Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / Aug. 14, 1936, edition 1 / Page 3
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Friday, August 14, 1936. THE PILOT, Southern Pines and Aberdeen, NV>rth Carolina Hagre Thre« Moore County Hospital—Showing Construction of New Winj? 4 Sir' This Double-Quick paste—‘gives you REALLY WHITE TEETH # Tooth pastes only partially effective can’t keep teeth really white. Don’t waste time with them; use Dr. West’s Double- Qutck Tooth Paste. It cleans over twice as fast as some leading brands, yet cannot scratch enameL For brilliant white teeth, try it today. BIG TUBE c m Photo by Hemmer The above i)icture was taken several week.s ago and the building is exi)ecte(l to be ready for occupancy by the end of November, (’harles ('. Hartman of (Ireensboro is the architect for the new wing. The Building Committee in charge of construction is composed of Col. George P. Hawes, Chairman; George H. Maurice and L. H Pender. — ’V, you can get a baby pow der that will keep your baby SAFER against germs and skin infections. It’s Ktennen Anti septic Powder. your doctor will tell you that whenever you buy a baby powder it surely ought to be Mennen. Bccause Mennen is more than just a dusting powder—it’s antiseptic! Andit costs no more! So, mother, buy a tin of this “safety f)owder” from your druggist, today. MENNfN Antiseptic POWDER PINEBLUFl^ CORRESPONDENCE Mrs. Mary Eldridge and Miss Marie Hall of Rockingham have been spend- Editor, The Pilot: suffering caused by the war, when ing some time in Pinebluff during the Since the announcement of the or- one of our main objectives is the se- past two weeks. ganization of a Sandhills Post of the ^ c'Jf’f'g of adequate pensions for the i their recent bonuses to the fur- Miss Margaret McQueen of South- Veterans of Future Wars, certain cri-1 widows and orphans of that war, who ■ tiering of our cause, ern Pines was a recent guest of Miss ticisms have been made which show | have been shamefully neglected in the think twice, therefore, Marie Hall. that the nature of our organization inipatient piocess of th, veteians accuse us of being ‘‘smart others in our ranks whose lives are thus touched by the suffering of the war. There are. of course, many ac tual veterans who thoroughly endor.se our movement, and a few have even Mr and Mrs. H. E. Barry and child- widely misunderstood. The aims ern of Rockingham were Sunday purposes of the Future Veterans are set forth in our manifesto, which guests of Mrs. Mary Eldridge. i Mr. and Mrs. Alton Poole, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Poole and son Calvin, and Mr. William Poole called on Mrs. Mary Eldridge last Wednesday after noon. Mrs. Mary Eldridge and Miss Marie Hall spent last Thursday afternoon with Miss Hall’s parents Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Hall of near Jackson Springs. Mr. and Mrs. David Buscall ot Washington, D. C., are visiting Mr. gweepingly and illogically as may be obtained from the post offi cers at any time, and are more broad ly discussed in our handbook, “Patri otism Prepaid”, which is to be found at Hayes’s Book Store. I suggest that our detractors make a close study of of th? veterans . r u • who accuse us of being feathering of their own nests. , , ^ ■ " aleckfi. Ignorant of the profound We endorse all possible compensa- forces with which we deal. I venture tion for men who were permanently t^at the war to Jack Turner is a injured in action in the V\ar, but not niore "profound force” than it is to for men now drawing government niany a jibing “veteran”, to whom money for the lasting effects of yel- profundity of the war was re- name of Patriotism, and to think deeply of the meaning of this word, and also to reconsider in the light of a vigorus and liberal spirit the relation of the citizen to society. Sincerely, Cadwallader Benedict, Commander Sandhills Post, Veterans of Future Wars. Southern Pines, •August 12, 1936. THE ARK Southern Pines, N. C. A Countrj* Day and Boarding School for children under fourteen years. Open air classes, and ail out-door activities. Music - Art - Handicrafts MILLICENT A. HAYES Principal low