere simplicity, broug^ht something of the faith. The fatherly and gentle leader was a powierful factor in the building of those little kingdoms. A hundred and eighty years of such influence through suc- agedUng generations did some thin? to the human roots of the people. And tiiat something is The trek back is still made. The not easily destroyed. Bonds that church holds a lure. The list of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Miller are spend ing a few days in Washington, D. C. Mrs, M. A. Miller returned with tjiem after a month’s visit here. Dr. D. M. Currie of Baltimore, Md., spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. J. L. Currie. Miss Betty Barringer has returned home after a two week’s visit in Char lotte. She was accompanied home by her cousin. Miss Jean Hester. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Crutchfield of Asheboro spent the week-end in Car thage. Mrs. W. H. McNeill and Eleanor Woltz spent last week in Charlotte with Mrs. Charles Alexander. Mrs. Worth Miller and Misses Va lera of New Bern and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Graves of Greensboro spent the worlds today. Long Union, Mt. Carmel, Bensalem, Cypress, Bethesda or any of the others, the stor^ is the same. were years in developing are apt to 'hold somethinr of their the faitftiful is longer perhaps than first ituspected. deen have returned to Aberdeen after a visit with Mrs. N. A. McKeithen. Miss Adelaide Bateman and guest. Miss Elizabeth Rogers of Lynchburg, Va., spent a few days last week with Mrs. Nelia Black. Mrs. E. H. Morton. Guests prizes went Mrs. C. C. Kennedy of New York City is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. P. K. Kennedy. , Mrs Ed Simpson has returned af ter a vifiit in Red Bajnk, N. J, Mrs. E. S. Adams entertained for i(>hn Adams on the occasion of his 75tb birthday. Covers were laid for six and a cake bearing 75 pink candles centered the table. Guests were R. D. Bryan, J. G. Downing, Dr. H. J. Shields, G. C. Graves and W. O. Du pree. Mrs. U. L. Spence was hostess on Saturday morning at a bridge break fast. Higrh score prize for bridge went to Mrs. Jack Lane and for rook to Mrs. E. H. Morton. Guests prizes went to Mrs. W. £. Evans of Rawland, Mrs. M. B. Brown of High Point and Mn Charles BuU«r of Lynchburg, Va. Curb Market wlU be on Friday of this week Instead of Saturday. t red down with them on Sunday. Mrs. Charles B. Hudson left last week for a visit with relatives on Long Island. W. P. Morton is away for the week, attending a conference at Williams burg, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McCaskill have moved to the Craven Cottage for the summer months. Mr. and Mrs. Verland Smith have returned from Chicago where they vis ited Mrs. Smith’s father, H. D. Spi vey. Miss Pearl McNeill of Charlotte spent the week-end with relatives here and in Southern Pines. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Swaringen are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son, Edward C., Jr., at the Moore County Hospital, Sunday, June 28th. Mrs. I. C. Sledge, Catherine and Nancy Sledge and Mrs. Elwin Mc Leod spent Saturday in Greensboro. Misses Louise and Margaret Law rence have returned to their home in Hamlet after visiting here in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Neal and son, Walter, of Charlotte q>ent Sunday with friends in Pinehurst. niey were COMt IVe'ff show you why they're the 1936 BLUE RIBBON VALUES Prize Quality at Every Price All give you the GOODYEAR MARGIN OF SAFETY—Center Traction for quicker- stopping (let us show you!) All are BLOWOUT PROTECTED IN EVERY PLY by patented SUPERTWIST Cord—extra springy, longer lasting (ask us to dem onstrate!) All built to deliver LOWEST COST PER MILC service by world’s largest rubber com pany—maker of the most tires by millions UOUBIC eagle #J3 AU- ^ WEATHER PATHnWDER How about ALL-WEATKER? Gives you 43% more non-skid mileage. Standard on the new cars. World's most popular tire at any price. Look it over! it’s our biggest seller. A Life-Saver for Pocketbooks! PATHFINDER Many of our customers say it’s the bigges: money’s worth in town! 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The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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July 3, 1936, edition 1
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