fever contracted in 1924. vealed in fencepost holes at Camp these great documents before jump- realizing the effects of ing to hasty conclusions as to what we are about. Let us not also hear the cry thrown Dix. I against us that we are incapable of I jj jf. unquestionably that the Vet- .11 IXiK KOl’SSKAU TO PKESIDE AT TEIJM OF CKIMIN'AL COl KT A term of Superior court for the trial of criminal cases will convene in Carthage on next Monday with Judge J. A. Rousseau presiding. the World grans of Future Wars have caused War, of “what war actual';, meant”, countless people to laugh justifiably, Gone With The Wind and a lot of Granted that we have never seen a idiotic folly perpetrated in the other new fiction at Hayes.’ Although we are usually attack- pal with a bayonet tlirough the lungs o!' holding in his guts with his hands: | the chance hour of our birth saved | ed as Rctis or Fascists, and some- and Mrs. Vance Adams this week- ^j^th, the stream of vituperation in' u.s fi’om such horrors in the past. It end. Mrs. Marvebell Clark of Sanford is spending the week with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark. Mi.ss Joe McCaskill and Mr. and Mrs. John McMaster and .son ot Washington, D. C., spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs, Garland Mc Caskill. Mrs. Vance Adams is spending the week visiting relatives in Fayette ville. Mrs. Anna McMinn left Saturday for Cuba, N. Y., where she will visit relatives. She will spend a few days in Washington, D. C., with her son, Grant McMinn. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Atkinson and children spent Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Butner enroute to their home in Winston-Salem from Myrtle Beach. Pauline Adcox of Durham spent several days last week with her par ents. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Adcox. Miss Elizabeth Fletcher left last the Sandhills comes from those who' is, however, absurd for the detract- I'.old that we are the offspring of the ] ors of our generation—we who are | Liberty League, that we are financed ; now in or not long out of colleges or ^ by them, in fact; and our innocent ■ establishing ourselves in a society ■ organization is angrily laid at the * still groaning from the great wound, feet of “the Du Ponts” as if it were a of the War in its vitals— it is absurd j vast pyramid of holding companies, of them to say that we who have 1 This thrust through us at the forces i spent oui' so called careless youth in of privilege is most gratifying in' a wrecked civilization know nothing that it indicates, .since it conies from | of the meaning of war. In all modesty the left, the liberal spirit of the j we ask the men who fought the war Sandhills’ citizens; but it is true- nev-i (as many of them as have ears to | Why Gulf is the Gas for August MONTESANTI Dry Cleaning TAILORING Southern Pines Telephone 5541 eitheless that this supposed connec tion of ours with the robber barons has no basis in fact. We are strictly nonpartisan group. hear) if it is not more admirable of us to turn our faces toward the mak ing of the new world anti the Veterans of Future Wars are do- country- and for us—that we know nothing of the mud, blood, lice, and physical hardship of the “front”. I am sure that the last thing which ■we wish to do is to make fun of the I men who fought in the World War. week for Southern Pines where she ■ -\xe do not, however, approve some The most prevalent local accusation ! ing just that -- than to indulge against the Veterans of Future Wars ' in the sterile bitterne‘=s which W’e , is that we are "wise guys” making j might logically adopt in view of what fun of the men who fought for their i was passed to us by those who made \ has accepted a position. Dault Nichols of Pinnacle, was a guest of M. F. Butner Thursday. Hazel Adcox of Washington, D. C., is spending her vacation wi'ch her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Adcox. of measures which the survivors of both the war and the training camps hu.’tled through Congre.ss, costing the United States $l,000,000,00f in inter est alone on the borrowed money for th? prematurely paid bonus from last the War. We do not curse the time | of our birth; we seek to recognize, i and so if possible to avoid the tragic folly of an older but often question- ^ ably \/iser generation. We endeavor to point out, particularly to our own generation, the missteps which must be avoided m the future, and we urge American youth not to recrimination but to a clear-sighted progress to ward a more hopeful future for us all. We have used forthright humor and j satire, which succeed where nothing ' else will to destroy the monstrous i sentimentality forever rampart in the world. We are accuseo of not being patri otic. We reply that merely because we have seen the contemptible and economically unsound antics of the bonus-grabbers and have laughed at them, we have done more than all the flag-wavers to reveal the true nature of .patriotism that most fickle and cor- Mr. and Mrs. John Fiddner spent June until 1945. the week-end at Long Point. | a . certain amount of local misun- Peggy Johnson of Sanford is a clerstanding has, I believe, <i> Isen guest this week of Alice Adams. | through a cartoon displayed in the Forty-six 4-H club girls from Mill ^ window of Hayes’s store, picturing school communities of Moore county “Life at the Front” in terms of easy with Miss Flora McDonald of Carth- chairs, reading lamps, and a good age as Home Demonstrator, Mrs. W. five-cent cigar. This cartoon is not D. Shannon of Pinebluff as Native a “wise-guy” crack at the men who Study Instructor and Edward Snipes ^ actually suffered. It is a satirical ■of Carthage as Life Guard are spend- illustration for a sentence from “Pa^ ing the week camping in Pinebluff. HRLEN W.-VRING HINS GOLiF number of men who are receiving M.ATCH .\T lilNV ILLE disability allowance as compared to the number of men who were offic- Miss Helen Waring. Pinehurst’s No. jj^„y mounded in battle, it is ap- 1 w'oman golfer. Saturday defeated parent that the safest place in the :Miss Jane Cothran of Greenville, S. ^ army is up in the front line”. This C. in a match at Linville. It was a ^ jg^ adds Mr. Gorin "an excellent "21 hole match for the championship health note for use in the next war.” in the Linville woman’s golf touma-1 T^e men who suffered and died in ment. Miss Waring succeeds MIm i the last war are honored as much by Kathryn Hemphill of Columbia, S. C., ^ the Veterans of Future Wars as by. is one of the most persistent and sln- who did not defend her championship any of their buddies. No one can ac- I cere workers on the National Council, this year. cuse us of not being cognizant of the Undoubtedly there ar« hundreds of triotism Prepaid” (without which it is admittedly misleading): “From the emotions. I have dealt purposely with gen eralities here: but let me cite one fact, one “case history”, which may clarify the nature of our organization and the temper of the modern youth it represents: The father of our National Secre tary, John C. Tamer, died in the World War. Turner was one of the founders of the Future Veterans and WHY NOT BEAT AUGUST HEAT by driving sumeplacc for a swim.^ And if you want to keep your gas bills down, don’t for get you need a fuel with a for mulaOther wise your gas doesn't burn completely—part of it escapes through the exhaust unhHrtml, u ustet/. Stick to T hat Good Gulf in August—it’s “Kept in Step with the Calendar”—specially leiined for summer driving. Ail of it goes to work, none of it goes to tiastc. Try Gulf and see! 'v ^ Evelyn M. Edson I'lBHC STENOGKAPHEK NOTARY riBLlC John S. Ruggles INSUKWCK .\GENCY Telephone 7062 Dr S. Neal, Beard and Wright vetf:kinahl\ns Swinnerton Stables, Southern Pines on Mondays Race Track, Pinehurst on Thursdays A.L.. AD A MS PAINTER — DECORATOR PAPER HAKCn WALL PAPERS NEON SIGNS Phone C922 E. V. PERKINSON General Contractor Storagre dMitkcra Plnea, N. C. TeL W'll be in h1i offica over Um Poat Office, Sanford, N. C., aTaary Wadnesday, from 10:00 a. m. (• H;00 p. m. Don’t fftU to aaa liiai If rotir ey»a are waak.
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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Aug. 14, 1936, edition 1
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